Dialogue Works

Amb. Chas Freeman: Gaza's Silent Hell, Genocide and Starvation in Real Time


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Nima Rostami Alkhorshid:

  1. Ambassador, how do you respond to Colonel Aguilar’s testimony about Amir, the child killed by IDF after showing profound respect to aid workers, and the broader reality of Gaza’s humanitarian sites being designed as death traps?
  2. Given the growing number of European countries and Canada considering recognition of Palestine, do you see this as genuine support for Palestinian self-determination or merely a symbolic slap at Israel?
  3. With Steve Witkoff engaging in talks with Netanyahu and touring Gaza’s aid sites, do you believe these are sincere diplomatic efforts or orchestrated propaganda that undermine real peace?
  4. How do you assess the potential for renewed conflict between Iran and Israel, especially in light of Iran’s likely response if attacked again, and does Witkoff have any credibility in de-escalating tensions?
  5. Considering the erratic and coercive nature of U.S. foreign policy under Trump—tariffs, secondary sanctions, and bullying tactics—when do you think a counter-revolution against such self-destructive policies might emerge?


Ambassador Chas Freeman:

  1. Colonel Aguilar exposed a horrifying truth: the so-called humanitarian aid sites in Gaza are death traps, deliberately designed like cattle chutes leading to slaughter. Amir’s story—his dignity, desperation, and murder—is emblematic of a system where the U.S. and Israel jointly orchestrate a genocide under the guise of aid. The IDF shoots civilians leaving the sites, and American contractors mimic this behavior, showing a complete lack of discipline and humanity. This is un-American and immoral.
  2. Recognition of Palestine by Western nations is too little, too late. It’s politically dishonest—meant more as a rebuke to Israel than a real step toward Palestinian self-determination. The land has been largely seized, Gaza is being ethnically cleansed, and no symbolic gesture can undo that. It reflects Western hypocrisy: lofty rhetoric with no meaningful action, continuing a tradition of empty words in West Asia.
  3. Steve Witkoff’s efforts are a charade. His tour of Gaza with an evangelical ambassador was political theater, contradicting the reality exposed by Colonel Aguilar. Witkoff has no credibility—he misled Iran, enabling an Israeli attack, and acts as Netanyahu’s mouthpiece. Demanding Hamas’s surrender is not negotiation; it’s a demand for national suicide. Real diplomacy requires talking to your opponents, not demonizing them.
  4. Iran is unlikely to show restraint in a future conflict. After suffering civilian casualties, they will target Israeli population centers, not just military sites. The current U.S. approach, pushing maximalist demands disguised as American policy but rooted in Israeli interests, ensures escalation. Iran doesn’t seek Israel’s destruction; they’ve shown willingness to coexist, as history with Cyrus and Esther shows. But Israel refuses to recognize its neighbors’ rights, making peace impossible.
  5. Trump’s foreign policy is an extortion racket—arbitrary tariffs, secondary sanctions, and economic bullying that harm the U.S. more than others. It alienates allies, destroys trust, and undermines American industry. Policies like taxing steel but not orange juice reveal a shallow understanding of economics. This self-destructive approach may eventually trigger a counter-revolution, but for now, it reflects a deeper crisis of American leadership and morality.

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Dialogue WorksBy Nima Rostami Alkhorshid