Author Topic: Israel, and its neighbors  (Read 1035512 times)

Crafty_Dog

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Crafty_Dog

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Re: Israel, and its neighbors
« Reply #3152 on: October 23, 2024, 12:39:53 PM »
Here it is!

 :-o :-o :-o

ccp

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CNN analyst ; no one knows what Netanyah's "endgame" is
« Reply #3153 on: October 23, 2024, 08:05:12 PM »
https://edition.cnn.com/2024/10/23/middleeast/netanyahu-endgame-israel-gaza-lebanon-intl/

I will give you 3 guesses.

We do know what Hamas Iran and Hezbollah's "endgame" is - wipe out Israel as Jewish nation.

about the author:

based in London
also has masters from Columbia journalism   
I am not sure I need to know anything else about her.


Body-by-Guinness

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Israel's Fine Strategic Line Walked After 10/7
« Reply #3154 on: October 28, 2024, 02:21:23 PM »
VDH Lays it out as only he can. I think the comparison w/ Churchill is surprisingly apt:

The Ordeal and Triumph of Mr. Netanyahu
4 Comments / October 28, 2024
Victor Davis Hanson
American Greatness

Ordeal

After the October 7 massacres, the obituaries of the long political career of Benjamin Netanyahu, published both in Israel and in the West, became orthodox. He was considered as politically inert as Donald Trump once was after January 6, 2021.

The conventional wisdom speculated not if, but only when he would be forced out of office.

Western leaders and the Israeli left, and indeed even the Israeli non-left, as well as American and European pundits, claimed that the laxity of the Netanyahu government was entirely to blame for the grotesque massacre of October 7.

Indeed, last fall, there arose almost a competition of critics to assert all the ways in which Netanyahu was played by Hamas.

Accordingly, Netanyahu’s sweeping Supreme Court reforms had supposedly needlessly split the country, demoralizing the military and eroding Israeli deterrence in the eyes of Palestinian terrorists. Or his purported strategy of playing off the more lethal and toxic Hamas against the Palestinian Authority was supposedly proof of his reckless naivete.

Still, other opponents argued that his 16 years as Israel’s longest-serving prime minister and his age of 75 made him a Joe Biden-like relic of the past, simply too old and too familiar to be any longer effective. He was told it was well past time to step down and let a new generation break out of the old toxic Middle East mindsets.

And indeed, after October 7, Netanyahu faced a bleak regional and global landscape—analogous to what a 65-year-old Churchill faced in June 1940 when all of Western Europe was in the hands of the Nazis and a lonely Britain was without a single wartime ally—with a sympathetic America still hesitant to commit to ensuring its existence.

Massive immigration from the Middle East into Europe and the United States—spiked by hundreds of thousands of oil-subsidized foreign students in Western universities, coupled with the post-George Floyd woke/DEI hysterias—had made European and American political parties unapologetically not just anti-Israel but now increasingly anti-Semitic as well.

Western governments at times seemed far more terrified of their own Muslim citizens, foreign residents, radicalized students, and left-wing activists of their political parties than they were of any terrorist threats emanating from Iran and its surrogates.

So, a shared sense of resignation, if not despair, had swept the West and, in part, Israel too. Armchair strategists and retired generals opined nonstop how it would be virtually impossible to root out Hamas from its vast subterranean labyrinths—given its armories and headquarters were buried deep below Gazan hospitals, schools, and mosques.

The West all but accepted Hamas propaganda that it was more immoral to root out Hamas murderers hiding beneath hospitals than it was for them to murder and then flee beneath them.

Hamas’s own leaders were in no mood to negotiate a return of the hostages. They felt the more collateral damage their own fellow Gazans suffered, the more CNN-fed propaganda about Israeli “atrocities” and “genocide” would neuter the Netanyahu government. Hamas sensed Palestinians were to be the media’s new Ukrainians—fellow underdogs deserving Western support.

The old friendship days of Donald Trump—the Abraham Accords, the move of the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, the institutionalization of an Israeli Golan Heights, the withdrawal from the Iran Deal, the crippling oil sanctions on Tehran, and the terrorist designation of the Houthis—were long gone.

In their place emerged the most anti-Israeli American government in memory. Biden-Harris soon put arms holds on Israel, hectored it to be proportionate in responding to some 500 projectiles launched by Iran against the Jewish homeland, and all but resonated the slurs of the left that Israel had become “genocidal.”

By spring 2024, we were further told that Israel could not finally defeat Hamas or remove its leadership from their tunnels. Moreover, Israel also faced 100,000, 125,000, or perhaps even 150,000 Hezbollah ballistic missiles and rockets—along with the full arsenal of Iranian rockets, missiles, and drones—that were ready at last to swarm and destroy Israeli defenses.

So, Israel was hopelessly trapped, we were told, in a brilliantly devilish Iranian “ring of fire.” Accordingly, Iranian appendages in the West Bank and Gaza, Yemen, Syria, Iraq, and Lebanon would wage an on-off again war of attrition against Israel.

Meanwhile, Iran would finalize the production of five or six nuclear bombs. Israel’s civilian and military manpower would be worn down and worn out on multiple fronts and its tourist trade would be destroyed.

The economy would be bled out, as its citizens were ostracized abroad and at home called up to military service. And its only patron, the once reliable U.S., now under the Biden-Harris administration, considered the Jewish state a near embarrassing election-year liability.

Such were the burdens that would supposedly crush Netanyahu as he was forced from office. These challenges would soon lead to a more “realistic” and compliant Israeli government that would stop the ground wars, not retaliate disproportionally against Hezbollah or Iran (“You got a win. Take the win” in the words of Joe Biden), and use the Biden administration as a neutral interlocutor to legitimize Hamas and thereby perhaps ransom the hostages for billions of dollars.

The more Israel knocked down incoming missiles, the more Biden urged them not to respond proportionally, as if to punish Israel for its competence and reward Iran for its ineptitude.

Indeed, not since the infamous days of the 1950s, when the CIA overthrew Latin American regimes, had America so brazenly interfered in the internal politics of a foreign nation as it now overtly sought to replace or undermine the Netanyahu government—by strategic leaks of shared classified information, slow-walking and suspending arms, threats of holding back financial aid, opening back-channel relations with its political opponents, and by nonstop loud jawboning.

Triumph

Yet here we are in autumn 2024, a year after October 7, with Hamas’s leadership virtually liquidated. Its terrorist brigades are decimated and increasingly scattered, and its own battered constituencies now angry that they are suffering the consequences of a self-interested—and, worst of all, losing—Hamas elite.

Hezbollah has launched some 9,000 rockets since October 7. It has made the Lebanese-Israeli border a no-man’s land. Some 80,000 Israelis were forced from their homes. Hezbollah violated all the UN peace accords and used UN deployments as virtual shields. Middle East experts assumed that Hamas were amateur killers compared to Nasrallah’s dreaded Hezbollah—the SS of Middle Eastern terrorist brigades.

Supposedly, its hardened killers, some 100,000 strong, could at any time trump the wickedness and medieval savagery of Hamas by sending at will far deadlier hit teams into northern Israel to repeat the massacres of October 7.

And what of Iran itself, the hub to the spokes of such terrorism?

We were told that it would soon become nuclear and might strike against the proverbial “one-bomb” state. In the mullahs’ eyes, poor Israel was a divine gift to the theocracy of assembling half the world’s Jewry into one easy target.

Did not Iran export deadly drones and missiles to new staunch allies like Russia and China and develop missiles nearly comparable to any in the West?

And yet somehow an embattled Netanyahu, shunned by the Biden administration, demonized by the European Union, and smeared and slandered by the UN, saw opportunity where all others saw only doom.

He understood that the sheer depravity of October 7 gave Israel, at least for a brief window, the moral authority to wage all-out war on its enemies, terrorists whose reputations he sensed were exaggerated, and their leaders’ bloodcurdling threats thus mostly empty.

So, Israel systematically neutered Hamas, eliminating its leadership, destroying its tunnels, and warning civilians this time around to vacate buildings that served as armories, storehouses, and safe houses and thus would be leveled. And so they were.

As if out of some science fiction novel, years ago Israel booby trapped thousands of Hezbollah pagers and walkie-talkies. And when they now finally exploded, they wounded or killed in a few seconds many of its ruling echelon while identifying the terrorists among the Lebanese population and revealing their strategic locations at the moments of their demise.

Netanyahu was told that reentering the Lebanese border was to revisit the graveyard of past failed Israeli incursions. And yet he did just that, though in measure, and thus half of the Hezbollah missile force is now reportedly gone. And with that, he pivoted to Iran.

Iran had sent 500 rockets, drones, and missiles into Israel, Israel heretofore launching a mere handful of missiles in response—until last week when the Israelis had apparently taken out much of the Iranian missile inventory and launch sites, as well as its anti-aircraft batteries.

So Israel without loss has finally retaliated against Iran in force, but in a geostrategically brilliant fashion that for now has taken few lives, avoided a regional war, and again put Iran in a nearly impossible strategic position—and all without further alienating an often hostile Biden administration.

If Iran does not match its murderous eliminationist rhetoric with a third strike, it will continue to lose face abroad and perhaps eventually even its governance at home. And yet Tehran realizes such humiliating quietude is the better of two bad choices, since Israel also gave it a way out, by killing few Iranians and sparing its oil and nuclear facilities.

On the other hand, if Iran foolishly chooses to send more ballistic missiles into Israel, there is a good chance that again few—if any—will get through. And such a third strike will both justify and indeed this time ensure that an unbound (and unstoppable) Israeli retaliation will destroy Iran’s nuclear facilities and its oil infrastructure, rendering it destitute, defenseless, and humiliated—to the delight of the Arab world, the U.S. and even Europe, and the indifference of its supposed allies China and Russia.

Moreover, Netanyahu struck before the election. That sent a message that even if Harris were to be elected, neither she nor Biden in the next few months will veto Israeli strategic options. (And the strike also reminded American voters that the current administration turned a calm Middle East into an inferno). All that said, Israel responded again with restraint, which the Biden-Harris will eagerly claim was due to their own humanitarian pressure.

In sum, Netanyahu has changed the very image of his multifarious enemies—and indeed of the Middle East terrorist himself. The myth of a deadly and inviolate Iran is now shattered, replaced by a neurotic theocracy, its terrorist limbs amputated, its homeland defenseless, and its ultimate fate in the hands of a righteously angry Israel—with the specter of a possible President Donald Trump on the horizon who would end the dangerous American strategic nonsense of promoting a theocratic, anti-Western, Persian/Shiite/underdog as a foil to the moderate Arabs and Israel.

Likewise, exploding pagers and walkie-talkies not only decimated Hezbollah, but it also humiliated it—and made it the butt of macabre global jest.

Targeted assassinations changed the image of the fiery terrorist Iranian, Hezbollah, or Hamas leader, shaking his fist and shouting death to Israel and the West to assembled thousands, into a caricature of a craven and quivering bully—screaming from a reinforced bunker about the unfairness of being on the receiving end of what it has so boastfully for decades dished out.

Western media weekly posts wanted poster-like charts of Iranian, Hezbollah, and Hamas leadership, with x’s over the faces of the deceased. Now no sooner does a Hamas, Hezbollah, or Iranian terrorist implode than there are hushed assumptions that no one wishes to publicly identify as his replacement—and thus join him in eternity

The surreal aspect of the Netanyahu retaliatory tour is that he has done more to neutralize European and American enemies—with decades of Western blood on their hands—than NATO, the CIA, the FBI, and Interpol combined, and yet more often received rebuke rather than gratitude.

https://victorhanson.com/the-ordeal-and-triumph-of-mr-netanyahu

Crafty_Dog

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GPF
« Reply #3155 on: November 01, 2024, 08:30:29 AM »


Time to talk. Israel is ready to seek a cease-fire along the Lebanese border, Israeli broadcaster Channel 12 reported. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Israeli security officials reportedly agreed at a meeting on Tuesday that the goals of the operation in southern Lebanon have been achieved and that a political settlement must now be reached. They also agreed that a deal would facilitate the return of residents to their homes in northern Israel, which was a key objective of the ground operation.

U.S. and Egypt. CIA Director William Burns held talks in Cairo with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi and intelligence chief Hassan Rashad. They discussed potential negotiations on a cease-fire in Gaza, the release of hostages held by Hamas and delivery of humanitarian aid. They also talked about the conflict in Lebanon, noting that an escalation of the fighting there would have serious consequences for the region.

Body-by-Guinness

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If We Don’t Allow Terrorists to Provide Food that Will be Hijacked …
« Reply #3156 on: November 01, 2024, 10:29:51 AM »
… by terrorists then people will starve! The left’s inability to take a fair and consistent stand here astounds:

The UNRWA meltdown
Why is a country under genocidal attack expected to provide aid to its attackers?

MELANIE PHILLIPS
NOV 01, 2024

Gaza building underneath which IDF discovered the bodies of four Israeli hostages
If anything illuminates the insanity and moral bankruptcy of our times, it’s the reaction to Israel’s decision to act against the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA).

Laws passed this week by the Israeli Knesset, which will come into force in three months’ time, ban UNRWA from operating in either Israel or Gaza, prohibit state officials from having any contact with the agency or its representatives, and enable Israel to arrest and prosecute any of its employees with terrorist connections.

The evidence is overwhelming that UNRWA is indeed an active partner of Hamas.

Israel has claimed that dozens of UNRWA officials and staffers directly participated in last year’s October 7 pogrom in southern Israel, when 1,200 were murdered and more than 250 kidnapped into Gaza.

Mohammad Abu Itiwi, who led the murder and kidnapping of Israelis hiding in a roadside bomb shelter on that terrible day and who was killed by the Israel Defence Forces last week in Gaza, had been employed by UNRWA since July 2022 while serving as a Nukbha commander in Hamas’s Bureij battalion.

Fateh Sherif Abu el-Amin, who led Hamas in Lebanon and was killed in an Israeli airstrike there in September, doubled as the head of Lebanon’s UNRWA teachers’ union. A school principal, he oversaw 65 schools and roughly 40,000 students. He had also been responsible for co-ordinating terror activities between Hamas and Hezbollah; procuring weapons and recruiting terrorists; and using social media to incite attacks.

The IDF repeatedly discovered terrorist infrastructure sited in and around UNRWA schools, hospitals and other facilities. Back in February, Israeli forces found below UNRWA’s headquarters in Gaza City a subterranean data centre that was hooked up to the electricity supply in the UNRWA facility above.

According to the curricula monitoring organisation IMPACT-se, UNRWA’s school curriculum has had a “central, radicalising influence on generations of Palestinians” and teaches children that the Jews are “liars and fraudsters” who “spread corruption.”

Despite all this and more such evidence of UNRWA’s terrorist ties, there has been hysterical outrage over Israel’s ban. There have been claims that it will deepen the humanitarian crisis with Gazans now on the brink of starvation — a claim that’s been made repeatedly during the war but has always proved untrue.

In reality, hundreds of aid trucks enter Gaza every week but Hamas continues to steal the aid and sell it on the black market at hugely inflated prices that Gaza residents cannot afford. Hamas has seized an estimated $500 million in foreign aid since the war began.

Most of the assistance coming in isn’t even being distributed by UNRWA. Israeli officials have said that aid agencies such as the World Food Program, World Central Kitchen and UNICEF have a bigger role in distributing Gaza’s aid supplies.

None of this is acknowledged by those claiming that the Palestinian Arabs in Gaza are starving and UNRWA is irreplaceable. Other aid agencies, they say, don’t provide health and education services.

But UNRWA’s schools have taught generations of Gaza’s children to hate and murder Jews. According to the IDF, every single UNRWA hospital and clinic has been used as a terrorist hub, with clinical staff doubling as Hamas members.

In any civilised universe, how can such a provision be deemed “irreplaceable”? Shouldn’t the appropriate response to the organisation that has facilitated such terrorist assistance be to shut it down?

Moreover, why should Israel be held responsible for providing Gaza with humanitarian assistance? Israel has been under bombardment from the coastal enclave for two decades. Gaza’s population elected Hamas to rule them. Opinion polling consistently reveals that even among those who now hate Hamas, the vast majority support the killing of Israelis.

Thousands of those civilians took part in the October 7 atrocities in Israel and grossly abused the Israeli captives when they were dragged into Gaza. The IDF subsequently found evidence of ties to Hamas in virtually every house.

In what conceivable moral universe is a country targeted for such a remorseless and genocidal attack expected to look after the welfare of its murderous attackers?

The United Nations says Jerusalem has an obligation under international law to provide humanitarian assistance in Gaza because Israel is the occupying power. But this is totally untrue. Israel is not occupying Gaza. It withdrew from it altogether in 2005.

It’s the United Nations that has failed to live up to its own international obligation not to fund and support violence. For years, the world body has turned a blind eye to UNRWA’s ties to terrorists. So have America, Britain and other countries. They still refuse to acknowledge this problem.

In a statement this week expressing “grave concern” over the Israeli ban, the foreign ministers of Canada, Australia, France, Germany, Japan, the Republic of Korea and the United Kingdom claimed that UNRWA was tackling its employees’ support for terrorism by pursuing the recommendations made in last April’s independent review by the former French foreign minister, Catherine Colonna.

That review was a travesty. Before the report was even written, Colonna said that her goal was to “enable donors … to regain confidence, when they have lost it or when they have doubts, in the way UNRWA operates”. Her report was drafted to achieve precisely that rather than stop the rot.

Far from tackling the agency’s terrorist ties, its commissioner-general, Philippe Lazzarini, has batted them away. He claimed implausibly that UNRWA didn’t know about the Hamas data centre underneath its Gaza headquarters.

He denied that it employed terrorists and said this claim was part of a “large-scale campaign aimed at undermining the agency”. Having suspended the teachers’ union head Abu el Amin under pressure over the revelation of his Hamas role, Lazzarini reinstated him three months later under pressure of a strike by UNRWA teachers supporting their union’s head.

As for UN Secretary-General António Guterres, he appeared to blame Israel for the Hamas October 7 pogrom by saying it “did not happen in a vacuum” and has repeatedly parroted Hamas talking points.

Instead of holding the UN’s and UNRWA’s feet to the fire, Israel’s supposed allies in America and Britain have been threatening to cut off the Jewish state at the knees.

Having told Israel earlier this month that it must take steps within 30 days to improve the humanitarian situation in Gaza or face potential restrictions on US military aid, the Biden-Harris administration threatened it with “consequences under US law and US policy” over its UNRWA ban.

In Britain, there have been reports that the government may suspend further arms sales to Israel as punishment. The UK ambassador to the United Nations, Dame Barbara Woodward, said that Israel must “ensure UNRWA can continue to provide essential services to those suffering in Gaza and the West Bank”.

But UNRWA’s role is not as a dispassionate provider of essential services. It was actually created in 1949 as a weapon to delegitimise the State of Israel. While refugee status for all other peoples is considered a temporary measure, it’s permanent for the Palestinian Arabs. Under UNRWA’s unique designation, it’s passed down from generation to generation.

That’s why the number of Palestinian Arab “refugees” has ludicrously increased from 700,000 in 1948 to 5.9 million today—an ever-growing running sore whose toxicity is vastly increased by the hatred of Israel taught in UNRWA schools.

The pretence that UNRWA exists to provide for the suffering was finally ripped apart by the part its employees played in the October 7 atrocities and in the war that has followed.

Israelis are no longer prepared to tolerate people who are trying to kill them and destroy their country while parading as humanitarian relief workers. Yet the United States, Britain and the United Nations are pressuring Israel to continue to keep this malign farce going.

Such people aren’t appalled by UNRWA. They’re appalled by the ban on it. That tells you everything you need to know about the war against Israel by the so-called civilised world.

Jewish News Syndicate

Don’t forget that you can catch up with all my previous work on my website at melaniephillips.substack.com

https://melaniephillips.substack.com/p/the-unrwa-meltdown?r=1qo1e&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=email&triedRedirect=true
« Last Edit: November 01, 2024, 11:46:37 AM by Body-by-Guinness »


Crafty_Dog

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Re: Israel, and its neighbors
« Reply #3158 on: November 02, 2024, 07:51:57 AM »
OMG, was Bill actually making sense there?!?

Crafty_Dog

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Serious Read: GPF: The Illusion of Palestinian Statehood
« Reply #3159 on: November 05, 2024, 06:58:06 AM »


November 5, 2024
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The Illusion of Palestinian Statehood
Long before the Hamas attack, Israelis did not see a two-state solution as a viable option.
By: Hilal Khashan

The idea of a two-state solution was a Palestinian concept that gradually gained international support. Its broad outlines began to take shape in the early 1970s after the Jordanian army expelled the Palestine Liberation Organization from Jordan and forcibly relocated PLO headquarters to Lebanon. However, Israel has from the outset rejected Palestinian statehood, pointing to the fact that peace talks and U.N. resolutions never referred to establishing a Palestinian state. It has also argued that Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack created a sweeping sentiment within Israel, shared by young West Bank Palestinians but for different reasons, that Palestinian statehood will never be an acceptable option.

Israel’s Stance

Recognizing the right of the Palestinian people to a state casts doubt on the biblical Zionist narrative that defines the “Land of Israel” as stretching from the Mediterranean coast to the Jordan Rift Valley, which includes the Jordan River and the Dead Sea. Thus, Israel’s rejection of a Palestinian state in the West Bank is both a strategic and a principled position. Until a few years ago, Israel did not recognize the existence of the Palestinian people, and the flexibility it has sometimes shown on this front, including in the 2002 road map for peace and the 2020 Abraham Accords, was just a maneuver to buy time to annex more land.

Israel’s rejection of a Palestinian state is not a ploy to extract more concessions from the Palestinians. It’s also not, as Israel insists, a reaction to Palestinian attempts to acquire a state through violence or concerns that a Palestinian state will threaten Israel and the region. Israel does not view the Palestinians’ commitment to peace, their abandonment of armed struggle or international legitimacy of the Israeli state as incentives to grant the Palestinians an independent political entity.

To understand the Israeli position, it is essential to understand the real cause of the 1967 war, which resulted in Israel’s occupation of the West Bank, the Golan Heights, Gaza and the Sinai Desert. Israel knew that Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser did not want war despite his rhetoric. He explained that Egypt itself would not start a war but would react massively should Israel launch one. The Egyptian military command considered sending forces to Sinai as a demonstration to persuade the administration of U.S. President Lyndon Johnson to engage in dialogue with Nasser after their estrangement in 1965. Egypt agreed to send Vice President Zakaria Mohieddin to Washington to discuss ways to ease tensions in the Middle East and reverse Egypt’s decision to close the Strait of Tiran to Israeli shipping. Ten days before Mohieddin’s scheduled visit, however, Israel launched the Six-Day War.

Soon after the war’s conclusion, Yigal Allon, an Israeli Cabinet member, proposed the annexation of the Jordan River lowland to isolate West Bank Palestinians from Transjordan and Israel’s ambitious settlement construction project. Israel wanted what it called the liberation of the Land of Israel, especially Judea and Samaria, fearing increasing demands from the Palestine Liberation Organization, established in 1964, and the Fatah movement to establish a Palestinian state in the West Bank, which was then under Jordanian control, and the Gaza Strip, then administered by Egypt.

These calls for independence explain Jordanian King Hussein’s decision just five days before the outbreak of the war to sign a defense treaty with Egypt, as he was aware of Israel’s intention to go to war and the likely outcome of the conflict. He preferred to get rid of the West Bank, which he viewed as a burden on his Hashemite Kingdom. He withdrew his army from the territory without putting up much of a fight.

Israel did not occupy the West Bank or construct settlements and roads there solely for security reasons. It had no intention to return the area to the Palestinians so that they could establish a state if the region became more secure. Rather, its intention was for the West Bank to become part of the state of Israel. This was made clear by Israeli Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion's 1956 proclamation that Jordan had no right to exist and that the West Bank should become an autonomous region within Israel.

Statehood and Peace Talks

No direct or indirect negotiations with the Palestinians mentioned the potential for a Palestinian state in a realistic manner. Even talks on the Oslo Accords veered from the topic and treated the West Bank and the Gaza Strip as disputed lands. Israel and the United States have insisted that the peace process be based on U.N. Security Council resolutions 242 and 338, which did not mention the word “Palestine” or the Palestinians but addressed instead the Arab countries that participated in the 1967 war.

Even after the establishment of the Palestinian National Authority in 1994 following the signing of the Oslo Accords, Israel rejected Palestinian sovereignty over any land, water and space. It also objected to the name “Palestinian National Authority,” which implies the existence of a homeland and state. It instead insists on using “Palestinian Authority” to describe the entity that administers the Palestinian territories. Thus, the passports of residents of the West Bank and Gaza bear the name “Palestinian Authority.”

Israel accepted the idea of establishing a Palestinian state that includes the West Bank, or parts of it, on only two occasions but placed impossible conditions for its establishment in both instances. The first was the road map for peace. In 2002, U.S. President George W. Bush referred in a speech to the possibility of establishing a Palestinian state. The “international quartet,” consisting of the U.S., the European Union, the United Nations and Russia, put forward a plan to get negotiations underway amid Israel’s continued construction of settlements in the West Bank. Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon set 14 conditions for accepting the plan and establishing a Palestinian state that ultimately derailed its implementation. The conditions included an indefinite hold on negotiations with the Palestinians on resolving the final status issues and refusal to dismantle any settlements, including isolated outposts.

The second instance was the Abraham Accords, signed under mediation during the Trump administration. Although they cite the possibility of establishing a Palestinian state, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu presented 10 conditions to make this happen that the Palestinians could not satisfy. They included Israel’s annexation of the Jordan Valley lowland, the northern West Bank and related settlements, Palestinian acceptance of Israel’s annexation of east Jerusalem, and the extension of Israeli security sovereignty over the entire West Bank. Netanyahu insisted that after the Palestinians accepted these conditions, negotiations would begin between the two parties to establish a Palestinian state.

Traumatized Israeli Public

A poll release last February and conducted by the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv found that 63 percent of Jewish Israelis opposed the establishment of a Palestinian state. Many are reluctant to discuss creation of a Palestinian state or even consider peace, even in the context of a comprehensive normalization agreement with all Arab countries. Hamas’ attack last year wounded the Israeli psyche, disillusioning Israelis about the possibility of peaceful coexistence with Palestinians.

The country is also experiencing a period of political upheaval and social division. Although most Israelis see Netanyahu as the politician best suited to lead the country, they also view him as a failed and corrupt leader. Only 28 percent of respondents in the INSS poll said they approved of Netanyahu, indicating Israel is suffering from a crisis of confidence in its political leaders. Many respondents also said they could agree to make peace without necessarily establishing a Palestinian state if a trusted and charismatic leader emerged.

Last July, the Knesset approved by a large majority a draft resolution rejecting the establishment of a Palestinian state west of the Jordan River. The move came after five countries – Norway, Ireland, Spain, Slovenia and Armenia – recognized the Palestinian state. The Knesset vote was a clear message that Israel would not agree to establishing a Palestinian state or any negotiations that could lead in that direction. It reflected the general sentiment in Israeli society against a two-state solution.

Palestinian Youth

As for young Palestinians, many say they do not trust the Palestinian Authority in Ramallah and reject the establishment of a Palestinian state, believing it will fail due to rampant corruption and discontiguity and could, in the best case, lead to establishment of Native American-style reservations. Palestinian youth describe the Ramallah government as authoritarian and self-serving. More than 30 years after the declaration of principles on the White House lawn and the start of peace negotiations, young people have lost hope for the future.

Israelis and Palestinians are both traumatized peoples. The fragmented political landscape for both groups has produced unpopular leaders and limited public support for genuine peace, turning the page, and moving on to new horizons

Body-by-Guinness

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Qatar to Hamas: Don’t Let the Door Hit You on the Way Out?
« Reply #3160 on: November 08, 2024, 10:01:40 AM »
If confirmed, this is a big deal:

🚨BREAKING🚨Qatar has told all Hams officials in the country: You are no longer welcome here. Leave the country immediately.

https://x.com/jewishwarrior13/status/1854912018299388110?s=61

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Israel, and its neighbors
« Reply #3161 on: November 08, 2024, 10:30:16 AM »
If true, Trump wins again!


Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: Hamas torture tapes
« Reply #3163 on: November 12, 2024, 07:58:12 AM »


Gaza’s Forgotten Palestinian Victims
Who will protest on behalf of the dissidents tortured by Hamas?
By The Editorial Board
Nov. 11, 2024 5:48 pm ET




212

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(2 min)



Hamas leader in the Gaza Strip Yahya Sinwar in 2017 Photo: Khalil Hamra/Associated Press
You won’t see any street protests over it. No encampments on campus. Video evidence of the torture of Palestinians in Gaza elicits little reaction in the West—perhaps because the torture was carried out by Hamas.

Opinion: Potomac Watch
WSJ Opinion Potomac Watch
The Second Trump Administration Begins to Take Shape


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On Sunday the Israel Defense Forces released a 47-minute montage of Hamas interrogations from CCTV footage that its troops discovered in Gaza. Israel says it found thousands of hours of footage, which are from 2018-20 and show “Hamas’s brutal methods for interrogating civilians, violating human rights and systematically oppressing residents suspected of opposing the organization’s rule.”

The scenes are repulsive, and they match accounts from victims of Hamas such as gay men, political dissidents and those accused of “collaborating” with Israel. Prisoners are seen in the video with sacks over their heads, chained to floors and ceilings in unnatural positions while they are beaten with canes on the soles of their feet. They writhe in agony while their torturers chat casually and recline—one with his hands folded behind his head.

This is how Hamas acts in peacetime against its own people. Yahya Sinwar, the mastermind of Hamas’s Oct. 7 massacre, got his nickname as “butcher of Khan Younis” for killing Palestinians accused of collaboration. When Hamas took over Gaza in 2007, it threw rivals off roofs. This war has also seen Hamas executing or torturing Palestinians who in some way are alleged to aid Israel or dare voice dissent.

Hamas’s brutality has never seemed to trouble the conscience of the student or activist left in the West. In the same way Bashar al-Assad’s slaughter of thousands of Palestinian civilians in Syria, many of them starved and bombed indiscriminately in Damascus’s Yarmouk district, made no impression. No one gets worked up when Israel can’t be blamed.

That’s one reason the movement that calls itself “pro-Palestine” is better termed “anti-Israel.” Another is its demand that Israel leave Gaza to Hamas rule. When you hear the shout “Free Palestine,” understand what’s left implicit: “for a larger Hamas dictatorship.”

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Israel, and its neighbors
« Reply #3165 on: November 15, 2024, 10:57:23 AM »
Most Americans know nothing about the truth of the Israel-"Palestinian" conflict because the establishment media endlessly promotes pro-Hamas, pro-Hezbollah, anti-Israel narratives. None of this truth is taught in our public schools, either. Quite the contrary. Arm yourself with these facts to counter anyone you hear spouting these lies.

Top 20 Lies of the Pro-Palestinian Arab Cause
It’s just a start.

November 14, 2024 by Adam Turner


“If you have the facts on your side, hammer the facts.  If you have the law on your side, hammer the law.  If you have neither the facts nor the law, hammer the table.”

The above is an old saying from the legal world.  But it has applications for other matters, as well.

For example, in the foreign policy realm, and for the “Pro-Palestinian Arab Cause.”

As I said in an earlier column, the Palestinian Arab Cause has “jumped the shark” – i.e., it has (long ago) reached its peak and begun a downhill slide to mediocrity or oblivion.

Now, let me take things a step further – the Palestinian Arab Cause has gone so far downhill that it is, officially, a ridiculous cause that makes absolutely no sense anymore – if it ever did – based on the constant untruth’s that its proponents are constantly peddling.

These include the following Top 10 Lies of the Palestinian Arab Cause.

Israel is an apartheid regime. This charge is especially stupid because “apartheid” involves “race”, and there is no “race” implicated here.  Further, Israel is a democracy where its Arab citizens are fully equal under the law.  Now, there are distinctions made between Israeli citizens and the Palestinian Arabs who are not citizens, but this is because Israel has legitimate security needs.

Israel is committing, or attempting to commit, genocide. Genocide is an internationally recognized crime where one party acts with the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group.  There is absolutely no evidence that Israel intends to destroy the Palestinians, in whole or in part.  This is why the South Africans are having a problem making this claim, even with a biased anti-Israel international court.  Especially since the Palestinian Arab population numbers continue to grow, and the Hamas claimed casualties are dwarfed by those from many other recent conflicts (see the Sudan, the Congo, Syria, etc.)  But Hamas, on the other hand, does routinely call for a genocide of the Jews.

Israel is targeting civilians/or Israel is indiscriminate about its attacks, leading to excessive civilian deaths. No, it certainly isn’t. The civilians who die do so largely because Hamas routinely uses civilians as human shields.  Further, the IDF has made great efforts to minimize civilian casualties, by warning Gazans to leave areas or buildings about to be targeted.  They have done this through about nine million leaflets dropped, fifteen million messages sent, and sixteen million robocalls made.  As a result, the ratio of civilians to terrorist in this conflict is probably approaching one to one, an unprecedented modern ratio, and Israel has been praised for its success in protecting the lives of civilians by noted experts in modern warfare such as Richard Kemp (UK, Ret.) and Major John Spencer (US, Ret.).

The Hamas counted casualties are to be believed. No – in fact, they are “poorly fabricated figures.”  Meanwhile, Israel actually reduced the number of its reported casualties from the October 7th

Israel is the aggressor in this conflict. Not so. The Jewish state has made real peace offers to the Palestinian Arabs in 1993, in 2000, in 2001, in 2005, and in 2008, all immediately answered by vicious and bloody Palestinian terrorism.  Here is former President Bill Clinton taking the Palestinian Arabs to task for their failure to embrace peace during his term.  And Hamas started the current hostilities in a particularly bloodthirsty way on October 7, 2023.

Favoring the Palestinian Arab Cause is in the U.S. national interest. No, it isn’t, as I have explained numerous times before. The Palestinian Arabs are a stateless people. No, Jordan clearly has a majority of Palestinian Arabs, and its Queen is a Palestinian Arab.  Granted, the Palestinian Arab majority does not rule in Jordan; then again, none of the 21 Arab states are democratic.

The conflict needs to be solved soon because the Palestinian Arabs are having more children than the Israelis. No, this is outdated demographic data.  Today, the Israelis have a higher demographic growth than the Palestinian Arabs.

The Palestinian Arabs have a population in Judea, Samaria, and Gaza that is too large to be controlled by Israel. As in everything else, the Palestinian Arabs are simply lying about their numbers.  The UN official population numbers the Palestinian Arabs in those areas at roughly 6 million; in reality, there are probably less than 4 million.

Creating a Palestinian state will lead to the protection of the human rights of Palestinian Arabs. As stated above, none of the 23 Arab states are democracies, and none of them are protective of human rights. A Palestinian Arab state will most certainly be a (possibly theocratic) brutal dictatorship with discriminating policies against women, homosexuals, and Christians.

Plus, as an extra (sad) bonus, here are another Top 10 Lies of the Palestinian Arab Cause, because there are just so many to debunk.

The Palestinian Arabs are the indigenous people in Israel and the Jews are the settlers. No – absolutely not. The Palestinian Arabs are mostly descended from Arabs and others who immigrated to the area from other Muslim areas in response to the economic job opportunities created by the return of many Jews to the area in the 1900’s.  Only a very small percentage of the Palestinian Arabs are native to Israel, Judea, Samaria, and Gaza, and those are descended from the original Jewish, Christian, or Samaritan inhabitants who were forcibly converted to Islam.  Meanwhile, a majority of the Jews in Israel are descended from Middle Eastern Jews, who were exiled from Israel but stayed in the Middle East, and who are physically indistinguishable from Arabs.  The minority Ashkenazi Jews, who are often portrayed as European settlers, are descended from Jews from ancient Israel, but with some European influence, from living in Europe for so long.  Their original Middle Eastern origin can easily be seen in the physical appearance of two prominent Ashkenazi Jews – Adam Sandler and Gal Gadot.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is responsible for the lack of a ceasefire deal. As Eli Lake at Commentary has written, “(t)here was no deal for Netanyahu to reject.  Hamas is not participating in the actual negotiations.  The diplomacy has been between America, Israel, Egypt, and Qatar.  The Qataris are stand-ins for Hamas, but they are not proxies.  Several times since April, Hamas has rejected offers for a cease-fire, or in some cases, has insisted on last-minute deal-killing demands—such as a stipulation that the first round of hostages need not be alive.”  And President Biden’s claims to the contrary are driven by American politics and contradicted by his own administration’s previous statements (and by other evidence).

Israel is violating international law. Once again, this is simply not true. This subtopic is actually worthy of its own, separate, research paper.  Suffice to say, international law has been misrepresented – does anyone understand what “proportionality” really means? – to attack Israel through lawfare.

Gaza was occupied by the Israelis prior to the October 7th massacre. The Merriam-Websterdefinition of “occupation” is: “a: the act or process of taking possession of a place or area: SEIZURE; b: the holding and control of an area by a foreign military force; OR c: the military force occupying a country or the policies carried out by it.”  Therefore, Gaza has not been “occupied” by Israel, according to the actual meaning of the word, since 2005.

Gaza was an “open-air prison” before the October 7th Proponents of the Palestinian Arab Cause say, at different times, to make different arguments, that “the Gaza of Oct. 6, 2023, was occupying its very own quantum superposition — at once both sublime utopia and horrific dystopia. Depending on the context, either of these versions could be the true Gaza that proves the specific argument trying to be made.”  Just call this Schrödinger’s Gaza.

The Gazans were suffering from an Israeli caused famine. As reported by JNS, “the U.N.’s own Famine Review Committee admitted in a report that the claims about not enough food being sent into Gaza were untrue.  What’s more, this allegation, which is at the heart of the equally widespread big lie that Israel is committing genocide against the Palestinians, is a matter of sleight of hand bookkeeping.”  And many of the pictures of supposedly starving children are children with genetic diseases.  This can often be seen by contrasting the appearance of the healthy parent with the “starving” child in the picture.

Hamas is legitimate nationalistic organization seeking a Palestinian state. Not at all. As is well-known, Hamas is a part of the international Muslim Brotherhood terror organization, which also briefly ruled over neighboring Egypt.  Hamas is also a terror proxy of Iran, a nation which is the leading state sponsor of terrorism, and which has provided Hamas with billions in funding for weapons, training and equipment.

The Palestinians have – and should have – been given nation status at the UN. The only problem with this action is that “State of Palestine” is not an actual state/nation. According to the international treaty, the Montevideo Convention on Rights and Duties of States, Article 1, the state as a person of international law should possess the following qualifications: a) a permanent population; b) a defined territory; c) government; and d) capacity to enter into relations with the other states.  Since the “State of Palestine” does not have these qualifications, it is not a “State.”

The Palestinian Authority is the “moderate” force among Palestinian Arabs. As I wrote over a decade ago – and it is still true today – the Palestinian Authority: uses their various cultural, educational, and media sources to undermine the peace process with Israel; uses their children’s shows and elementary schools to incite Palestinian children to kill Israelis, including women and children, and Jews; produces government officials, from the President down to their diplomatic envoys, who spread anti-Semitism throughout the world; names streets, buildings, and squares after terrorists who have killed Israelis and Jews; sells and teaches Mein Kampf and the Protocols of the Elders of Zion; smuggles arms, rockets and explosives into Judea and Samaria to be used to attack Israeli cities and farms; praises, pays and otherwise honors Palestinian terrorists, and their families, who kill Israelis, Jews, and even Americans; is duplicitous about its desire for war; and denies the Holocaust, while calling for another one, and allows Holocaust deniers to serve as their leaders.  In other words, the PA is not in any way “moderate.”

After October 7th, now is the time to favor the Palestinian Arab Cause. This would, perversely, incentivize international terrorism by rewarding the Palestinian Arabs with a state after a bloodthirsty and vicious act of terrorism by Hamas, a designated terror organization. No nation on this planet should want to do that.

The amount of lies and double talk by the proponents of the Palestinian Arab Cause is staggering.  Their whole cause seems to be grounded solely in anti-Israel and anti-American propaganda, and not on actual facts.  Which is why its proponents often resort to violence and intimidation in their tactics; not having the law or the facts on their side, they need to “pound the table.”

So, I would like to end with a final question to objective readers.  It is simple – if the Palestinian Arab Cause is so righteous, then why is every prominent argument in favor of it a lie?

Adam Turner is a national-security professional with two decades of experience who works for the Zionist Organization of America.
"You have enemies?  Good.  That means that you have stood up for something, sometime in your life." - Winston Churchill.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Israel, and its neighbors
« Reply #3166 on: November 15, 2024, 11:02:30 AM »
Good useful summary for educating the un and mis-informed.

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Israel blasts Amnesty International report
« Reply #3167 on: December 06, 2024, 07:48:45 AM »
https://justthenews.com/world/middle-east/israel-blasts-amnesty-international-after-report-alleges-genocide-gaza
--------------------
In my travels this week I listen to a lot of NPR, unfortunately, and they had a director of Amnesty International on to explain why they consider Israel action to be genocide. They promise to give equally harsh scrutiny to Hamas, but assert that "October 7th was just one day" while the Israeli action is ongoing.

No pushback whatsoever from the NPR host of the program. This is what 'reasonable and honest liberals' use for a news source.





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PA bans Al Jazeera
« Reply #3172 on: January 04, 2025, 06:52:03 AM »


Palestinian Authority Bans Al Jazeera in West Bank
Qatar-funded broadcaster’s Hamas coverage prompts accusations of bias
By Dov Lieber and Rory Jones
Jan. 2, 2025 3:05 pm ET
WSJ


The Palestinian Authority banned Al Jazeera in the occupied West Bank in the latest confrontation between the influential broadcaster and governments that have accused it of sympathetic coverage of Hamas.

The Palestinian Authority on Wednesday accused Al Jazeera of broadcasting reports that are “misleading, foster discord and interfere” in Palestinian internal affairs and suspended the network’s operations in areas it controls. Al Jazeera said it was shocked by the decision, calling it “an attempt to hide the truth” about events in the West Bank.

The ban comes as the Palestinian Authority battles militants from Hamas and its allies for control over parts of the West Bank, a fight that could shape the struggle for leadership of the Palestinian cause. The Hamas-led attacks on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, sparked a war in Gaza, with Israel invading the strip and killing top Hamas leaders. The war has left a leadership vacuum in Gaza that the Palestinian Authority hopes to fill, and critics say Al Jazeera is broadly sympathetic to Hamas and reproving of the Palestinian Authority’s crackdown on militants.

Israel and Arab governments in the region have long been critical of Al Jazeera, which is based in Qatar’s capital Doha and funded by the gas-rich Gulf state. During the war in Gaza, Israel banned the broadcaster and accused some of its journalists of being militants from Hamas and its allies. Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt in recent years have accused Al Jazeera of favorably covering Islamist movements such as Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood—a charge the network has denied.

“The crackdown on Al Jazeera has been because of its critical stance on the Palestinian Authority operation in the West Bank, and at the same time, the Hamas-friendly coverage of the Gaza war,” said Mohanad Hage Ali, deputy director of research at the Malcolm H. Kerr Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut.

More broadly, he said, “the Palestinian Authority shares Arab states’ discomfort with Al Jazeera coverage.”

An Al Jazeera broadcast engineer inside the network’s office in the West Bank city of Ramallah in May.
An Al Jazeera broadcast engineer inside the network’s office in the West Bank city of Ramallah in May. Photo: Nasser Nasser/Associated Press
Al Jazeera didn’t respond to a request for comment. Many in the Arab world, including Palestinians, see Al Jazeera as independent and credible in a region where many media outlets are tightly controlled by Arab governments.

The network is one of the most-watched channels in the Arab world and is one of the few news organizations with a large presence in Gaza. Qatar is also one of the main mediators in cease-fire negotiations between Israel and Hamas, alongside Egypt and the U.S.

“Al Jazeera is the most credible and popular channel that’s viewed not just amongst Palestinians but generally in the Arab world,” said Tahani Mustafa, a senior analyst at the International Crisis Group.

The broadcaster has a knack for going places other media outlets don’t, Mustafa said. This includes the Gaza Strip, where Israel has banned the entry of journalists since the start of the war. Al Jazeera already had a large crew there when the hostilities began. This gave the broadcaster an outsize role in on-the-ground reporting from Gaza.

In the West Bank, Mustafa said the Palestinian Authority feels that Al Jazeera’s ability to influence opinion is far greater than its own. The Western-backed governing body is already suffering from a serious legitimacy crisis, and Al Jazeera’s critical take of the Palestinian Authority’s operation against Hamas and its allies in the West Bank city of Jenin is only worsening the situation.

“The PA is losing the PR war,” Mustafa said.

Al Jazeera has long been controversial. Founded in 1996, Al Jazeera quickly built a reputation as an Arabic broadcaster that would air marginalized figures and groups, such as the Taliban and al Qaeda, considered extremists in the West and some parts of the Arab world.

During the Arab Spring uprisings against Arab governments that began in 2011, Al Jazeera was viewed as broadly supportive of Islamist movements that proliferated across the Middle East and it helped galvanize Arab frustration with autocratic leaders.

In 2017, Saudi Arabia, the U.A.E. and Egypt demanded Qatar close Al Jazeera as part of a broader boycott of the tiny Gulf state amid accusations it supported extremist groups such as Hamas.

Doha denied the accusations. But Al Jazeera’s largely pro-Qatar coverage of the conflict between Arab states created the impression that it wasn’t always an independent observer of regional politics, and it lost credibility among some Arabs, said Hussein Ibish, senior resident fellow at the Arab Gulf States Institute, a think tank in Washington.

In 2020, the Trump administration ordered Al Jazeera affiliate AJ+ to register as a foreign agent of Qatar. Al Jazeera said Washington made the move at the behest of the U.A.E., which at the time was in the process of a U.S.-backed initiative to normalize relations with Israel.

Al Jazeera has again become part of the story during the war between Hamas and Israel in Gaza, with some accusing the network of an anti-Israel bias. The broadcaster has had nearly nonstop coverage of the Gaza campaign, often with explicit images of destruction and civilian deaths.

Elhanan Miller, an Arabic-speaking Israeli journalist, said regular invites from Al Jazeera’s Arabic channel for him and other Arabic-speaking Jewish Israelis stopped around the time the current war in Gaza began.

He also said he thought the broadcaster was blurring the line between reporting and propaganda. This included, Miller said, referring to all Israelis as settlers even if they live in Israel’s internationally recognized borders, or cutting to live coverage of news conferences by Hamas’s military wing.

Israel’s government in May shut down the local offices of Al Jazeera under a new law that gives Israel the power to ban foreign news organizations deemed to be a threat to national security. Israel seized Al Jazeera’s equipment and blocked its broadcasts and website, and later also raided its offices in the West Bank city of Ramallah. Al Jazeera and Israeli rights groups criticized the move as undemocratic.

Israel’s move to shut Al Jazeera made it easier for the Palestinian Authority to follow suit, said Ibish at the Arab Gulf States Institute. The emergence of an Islamist-led transitional government in Syria, backed by Turkey and its ally Qatar, has also reignited concerns about the geopolitical influence of Islamist movements such as the Muslim Brotherhood, he said.

“That is the context in which the PA is acting against Al Jazeera, and in those circumstances, they will find a lot less pushback,” he added.

Write to Dov Lieber at dov.lieber@wsj.com and Rory Jones at Rory.Jones@wsj.com

Copyright ©2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8
Appeared in the January 3, 2025, print

Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: PA vs Hamas
« Reply #3173 on: January 04, 2025, 07:14:32 AM »
second

The Palestinian Authority Takes on Hamas Militants in West Bank Power Struggle
Weeks of deadly fighting have marked the most serious clashes between Palestinian factions in years
By Dov Lieber
Updated Jan. 2, 2025 4:38 am ET





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Palestinian Authority security forces are battling militants from Hamas and its allies in the occupied West Bank, in a fight that has the potential to shape the long-running struggle for the leadership of the Palestinian cause.

The struggle between Palestinian factions gained new urgency as the Israeli military battered Hamas in Gaza over the past 15 months, leaving a leadership vacuum in the territory. The PA has support in the West, while the militant groups are backed by Iran and deeply rooted in Palestinian society.

The Biden administration and others see the PA as the best alternative for running Gaza after the war. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has resisted the idea, saying the PA is anti-Israel at its core.

The PA has governed major Palestinian population centers in the West Bank since the 1990s under agreements with Israel. Showing it can take on militants there could bolster its case to run Gaza.

The clashes pit PA security forces against militants from Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad, an allied group. The fighting, which erupted in December, is the most fierce since Fatah, the Palestinian faction that largely controls the PA, engaged in a 2007 battle with Hamas in Gaza, analysts said. Fatah ultimately lost that fight, leading to Hamas’s control of the enclave.

The current fighting has taken place in the Jenin Refugee Camp, which has long been seen by Palestinians as a center of resistance against Israel and by Israel as a stronghold for militants conducting terrorist attacks. The fighting has led to at least 11 deaths and dozens of arrests, according to Palestinian and Israeli officials.

Clashes began on Dec. 5 after militants stole two pickup trucks belonging to Palestinian security forces. The black-clad and masked militants paraded the vehicles through the camp’s narrow streets bedecked with flags belonging to various Islamist militant groups. PA security forces surrounded the camp that night and began the crackdown.

Security forces have so far killed at least six inside the camp, arrested dozens of suspected militants and defused dozens of improvised explosive devices and booby-trapped cars, said Brig. Gen. Anwar Rajab, the spokesman for the PA’s security forces.

One of those killed was Yazid Ja’saysa, a commander in the Jenin Battalion, a PIJ affiliate and the city’s most prominent militant group. Among those killed were also five unarmed individuals, including a journalist, according to the United Nations. The militants, meanwhile, have killed at least five members of the security forces, according to Rajab. 

“The goal of this operation is to restore control of the Jenin Camp from the control of outlaws, who have embittered the daily lives of citizens,” Rajab said while announcing the operation on Dec. 14.

Clashes occurred on Dec. 15 between Palestinian Authority security forces and militants in Jenin.
Clashes occurred on Dec. 15 between Palestinian Authority security forces and militants in Jenin. Photo: zain jaafar/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images
Rajab has argued that the existence of the militant groups harms Palestinian interests by giving Israel a pretext to carry out raids in Palestinian areas.

The Israeli military has fought numerous battles in recent years in Jenin. In August, the town was the focus of a major operation the military said was intended to prevent terrorist attacks originating from Palestinian territory.

More than 800 Palestinians in the West Bank have been killed by Israeli forces since the start of the war in Gaza, the Palestinian health ministry says. Israel’s military says most were militants, while Palestinians dispute that.

Israel has been surprised by the determination shown by Palestinian security forces during the fighting, an Israeli security official said. The official said Israel had no part in the operation, but said it and the PA do have common foes. PA officials say Israel has no involvement in the operation.

The stakes are high for the PA, analysts say. “If it ends with a success, it can be a kind of a shift,” with Palestinian security forces moving on to uproot militants in other parts of the West Bank, said Michael Milstein, a former senior intelligence officer for Palestinian affairs in the Israeli army.

“If it fails, it can cause a domino effect. Hamas may raise their heads in places like Tulkarem and Nablus,” added Milstein, referring to other Palestinian cities where militants have a strong presence.

The PA in recent years has struggled to maintain control in the northern West Bank, especially in crowded and poverty-stricken refugee camps that were founded decades ago after the creation of the state of Israel. The camps have seen a resurgence of militancy and clashes with Israeli security forces. 

Some Palestinians see the PA as corrupt and incompetent. Support for Hamas in the West Bank surged in the wake of the Hamas-led attacks on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, which killed about 1,200 people.

But polls show that support has gradually waned during the war, which has led to widespread devastation in Gaza. More than 45,000 people have been killed there since the start of the war, according to Palestinian health authorities, whose figures don’t say how many were combatants.

On Tuesday, a group of Gaza businessmen, human rights workers and construction contractors publicly expressed support for the Palestinian Authority to oversee Gaza and its reconstruction. One of the signatories to their joint letter said they felt it was their duty to say Gaza shouldn’t be controlled by outsiders or Hamas.

The militant groups have sought to frame the crackdown in Jenin as the PA doing Israel’s bidding. “This operation has reached dangerous and unprecedented levels, with scenes that mimic what the occupation is doing against our people,” Hamas said Sunday.

Separately, the PA on Wednesday said it was suspending all of Al Jazeera’s activities in the Palestinian territory, accusing the influential Middle Eastern news channel of “broadcasting inciting materials and reports that are misleading, foster discord, and interfere in Palestinian internal affairs.”

Al Jazeera, which has extensively reported on the PA crackdown in Jenin, said the decision was an attempt to dissuade the channel from covering the rapidly escalating events in the occupied territories. It added that the move was “in line with the [Israeli] occupation’s actions against its staff.”

In May, Israel shut down Al Jazeera’s broadcast in the country and shuttered its offices on the grounds that it harmed state security and operated as the media arm of Hamas. The outlet is one of few with a large presence in Gaza. In September, Israeli forces also raided and shuttered the channel’s main offices in the West Bank city of Ramallah.

Israeli and PA officials say Israel has no involvement in the current operation in Jenin.

Ghassan Khatib, a lecturer at Birzeit University in the West Bank, noted that despite calls by militant groups for demonstrations opposing the crackdown, they haven’t materialized—nor have clashes spread to other areas.

He said the decision to launch the operation stems from a desire among Palestinians to prevent the spread of lawlessness. Khatib added that there is fear that Israel, emboldened by the war in Gaza, could launch equally destructive campaigns in the West Bank or further tighten its control of the territory.

“The Palestinian Authority realized a silent majority of the Palestinian public is having the same fears,” Khatib said. “That’s why you don’t see strong public backlash.”

Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: $8B arms to Israel
« Reply #3174 on: January 04, 2025, 10:22:44 AM »
third

The Biden administration notified Congress of an $8 billion weapons package for Israel, including thousands of bombs, missiles and artillery shells, in one of the largest new arms sales since the war in Gaza began in 2023.

The weapons package, which congressional officials received notification of late on Friday afternoon, also includes the planned sale of thousands of bombs, air-to-air missiles and precision munitions, according to U.S. officials familiar with the sale.

The new weapons package includes some items that could draw objections from Democrats who have opposed the transfer of large bombs to Israel amid concerns over the civilian toll of the war in Gaza. The proposed sale includes a set of guidance kits designed to be fitted to large MK-84 2,000-pound bombs, as well as BLU-109 bunker buster bombs, one of the officials said. Also included are AMRAAM and Hellfire missiles and 155mm artillery rounds.

The planned weapons sale, which comes just weeks before President Biden hands over power to President-elect Donald Trump, is the largest the U.S. government has authorized for Israel since the massive $20 billion weapons package the administration approved in August. Israel was also informed of the move, said an Israeli official, who said that the country expected the weapons to begin arriving in 2025.

President Biden has at times used weapons sales to Israel to deliver a warning or encouragement; now all sides are waiting for policy changes in the coming Trump administration.
President Biden has at times used weapons sales to Israel to deliver a warning or encouragement; now all sides are waiting for policy changes in the coming Trump administration. Photo: saul loeb/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images
“We will continue to provide the capabilities necessary for Israel’s defense,” said an administration official familiar with the deal, which still requires congressional approval to move forward. The office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declined to comment. The new weapons package was reported earlier by Axios.

Arms sales to Israel have been a troublesome issue for the Biden administration, which organized an airlift of bombs and other munitions to Israel in the aftermath of Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023 attack on southern Israel, in which about 1,200 people were killed and militants seized some 250 hostages.

The resulting Israeli military offensive against Hamas has killed more than 45,000 Palestinians in Gaza, according to Palestinian health authorities, whose figures don’t say how many were combatants. The war, which has largely been carried out with U.S.-made weapons, has reduced much of the coastal enclave to ruins while thousands of people have also struggled with famine-like conditions in the territory, according to Palestinian health officials and a United Nations-backed hunger-monitoring mechanism.

Some leading Democrats and others in Congress have urged Biden to curb weapons sales to Israel to reduce civilian deaths in Gaza and pressure Netanyahu into accepting a cease-fire that would halt the war and free remaining Israeli hostages held in Gaza in exchange for Palestinian prisoners.

A destroyed part of Gaza City as seen Thursday from southern Israel.
A destroyed part of Gaza City as seen Thursday from southern Israel. Photo: Tsafrir Abayov/Associated Press
The Biden administration invested substantial amounts of time and political capital pushing fruitlessly for a cease-fire agreement. Israeli officials met with mediators in the Qatari capital Doha on Friday to continue discussions on a possible deal, but gaps remain between the sides, according to Arab officials familiar with the talks. Hamas said Friday that the current negotiations were serious and that the group was seeking a deal at the earliest possible time. Netanyahu’s office on Thursday said he had authorized his negotiating team to continue talks in Doha.

Biden had decided in May to pause delivery of one set of 2,000-pound and 500-pound bombs to Israel, amid fears that an Israeli offensive on the southern Gaza Strip city of Rafah could cause further harm to civilians. The administration later lifted its hold on the delivery of the 500-pound bombs but continues to withhold the 2,000-pound munitions.

“The Biden administration has been walking the fine line, sometimes using ammunition supplies, especially 2,000-pound bombs, as a warning sign to Israel,” said Ofer Shelah, a former head of Israel’s parliamentary subcommittee on military force buildup and now a defense expert at the Tel Aviv-based Institute for National Security Studies.

“Everybody’s waiting for Trump” to understand how policy will change, he said.

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A congressional official said that the new weapons sales could run into opposition from progressives in Congress. Democratic committee leaders in the House or the Senate could hold the weapons requests, delaying their approval. If the sales pass the committee review, progressives could also bring a vote of disapproval that would be unlikely to block the weapons but could slow delivery.

“Biden did this so that they could take the credit while delivering Trump a political problem,” the official said.

Israel’s defense ministry in December thanked the White House for supporting Israel with weapons and ammunition throughout the war. Netanyahu in June had angered the White House when he publicly criticized the U.S. for withholding munitions to Israel, coinciding with policy disagreements over the military operation in Rafah.

The $8 billion package sent to Congress on Friday comes in addition to a separate $680 million sale of JDAM kits and small-diameter bombs, which the administration sent to Congress in November.

“These are arms shipments that he already committed to transfer to Israel months ago. However, the urgency with which he’s doing it does indicate that he wanted some symbolic value to it” in terms of the strength of the bilateral relationship, said Alon Pinkas, a former Israeli consul general in New York.

Body-by-Guinness

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USS Liberty Redux
« Reply #3175 on: January 06, 2025, 10:05:40 PM »
One of the most comprehensive treatments of Israel’s attack on the USS Liberty:

https://criticallythinking.substack.com/p/the-true-cost-of-wind-energy-updated?r=2k0c5&triedRedirect=true

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Israel, and its neighbors
« Reply #3176 on: January 07, 2025, 06:40:44 AM »
That does not appear to be the link you had in mind.

Crafty_Dog

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GPF:
« Reply #3177 on: January 07, 2025, 08:50:09 AM »



Daily Memo: Israel Signs Defense Deals With Domestic Firm
The contracts are a boost to the country's defense industry.
By: Geopolitical Futures

Focus on homemade. Israel’s Defense Ministry announced two deals with Israeli defense firm Elbit Systems in a move that could reduce the country’s reliance on arms imports. The first agreement is for the purchase of thousands of heavy air-to-air munitions, and the second is for the building of a factory that will produce raw materials that were previously purchased abroad. The total value of the projects is approximately $275 million.

Collision course? A government body aimed at evaluating Israeli defense policy said Turkey’s increasing presence in Syria could pose a direct threat to Israel. A report released Monday by the Nagel Commission expressed concern about Turkey’s ambition to restore its Ottoman legacy and said this could lead to direct conflict between Turkey and Israel. It recommended significantly increasing the size of the Israeli army and extending military service to three years

Crafty_Dog

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FO: "Greater Israel"
« Reply #3178 on: January 09, 2025, 07:22:01 AM »


(14) GREATER ISRAEL MAP SPARKS OUTRAGE AMONG ARAB LEADERS: Officials throughout the Arab world are condemning a map shared by Israel’s Arabic-language Instagram account, which shows portions of neighboring Arab countries as part of “Greater Israel.”
“Greater Israel” is a controversial expression with various biblical and political meanings to describe the expansion of the state of Israel beyond its 1979 and 1994 borders.

Arab officials have accused Netanyahu’s government of pursuing a “Greater Israel” project, with the latest provocation eliciting official statements from the foreign ministries of Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE as well as the Arab League.

Why It Matters: This incident underscores the Arab World’s growing fears of Israeli expansion. Although there is no official “Greater Israel” project, and the concept often takes the form of a conspiracy theory, Arab leaders are still compelled to respond to such provocations, while balancing diplomatic obligations to the U.S. and other Arab states. The election of Donald Trump and nomination of Mike Huckabee as U.S. Ambassador to Israel, along with Israel’s occupation of the Golan Heights and buffer areas between Syria and Lebanon, have only intensified such fears, which is likely to become a major diplomatic issue for the incoming Trump Administration. – M.N

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Belay Pay to Slay Program w/out Delay
« Reply #3179 on: January 11, 2025, 05:05:42 PM »
« Last Edit: January 11, 2025, 05:07:21 PM by Body-by-Guinness »

Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: A proposal forIsrael
« Reply #3180 on: January 12, 2025, 01:33:41 PM »


Annexing Parts of Gaza Is the Way to Unleash ‘Hell’ on Hamas
The terror group doesn’t care about Palestinian lives. Losing territory would be a humiliation.
By Amit Segal
Jan. 8, 2025 1:37 pm ET




1003

Gift unlocked article


President-elect Trump delivered an unequivocal message to Hamas in a Dec. 2 Truth Social post: “If the hostages are not released prior to January 20, 2025, the date that I proudly assume Office as President of the United States, there will be ALL HELL TO PAY in the Middle East, and for those in charge who perpetrated these atrocities against Humanity. Those responsible will be hit harder than anybody has been hit in the long and storied History of the United States of America.”

With only a week and a half until Mr. Trump’s inauguration, the question arises: How can hell be unleashed on hell?

I recently visited Jabalia, north of Gaza City, which before the current war was one of the Middle East’s most densely populated areas and a source of great pride for Hamas. Today, Jabalia is in ruin. Most residents heeded the Israeli military’s repeated orders to evacuate. Packs of starving dogs roam the desolate streets.

The Israel Defense Forces unleashed hell on Gaza. Most of the strip has been decimated by Israeli bombs. But the population still isn’t rising up against Hamas, the regime that brought this catastrophe upon them. What good would another barrage of explosives do? There’s no benefit to turning tens of thousands more Gazans into refugees. Gaza’s refugee population is already bloated, as refugee status extends not only to those who lost their homes in Israel’s 1948 War of Independence, but also to their descendants.

Hamas sees the suffering of the Gazan people as a benefit, not a cost. Terrorists who locate their headquarters in hospitals, schools and kindergartens do so not only to protect themselves from possible attacks but also to exploit the inevitable killing of civilians for propaganda: More killing equals more world empathy. Hamas also steals humanitarian aid from its own citizens and then sells food at exorbitantly high prices to a starving population. Further civilian suffering won’t change Hamas’s lack of care for Gazans’ welfare.

Mr. Trump should take two steps. The more urgent is to stop Hamas’s systemic seizure of the humanitarian aid that Israel sends to Gaza. The Biden administration has spent 15 months pressuring Israel to continue its provision of aid to Gaza despite Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s assurances at the onset of the war that the U.S. would work to prevent aid from falling into Hamas’s hands. Mr. Trump should honor Mr. Blinken’s promise and call for the transfer of aid only by IDF soldiers or private entities with the ability to ward off Hamas terrorists. Without the ability to steal aid and exploit its starving population, Hamas would be at great risk of collapsing within weeks.

Another strategic move would be to allow Israel to annex parts of the Gaza Strip. In the Middle East, nothing hurts more than loss of territory. In the Palestinian dialect of Arabic, sumud, or “steadfastness,” is closely associated with the concept of attachment to the land. Territory is the most precious and stable currency in the region. The worst outcome of a war meant to conquer Israel would be Israel’s ending with more territory than when it began.

In 1948, after Israel declared its independence in accordance with a United Nations mandate, five Arab nations declared war against the Jewish state. Israel won and annexed more than 2,000 square miles that had originally been designated for Arabs. In 1967, Egypt, Syria and Jordan sought to destroy Israel, only for Israel to emerge victorious and take control of land from all three countries.

Today, the world demands that Israel withdraw to its original borders after every conflict it wins. Is it surprising that aggressors repeatedly try to destroy the Jewish state, knowing that they face little to no threat of loss of territory? This status quo must change.

There is nothing sacred about Gaza’s borders, which were created in 1949 to mark the line of separation between Egypt and Israel. Gaza was under Egypt’s control until 1967, and it was controlled by Israel until 2005, when the Jewish state unilaterally withdrew.

There is a clear security justification for shrinking Gaza’s borders: Annexing a 1-mile perimeter around Gaza would create a buffer zone between Hamas-governed territory and the Israeli communities that Hamas brutally attacked on Oct. 7. The zone should also include a 3-mile stretch along the northern border of Gaza, which was the site of Israeli settlements before Israel withdrew and Hamas converted them into terrorist bases.

The borders of the Middle East were drawn arbitrarily in the 20th century by European diplomats representing colonial powers. This contributed to nearly a century of bloody violence, as artificial borders can’t protect nations from conflicting tribes. Bashar al-Assad’s fall in Syria is only the most recent example of tribal turmoil in a Middle Eastern country.

During Mr. Trump’s first term, he signaled his openness to rethinking the Middle East by recognizing both Israel’s annexation of the Golan Heights and some form of Israeli sovereignty over Jewish settlements in Judea and Samaria. Mr. Biden, for his part, tacitly permitted the IDF to create a buffer zone in portions of southern Syria. Mr. Trump can extend this approach to Gaza to signal that terrorism doesn’t pay. This map change could represent a significant advancement toward peace in the Middle East.

Mr. Segal is chief political commentator on Israel’s Channel 12 News and author of “The Story of Israeli Politics.”

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Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: Hamas rearming
« Reply #3181 on: January 15, 2025, 02:08:41 PM »
Hamas Has Another Sinwar. And He’s Rebuilding.
Under Yahya Sinwar’s younger brother, Hamas recruits fighters in Gaza, drawing Israel into war of attrition
A billboard tribute in San’a, Yemen, to Hamas’s Yahya Sinwar soon after the Israeli military said he was killed.
A billboard tribute in San’a, Yemen, to Hamas’s Yahya Sinwar soon after the Israeli military said he was killed. Photo: yahya arhab/Shutterstock
By Summer SaidFollow
, Anat PeledFollow
 and Rory JonesFollow
Updated Jan. 13, 2025 12:04 am ET

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Hamas suffered a severe blow last fall when Israel killed Yahya Sinwar, the group’s leader and strategist behind the Oct. 7 attacks.

But now the U.S.-designated terrorist group has another Sinwar in charge, Yahya’s younger brother Mohammed, and he is working to build the militant group back up.

Israel’s 15-month campaign has reduced Hamas’s Gaza Strip redoubt to rubble, killed thousands of its fighters and much of its leadership, and cut off the border crossings it might use to rearm. The well-trained and well-armed cadres who surged into southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, are badly weakened.

But the violence has also created a new generation of willing recruits and littered Gaza with unexploded ordnance that Hamas fighters can refashion into improvised bombs. The militant group is using those tools to continue to inflict pain. The Israeli military in the past week has reported 10 deaths among soldiers in the area of Beit Hanoun in northern Gaza. Hamas also has fired some 20 rockets at Israel in the past two weeks.

The recruitment drive and persistent fighting under Sinwar pose a fresh challenge for Israel. Its military has battered the group in Gaza, but for months has had to return to areas it previously cleared of militants to take them on again in new fighting. That cycle points to the difficulty of ending a war that has exhausted Israel’s troops and continues to imperil hostages still held in Gaza.

“We are in a situation where the pace at which Hamas is rebuilding itself is higher than the pace that the IDF is eradicating them,” said Amir Avivi, a retired Israeli brigadier general, referring to the Israel Defense Forces. “Mohammed Sinwar is managing everything.”

Spokespeople for Hamas declined to comment.

The city of Beit Hanoun in ruins after fighting between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip.
The city of Beit Hanoun in ruins after fighting between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip. Photo: kai pfaffenbach/Reuters
Months of battering Hamas in Gaza have left Israel’s military exhausted.
Months of battering Hamas in Gaza have left Israel’s military exhausted. Photo: kai pfaffenbach/Reuters
Mohammed Sinwar is at the center of Hamas’s revival effort. When Israeli soldiers killed his brother in October, the movement’s officials, based in the Qatari capital, Doha, decided to form a collective leadership council rather than appoint a new chief.

But Hamas militants in Gaza didn’t go along and now operate autonomously under the younger Sinwar, according to Arab mediators involved in cease-fire talks with Israel.

Mohammed Sinwar is believed to be about 50 and has long been considered close to his older brother, who was more than 10 years his senior. Like Yahya Sinwar, he joined Hamas at an early age and was considered close to the head of the movement’s armed wing, Mohammed Deif.

Unlike his brother, who spent more than two decades in an Israeli prison, Mohammed hasn’t spent a significant amount of time in Israeli jail and is less understood by Israel’s security establishment. He has operated largely behind the scenes, according to Arab officials, earning him the nickname “Shadow.”

“We are working hard to find him,” said a senior Israeli official from the Southern Command, which runs the battle in Gaza.

According to Israeli officials, Mohammed Sinwar was one of the people responsible for the kidnapping of an Israeli soldier in 2006 that eventually led to his brother’s release in a prisoner swap five years later.

With Yahya Sinwar, Deif and Deif’s deputy all dead, Mohammed Sinwar is now Hamas’s most senior commander in Gaza, along with Izz al-Din Haddad, the military head in northern Gaza, according to political analysts who study the militants.

Late Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar was better understood by Israeli security forces than his younger brother.
Late Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar was better understood by Israeli security forces than his younger brother. Photo: mohammed salem/Reuters
Before the war, Israel believed that Hamas had up to 30,000 fighters arranged into 24 battalions in a structure that loosely resembled a state military. The Israeli military now says it has destroyed that organized structure and has killed about 17,000 fighters, and detained thousands of others.

Hamas, which Israeli and Arab officials say still controls large areas of the Gaza Strip, hasn’t said how many fighters it has lost. The number of new Hamas recruits also remains unclear.

The Israeli military says Hamas has recruited many hundreds of people in the past few months and that recruiting was happening across Gaza, with a focus on the north. Arab officials say they have been told by Israel the number could be in the thousands.

The new fighters, while inexperienced, are launching hit-and-run attacks in small cells of just a few fighters. They are using guns and antitank weapons that require little military training.

Hamas is recruiting the new fighters with promises of more food, aid and medical care for young men and their families, according to Arab officials, who say the militants sometimes steal humanitarian aid or co-opt civilians to work with the militant group.

The U.S. and international aid groups have long pressed Israel to allow more aid into the Gaza Strip, where residents have had to contend with hunger and high prices. Israel has said it admits lots of aid and has pointed to distribution problems by aid groups and looting by forces including Hamas as impediments to getting more of it to Palestinians.

Boys play in a destroyed car near the Nuseirat camp in Gaza. Hamas is recruiting new fighters with promises of more food, aid and medical care.
Boys play in a destroyed car near the Nuseirat camp in Gaza. Hamas is recruiting new fighters with promises of more food, aid and medical care. Photo: eyad baba/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images
A man at the Nuseirat camp rebuilding on Saturday with materials salvaged after airstrikes.
A man at the Nuseirat camp rebuilding on Saturday with materials salvaged after airstrikes. Photo: eyad baba/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images
Hamas militants are also targeting funerals and prayer gatherings to find aggrieved young Palestinians inclined to sign up, these officials said.

The recruiting drive is extending a war that was triggered by the Hamas-led attacks on Oct. 7, 2023, which left around 1,200 people dead and about 250 taken hostage. About 400 Israeli soldiers have died fighting in Gaza. More than 46,000 people have been killed in Gaza during the war, according to Palestinian health authorities, who don’t say how many were combatants.

Israeli soldiers have spent months in a new fight with Hamas in northern Gaza. Demonstrating the numbers of militants still operating, the Israeli military earlier this month said it apprehended more than 240 fighters from Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad, another militant group, in a single battle at a hospital in the area.

Videos posted online by Hamas’s armed wing show how it is currently fighting in northern Gaza. In a video from late last year, four fighters creep up on a tank and attach a device that causes the vehicle to explode. Another video shows a Hamas militant moving through the debris of a bombed-out building before launching a rocket-propelled grenade at a tank.

Once a bustling hub of Palestinian life, the Gaza Strip has been reduced to rubble, with most of the prewar population of more than two million squeezed into an encampment of tents and other makeshift housing along the beach.

Months of efforts to reach a cease-fire that would free many of the hostages still being held in Gaza have been fruitless, amid deep-seated disagreements over issues including Israel’s demand that it be able to continue the fight after a pause.

Mohammed Sinwar has proved as stubborn as his older sibling in pushing for a permanent cease-fire that ensures Hamas’s survival, according to Arab officials mediating the talks.

“Hamas is in a very strong position to dictate its terms,” Mohammed Sinwar wrote late last year in one message to mediators that was shared with The Wall Street Journal. He wrote in another message: “If it is not a comprehensive deal that ends the sufferings of all Gazans and justifies their blood and sacrifices, Hamas will continue its fight.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said the fighting will continue until Hamas is destroyed.

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Do you think Israel will achieve its strategic goal of destroying Hamas? Join the conversation below.

Israel has blunted Hamas’s ability to smuggle weapons by carving security corridors into the strip and by taking control of the 9-mile-long border between Egypt and Gaza. But the group had a large arms stockpile before the war and continues to be able to fire rockets.

Israel’s difficulty in uprooting Hamas contrasts with its success in killing many of the group’s senior leaders, both in Gaza and abroad, and the beating back of Hezbollah in Lebanon. Israel forced Hezbollah to accede to a cease-fire there that has eased fighting, after the Iran-backed militia came to Hamas’s aid in the war by firing rockets into Israel almost daily.

U.S. Ambassador to Israel Jack Lew said on Jan. 10 that the U.S. has long thought it was a mistake to set the destruction of Hamas as the goal. The U.S. has pushed Israel to come up with a plan for governing the Gaza Strip after the war so that Hamas can be squeezed out.

Many in Israel’s security establishment agree. They want the government to introduce a new administration that could counter Hamas’s control over parts of the strip, with the Palestinian Authority viewed as the only realistic option.

Netanyahu has opposed a role for the Palestinian Authority, which administers parts of the occupied West Bank. Other players, such as Arab states, appear unwilling to take control of Gaza while Hamas remains a military threat. The Israeli prime minister’s office didn’t respond to a request for comment.

“Hamas had a major, major blow, but it’s still there,” said Yoel Guzansky at the Tel Aviv-based Institute for National Security Studies think tank. “They will recruit, rearm.”

Benoit Faucon and Saleh al-Batati contributed to this article.

Write to Summer Said at summer.said@wsj.com, Anat Peled at anat.peled@wsj.com and Rory Jones at Rory.Jones@wsj.com

ccp

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"cease fire hostage deal"
« Reply #3182 on: January 15, 2025, 02:26:38 PM »
A bad deal for Israel:

https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/zion-zoa-klein/2025/01/15/id/1195207/

and Trump and Biden both jockeying for credit  :roll: :roll: :roll:


DougMacG

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Re: Israel, and its neighbors
« Reply #3184 on: January 15, 2025, 09:15:47 PM »
Biden: I got the Israel-Hamas deal done

Netanyahu: Thank you Trump for getting this deal done

https://x.com/libsoftiktok/status/1879714233010778405


Crafty_Dog

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Shut up Bibi explains?
« Reply #3186 on: January 27, 2025, 09:26:11 AM »


Crafty_Dog

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There is no peace with a rape regime
« Reply #3188 on: January 29, 2025, 07:47:32 AM »


There Is No Peace With A Rape-Regime
We, The Jewish People, Are Not Going To Walk Like Sheep To The Slaughter
by Tzlil Berko
Special to IPT
January 29, 2025

https://www.investigativeproject.org/9385/there-is-no-peace-with-a-rape-regime

Crafty_Dog

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GPF: New Hope for Lebanon
« Reply #3189 on: January 29, 2025, 12:51:05 PM »
January 28, 2025
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Open as PDF

New Hope for Lebanon
Optimism about the incoming administration is pervasive, but serious challenges lie ahead.
By: Hilal Khashan

There’s a broad sense of optimism in Lebanon that the election of Joseph Aoun as president earlier this month could bring genuine change after decades of rampant corruption and government mismanagement. Many see Aoun’s election and the subsequent appointment of Nawaf Salam as prime minister as a bloodless coup that could overthrow the corrupt political and business establishment that has ruled the country for more than 80 years. However, this hope should be tempered with an understanding of Lebanon’s history. The circumstances that led to the election of Aoun, who had been serving as army commander since 2017, mirror those that preceded the 1958 election of Fouad Shehab, who also had served as army commander before becoming president. Shehab’s own ambitious reform agenda was thwarted by the sectarian elite throughout his presidency, which ran until 1964. Today’s political class in Lebanon seems similarly capable of blunting the new administration’s reform plans.

The First Republic: 1943-75

The State of Greater Lebanon was established in 1920 by the power of the French Mandate and the will of Maronite Christians. But the country’s current power structure was developed following independence in 1943 and the signing of the National Pact, the founding contract between the country’s Muslim and Christian sects. Corruption, nepotism and clientelism were integral parts of the system, sweeping through the Lebanese state apparatus from independence until the end of the civil war in 1989. Since then, this corruption has even more deeply permeated the Lebanese public sector.

The idea that corruption in Lebanon is a more recent phenomenon – beginning with Syrian control over the country (1976-2005) or the rise of Hezbollah – is thus a false impression. The truth is that the corruption of Lebanon’s ruling class began at independence and with the election of the country’s first president, Bishara al-Khoury. In 1948, al-Khoury set a precedent by amending the constitution to enable himself to serve a second presidential term, though he resigned in 1952 following demonstrations against the corruption of his administration and the proliferation of bribery.

Despite the intense enmity between al-Khoury and his successor, Camille Chamoun, the latter refused to prosecute him, fearing that his own successor could also press charges against him for mismanaging public funds. Chamoun’s decision set the expectation that government officials would be immune from prosecution for betraying public trust. His promise of reform turned into a massive plundering of various sectors of society. The perpetrators flouted anti-corruption laws, knowing that Chamoun would shield them from accountability. Many big businesses funded Cabinet members and lawmakers so they could monopolize the economy and import goods to control prices. Lebanon witnessed a boom in the construction of villas and palaces for judges and law enforcement officers who were part of this system.

Lebanon’s modern state institutions date back to the presidency of Fouad Shehab, who saw himself as a nation builder and established the central bank, the Civil Service Board, the Audit and Control Bureau, and the social security apparatus. But sectarian leaders stood up to him and thwarted his project after the end of his term. Shehab fought financial and administrative corruption but also gave the military intelligence agency, the Deuxieme Bureau, broad powers to control Lebanon’s security. This led to military corruption, especially after the failed military coup in December 1961.

During the presidency of his successor, Charles Helou, in 1964-70, military intelligence officers interfered blatantly in politics and public affairs. Helou tried to selectively purge the administration and judiciary, which left him many enemies. During his term, the political elite conspired out of jealousy to bankrupt the all-important Intra Bank, an institution that had made Beirut the banking capital of the Middle East. In alliance with Helou, sectarian leaders dropped their support for Shehab’s modernization project in the 1968 general elections, which led to the defeat of the presidential candidate supported by Shehab, Elias Sarkis, in the 1970 election against Suleiman Franjieh. When intelligence officers were tried on corruption charges during Franjieh’s administration between 1971 and 1973, the court failed to convict any of the accused for illicit enrichment, confirming that the principle of “live and let live” continued to reign.

The Second Republic: 1989-2025

The 1989 Taif Agreement that ended the civil war also terminated the Maronite-Sunni monopoly of the political system. The deal produced another sectarian system predicated on a power-sharing arrangement among Maronites, Sunnis and Shiites, with the Druze acting as a balancing mechanism. The new formula integrated traditional Western capitalism with other capitalist models appearing in the 1960s and 1970s – all of which laid the foundations of the new system based on rigid political and economic quotas. The newcomers to Lebanese politics included Rafik Hariri, a representative of petrodollar capitalism thanks to his construction business in Saudi Arabia, and Nabih Berri, who was rapidly rising in the ranks of the Amal Movement.

The new formula functioned under Saudi-Syrian sponsorship, but Hariri’s assassination in 2005 undermined the foundations of the quadripartite arrangement. The role of the Sunnis and their Saudi backers was eroded, as was that of Damascus following the departure of Syrian forces from Lebanon. These developments reshuffled Lebanese politics, leading to the dominance of Iranian-backed Hezbollah over the joints of the political system and its economic spoils.

The Taif Agreement failed to end the financial crisis that started in 1985. Massive riots took place in 2002, leading to the resignation of Prime Minister Umar Karame and the beginning of Hariri’s term as prime minister. Hariri engaged in massive borrowing to rebuild the country’s economic infrastructure at an exorbitant cost of $40 billion without resolving fundamental issues such as deficiencies in water and electricity. By the time of Hariri’s assassination, Lebanon’s debt had soared to 158 percent of gross domestic product. Hariri brought financial corruption to levels never seen before in Lebanon. Among other things, he took possession of private property in Beirut’s central and waterfront areas that had been damaged during the civil war by granting owners shares in Solidere, a company he established for this purpose.

Following Hariri’s assassination, politicians and the business elite continued his practice of plundering public money. At the time of the 2019 uprising, Lebanon’s debt was 172 percent of GDP. The ruling class embezzled $144 billion in depositor savings without being held legally accountable. Despite President Michel Aoun’s reform agenda, which led to his election in 2016, he was reportedly worth $1 billion when he left office in 2022. His son-in-law Jibran Bassil, leader of the Free Patriotic Movement, accumulated another billion dollars, close to the wealth of Druze leader Walid Jumblatt, head of the Progressive Socialist Party. Prime Minister Najib Mikati made his $2.2 billion fortune from telecom projects in Lebanon and Syria in collaboration with partners affiliated with former Syrian President Bashar Assad’s administration. Even Hezbollah, which often bragged about its lawful finances, profited heavily from corrupt practices. Its late chief, Hassan Nasrallah, and his core team funneled at least $3 billion in cash outside Lebanon for private use should they decide to leave the country.

The Promise of the Third Republic

Since Joseph Aoun’s election as president on Jan. 9 and Nawaf Salam’s appointment as head of government the following week, an atmosphere of optimism has prevailed in political and social circles. It has reached the point that Salam will likely be able to form a government within a few days – a process that took nearly a year under previous administrations. However, the government’s formation will still face many hurdles, including the distribution of ministerial portfolios, which hinges on incentives and quotas rather than the public interest, especially for prominent sects such as Shiites, Maronites and Sunnis.

For many years, the Amal Movement reserved the finance portfolio, which controlled state resources and prevented the government from settling the budget without the approval of the Shiite camp. As for other lucrative portfolios, the Maronites dominated the Ministry of Energy, and the Sunnis usually held the telecommunications posts. As for Hezbollah, which was not allowed to control sensitive ministries such as interior or foreign affairs, it accepted service portfolios such as health and public works. The Aoun-Salam administration is trying to convince the parliamentary blocs that Lebanon is changing and that the new government will differ fundamentally from previous ones. However, Lebanon’s establishment leaders and lawmakers already seem determined to abandon the reform effort.

One of the main challenges in forming a government in Lebanon is that every parliamentary bloc, no matter how small, wants representation, especially in the financially lucrative portfolios. Complicating matters is the fact that every member of every bloc believes he is qualified to be a minister.

If the new administration is to be a transitional government – designed to prepare the country for parliamentary elections in 2026 – the nature of the Lebanese system based on accommodation and narrow interests will likely prevail. If Salam wants the government to be foundational – designed to put Lebanon on the path to becoming a modern state, which would involve disarming Hezbollah – he will face formidable challenges that could derail his objectives. State building is a daunting process that requires the emergence of a new political class and new behavioral values centered not on personal, sectarian and parochial interests but on citizenship, solidarity and inclusivity. It’s unrealistic to believe that the Aoun-Salam administration can bring about such mammoth changes in only a few years.

Throughout history, financial and political corruption was one of the key reasons for the fall of empires, kingdoms and states. In the Middle East and North Africa, corruption was widespread during the Abbasid Caliphate, the Mamluk Sultanate and the Ottoman Empire. The states that emerged from the ruins of the Ottoman Empire at the end of World War I, including Lebanon, inherited its strong legacy of corruption. Lebanon’s governance problem is a result of several factors, including most notably the corruption of the political class, its subordination to foreign countries and the absence of fundamental principles without which a modern state cannot exist. Chief among these principles is prioritization of the country’s national interest (including in regard to public funds) over all private interests.

DougMacG

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Israel update, Caroline Glick
« Reply #3190 on: February 03, 2025, 08:01:19 AM »

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Israel, and its neighbors
« Reply #3191 on: February 03, 2025, 04:21:22 PM »
Intelligent woman.