Turkey's relations with the US -- and US hopes for tougher sanctions against Iran -- suffered another blow last week with the House Foreign Affairs Committee resolution condemning the "genocide" of Armenians during the last years of the Ottoman Empire, reports Gareth Jenkins* The killing of Palestinian activist Mahmoud on 19 January 2010 was clearly a well-planned, violent and sadistic act, committed by Israeli assassins in the supposed safety of a foreign and sovereign country. Yes, was a Palestinian activist. We have no reason to believe otherwise. He spent years of his life in Israeli prison (and one year in an Egyptian jail) for his political activism. This, however, gives no credibility to Israel's accusation that was a killer of Israelis. This assertion becomes even more problematic when considering that 's assassination was, according to the British media, ordered by accused Israeli war criminals and rightwing politicians. According to The Sunday Times, Meir Dagan, the current director of Mossad, briefed Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu on the assassination plan during a meeting in early January. "The people of Israel trust you. Good luck," Netanyahu reportedly said at the end of this meeting. It is disgraceful enough that the assassins used fraudulent European passports as well as credit cards linked to an American bank to carry out their plans. But more upsetting is the fact that this cruel and calculated action has inspired little more than expressions of "outrage". Have we become this resigned to Israeli impunity? What about the sanctity of life, the sovereignty of nations, and respect for international law? Are these immediately disposable when the victim is Palestinian and the location of the crime an Arab country? has also been callously deprived of his own relevance to the story. We don't really know much about the man aside from what Israel wants us to know -- a senior Hamas operative who was responsible for the abduction and killings of two Israeli soldiers; one of the founders of the militant arm of Hamas, the Ezzeddin Al-Qassam Brigades; the middleman between Hamas in Gaza and Al-Quds Force of the Revolutionary Guard in Iran. Who has weaved this fascinatingly reductionist account of 's life in such a short span of time? His family? Hamas? The Palestinian media? None of these. The creator of this biography is Israel, the very country that assassinated him. That is truly outrageous: the murderer writes and convinces the world of the story of the murder victim. And the media gladly runs with it. Expectedly, a Palestinian would tell 's story in entirely different terms. He was born in Jabalya, one of Gaza's poorest and most crowded refugee camps. These key words alone -- Gaza, poor, crowded, refugee -- helps to unravel the real story of . It is the story shared by so many people who still live a life of utter anguish, poverty and resistance in the Gaza Strip -- and elsewhere -- that is under inhumane siege and successive wars by the world's fourth strongest army. The story is not about abducted occupation soldiers, but about millions of refugees; not about Iran, but about Gaza and Palestine; not about luxury hotels, but about horrifyingly desolate refugee camps. But Palestinians -- like many oppressed peoples around the world -- have no right to their own narrative. Their story is negligible, if not wholly irrelevant. Israel commits the murder, Israel offers the explanation, and eventually Israel gets away with both the crime and the lie. 's murder might eventually inspire several documentaries that highlight the murderous nature of Palestinian militants, and the unequalled brilliance of Israeli retaliation. Another Steven Spielberg's Munich might already be in the making. The first scene of it would not be 's family forced to flee their village in Palestine after untold butchery by Zionist militants in 1948. Instead, it might show a dark-skinned, menacing Palestinian slaughtering two helpless Israeli soldiers pleading for their lives. We are, more or less, told to forget about . After all, his name is used along with Hamas and Iran in the same sentence. That should be enough to tell us that his life is dispensable -- just like the lives of over 1,400 Palestinians who were killed by the Israeli army in Gaza between December 2008 and January 2009. Israel may well be preparing for yet another attack on the impoverished Strip. The tunnels that represent the lifeline for the vast majority of Palestinians in Gaza are being routinely blown up by Israeli warplanes and collapsed by dynamite. Gazans cannot be allowed any weapons to defend themselves either. The international community has held many meetings to ensure that no weapons find their way to Gaza. The US in particular is utterly firm regarding this issue, although not at all firm about ensuring that food or medicine reaches the Strip. may have been killed due to Israel's belief he was arming the resistance. This partly explains why the international community is not at all moved by the murder. might have been involved in breaking the Western consensus on denying Gaza both food and arms. The EU is only worried about its link to the story, and not the murder itself. An EU statement issued in Brussels on 22 February condemned the "fact that those involved in this action used fraudulent EU member-states passports". They didn't name Israel though. As The Financial Times conceded, "criticism of Israel was as strongly worded as the EU could manage, given that Germany, Italy and several other countries place great emphasis on close relations with Israel." One can only imagine what would happen if Hamas decided to strike back, expanding the battleground from Gaza to the rest of the world. Would the EU express disapproval of Hamas's use of fraudulent passports but then refrain from actually naming the group, due to a fear, say, of upsetting Muslim countries? No. When the victim is a Palestinian and the murderers are Israelis -- 27 of them so far -- it's an entirely different story, and an entirely different concept of justice. * The writer is editor of PalestineChronicle.com.