[RD] War in Gaza News: Pas de Deux

Birdjaguar

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Moderator Action: I have started a new thread for Gaza war news. One of the reasons why the other thread was closed and not reopened is that there has been so much trolling, flaming, bickering and personal animosity that no one among the staff has any interest in trying to moderate the thread. This has been and will likely continue to be a very divisive issue for those with strong commitments to one side or the other. If thread participants cannot show greater attention to the news rather than aggressive posting, the thread will likely get closed again. One thing the staff can do is to issue long thread bans and points for those of you who are unable to be civil towards those with whom you disagree. You know how to post avoid trouble. Do not expect to be warned before being banned if you post with animosity or disrespect.

  • Please post news with links and your comments on that news.
  • If the news is in a foreign language, please include a summary or translation.
  • No grisly pictures of the dead and dying please
  • No name calling

Be nice!
 
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Story a few days old. New York Times clarifies the demands made by Israel PM Netanyahu as part of the ceasefire: namely that Gaza residents returning to the northern part disarm, and Israel retains control over their Egypt border.
If he's trying to torpedo any peace talks, I don't see it; in fact this seems to reflect a genuine desire that Hamas not be positioned to simply repeat the Oct.7 attacks again...

(the details are much farther into the article)


Spoiler Article Here :

By Ronen Bergman, Patrick Kingsley and Adam Rasgon
Ronen Bergman reported from Tel Aviv, Patrick Kingsley from Jerusalem and Adam Rasgon from Doha, Qatar.
Aug. 13, 2024

For weeks, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel has denied that he is trying to block a cease-fire deal in Gaza by hardening Israel’s negotiating position. Mr. Netanyahu has consistently placed all blame for the deadlocked negotiations on Hamas, even as senior members of the Israeli security establishment accused him of slowing the process himself.
But in private, Mr. Netanyahu has, in fact, added new conditions to Israel’s demands, additions that his own negotiators fear have created extra obstacles to a deal. According to unpublished documents reviewed by The New York Times that detail Israel’s negotiating positions, Israel relayed a list of new stipulations in late July to American, Egyptian and Qatari mediators that added less flexible conditions to a set of principles it had made in late May.
Doubts have also been raised about Hamas’s willingness to compromise on key issues, and the group also requested its own extensive revisions throughout the process, while ceding some smaller points in July. On Tuesday, Ahmad Abdul Hadi, a Hamas official, said the group would not be participating in a new round of negotiations set to take place in Doha or Cairo on Thursday.
But the documents reviewed by The Times make clear that the behind-the-scenes maneuvering by the Netanyahu government has been extensive — and suggest that agreement may be elusive at the talks set to begin this week.

Among other conditions, the latest document, presented to mediators shortly before a summit in Rome on July 28, suggested that Israeli forces should remain in control of Gaza’s southern border, a detail that was not included in Israel’s proposal in May. It also showed less flexibility about allowing displaced Palestinians to return to their homes in northern Gaza once fighting is halted.
Some members of the Israeli negotiating team fear that the new additions risked scuppering the deal, according to two senior officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the press.
The Times reviewed the documents and confirmed their authenticity with officials from Israel and other parties involved in the negotiations.

For months, Israel and Hamas have held indirect negotiations, mediated by Egypt, Qatar and the United States, to halt the fighting in Gaza; free the remaining hostages captured by Hamas at the start of the war; and release hundreds of Palestinians held by Israel.

While Hamas has also proved intransigent, Mr. Netanyahu’s Israeli critics partly blame the prime minister for the deadlock because his new conditions risk derailing the talks at a time when a deal appears within reach. Some have argued that he is prioritizing the stability of his coalition government above the freedom of the hostages: His small majority in Parliament depends on several far-right lawmakers who have conditioned their support for his government on the prevention of a cease-fire.
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Destroyed multistory buildings line either side of an urban road.
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Destroyed buildings last month in Beit Lahia, one of the northernmost cities in the Gaza Strip.Credit...Omar Al-Qattaa/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
In a statement for this article, Mr. Netanyahu’s office, which did not dispute the authenticity of the documents, denied that he had added new conditions and said that the prime minister had instead sought to clarify ambiguities in Israel’s May proposal, making it easier to put into effect.
“The July 27 letter does not introduce new terms,” the statement said. “To the contrary, it includes essential clarifications to help implement the May 27 proposal.”
“Hamas is the one that demanded 29 changes to the May 27 proposal, something the prime minister refused to do,” the statement added.

Middle East Crisis: Live Updates›​

Updated
Aug. 13, 2024, 6:26 p.m. ETAug. 13, 2024

The statement echoed similar comments from Mr. Netanyahu and his office in recent weeks; on Monday, it released a statement saying that Yahya Sinwar, Hamas’s leader, “has been — and remains — the only obstacle to a hostage deal.”

At a meeting on Aug. 4 with cabinet ministers, Mr. Netanyahu said that Israel had “not added even a single demand to the outline” and that “it is Hamas which has demanded to add dozens of changes.”
Yet, in a letter to mediators on July 27, the Israeli negotiation team added five new qualifications to the outline of a deal that it had proposed exactly two months earlier, on May 27.
One of the most contentious additions was the inclusion of a map indicating that Israel would remain in control of the border between Gaza and Egypt, an area known as the Philadelphi Corridor.
By contrast, Israel’s proposal in May had suggested that troops would leave the border zone. It pledged the “withdrawal of Israeli forces eastwards away from densely populated areas along the borders in all areas of the Gaza Strip.”
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Two vehicles drive on a dirt road near a high border fence; on the far side are a paved road and a building.
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United Nations vehicles driving along Gaza’s border with Egypt, an area known as the Philadelphi Corridor, in January.Credit...Mahmud Hams/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

A second key point of contention adds new complexity to the way in which displaced Palestinians would return to their homes in northern Gaza during a cease-fire.
For months, Israel said it would agree to a cease-fire only if its soldiers could screen the returning Palestinians for weapons as they moved from southern to northern Gaza.
Then, in its May proposal, Israel softened that demand. While its position paper still stated that the returnees should not be “carrying arms while returning,” it removed the explicit requirement that Israeli forces screen them for weapons. That made the policy seem more symbolic than enforceable, prompting Hamas to agree to it.
Israel’s July letter revived the question of enforcement, stating that the screening of people returning to the north would need to be “implemented in an agreed upon manner.”
Mr. Netanyahu’s office said there was no contradiction between the two positions, saying that the second one made the first one easier to carry out. “The letter not only does not contradict the May 27 proposal, it facilitates it,” the statement said.

In recent weeks Mr. Netanyahu has suggested that it is reasonable for Israel to seek to prevent Hamas from rebuilding its military strongholds in northern Gaza.
Hamas is “unprepared to allow any mechanism to check for and prevent the passage of munitions and terrorists to the northern Gaza Strip,” Mr. Netanyahu said on Aug. 4. “It is doing all this because it wants to recover and rebuild, and return again and again to the massacre of Oct. 7.”
Senior Israeli officials familiar with the latest negotiations, as well as leaders in Israel’s security forces, agree in principle with Mr. Netanyahu that it would be better to maintain checkpoints to screen people for weapons. But they also believe that it is not worth holding up a deal over this point, and want Mr. Netanyahu to back down ahead of the planned meeting on Thursday, so hostages can be freed as quickly as possible, the senior officials said.
 
Hezbollah has released a video of their tunnel network. It appears to allow underground movement and deployment of medium-range ballistic missiles as well as troop deployments. I guess they think it will put off an attack but it looks like tactically useful info to me. I suppose it could have been filmed in Iran.

Spoiler Times of India is the best footage of the video I found, but it is not great :
NYT said:
Israel Was Less Flexible in Recent Gaza Cease-Fire Talks, Documents Show
"Less flexible" is a useful euphemism for "doing everything it can to extend the war".
 
Moderator Action: *snip* -lymond
. And according to current policies, Belgium does indeed have a stringent export policy toward Israel. In 2009, the federal and regional governments agreed “not to issue arms export licenses that would strengthen the military capabilities of the warring parties.” Both the Flemish and Walloon regional governments explicitly state that they still follow this policy line. But in practice, there appears to be a serious discrepancy between words and deeds. Indeed, quite a bit of military equipment is still being transferred to Israel from or via Belgium.
.

 
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The UK is funding aid there:


 
Moderator Action: Several posts deleted. Already this reopened topic is off to a very bad start. A big reason for that has been addressed. However, if this continues the topic will be closed permanently. Stick to news and don’t go at each other. Drive by commentary and trolling will not be tolerated
 

Gaza nurse says whole family, including quadruplets, killed in air strike​

A nurse in Gaza has told the BBC his wife and six children - including a group of quadruplets - were killed in an attack in the central Gaza strip.
"My entire family has been wiped out in an instant", says Ashraf El Attar, "leaving me with nothing".
The nurse - who works at Gaza's European hospital - says his family home in Deir-al-Balah was hit in the early hours of Sunday morning. He survived with minor injuries.
Israel has not spoken about this specific attack, but has said its forces were operating in the city. It says it only targets members of armed groups.

Killed in the strike were Mr El Attar's wife - Hala Khattab, a teacher - and their six children - a 15-year-old boy, a one-year-old girl, and their four 10-year-old quadruplets.
Speaking to BBC Arabic's Gaza Today podcast, the nurse says that around 6am on the morning of the attack he was getting ready for work when he "heard the alarm sound and suddenly lost consciousness".
When he came to, Mr El Attar says he was in "severe pain" and the house "was in ruins".
All the outer walls of their apartment building were destroyed.
"I desperately called out for my children and my wife, but it was too late.
"My six children, including four twins, and my wife were killed instantly in the attack," he says.
The strike took them by surprise, Mr El Attar says. The night before, the family had spent time "enjoying a soap opera together", trying to "escape the harsh reality of war".

Mr El Attar's mother - and grandmother to his six children - says she "cannot comprehend" why their home was hit.
"My son Ashraf works as a nurse at the European hospital, where he is dedicated to helping patients.
"We had no connections with any organisations," she says.
The couple had an "incredibly challenging time" raising their children, she says, in particular the quadruplets.
"The babies faced severe health issues in their early months and nearly died.
"We provided oxygen cylinders at home, and one of them, Hammam, underwent hernia surgery," she says.

Mr El Attar says his wife - Hala - was "dedicated" to helping displaced people.
She was working for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (Unrwa), he says, a UN agency that provides support for Palestinian refugees.
Now the nurse says he is forced to come to terms with the life they could have had together.
"I worked tirelessly to support my family and watch my children grow up, dreaming of giving them a better future - a big house, a car, and mobile phones," he says.
But now "all those dreams have been destroyed".
"I demand justice for my family", he says, something he vows to pursue through "any international court".
"Israel has committed a grave injustice. My entire family has been wiped out in an instant, leaving me with nothing."
The Israel Defense Forces has not commented on this specific strike, but has said it was operating in Deir al-Balah over the weekend.
In another statement on Monday, it said it had been operating in the outskirts of Deir al-Balah "eliminating terrorists, destroying combat compounds above and below ground".
It says it only targets members of armed groups, and blames civilian deaths on Hamas - who it says places fighters, weapons, tunnels and rockets in residential areas.
Hamas-led gunmen killed about 1,200 people in an attack on Israel on 7 October 2023, taking 251 others back to Gaza as hostages.
That attack triggered a massive Israeli military offensive against Gaza and the current war, during which more than 40,170 people have been killed in Gaza, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/clyn31g50e3o
 

Israeli families of the dead and captive vent their fury over Netanyahu's failure to end the war​

Spiralling health crises in Gaza and rage from Israeli hostage families underscore the urgency of a ceasefire

As Avraham Munder's wooden casket was lowered into the Nir Oz earth at sunset earlier this week, his family's fury and exasperation with Israel's government and its prime minister appeared to overtake their grief.

"You could have been returned alive and been redeemed from … the physical and psychological pain inhumane conditions in which you were held in captivity, if only the prime minister and ministers had acted with political honesty and empathy and not sacrificed you," his daughter Keren told mourners at his graveside.

"[Our] dear father … was abandoned again and again by the prime minister and his ministers in the Hamas tunnels," she said.

Munder, who was 79 when he was abducted on Oct. 7, 2023, was last seen alive by fellow captives in March. His wife, Ruti, daughter Keren and grandson Ohad were all abducted from Nir Oz and taken to Gaza during the Hamas attacks that killed some 1,200 people — but while the others were released as part of a hostage/detainee swap in November, Avraham Munder remained a captive.

Munder was known to have been injured when he was dragged out of Nir Oz on a militant's motorcycle, but his family had reason to believe he was still alive until their hopes were crushed on Monday. Israel's military announced its soldiers had retrieved the bodies of six hostages near Khan Younis, and among them was Munder's.

"We know that he was alive in March, meaning he survived five months, even in terrible conditions," his nephew Eyal Mor told CBC News after the funeral.

"During these five months there were multiple chances to sign a deal and rescue the ones that could be rescued. I feel like he was betrayed."

Israel's military said Thursday that the bodies of all six hostages had shown evidence of gunshot wounds and while the exact circumstances of their death have not been determined.

Roughly 100 Israeli hostages are still thought to be unaccounted for in Gaza.

For 10 months, their families have protested, held vigils and travelled the world trying to push Israel's government and its allies — especially the United States — to make their return the top priority.

"The recovery of six bodies is no achievement," the Hostages Families Forum Headquarters said earlier this week. "It is a testimony of the complete failure to reach a deal in time."

Diplomatic obstructions​

In the aftermath of Israel's assassination of Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh in Iran last month and the threat of a major military response by Iran's government, the intensity of the diplomatic efforts to reach a ceasefire picked up — only to abruptly cool down again in recent days after opponents accused Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of adding new conditions to a potential deal.

Statements from Netanyahu's office suggest the latest impediment to an agreement is whether Israel will maintain a presence along the southern border of Gaza, known as the Philadelphi corridor.

The zone runs the full 14 km width of the territory and, under arrangements agreed with Egypt two decades ago, Israeli military units are not permitted in the border area.

Along with Hamas, Egypt's government has remained adamant that should still be the case after a ceasefire.

In a statement Wednesday, Netanyahu's office said withdrawing the IDF from the area, which it has occupied during the war, is a non-starter.

"Israel will insist on the achievement of all of its objectives for the war, as they have been defined by the security cabinet, including that Gaza never again constitutes a security threat to Israel. This requires securing the southern border," said a statement.

Anguished families​

Eyal Mor, Munder's nephew, believes whether Hamas has truly been defeated or whether there are legitimate security reasons for holding up a ceasefire deal is irrelevant.

He says all of the delays are corroding the trust between Israelis and their government and it's time to say enough is enough.

"I'm upset about the decisions of the government," said Mor.

"Assets like the Philadelphi route are not strategic assets — strategic assets are the values of Israel. If you leave, you can always reoccupy the land but if we lose those values, what will we be left with?" he told CBC News.

His sentiment was amplified in a powerful editorial by a former ombudsman of the IDF, Yitzhak Brik.

Writing in Haaretz, Brik said that by putting new conditions on the negotiating table just when a deal is near, Netanyahu is leading Israel to a "catastrophe," that the delay in securing a ceasefire and freeing the remaining hostages is costing the country its "social resilience" and stoking hatred between groups within the country.

As the latest round of negotiations falters, Hamas and some Arab states have accused the United States of failing to put enough pressure on Netanyahu to wring out the necessary concessions.

In public statements, Hamas officials have said the current position of Israel and the United States concerning the presence of Israeli troops in Gaza represents a "reversal" of its earlier commitments.

In Gaza, where Israeli attacks on Hamas militants and civilian targets have laid to waste vast tracts of the territory and killed more than 40,000 people according to local health authorities, the United Nations says an immediate pause in the war is imperative to address multiple unfolding calamities.

On Friday, the World Health Organization confirmed the first case of polio in a 10-month old Palestinian baby, a viral disease that had not been registered in Gaza for 25 years, but now amid the deplorable health and sanitation conditions in the territory has returned.

"Polio will not make the distinction between Palestinian and Israeli children," wrote Philippe Lazzarini, the head of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) on social media.

"Delaying a humanitarian pause will increase the risk of spread."

Mass displacements​

Compounding the health crisis have been orders from Israel's military for hundreds of thousands of people in Gaza to uproot from previously designated "safe areas" in cities such as Deir Al Balah.

Muhannad Hadi, the UN Humanitarian Coordinator for the Occupied Palestinian Territories, says forcing so many people to move multiple times amounts to depriving them of the necessities of life.

"Imagine if you asked the population of Toronto – three million people – to move to just 11 percent [of the space of] Toronto's city. And to keep them there for 10 months with no access to proper bathrooms, no proper medical service, no shelter, no electricity. How would these people feel? That is what they are facing," Hadi told CBC News in a Zoom interview from Amman, Jordan.

In Gaza, a videographer working for CBC News saw scenes of desperation as thousands fled cities such Khan Younis without knowing where they were headed.



"Every day they promise us negotiations and it's all lies, on lies, on lies," Umm Hani Zaqout said as she packed up her belongings.

"They have meetings and discussions in the middle of the night and we're eating ****," she said.

At least 50 Palestinians – including many children – were killed in Israeli attacks over a 24 hour period in Khan Younis and Deir al Balah this week, even as the ceasefire talks continued.

"We are so desperate hoping for some good news," said the UN's Hadi.

"Sometimes I feel like I am a patient with a terminal illness waiting for my medical results to come out: am I going to live or not? Will there be a ceasefire or not?"
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/israel-hostage-families-fury-netanyahu-1.7303574
 
Any explanation as to why the ICJ did nothing when Israel callously murdered the Hamas leader/negotiator in the ceasefire? Or when risk of famine due to Israel's actions is increasing? Weren't they, only a few months back, supposedly ruling that Israel has to be cautious and not do anything illegal and give monthly reports?
They sort of faded into the background and into nothingness, almost as if their ruling was only for show.
 
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I think you have to file a complaint and show a connection with the EU, they don’t just go looking for crimes worldwide to prosecute.

They were already on the case, if you recall, and are bound by their own decision and ruling. I am asking why what has happened since didn't fall under their "order" to Israel to not do illegal things or otherwise escalate. Murdering the other side's leader should fall into that.
I meant the ICJ - I just don't like lord William Hague.
 
I seem to remember a complaint by South Africa was it not ?

I’d have to look, I think they came with a preliminary ruling, and we’re waiting for verdict, which will no doubt be appealed to.

Could be years.
 
Israel’s military launched air raids across southern Lebanon and Hezbollah responded with a large drone and rocket attack, saying the barrage was also in retaliation for the Israeli military’s killing of its commander Fuad Shukr in Beirut in July.

Most of the 40+ Israeli strikes on Lebanon were in the border area, up to five-kilometre deep territory along the 120 kilometre border.

The border area is now a military zone. It’s been evacuated of civilians. It’s been repeatedly hit by the Israeli army in recent months.

Hezbollah says it fired more than 320 rockets at Israel

The Lebanese group said it targeted Israeli military bases to “facilitate the passage of drones” towards their desired targets deep inside Israel. “And the drones have passed as planned”, it said.

It also said it fired more than 320 Katyusha rockets at 11 Israeli military bases and barracks, including the Meron base and four sites in the occupied Golan Heights.

AFP__20240823__36EP7LG__v2__HighRes__TopshotLebanonIsraelPalestinianConflict-1724558291.jpg

Smoke billows during Israeli bombing on the southern Lebanese village of Khiam on Friday [Rabih Daher/AFP]

AFP__20240823__36EQ8U2__v4__HighRes__TopshotIsraelLebanonPalestinianConflictBorder1-1724557227.jpg

Israel’s Iron Dome air defence system intercepted many of the rockets fired over the Upper Galilee region in northern Israel on Saturday [Jalaa Marey/AFP]
 

Six killed in West Bank strike and settler attack, Palestinian ministry says​

At least five people, including two children, have been killed in an Israeli air strike on an urban refugee camp in the occupied West Bank, the Palestinian health ministry says.

The Israel Defence Forces (IDF) confirmed the strike, on Nur Shams camp near the city of Tulkarm, saying it had targeted what it called the command room of a "terror cell".

Separately, the health ministry said one person had been shot dead and three injured during an attack by Israeli settlers near Bethlehem. The IDF said it was investigating the reports.

There has been a surge in violence in the West Bank since the start of the war in Gaza, triggered by Hamas's deadly attack on southern Israel on 7 October.

The UN said last Wednesday that 128 Palestinians, including 26 children, had been killed in Israeli air strikes in the West Bank since 7 October.
Overall, 607 Palestinians had been killed in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, including 11 by Israeli settlers, over the same period, it added.
Fifteen Israelis, including nine members of Israeli forces and five settlers, were also killed in attacks by Palestinians in the West Bank, according to the UN. Another 10 Israelis were killed in attacks in Israel by Palestinians from the West Bank.

Palestinian news agency Wafa reported that an Israeli drone carried out the strike on a house in Nur Shams camp on Monday night and four loud explosions were heard.
The Palestinian health ministry identified the five people killed as Mohannad Qarawi, 19, Jibril Jibril, 20, Adnan Jaber, 15, Mohammed Yusif, 49, and Mohammed Elayyan, 16.
Jibril Jibril was a member of Hamas who had been released from an Israeli prison in November as part of an exchange for Israeli hostages held in Gaza, according to the Palestinian reports.
Nur Shams has been targeted by the IDF several times in recent months. In April, the Palestinian Red Crescent said 14 people had been killed in a two-day Israeli operation there.
Later on Monday, the health ministry said a 40-year-old man named Khalil Salem Khalawi was shot dead during an attack by Israeli settlers in the Palestinian village of Wadi Rahhal, south of Bethlehem. Three other people were wounded, it added.
Wafa cited the head of the village council, Hamdi Ziada, as saying that shots were fired as settlers attacked homes near the local boys’ school.
He also claimed that Israeli forces had entered the village to provide protection for the settlers and fired tear-gas at residents.
Israel’s Ynet news website reported that Mr Khalawi was an Israeli Arab and that he was shot dead by IDF soldiers who arrived in Wadi Rahhal following a claim by settlers that stones had been thrown at an Israeli vehicle. Settlers also clashed with residents of the village, it said.
The IDF said it was looking into reports, which come two weeks after a Palestinian man was shot dead during a settler attack on the village of Jit.
Israel has built about 160 settlements housing some 700,000 Jews since it occupied the West Bank and East Jerusalem - land the Palestinians want as part of a future state - in the 1967 Middle East war.
The vast majority of the international community considers the settlements illegal under international law, although Israel disputes this.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c89w851xw5ko
 

Israeli settlers are seizing Palestinian land under cover of war - they hope permanently​

In the Palestinian village of Battir, where ancient terraces are irrigated by a natural spring, life carries on as it has for centuries.
Part of a Unesco World Heritage site, Battir is known for its olive groves and vineyards. But now it is the latest flashpoint over settlements in the occupied West Bank.
Israel has approved a new Jewish settlement here, taking away privately owned land for new settler houses and new outposts have been set up without even Israeli authorisation.
“They are stealing our land to build their dreams on our catastrophe,” says Ghassan Olyan, whose property is among that seized.
Unesco says it is concerned by the settlers’ plans around Battir, but the village is far from an isolated example. All settlements are seen as illegal under international law, although Israel disagrees.
“They are not caring about the international law, or local law, and even God’s law,” Mr Olyan says.

Last week, Israel’s domestic intelligence chief Ronen Bar wrote to ministers warning that Jewish extremists in the West Bank were carrying out acts of “terror” against Palestinians and causing “indescribable damage” to the country.
Since the start of the war in Gaza, there has been an acceleration in settlement growth in the occupied West Bank.
Extremists in Israel’s government boast that these changes will prevent an independent Palestinian state from ever being created.
There are fears, too, that they seek to prolong the war in Gaza to suit their goals.
Yonatan Mizrahi from Peace Now, an Israeli organisation that monitors settlement growth, says Jewish extremists in the West Bank are exacerbating an already tense and volatile situation, and making it harder than ever to end the Israel-Palestinian conflict.
He believes a “mix of rage and fear” in Israeli society after the 7 October attacks, in which 1,200 people were killed is driving settlers to seize more land, with fewer people questioning them.
A June survey by the Pew Research Center suggested that 40% of Israelis believed settlements made the country safer, up from 27% in 2013. Meanwhile, 35% of people polled said that the settlements hurt Israel’s security, down from 42%.
Mr Mizrahi worries that Jewish extremists in the West Bank are exacerbating an already tense and volatile situation, making it harder than ever to end the Israel-Palestinian conflict. “I think it’s extremely dangerous,” he says. “It’s increasing the hate on both sides.”
Since the outbreak of the war, settler violence against Palestinian civilians in the West Bank has surged.
It had already been on the rise, but in the past 10 months the UN has documented around 1,270 attacks, compared with 856 in all of 2022.
According to the Israeli human rights organisation B’Tselem, during the same period Israeli settler harassment has forced Palestinians out of at least 18 villages in the West Bank, the Palestinian territory between Israel and Jordan that was captured by Israel in the 1967 Middle East war and has been occupied ever since.
Between 7 October and August 2024, 589 Palestinians were killed in the West Bank – at least 570 by Israeli forces and at least 11 by settlers, according to the UN. They include some said to have been planning attacks as well as unarmed civilians. In the same period, Palestinians killed five settlers and nine members of Israel’s security forces.
This week, a Palestinian man aged 40 was reportedly shot dead after settlers and Israeli soldiers entered Wadi al-Rahhel, near Bethlehem. The Israeli military said stones had previously been thrown at an Israeli vehicle nearby.
Last month, a 22-year-old Palestinian man was killed when dozens of settlers rampaged through the village of Jit, prompting international condemnation. Israeli security forces have made four arrests and have described the incident as a “severe terror event”.
But the track record in such cases is one of virtual impunity. Israeli civil rights group Yesh Din found that, between 2005 and 2023, just 3% of official investigations into settler violence ended in a conviction.
In the letter by Ronen Bar, which was leaked to Israeli media, the head of Israel’s Shin Bet security service said that radical settlers were emboldened by light-handed law enforcement.

'Extremely dangerous'​

Settlers live in exclusively Jewish communities set up in parts of the West Bank.
Many settlements have the legal support of the Israeli government; others, known as outposts, and often as simple as caravans and corrugated iron sheds, are illegal even under Israeli law. But extremists build them regardless in a bid to seize more land.
In July, when the UN’s top court found for the first time that Israel’s occupation of the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, was illegal, it said the country should halt all settlement activity and withdraw as soon as possible.
Israel’s Western allies have repeatedly described settlements as an obstacle to peace. Israel rejected the finding, saying: “The Jewish people are not occupiers in their own land.”

Now there are fears that extremists are working to make settlements in the West Bank irreversible.
They have rapidly expanded their control over the territory, with the support of the most far-right government in Israel’s history. These extremists are advancing annexation plans in the West Bank and also openly call for settling Gaza once the war is over. Settlers now serve at the heart of Israel’s government, in key ministries.
At the very time that world leaders opposed to settlements are voicing renewed enthusiasm for a two-state solution - a long-hoped for peace plan that would create a separate Palestinian state - Israeli religious nationalists, who believe all these lands rightfully belong to Israel, are vowing to make the dream of an independent Palestinian state impossible.
Analysts think this is why some politicians are refusing to accept any ceasefire deal.
“The reason they don’t want to end the conflict or go into a hostage deal is because they believe that Israel should keep on fighting until it can reach a point where it can stay inside Gaza,” says Tal Schneider, political correspondent for The Times of Israel.
“They think for the long term their ideology is more righteous,” she adds. “This is their own logic.”
Israeli authorities, meanwhile, have announced plans for five new settlements, including the one in Battir, and declared a record area of land, at least 23 sq km, for the state. This means Israel considers it Israeli land, regardless of whether it is in the occupied Palestinian territories, or privately owned by Palestinians, or both, and Palestinians are prevented from using it.
By changing facts on the ground, as the settlers describe it, they hope to move enough Israelis on to the land and build enough on it to make their presence irreversible. Their long-term hope is that Israel formally annexes the land.
Outside state-sanctioned land seizures, extremists have also rapidly established settlement outposts.
In one by al-Qanoub, north of Hebron, satellite images showed new caravans and roads had appeared in the months since the start of the war. Meanwhile, an entire Palestinian community has been forced off the land.

We drove to al-Qanoub with Ibrahim Shalalda, 50, and his 80-year-old uncle Mohammed, who told us their homes had been destroyed by settlers last November.
As we approached, an extremist settler blocked the road with his car.
Armed Israelis soon arrived. The group – some Israel Defense Forces (IDF) soldiers, with insignia on their uniforms and one identified as a settlement security officer – stopped us for checks.
The settlement guard forced the two Palestinian farmers from the car and searched them. After two hours, the IDF soldiers dispersed the settlers and allowed the BBC car to leave.

Israel began settling the West Bank soon after capturing it from Jordan and occupying it more than five decades ago. Successive governments since then have allowed creeping settlement expansion.
Today, an estimated three million Palestinians live on the land - excluding Israeli-annexed East Jerusalem - alongside about half a million Jewish Israelis in more than 130 settlements.
But a prominent far-right government figure who took office in 2022 is promising to double the number of settlers to a million.
Bezalel Smotrich believes that Jews have a God-given right to these lands. He heads one of two far-right, pro-settler parties that veteran Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu brought into his governing coalition after the 2022 elections returned him to power.
Mr Smotrich serves as finance minister but also has a post in the defence ministry, which has allowed him to make sweeping changes to Israeli policies in the West Bank.
He has massively invested state finances in settlements, including new roads and infrastructure. But he has also created a new bureaucracy, taking powers from the military, to fast-track settler construction.
In secretly recorded remarks to supporters, Mr Smotrich boasted that he was working towards “changing the DNA” of the system and for de facto annexation that would be “easier to swallow in the international and legal context”.

‘Mission of my life’​

Religious nationalists have sat on the fringes of Israeli politics for decades.
But their ideology has slowly become more popular. In the 2022 election, these parties took 13 seats in the 120-seat Israeli parliament and became kingmakers in Mr Netanyahu’s right-wing coalition.
During the war, Bezalel Smotrich and fellow radical Itamar Ben-Gvir, now Israel’s national security minister, have repeatedly made comments stoking social division and provoking Israel’s Western allies.
After Israel’s military arrested reservists accused of sexually assaulting a Palestinian detainee, Mr Ben Gvir said it was “shameful” for Israel to arrest “our best heroes”. This month, Mr Smotrich suggested it might be “justified and moral” to starve Gazans.
But it is in the West Bank and Gaza that the far right seeks to make permanent changes. “This is a group of Israelis who have been against any type of compromise with the Palestinians or Israel's other Arab neighbours,” says Anshel Pfeffer, a veteran Israeli journalist and correspondent for The Economist.
And with the war in Gaza, the far right sees a fresh opportunity. Mr Smotrich has called for Palestinian residents to leave, making way for Israelis who could “make the desert bloom”.
Although Mr Netanyahu has ruled out restoring Jewish settlements in Gaza, he remains beholden to far-right parties who threaten to collapse his coalition if he signs a “reckless” ceasefire deal to bring home Israeli hostages currently held by Hamas.
The logic of the extremists may be one that only a minority of Israelis follow. But it is helping to prolong the war, and dramatically transforming the landscape of the West Bank - causing long-term damage to chances of peace.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c624qr3mqrzo
 

And something that appears to be going somewhat under the radar: Israel appear to have invaded the West Bank?
 

And something that appears to be going somewhat under the radar: Israel appear to have invaded the West Bank?
Yes, a full-scale invasion. There are no hostages in the West Bank to rescue, nor any significant armed groups due to Israel's hyper-surveillance and control of the area.

Not that any of it matters. Nothing matters now
 
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