[RD] War in Gaza News: Pas de Deux

Well you're delusional if you think Trump will aid Gaza.

Israel just got a big green light.

The pieces have been falling near where my "illusions" saw them go, haven't they? What's wrong with my arguments? The delusional are the ones who believe obviously unreal polls, or who seek to excuse the defeat of their cherished anti-slav crusade with what, invisible korean supermen intervening? That's delusional. Will you keep believing the narratives those believe?

The narrative that israel is all-powerful and invincible is fake. Israel is being defeated in a war of asttrition and has no way out of the situation it created for itself. It's not worth any further investment from those who had been allied to them. As usual Europe is run by idiots deluded by the propaganda their own services produce or repeat, so the usual parties guilty of assisting Israel with genocide will keep doing it way past the point where it's obviously damaging. What I'm telling you is that Europpe, for all the talk, is pretty much irrelevant in the international arena for any real war, and the US which is still relevant will cut and bail soon. AIPAC or no AIPAC.

The pro-genocide stance there may have cost Harris the election. It certainly contributed. Germany's estabelishment isn't doing itself any favours with supporting the genocide either, and I think they'll (Greens, SDP, CDU) do much worse in the coming election that they expect. They anticipated it becuse they can at least see that the public is getting more angry at them each passing month. Now the dutch estabelishment is likewise sinking itself: zionist fanatics from Israel start violence, get a reaction from the local population, and the government backs... the israelis? That'll not go well for the crapy "elites" who have been running that country. No need to even talk about the UK and zionist-captured Labour, it's pretty much decomposing.
Israel it will drag down with it all who are foolish enough to cling to it too long. Imo Trump won't be one to do that. I have found him far more intelligent, far more capable at assessing political situations, than the likes of Starmer or Scholz. And you interpret that opinion as you wish!

You see, I'm not saying Trump will cut collaboration with Israel out of the goodness of his hearth, or shock at the slaughter. Though it would be good to remember that the last US president who forced Israel to back out of a war was another media start who had not been a lifelong career politican: Reagan. I'm saying Trump will dump Israel because I think he will see, can see, the writing on the wall and is not one to plunge good money after bad, into a sunk cost. Trump's approach to failed projects has always been is to declare bankrupty on the project, close it and move on with others. And Israel is bankrupt. Moreally, militarily, and once the US withdraws support also economically.

The despair among the remnants of the old administration in the US to attempt to influence Trump can be seen on the "Iranian plot to assassinate Trump" narrative just published. Why now, when he just won? These things don't happen just because. They happen because the group doing the propaganda needs to do something. When they feel they need it. Looking at this stuff you can see what the people involved (FBI managers in this case?) are trying to do. Judging the likely effectiveness of the propaganda you can judge their desperation, their own assessment of the situation. My judgement is that Trump doesn't care the least bit about iranian assassination plots, he may be more afraid of the dem-aligned portion of the FBI! Imo the US is turning, the bureaucracy knows it. But now is a critical moment when Trumpp is going to choose whether or not to pick neocon scum like Pompeo again. The neocons are worried and getting feeble if iranian assassination plot is an important card to play for them.
 
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Israeli football fans provoke the opposition and then claim 'antisemitism' when they get a reaction.

Always the same.
 

Qatar withdraws as mediator between Israel and Hamas​

Qatar has withdrawn as a mediator in ceasefire and hostage release talks between Israel and Hamas, a diplomatic source has told CBS, the BBC's US partner.
It comes after senior US officials reportedly said Washington would no longer accept the presence of Hamas representatives in Qatar, accusing the Palestinian group of rejecting fresh proposals for an end to the war in Gaza.
The diplomatic source said that Hamas's political office in Doha "no longer serves its purpose" due to "a refusal to negotiate a deal in good faith".
Qatar is ready to resume its role as a mediator were Israel and Hamas to show "sincere willingness to return to the negotiating table", the source said.

Hamas have had a base in the Qatari capital since 2012, reportedly at the request of the Obama administration.
In anonymous briefings to Reuters, US officials said the Qatari government had agreed to tell Hamas to close its political office 10 days ago.
The reports have been denied by Hamas officials.
The small but influential Gulf state is a key US ally in the region. It hosts a major American air base and has handled many delicate political negotiations, including with Iran, the Taliban and Russia.
Alongside the US and Egypt, the Qataris have also played a major role in rounds of so-far unsuccessful talks to broker a ceasefire in the year-long war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza.
But there is growing evidence of a shift in the relationship.
After the killing of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, Hamas held a two-hour mourning tent in Doha in a small hall, a stark contrast to the recent three-day mourning held for Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh, which was conducted with official state oversight and security.
The latest round of talks in mid-October failed to produce a deal, with Hamas rejecting a short-term ceasefire proposal. The group has always called for a complete end to the war and the full withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza.
Israel has also been accused of rejecting deals. Days after being fired earlier this week, former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant accused Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of rejecting a peace deal against the advice of his security chiefs.
The call for Hamas to be expelled from Qatar appears to be an attempt by the outgoing Biden administration to force some sort of peace deal before the end of his term in January.
Were Hamas to be forced to leave Doha, it is unclear where they would base their political office. Key ally Iran would be an option, although the assassination of former leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran in July suggests they may be at risk from Israel if based there. It would also not give them anything close to the same diplomatic channels to the West.

A more likely option would be Turkey. As a Nato member but also a Sunni majority state, it would give the group a base from which to operate in relative safety. Last April President Erdogan hosted then Hamas political chief Ismail Haniyeh and his delegation in Istanbul, where they talked about “what needs to be done to ensure adequate and uninterrupted delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza, and a fair and lasting peace process in the region".
The move would also most likely be welcomed by Ankara, which has often sought to position itself as a broker between east and west.
Key Hamas figures such as Osama Hamdan, Taher al-Nunu, and others frequently featured on news outlets have been staying in Istanbul for over a month.
Their extended presence in Turkey marks a departure from past visits, which were typically limited to brief stays.
It is thought the personal safety of Hamas leadership is now a major concern for the group, which saw two leaders killed in less than four months. As well as Haniyeh’s death in July, in October Israel killed Yahya Sinwar, the mastermind behind the 7 October Hamas attack on southern Israel.
According to the European Council of Foreign Relations, “Hamas has adopted a temporary model of collective leadership to mitigate the effect of future Israeli assassinations”.
H A Hellyer, a senior associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute (Rusi), told the BBC that nowhere “will give them protection from Israeli assassination attempts in the same way that being in Doha, where America has its largest military base in the region, did”.
The latest move comes as US officials appear increasingly frustrated with the approach the Israeli government has taken to ending the war. In October, the US Secretaries of State and Defense said if Israel did not allow more humanitarian aid into the territory by 12 November, they would face unspecified policy “implications”.
Last weekend a number of UN officials warned the situation in northern Gaza was “apocalyptic”. On Saturday the independent Famine Review Committee said there was a “strong likelihood that famine is imminent in areas”.
The relationship between President Joe Biden and Netanyahu has deteriorated over the course of the war in Gaza, with increasing pressure from Washington to improve the humanitarian situation for the Palestinians and find some sort of negotiated settlement.

But, according to Dr Hellyer, US attempts at negotiation have been fatally flawed.
“By setting red lines and allowing Netanyahu to cross them without consequence, the Biden administration effectively encouraged further impunity. I don’t think any of this will change in the next 10 weeks,” he said.
Any overtures have been repeatedly rejected by Netanyahu and his right-wing coalition, who will now also feel emboldened by the prospect of an incoming Donald Trump presidency.
While exactly what approach Trump will take to the region remains uncertain, he is thought to be more likely to allow Israel to act on its terms.
He has previously said Israel should “finish what they started” in Gaza. During his last term in the White House, he took a number of steps deemed highly favourable to Israel, including moving the US embassy to Jerusalem.
It has also been reported, however, that Trump has told Netanyahu that he wants to see an end to the fighting by the time he takes office.
Either way, it seems likely that the current US administration will have less influence over the government in Jerusalem.
They may therefore believe the best way to force some sort of deal is to apply pressure on Hamas. Whether it pays off may depend on whether Qatar, so long a reliable ally, decides to go along with it.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c774d4p2mx6o
 

Israeli strikes on north Lebanon and Gaza kill dozens, officials and rescuers say​

Israeli strikes on northern Lebanon and Gaza have killed dozens of people, rescuers and officials say, including a number of children.
The Lebanese health ministry said at least 23 people including seven children were killed in Almat near Byblos, to the north of the capital Beirut.
In northern Gaza the official Palestinian news agency Wafa and Gaza's Hamas-run civil defence agency said at least 30 people had been killed in an Israeli strike on a house in Jabalia. The civil defence said the dead included 13 children.
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has not commented on the strike in Lebanon. It said it struck a site in Jabalia where "terrorists were operating", steps had been taken to mitigate civilian harm and the details were under review.

The Lebanese health ministry said rescue workers were still searching the rubble after the strike in Almat.
Israel has escalated its campaign against Iran-backed Lebanese armed group Hezbollah. Its main focus had been southern Lebanon, aiming to weaken the group’s capacity to launch rockets across the border. But in recent weeks, operations have targeted cities and towns throughout Lebanon.
In a separate incident to the south, three medical workers were killed when an Israeli strike hit an Islamic Health Authority building in Adloun, the health ministry said.
The IDF said it had intercepted Hezbollah rockets on Saturday after the militant group launched 70 projectiles, according to Israel’s military.
Since the escalation of the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah seven weeks ago, at least 3,002 people have been killed and more than 1.2 million displaced across Lebanon, according to Lebanese authorities.

In Gaza, aid groups say Jabalia and other parts of northern Gaza have been under siege since early October when Israel launched a new ground offensive against the Palestinian armed group Hamas.
Dr Fadel Naim, director of the Al-Ahly Hospital in Gaza City, told AP news agency that his facility had received 17 bodies from Jabalia so far, including those of nine women, and the death toll was likely to rise.
Eyewitnesses described the Israeli strike as an "earthquake".
"We were just sitting peacefully. These are innocent citizens who don’t belong to any military organization or faction," eyewitness and relative to the victims Hamza Alloush told Reuters.
The house "was bombed over the residents’ heads without warning, which led to the martyrdom of everyone inside. Those who were lucky enough to survive were thrown onto the trees, onto the neighbours, and the remains are still scattered under the rubble", he said.
Videos and images showed multiple bodies wrapped in blankets in the back of cars and laid to the ground at a hospital.
Another strike in Gaza City killed a welfare ministry official and seven members of his family, including his wife and children, medics and relatives said.
Israel is facing a US deadline that expires within days to improve the humanitarian situation in Gaza or face potential restrictions on military cooperation.
The UN previously said the "darkest moment" of the war in Gaza was unfolding in the northern part of the territory.

On Saturday, Israel rejected warnings of famine in northern Gaza from global food security experts, saying the group relied on "partial, biased data and superficial sources with vested interests".
The independent Famine Review Committee (FRC) said there was a strong likelihood of imminent famine and that immediate action was required to ease a catastrophic situation.
Israel said it had increased aid efforts, including opening an additional crossing on Friday to get more aid into southern Gaza.
The IDF later said it had delivered 11 trucks of food, water and medical aid into Jabalia and Beit Hanoun on Thursday.
Meanwhile, efforts to reach a ceasefire have stalled, with Qatar suspending its work as a mediator until Hamas and Israel "show their willingness" to negotiate.

Israel launched its current military offensive in Gaza after Hamas' attack on 7 October 2023 that killed about 1,200 people in Israel and took 251 hostages back to Gaza.
Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry, whose figures the UN sees as reliable, has reported a death toll of more than 43,600 people since the start of the war. Many more bodies are believed to remain under the rubble of bombarded buildings.
In Lebanon, Israel went on the offensive against Hezbollah after almost a year of cross-border fighting sparked by the war in Gaza.
Israeli air strikes have eliminated most of the group’s leadership and caused widespread destruction in parts of southern and eastern Lebanon and Beirut’s southern suburbs - areas where Hezbollah has a strong presence.
Israeli authorities say more than 70 people have been killed by Hezbollah attacks in Israel and the occupied Golan Heights over the past year.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cd6v3zq2jvjo
 

Dozens detained after protesters defy ban in Amsterdam​

Dozens of pro-Palestinian demonstrators have been detained by police in Amsterdam after defying a ban on public protests in the Dutch capital.
Hundreds gathered in Dam Square on Sunday, calling for an end to the conflict in Gaza and expressing dissent towards the ban.
Demonstrations were temporarily banned by the mayor after Israeli football fans were targeted in so-called "hit-and-run" attacks on Thursday night after a match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Ajax Amsterdam.
Authorities say the attacks - which caused five people to be hospitalised - were motivated by antisemitism as the fans were sought out across the city.
Others have pointed to footage appearing to show some Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters chanting anti-Arab slogans and burning a Palestinian flag before the violence occurred.
The clashes came amid a rise in antisemitism globally since the start of the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas.
The violence - which led to at least 62 arrests - was condemned by leaders in Europe, the US and in Israel.
The outcry was exacerbated by the attacks occurring on the eve of the anniversary of Kristallnacht - Nazi pogroms against German Jews that took place in 1938.
Three-quarters of Jewish people in the Netherlands were murdered during the Holocaust in World War Two.
Amsterdam's Mayor Femke Halsema announced a ban on public assembly on Friday lasting at least until the end of the weekend, deeming the city a "high-risk security area".
But protesters on Sunday argued they should be free to voice their disapproval of Israel's actions in Gaza and the actions of the Maccabi supporters.

"This protest has nothing to do with antisemitism," Alexander van Stokkum, one of the demonstrators, told the AFP news agency on Sunday. "It is against Israeli hooligans who were destroying our city."
Others told a Reuters journalist: "We refuse to let the charge of antisemitism be weaponised to suppress Palestinian resistance."
The news agency reported that more than 100 people were detained for attending the protest. Police in Amsterdam confirmed there had been arrests, but have yet to say how many.
Following the protest ban, Dutch activist Frank van der Linde applied for an urgent permit so Sunday's demonstration could go ahead.
On X, he said that he wanted to protest what he described as "the genocide in Gaza", adding: "We will not let our right to demonstrate be taken away."
Mr Van der Linde was overruled by Amsterdam's district court, which wrote on Sunday that "the mayor has rightly determined that there is a ban on demonstrating in the city this weekend".
Dutch national newspaper De Telegraaf reports Mr Van der Linde was among those arrested.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx243z69w4no
 

US says Israel hasn't breached its law against blocking aid in Gaza​

The US says Israel has not breached American laws on blocking aid supplies, after a 30-day deadline it gave Israel to boost humanitarian aid access in Gaza or risk having some military assistance cut off lapsed.
Officials said on Tuesday that Israel has taken a number of steps to address its demands to surge supplies into Gaza, but added that more progress must be made.
State Department spokesman Vedant Patel cited the opening of a new land crossing, and deliveries resuming in the north - although he did not say any had entered the besieged Jabalia refugee camp.
Despite the US claims, the UN has warned that the amount of aid getting into Gaza is at its lowest level in a year.

A UN-backed report recently warned that there was an imminent likelihood of famine in northern Gaza, where hardly any aid has entered in the past month.
Joyce Msuya, the United Nations acting under secretary general for humanitarian affairs, said international crimes were being committed in Gaza.
Ms Msuya briefed council members at the United Nations on Tuesday, reporting that Israeli authorities were blocking humanitarian assistance from entering North Gaza, where fighting continues.
She said 75,000 people remain there with dwindling supplies.
Last month, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken gave Israel 30 days to ensure more aid trucks reached Gaza daily. That deadline expired on Tuesday.
A letter sent to the Israeli government demanded the country end the isolation of the besieged north, where aid groups warn that civilians are being starved amid Israel’s military offensive.
A group of eight humanitarian aid agencies said conditions had actually deteriorated since the letter was sent.
But the US reaction on Tuesday indicates that Washington will continue to supply weapons to its ally, despite growing warnings from aid groups about civilians being killed and displaced by Israel’s assault on the north.
The Israeli military, however, said it has been routing a Hamas resurgence in the region.
Israel says it has substantially increased the amount of aid getting into Gaza, and accuses aid agencies of failing adequately to distribute it.
In Beit Hanoun, which was besieged for more than a month, Ms Msuya said food and water reached shelters Monday only for Israeli soldiers to forcibly displace people from those areas Tuesday.
Ilze Kehris, assistant secretary general for human rights at the UN, said the pattern and frequency of Israel's attacks suggest systematic targeting of civilians.
Much of the death and destruction was caused by US weapons, given to Israel in order the help the fight Hamas.
Israel launched a campaign to destroy Hamas after the group's attack in southern Israel on 7 October 2023, which left about 1,200 people dead; 251 others were taken hostage.
Since then, more than 43,000 people have been killed in Gaza, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cvgej83z93qo
 
Thus, the genocide continues.
 
Doesn't the republican voting base also include a sizable bit of people who want the US to stop giving weapons/aid to Israel and get involved indirectly in its wars?
Then again, so does the democrat voting base.
 
I was thinking of (eg) the Tuckerites, afaik his show always had that line.
rwmsm lies about empire only slightly less than lwmsm.
 

Israeli military's 'massive' forced displacement in Gaza amounts to war crimes: new report​

Human Rights Watch says forced displacement widespread, systematic and part of state policy

Human Rights Watch says the "massive" and "deliberate" forced displacement of Palestinians in Gaza carried out by Israeli forces equates to war crimes and crimes against humanity, in a new report published Thursday.

In the report, the international non-governmental organization said it had collected evidence that suggested "the war crime of forcible transfer." It described the Israeli force's actions as "a grave breach of the Geneva Conventions and a crime under the Rome statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC)."

The report comes as Palestinians displaced from northern Gaza said Israeli forces had inflicted widespread destruction on their home districts in a more than month-long offensive — something Human Rights Watch (HRW) says is a "deliberate attempt" by Israel to create conditions that will make returning "not just difficult, but impossible" for many Palestinians.

"The Israeli government cannot claim to be keeping Palestinians safe when it kills them along escape routes, bombs so-called safe zones and cuts off food, water and sanitation," said Nadia Hardman, HRW refugee and migrant rights researcher.

"Israel has blatantly violated its obligation to ensure Palestinians can return home, razing virtually everything in large areas."

The report found that Israeli authorities' conduct has led to the displacement of roughly 1.9 million Palestinians, more than 90 per cent of the population of Gaza, and the widespread destruction of much of Gaza over the last 13 months.

Forced displacement across the Gaza Strip has been "widespread, and the evidence shows it has been systematic and part of a state policy," the report said.

"Such acts also constitute crimes against humanity," it said.

There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military or foreign ministry, but Israeli authorities have previously rejected such accusations and say their forces operate in compliance with international law.

Report latest in aid group warnings over Gaza​

The 154-page report is the latest in a series from aid groups and international bodies warning about the dire humanitarian situation in the war-ravaged enclave.

For the past month, Israeli troops have moved tens of thousands of people from areas in the north of the enclave as they have sought to destroy Hamas forces the military says have been reforming around the towns of Jabalia, Beit Lahiya and Beit Hanoun.

"Israeli forces have carried out deliberate, controlled demolitions of homes and civilian infrastructure, including in areas where they have apparent aims of creating 'buffer zones' and security 'corridors,' from which Palestinians are likely to be permanently displaced," the report said.

Adam Coogle, HRW's deputy director of the Middle East and North Africa division, said the forced displacement of Palestinians and mass destruction of some areas in Gaza amount to "ethnic cleansing."

Coogle said the organization is calling on governments to condemn the forced displacement and crimes against humanity, and to also adopt targeted sanctions and other measures and to halt weapons sales to Israel.

"We believe that the International Criminal Court prosecutor should investigate forced displacement in Gaza," he said.

Evacuation orders 'inconsistent' and 'inaccurate': report​

In the report, HRW said evacuation orders have been "inconsistent, inaccurate and frequently not communicated to civilians with enough time to allow evacuations, or at all," adding that the orders did not take into consideration the needs of people with disabilities.

"There is no plausible imperative military reason to justify Israel's mass displacement of nearly all of Gaza's population, often multiple times," it said. "Rather than ensuring civilians' security, military 'evacuation orders' have caused grave harm."

The law of armed conflict forbids the forcible displacement of civilian populations from occupied territory, unless necessary for the security of civilians or imperative military reasons. The report accused Israeli authorities of not evacuating civilians in Gaza for their security, saying they have not been secure during evacuations or on arrival at designated safe zones.

"Even where there is a military imperative that puts civilians at risk, what would otherwise be forcible transfer, will only be permitted as a lawful evacuation if Israel as the occupying power takes sufficient steps to safeguard civilians during their displacement and return them to their homes as soon as it is safe to do so," it added.

The report said Israel has as a result not met the requirements and "cannot plausibly claim" that the displacement in Gaza falls within the exemptions to allow lawful evacuation.

Israel invaded the Gaza Strip last year after the Hamas-led attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, which killed an estimated 1,200 people, according to Israeli authorities, and abducted more than 250 as hostages. An estimated 100 hostages remain in Gaza.

The Israeli campaign has killed more than 43,500 people, according to Gaza health authorities, and destroyed much of the enclave's infrastructure, forcing most of the 2.3 million population to move several times. The Palestinian civil emergency service estimates that the bodies of 10,000 people may be trapped under the rubble, which would take the reported death toll to more than 50,000.

Last week, the UN Human Rights Office said nearly 70 per cent of the fatalities it has verified for the first six months of the Gaza war were women and children.

Human Rights Watch said it interviewed 39 displaced Palestinians in Gaza, analyzed Israel's evacuation system, including 184 evacuation orders and satellite imagery confirming the widespread destruction, and verified videos and photographs of attacks on designated safe zones and evacuation routes.

The Israeli military has denied seeking to create permanent buffer zones, and Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said on Monday that Palestinians displaced from their homes in northern Gaza would be allowed to return at the end of the war.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/human-rights-watch-gaza-displacement-1.7383031
 

At least 15 rescue workers killed in Israeli strike in Lebanon​

An Israeli air strike on an emergency response centre in north-eastern Lebanon on Thursday killed at least 15 rescue workers, officials say, in one of the deadliest attacks of its kind involving Lebanese emergency responders in the war.
The strike in Douris, near the city of Baalbek, destroyed a building of the civil defence agency, which is linked to the Lebanese government and not affiliated with the Iranian-backed group Hezbollah. The regional governor, Bachir Khodr, said the victims included the city’s civil defence chief, Bilal Raad.
The Israeli military has not commented on the attack, which was described by the Lebanese health ministry as “barbaric”.
The Lebanese civil defence carries out emergency services including search and rescue work and fire-fighting response.

In the southern Nabatieh region, another Israeli air strike on Thursday destroyed the civil defence centre in the town of Arab Salim, killing six people, including five paramedics, the Lebanese state news agency NNA reported.
According to Lebanon’s health ministry, at least 192 emergency and health workers have been killed in Israeli air strikes across the country since the escalation of the conflict with Hezbollah in September.
The attacks come as Israel has intensified its air campaign across Lebanon in recent days, including on Beirut’s southern suburbs, where Hezbollah is based in the capital. The area was hit by air strikes for the fourth consecutive day on Friday following evacuation orders issued by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), which says it is targeting infrastructure linked to the group.
This comes amid renewed international efforts for a ceasefire, with American officials delivering the first official proposal of a deal to Lebanese authorities.

The Lebanese government says any agreement should be based on the United Nations Resolution 1701, which ended the 2006 war between Hezbollah and Israel. The resolution includes the removal of the group’s fighters and weapons in areas between the Blue Line - the unofficial frontier between Lebanon and Israel - and the Litani River, about 30km (20 miles) from the boundary with Israel.
A potential deal would likely include the deployment of additional troops of the Lebanese army to the area and a mechanism to monitor its implementation, although details remained unclear.
Israel, however, wants the right to act inside Lebanon if there is any violation of a deal. There are no signs that Hezbollah, or the Lebanese government, are willing to accept such a demand.
Hezbollah has been severely weakened after two months of intense air strikes that destroyed large parts of its infrastructure and killed many of its leaders. But after the initial shock, the group seems to have regrouped, according to analysts, and continues to carry out daily attacks on northern Israel, although not with the same intensity.
Speaking in Beirut during a visit of Ali Larijani, senior advisor to the Iranian Supreme Leader, Prime Minister Najib Mikati said the Lebanese government’s priority was to reach a ceasefire and implement Resolution 1701 in “its entirety, without any amendments or interpretations that differ from the content of the resolution and its provisions”. He added that negotiations to try to reach “an understanding” were continuing.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0mzkg7rleko
 

Trump victory a boon to Israeli settlers who hope to annex entire West Bank​

Israeli settlers welcomed Trump’s election. For Palestinians, it's another blot on an already bleak horizon

Supporters of Israel's decades-old settlement enterprise in the occupied Palestinian territories have been quick to welcome Donald Trump's recent U.S. election victory and what they clearly expect will be a boon to their aim of formally annexing the West Bank.

Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, himself a settler, was confident enough to put a date on the aspiration during a Monday news conference in Jerusalem.

"The year 2025 will, with God's help, be the year of sovereignty in Judea and Samaria," he said, using the Jewish biblical name for the West Bank.

Smotrich added he intends to work with "the new administration of President Trump, and with the international community" toward that goal.

For Palestinians still clinging to hope that the occupied territories including East Jerusalem will one day form the basis for a Palestinian state, it's one more thing to worry about on an already bleak horizon.

Dror Etkes, an Israeli researcher and anti-settlement activist, said the Palestinians are right to worry, given the rate of settlement expansion during Trump's first presidency along with the makeup of the current Israeli government.

Elected two years ago, the government is the most right-wing in Israel's history and includes extremist settlers in its cabinet.

"They're going to annex a very, very big part of the West Bank, I assume," said Etkes. "Where [Israeli settlements] are today and where they want Israelis to be in the future."

Israel captured East Jerusalem and the West Bank from Jordan in 1967. Successive Israeli governments since have allowed Jewish settlements to expand and flourish on Palestinian land.

The settlements are widely considered illegal under international law, although Israel disputes this.

Today, there are a half-million Jewish settlers in the West Bank alone, some living in large settlement blocs, others in smaller remote ones or in "outposts." Some settlers live there for economic reasons, others because they believe they have a divine right to the land.

Violence against Palestinians by extremist settlers has been on the rise in recent years, spiking even more in the wake of the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on Israel.

"Vicious. This is the word," said Etkes, describing what he calls a well-organized, well-funded campaign aimed in particular at Palestinian herding communities.

"Targeting one community after the other. And once you are getting rid of one community, you go to the next one. And to the next."

There have been more than 1,400 attacks, many of them increasingly violent, by Israeli settlers against Palestinians over the past year, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

Mohammad Hureini, a 20-year-old Palestinian activist in the village of At-Tuwani tries to ensure his father is never alone when out grazing their animals, he told CBC in a September interview at his family home.

"I've been really afraid to face settlers over the past period," he said. "People are becoming more and more crazy."

At-Tuwani lies south of Hebron and in the shadow of Ma'on, a settlement notorious for the extremists who live there and in a nearby outpost.

For nearly two decades, Palestinian children have had an Israeli army escort while on their way to school.

Hureini said At-Tuwani residents face near-daily harassment. "It became a crime if you water your trees. If you work your land," he said.

He said his father is accompanied by himself, one of his brothers, or Israeli and international "solidarity" volunteers when he's with his herd or tending to their land.

Hureini's cousin was shot in the stomach by a settler just days after violence began in October 2023. Video of the incident shows an armed settler opening fire and his cousin falling to the ground, while an armed figure in military fatigues looks on.

Zakaria Adra survived, but his attacker was never charged. It's not clear if the man in army fatigues was a soldier or not.

That's a growing problem in the West Bank, according to observers who say it's hard to differentiate between the Israel Defence Forces and what it called "local community defence forces," which the IDF trains and equips.

Local defence force numbers have swelled since October 2023. These are often made up of hardline settlers who have volunteered as reservists to replace Israeli troops normally stationed in the West Bank but are now fighting in Gaza or Lebanon.

Critics call them militias.

Who is a soldier, who is a settler?​

Hagit Ofran, settlement watch director for the Israeli organization Peace Now, said the blurred line is extremely problematic.

"With the way that settlers and soldiers are working together, and the fact that you cannot know if the person in front of you is a settler who is now on reserve duty and a soldier, or a settler who happened to have the uniform in his closet and is now wearing [it]."

CBC News journalists experienced the phenomenon first-hand while filming an interview with Hureini outside his family home in September.

An armed man dressed in military fatigues but with no recognizable insignia approached from the direction of the settlement outpost in a buggy-like vehicle, from which he emerged to demand our passports.

He refused to present identification or to accept our Israeli government-issued press cards in place of our passports. Soon, more armed men in military dress arrived.

Hureini surrendered his ID, and told us he knew the "settler-soldier" as someone who regularly harassed At-Tuwani residents.

A standoff ensued during which a Palestinian-Israeli colleague working with us was detained by the armed men and taken away in a vehicle.

After having been driven off in the direction of the settlement, he was eventually released on the side of a road where our crew was able to collect him. He'd been ordered to report to a police station the next day and forbidden from returning to the area for two weeks.

It was a mild taste of what many Palestinians are faced with every day.

Asked to comment on the incident, the IDF said the man demanding passports was an army reservist and was entitled to do so.

"The intensity of the harassment, and the distance that the army is keeping the Palestinians away from their lands became much bigger because of this new phenomenon of [the] regional defence units," said Peace Now's Ofran.

She said hundreds of Palestinian families have fled settler violence over the past year.

'You're always afraid'​

Residents of Zanuta, a herding village south of At-Tuwani, fled en masse in October 2023. This summer, an order from Israel's Supreme Court gave them permission to return.

But when they tried to move back in September, they found their homes had been destroyed along with the local council building and a school built with funding from the European Union.

The Israeli court order stated that they be given army and police protection, but residents say they didn't get it.

"You're always afraid," 52-year-old shepherd Shafik Suleiman told us in September, saying the settlers had come back to harass them right away. "If you'd come an hour ago you would have seen settlers here."

He showed us a video of a man driving his quad vehicle through their animals. He said the man was Yinon Levi, head of an outpost called the Meitarim farm located just across the valley from Zanuta.

Levi is one of 11 extremist settlers sanctioned by Canada, accused of inciting and perpetrating violence against Palestinians and their property.

Outposts are small settlements usually consisting of one or two structures or even tents. They are used by hard-liners as a base from which to extend control over more land.

Even Israel considers the outposts illegal — at least technically.

Palestinians and settlement watch groups say despite its own laws, the current Israeli government broadly supports them and will one day connect them to infrastructure including electricity and water.

Nearly 70 outposts have been green-lit for government funding over the past year according to settlement watch groups, a way of "regularizing" them. Meanwhile, 43 new outposts have been established.

In the end, the residents of Zanuta abandoned their attempt to repopulate their town. Even with the court order allowing them to return, they were not given permission to rebuild damaged buildings.

Coupled with ongoing threats from Meitarim farm, Zanuta's mayor said it was no longer sustainable.

"Unfortunately, the settlers still attack us," said Fayez Tell, adding the Oct. 7 attacks and the Gaza war that followed have given cover to Israelis determined to annex the West Bank.

"The settlers have ... permission to do anything," he said.

Back in At-Tuwani, Hureini says his chosen path remains one of activism, non-violent resistance to the theft of Palestinian land.

"Even though I'm still under the same, you know, rule as a man carrying a gun," he said. "Because this occupation doesn't [care] if you are having a gun or not. You are the same target.

"We have no power in our hand except to just be in the land, on the ground and let them see that we still will not go out from here."
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/settlers-west-bank-1.7385172
 
I fully expect Israel to annex the West Bank and and Gaza next year.
 
I don't, but only because they would have to give the palestinians there voting rights, which would end Israel as a jewish state.
More likely they will just eat up some more territory and continue as before.
The plan is just to force them out, and this can happen only if there is some bit left for them to be displaced to.
 
I don't, but only because they would have to give the palestinians there voting rights, which would end Israel as a jewish state.
More likely they will just eat up some more territory and continue as before.
The plan is just to force them out, and this can happen only if there is some bit left for them to be displaced to.
Palestinians are slowly getting out anyways (last I heard it took about 10k to get out and they've been showing up in the mediterranean islands), this is a formal genocide, it will be completed. It will never be forgotten, and Israel will fall... eventually. lol

 
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