ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 09 Mar 2024 7:21 am - Jerusalem Time

Biden: “The ceasefire in Gaza by Ramadan seems difficult.”

US President Joe Biden announced on Friday that reaching a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip by the month of Ramadan “seems to be difficult,” in contrast to previous optimistic statements about the success of reaching an agreement before the month arrives.


"It seems difficult," Biden told reporters in response to a question about whether it was possible to reach a temporary truce to stop the war that has been raging for five months by the month of Ramadan.


Biden expressed his "deep" concern about the violence that could erupt in occupied Jerusalem during Ramadan.


The United States, Qatar, and Egypt are striving to secure an agreement on a truce in Gaza before Ramadan, but the negotiations that took place this week in Cairo did not lead to any tangible results.


On Friday, Abu Ubaida, spokesman for the Al-Qassam Brigades, the military wing of the Hamas movement, called in a televised statement on “our people in the occupied West Bank, Jerusalem and the Palestinians inside to march towards Al-Aqsa Mosque” during the month of Ramadan, which begins next week, and “not to allow the occupation to change the reality on the ground.” He said, “We welcome Ramadan with jihad and unity in a time when men are proud.”

PALESTINE

Fri 08 Mar 2024 10:19 pm - Jerusalem Time

Hamas confirms that it “will not give up” on its demands to establish a truce in Gaza

Hamas stressed that it will not give up its demand for a final ceasefire and the withdrawal of the Israeli army from the Gaza Strip in exchange for the release of the hostages it has been holding since the October 7 attack on southern Israel.


Abu Ubaida, spokesman for the Al-Qassam Brigades, the movement’s military wing, said in a televised statement carried by Agence France-Presse, “Our top priority for completing the prisoner exchange is full commitment to stopping the aggression and the enemy’s withdrawal, and there is no giving up on that.”


Earlier today, US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken said that it was up to the Hamas movement to agree to a ceasefire that would allow more humanitarian aid to enter Gaza, and to hold talks on a “permanent solution” to the conflict.


Hamas left talks in Cairo aimed at reaching a ceasefire agreement before Ramadan, amid fears about an escalation of violence during Ramadan.


Israel and Hamas are exchanging accusations of not reaching an agreement that would obligate Hamas to free some of the hostages it is still holding in exchange for a 40-day truce. Palestinian prisoners in Israel will also be released.


Blinken said before his meeting with Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan that Washington is still pressing to implement a ceasefire.


He added: “The problem is Hamas.” The problem is whether or not Hamas will decide to implement a ceasefire that will benefit everyone.” He continued: “The ball is in their court.” “We are working hard on that and we will see what they do.”

PALESTINE

Fri 08 Mar 2024 10:13 pm - Jerusalem Time

War on Gaza: 30,878 dead, 72% of whom were children and women

The death toll from the Israeli war on the Gaza Strip since October 7 last year rose today, Friday, to 30,878 people and 72,402 injured, according to what the Ministry of Health announced, which confirmed that 72 percent of them were children and women.


For the 154th day of the war on Gaza, the Israeli army continued its aerial and artillery bombardment of various areas in the Gaza Strip, at a time when hunger threatens hundreds of thousands of people trapped in northern Gaza.


In terms of military operations, the resistance continues to confront the Israeli army and is waging fierce battles against its forces in several areas, including Juhr al-Dik and Khan Yunis, while Israeli Army Radio announced the killing of dozens of senior officers since October 7, 2023.

PALESTINE

Fri 08 Mar 2024 10:09 pm - Jerusalem Time

Blinken: The ball is in Hamas’ court to reach a ceasefire

US Secretary of State, Anthony Blinken, said on Friday that "the ball is in the court" of the Hamas movement regarding agreeing to a ceasefire, with hopes of reaching a new truce in the war that has been ongoing for five months diminishing.


The day after US President Joe Biden called in his State of the Union address for an “immediate” six-week truce to allow the entry of humanitarian aid into the devastated Gaza Strip and the release of hostages, Blinken said that the matter depends on the leaders of Hamas.


When meeting with his Turkish counterpart Hakan Fidan, he added, "The ball is in their court. We are working hard on that."

Blinken continued, "I have no doubt that reaching this ceasefire and releasing the hostages will be deeply in the interest of all concerned."


For his part, Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan described the conditions in the Gaza Strip as deteriorating and requiring urgent action to end the suffering of innocent people.


He pointed out that the meeting of the strategic mechanism between the two countries began in 2021, and that within this framework, they will hold multiple talks that include security, regional cooperation, regional issues, trade, energy, and others.


He stated that many important regional developments are occurring at the same time, most notably the genocide practiced by Israel in Gaza.


Fidan said, "The deteriorating situation in Gaza requires us to focus on it. The international community has not been able to stop the suffering of innocent people. People in Gaza are in dire need of humanitarian aid."


He stressed the need for serious work by the United States and other countries to ensure a ceasefire and secure humanitarian aid to Gaza without interruption.


Mediators are making strenuous efforts to reach a truce before the month of Ramadan, which is expected to fall next Monday.


A senior Hamas official announced that its delegation had left Cairo, where it was participating in discussions regarding a truce in the Gaza Strip, stressing that the initial Israeli response did not meet the “minimum” of what the movement required.


The delegation left Cairo, where consultations have been held since Sunday, mediated by Egyptian, Qatari and American, to reach a truce in the war.

PALESTINE

Fri 08 Mar 2024 7:32 pm - Jerusalem Time

West Bank: Israeli settlers attack the village of Burqa, east of Ramallah

This Friday evening, a group of settlers attacked the village of Burqa, east of Ramallah.


Local sources reported that the settlers tried to set fire to a citizen’s house on the outskirts of the village, but the vigilance of the villagers prevented that.


The sources reported that the settlers withdrew from Burqa after the citizens confronted them, while an Israeli army force consisting of five vehicles stormed the village.


Last Saturday, settlers attacked the village of Burqa, burned a house and a car park, destroyed a livestock barn, and opened fire on citizens’ homes.

PALESTINE

Fri 08 Mar 2024 6:13 pm - Jerusalem Time

West Bank: Israeli forces arrest three young men from Ras Al-Fara'a

Today, Friday, the Israeli forces arrested three young men from Ras Al-Fara’a, south of Tubas, while they were hiking in the northern Jordan Valley.


The director of the Prisoner Club in Tubas, Kamal Bani Odeh, reported that the Israeli forces arrested Mustafa Fidaa Dhiyab Abu Khaizran, Baraa Ahmed Dhiyab Abu Khaizran, and Qassam Basem Bashir Abu Khaizran, while they were hiking in Ain al-Sakot in the northern Jordan Valley.

PALESTINE

Fri 08 Mar 2024 5:08 pm - Jerusalem Time

West Bank: 4 Israelis were injured in an explosive device detonation near Silat al-Dhahr

Three Israelis were injured, one of them seriously, in the explosion of an explosive device near the Homesh outpost, south of Jenin. Today is Friday.


The Israeli army announced, in a statement, the detonation of an explosive device in an area where its forces were present near Silat al-Dhahr, while no casualties were reported.


He stated that his forces began searching for the perpetrators. While it was not officially announced that any of his soldiers were injured.


Beilinson Hospital announced that 3 injured people had arrived, and the condition of one of them was described as serious while the other two were in moderate condition, and there was no danger to their lives, according to the hospital.


It was reported that two of the injured were transported by military helicopter to the hospital, while treatment was provided to the other injured at the site of the operation.


According to Israeli reports, the operation began with gunfire towards one of the military sites in the “Homesh” settlement outpost, without causing casualties. While the forces began searching and chasing the perpetrators, an explosive device was activated, resulting in casualties.


An Israeli security official said about the operation, “A difficult operation took place in ‘Shomron’ (north of the occupied West Bank), and we have begun searching for the ‘saboteurs’ and we will reach them sooner or later.”


He added, "We are working around the clock with all security services in order to reach the 'saboteurs' and arrest or kill them."

PALESTINE

Fri 08 Mar 2024 5:06 pm - Jerusalem Time

War on Gaza: At least 20 killed in Israeli bombing

More than 20 citizens were killed today, Friday, as a result of the Israeli army bombing citizens’ homes in the central and southern Gaza Strip.


Israeli warplanes launched a series of raids targeting two homes in the town of Al-Qarara, northeast of Khan Yunis, south of the Gaza Strip, which led to the death of more than 12 persons and the injury of dozens, in addition to a number of people missing under the rubble.


Eight citizens, the majority of whom were children, were killed, and others were injured, as a result of an Israeli bombing on the Al-Zawaida area in the central Gaza Strip, while the bombing that targeted a house in the Al-Tuffah neighborhood, east of Gaza City, resulted in deaths and injuries.


The Israeli forces targeted a group of citizens in the Bani Suhaila area, east of the city of Khan Yunis in the south, killing a number of them and wounding others, some of them seriously.


The Israeli forces fired phosphorus bombs at the project area in Khan Yunis, and bombed a house belonging to the Wadi family near the city of Hayat, west of the city, which led to its complete destruction.

PALESTINE

Fri 08 Mar 2024 1:47 pm - Jerusalem Time

UN Human Rights Commissioner Türk : Israeli settlements in Palestinian territories is a “war crime”

UN Human Rights Commissioner Volker Türk has warned that the expansion of Israeli settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories constitutes a “war crime” and risks eliminating “any practical possibility” of a “viable Palestinian state.”


Turk stated that the expansion of Israeli settlements constitutes population displacement by Israel, which “amounts to a war crime” under international law.


Volcker said - in a statement accompanying the 16-page report - “Settler violence and settlement-related violations have reached shocking new levels, and threaten to eliminate any practical possibility of establishing a viable Palestinian state.”


The report, which was based on monitoring carried out by the United Nations itself in addition to other sources, documented the construction of 24,300 new Israeli housing units in the occupied West Bank within one year until the end of October 2023, saying that it is the highest recorded increase ever since the start of monitoring. 2017.


He also stated that there has been a significant increase in the intensity, intensity and frequency of violence by Israeli settlers and the Israeli government against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, especially since the start of the Israeli aggression on the Gaza Strip on the 7th of last October.


Yesterday, Thursday, the newspaper "Israel Today" reported that plans had been approved to build 18,515 housing units in the occupied West Bank settlements during the current year, noting that this is the largest number of housing units to be approved in one year.


The newspaper pointed out that the Supreme Planning Council approved last Wednesday the construction of 3,500 additional housing units in the “Maale Adumim,” “Efrat,” and “Kedar” settlements.


It quoted Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich as saying that settlement will continue to expand, and that settlement in the West Bank is “Israel’s security belt,” as he put it.

ARAB AND WORLD

Fri 08 Mar 2024 1:06 pm - Jerusalem Time

Israeli official: We welcome Washington's plan to establish a temporary port in Gaza

Israeli official: We welcome Washington's plan to establish a temporary port in Gaza


An Israeli official said on Thursday that Israel welcomes an American plan to build a “temporary port” on the Gaza coast to deliver humanitarian aid by sea, and will coordinate the development of the project with the United States.

Reuters quoted the official, who requested anonymity, as saying that Israel "fully supports" the establishment of such a facility after US officials said that President Joe Biden will announce in his State of the Union address that the US military will build a port to receive food, medicine and other supplies for civilians. In the besieged Palestinian Strip.


According to press reports, the port mainly includes a temporary dock, which will provide the capacity to accommodate hundreds of additional truckloads of aid daily.”


The plan includes the deployment of American forces in the Gaza Strip, and American military personnel will remain at sea, with other allies participating in implementation.


Biden orders the US army to establish a port in Gaza for aid

American officials explained that the implementation of this large project “will require several weeks of planning and implementation,” and will include a sea corridor to bring aid from the island of Cyprus in the eastern Mediterranean.

American officials were keen to confirm that American forces would not be deployed on the ground in the Gaza Strip, which has been subjected to continuous Israeli bombing since the October 7 Hamas attacks on southern Israel.


The official, who requested to remain anonymous, added, "This port, which mainly includes a temporary dock, will provide the capacity to accommodate hundreds of additional truckloads of aid daily."


American officials explained that the implementation of this large project “will require several weeks of planning and implementation,” and will include a sea corridor to bring aid from the island of Cyprus in the eastern Mediterranean.


American officials were keen to confirm that American forces would not be deployed on the ground in the Gaza Strip, which has been subjected to continuous Israeli bombing since the October 7 Hamas attacks on southern Israel.


“It is expected to be an operation that will not require boots on the ground,” a second official said.


He added, "The American army has unique capabilities. It can do extraordinary things from abroad, and this is the operational concept that was briefed to the president."


He pointed out that the Israelis have been informed of the project and the United States will work with them on security requirements, while coordinating with “partners and allies,” the United Nations, and relief organizations working in Gaza.


Political pressure


This announcement during the State of the Union address highlights the intense political pressure on Biden due to his unwavering support for Israel despite the rising death toll in Gaza and the humanitarian crisis.


Last week, Biden announced airdrops of aid into Gaza, following an incident in which more than 100 people were killed while trying to get aid in northern Gaza.


Earlier on Wednesday, US Defense Department spokesman Patrick Ryder said that Washington is considering establishing a sea corridor to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza.


American optimism


This comes after the US State Department said that Washington is optimistic that a new sea route to deliver aid to Gaza, currently under discussion, could complement current efforts to deliver aid to the Strip by land and through airdrops.


It added that the sea aid corridor "is still in the development stage," and that Washington continues to work to increase the volume of aid reaching those in need in Gaza.


Cyprus had talked about efforts to establish a sea corridor starting from the island’s ports directly to Gaza, according to the Politico website.


So far, the only route for aid to the war-ravaged coastal enclave is by land from Egypt at Rafah, but there is a growing diplomatic push to use ships, which can deliver 500 times as much aid as trucks.


Key practical challenges include the risks posed by war and the fact that Gaza's port is too small to receive large tankers.

Sky News


ARAB AND WORLD

Fri 08 Mar 2024 12:56 pm - Jerusalem Time

Israel is afraid of accusing its officers of committing war crimes and imposing sanctions on them

A report by the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Security Committee warns that “friendly” countries will impose sanctions on officers who participate in the war on Gaza and settlers in the West Bank. * Bank of Israel: “Circumventing an international sanctions regime entails great risks.”


The Israeli authorities submitted a report to the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Security Committee about the existence of a “real danger” that countries “friendly” to Israel would impose sanctions on Israeli officers participating in an attack on Rafah and the West Bank, according to the “Israel Hayom” newspaper today, Friday.


In this context, the newspaper referred to “the Biden administration’s threats to impose sanctions on Israeli soldiers who worked in Gaza,” and that the sanctions will be similar to those imposed by the administration on four settlers who participated in terrorist attacks on Palestinians in the West Bank, and imposed sanctions on their bank accounts and were prevented from obtaining an entry visa to the United States.


The Israeli authorities are working to establish a “protection system” for soldiers, amid fears of similar sanctions being imposed by European countries. Britain and France imposed such sanctions on settlers in the West Bank.


The report submitted to the Foreign and Security Committee included British steps aimed at collecting information about Israeli war crimes, and that banners calling for information about Israeli war crimes in Gaza were hung at airports throughout Britain.


The Israeli National Security Council is working on preparing a report on the military operations carried out by Israeli soldiers in Gaza, and the Israeli Military Prosecutor has prepared a report stating that Israel is following up on a “limited number” of “abuses” committed by Israeli soldiers during the war on Gaza, according to the newspaper.


Meanwhile, Knesset members are seeking to deal with the possibility of restrictions on bank accounts, so that those who would be subject to such sanctions can continue to manage their economic affairs.


There is a fear in the Israeli banking system that if it does not cooperate with the international sanctions regime, Israel will find itself a pariah state, according to the newspaper.


The newspaper quoted Knesset member Amit Halevy, from the Likud Party, regarding the possibility of freezing bank accounts of Israeli soldiers, saying, “The bank controller is obligated to ensure that banks preserve as much as possible the property rights of their customers.”


The Bank of Israel’s comment stated that “circumventing sanctions regulations would expose banking companies to significant risks, including the risks of (non-)compliance with (international resolutions), money laundering and terrorist financing, legal risks, and reputational risks.”

PALESTINE

Fri 08 Mar 2024 12:50 pm - Jerusalem Time

The Israeli army renews its disavowal of responsibility for the "flour massacre"

On Friday, the Israeli army renewed its disavowal of responsibility for the “flour massacre” in Gaza City, which claimed the lives of more than 100 Palestinians who were waiting for humanitarian aid in the northern Gaza Strip at the end of last February.


This came according to the results of a preliminary investigation conducted by the Israeli army and presented to the Chief of the General Staff, Herzi Halevy, which indicated that the Israeli forces carried out shooting, but due to the presence of suspicious elements posing a “threat” by approaching the army forces.


On February 29, Israeli forces opened fire on hundreds of Palestinians as they gathered south of Gaza City waiting to receive humanitarian aid on Al-Rashid Street, especially flour (wheat). This left 118 dead and 760 wounded, according to the Ministry of Health in the Gaza Strip.


The Israeli army said in a statement, a copy of which was obtained by Anatolia, “The Commander of the Southern Command, Major General Yaron Finkelman, on Tuesday presented to the Chief of the General Staff, Major General Herzi Halevy, the results of the command’s investigation regarding the sequence of events that occurred during the humanitarian operation to bring supply convoys into the northern Gaza Strip.” The night of February 29th.


He claimed that the investigation reveals "that the Israeli army forces did not fire on the humanitarian convoy itself, but rather on a number of suspects who approached the nearby forces and who posed a threat to them."


He pointed out that the investigation also shows that "while the trucks were heading towards the distribution centers, a violent gathering arose around them, including about 12,000 Gazans, and they looted the equipment they were transporting."


He added, claiming: “In the context of theft operations, looting incidents were observed that caused serious harm to civilians in crowded areas, while ramming operations were observed.”


The Israeli army continued: “In addition, during their gathering, dozens of Gazans approached the Israeli army forces within a few meters, and thus posed a real threat to the force present at that point.”


He added: “At this stage, the forces carried out precise shooting to repel a number of suspects, and as the suspects continued to approach, the forces opened fire to eliminate the threat,” according to the same statement.


The IDF announced that it "will continue to investigate the incident by the Investigative Mechanism of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, an independent inspection body charged with investigating unusual events that occurred during the fighting and which will independently examine the findings, investigation and formulate its findings in relation to the incident."


Hamas or international institutions did not immediately comment on the Israeli army's statement.


Earlier, Hamas, the Palestinian Authority, and many international institutions accused the Israeli army of responsibility for the massacre.

ARAB AND WORLD

Fri 08 Mar 2024 12:49 pm - Jerusalem Time

Rabbi in Jaffa: According to Jewish law, all residents of Gaza must be killed

Rabbi Eliyahu Mali told his students: “The basic law in a religious war, and in this case in Gaza, is that ‘leave none of it alive.’ Today’s terrorists are the children in the previous military operation who were kept alive. And women are practically the ones who produce the terrorists.”


The head of the Biblical Religious Institute "Yeshivah Shirat Moshe" in Jaffa, Rabbi Eliyahu Mali, incited his students who are serving in the Israeli army after graduating from the yeshivah, to commit massacres against the residents of Gaza, considering that according to Jewish law all residents of Gaza must be killed, and when he was asked about the elderly And children, he replied, “the same applies to them.”


The rabbi's statements came during a conference held in the yeshivah yesterday, according to what the Ynet website reported today, Friday. This rabbi focused on the treatment towards the civilian population in Gaza during the war.


Maley described the war waged by Israel on Gaza as a "religious war." He said, “The basic law in a religious war, and in this case in Gaza, is that ‘you shall not leave any of them alive’ (Deuteronomy), and if you do not kill them? They will kill you. Today’s saboteurs are the children in the previous military operation whom you kept alive.” "Life. And women are practically the ones who produce the saboteurs."


He added, “It is either you or them. No soul can live on the basis of ‘He who is coming to kill you, go ahead and kill him’ (Babylonian Talmud). This applies not only to the 14- or 16-year-old boy, or the 20- or 30-year-old man who points a gun at you, but also to the future generation. This also applies to those who produce the future generation as well. Because in reality there is no difference."


In response to a question about the killing of elderly people in Gaza, Maley claimed, “There is a difference between a civilian population elsewhere and a civilian population in Gaza. In Gaza, according to estimates, 95-98 percent want to exterminate us.”


When asked, "Children too?", this rabbi replied: "It's the same thing. You can't do that with the Torah. Today he's a child, tomorrow he's a fighter. There are no questions here. Today's terrorists were 8-year-old children in the previous military operation. So... "You cannot be satisfied here. Therefore, the ruling on Gaza is different here."


This rabbi said at the beginning of his speech, “Because this is a sensitive issue, and they informed me that it would be published on the Internet, I want to make up my mind and say that the conclusion is that what was stated in the Israeli army’s decrees should only be implemented.”

PALESTINE

Fri 08 Mar 2024 12:40 pm - Jerusalem Time

West Bank: Israeli settlers continue their attacks in Hebron and Nablus

Today, Friday, settlers continue their attacks on citizens and their property under the protection of the Israeli forces in Hebron and Nablus.


In Hebron, a group of settlers released their sheep to graze on the crops and olive trees in front of the house of citizen Farid Hamamda in the Fatih Sidra area in Masafer Yatta. A settler also prevented citizen Hamamda from taking his sheep out of the barn by force of arms.


In Nablus, a group of settlers carried out orgies near the checkpoint, in an attempt to prevent citizens’ vehicles from entering Nablus.

OPINIONS

Fri 08 Mar 2024 12:40 pm - Jerusalem Time

Is Netanyahu prolonging the Gaza war to cling to power?

New Arab

New Arab

Opinion Writer

Analysis: An end to Israel's war in Gaza could mean an end to Benjamin Netanyahu's political career.

By Hanna Davis

Since Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s already rocky reputation was ruined following his defence failures on 7 October, he has been fighting to improve his legacy and ensure his political survival - trying at all costs to ward off an early election that would oust him from power. 

In recent weeks, thousands of protesters have taken to the streets, calling for Netanyahu to step down and for elections to be held before their official date in November 2026. Only 15% of Israelis want Netanyahu to stay in office after the war on Hamas in Gaza and the vast majority (71%) want early elections. 

“Netanyahu came into the war already with low popularity ratings,” Mairav Zonszein, the International Crisis Group’s senior Israel-Palestine analyst, told The New Arab.

“After October 7, he lost all legitimacy and a lot of Israelis hold him responsible for what happened,” Zonszein said. “People want to see Netanyahu out.”


"Prolonging the war would first and foremost provide Netanyahu time to ensure his political survival"


So, Netanyahu is holding onto any last chance he may be able to pull off a war victory - which could re-energise his frustrated populace - while trying against all odds to keep an election at bay.

  “In short, the longer he’s embroiled in war, the longer he can put off some kind of domestic political shift,” Zonszein said. 

Netanyahu is playing up the challenges of holding elections during wartime and has made dramatic assertions like: “Hamas and Hezbollah want Israel to go to early elections, it would be a victory for them”. 

However, the majority of Israelis still believe that Netanyahu’s wartime decision-making is primarily motivated by political interests, according to an opinion poll conducted by the Israeli Channel 13. 

Netanyahu’s “main goal is to remain in power”, Zonszein said, and “he has been the most resilient political leader”.  The prime minister has in total served for over 16 years, Israel's longest-serving premier. 


Pushing the 'ball of war'

“Netanyahu is trying to push the ball of war as much as he can,” Khalil Shaheen, a Ramallah-based political analyst from the Palestinian Policy Network, said. He added that Netanyahu might want to keep the ball rolling until the US elections in November when Trump could return to the White House and be more willing to support his hardline plans for annexation in the occupied West Bank and indefinite Israeli military control over Gaza.

“He wants to maintain a level of tension everywhere,” Shaheen said, in the West Bank, Gaza, and on Israel's northern border with Lebanon.

“Keeping the whole society in Israel engaged in tensions and war is the best scenario for Netanyahu, so he can claim that it is not the time for elections,” he said.

Since 7 October in the occupied West Bank, there has been a “shocking spike” in Israeli forces' use of “unlawful lethal force” against Palestinians, according to the human rights watchdog, Amnesty International.

Israeli forces have killed at least 422 Palestinians and injured 4,650 others, according to Health Ministry figures.

In the north, Netanyahu has made clear Israel would continue attacks on Hezbollah until the group moves back from the border, regardless of if a ceasefire holds in Gaza.

Lebanese officials quoted by NBC News feared that as the cross-border fighting dragged on the Israeli prime minister might ignite the fighting into an all-out war in an attempt to secure wins to maintain his political survival.

In the south, waving the threat of the Rafah invasion could reflect another attempt by Netanyahu to draw out the war.


"Keeping the whole society in Israel engaged in tensions and war is the best scenario for Netanyahu, so he can claim that it is not the time for elections"

Zonszein said that prolonging the war would “first and foremost” provide Netanyahu time to ensure his political survival.

Then, she speculated, he could “pay lip service” to the Saudi-US normalisation deal and imprint his image as the leader who achieved normalisation with Riyadh - “which would be a huge win”.

Netanyahu might also want to buy time to secure a hostage deal, which “would be considered quite a success”, Zonszein added. 

“It’s possible that if he draws this out [the war in Gaza], and manages to squeeze out some kind of victory, then maybe he could salvage his career.


War ends, along with Netanyahu's career

Netanyahu is now in a tight political bind when it comes to ending the war in Gaza. A diplomatic deal that could free the remaining hostages - which Netanyahu needs to do to appease the Israeli public - is likely to leave Hamas in at least partial control of Gaza, which Netanyahu’s far-right coalition members would not accept. 

Netanyahu’s far-right coalition members, whom he brought into his government to win the election in 2022, oppose any ceasefire deal that would leave Hamas in power. The ultranationalist coalition member, Itamar Ben-Gvir, has threatened to quit the government over any “reckless” deal with Hamas.

Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich’s Religious Zionism party has 14 seats in the Knesset, meaning if Ben-Gvir and his party members left Netanyahu’s coalition, it could easily topple the premier’s current 64-member majority. 

Zonszein said in the event of an unfavourable ceasefire deal, Netanyahu’s far-right coalition members might “leave and protect their future political base”, which would lead to an election.

However, Nimrod Goren, a Jerusalem-based political analyst with the Middle East Institute, told The New Arab that Israel’s far-right politicians would be unlikely to make a move towards early elections because “they are holding onto a position of power that would be very difficult for them to get again”.

He said that the contentious debate over military exemption for Israeli ultra-orthodox Jews would be more likely to topple the government. Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant on 28 February called for the passage of a law to draft ultra-Orthodox Jews, who are normally exempt from military conscription.

Gallant said he would only back the legislation if it is endorsed by centrist ministers, like Netanyahu’s chief political rival, Benny Gantz.

Gantz is very unlikely to support the law, which is likely to cause a clash with the Haredi religious political parties necessary for the survival of Netanyahu’s coalition. “This is the hook for political actors to create a crisis, which could lead to early elections,” Goren said. 


"The only thing that most of the Israeli political parties believe in is that Palestinians should leave the whole area, not only in Gaza, but in the West Bank"


Gantz soars in the polls

It is widely anticipated that when the war is over, Netanyahu’s emergency war cabinet would break up, Dahlia Scheindlin, an Israeli pollster and political analyst, told The New Arab. This would leave Netanyahu’s coalition less stable, which Scheindlin said could “prompt a crisis that ultimately leads to the toppling of his pre-war coalition”.

Benny Gantz, and his centrist-right National Unity Party joined Netanyahu’s ultranationalist and religious government as part of the emergency war cabinet. Since the war, Gantz’s popularity has soared; he is touted by his supporters as their next prime minister and many of his party members are urging him to quit Netanyahu’s war cabinet. 

Gantz’s National Unity Party polled with 37 seats, compared to Netanyahu’s Likud party at just 18, according to a February poll. 

In a rogue move, Gantz arrived at the White House on Monday for visits with senior officials from the Biden administration - without coordinating his visit with Netanyahu. The visit infuriated Netanyahu, who said that Israel “only has one premier”.

His visit to the US comes as Washington is growing increasingly frustrated with Netanyahu’s hardline stances in the war. “The visit fits the pattern of international interlocutors desperately searching for someone they think is more rational on the Israeli side,” Scheindin said. 

She also said that it appears that Gantz “doesn’t mind sidelining Netanyahu”, adding that the defence minister “wants Netanyahu to be seen by the public as someone that’s not the point-person anymore because he’s too dangerous in terms of isolating the country”. 

Goren said that although the Israeli electorate has become more hawkish and is moving closer to the right wing, their electoral behaviour still sides with “someone like Gantz”, who appears more reasonable and “has military experience and access to international actors”. 

Although Goren made clear that Gantz would be unlikely to leave the war cabinet until the fighting cools, “When tensions are downplayed or there is an agreement, it will be easier for Gantz and his party to leave [Netanyahu’s] coalition”.

He added that especially with the threat of a war with Hezbollah still looming, Gantz will be unlikely to leave soon. 

'No Israeli party recognises Palestine'

Even if Netanyahu is ousted from power, the situation on the ground for Palestinians would largely remain the same. If Gantz took Netanyahu’s place, “there may be more willingness to cooperate with the US and to pay lip service to the notion of some kind of cooperation with the Palestinians,” Zonszein, from the International Crisis Group (ICG), said. “But very much on a very superficial level,” she added.

“There is certainly no political opposition that would significantly change the policies regarding Gaza or the crisis with Palestinians as a whole.”

Shaheen, the Ramallah-based analyst, said that nearly all Israeli parties don’t recognise a Palestinian state.

“The only thing that most of the Israeli political parties believe in is that Palestinians should leave the whole area, not only in Gaza, but in the West Bank,” he stated. 

Hanna Davis is a freelance journalist reporting on politics, foreign policy, and humanitarian affairs.

PALESTINE

Fri 08 Mar 2024 12:38 pm - Jerusalem Time

Britain to work with US on Gaza maritime aid corridor

UK foreign minister David Cameron said on Friday that Britain would work alongside the United States to open a maritime corridor to deliver aid directly to Gaza, foreign minister David Cameron."


Alongside the US, the UK and partners have announced we will open a maritime corridor to deliver aid directly to Gaza," Cameron said on social media."


We continue to urge Israel to allow more trucks into Gaza as the fastest way to get aid to those who need it."

ARAB AND WORLD

Fri 08 Mar 2024 12:23 pm - Jerusalem Time

Israeli bombing renewed on several towns in southern Lebanon

Today, Friday, Israeli bombing renewed on several towns and areas in southern Lebanon, as warplanes launched raids on the towns of Majdal Zoun, Al-Mansouri, and Baraashit.


The Israeli army fired its heavy machine guns at dawn today towards the forests adjacent to the towns of Ramiya and Aita al-Shaab, coinciding with the flight of reconnaissance aircraft over the villages of the western and central sectors, reaching the outskirts of the city of Tyre, and the launching of flare bombs over the border villages.

PALESTINE

Fri 08 Mar 2024 11:14 am - Jerusalem Time

Biden: More than 30,000 Palestinians were killed in Gaza, most of whom were not from Hamas

US President Joe Biden said that more than 30,000 Palestinians were killed in the Gaza Strip and that most of them were not members of the Hamas movement.


This came in his State of the Union address to Congress, in which he noted that “Israel lived through the bloodiest day since the Holocaust” following the Hamas attacks on October 7.


Biden pointed out that Israel has the right to pursue Hamas until the end, stressing that it bears the responsibility not to target civilians when carrying out its attacks.


He said: "This war has claimed more innocent civilian lives than all previous wars in Gaza combined. More than 30,000 Palestinians have been killed, most of whom are not members of Hamas. Thousands and thousands of women and children have been killed, and boys and girls have been orphaned."


Biden announced that he had issued instructions to the US Army to establish a temporary port on the Gaza coast, indicating that more humanitarian aid would enter Gaza by sea through this port without American soldiers setting foot in Gaza.


He added: “This temporary port will enable large amounts of humanitarian aid to enter Gaza every day, but Israel must also do its part, and must allow more humanitarian aid to enter Gaza, and ensure that humanitarian workers are not exposed to gunfire. "Israeli leaders do so, as humanitarian aid cannot be a bargaining chip or a secondary issue."


He also reiterated that the only political solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is the two-state solution.

OPINIONS

Fri 08 Mar 2024 11:08 am - Jerusalem Time

On Solidarity and Kushner’s Shame: How Gaza Defeated US Stratagem, Again

Counter Punch

Counter Punch

Opinion Writer

BY RAMZY BAROUD

Jared Kushner, a former US official whose relationship to power is that he married the wealthy daughter of a man who was later to become the US president, once attempted to teach Palestinians how to handle their own struggle for freedom.

In 2020, he advised Palestinians to stop ‘doing terrorism’, summing up the Palestinian problem in the claim that ‘five million Palestinians are (..) trapped because of bad leadership’, not the Israeli occupation or US support for Israel.

The inexperienced politician, who once bragged about reading 25 books on the Middle East, presented Palestinians with the same clichéd rhetoric already offered to them by other ill-intentioned self-imposed ‘peacemakers’.

Palestinians “have a perfect track record of missing opportunities,” he said, re-hashing the condescending language once used by Israel’s former Minister of Foreign Affairs, Abba Eban: “If they screw this up, I think that they will have a very hard time looking the international community in the face, saying they are victims”.

But why bring up Kushner now?

Every few years, Americans, at the behest of Israel, peddle such ideas that the Palestinian cause is finished, that solidarity with the Palestinian people is dead and that the Palestinian people and their leadership should accept whatever political or financial crumbs thrown their way, courtesy of Washington, Tel Aviv and a few of their western allies.

Yet, every few years, the Palestinian people prove them wrong; that despite all the pressures – arm-twisting, sanctions, sieges, and relentless violence – they remain strong and not the victims ignorantly dubbed by Kushner.

What Kushner may not know is that there is a critical difference between victim and victimhood. While Palestinians cannot control their victimization, since it is imposed on them from an outside force, Israel – generously financed by the US – they do not seek to be victims.

Indeed, victimhood is a different issue. It is the state of perceiving oneself as a perpetual victim, with no aspirations, no agency.

While it is true that the ongoing Israeli genocide in Gaza is one of the greatest crimes of mass killings and ethnic cleansing in modern history, it is also true that no nation, in recent decades, has fought back as ferociously as the Palestinians. This is hardly the behavior of a victim.

The Joe Biden Administration, like every other US administration, has talked down to Palestinians, declaring them foolish for not accepting political deals that would fail to guarantee them the most basic of their long-denied rights. While Palestinians sought total and unconditional freedom, Camp David (1979), the Oslo Accords (1993), the Road Map (2004), and every other ‘offer’ before, during or after were political attempts at prolonging the Israeli occupation and denying the rights of the Palestinians. Kushner’s was not the exception.

All of these previous American ‘peace proposals’ were obviously unfair, as they were to Israel’s advantage and were designed entirely independent from international and humanitarian laws. All of these pro-Israeli proposals have failed, not due to the international community’s ability to challenge Washington, but due to the tenacity of the Palestinian people.

Palestinians defeated the US agenda, but that was not enough to clinch their own freedom, simply because they were in this difficult battle alone.

Solidarity with the Palestinian people has always been one of the pillars of all international solidarity movements worldwide for decades. The phrase ‘Free Palestine’ has been written on countless walls, in every language, in every city, town, or working-class neighborhood. Still, that solidarity was not enough to turn the tide, to achieve the coveted paradigm shift or to reach the critical mass needed to globalize the struggle for the freedom of the Palestinians the way that the struggle to end South Africa’s apartheid imposed itself as a moral necessity on the whole world.

There should be no illusions that the anti-apartheid struggle of South Africa and the struggle for Palestinian freedom are identical. Back then, the global geopolitical shift made it difficult for Pretoria to maintain its racial segregation regime. Moreover, the power of that racist government, if compared to that of Israel and its backers, is minuscule.

Washington sees Israel as an integral part of the US global influence. For US politicians, Israel is a domestic and not simply a foreign policy issue. Moreover, if Israel ceases to exist in its current dominant form, the US will lose a stronghold in a region teeming with precious resources, strategic waterways and much more. This is precisely why Biden has repeatedly declared that “If Israel didn’t exist, we would have to invent it”.

However, things are finally changing, and the new solidarity, ignited in response to the worst killing campaign in the history of the region, has exceeded the confines of conditional solidarity, ideological solidarity and symbolic solidarity, which, to some extent, had defined global solidarity with the Palestinians.

This solidarity is now expressing itself at the highest level of political discourses. In his testimony before the International Court of Justice’s public hearings (February 19-26), China’s representative, Ma Xinmin, went as far as defending, while referencing international law, the Palestinian people’s right to armed struggle. Russia’s Ambassador to the United Nations, Vassily Nebenzia, called on sanctions on “those who obstruct humanitarian access to those in need”. European governments, such as Spain, Ireland, Norway and Belgium, are using unprecedented language to describe Israel’s war crimes in Gaza, while demanding real action.

The Global South is back at the forefront of championing the cause of Palestine as the world’s most inspiring national liberation struggle.

None of this was born in a vacuum. While the majority of global protests and rallies in post-October 7 were related to Palestine and Israel, 86 percent of these protests were reportedly pro-Palestine. It is not only the frequency or size of current protests that matter, but their nature as well. This includes a group of Italian youth trying to storm the US consulate in Pisa; Palestine activists taking over the Congress building, and an American soldier self-immolating out of sheer anger at the culpability of his government in the crimes underway in Gaza.

This is truly earth-shattering. The critical mass for meaningful solidarity has finally been achieved, signaling that, once more, Palestinians have imposed themselves as the guardians of their own struggle, standing proudly at the frontline of the global struggle for freedom and justice.

This leaves us with the question: Who is truly “having a hard time looking at the international community in the face?” Certainly, not the Palestinian people.

OPINIONS

Fri 08 Mar 2024 11:02 am - Jerusalem Time

Cut From the Same Cloth: The United States and Israel in Palestine

Counter Punch

Counter Punch

Opinion Writer

BY M. REZA BEHNAM

Revolutionaries in Iran in the 1970s referred to the United States as the “Great Satan” and to its ally, Israel, as the “little Satan.” The truth of their rallying cry resounds today as Israel executes, unimpeded, its scorched earth policy in Gaza.

The Israeli war on Gaza has been oiled by the military, financial and diplomatic benefaction of the United States.  While President Joe Biden makes passive public appeals for Israel to show restraint, behind closed doors, he reaffirms America’s continued support.  

The administration’s recent indulgence of Israel was visible during a 4 March 2024 meeting in the White House between Israeli minister Benny Gantz and Vice President Kamala Harris. At that meeting, the vice president stated the administration’s displeasure with the dire humanitarian crisis in Gaza; but in the same breath, told Gantz that the United States wanted to continue supporting Israel, but that Tel Aviv needed to do its part; stating, “help us, help you.”  

The infamous “hug that was seen around the world” has come to haunt even a committed Zionist like Biden.  In order to retrieve a modicum of domestic and international credibility—after Israel’s massacre of more than 100,000 Palestinians—the administration has put on its “humanitarian face.” Salvage efforts that have been for Palestinians obviously too timid and too late.

The language, action and inaction that has emanated from the Biden White House indicates that either Israel is calling the shots in Washington, or the administration is on board with Israel’s genocidal plan to empty Gaza and the West Bank of Palestinians.  It also seems evident, that Biden, who has said on a number of occasions “I am a Zionist,” has been beguiled by the myths and fantasies that the Jewish state has created.   

In the face of domestic and global condemnation, the administration has embraced the right-wing regime in Tel Aviv.  It has continued to block United Nations resolutions calling for an immediate ceasefire.  Recently, on 29 February, the United States alone, among the 15 members of the UN Security Council, opposed a statement expressing “deep concern” over the Israeli military’s killing of Palestinians who had gathered near trucks carrying food to Gaza City.  At least 112 were killed and another 760 injured in what is now called the “flour massacre.” 

In a symbolic display of concern following the massacre, the United States began airdropping humanitarian aid into Gaza, while simultaneously supplying Israel with bombs to drop on Gaza.  

During the administration’s first photo-op on 2 March, the U.S. and Jordanian air forces dropped 38,000 meals to some 1.5 million Palestinians.   Water and medical supplies were not included.  Biden refused to blame Israel for blocking aid into Gaza, but said he would “insist” that Israel open additional routes and allow more aid trucks to enter.     

In its eagerness to indulge Israel, the administration has been willing to break U.S. laws.  The Biden administration has used emergency powers to bypass arms sales reviews and Congressional oversight to expedite its arms transfers to Israel.   It is currently violating the Foreign Assistance Act, 1961; Arms Export Control Act, 1976; War Crimes Act,1996; Genocide Convention Implementation Act (Proxmire Act), 1987-88; and the Leahy Laws, 1997-98. 

The White House is awash in rhetoric.  It has, however, refused to put any real limits on Israeli violence, choosing instead to stoke the Israeli war machine.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, for example, during discussions in February 2024 with Israeli leaders in Tel Aviv, sheepishly stated: “it will be up to Israelis to decide what they want to do, when they want to do it, how they want to do it. No one’s going to make those decisions for them….”

The administration’s actions, even when confronted with Israel’s systematic violence against the Palestinians, clearly indicate that U.S. financial and military hegemonic interests outweigh what little is left of its humanity.

Like his predecessors, Biden has shown no genuine concern for the Palestinians, for the region and its people.  He has, however, been dedicated to integrating Israel into the Arab Middle East, with Saudi Arabia seen as the prize.  

To realize his integration policy, Biden has continued to expand on former President Donald Trump’s objective of strengthening military cooperation and economic ties among family-ruled Arab dictators and Israel.  He has pressed ahead with the Trump era Abraham Accords—a set of Arab-Israeli normalization agreements initiated in September 2020 and signed by the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan. 

When the accords were initiated, the Trump administration and its Arab partners believed that Palestinians could be ignored; that they were irrelevant; and that they would simply accept their slow death.  Biden has amplified that disregard.

The administration is under the impression that deepening economic and military ties with Arab despots will lead to regional stability—which ultimately translates into U.S.-Israeli hegemony. It is worth noting that the region remains volatile, even though Riyadh and Tel Aviv have cooperatedcovertly for years, as have Bahrain, the UAE, Oman, Qatar and Egypt.  

After close to five months of Israeli atrocities, Biden continues to push for what Egypt’s president, Abdel Fatah al-Sisi, once called the “deal of the century” —  a normalization pact between Saudi Arabia and Israel.  The United States sees Saudi Arabia as the integration linchpin.  If Riyadh—the largest and wealthiest Gulf regime—allies with Israel, the White House believes that others will fall in line.   

In addition to encouraging Israel-Arab economic ties, Washington has been actively promoting the furtherance of cybersecurity linkages.  The U.S. Department of Homeland Security, for example, at a Cybertech Conference in Tel Aviv on 3 February 2023, announced an expansion of the Abraham Accords to include an agreement on cybersecurity.   By giving official recognition to intelligence sharing and security agreements between Israel and the Arab states, the accords have made the spyware business easier and more lucrative.  

The Gulf regimes, believing that linkages with Israel will shore up their security ties with the United States, have become eager customers of advanced surveillance technology; which they also see as useful in policing their populations.  Israel—one of the world’s top spyware exporters—has been more than willing to sell its technology, with little regard for human rights abuse.  

The United States, Israel and Arab dictators have become deeply enmeshed in the cybersecurity/intelligence world.  Israel has positioned itself in the international “order” through its global cybersecurity/surveillance web and the lucrative global tech weapons industry that have developed around it.  

Washington’s steadfast support for and unwillingness to criticize Israel can plausibly be attributed to the cyber power and economic clout that together they have been able to wield in the region and globally.  

The ongoing collaboration between the U.S. National Security Agency and its Israeli equivalent, the secretive Cyber Unit 8200—the tech intelligence unit of the Israel Defense [occupation] Forces—is just one example of the cybersecurity network that has linked the two countries.  

Former soldiers of the elite 8200 cyber warfare unit, for example, have gone on to found and occupy top positions at cybersecurity and international IT companies and in Silicon Valley.   Google, for one, has two offices and over 2,000 employees in Israel.  

Washington cares little that Israeli cybersecurity companies (numbering 700) export their spyware around the world or that Unit 8200 honed its intelligence skills through mass surveillance of innocent civilians in the occupied West Bank and Gaza; personal information that was used to blackmail Palestinians, to turn them into Israeli collaborators. 

Zionist hubris, facilitated by the United States, has no bounds.  After stealing Palestinian land, water and pillaging Gaza, Israel has been seeking to plunder the maritime offshore natural gas reserves that are the property of Palestine.   

On 29 October 2023, amidst its brutal war in Gaza, the Israeli Ministry of Energy and Infrastructure announced that it had awarded licenses for natural gas exploration in areas that overlap with the recognized maritime borders of Gaza.  As an occupying power, Israel has no legal right under international law to award licenses in areas it does not hold sovereignty over.  

The bidding process for the illegal licenses was launched in December 2022, a year before Israel’s horrific assault on Gaza.  Licenses were issued to six companies: Ratio Energies and NewMed Energy (Israeli), ENI (Italian); Dana Petroleum (UK subsidiary of Korea National Oil Company); SOCAR (Azerbaijan’s national oil company); and British owned BP.

The U.S.-Israeli economic and military stranglehold over the region has been challenged by the colonized Palestinians in Gaza who have bravely resisted despite having no sizable army, air force or sophisticated surveillance technology or weaponry.  Gaza has become an inspirational symbol of resistance in the Middle East and worldwide; a reality the U.S. and Israel will be powerless to overcome.

To understand the unsavory alliance that has held the United States and Israel together, is to understand that they are cut from the same cloth.   Both countries share a ruthless exploitative settler-colonial ideology and psychology, that has set them on parallel social, political and economic paths. They have existed by exploitation and churning the cauldron of division and conflict among countries in the region. 

After a half century of steadfast support, it has become virtually impossible for Washington to imagine a regional reality that does not have Israel at its core. The United States has finally been forced to confront the brutishness of its “ally,” and to recognize that Zionists, and they, have no place or future in the Middle East.

 

OPINIONS

Fri 08 Mar 2024 10:55 am - Jerusalem Time

Muslim nations must confront the West to lift Gaza siege

David Hearst

David Hearst

Opinion Writer

The unimpeded slaughter in Gaza has lit a furnace of anger and humiliation in each and every Arab and Muslim heart. 

If witnesses to the Nakba of 1948 are few and far between, a whole generation now knows what a genocide looks and feels like in real time.

The Israeli onslaught has projected Palestine into the world's number one moral cause, like the end of apartheid in South Africa, the civil rights campaign in the US, or the abolition of slavery in the 19th century. 

But six months on, the demolition of Gaza has yet to make a dent in the behaviour of the regimes closest to it.

They behave as if it's business as usual. The Palestinian Authority (PA) continues to collaborate with Israel on a nightly basis, putting factionalism above the national interest of the Palestinian people. Egypt continues to allow Israel to dictate how much aid gets through the Rafah crossing. Jordan drops token amounts of aid over Gaza, but only after it has asked Israel’s permission. 

Much has been threatened, but in reality none of the countries which normalised relations with Israel are prepared to pull the plug on recognition.

'Guilty as charged'

At the Munich Security Conference last month, Egypt’s Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry agreed with Tsipi Livni, the former Israeli foreign minister, that Hamas was beyond the pale because it refused to recognise Israel. By that time at least 28,858 civilians had been killed in Gaza. 

Two weeks later, three warhorses trooped on stage at the Antalya Diplomatic Forum to issue ritual denunciations of a war they had no intention of letting either Hamas or Gaza win.

Speaking the day after the massacre that took place when Israeli forces fired on people at an aid convoy in Gaza City’s al-Rasheed Street, Riyad al-Maliki, the Palestinian foreign minister, blustered "the only legitimate authority that will operate and will continue operating in Gaza is the Palestinian Authority."

This is when the PA is so unpopular at home in the occupied West Bank, it has trouble asserting its legitimacy in Nablus, Jenin or for that matter, Ramallah. 


If witnesses to the Nakba of 1948 are few 

and far between, a whole generation now 

knows what a genocide looks and feels like 

in real time

Abdulla bin Ahmed Al Khalifa, undersecretary of the Bahraini foreign ministry, bristled when asked whether it was business as usual for Bahrain. But went on to say "achieving peace will never be through isolation, extremism or aggression, but rather through communication, dialogue and peaceful means." Which meant the same thing.

At least Hossam Zaki, assistant general secretary of the Arab League, was honest: "All internationals have failed. Yes we are all guilty as charged."

Only one country present at Antalya did not mince its words, but that country is 6500km away.

South Africa has thrown caution to the wind. It is prepared to risk US sanctions  - there are two punitive bills proceeding through the House of Representatives at this moment - to make a moral stand on Palestine.

"We are heterogeneous in the global South. But one thing we share is the historical experience of oppression and colonialism. This is what unites us in supporting the struggle for Palestine," said Naledi Pandor, Pretoria's minister of international relations.

This week, Pandor is in Washington to lobby against the imposition of sanctions which would be "catastrophic" for her country. But by heaven, it feels lonely.

"We went to the International Court of Justice, looked around, and there was nobody behind us," said Faisal Dawjee, former media director for the South African government, recalling the pressure South Africa came under to withdraw the case before the preliminary ruling. 

"What’s happening in the occupied territories is ten times worse than the apartheid we experienced in South Africa, and the West is complicit in apartheid and genocide," Dawjee said.

But neither have the hosts of this conference in Antalya, Turkey, been immune from criticism.

What is Turkey doing?

The people of Gaza have held their breath on two occasions in recent Turkish history - the first was on 15 July 2016, the night of the failed Gulenist coup, and the second was Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s re-election last year. 

Now that Gaza is really at the mercy of a vicious invading force, one that makes no distinction between fighters and civilians and repeatedly attacks crowds gathering at aid convoys, what is Turkey doing?

From the start, Turkey built its foreign policy towards the war on two assumptions which turn out to be questionable six months on. It said that Ankara should be part of the regional Arab consensus - as we have painfully seen, there is none. 

And it said that Turkey would be a guarantor nation to a two-state solution: there is no two-state solution that the current Israeli leader is prepared to accept, and no Israeli politician has yet been born who is prepared to order the eviction of well over 750,000 heavily armed settlers in the West Bank, occupied East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights.

Qatar is taking a pasting for playing the role of mediator with the political wing of Hamas in Doha, and Turkey, which has contacts with Hamas and is just as close, has not shared this burden.

To be taken seriously as a guarantor, you need to be visible, and much of what Turkey has done has been behind the scenes.

Turkish officials don’t take the criticism. 

They admit that much of what they have done publicly has been guided by the fear of falling into the trap Ankara fell into after the military coup in Egypt, and the failed intervention in Libya, when they fought for the Arab Spring in almost complete isolation. 

Today, they have a horror of being the only head above the parapet. Beneath it, they claim, they have been active. They say they have changed the narrative about Gaza, making it about a two-state solution.

In this, Ankara wanted to show the world that Israel is the one-stater, whose ruling party Likud claims Jewish sovereignty from the river to the sea.

By the same token, Ankara has pushed hard to unify Fatah and Hamas, and this effort was starting to succeed. Jibril Rajoub, general secretary of Fatah, made conciliatory remarks to Hamas, but the talks came to a standstill when Israel killed his closest contact in Hamas, Saleh al-Arouri, who once shared the same cell.

Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan encouraged Arab states to make a stand against Israel and the US, and this has worked to a degree. 

Having poured scorn on Hamas, Saudi Arabia has taken a more aggressive position on a two-state solution, and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman snubbed US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken on his last visit.

"We showed them you can shout at America, because we have always done that. They were taken aback," one official said.

Turkey created the Gaza Contact Group to convince western states that opposed an immediate ceasefire. The group included Muslim countries like Indonesia and Nigeria. Turkey also claims credit for bringing the Arab League and the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) together to give a sharper Muslim voice to their statements.

Has any of this worked?

Strategic patience wearing thin

On 26 October, 120 nations voted for a ceasefire resolution supported by Jordan at the UN General Assembly with 14 voting against and 45 abstentions. Erdogan, Fidan and the Arab-Islamic delegation set about persuading the countries that did not support the resolution. By December 153 nations supported a ceasefire, with 10 against and 23 abstentions.


Muslim nations have to demolish 

the argument that an apartheid 

state has the right to commit 

genocide and do that in the name 

of self-defence

Turkey in the meantime has withdrawn its ambassador to Israel but continues to trade with it, although in fruits rather than arms. 

I am not sure playing the nice guy with Israel or the Arab regimes that surround it works. 

The analysis of those advisers around Erdogan about the rottenness of the Arab state and its deep complicity with Israel holds true as never before.

If Turkey can act decisively and within hours in Libya when Khalifa Haftar’s forces came within 14km of Tripoli, or in Azerbaijan, it seems curious it is so hesitant to act on its doorstep in Gaza. 

True, in both Libya and Azerbaijan, there was a vacuum of international power. In Gaza there is not. But history favours the bold. And what hesitancy does is leave the playing field open to Israel and the US, who are the cause of the slaughter in Gaza.

If I were the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, I would be tempted to think that I could get away with my policy of perpetual war, because as yet no serious international pressure has emerged to stop him.

This may be about to change. Fidan told a meeting of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) in Jeddah this week that Turkey’s strategic patience was wearing thin: "There is an overwhelming  expectation from us to act right now, even if it means doing so unilaterally."

Break the siege of Gaza

Let’s be clear what a permanent ceasefire in Gaza has to achieve.

Way before negotiations begin on a mythical Palestinian state  - and that could only happen under a new Israeli government and the ousting of the National Security Minister Itmar Ben Gvir and the Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, the shock troopers of Jewish supremacy, which would be big enough events in themselves - the ceasefire has to break the siege of Gaza.

It is the siege - the ability of Israel to calculate the number of calories each Palestinian in Gaza gets down to the point of starvation - that really matters. Leave it in place and Israel will be haggling over every bag of flour, every bag of cement that goes through. 

There comes a time when Muslim nations can no longer be spectators. They have to act. They have to confront America and Europe. They have to demolish the argument that an apartheid state has the right to commit genocide and do that in the name of self-defence.

My gut feeling is that neither the US nor the EU, both in election years, are in a mood to push back. It would not take much to force them to accept other military forces on the ground, under the guise of a peacekeeping or aid operation.

The US is exhausted with the Middle East after three decades of failed intervention. Its ability to deter the Houthis in the Red Sea, Hezbollah in Lebanon, or the Iraqi militias hugely diminished.

It's Israel’s turn to feel the cold hand of western duplicity. Such a shock is long overdue, and can only be delivered by its closest ally.

Only then might it be ready to negotiate with a people it has done everything in its armoury to crush. It’s long overdue.

ARAB AND WORLD

Fri 08 Mar 2024 10:54 am - Jerusalem Time

Sexual abuse allegation in Kibbutz Be'eri on 7 October 'not true', says spokesperson

New York Times report alleging sexual abuse against two sisters during Hamas attack denied by kibbutz spokesperson

An Israeli kibbutz spokesperson has denied allegations made by a New York Times article of sexual assault committed against women members during Hamas-led attacks on 7 October. 

In a report published by The Intercept earlier this week, a spokesperson for Kibbutz Be’eri denied claims made in a Times piece on 28 December. 

The article, titled "Screams without words", described three alleged victims of sexual assault, when Hamas and other Palestinian groups launched a surprise attack on southern Israel killing around 1,140 people. 

Two of the alleged victims of sexual assault were unnamed teenage sisters from Kibbutz Be'eri, aged 13 and 16. The Intercept used the details from the Times piece to identify the girls as members of the Sharabi family. 

Michal Paikin, spokesperson for the kibbutz, denied that the two girls were sexually abused. 

“You’re talking about the Sharabi girls?” he told The Intercept. “No, they … were shot and were not subjected to sexual abuse.”

The Times article mainly relied on the testimony of an unnamed Israeli special forces paramedic.

It also cited unidentified neighbours in Be'eri who said the girls' bodies were found separated from their families. However, the Sharabi family has disputed this detail. 

“They were just shot, nothing else had been done to them,” their grandmother Gillian Brisley told Israel's Channel 12 in a recent interview.

Prior to the Times's article, Sharabi family members gave several interviews which appeared to contradict the claims made in the story. However, none of these interviews were used in the Times piece. 

On Monday, Pramila Patten, the UN special envoy for sexual violence, reported that there was evidence to suggest sexual violence occured during the 7 October attack. 

The report stated that sexual violence occurred at the Nova music festival site and its surroundings, Road 232, and Kibbutz Re'im. It was unable to determine whether it occurred in Be'eri. 

Last month, UN experts decried reports of rape and sexual assault of Palestinian women and girls held in Israeli detention.

The independent experts, part of the UN’s fact-finding and monitoring mechanisms of the Human Rights Council, confirmed in a statement receiving reports of Palestinian female detainees being subjected to “multiple forms of sexual assault,” with at least two detainees reportedly raped, while others were allegedly threatened with rape and sexual violence. 

They also described women being strip-searched by male Israeli officers and noted the circulation of degrading images of detainees online by Israeli soldiers.

OPINIONS

Fri 08 Mar 2024 8:54 am - Jerusalem Time

How the ‘fight against antisemitism’ became a shield for Israel's genocide

Jonathan Cook

Jonathan Cook

Opinion Writer

Western capitals no longer treat Israel like a state, a political actor capable of slaughtering children, but rather as a sacred cause. So any opposition has to be a blasphemy


If you read the establishment media, you might conclude that a serious battle is being waged by Israel and its most ardent supporters to tackle an apparent new wave of antisemitism in the West.

In article after article, we are told how Israel and western Jewish leadership bodies are demanding our concern, and outrage, at a rise in anti-Jewish hate incidents. Organisations such as the Community Security Trust in the UK and the Anti-Defamation League in the US produce lengthy reports on the relentless increase in antisemitism, especially since 7 October, and warn that action is urgently required.

Undoubtedly, there is a real threat of antisemitism and, as ever, it comes largely from the far right. Israel’s actions – and its false claim to be representing all Jews – only help to stoke it.

This moral panic is transparently self-serving. It directs our attention away from the pressing, all-too-concrete evidence that Israel is committing a genocide in Gaza - one that has slaughtered and maimed many tens of thousands of innocents. 

It redirects our attention instead towards tenuous claims of a deepening antisemitism crisis, one whose tangible effects appear limited and for which the evidence is all too clearly exaggerated. 

After all, a rise in “Jew hatred” is all but inevitable if you redefine antisemitism, as western officials have recently done via the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s new definition, to include antipathy towards Israel – and at the moment when Israel appears, even to the World Court, to be carrying out a genocide.

The logic of Israel and its supporters runs something like this:

Many more people than usual are expressing hatred of Israel, the self-declared state of the Jewish people. There is no reason to hate Israel unless you hate what it represents, which is Jews. Therefore, antisemitism is on the rise.

This argument makes sense to most Israelis, to its partisans, and to the overwhelming majority of western politicians and career-minded establishment journalists. That is: the very same people who interpret calls for equality in historic Palestine – “from the river to the sea” – as a demand for a genocide against Jews.

The singer Charlotte Church, for example, found herself accused of antisemitism by the entire establishment media after a "pro-Palestinian chant" to raise money for Gaza’s children being starved by an Israeli aid blockade. The offending song had included the lyric “From the river to the sea”, calling for the liberation of Palestinians from decades of Israeli oppression. 

At the weekend, Chancellor Jeremy Hunt once again suggested marches calling for a ceasefire were antisemitic because they supposedly "intimidated" Jews. In fact, Jews are prominent at those marches. He was referring to Zionists who excuse the slaughter in Gaza. 

Similarly, in the wake of George Galloway’s overwhelming byelection win "for Gaza" in Rochdale last week, a BBC reporter berated former Labour MP Chris Williamson for using the word "genocide" to describe Israel’s actions. 

The reporter was worried that the term “might offend some people”, despite the World Court finding the accusation of genocide plausible. 

A ghoulish phenomenon

But the ambition of these Israel zealots runs much deeper than mere deflection. Israel’s leaders and most of its citizens are not ashamed of their genocide, it seems, and neither are their overseas backers. 

If my social media feeds are any guide, the slaughter in Gaza is not discomfiting these apologists, or even giving them pause for thought. They appear to revel in their support for Israel as the world looks on in horror. 

Every Palestinian child’s bloodied body, and the outrage it provokes from onlookers, fuels their self-righteousness. They entrench, they do not retreat. 

They appear to be finding a strange reassurance – comfort even – in the wider public’s anger and indignation at the extinguishing of so many young lives.

It mirrors very precisely Israeli officials’ own reaction to the International Court of Justice's verdict that there is a plausible case Israel is committing genocide in Gaza. 

Many observers assumed that Israel would seek to placate the judges and world opinion by toning down its atrocities. They could not have been more wrong. In defying the court, Israel became even more brazen, as attested to by its horrifying assault on the Nasser hospital last month and its lethal attack on Palestinians scrambling to reach an aid convoy last week. 

Israel’s war crimes – broadcast on every social media platform, including by its own soldiers – are even more in our faces than before the World Court ruling.

This phenomenon needs explaining. It looks ghoulish. But it has an internal logic that shines a light on why Israel has become an emotional crutch for many Jewish people, both inside the country and abroad, as well as for others. 

It is not just that Jews and non-Jews who strongly subscribe to the ideology of Zionism identify with Israel. It runs deeper still. They are utterly dependent on a worldview – long cultivated in them by Israel and by their own community leaders, as well as by oil-grabbing western establishments – that places Israel at the centre of the moral universe. 

They have been drawn into what looks more like a cult – and a very dangerous one at that, as the horrors of Gaza are revealing.

Albatross, not sanctuary

The claim they have internalised – that Israel is a necessary sanctuary in a future time of trouble from the supposedly innate, genocidal impulses of non-Jews – should have come crashing down on their heads over the past five months. 

If the price of reassurance – of having a “just-in-case” bolthole – is the slaughter and maiming of many tens of thousands of Palestinian children, and the slow starvation of hundreds of thousands more, then that bolthole is not worth preserving. 

It is not a sanctuary; it is an albatross. It is a stain. It must go, to be replaced by something better for Jews and Palestinians in the region – “from the river to the sea”. 

So why have these Israel partisans not been able to reach a conclusion so morally self-evident to everyone else – or at least those not suborned to the interests of western establishments? 

Because like all cult members, hardcore Zionists are immune to self-reflection. Not only that, but their reasoning is inherently circular. 

Israel, Zionism’s creation, is not in the least concerned with providing a solution to antisemitism, as it professes. Quite the reverse. It feeds on antisemitism and needs it. 

Antisemitism is its lifeblood, the very reason for Israel’s existence. Without antisemitism, Israel would be redundant, there would be no need for it as a sanctuary. 

The cult would be over, and so would the endless military aid, the special trading status with the West, the jobs, the land grabs, the privileges and the sense of importance and ultimate victimhood that allows for the dehumanisation of others, not least the Palestinians. 

Like all true believers, Israel’s partisans overseas – who proudly call themselves “Zionists” but are now pressuring social media platforms to ban the term as antisemitic, as the movement’s goals become more transparent – have too much to lose from self- and communal doubt.

The fight against antisemitism means nothing else can take priority – not even genocide. Which, in turn, means no greater evil can be acknowledged, not even the mass murder of children. No bigger threat, however pressing, however urgent, can be allowed to come to the fore.

And to keep the doubt at bay, more antisemitism – more supposed existential threats – must be generated. 

Racism in new garb

In recent years, the biggest difficulty facing Zionism has been that the true racists – on the right, often in power in western capitals – have also served as Israel’s strongest allies. They have dressed up their traditional racist ideologies – that once fed antisemitism, and could again – in new garb: as Islamophobia. 

In Europe and the United States, Muslims are the new Jews. 

Which is ideal for Israel and its partisans. A supposed “global, civilisational war” – ideological cover to justify continuing western domination of the oil-rich Middle East – always places Israel, the regional attack dog, on the side of the angels, firmly alongside the white nationalists.  

Because Israel and its apologists cannot expose the true racists and antisemites in power, they must create new ones. And that has required changing antisemitism’s definition beyond recognition, to refer to those who oppose the colonial domination project into which Israel is profoundly integrated.

In this upside-down worldview, one that prevails not only among Israel partisans but in western capitals, we have arrived at a nonsense: to reject Israel’s oppression of Palestinians – and now even its genocide of them – is supposedly to reveal oneself as antisemitic.

Palestinians dehumanised

This was precisely the position in which Francesca Albanese, the United Nations special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the occupied Palestinian territories, found herself last month after she criticised French President Emmanuel Macron. 

Israel has, as a consequence, declared it is banning her from entry to the occupied territories to record its human rights abuses. 

But notably, as Albanese pointed out, nothing has changed in practice. Israel has excluded all UN rapporteurs from the occupied territories for the past 16 years, during its siege of Gaza, so they cannot witness the crimes that foregrounded the attack on 7 October.

Last month, Macron made a patently preposterous statement, though one promoted by Israel and treated seriously by the western media. He described Hamas’ attack on Israel as the “biggest antisemitic massacre of our century” – that is, he claimed it was driven by hatred of Jews.

One can criticise Hamas for how it carried out its attack, as Albanese has done: undoubtedly, its fighters committed many violations of international law that day in killing civilians and taking them hostage. 

Exactly the same kind of violations, we should note in the interests of balance, that Israel has committed day in, day out for decades against the Palestinians forced to live under its military occupation.

Palestinian prisoners, seized by an occupying Israeli army in the middle of the night, held in military jails and denied proper trials, are no less hostages. 

But to ascribe antisemitism as Hamas’ motivation is intended to scrub out those many decades of oppression. It airbrushes out the very abuses faced by the Palestinians that Hamas and the other Palestinian militant factions were established to resist. 

That right of resistance to belligerent military occupation is enshrined in international law, even if the West rarely acknowledges the fact. 

Or as Albanese put it: "The victims in the October 7 massacre were not killed because of their Judaism, but in response to Israeli oppression.”

Macron’s ridiculous remark also wiped out the past 17 years of the siege of Gaza – a slow-motion genocide that Israel has now put on steroids. 

And he did so precisely because western colonial interests – just like Israel’s interests – must rationalise the dehumanisation of Palestinians and their supporters as racists and barbarians, in the West’s pursuit of domination and old-fashioned resource control in the Middle East. 

But it is Albanese, not Macron, now fighting to save her reputation. She is the one being smeared as a racist and antisemite. By whom? By Israel and the genocide-supporting leaders of Europe.

Sacred cause

Israel needs antisemitism. And armed with a ludicrous redefinition adopted by western allies that classifies as Jew hatred any opposition to its crimes – any rejection of its bogus claims of “self-defence” as it crushes resistance to its occupation and its oppression of Palestinians – Israel has every incentive to commit more crimes. 

Every atrocity produces more outrage, more resentment, more “antisemitism”. And the more resentment, the more outrage, the more “antisemitism”, the more Israel and its supporters can present the self-declared Jewish state as a sanctuary from that “antisemitism”. 

Israel is no longer treated as a state, as a political actor capable of committing crimes and slaughtering children, but as an article of faith. It is transformed into a belief system, one immune to criticism or scrutiny. It transcends politics to become a sacred cause. And any opposition must be damned as wicked, as blasphemy.

Which is precisely the state to which western politics has devolved. 

This battle against “antisemitism” – or rather, the battle being waged by Israel and its partisans – is to turn the meaning of words, and the values they represent, on their head. It is a fight to crush solidarity with the Palestinian people, and leave them friendless and naked before Israel’s campaign of genocide. 

It is a moral duty to defeat these “antisemitism” warriors and assert our shared humanity – and the right of all to live in peace and dignity – before Israel and its apologists pave the way to an even greater slaughter.

ARAB AND WORLD

Fri 08 Mar 2024 8:51 am - Jerusalem Time

“The Economist”: Air aid is a farce...and Biden’s anger at “Israel” will not stop the Gaza war

The British magazine “The Economist” confirmed today that the operation to drop aid over the Gaza Strip, which was conducted in conjunction with Jordan, did not symbolize America’s power, but rather its frustration with its limited ability to influence Israel’s war against the Gaza Strip.

President Biden has recently sharpened his tone towards Israel, saying that he will not accept “any excuses” for the delay in increasing humanitarian supplies to the Gaza Strip.

Biden is facing increasing pressure, at home and abroad, due to the horrific losses caused by the war on the Gaza Strip, especially the mass displacement of the Strip’s population, the death of thousands of civilians, and the spread of hunger and disease.

According to the magazine, Biden is making his dissatisfaction with Netanyahu clear in other ways as well. On March 4 and 5, his administration welcomed Benny Gantz as an alternative prime minister, and granted him meetings with the vice president, the national security advisor, and others. Netanyahu, who had not yet set foot in the White House under Biden, was very angry and tried to obstruct Gantz's efforts in Washington and London.


Since the beginning of the war on the Gaza Strip, President Biden has followed four axes: embracing Israel’s right to defend itself and destroying Hamas and its capabilities, preventing the spread of war, and seeking to limit the damage to Palestinian civilians in order to preserve America’s humanitarian image, in addition to resuming talks. Peace to establish a Palestinian state.

The magazine indicates that Biden sent weapons to the Israeli armed forces, and he also succeeded in avoiding a regional conflagration after the war. However, he claimed that he was struggling to protect ordinary Palestinians from the wrath of “Israel.”

The newspaper pointed out that “Hamas has been weakened, but not defeated, and is fighting through a network of tunnels.”

In turn, American officials say that the airdrops are part of an attempt to “flood the region” with aid. It is a highly inefficient method, and tends to cost three to four times as much as bringing food by land.

The sporadic flights, each delivering more than 30,000 meals, are more theatrics than a serious humanitarian relief effort.

The United States of America used its veto power three times against United Nations Security Council resolutions calling for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza. She defended “Israel” before the International Court of Justice in The Hague.

The newspaper also pointed out that “Biden’s support for Israel carries a cost for him at home, as he faces growing dissatisfaction.”

For his part, Bernie Sanders, the leftist senator who ran twice for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination, condemned Israel's violation of the US Foreign Aid Law, which prohibits the provision of aid to any country that prohibits or restricts, directly or indirectly, the transfer or delivery of aid. American.

The magazine quoted Matt Doss, from the Center for International Policy, as saying that the airdrop operation reveals the blatant absurdity of American policy, adding: “We are airdropping food on the population whose starvation we are supporting with our arms and weapons.” Meanwhile, Republicans accuse Biden of tying Israel's hands.

Despite his irritation with Netanyahu, Biden refused to use American influence more directly, in the manner of Ronald Reagan, who blocked arms deliveries to Israel in the 1980s, or George H.W. Bush, who withheld loan guarantees to Israel in 1990.

The magazine concluded by saying, “Gantz’s independent diplomacy is a warning that Biden may put his thumb on the scales of unstable Israeli politics.”

Palestinian factions said that airdrops of aid contribute to reducing the work of UNRWA, and are a dedication to the occupation’s plans to separate and divide the Gaza Strip, and tighten the siege on the Palestinian people.

For its part, the American network “NBC” earlier quoted American officials as saying that President Joe Biden “is trying to intensify his pressure on Israel to bring more aid into the Gaza Strip and reduce the severity of the military attacks,” but he “did not reach Limit cutting off arms shipments to it.”

A few days ago, the Minister of National Security in the occupation government, Itamar Ben Gvir, claimed that transferring aid to the Gaza Strip exposes our soldiers to danger.

Sama News

ARAB AND WORLD

Fri 08 Mar 2024 8:47 am - Jerusalem Time

Jerusalem Post: This is how the Gaza war changed Netanyahu’s features

The Israeli newspaper Jerusalem Post published a report on the impact of the Al-Aqsa flood and the war on the Gaza Strip on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, by reviewing his facial features and photos taken of him.

The newspaper said in its report that it showed two pictures of Netanyahu, one 9 days before the war and the other 4 months after the war, to expert Tami Elashvili, who it said was the innovator of the methodology for analyzing people through facial features.

According to Elashvili, Netanyahu appears “less pessimistic, with thick eyebrows indicating self-confidence and charisma” in the photo taken before the war.

While the photo taken after the war shows “his eyebrows are so thin that they are almost non-existent, and this indicates the effects of severe trauma.”

The picture also shows that “his eyes are raised upward, and the lower part is white, which indicates severe pressure.” Also, “the sides of the lips indicate a more fundamental pessimism than before the war. The eyes droop and narrow,” which indicates that Netanyahu is “emotionally broken, and his broad, square chin that characterizes people with key administrative roles has shrunk.”


According to Elashvili’s analysis, “Before the war, Netanyahu’s hair hid the front, and after the war it became more exposed.” After the seventh of last October, “he became very thin, and thus his face tended to be triangular in shape.”

The specialist’s analysis indicated that “the untidy eyebrows indicate that he is mentally and emotionally distracted.” Before the war, he was taking care of them, but now “they are not like that,” which indicates that Netanyahu before the war was “very focused, and knew what he wanted and what he intended to do.” “.

The newspaper’s report indicates that Netanyahu is known to “know how to express himself and his thoughts, but the matter is different now,” which indicates that he is “terribly emotionally and mentally distracted, does not know how to do things, and is in a whirlwind inside himself.”

ARAB AND WORLD

Fri 08 Mar 2024 8:30 am - Jerusalem Time

The Israeli army is preparing plans for a ground operation in Lebanon

Israeli Channel 13 said that Chief of Staff Herzi Halevy had instructed the preparation of plans for a possible ground operation in Lebanon and to draw lessons from the Gaza war.


The channel added that Halevy assigned the preparer of plans for the ground operation in the Gaza Strip, General Chico Tamir, to plan a new ground operation in Lebanon.


In the same context, the Lebanese Al-Akhbar newspaper, which is close to Hezbollah, reported that Israel informed European countries that it had set a deadline of March 15 to reach a political settlement with Lebanon, otherwise it would be prepared to escalate military operations into a full-scale war.


The Lebanese-Israeli border has witnessed mutual bombardment since the Israeli aggression on the Gaza Strip.


The newspaper quoted Western diplomatic sources - which it did not name - that Israel's talk about the deadline increased the concern of Western countries, which believe that every effort should be made to support the continuing efforts of the United States and France to implement Resolution 1701, and initiate a border settlement that provides security in the long term and guarantees the return of the displaced. Both sides of the border.


According to the same sources, the political path is not sufficient for reassurance, despite the American side’s insistence on drafting the initials of the agreement between Beirut and Tel Aviv.


However, these sources warned that any discussion regarding political arrangements in Lebanon and a ceasefire will not be translatable as long as the aggression against the Gaza Strip continues.


The US presidential envoy for energy affairs, Amos Hochstein, said during his visit to Beirut a few days ago that any truce agreed upon in Gaza does not have to extend to Lebanon automatically.


In the wake of a devastating Israeli war on the Gaza Strip, since October 8, 2023, the Lebanese-Israeli border has witnessed an exchange of fire between Hezbollah and Palestinian factions on the one hand and the Israeli occupation army on the other, which led to deaths and injuries on both sides of the border.


Recently, threats have escalated from Israeli officials to expand attacks on Lebanese territory unless Hezbollah fighters withdraw to the south of the Litani River.

PALESTINE

Fri 08 Mar 2024 8:22 am - Jerusalem Time

Gaza Health: 6,000 pregnant women suffer from malnutrition

The Gaza Ministry of Health said on Friday that about 6,000 pregnant women in the Strip suffer from malnutrition, dehydration, and a lack of proper health care.


According to the Ministry, in a press statement on the occasion of International Women’s Day, which falls on March 8 of each year, about 5,000 pregnant women in the Gaza Strip give birth every month in harsh, unsafe, and unhealthy conditions as a result of bombing and displacement.


It pointed out that the Israeli army killed about 9,000 women, including thousands of mothers, pregnant women, and health personnel.


It pointed out that women constitute 49% of the population of the Gaza Strip, most of whom are of childbearing age, which exacerbates their health and psychological conditions as a result of the Israeli aggression.


The ministry said: ️Palestinian women, especially in the Gaza Strip, are exposed to the worst humanitarian catastrophe of killing, displacement, arrest, abortion, epidemics, and death from starvation as a result of the Israeli aggression.


It considered that the silence of the international community contributed to the genocide that Palestinian women, their children, and their families are subjected to daily at the hands of the Israeli forces supported by the United States and Europe.

It called on the United Nations to work to immediately stop the Israeli aggression and genocide against Palestinian women and their families.

PALESTINE

Fri 08 Mar 2024 8:10 am - Jerusalem Time

Netanyahu rejects a plan to secure aid to Gaza by armed men

The Hebrew newspaper Israel Hayom revealed, on Friday, that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rejected a plan presented by the security establishment to secure humanitarian aid convoys entering the Gaza Strip, by armed elements not related to Hamas, in order to prevent the looting and theft of those convoys.


According to the Hebrew newspaper, senior officials in the security establishment believe that as long as aid convoys enter without being secured by armed elements, the plundering of aid will not stop, whether it enters in trucks by land or sea.


According to the plan that was presented, those elements that the security establishment wants to communicate with are not Hamas supporters, and they are also supposed to be part of the “day after” solution to the war in the Gaza Strip, and securing humanitarian routes to supply the Strip with aid.


The Israeli security establishment believes that whoever will control the distribution of aid will control the Gaza Strip, but the issue of the identity of these militants remains unresolved, as they cannot, of course, be members of Hamas, while Netanyahu also refuses that they be members of the Palestinian Authority and the Fatah movement.


The newspaper indicated that discussions took place about this in the Israeli security establishment, which included securing supply convoys, as well as identifying the humanitarian areas that would be established. The plan was presented at the political level, along with a plan to evacuate civilians from Rafah if a military operation was carried out there.


Netanyahu opposes any discussion on this issue, and refuses to implement any plan within the framework of the day after the war, as long as the Israeli army is still operating inside the Strip.

PALESTINE

Fri 08 Mar 2024 7:56 am - Jerusalem Time

Austin urges Gallant to increase aid to Gaza

US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on Friday urged Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Galant to increase humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip.


This came during a phone call that took place between them at dawn, to discuss the situation in the Gaza Strip and the region.


Austin stressed the need to ensure that aid reaches points safely, and to ensure its delivery to the population. As reported on the Seventh Hebrew Channel.

PALESTINE

Fri 08 Mar 2024 7:45 am - Jerusalem Time

War on Gaza: Within 24 hours...Israel commits 8 new massacres, claiming the lives of 78 people

The Israeli army committed 8 new massacres in different areas of the West Bank, killing 78 persons and wounding 104 others during the past 24 hours.


The Ministry of Health reported that the death toll had risen to 30,878 persons and 72,402 wounded since the seventh of last October.


It pointed out that there are still a number of victims under the rubble and on the roads, and the Israeli army prevents ambulance and civil defense crews from reaching them.


Last night, a number of citizens were killed and injured, as the Israeli war on the Gaza Strip continued for the 154th day in a row.


The dead toll of the bombing of two houses in the Al-Hakar area of Deir Al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip, last night, was 9 persons.


Meanwhile, it bombed a house in the city of Rafah, south of the Gaza Strip, killing 5 citizens and wounding a number of others with varying injuries.


The Israeli aircraft launched a series of raids on separate areas of Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip, in addition to others in separate areas of the central and southern Gaza Strip.