[RD] War in Gaza News: Pas de Deux

Israeli reservists speak out against Gaza war as pressure on Netanyahu grows​

Israel's war in Gaza grinds on, but opposition is growing.

In recent weeks, thousands of Israeli reservists – from all branches of the military – have signed letters demanding that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government stop the fighting and concentrate instead on reaching a deal to bring back the remaining 59 hostages being held by Hamas.

Eighteen months ago, few Israelis doubted the war's logic: to defeat Hamas and return the hostages.

For many, the January ceasefire and subsequent return of more than 30 hostages raised hopes that the war might soon end.

But after Israel broke the ceasefire and returned to war in mid-March, those hopes were dashed.

"We came to the conclusion that Israel is going to a very bad place," Danny Yatom, a former head of the spy agency Mossad told me.

"We understand that what mainly bothers Netanyahu is his own interests. And in the list of priorities, his interests and the interests of having the government stable are the first ones, and not the hostages."

Many of those signing recent letters are, like Yatom, long time critics of the prime minister. Some were involved in the anti-government protests that preceded the outbreak of war on 7 October 2023 following Hamas's attack on Israel.

But Yatom says that's not why he decided to speak out.

"I signed my name and I am participating in the demonstrations not because of any political reason, but because of a national reason," he said.

"I am highly concerned that my country is going to lose its way."

The first open letter to be published, in early April, was signed by 1,000 air force reservists and retirees.

"The continuation of the war does not contribute to any of its declared goals," they wrote, "and will lead to the death of the hostages".

The signatories urged Israelis to follow their lead before time ran out on the estimated 24 hostages still thought to be alive in Gaza.

"Every day that passes is further risking their lives. Every moment of hesitation is a crying shame."

In the weeks since, similar letters have appeared from almost every branch of the military, including elite fighting and intelligence units, along with a number of decorated commanders.

More than 12,000 signatures all.

After 7 October, hundreds of thousands of Israeli reservists answered the call, eager to serve.

But now, more and more are refusing, with reports suggesting that reserve attendance has dropped to as little as 50-60%.

For a military that depends heavily on reservists to fight its wars, it's a looming crisis on a scale not seen since Israel's first Lebanon war in 1982.

In a leafy Jerusalem park, I met "Yoav" (not his real name), an infantry reservist who asked not to be identified.

Yoav served in Gaza last summer but said he wouldn't do it again.

"I had the feeling that I needed to go to help my brothers and sisters," he told me.

"I believed I was doing something good. Complicated but good. But now, I don't see it in the same way anymore."

The government's determination to keep fighting Hamas, while hostages risk death in the tunnels of Gaza, Yoav said, was misplaced.

"We are very strong and we can beat Hamas, but it's not about beating Hamas," he said. "It's about losing our country."

During his time in Gaza, Yoav told me, he tried to be "the best moral soldier that a man can be".

But the longer the war goes on, critics say, the harder it is for Israel to claim, as government officials often do, that its military is the most moral army in the world.

In a recent column in the left of centre newspaper Haaretz, the retired general Amiram Levin said it was time for soldiers – starting with senior commanders - to think about disobeying orders.

"The risk of being dragged into war crimes and suffering a fatal blow to the Israel Defense Forces and our social ethos," he wrote, "make it impossible to stand idly by".

Some of Israel's critics, including those who have brought cases before the International Criminal Court and International Court of Justice, argue that such lines have already been crossed.

Netanyahu has lashed out at the protesters, dismissing their concerns as "propaganda lies", spread by "a small handful of fringe elements – loud, anarchist and disconnected pensioners, most of whom haven't served in years".

But polls suggest the protest letters reflect a growing public conviction: that the release of the remaining hostages should come before everything.

In Tel Aviv, where noisy anti-war demonstrations have been held for well over a year, images of the hostages are held aloft, while other protestors sit on the road, cradling pictures of Palestinian children killed during the war.

Amid the row generated by the letters, such emotive displays appear to have rattled the authorities.

On 20 April, the police briefly told protesters that "pictures of children or babies from Gaza" would not be permitted, along with posters displaying the words "genocide" or "ethnic cleansing".

Following expressions of outrage from the organisers, the police quickly backed down.

Meanwhile, the prime minister continues to speak of his determination to defeat Hamas.

Military pressure, Netanyahu continues to insist, is the only way to bring the hostages home.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/crldw5gklrro
 

Hamas says Gaza talks pointless while Israel continues 'starvation war'​

A senior Hamas official has said the armed group is not interested in further talks on a new Gaza ceasefire and hostage release deal while Israel continues what he called its "starvation war".

Israel cut off all humanitarian aid from entering Gaza nine weeks ago and later resumed its military offensive, saying it was putting pressure on Hamas to release hostages.

But Bassem Naim said there was "no point in any negotiations" while the blockade remained in place.

His comments came after Israel's security cabinet approved an expanded offensive which could see the forced displacement of most of Gaza's 2.1 million population and occupation of all of the Palestinian territory indefinitely.

Israel also intends to replace the current aid delivery and distribution system with one channelled through private companies and military hubs.

The UN's humanitarian office has rejected that idea, saying it does not live up to fundamental humanitarian principles and "appears to be a deliberate attempt to weaponize the aid".

On Monday, the Israeli military's spokesman said its expanded ground offensive in Gaza would seek to bring home the remaining 59 hostages, up to 24 of whom are believed to be alive, and achieve the "dismantling and decisive defeat of the Hamas regime".

The operation would take place on a "wide scale" and involve "the movement of the majority of the Gaza Strip's population - in order to protect them in a Hamas-free zone", he added.

An Israeli official briefed the media that the offensive would also include "holding the territories, moving the Gazan population south for its defence, [and] denying Hamas the ability to distribute humanitarian supplies".

A second official said it would not be implemented until after US President Donald Trump's visit to the region next week, providing what he called "a window of opportunity" to Hamas to agree a new ceasefire and hostage release deal.

But Bassem Naim's comments on Tuesday seemed to counter that.

"There is no point in any negotiations or engagement with new proposals while [Israel] continues its starvation war against our people in the Gaza Strip - a war that the international community, including UN institutions, has deemed a war crime in itself," he said.

Hamas also put out a separate statement telling Israeli ministers that their approval of the expanded offensive represented "an explicit decision to sacrifice" Israeli hostages.

UN Secretary General António Guterres warned that expanded Israeli ground operations and a prolonged military presence would "inevitably lead to countless more civilians killed and the further destruction of Gaza".

France's Foreign Minister, Jean-Noël Barrot, said Israel's plans were "unacceptable" and that its government was "in violation of humanitarian law".

In Washington, Trump said the US would help supply food to people in Gaza, without going into details.

"People are starving and we're going to help them get some food," he said. "Hamas is making it impossible because they're taking everything that's brought in."

Israel cut off all deliveries of aid and other supplies on 2 March and resumed its offensive on 18 March after the collapse of a two-month ceasefire that saw 33 Israeli hostages released in exchange for about 1,900 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.

Israel has also accused Hamas of stealing and storing aid - an allegation the group has denied.

But aid agencies have warned that mass starvation is imminent unless the blockade ends.

The UN and its humanitarian partners have said Israeli authorities are seeking to shut down the existing aid distribution system run by them and are asking them to agree to deliver supplies "through Israeli hubs under conditions set by the Israeli military".

Israeli Army Radio reported on Tuesday that Israel was proposing to distribute aid from three distribution centres in the southern governorate of Rafah, which is currently covered by an Israeli evacuation order and cut off from the rest of the territory by a new military corridor.

It said a representative from each family in Gaza would be allowed to go to the centres to receive a week's supply of food - estimated to be about 70kg (154lb) on average - in order to prevent starvation. They would be screened to ensure Hamas members did not enter.

The report said the distribution would be managed by American organisations and private companies, rather than Israeli troops. It added that aid would not be distributed anywhere else in Gaza, which might hasten the movement of the population southwards.

A spokesman for the UN Office for Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said the Israeli plan "appears designed to further control and restrict supplies, which is the opposite of what is needed", adding that aid should never be used as a way of forcing populations to move.

Jens Laerke told a news conference in Geneva that the UN would not co-operate with the plan because it would "not live up to the core fundamental humanitarian principles of impartiality, neutrality, and independent delivery of aid".

"Impartiality means aid is provided on needs alone, not based on trying to get people to go somewhere," he said. "Then neutral and independent: it is extremely important that [those receiving aid] see a neutral provider that they have nothing to fear from."

The UN has said Israel is obliged under international law to ensure food and medical supplies for Gaza's population. Israel has said it is complying with international law and there is no aid shortage because thousands of lorry loads entered during the ceasefire.

One Palestinian man in Gaza said he believed Israel's proposal was "camouflage" and that it "has no intention of allowing aid into" the territory.

"This is the basic principle Israel is working on - to prolong the blockade until Gaza reaches an aggravated stage of famine," he told BBC Arabic's Gaza Today programme.

But another man said his "first and last concern" was receiving the supplies his family needed to survive, adding: "What really matters to us is that we want to live, eat, and go on with life."

The Israeli military launched a campaign to destroy Hamas in response to an unprecedented cross-border attack on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.

At least 52,615 people have been killed in Gaza since then, including 2,507 since the Israeli offensive resumed, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.

Health officials reported that Israeli strikes killed at least 13 people across Gaza on Tuesday.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cvgq22lzn3no
 

Zionists seething (though knowing Trump we will change our minds and resume bombing before the end of the week)
Seat of my pants observations:

I think it’s an interesting strategy if it also give us some leverage when dealing with Israel, Iran, and Saudi Arabia. China has been moving in on trying to form a rapprochement between SA-Iran, and if we throw out a limited line to Teheran to say “hey, we’re flexible on some things,” that means Iran isn’t tied necessarily to the Sino-Russian axis, and Saudi Arabia is going to have to decide if they really want future U.S. support and will have to make concessions in order to swing us towards them. Israel too needs some pressure put on it, though I would start with their secret tech transfers to Peking of high-tech military components.

I like a more Washingtonian approach of not taking sides, with the proviso that unless there is a very material threat, our policy can be to work as a moderating partner that is neither in the pockets of the Israelis or the Gulf monarchies.
 

Israeli forces close UN-run schools in East Jerusalem​

Armed Israeli security forces have forced the closure of three schools run by the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (Unrwa) in Israeli-annexed East Jerusalem.

Hundreds of Palestinian students were sent home from the schools in Shuafat refugee camp just after classes began on Thursday morning.

Unrwa's Commissioner-General, Philippe Lazzarini, said Israeli authorities were denying children their basic right to learn and accused them of a "blatant disregard of international law".

An Israeli ban on Unrwa took effect earlier this year and Israel accuses the agency of being infiltrated by Hamas. Unrwa denies this claim and insists on its impartiality.

Videos showed girls in uniform hugging each other outside one school in Shuafat following the arrival of Israeli forces outside.

A closure order fixed to the wall of the school read: "It will be prohibited to operate educational institutions, or employ teachers, teaching staff or any other staff, and it will be forbidden to accommodate students or allow the entry of students into this institution."

Unrwa said that more than 550 pupils aged six to 15 were present and that one of its staff members was detained, in what its director in the occupied West Bank called "a traumatising experience for young children who are at immediate risk of losing their access to education".

The agency said that Israeli police were also deployed at three other schools in East Jerusalem, forcing them to send their students home too.

"Storming schools and forcing them shut is a blatant disregard of international law," Philippe Lazzarini wrote on X. "These schools are inviolable premises of the United Nations."

He added: "By enforcing closure orders issued last month, the Israeli authorities are denying Palestinian children their basic right to learn.

"Unrwa schools must continue to be open to safeguard an entire generation of children."

The Palestinian Authority, which governs parts of the West Bank not under Israeli control, said the move was a "violation of children's right to education".

The British consulate in Jerusalem said the UK, EU, Norway, Switzerland, Turkey and Japan strongly opposed the closure orders issued against the Unrwa schools and stood "in solidarity with students, parents, and teachers".

"Unrwa has operated in East Jerusalem under its UN General Assembly mandate since 1950. Israel is obliged under international humanitarian law to facilitate the proper working of all institutions devoted to the education of children," they added.

Last year, Israel's parliament passed laws forbidding contact between Israeli officials and Unrwa, as well as banning activity by the agency in Israeli territory.

Israel captured East Jerusalem, along with the rest of the West Bank, in the 1967 Middle East war.

It effectively annexed East Jerusalem in 1980 in a move not recognised by most of the international community, and sees the whole city as its capital.

Palestinians see East Jerusalem as the capital of their hoped-for future state.

Approximately 230,000 Israeli settlers currently live in East Jerusalem alongside 390,000 Palestinians.

Most of the international community considers the settlements built there and elsewhere in the West Bank to be illegal under international law - a position supported by an advisory opinion from the International Court of Justice (ICJ) last year - although Israel disputes this.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cqxej00w3wno
 

Israel denying food to Gaza is 'weapon of war', UN Palestinian refugee agency head tells BBC​

How do you measure misery? For journalists the usual way is to see it, to feel it, to smell it.

Beleaguered Palestinian colleagues in Gaza are doing that, still doing invaluable reporting at great risk to themselves. More than 200 have been killed doing their jobs.

Israel does not allow international journalists into Gaza.

Denied the chance of eyewitness reporting – one of the best tools of the job – we can study, from a distance, the assessments of aid organisations operating in Gaza.
Pascal Hundt, deputy director of operations at the International Committee of the Red Cross said last week that civilians in Gaza faced "an overwhelming daily struggle to survive the dangers of hostilities, cope with relentless displacement, and endure the consequences of being deprived of urgent humanitarian assistance."

He added: "This situation must not—and cannot—be allowed to escalate further."

But it might, if Israel continues the plunge deeper into war that resumed on 18 March when it broke a two-month ceasefire with a massive series of air strikes.

Israel had already sealed the gates of Gaza. Since the beginning of March, it has blocked all shipments of humanitarian aid, including food and medical supplies.

The return to war ended any chance of moving on to the ceasefire's proposed second phase, which Israel and Hamas had agreed would end with the release of all the remaining hostages in exchange for a full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza.

That was unacceptable to the prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, and the ultra-nationalist religious extremists who keep him in power.

They want Gaza's Palestinians to be replaced by Jewish settlers. They threatened to topple Netanyahu's government if he did not go back to war, and the end of Netanyahu's political career would bring the day of reckoning for his part in Israel's failure to prevent the deadly Hamas attacks on 7 October 2023. It might also force a conclusion in his long trial on corruption charges.

Prime Minister Netanyahu is now promising a new "intense" offensive into Gaza in the days after President Donald Trump finishes his swing through the wealthy Arab oil monarchies in the Gulf later this week.

The offensive includes a plan to displace massive numbers of Palestinian civilians on top of waves of artillery, air strikes and death. "To displace" is a cold verb. It means families having only handfuls of minutes to flee for their lives, from an area that might be hit immediately to one that might be hit later. Hundreds of thousands have done so repeatedly since the war began.

Gaza was one of the most overcrowded places on earth before the war. Israel's plan is to force as many Gazans as possible into a tiny area in the south, near the ruins of the town of Rafah, which has been almost entirely destroyed.

Before that happens, the UN humanitarian office estimates that 70% of Gaza is already effectively off limits to Palestinians. Israel's plan is to leave them in an even smaller area. The UN and leading aid groups reject Israeli claims that Hamas steals and controls food that comes into Gaza. They have refused to cooperate with a scheme proposed by Israel and the US that would use private security firms, protected by Israeli troops, to distribute basic rations.

Far from Gaza, in London, I talked to Philippe Lazzarini, the commissioner-general of Unrwa, the UN agency that supports Palestinian refugees. He told me that he was running out of words "to describe the misery and the tragedy affecting the people in Gaza. They have been now more than two months without any aid".

"Starvation is spreading, people are exhausted, people are hungry... we can expect that in the coming weeks if no aid is coming in, that people will not die because of the bombardment, but they will die because of the lack of food. This is the weaponisation of humanitarian aid."

If words are not enough, look at the most authoritative data-driven assessment of famine and food emergencies in the regular reports issued by Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, or IPC. It is a joint venture by UN agencies, aid groups and governments that measures whether a famine is happening.

The latest IPC update says Gaza is close to famine. But it says that the entire population, more than two million people, almost half of whom are children, is experiencing acute food insecurity. In plain English, that means they are being starved by Israel's blockade.

The IPC says that 470,000 Gazans, 22% of the population, are in a classification it calls "Phase 5 – catastrophe." The IPC defines it as a condition in which "at least one in five households experience an extreme lack of food and face starvation resulting in destitution, extremely critical levels of acute malnutrition and death."

In practical terms, the phase five classification, the most acute used by the IPC, estimates that "71,000 children and more than 17,000 mothers will need urgent treatment for acute malnutrition".

Thousands of tons of the food, medical aid and humanitarian supplies that they need are sitting only a few miles away, on the other side of the border in Egypt.

In London I asked Mr Lazzarini whether he agreed with those who have accused Israel of denying food and humanitarian aid to civilians as a weapon of war.

"I have absolutely no doubt," he said, "that this is what we have witnessed during this last 19 months, especially during this last two months. That's a war crime. The quantification will come from the ICJ [International Court of Justice] not from me, but what I can say, what we see, what we observe, food and humanitarian assistance is indeed being used to meet the political or military objective in the context of Gaza."

I asked Mr Lazzarini whether the blockade, on top of a year and half of war and destruction, might amount to genocide. That is the accusation against Israel levelled by South Africa and other states at the ICJ in The Hague.

"Listen, by any account, the destruction is massive. The number of people who have been killed is huge and certainly underestimated. We have seen the systematic destruction also of a school, of a health centre. People have been constant pinballs within Gaza, moving all the time. So there is absolutely no doubt that we are talking about massive atrocities. Genocide? It could end up to genocide. There are many elements which could go in this direction."

Israel's defence minister Israel Katz has made no secret of Israel's tactics. Last month Katz said that the blockade was a "main pressure lever" to secure victory over Hamas and to get the all the hostages out. The National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir agreed. He wrote that: "The cessation of humanitarian aid is one of the main levers of pressure on Hamas. The return of aid to Gaza before Hamas gets on its knees and releases all of our hostages would be a historic mistake."

Netanyahu's plans for another offensive, and the remarks made by Katz, Ben-Gvir and others, horrified Israeli families with hostages still inside Gaza. The Hostages and Missing Families Forum which represents many of them, said minister Katz was pushing an "illusion... Israel is choosing to seize territory before the hostages."

Dissident Israeli military reservists also protested, saying that they were being forced to fight again not for Israeli security but for the political survival of the Israeli government. In the air force reserve, 1,200 pilots signed an open letter saying that prolonging the war served mainly "political and personal interests and not security ones". Netanyahu blamed a small group of "bad apples" for the open letter.

For many months Netanyahu and his government have also accused Mr Lazzarini of lying. One official report posted online in January of this year was headed "Dismantling Unrwa Chief Lazzarini's Falsehoods". It claimed that he had "consistently made false statements which have profoundly misinformed the public debate on this issue". Unrwa, Israel says, has been infiltrated and exploited by Hamas to an unprecedented degree. It says some Unrwa employees took part in the attacks of 7 October.

Mr Lazzarini denies the personal accusations directed at him by Israel and the broader ones aimed at Unrwa. He says Unrwa investigated 19 staff named by Israel and concluded nine of them may have a case to answer. All 19 were suspended. Mr Lazzarini said that since then Unrwa had received "hundreds of allegations from the State of Israel. Each time, as a rule-based organisation, we keep asking for substantiated information". He said they had never received it.

All wars are political, and none more than the ones between Israel and the Palestinians. The war engages and enrages the outside world as well the belligerents.

Israel argues that self-defence justifies its actions since 7 October 2023 when Hamas, Islamic Jihad and others attacked Israel, killed around 1,200 people, mostly Israeli civilians, and took 251 others hostage. Any other government, it says, would have done the same.

Palestinians and an increasingly concerned and outraged chorus of states, including some of Israel's key European allies, say that does not justify the continuation of the most devastating assault on Palestinians since the war of 1948, when Israel gained its independence, which Palestinians call "the catastrophe".

Even President Trump shows signs of distancing himself from Benjamin Netanyahu, saying that the people of Gaza must be fed.

The allegation that the total denial of food to Gazan civilians is more evidence of an Israeli genocide against Palestinians has outraged Benjamin Netanyahu, his government and many Israeli citizens. It produced rare political unity in Israel. The leader of the opposition Yair Lapid, normally a stern critic of Netanyahu, condemned "a moral collapse and a moral disaster" at the ICJ.

Genocide is defined as the destruction, in whole or in part, of a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group. The International Criminal Court (ICC), a separate body, has issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu and his former defence minister on war crimes charges, which they reject. The three Hamas leaders who were also the subject of ICC warrants have all been killed by Israel.

It is not too soon to think about the longer-term impact of this devastating war, even though its end is not in sight. Mr Lazzarini told me that "in the coming years we will realise how wrong we have been… on the wrong side of the history. We have under our watch let a massive atrocity unfold."

It started, he said, with the Hamas attacks on Israel on the 7 October: "The largest killing of Israeli and Jewish in the region since World War II" had been followed by a "massive" military response by Israel.

It was, he said, "disproportionate, basically almost leading to the annihilation of an entire population in their homeland... I think there is a collective responsibility from the international community, the level, the passivity, the indifference being shown until now, the lack of political, diplomatic, economic action. I mean, it's absolutely monstrous, especially in our countries where we have said 'never again'."

Ahead may be an attempt to realise Donald Trump's dangerous fantasy of Gaza as the Dubai of the Mediterranean, rebuilt and owned by America and without Palestinians. It has given shape to cherished dreams of Israeli extremists who threaten of the removal of Palestinians from the land between the river Jordan and the Mediterranean.

Whatever lies ahead, it will not be peace.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx27dzv7znpo
 

Deadly Israeli strikes target 2 separate Khan Younis hospitals in 1 day​

Airstrikes at European Hospital, Nasser Medical Complex kill 18, part of mission targeting Hamas, IDF says

After a deadly attack on the European Hospital in Khan Younis Tuesday, patients who managed to escape and people trying to find loved ones were forced to navigate huge craters marring the medical centre's courtyard, as mangled slabs of cracked concrete jutted up from the street in every direction.

The craters were the result of nine missiles fired at the hospital by Israel, killing at least 16 people and wounding 70 others, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. It was the second Israeli attack of the day targeting hospitals in the Gaza Strip, after an earlier airstrike hit the Nasser Medical Complex, also in Khan Younis, killing two patients, including a well-known journalist.

Some patients at the European Hospital were wheeled out of the building on gurneys while others leaned on people helping them limp away as members of the civil defence conducted rescue operations.

Rasmiya Al-Saleh sat on a gurney in the middle of the street. The visibly shaken 45-year-old was wrapped in blue and white blankets, leaning against a bundle of red blankets that held her meagre belongings, as she asked passersby to find her a car. She was at the hospital to have someone look at her broken leg when the missile strike happened.

"They told me to get out," she told CBC News freelance videographer Mohamed El Saife. "They didn't examine me or do any tests or anything."

Abdul Karim Al-Khamis, 35, was inside the hospital with his father, who was waiting to be evacuated abroad for treatment, when they heard a loud explosion and realized they were under attack.

"There are people in the ICU, there are people in the rooms," he told CBC News from the damaged courtyard where many people milled about looking for ambulances or cars to take them away from the destruction.

"It's the only hospital in the south. Where can we go?"

In a statement posted to Telegram, the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) said it had conducted a "precise" strike to hit a "Hamas command center" beneath the European Hospital. Hamas denies exploiting hospitals and civilian properties for military purposes.

Journalist killed in Nasser Hospital strike​

The Gaza Health Ministry said two patients were killed in the earlier attack on Nasser Medical Complex, including Hassan Aslih, a well-known Palestinian journalist who was recovering there from an earlier strike.

Israel had accused Aslih of taking part in the Oct. 7, 2023 attack, and said he had documented and uploaded footage of "looting, arson and murder" during the Hamas-led incursion into southern Israel that killed about 1,200 people and saw some 250 taken hostage, according to Israeli tallies. Israel's responding ground and air invasion has killed more than 52,000 people, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.

The IDF said in a statement that it struck "significant Hamas terrorists who were operating from within a command and control center" located at the Nasser Hospital. It didn't name them.

Ahmed Siyyam, a Gaza civil emergency service member, told Reuters the attack hit the third floor of the Nasser hospital, where dozens of patients and injured were being treated.

Reuters footage showed heavy damage to one of the hospital buildings, including to the medical equipment and beds inside.

"I came to the hospital not knowing whether to mourn the martyrs, treat the patients and injured, or deal with the staff who no longer feel safe," said Atef Al-Hout, the director of Nasser Hospital.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/gaza-israel-hospitals-target-1.7534211
 

Canada, Britain, France threaten action if Israel does not stop military offensive and lift aid restrictions​

Israel to 'control all parts' of Gaza, Netanyahu says as aid trucks wait to enter territory

The leaders of Canada, Britain and France warned on Monday that their countries would take action if Israel does not stop a renewed military offensive in Gaza and lift aid restrictions.

"The Israeli government's denial of essential humanitarian assistance to the civilian population is unacceptable and risks breaching international humanitarian law," a joint statement released by the prime minister's office said.

"We oppose any attempt to expand settlements in the West Bank.... We will not hesitate to take further action, including targeted sanctions."

The statement came after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Monday that Israel would control the whole of Gaza despite mounting international pressure that forced it to lift a blockade on aid supplies that left the enclave on the brink of famine.

The Israeli military, which announced the start of a new operation on Friday, warned residents in the southern city of Khan Younis on Monday to evacuate to the coast immediately as it prepared "an unprecedented attack."

"There is huge fighting going on, intense and huge. We are going to control all parts of Gaza," Netanyahu said in a video message. In it, he pledged to achieve "complete victory" with both the release of the 58 hostages still held by Hamas in Gaza and the destruction of the Palestinian militant group.

Even as the military warned of the attack, Reuters reporters saw aid trucks heading toward northern Gaza after Netanyahu was forced to agree to allow a limited amount of aid into Gaza in response to global concern at the reports of famine.

Netanyahu said U.S. senators he has known for years as supporters of Israel, "our best friends in the world," were telling him the scenes of hunger were draining vital support and bringing Israel close to a "red line, to a point where we might lose control."

"It is for that reason, in order to achieve victory, we have to somehow solve the problem," he said, in a message apparently addressed to far-right hardliners in his government who have insisted aid be denied to Gaza.

The United Nations has long said Gaza needs at least 500 trucks of aid and commercial goods every day. The World Food Program has said more than 116,000 metric tonnes of food – enough to feed one million people for up to four months — was standing ready to be brought in.

However, it remained unclear how much aid would be allowed in and how it would be distributed before the launch of a U.S.-sponsored plan to employ private contractors to distribute aid, which the United Nations and other aid groups have rejected.

Aid cleared to enter a 'drop in the ocean': UN chief​

The Israeli military said five trucks had entered Gaza on Monday, although UN aid officials said nine trucks had been cleared to enter, a quantity UN aid chief Tom Fletcher described as "a drop in the ocean."

Israeli military spokesperson Nadav Shoshani said it would take time to create a situation where hundreds of trucks were able to enter daily, but added: "I think that's also a decision for the political echelon of how many will come in," he told reporters.

Israeli strikes have killed more than 500 people in the past eight days as the military campaign has intensified, with at least 40 people killed on Monday, according to local medical workers.

One of the strikes killed seven at a school housing displaced families in Nuseirat, central Gaza, and three in a house in nearby Deir Al-Balah, local health authorities said.

Militant leader killed in undercover raid​

The military said it hit 160 targets, including anti-tank positions, underground infrastructure and a weapons storage point as part of what it has dubbed Operation Gideon's Chariots.

On Monday, residents and medics said an Israeli undercover force disguised as displaced persons killed Ahmed Sarhan, a commander of the Popular Resistance Committees, a militant group allied with Hamas in a raid in the city of Khan Younis.

Residents said Sarhan fought the force before he was killed and that the Israelis detained his wife and children before retreating in a bus toward the eastern border with Gaza under a cover of fire from planes.

"As you see, they entered, opened a hole in the wall, entered the house and executed the father and took an 11-year-old child and his mother, and left," said an eyewitness, Mohammed Sarhan, referring to the PRC commander.

Ceasefire talks appear to wane​

As the fighting has intensified, hopes of a ceasefire appeared to be waning.

The White House said U.S. President Donald Trump continued to engage with both sides. But sources on both sides said there had been no progress in a new round of indirect ceasefire talks between Israel and Hamas in Qatar.

Former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant, who left the government last year after falling out with Netanyahu, said the fact Hamas remained in Gaza represented a "resounding failure" for the Israeli campaign and reflected the government's failure to plan for the future of the enclave.

Netanyahu said ceasefire discussions touched on a fresh truce and hostage deal as well as a proposal to end the war in return for the exile of Hamas militants and the demilitarization of Gaza — terms previously rejected by Hamas.

Senior Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri blamed Israel for the lack of progress at the talks and said escalating its offensive would be "a death sentence" for remaining hostages.

Israel's ground and air war has devastated Gaza, displacing nearly all its residents and killing more than 53,000 people, many of them civilians, according to Gaza health authorities.

The war erupted after Hamas-led militants attacked Israeli communities near Gaza's border on Oct. 7, 2023, killing about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and seizing 251 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/israel-gaza-aid-military-1.7538495
 

Gaza baby sent back to war zone after open-heart surgery in Jordan​

In a makeshift tent in al-Shati refugee camp, in the north of the Gaza Strip, 33-year-old Enas Abu Daqqa holds her tiny baby daughter Niveen in her arms. A fan hums constantly behind her to break the morning heat.

Enas worries that Niveen's health might deteriorate at any point. She is only seven months old, and was born during the war with a hole in her heart.

As her mother explains how she struggled to keep her alive amid a collapsing health system in Gaza, Niveen, with her big brown eyes and tiny frame, cries and fidgets.

"The war has been very tough for her," Enas tells the BBC. "She wasn't gaining any weight, and she would get sick so easily."

Niveen's only chance to survive was to receive urgent care outside Gaza. And in early March, Jordan made that possible.

As a ceasefire between Hamas and Israel held, 29 sick Gazan children, including Niveen, were evacuated to Jordan to receive treatment in the country's hospitals. Her mother and older sister were brought out with her.

They were the first children evacuated to Jordan after King Abdullah announced plans to treat 2,000 sick Gazan children in hospitals there during a visit to the US the previous month. These evacuations were co-ordinated with the Israeli authorities who do background checks on the parents travelling with their children.

Doctors in Jordan performed successful open-heart surgery on Niveen, and she was slowly beginning to recover.

But about two weeks into the children's treatment, the ceasefire in Gaza collapsed when Israel resumed its offensive against Hamas, and the war was back on, in full force.

For weeks, Enas followed the news from her daughter's hospital room in Jordan, worrying about the safety of her husband and other children who were still in Gaza.

And then late at night on 12 May, the Jordanian authorities told Enas they were sending her and her family back to Gaza the following day, as they said Niveen had completed her treatment.

Enas was shocked.

"We left while there was a ceasefire. How could they send us back after the war had restarted?" she says, frustrated.

Enas is now reunited with her husband and children in Gaza. They say Niveen did not complete her treatment before she was sent back, and they worry that her condition could get worse.

"My daughter is in a very bad condition that could lead to her death," says Enas. "She has heart disease. Sometimes she suffocates and turns blue. She can't continue living in a tent."

On 13 May, Jordan announced that it had sent 17 children back to Gaza "after completing their treatment". And the next day, a new group of four sick children were evacuated from Gaza to Jordan.

The Jordanian authorities have told the BBC that all children sent back were in good medical condition, rejecting claims that they did not complete their treatment.

The authorities noted that the kingdom was clear from the beginning about its intention to send the children back once they were better, adding that this was necessary "for logistical and political reasons".

"Jordan's policy is to keep Palestinians on their land, and not to contribute to their displacement outside their territory," a foreign ministry statement sent to the BBC said. The return of the 17 children would also allow for more sick children to be evacuated from Gaza, it added.

But an official in the Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza told the BBC the children still needed care, and that their return to the war endangered their lives.

'Forced back'​

This is exactly what worries 30-year-old Nihaya Bassel.

Her son, Mohammed, who is just over a year old, suffers from asthma and serious food allergies. She believes her son did not receive the full treatment he deserved.

"We're back to living in fear and hunger, surrounded by death," Nihaya says as her eyes fill up with tears. "How can I get this child the milk that he needs to drink? He doesn't eat even though he's just over a year old, because if he eats, he will immediately get sick."

Israel imposed a strict siege on the Gaza Strip 11 weeks ago, cutting off all supplies including food, medicine, shelter and fuel. It said this and the resumed offensive were meant to put pressure on Hamas to release the hostages still held in Gaza.

International organisations warn that Palestinians living there are at "critical risk of famine". On Monday, Israel announced it would allow a "minimal" amount of food into Gaza following US pressure. The UN welcomed the crossing of five lorries carrying aid including baby food, but called it "a drop in the ocean".

Nihaya is now living in a small, tented area in al-Shati camp with her brother-in-law's family. Her husband and three other children had fled there from elsewhere in northern Gaza, escaping heavy Israeli strikes as the war restarted while she was in Jordan.

"I left my children here. I left my husband here. They went through hell while I was away," Nihaya says as she bursts into tears.

"My mind and heart were constantly with them in Gaza while I was in Jordan. All of this so that my child could get treated. Why force me back before finishing his treatment?"

As she speaks, the sounds of Israeli surveillance drones drown out her voice. Her toddler runs around next to her, at times almost stumbling into a smoky open fire in the tent that the family uses for cooking meals.

She struggles to contain her anger as she recounts her journey back to Gaza.

"We didn't leave [till] 04:00, and didn't arrive in Gaza till 22:45," she says. As they reached the border crossing, Nihaya says they were harassed by Israeli security forces.

"They started cursing at us. They threatened to beat us. They took all our money. They took our mobile phones, our bags and everything," she says, noting that they confiscated all the bags of anyone who had cash on them.

Enas said the same thing happened to her, noting that her medical supplies were confiscated too.

The Israeli army told the BBC that they confiscated "undeclared cash exceeding normal limits" from Gazans returning from Jordan due to suspicions that they would be "used for terrorism within Gaza". It notes that the money is being held while circumstances are investigated.

It has not given a reason for why other personal belongings were confiscated.

Nihaya says she has come back from Jordan "empty-handed"; even her son's medical records were in the bags that the Israeli security forces took away, she says.

Jordan says it has given children like Niveen and Mohammed the best healthcare it can offer, and both families acknowledge this.

But they worry that a life in one of the world's deadliest war zones for children will just undo all the progress their children have made over the past two months.

"I got my son to a point where I was very happy to see him like that," Nihaya says through her tears. "Now they want to bring him back to square one? I don't want my son to die."
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/crk22xm831ko
 

Israel fires 'warning shots' near diplomats in West Bank​

A number of countries have condemned the Israeli military's actions after troops fired warning shots in the vicinity of a diplomatic delegation on a visit to the occupied West Bank.

The Israeli military accused the group of straying from an approved route and said warning shots were fired into the air "to distance them away". It said it "regrets the inconvenience caused".

No injuries were reported in the incident, which happened in the city of Jenin, where Israel has been fighting armed Palestinian groups for years.

Many countries, some of whom had diplomats on the visit, have condemned Israel's actions - including Spain, Egypt, France, Turkey and Italy.
Some nations involved have said they will summon Israeli ambassadors to account for the incident, calling for investigations and explanations from Israel.

The Palestinian Authority (PA), which governs parts of the occupied West Bank, has accused the Israeli security forces of deliberately targeting the delegation in a "heinous crime".

It said the group were there on an official visit with Palestinian authorities to "observe and assess the humanitarian situation and document the ongoing violations perpetrated by the [Israeli] occupying forces against the Palestinian people".

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said in a statement that its troops had fired "warning shots" to ensure the delegation did not enter "an area where they were not authorised to be" in Jenin.

It said the diplomats had "deviated from the approved route" and that it "regrets the inconvenience caused" by the incident.

The IDF added it would speak to representatives of the nations involved to update them on the result of an internal investigation into the incident.

A European diplomat said the group had gone to the area "to see the destruction" caused by months of Israeli operations.

The PA said dozens of countries were involved, including Egypt, Jordan, Spain, Turkey, France and the UK.

Condemnation has come in from nations in Europe and the wider Middle East, with particular criticism saved for the risk it posed to the lives of diplomats.

Spain, Italy and France were among those that said they would summon their Israeli ambassadors to clarify what happened, while the EU's foreign policy chief said any threats to the lives of diplomats are "unacceptable" and called for those responsible to be held accountable.

Egypt said the shots being fired on the group "violates all diplomatic norms", while Turkey said it was "yet another demonstration of Israel's systematic disregard for international law and human rights".

Both nations called for an immediate investigation and explanation from Israel.

The Israeli military has been fighting armed Palestinian factions based there for a number of years. Hundreds of Palestinians and dozens of Israelis have been killed in a surge in violence in the West Bank since the start of the war in Gaza, which was triggered by Hamas's deadly attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023.

Israel has built about 160 settlements housing some 700,000 Jews since it occupied the West Bank and East Jerusalem in the 1967 Middle East war.

The vast majority of the international community considers the settlements illegal under international law - a position supported by an advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) last year - although Israel disputes this.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cvg776ewgn2o
 
This was where Netanyahu was always steering this but I guess having it be an officially stated goal is something. This would be the largest genocide in some time, larger than the Balkans, and very possibly Rwanda depending on how you quantify forced relocation vs death. America has committed a lot of crimes since WWII and had a lot of military “misadventures,” but the official pursuit of a genocide as policy position of the president is genuinely without modern precedent.
 

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Netanyahu accuses Starmer of being on 'wrong side of humanity' and siding with Hamas​

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has launched a blistering attack on UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and the leaders of France and Canada - saying that they had "effectively said they want Hamas to remain in power".

He also accused Starmer, Emmanuel Macron and Mark Carney of siding with "mass murderers, rapists, baby killers and kidnappers".

Netanyahu was speaking after Thursday's deadly attack on Israeli embassy staff in Washington. Days earlier, the UK, France and Canada had condemned Israel's expanded offensive in Gaza as "disproportionate" and described the humanitarian situation as "intolerable".

Downing Street has pointed to Sir Keir's condemnation of the Washington attack.

In that post, Sir Keir called antisemitism an "evil we must stamp out".

All three countries denounced the Washington killings, which saw embassy workers Yaron Lischinsky, 30, and Sarah Lynn Milgrim, 26, shot dead at an event hosted by the Capital Jewish Museum. The suspect, Elias Rodriguez, repeatedly shouted "free Palestine" as he was arrested, police said.

The UK, France and Canada - close allies of Israel - also came out in strong support of Israel following the deadly Hamas-led attacks 19 months ago.

Their statement demanding Israel halt its latest offensive was widely viewed as the strongest criticism of Israel's military action since the war in Gaza began. It threatened concrete actions if Israel did not change course.

On Wednesday Sir Keir added that Israel's decision to allow only a small amount of aid into Gaza was "utterly inadequate" and the UK suspended talks over a possible trade deal.

In his video, Netanyahu said Hamas wanted to destroy Israel and annihilate the Jewish people. He said the Palestinian armed group had welcomed the joint UK, French and Canadian criticism of Israel's war conduct.

Some of Israel's closest allies wanted Israel to "stand down and accept that Hamas's army of mass murderers will survive", he said.

"I say to President Macron, Prime Minister Carney and Prime Minister Starmer, when mass murderers, rapists, baby killers and kidnappers thank you, you're on the wrong side of justice," he added.

"You're on the wrong side of humanity, and you're on the wrong side of history."

Netanyahu went on to blame a recent claim by UN's humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher that thousands of babies would imminently die in Gaza if Israel did not immediately let in aid for the attack in Washington.

"A few days ago, a top UN official said that 14,000 Palestinian babies would die in 48 hours. You see many international institutions are complicit in spreading this lie," he said.

"The press repeats it. The mob believed it. And a young couple is then brutally gunned down in Washington."

When asked at the time for clarification on Fletcher's statement, the UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA) spokesman Jens Laerke said "there are babies who are in urgent life-saving need of these supplements... and if they do not get those, they will be in mortal danger".

Also on Thursday, an Israeli minister, Amichai Chikli, accused Sir Keir and other leaders of "emboldening the forces of terror".

On Friday, UK armed forces minister Luke Pollard condemned the killings in Washington but rejected Netanyahu's strong criticism of the British prime minister.

He said: "We stand in support of Israel's right to self-defence as long as they conduct that within international humanitarian law - a position we've had since those appalling attacks on 7 October.

"We are also very clear we need to see aid get to the people who are genuinely suffering in Gaza."

French foreign ministry spokesman Christophe Lemoine also reiterated his criticism of Israel's "escalation" in Gaza following Netanyahu's statement.

He told FranceInfo radio: "Israel has to let the aid in. Access has to be massive and free."

On Thursday, more than 90 lorries carrying aid supplies were allowed to cross into Gaza but the UN said that level was "nowhere near enough" to meet the needs of Palestinians living there.

The trickle of aid follows an 11-week total blockade, which humanitarian groups said risked widespread famine. Israel resumed air strikes in March which have since killed 3,613 Palestinians, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.

In an interview for BBC World Service's Newshour programme, former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert described the current Israeli administration as a "gang of thugs".

He was asked about remarks by the Israeli education minister, who had said Olmert should be ashamed of a previous interview with the BBC, where he argued that what Israel was doing in Gaza was "close to a war crime".

"This is nonsense, they are a group of thugs that are running the state of Israel these days and the head of the gang is Netanyahu - this is a gang of thugs," Olmert said.

"Of course they are criticising me, they are defaming me, I accept it, and it will not stop me from criticising and opposing these atrocious policies."

Israel launched a military campaign in Gaza in response to Hamas's cross-border attack on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.

At least 53,762 people, including 16,500 children, have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c7804k13x52o
 

Israeli ambassador suggests diplomats in West Bank led astray to provoke IDF​

Warning shots were fired in vicinity of diplomatic delegation that included Canada's top diplomat in West Bank

Israel's ambassador to Canada suggests that there might have been a deliberate effort to provoke Israeli soldiers before they fired warning shots in the vicinity of a diplomatic delegation — which included Canadians — in the West Bank on Wednesday.

Four members of a Canadian delegation were part of a tour in the city of Jenin when members of the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) fired warning shots in the area. Two are Canadian citizens, including Ottawa's top diplomat in the West Bank, and two are locally hired staff. No one was injured during the incident.

Israel's Ambassador Iddo Moed suggested during an interview with CBC News Network's Power & Politics that the diplomats may have been led astray to intentionally try to provoke the IDF soldiers.

"They went into the soldiers. There was nothing to see. There was a barrier, a very clear barrier. So what was the idea to walk into that barrier unless you want to try and provoke something," Moed told guest-host Peter Armstrong, referencing to videos of the incident

"Maybe they were led there. I don't know, I don't want to speculate."

A video of the incident circulating online shows members of the tour group speaking to cameras near a large yellow gate. Gunshots can be heard as the group hurries away from the gate and goes around a street corner. In one video, two soldiers can be seen pointing guns in the direction of the group.

The IDF said Wednesday that an initial investigation into the incident revealed that the delegation had deviated from an approved route and soldiers fired warning shots to get the delegation to move. The Palestinian Authority said in a statement it "refutes the narrative" presented by the IDF. It said that it incident took place near the gate of a refugee camp after the delegation encountered another barrier at a different entrance.

"The delegation remained at the iron gate for more than 15 minutes, during which they listened to a briefing by the Governor of Jenin on the conditions in the camp, in the presence of a large number of journalists and media representatives, before the Israeli army opened fire toward the diplomatic delegation," the statement said.

When pressed about the suggestion that the tour might have provoked Israeli soldiers, Moed again referred to videos of the incident.

"You can see they really made an effort to confront the soldiers," Moed said. The ambassador added that there will be an investigation and that the government will take responsibility if any wrongdoing is uncovered.

Prime Minister Mark Carney called for a full investigation into the incident on Wednesday evening.

"We expect a full investigation and we expect an immediate explanation of what happened. It's totally unacceptable," Carney said during a news conference.

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand issued a summons to Moed on Wednesday so that the government could relay Canada's "serious concerns." The foreign ministers of France and Italy also issued summons to their respective Israeli ambassadors regarding the incident.

But Moed suggested that the formal summons was unnecessary because the Israeli government has been forthcoming with those countries about what happened.

"We have taken responsibility for the investigation, for dealing with the diplomats and with governments that want to have that information. But there is no need to formally request [that information] as if things like that are not happening naturally," Moed said.

A senior Canadian government official told CBC news that members of the Canadian delegation were shaken up by the incident and were being offered support from Global Affairs Canada.

Netanyahu calls out Carney, other leaders​

Wednesday's incident comes at a tense moment in Canadian-Israeli relations.

Earlier this week, Carney joined British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron in threatening to impose sanctions on Israel in response to its "denial of essential humanitarian assistance" in Gaza.

In a video statement released Thursday condemning Wednesday's shooting of two Israeli embassy staff members in Washington, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called out Carney, Starmer and Macron for their Gaza statement, accusing them of "emboldening Hamas."

"You're on the wrong side of humanity and you're on the wrong side of history," Netanyahu said of the three leaders.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/west-bank-shots-fired-near-diplomatic-group-idf-1.7541617
 

Legit targets, legit attack during a time of war, it's just a miniscule taste of their own medicine. Israel can go fudge itself. Free Palestine

Should be noted the immediate reaction was to attack US citizens free speech. the irony of the "when it happens" tiktoks going viral the past week is not lost on me.
 

Legit targets, legit attack during a time of war, it's just a miniscule taste of their own medicine. Israel can go fudge itself. Free Palestine

Should be noted the immediate reaction was to attack US citizens free speech. the irony of the "when it happens" tiktoks going viral the past week is not lost on me.
I don't think killing embassy employees will do anything to help Palestinians. It will just reinforce the stereotype many Americans have of pro-Palestine supporters being pro-Hamas and antisemitic.
 
I don't think killing embassy employees will do anything to help Palestinians. It will just reinforce the stereotype many Americans have of pro-Palestine supporters being pro-Hamas and antisemitic.
yea, 200 thousand palestinians killed so far, idgaf about embassy officials for Israel and Israel just used their fudging military to fire "warning shots" at EU diplomats, and have spent decades assassinating other diplomats...
 
????

They killed 1,200 people and took hundreds of hostages. The Israeli government sucks too, but both sides can be bad.

The version of October 7th that has been fed to Western audiences is largely propaganda. 3-400 of those killed in the operation were uniformed soldiers on active duty, and we know the IDF killed Israeli civilians in the course of their own operations in the aftermath of the resistance attacks; though we don't know how many, I suspect the number is likely to be significant given the massive disparity in firepower between the resistance and the IDF.

I don't defend the atrocities committed by the resistance, but using them as an excuse to say "both sides are equally bad" is essentially morally equivalent to saying "the resistance against the Nazis includes some bad people so I'm neutral". Hamas fighters and the Houthis (and Hezbollah though they were unfortunately battered into submission) are the ones putting everything on the line to stop the Zionist genocide. They deserve the praise of all people of conscience, though of course this is criminalized in much of the allegedly free world.
 
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