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The Houthis military spokesperson said the group targeted British oil ship Pollux with missiles in the Red Sea. Reuters, Haaretz Houthis military spokesperson says the group targeted British oil ship Pollux with missiles in the Red Sea According to report by the New York Times, the U.S. State Department designated on Friday the Houthis as a terrorist organization, officially labeling the group as A "Specially Designated Global Terrorist group" (SDGTG). The move, that was announced last month, and has now gone into effect, allows the U.S. to "crack down on the Iran-backed Houthis' access to the global financial system." Washington is refraining from defining the Houthis as a Foreign Terror Organization" (FTO) which "would allow for harsher U.S. penalties and greater ability to prosecute the group's financial supporters," said the report. According to the NYT, this is due to the risk of such a categorization to complicate the transfer of humanitarian aid to the region View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Institute for Study of War backgrounder 16 Feb Key Takeaways: Israeli President Isaac Herzog “secretly” met with Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammad Bin Abdulrahman al Thani to discuss the release of Hamas-held hostages in the Gaza Strip, according to two sources familiar with the meeting. Northern and Central Gaza Strip The Israel Defense Forces continued targeting Hamas commanders and fighters in the northern Gaza Strip. The IDF 215th Artillery Brigade (assigned to the 162nd Division) killed an aide to the Sabra Battalion commander in Hamas’ Gaza City Brigade.Israeli forces killed the previous Sabra Battalion commander in November 2023. Israeli forces clashed with Palestinian fighters in the central Gaza Strip on February 16. The IDF Nahal Brigade (assigned to the 162nd Division) killed several Palestinian fighters, and the IDF Air Force targeted a Palestinian fighter squad near Israeli ground forces. Southern Gaza Strip Israeli forces found medications belonging to Hamas-held hostages and weapons in Nasser Hospital in western Khan Younis on February 16. Israeli special operations forces began operating in Nasser Hospital on February 15 after receiving “credible intelligence” that Hamas-held hostages were in the hospital. The IDF Maglan Unit (assigned to the 98th Division) found mortars, grenades, and weapons belonging to Hamas in the hospital. The IDF reported on February 16 that it has been causing “significant damage” to Hamas’ Khan Younis Brigade. Israel withdrew the IDF 646th Paratroopers Brigade from Khan Younis on February 15. Only Israeli regular units remain in the Gaza Strip. Hamas policemen shot and killed a child, who was attempting to take food from a humanitarian aid truck in Rafah. Riots erupted in the border area between Rafah and Egypt in response to the incident. The child’s family issued a statement holding Hamas responsible. Israeli media reported that an unnamed Hamas official on the border denied the incident, saying that “there is no truth in what is being spread in the media and social networks.” Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said that Israel will not evacuate Palestinian civilians from Rafah to Egypt. West Bank A Palestinian resident of east Jerusalem conducted a shooting attack in Kiryat Malachi on February 16, injuring four and killing two. The Mujahideen Brigades boasted that terror attacks like this one evade Israeli security. Hamas responded to the attack by repeating its previous calls for Palestinian civilians to conduct terror attacks targeting Israelis. Local footage showed Israeli forces engaged in clashes with unidentified Palestinian fighters in Shuafat shortly after the shooting attack. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that the attack north of Kiryat Malachi “reminds us that the whole country is a front and that the murderers, who come not only from Gaza, want to kill us all.” Israeli forces clashed with Palestinian fighters in three locations across the West Bank. Southern Lebanon and Golan Heights The Israel Defense Forces conducted a training exercise to increase the combat readiness of forces stationed on Israel’s northern border. Lebanese Hezbollah conducted five attacks from southern Lebanon into northern Israel on February 16. Iraq Iaqi Prime Minister Mohammad Shia al Sudani met with the commander of NATO Allied Joint Force Command Naples to discuss NATO’s Mission Iraq. Yemen The Houthis likely conducted a missile attack targeting an unspecified Panama-flagged commercial vessel in the Red Sea. The UK Royal Navy’s United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) and British maritime security firm Ambrey reported that the vessel’s captain reported an explosion but that the crew and vessel were unharmed. US Central Command (CENTCOM) conducted preemptive strikes targeting Houthi anti-ship cruise missiles (ASCM) in Yemen on February 15. CENTCOM struck three mobile ASCMs that the Houthis had prepared to launch against vessels in the Red Sea. CENTCOM Deputy Commander Vice Admiral Brad Cooper stated that Iran directly supports the Houthis’ attacks on commercial vessels in the Red Sea during an interview with CBS News on February 15. Cooper stated that Iranian support has been “critical” for the Houthi attacks on commercial shipping. Cooper also stated that the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) is “inside Yemen, and they are serving side by side with the Houthis, advising them and providing target information.” Iran Two unspecified Western officials and an IRGC-affiliated individual told the New York Times that Israel was responsible for the February 14 explosions on natural gas pipelines in central Iran.[62] The sources stated that the attacks on the pipelines required ”deep knowledge” and ”careful coordination.” View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Haaretz | News Israel-Hamas War Day 134 | IDF: Forces Arrested 100 Terror Suspects in Khan Yunis' al-Nasser Hospital Compound Feb 17, 2024
RECAP: IDF forces arrest about 100 terror suspects in Khan Yunis' al-Nasser hospital compound; Houthis target British oil ship in Red Sea Palestinians coming from the Gaza Strip broke through to the Rafah crossing and burned tires outside the entrance to the compound. Sources in Gaza's border authority say they are displaced people who were sheltering near the border crossing, and that they stormed aid trucks entering Rafah. ■ The CEOs of six international human rights organizations issued an urgent joint statement "warning of the "catastrophic" consequences of an Israeli ground offensive in Rafah," according to a report by the Guardian. ■ Speaking at the Munich Security Conference, Scholz said Germany was asking Israel to abide by international law in the conflict in Gaza and not to open a second front on its northern border with Lebanon. ■ The IDF spokesperson said that the air force attacked a Syrian Army weapon arsenal overnight in the city of Mhajjah, in Daraa, Syria. ■ Israeli forces arrested about 100 terror suspects in the all-Nasser hospital compound in Khan Yunis in southern Gaza, according to the IDF spokesperson. ■ The Houthis military spokesperson said the group targeted British oil ship Pollux with missiles in the Red Sea. ■ New York Governor Kathy Hochul apologized for remarks she made at a Jewish philanthropy event in New York City that went viral on social media and which suggested Israel had justification to destroy Gaza following the October 7 attack. ■ The British Foreign Secretary David Cameron has urged China to use its influence to pressure Iran over Houthi attacks in the Red Sea, in a meeting with the Chinese foreign minister View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
The 146th and 210th Divisions have been carrying out drills with reservists, while the Golani Brigade began this week the "procedure for increasing readiness on the northern border," the IDF says.
The exercises have simulated fighting and medical evacuations along Israel's northern border, in "complex" and hilly terrain and amid winter weather, according to the IDF. Troops killed numerous Hamas operatives in the Gaza Strip over the past day, as the Israeli Air Force struck many targets belonging to the terror group. Among the targets were command rooms, buildings used for military activity, and rocket launching positions, according to the IDF. The Defense Ministry releases a clip showing Palestinian medics treating a wounded Hamas terrorist amid the October 7 onslaught, at the Erez border crossing. The ministry says they are medics of the Palestine Red Crescent Society, although their uniform and ambulance appear to be of the Military Medical Services. The video also shows how armed members of the terror group and other Palestinians in plainclothes attacked the checkpoint on the morning of October 7. At least 10 Israeli soldiers were killed in the area of the crossing. IDF Operations in Khan Younis, Gaza: |
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The IDF struck and killed a Hamas operative who launched a rocket from northern Gaza at Ashkelon this morning, within half an hour of the attack.
This morning, sirens sounded in Ashkelon after one rocket was fired from the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood in Gaza City. Fortunately, the rocket was intercepted by the Iron Dome air defense system. Within 30 minutes, the Nahal Infantry Brigade and 215th Artillery Regiment identified the operative behind the attack, and called in an airstrike, killing him. |
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It's great they are plinking individual launch crews, launchers, and bomb boats, but I wonder why they aren't hitting storage areas, Houthi and Axis of Resistance leaders, and Iranian assets in and around Yemen.
Maybe no actionable intelligence, Saudis asked them not to, or their fear of escalation.
Feb. 16 Summary of Red Sea activities From p.m. (Sanaa time), Feb. 16, to 1 a.m., Feb 17, four anti-ship ballistic missiles launched from Iranian-backed Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen into the Red Sea. It is assessed that at least three of the missiles were launched towards commercial vessel MT Pollux, a Panamanian-flagged, Denmark-owned, Panamanian-registered vessel. There were no reported injuries or damage from MT Pollux or any other ship in the area. Additionally, between the hours of p.m. and p.m., CENTCOM successfully conducted two self-defense strikes against one mobile anti-ship cruise missile and one mobile unmanned surface vessel (USV) in Yemen. CENTCOM identified the mobile missile and USV in Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen and determined it presented an imminent threat to U.S. Navy ships and merchant vessels in the region View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
WP: Video is said to show U.N. relief worker taking Israeli shot on Oct. 7
Good news is Israel killed him in an air strike on Oct 16th. Highlights A U.N. relief worker alleged by Israel to have participated in the Oct. 7 attacks was captured on video that day removing the limp body of an Israeli man who had been shot at Kibbutz Beeri and driving off with it, according to information released Friday by Israeli authorities. On Oct. 16, [the UN worker], five of his children and one of his two wives were killed in a strike on their home in Nuseirat, according to an UNRWA colleague Israel told the United Nations Relief and Works Agency last month that Faisal Ali Musalam Naami, 45, and 11 other UNRWA employees participated in or lent support to the Hamas-led assault on southern Israel that precipitated Israel’s war in the besieged Palestinian territory. Israeli authorities have said Hamas and allied gunmen killed 1,200 Israelis and took some 253 people hostage back in Gaza. In the footage from Oct. 7, the SUV drives toward an open gate to Kibbutz Beeri shortly after 9:30 a.m. and stops just inside the entrance, where three men who had been shot and dragged from a car are lying motionless on the ground. Two men step out of the SUV. The driver, the man identified as Naami, is wearing glasses that match photos from his social media profiles. The other man is carrying a rifle. They open the rear door of the vehicle and spread out a blanket inside. They approach one of the people who had been shot, a man on the street next to an overturned cooler. It is not clear if he is alive, but he does not react as the man identified as Naami takes him by the jacket, the other man lifts his legs and they carry him to the trunk and place him inside. They then rummage through belongings that are strewn in the street, taking a cellphone and a hat before driving off less than three minutes after they arrived. It is not clear why or where the two men took the Israeli or why they left the other bodies View Quote Entire article in spoilerClick To View Spoiler Video is said to show U.N. relief worker taking Israeli shot on Oct. 7 A U.N. relief worker alleged by Israel to have participated in the Oct. 7 attacks was captured on video that day removing the limp body of an Israeli man who had been shot at Kibbutz Beeri and driving off with it, according to information released Friday by Israeli authorities. Israel told the United Nations Relief and Works Agency last month that Faisal Ali Musalam Naami, 45, and 11 other UNRWA employees participated in or lent support to the Hamas-led assault on southern Israel that precipitated Israel’s war in the besieged Palestinian territory. Israeli authorities have said Hamas and allied gunmen killed 1,200 Israelis and took some 253 people hostage back in Gaza. The explosive allegations plunged the United Nations into crisis, leading the United States — the agency’s largest donor — and other nations to suspend funding for the relief agency and threatening to collapse its operations in Gaza and the wider Middle East. The footage of the person Israel identified as Naami would be the first to surface publicly of any of the accused individuals participating in the attack. Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant released a screenshot from the video at a news conference Friday as part of a dossier that publicly identified the accused relief workers. “UNRWA has lost legitimacy and can no longer function as a U.N. body,” Gallant said. The CCTV footage, located independently by The Washington Post, provides a fuller picture than the brief account in the public dossier, which says Naami “was involved in kidnapping a soldier from Beeri.” Israel has also accused Naami of being part of a Hamas brigade in his hometown of Nuseirat. After he was named in confidential Israeli documents last month, The Post found images of Naami online and then used facial recognition software to find a likely match for him in footage from Oct. 7. The Post found other indications pointing to Naami as the individual in the footage. A Nissan Terrano II in the footage appears consistent with the same make and model of car that Naami is pictured with in social media posts, including damaged trim on a rear window. Before Friday’s news conference, a security official told The Post that Israeli authorities had identified the man in the footage as Naami. The footage is among the evidence Israel used as the basis for its allegation against Naami, said the official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive information. In the footage from Oct. 7, the SUV drives toward an open gate to Kibbutz Beeri shortly after 9:30 a.m. and stops just inside the entrance, where three men who had been shot and dragged from a car are lying motionless on the ground. Two men step out of the SUV. The driver, the man identified as Naami, is wearing glasses that match photos from his social media profiles. The other man is carrying a rifle. They open the rear door of the vehicle and spread out a blanket inside. They approach one of the people who had been shot, a man on the street next to an overturned cooler. It is not clear if he is alive, but he does not react as the man identified as Naami takes him by the jacket, the other man lifts his legs and they carry him to the trunk and place him inside. They then rummage through belongings that are strewn in the street, taking a cellphone and a hat before driving off less than three minutes after they arrived. It is not clear why or where the two men took the Israeli or why they left the other bodies. At The Post’s request, two vehicle forensic experts analyzed Naami’s social media photos capturing partial views of a white vehicle. They identified the car as a 1993-1995 Nissan Terrano II, and said the vehicle seen in the Oct. 7 footage matched that same color, make and model and was from the same generation. Marcus Mazza, a vehicle engineering expert for Robson Forensic, a firm that provides technical expertise in court cases, said the separated trim also “may indicate that these are the same vehicle.” On Oct. 16, Naami, five of his children and one of his two wives were killed in a strike on their home in Nuseirat, according to an UNRWA colleague who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the news media. His name, the name of a woman who appears to be his wife and the names of his children appear on the Gaza Health Ministry’s list of those killed in Israeli attacks. The Israel Defense Forces told The Post it “is unaware of a strike at the specified area or time.” A spokesperson, speaking on the condition of anonymity per the agency’s protocol, did not respond when asked if Naami had been targeted. Efforts to reach surviving members of Naami’s family were unsuccessful. Naami was a social worker at the U.N. agency, according to the colleague and the Israeli dossier. “His personality was calm, he was very cheerful, he was friendly, he was loved by everyone, colleagues, clients and beneficiaries,” the colleague told The Post. The colleague said they did not know if Naami was involved in the attack or a member of Hamas. Shown a photo of Naami taken from the Oct. 7 footage, the colleague said they did not know if it was him “as his features are not clear.” Israeli officials have long complained that the U.N. agency was closely aligned with Hamas, accusations that UNRWA has rejected. The U.N. agency was established in 1949 to aid Palestinians who were expelled or forced from their homes during the founding of Israel. In the decades since, the agency has taken on many functions of a state for stateless Palestinians, such as providing food, health care and schools. Refugee camps in the occupied Palestinian territories, Lebanon, Jordan and Syria have turned into permanent urban slums. The allegations that aid workers were members of the organization have threatened the existence of the primary conduit for aid to Gaza’s 2.2 million people whose lives have been upended after nearly four months of war. At least 28,775 people have been killed and 68,552 injured in Gaza since the war began, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. Since Oct. 7, UNRWA’s schools and medical clinics the agency operates have been closed and turned into shelters that now house more than 1 million people. Palestinians in Gaza are almost totally dependent on UNRWA for the necessities of life as famine looms and diseases spread alongside continuous Israeli ground and air assaults. On Friday, Gallant said that in addition to the 12 workers, Israel has intelligence indicating that over 30 UNRWA workers participated in the massacre, including the taking of hostages. He said that 12 percent of UNRWA’s 13,000 workers are affiliated with Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad, a smaller Islamist group in the Gaza Strip. The agency denies that it has turned a blind eye to Hamas and says that Israeli authorities have long sought to dismantle UNRWA. Last week, the Israeli army uncovered what it said was a subterranean Hamas server complex, dug 65 feet underneath UNRWA headquarters in Gaza. On Tuesday night, the Israeli army released a video of a tunnel beneath Khan Younis, in southern Gaza, that it said was the hideout of Hamas leader Yehiya Sinwar. UNRWA packages were among the underground supplies. In response to the allegations last month, UNRWA launched a review and, before investigating the allegations, fired 10 of the accused employees; two others were dead. The United States and other countries have indicated they could restore funding after the release of the review. UNRWA spokeswoman Tamara Alrifai said a man matching Naami’s name joined the agency as social worker in 2006. But she said she could not comment on the ongoing investigation or verify if he was present in the footage shared by The Post. UNRWA had “not [been] presented with any evidence from the Israeli authorities,” she said, adding. “UNRWA only received from the Israeli government the list of names of alleged staff reportedly involved in the horrible 7/10 attacks.” NSFW video from IDF of atrocities. Video showing UN worker is at 2:00. GRAPHIC RAW FOOTAGE: Massacre Across Israel From the Eyes of Hamas |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Times of Israel: Freed hostage Aviva Siegel recounts Hamas’s sexual abuse, violence toward captives
Highpoints .Aviva Siegel, who spent 51 days in Hamas captivity...spoke to Channel 12 in an interview broadcast Friday, in which she detailed the Palestinian terror group’s humiliation tactics and sexual violence. Siegel, 62, who was abducted along with her husband Keith from their home in Kibbutz Kfar Aza by Hamas terrorists on October 7, described the weaponization of sexual violence against female hostages, for whom Siegel has emerged as a fierce advocate since being released during a November truce. During Hamas’s brutal onslaught, terrorists broke into the Siegels’ Kfar Aza home, snatching the couple to Gaza in their own car. When marching the couple, the terrorists shoved Keith, breaking his ribs. Siegel said that among the thirteen locations she and her husband were held in was a tunnel so lacking in ventilation that they did not have enough energy to talk. They were left in the tunnels while their Hamas guards would take breaks above ground to breathe fresh air. Siegel recounted how the terrorists would dress up the younger female hostages in tiny clothes, making them into “dolls — marionettes,” at whom the armed guards “just sat and stared.” One woman was given such tight-fitting clothes that she couldn’t bend her knee. Siegel said that when “three particularly young girls” took up the guards’ offer of a shower, the condition was that they would bathe together, with an open door and the terrorists watching. Siegel said that in another instance, a young female hostage was ordered at gunpoint to accompany a guard, who then pulled her by the hair, tossing her to the floor, as he and three other terrorists beat her with a stick. Siegel said the guards were not shy about how much they enjoyed tormenting the hostages, frequently pointing guns at them and threatening to shoot before bursting into laughter. After 50 days, Hamas terrorists covered the Siegel couple’s eyes and took them to a new location, where they separated Keith from Aviva, who, unbeknownst to her, was slated to be released the following day. “[The Hamas guard] comes to my room, kneels, and says, ‘you, tomorrow, Israel,’ and I say, ‘no, no, no, no, no, Keith and me.’ He says to me, ‘you leave now. Israel, your name. Keith, tomorrow.” Siegel asked to see Keith, but the terrorist refused, at which point she pushed him aside and approached her husband. “I looked at him and told him that I need to go, and I hugged him, and that is how I left him,” she said. Due to the lack of oxygen, Siegel’s guards were afraid she would be unable to climb the stairs out of the tunnel where she was held, 40 meters underground. “I ran,” she recalled. Upon her release, Siegel was relieved most of all to learn that her son Shai, who also lives in Kfar Aza, had survived the October 7 massacre. For her entire captivity, she had thought he was dead. ..in the immediate aftermath of her release, she remained silent about her ordeal, but she has since become vocal on behalf of the remaining hostages...speaking at length about the Hamas captors’ sexual violence. [In a Knesset hearing], Siegel described how...a younger female hostage returned from using the bathroom and looked distraught. But when she attempted to give the girl a hug, a terrorist guarding them intercepted her and prevented the embrace. “I saw that she was withdrawn, quiet and not herself,” Siegel said. “And excuse my language, but this son of a bitch had touched her. And he didn’t even let me hug her after it happened. It’s terrible, simply terrible. I told her I was sorry.” View Quote Entire article in spoiler Click To View Spoiler Freed hostage Aviva Siegel recounts Hamas’s sexual abuse, violence toward captives
Aviva Siegel, who spent 51 days in Hamas captivity and has since campaigned indefatigably for the remaining hostages, spoke to Channel 12 in an interview broadcast Friday, in which she detailed the Palestinian terror group’s humiliation tactics and sexual violence. Siegel, 62, who was abducted along with her husband Keith from their home in Kibbutz Kfar Aza by Hamas terrorists on October 7, described the weaponization of sexual violence against female hostages, for whom Siegel has emerged as a fierce advocate since being released during a November truce. During Hamas’s brutal onslaught, terrorists broke into the Siegels’ Kfar Aza home, snatching the couple to Gaza in their own car. When marching the couple, the terrorists shoved Keith, breaking his ribs. Siegel said that among the thirteen locations she and her husband were held in was a tunnel so lacking in ventilation that they did not have enough energy to talk. They were left in the tunnels while their Hamas guards would take breaks above ground to breathe fresh air. After several days, the hostages asked their guards what they should do if they felt suffocation was imminent, and the guards told them to shout for help. Siegel recalled that at one point Keith yelled repeatedly to no avail. She also described how malnourished the hostages were, sometimes going for days without food or water, while their guards pretended not to understand the hostages’ pleas for sustenance. Siegel recalled hiding food and when another hostage told her that a piece of bread she had hidden would soon be covered in mold, Siegel replied, “don’t worry, I’ll eat it with the mold.” Siegel recounted how the terrorists would dress up the younger female hostages in tiny clothes, making them into “dolls — marionettes,” at whom the armed guards “just sat and stared.” One woman was given such tight-fitting clothes that she couldn’t bend her knee. Siegel said that when “three particularly young girls” took up the guards’ offer of a shower, the condition was that they would bathe together, with an open door and the terrorists watching. Siegel said that in another instance, a young female hostage was ordered at gunpoint to accompany a guard, who then pulled her by the hair, tossing her to the floor, as he and three other terrorists beat her with a stick. “They hit her entire body, and she didn’t say a word,” Siegel said. “When she returned and I asked ‘how did you not scream?’ she said, ‘I didn’t want to give them the satisfaction [of knowing] that they hurt me.'” Siegel said the guards were not shy about how much they enjoyed tormenting the hostages, frequently pointing guns at them and threatening to shoot before bursting into laughter. One time, when Keith spoke despite a guard demanding silence, a terrorist threatened him with a gun and dangled handcuffs in his face, “kind of in jest, but irritated,” Siegel said. “After that, Keith entered a dayslong depression. He barely communicated; we would cry covertly.” After 50 days, Hamas terrorists covered the Siegel couple’s eyes and took them to a new location, where they separated Keith from Aviva, who, unbeknownst to her, was slated to be released the following day. “[The Hamas guard] comes to my room, kneels, and says, ‘you, tomorrow, Israel,’ and I say, ‘no, no, no, no, no, Keith and me.’ He says to me, ‘you leave now. Israel, your name. Keith, tomorrow.” Siegel asked to see Keith, but the terrorist refused, at which point she pushed him aside and approached her husband. Choking back tears, Siegel recalled her last moments with Keith, who has still not been released. “I looked at him and told him that I need to go, and I hugged him, and that is how I left him,” she said. Due to the lack of oxygen, Siegel’s guards were afraid she would be unable to climb the stairs out of the tunnel where she was held, 40 meters underground. “I ran,” she recalled. On the ride home, Siegel noticed an elderly female hostage, Elma Avraham, who was in critical condition. Siegel massaged her continuously to keep her warm. “It’s possible that if you weren’t there this would not happen,” Avraham’s son Uri Ravitz later told Siegel at the hospital, referring to his mother’s recuperation. “So I feel like I also owe her life to you.” Siegel’s daughter Ilan told Channel 12 that when her mother was first released, the family was certain that their father would soon follow. Aviva said that at first, she saved stories from the captivity for her husband to tell, assuming his release was just around the corner. Upon her release, Siegel was relieved most of all to learn that her son Shai, who also lives in Kfar Aza, had survived the October 7 massacre. For her entire captivity, she had thought he was dead because he was not in the tunnel with her and the other Kfar Aza hostages. Recalling her grandmother’s silence about her experiences during the Holocaust, Siegel said that she had resolved not to be quiet about her ordeal. “People need to know,” she said. Asked if she considers herself a Holocaust survivor, Siegel replied, “I have definitely survived.” “The world really let me feel it stays silent, and I have a feeling that they have missed the history lesson of the Holocaust, in allowing something like this to happen,” she said. The interview was Siegel’s first on Israeli television since being freed. As a hostage, Siegel refused to hear about the October 7 atrocities, and in the immediate aftermath of her release, she remained silent about her ordeal, but she has since become vocal on behalf of the remaining hostages at public rallies, parliamentary hearings and other forums, speaking at length about the Hamas captors’ sexual violence. In a January 9 Knesset hearing, Siegel described how at one point in their captivity, a younger female hostage returned from using the bathroom and looked distraught. But when she attempted to give the girl a hug, a terrorist guarding them intercepted her and prevented the embrace. “I saw that she was withdrawn, quiet and not herself,” Siegel said. “And excuse my language, but this son of a bitch had touched her. And he didn’t even let me hug her after it happened. It’s terrible, simply terrible. I told her I was sorry.” On January 23, Siegel returned to the Knesset to address the newly established caucus on victims of sexual and gender violence in the war against Hamas. Aviva and Keith Siegel lived in Kfar Aza for four decades. Aviva, also known as Adrienne, was born in South Africa, and came to Israel at age 8. Keith is from the United States. They met in Kibbutz Gezer, where Keith, who works in pharmaceuticals, had come to volunteer, and Aviva, now a kindergarten teacher, was spending a year of pre-army community service. They have four children and five grandchildren. On October 7, thousands of gunmen led by the Palestinian terror group stormed Kfar Aza and other communities in southern Israel to kill nearly 1,200 people, mainly civilians, and take 253 hostages of all ages, while committing numerous atrocities and weaponizing sexual violence on a mass scale. Some 80 members of Kibbutz Kfar Aza were killed, and about 18 were taken hostage. Hamas’s shock assault triggered a war in Gaza that has seen some 50 percent of the Strip’s residences destroyed and led to the displacement of over a million people, many of whom face severe risk of starvation. According to the Gaza Strip’s Hamas-controlled health ministry, over 28,000 Palestinians have been killed in the hostilities. The figure, which cannot be independently verified, does not distinguish between civilians and combatants, of whom the Israeli military claims to have killed upward of 10,000. |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Institute for Study of War backgrounder 17 Feb Key Takeaways: Gaza Strip Israeli forces clashed with Palestinian fighters in the northern and central Gaza Strip on February 17. The Al Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades–the self-proclaimed military wing of Fatah–fired small arms and rocket-propelled grenades targeting Israeli forces east of Gaza City. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) Nahal Brigade and 215th Artillery Brigade (both assigned to the 162nd Division) directed an airstrike on February 17 that targeted Hamas fighters in an unspecified area of the central Gaza Strip. Israeli forces continued operations in and around Nasser Hospital in western Khan Younis on February 17. Israeli special operations forces began operating in Nasser Hospital on February 15 after receiving “credible intelligence” that Hamas-held hostages were in the hospital. Shayetet 13 arrested approximately 100 individuals at Nasser Hospital on February 17. The IDF Egoz and Maglan units identified and killed Palestinian fighters operating around the hospital. Israeli forces continued clearing operations in Khan Younis city. The 7th Brigade raided Palestinian militia weapons caches in Khan Younis city and captured small arms and explosives. The IDF 98th Division directed an airstrike that targeted three Palestinian fighters traveling towards a suspected launch position in Khan Younis. Unspecified Palestinian fighters conducted one indirect fire attack targeting Ashkelon on February 17. The IDF reported that it intercepted an unspecified munition targeting Ashkelon. Negotiations An unspecified senior Hamas member told al Jazeera on February 17 that Hamas plans to suspend ceasefire negotiations with Israel until aid is delivered to the northern Gaza Strip. Yemen The Houthi movement said that it launched anti-ship ballistic missiles targeting the Pollux, a Panamanian-flagged and registered and Danish-owned vessel in the Red Sea on February 16 and 17. CENTCOM conducted two preemptive strikes targeting one mobile anti-ship cruise missile (ASCM) and one surface naval attack drone in Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen on February 16 and 17. CENTCOM conducted the strikes after determining that the cruise missile and attack drone presented an “imminent threat” to merchant vessels and US Navy ships in the Red Sea. View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Haaretz | News Israel-Hamas War Day 135 | Netanyahu Gov't Rejects Unilateral Recognition of Palestinian State; Gantz Issues Rafah Ultimatum Feb 18, 2024
Thank God for Brandon. Israel asked the UAE to pay the PA workers; the Emiratis said no and suggested Netanyahu ask Zelensky for money According to a report in the Wall Street Journal, the Biden administration is considering ways to financially support the Palestinian Authority, as Palestinian officials warn it may soon run out of funds. View Quote Gantz: If Israeli hostages aren't returned by Ramadan, Gaza fighting will expand to Rafah (Ramadan begins on 10 March) Minister Benny Gantz, speaking to North American Jewish organizations, said that if Israel's hostages are not returned by Ramadan, the IDF will expand its fighting to Rafah as well. "The world must know, and the leaders of Hamas must know," he said. "To those who say the price is too high, I say clearly: Hamas has a choice. They can surrender, release the hostages, and the residents of Gaza can celebrate Ramadan," he said. Gantz noted that any operation in Rafah will include the evacuation of civilians in co-ordination with Israel's "American and Egyptian partners." In his speech, Gantz emphasized that "any unilateral actions like recognizing a Palestinian state are not the way to regional stability and political arrangements," adding that those things can only be established by long-term processes that will act against the "Iranian axis" and "improve the lives of all residents in the region." Gantz noted that one such effort is Israel's normalization process with Saudi Arabia, "a step that can be part of the solution." View Quote RECAP: Israeli gov't to vote on resolution opposing recognition of Palestinian state; Russia invites Palestinian factions to meet in Moscow. ■ Algeria has submitted a proposal for a cease-fire in Gaza to the UN Security Council, which will likely be discussed by the council on Tuesday. ■ Egypt's Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry warned against an Israeli attack in Rafah, saying it would have "severe repercussions" on the crisis in Gaza and also for Egypt's security. ■ The residents of the Palestinian village of Turmus Ayya in the West Bank reported that settlers entered the village during the night, set fire to vehicles and spray-painted hateful graffiti on walls. ■ Protesters demanding the release of the hostages dyed the water in a Jerusalem fountain Red, with a sign: "Enough blood has been spilled, a deal is on the table. ■ Police arrested an East Jerusalem resident on suspicion of arms trafficking after a shoulder-fired rocket with a launch system was found in his car, as well as nine grenades and more than 1,000 bullets for a MAG machine gun. ■ According to a report in the Wall Street Journal, the Biden administration is considering ways to financially support the Palestinian Authority, as Palestinian officials warn it may soon run out of funds. ■ The IDF said it is continuing its activity in Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis and surrounding areas. ■ Russia has invited Palestinian factions to meet in Moscow on February 26, the PA prime minister said, adding that the PA was ready to engage with Hamas. ■ The Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza announced that 127 people were killed, and 205 people injured in Gaza in the past day. ■ Israeli fighter jets attacked Hezbollah infrastructure in southern Lebanon earlier on Sunday. ■Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will meet on Monday evening with representatives of the families of hostages, at the Prime Minister's Office in Jerusalem. ■ Israel's government is expected to vote on Sunday on a resolution opposing unilateral international recognition of a Palestinian state View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
The Biden administration is looking to financially prop up the Palestinian Authority amid warnings from officials in Ramallah that it is close to running out of money
Highlights The Biden administration is looking to financially prop up the Palestinian Authority amid warnings from officials in Ramallah that it is close to running out of money, potentially jeopardizing U.S. hopes that the organization will be able to govern Gaza when Israel’s war with Hamas is over. The administration is trying to work around a law that prevents it from contributing directly to the Palestinian Authority. U.S. officials said they are concerned that without a revenue boost, the organization won’t be stable enough to maintain its hold on power in the West Bank, let alone be in a position to take on an expanded role. The Palestinian Authority has been dogged by accusations of corruption and ties to extremists that led to the cutoff of U.S. funds in the first place. The U.S. is limited in its ability to provide direct support. In March 2018, Congress enacted the Taylor Force Act, suspending U.S. bilateral economic assistance for the Palestinian Authority because of its practice of providing payments to Palestinians accused of terrorism and their relatives. In 2018, former President Donald Trump directed the State Department to withdraw $200 million in aid that was originally planned for programs in the West Bank and Gaza, following a review of U.S. assistance to the Palestinian Authority. Biden reversed the move shortly after taking office. View Quote The Taylor act is the law restricting direct payments to the PA. Here's how it gots its name: Taylor Force was a West Point graduate and United States Army veteran who was visiting Israel as a part of a Vanderbilt University program. He was brutally stabbed and killed by a Palestinian terrorist. The Palestinian Authority praised Force’s killer as a ‘heroic martyr’ and is paying the killer’s family a monthly cash stipend. [In 2017] the President of the Palestinian Authority Mahmoud Abbas said he would not stop the practice of paying terrorists, even if he had to step down from office. View Quote Entire article in spoiler Click To View Spoiler Palestinian Authority’s Financial Plight Threatens U.S. Plans for Postwar Gaza WASHINGTON—The Biden administration is looking to financially prop up the Palestinian Authority amid warnings from officials in Ramallah that it is close to running out of money, potentially jeopardizing U.S. hopes that the organization will be able to govern Gaza when Israel’s war with Hamas is over. The administration is trying to work around a law that prevents it from contributing directly to the Palestinian Authority, while also nudging allies to give more to the organization, U.S. officials said. Palestinian officials have warned that they could run out of the money needed to pay salaries and provide essential government services as soon as late February, the U.S. officials said. Early in the war in Gaza, the U.S. opted to rely on a revitalized Palestinian Authority as the best, if not only, option for what it has described as “the day after” the war ends. U.S. officials said they are concerned that without a revenue boost, the organization won’t be stable enough to maintain its hold on power in the West Bank, let alone be in a position to take on an expanded role. The organization’s financial plight also limits its ability to implement overhauls the U.S. says are needed to secure support from Israel and from the Palestinian public. The Palestinian Authority has been dogged by accusations of corruption and ties to extremists that led to the cutoff of U.S. funds in the first place. Several proposals have been made to resolve the Israel-Hamas conflict, but disagreements over Gaza’s governance are blocking progress. The Palestinian Authority has relied over the years on assistance from the U.S. and Europe and tax revenue collected by Israel. Cuts in aid by the Trump administration put the Ramallah-based organization under financial strain, and a suspension of Israeli tax revenue after the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks on Israel has left the Ramallah-based government “on the verge of financial collapse,” a senior Palestinian official told The Wall Street Journal. In October, Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich initially suspended the delivery of all tax revenue, which had been transferred monthly to the Palestinian Authority pending the ministry’s approval. The Israeli government then opted to suspend only revenue earmarked for the Palestinian Authority’s employees in Gaza, saying the funds go into the pockets of Hamas militants. In response, the Palestinian Authority said it wouldn’t accept any partial revenue transfers. The organization pays the salaries of about 150,000 public-sector employees in the West Bank and Gaza, according to its official estimates. In December, President Biden asked Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to accept a proposal to transfer the frozen tax revenues to Norway for safekeeping until an arrangement could be found that would assuage Israel’s concerns that the money would fund Hamas, according to U.S. officials. Israel’s government said in January that it agreed to the plan, but U.S., European and Palestinian officials said a few sticking points remained. Secretary of State Antony Blinken has said that the revenue should be conveyed to the Palestinian Authority in accordance with previous agreements, according to a statement about his meetings with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in January. The Biden administration is struggling to overcome concerns about the Palestinian Authority’s aging leadership and unpopularity, particularly in Gaza, where it was ousted from power by Hamas in 2007. If the organization runs out of money, U.S. officials say, it will be vulnerable to groups viewed by the U.S. and Israel as more extremist and opposed to compromise. It could also be overwhelmed by a deteriorating security situation in the West Bank, the officials say, amid an increase in clashes between Israeli forces and Palestinian militants, as well as attacks by Israeli extremists. The Palestinian Authority has been in financial crisis since 2020, the senior Palestinian official said. The Palestinian finance ministry is operating under the “most restrictive budget, which is the worst-case scenario, paying a portion of public servants and trying to pay portions of previous debt,” he said. He added that he hoped international pressure would bring a speedy transfer of the funds. The U.S. is limited in its ability to provide direct support. In March 2018, Congress enacted the Taylor Force Act, suspending U.S. bilateral economic assistance for the Palestinian Authority because of its practice of providing payments to Palestinians accused of terrorism and their relatives. In 2018, former President Donald Trump directed the State Department to withdraw $200 million in aid that was originally planned for programs in the West Bank and Gaza, following a review of U.S. assistance to the Palestinian Authority. Biden reversed the move shortly after taking office, restoring much of the aid, which isn’t subject to the Taylor Force Act’s ban on direct assistance. In January, as Congress grappled over a foreign-aid package that was passed by the Senate on Tuesday, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell called the Palestinian Authority “relentlessly and thoroughly corrupt” and objected to including funding for Palestinian aid. Some U.S. lawmakers described the United Nations and other international organizations as potential ways to circumvent Taylor Force Act restrictions. The bill approved by the Senate, which would provide $14.1 billion for Israel’s war against Hamas, includes almost $10 billion for humanitarian aid for civilians in conflict zones, including Palestinians in Gaza, which wouldn’t go directly to the Palestinian Authority. The bill still faces a significant hurdle in the House. A boost by the U.S.’s European Union allies in financial support for the Palestinian Authority appears unlikely. “The EU is already doing an awful lot, but I don’t see that we are about to increase our support financially,” EU Special Representative for the Middle East Peace Process Sven Koopmans said in an interview. While the Palestinian Authority is often subject to criticism over issues including corruption, it is “an essential partner and we have to stand by them and we also encourage them very much to reform and we are helping them on that,” Koopmans said. “If the PA collapses for any reason, it is a catastrophe for the security situation, for the Palestinians, for the Israelis and for the wider region.” MEMRI article from 2018 explaining why Congress banned direct payments to the PA. Palestinian Authority (PA) President 'Abbas: 'If We Had Only A Single Penny Left, We Would Pay It To Families Of The Martyrs And Prisoners' Since U.S. President Donald Trump took office, the Palestinian Authority (PA) has been pressured to stop the allowances it has been paying to families of Palestinian martyrs, wounded, prisoners, and released prisoners since it was established, on the grounds that these payments encourage continued terrorism. Senior PA officials, headed by PA President Mahmoud Abbas, totally reject this demand, and emphasize that these payments will not be stopped, noting that they are a clear national obligation. A month later, Abbas said in an interview with the London-based Qatari daily Al-Quds Al-Arabi that he would not give in to the American and Israeli demand to stop payments to the families of prisoners and martyrs, calling them "fighters" and underlining his obligation to them. In similar statements yesterday, July 23, 2018, at a Ramallah ceremony, he called the prisoners "pioneers" and "stars in the firmament of the Palestinian people's struggle" who head the Palestinian priorities. He added that the payments would not be stopped. View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
The IDF says it carried out airstrikes against Hezbollah positions in south Lebanon's Yaroun this morning.
Troops also shelled areas in Alma ash-Shab and Dhayra with artillery to "remove threats," the IDF adds. Troops of the 98th Division raided several Hamas positions, killing gunmen and locating weapons in the process. The division's 7th Armored Brigade killed some 20 Hamas operatives with tank shelling and directed airstrikes on additional gunmen in western Khan Younis, according to the IDF. The Commando Brigade and other special forces continued to search Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, locating weapons. In a nearby building, the IDF says troops killed several Hamas gunmen and seized several safes and weapons. |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Times of Israel: Hamas seeking to replace Sinwar, Khan Younis Brigade is defeated
Remember this the next time you hear complaints about how the Israelis dressed as doctors in their raid: The IDF said some of the terror operatives detained at the hospital were dressed up as hospital staff. Highlights Hamas’s leadership abroad is looking to replace its Gaza leader Yahya Sinwar, as the terror group’s battalions in Khan Younis have been dismantled and an offensive in Rafah loom. Security forces have yet to get their hands on Sinwar, or Hamas’s military commander Mohammad Deif and his deputy Marwan Issa. But Sinwar has reportedly been out of contact with the terror group’s leadership abroad since the end of January and his involvement in ongoing hostage negotiations is in question. “Hamas does not trust its commanders — this is a very, very noticeable thing,” Gallant said following an assessment with the head of the Israel Defense Forces’ Southern Command. “Hamas-Gaza is MIA, there is no one to talk to among leadership on the ground,” he said, alleging that Hamas leadership abroad was looking for new leaders in Gaza. “That means there is a tender [in Hamas] for who will run Gaza,” he said. In Khan Younis, Gallant said some 200 terror suspects had surrendered to troops at Nasser Hospital, and dozens more at Al-Amal Hospital, which he argued indicated the loss of Hamas’s “fighting spirit.” “People armed with RPGs, weapons, and guns came to the moment of truth and did not fight. This indicates something of their understanding of the power differential, that they understood their fate was to surrender or die — there is no third option,” he said. Gallant said Hamas’s Khan Younis Brigade had been “defeated and does not function as a military entity in any way.” “Hamas is left with marginal [forces] in the central camps and with the Rafah Brigade, and what stands between them and a complete collapse as a military system is a decision by the IDF,” he said. The operation at Nasser Hospital, which began Thursday, is being carried out by the Commando Brigade, Navy’s Shayetet 13, Shin Bet agents, and other special forces. One of the stolen cars found at the medical center belonged to a Nir Oz resident, according to the IDF. In a Hamas vehicle, troops found several weapons, including grenades. The IDF said some of the terror operatives detained at the hospital were dressed up as hospital staff. Other suspects who were holed up at the hospital included many who participated in the October 7 massacre and have links to the hostages held by the terror group, it said. View Quote Entire article in spoiler Click To View Spoiler Gallant: Hamas seeking to replace Sinwar, Khan Younis Brigade is defeated
Hamas’s leadership abroad is looking to replace its Gaza leader Yahya Sinwar, as the terror group’s battalions in Khan Younis have been dismantled and an offensive in Rafah looms, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said Sunday. Security forces have yet to get their hands on Sinwar, or Hamas’s military commander Mohammad Deif and his deputy Marwan Issa. But Sinwar has reportedly been out of contact with the terror group’s leadership abroad since the end of January and his involvement in ongoing hostage negotiations is in question. “Hamas does not trust its commanders — this is a very, very noticeable thing,” Gallant said following an assessment with the head of the Israel Defense Forces’ Southern Command, Maj. Gen. Yaron Finkelman. “Hamas-Gaza is MIA, there is no one to talk to among leadership on the ground,” he said, alleging that Hamas leadership abroad was looking for new leaders in Gaza. “That means there is a tender [in Hamas] for who will run Gaza,” he said. In Khan Younis, Gallant said some 200 terror suspects had surrendered to troops at Nasser Hospital, and dozens more at Al-Amal Hospital, which he argued indicated the loss of Hamas’s “fighting spirit.” “People armed with RPGs, weapons, and guns came to the moment of truth and did not fight. This indicates something of their understanding of the power differential, that they understood their fate was to surrender or die — there is no third option,” he said. Gallant said Hamas’s Khan Younis Brigade had been “defeated and does not function as a military entity in any way.” “Hamas is left with marginal [forces] in the central camps and with the Rafah Brigade, and what stands between them and a complete collapse as a military system is a decision by the IDF,” he said. “There is no one here to come to their aid, no Iranians, no international aid,” Gallant said, vowing that the army would dismantle the remaining six Hamas battalions — two in central Gaza and four in Rafah. “We have no right to stop as long as there are 134 hostages” held by Hamas, he added. Also Sunday, the IDF said special forces operating at Nasser Hospital had located vehicles used by Hamas terrorists who participated in the October 7 onslaught, as well as Israeli-owned cars stolen during the massacre. The operation at Nasser Hospital, which began Thursday, is being carried out by the Commando Brigade, Navy’s Shayetet 13, Shin Bet agents, and other special forces. One of the stolen cars found at the medical center belonged to a Nir Oz resident, according to the IDF. In a Hamas vehicle, troops found several weapons, including grenades. The IDF said some of the terror operatives detained at the hospital were dressed up as hospital staff. Other suspects who were holed up at the hospital included many who participated in the October 7 massacre and have links to the hostages held by the terror group, it said. Troops also seized several firearms, explosive devices, and other military equipment belonging to terror operatives, the IDF said. Also at Nasser Hospital, IDF troops found closed boxes of medications bearing the names of hostages. The medications, which were reportedly delivered to Gaza in a secretive initiative coordinated by the families of some of the hostages, apparently did not reach their destinations. The IDF released footage showing the medication with the names of the hostages, some of whom are still being held captive by Hamas. The IDF asserted that its searches of the Nasser Hospital premises ensured that the medical center was able to continue its operations “without harming the patients and medical staff, and in accordance with the values of the IDF and international law.” This contrasted with a statement by the head of the World Health Organization, who said Sunday that Nasser Hospital “is not functional anymore,” during the raid. Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said a WHO team was not allowed to enter on Friday or Saturday to assess patients and medical needs. In a post on X, he said about 200 patients remain there, including 20 who need urgent referrals elsewhere. It is not clear where the WHO tally is from, since its teams did not enter the hospital. Hamas said Saturday that 120 patients remain at the hospital. Gaza health ministry spokesperson Ashraf al-Qidra told Reuters that water supply to the hospital had halted because generators had been out of action for three days, sewage was flooding emergency rooms, and the remaining staff had no way of treating intensive care patients. A lack of oxygen supplies — also a result of having no power — had caused the deaths of at least seven patients, he asserted. While Gazans sheltering at the facility were told to evacuate ahead of the incursion, the IDF claims it has taken pains to keep the hospital functioning for patients, including transferring fuel and medical supplies to the facility. Elsewhere in Khan Younis, the IDF said troops of the 98th Division raided several Hamas positions, killing gunmen and locating weapons in the process, the IDF said. The division’s 7th Armored Brigade killed some 20 Hamas operatives with tank shelling and directed airstrikes on additional gunmen in western Khan Younis, according to the IDF. Another 15 Hamas operatives were killed and a weapons depot was destroyed in a series of airstrikes in the city, the IDF said. In central Gaza, the IDF said the Nahal Brigade killed at least 10 Hamas operatives during the past day, including by calling in airstrikes. According to local residents and Hamas media officials, Israeli planes carried out attacks on two areas in Rafah Sunday, including an empty building near the border with Egypt. Strikes and fighting killed at least 10 people in Rafah and central Gaza’s Deir al-Balah overnight, said the official Palestinian news agency Wafa. At the morgue of a Rafah hospital, mourners bent down to give a final kiss to a loved one wrapped in a white body bag. “That’s my cousin — he was martyred in Al-Mawasi, in the ‘safe area,'” said Ahmad Mohammed Aburizq. “And my mother was martyred the day before. There’s no safe place. Even the hospital is not safe.” In the central Gaza town of Zawaida, people dug through rubble from a Saturday airstrike to search for bodies, including those of children. “Our message is to the Israeli government and the Hamas government present in Gaza: Please stop the war. Enough war,” said Samah al-Karnz, who lived near the building hit in the strike. The war broke out on October 7, when Hamas carried out a devastating attack on southern Israel, killing some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and taking 253 hostages. Palestinians inspect the destruction in Rafah following an Israeli airstrike on February 18, 2024. (MOHAMMED ABED / AFP) In response, Israel launched a war with the aim of securing the release of the hostages and toppling Hamas from power in Gaza. The Hamas-run Gaza health ministry said Sunday that 28,985 people had been killed in the enclave since the start of the war. These figures cannot be independently verified and do not distinguish between Hamas members and civilians. They also include Palestinians killed as a consequence of terror groups’ own rocket misfires. The IDF says it has killed nearly 11,000 Hamas operatives in Gaza, in addition to some 1,000 terrorists inside Israel on October 7. The war has caused a humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip, with most of the population displaced and at risk of starvation. Over half of the Strip’s 2.3 million Palestinians have sought refuge in the southernmost city of Rafah — the last city in the enclave where the IDF ground forces seek to operate. In response to international concern about what would happen to the people in Rafah, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said residents will be evacuated before a ground offensive begins there, though it is unclear where they will be able to go. |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Forces operating at Nasser Hospital in southern Gaza's Khan Younis located vehicles of Hamas terrorists who participated in the October 7 onslaught, as well as Israeli-owned cars stolen during the massacre.
The operation at Nasser Hospital is being carried out by the Commando Brigade, Navy's Shayetet 13, Shin Bet agents, and other special forces. Also at Nasser Hospital, IDF troops found closed boxes of medications with the names of hostages listed on them. The medications, which were reportedly delivered to Gaza in a secretive initiative coordinated by the families of some hostages, apparently did not reach their loved ones. The IDF releases footage showing the medication with the names of the hostages, some of whom are still being held captive by Hamas. Intense footage from the IDF In Southern Gaza: |
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Haaretz | News Israel-Hamas War Day 136 | Smotrich Urges Netanyahu: Withdraw From Oslo if Palestinian State Created Unilaterally Feb 19, 2024
Hamas says 6,000 of its fighters killed, half of Israel's claim of 12,000 A Hamas official based in Qatar told Reuters that the group estimated it had lost 6,000 fighters during the four-month-old conflict, half the 12,000 Israel says it has killed. Gaza's ruling group can keep fighting and is prepared for a long war in Rafah and Gaza, said the official, who requested anonymity. "Netanyahu's options are difficult and ours are too. He can occupy Gaza but Hamas is still standing and fighting. He hasn't achieved his goals to kill the Hamas leadership or annihilate Hamas," he added View Quote Gaza war hits Israeli economy with 19.4% Q4 drop Israel's economy took a deep dive in the fourth quarter due to the war with Palestinian Islamist group Hamas in Gaza, but 2023 still ended with positive growth, data showed on Monday. Gross domestic product contracted an annualized 19.4 percent in the last three months compared to the previous quarter, the Central Bureau of Statistics said in an initial estimate that topped a Reuters consensus forecast of 10 percent. For all of 2023, the economy grew 2.0 percent, compared with 6.5 percent in 2022 but above an Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) average of 1.7 percent. However, per capita GDP slipped 0.1 percent last year versus an OECD average of 1.2 percent growth. The war has raged since Hamas' Oct. 7 cross-border attack on southern Israel. Depending on the length of the conflict and whether it expands to other fronts, the economy is expected to grow as much as 2 percent in 2024. "The contraction of the economy in the fourth quarter of 2023 was directly affected by the outbreak of the Iron Swords War on October 7," the statistic bureau said. The economy in the fourth quarter was impacted by a 26.9 percent drop in private spending – the main growth driver – an 18.3 percent fall in exports and 67.8 percent slide in investment in fixed assets, especially in residential building. Government spending, mainly on war expenses, jumped 88.1 percent. The estimated 2 percent overall growth for last year was in line with latest projections by the Bank of Israel and Finance Ministry. View Quote RECAP: Israeli soldier killed in Gaza fighting; United Nations' top court begins hearings on legality of Israeli West Bank control Here are the latest updates on the 136th day of the war:■ The army named Staff Sgt. Simin Shlomov as a soldier killed in combat in southern Gaza on Sunday. ■ Israel expects to continue full-scale military operations in Gaza for another six to eight weeks as it prepares to mount a ground invasion of the enclave's southernmost city of Rafah, four officials familiar with the strategy said. ■ IDF says that protesters are blocking the Nitzana border crossing with Egypt, preventing aid trucks destined for Gaza. ■ Hamas claimed that 6,000 of its fighters have been killed in the war, which is half of the 12,000 that Israel claims. ■ IDF Spokesperson: We are continuing airstrikes and raids on terror targets in Khan Yunis in southern Gaza. ■ The Hamas-run Health Ministry in Gaza reported that since the war began, 29,092 Palestinians have been killed and 69,028 have been injured. ■ United Nations' top court begins hearings into the legality of Israel's 57-year occupation of lands sought for a Palestinian state. ■ Palestinian Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki said Israel is committing genocide in Gaza and has enforced a policy of apartheid against Palestinians for years, at the opening of a week of hearings on Israel's occupation of Palestinian territories at The Hague. ■ Israel's foreign minister declares Brazilian president Lula 'persona non grata' following Gaza remarks, ■ Police bomb squad scan area in northern Israel after suspected drone fell near the Sea of Galilee. ■ Israeli forces arrested 22 wanted persons across the West Bank overnight into Monday in a counter-terror operation, the IDF Spokesperson said View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
This is a different Houthi attack: Attached File
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Institute for Study of War backgrounder 18 Feb Key Takeaways: Iraq Reuters reported on February 18 that Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) Quds Force commander Esmail Ghaani directed Iranian-backed Iraqi groups to “pause” attacks on US forces during a January 29 meeting in Baghdad. Ghaani’s visit illustrates the degree to which Iran controls its proxy network across the Middle East. Gaza Strip The Israeli Defense Minister stated on February 18 that Hamas’ Khan Younis Brigade has been “defeated and does not function as a military entity in any way.” Hamas has not claimed attacks against Israeli forces in Khan Younis since February 13. Other Palestinian militias aligned with Hamas have continued attacks targeting Israeli forces in Khan Younis, however. Israeli special operations forces continued clearing operations in and around Nasser Hospital in western Khan Younis on February 18. Israeli special operations forces (assigned to the 98th Division) began operating in Nasser Hospital on February 15 after receiving “credible intelligence” that Hamas-held hostages were in the hospital. The special operations forces captured Israeli cars that Palestinian fighters stole on October 7 and seized weapons near Nasser Hospital. Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said on February 18 that over 200 suspected fighters had surrendered to Israeli forces at Nasser Hospital. Gallant added that the surrender of suspected fighters indicates Hamas' loss of ”fighting spirit.” The IDF said many of the suspected fighters who surrendered participated in the October 7 attack and have links to the hostages held by Hamas. Israeli forces continued clearing operations in additional areas of Khan Younis City. The 7th Brigade raided Palestinian militia weapons caches and killed over 20 fighters in Khan Younis City. The IDF 98th Division directed airstrikes targeting Palestinian fighters and a weapons warehouse. Israeli forces continued clearing operations in the central Gaza Strip. The Nahal Brigade (assigned to the 162nd Division) killed a Palestinian militia cell transporting weapons near Israeli forces] Israeli aircraft conducted airstrikes targeting a Hamas operational headquarters and additional targets in Nuseirat and Deir al Balah on February 17. The Israeli Defense Minister said on February 18 that the IDF would continue its operations to dismantle Hamas’s remaining six battalions in the central Gaza Strip and Rafah. Hamas did not claim any attacks in the central Gaza Strip on February 18. Israeli War Cabinet Minster Benny Gantz said Israeli forces will enter Rafah at the start of Ramadan (10 March) if Hamas does not release the remaining Israeli hostages the group holds. Gantz’s statement reflects a possible change in the Rafah operation’s timeline. Channel 12 reported on February 10 that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a War Cabinet meeting that the IDF would need to complete the operation into Rafah by March 10 due to international pressure. West Bank Israeli forces clashed with Palestinian fighters six times in the West Bank on February 18.[28] Israeli forces killed an al Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigade commander during an IDF raid in Tulkarm refugee camp.[29] Northern Israel/South Lebanon Lebanese Hezbollah conducted nine attacks from southern Lebanon into northern Israel on February 18. Yemen US Central Command conducted five preemptive strikes in Houthi-controlled territory in Yemen on February 17 that targeted three mobile anti-ship cruise missiles, one subsurface naval attack drone, and one surface naval attack drone. View Quote In depth discussion about IRGC-QF and control they have over proxy forces inside spoiler Click To View Spoiler Reuters reported on February 18 that Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) Quds Force commander Esmail Ghaani directed Iranian-backed Iraqi groups to “pause” attacks on US forces during a January 29 meeting in Baghdad.[1] Ghaani met with the leaders of Iranian-backed Iraqi militia groups less than 48 hours after the Iranian-backed drone attack on January 28 that killed three US servicemembers in Jordan. Kataib Hezbollah responded to Iranian directives from Ghaani by announcing that it would “suspend attacks” on January 30.[2] Harakat Hezbollah al Nujaba did not “initially agree” to Ghaani’s directive.[3] The group said that it would continue attacks targeting US forces on February 2, after Ghaani’s visit.[4] The Islamic Resistance in Iraq claimed three attacks targeting US forces after Ghaani’s visit.[5] It has not claimed any attacks after February 4.[6] Ghaani’s visit illustrates the degree to which Iran controls its proxy network across the Middle East. Most of Iran’s proxies and partners in Iraq immediately ceased attacks following Ghaani’s order. Harakat Hezbollah al Nujaba initially did not agree but Iranian-backed Iraqi groups have not resumed attacks targeting US forces since February 4.[7] Ghaani and Iran can pressure their partners and proxies to pause or resume attacks as needed, however. Nine Iranian and Iraqi sources told Reuters that Ghaani chose to pause attacks to “avoid a similar escalation” to the 2020 escalation cycle that resulted in the US airstrike that killed former IRGC Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani. Ghaani could resume attacks in pursuit of Iranian objectives—namely, expelling US forces from Iraq—as needed when or if Iran calculates that the risk of “similar escalation” decreases |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Warning--very loud
Translation: Video - New scenes show Israeli strikes in the vicinity of the town of Ghaziyeh Lebanon View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Originally Posted By michigan66: Warning--very loud
Translation: View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By michigan66: Warning--very loud
Translation: Video - New scenes show Israeli strikes in the vicinity of the town of Ghaziyeh Lebanon Whatever weapons depots they hit, the secondary explosions are incredible. https://twitter.com/i/status/1759601055162310955 |
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NYT: U.S. Strike Killed Afghans Recruited to Fight for Iran
Highlights It was a memorial for the “martyrs” killed when the U.S. struck military bases in Syria, according to Iranian state television....but he 12 fallen men weren’t Iranians. They were Afghans..part of the Fatemiyoun Brigade, a...force that dates to the height of the Syrian civil war a decade ago. To help President Bashar al-Assad of Syria beat back rebel forces and Islamic State terrorists, Iran began recruiting thousands of Afghan refugees to fight, offering $500 a month, schooling for their children, and Iranian residency. The brigade is still believed to be about 20,000 strong, drawn from Afghan refugees living mostly in Iran, and it serves under the command of the Quds Force, the overseas arm of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards. Most of the Afghans who fled to Iran over the years were Hazaras, one of the largest ethnic groups..and who share the Shiite Muslim faith with Iranians. ..in Afghanistan, the Hazaras were among the natural allies of American forces because they shared common enemies in the Taliban and in Al Qaeda. But...they are now aligned with Iran and seeking to chase American forces out of the region. In Syria, the Fatemiyoun force was often the first line of defense in the battle against ISIS and was widely credited for helping take back several Syrian cities. The government newspaper Iran said last week that at least 3,000 members of the force were killed in Syria over the years. The United States designated the Fatemiyoun as a terrorist organization in 2019. Analysts say that there is no evidence that Fatemiyoun forces were directly involved in attacks against American bases in Iraq and Syria..But the Fatemiyoun Brigade plays a significant role in helping Iran coordinate logistics on the ground for the network of militias it supports, funds and arms across the region. The Fatemiyoun forces oversee bases that serve as key stops along the supply chain of weapons, including drones, missile parts and technology, that makes its way from Iran to Iraq and then Syria and to Hezbollah in Lebanon. View Quote Entire article in spoiler Click To View Spoiler U.S. Strike Killed Afghans Recruited to Fight for Iran Refugees who joined the largely overlooked Fatemiyoun Brigade to battle for Shiite Islam and escape crushing poverty had become a force in Tehran’s proxy wars. It was a memorial for the “martyrs” killed when the U.S. struck military bases in Syria, according to Iranian state television. A small crowd sat in rows of folding chairs, men in the front and women in the back, at the main cemetery in Tehran, the Iranian capital, earlier this month. Children milled around and a young man passed a box of sweets. A man recited prayers through a microphone. But the 12 fallen men weren’t Iranians. They were Afghans, according to other soldiers and local media reports, part of the Fatemiyoun Brigade, a largely overlooked force that dates to the height of the Syrian civil war a decade ago. To help President Bashar al-Assad of Syria beat back rebel forces and Islamic State terrorists, Iran at the time began recruiting thousands of Afghan refugees to fight, offering $500 a month, schooling for their children, and Iranian residency. The brigade is still believed to be about 20,000 strong, drawn from Afghan refugees living mostly in Iran, and it serves under the command of the Quds Force, the overseas arm of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards. Iranian media affiliated with the Guards and social media platforms dedicated to the Fatemiyoun published the names and photographs of the slain Afghans and said they were killed in U.S. strikes in Iraq and Syria. The U.S. strikes were conducted in retaliation for a January drone attack on a military base in Jordan that killed three American soldiers. The U.S. had blamed an Iran-backed militia based in Iraq for the attack. Publicly, Iranian officials denied that any military personnel linked to Iran were among the casualties. Iran’s ambassador to the United Nations, Amir Saeid Iravani, told the U.N. Security Council days after the U.S. strikes that Iran had no connection to the bases attacked in Iraq and Syria. He accused the U.S. of falsely blaming Iran and said only civilians had been killed. The Guards did not issue a statement acknowledging the deaths of the Afghans under their command as they typically do when Iranian forces are killed, nor did any official threaten to avenge the deaths. After the Taliban regained control of Afghanistan, many refugees undertook the arduous journey by foot over the mountains and across the border into Iran. The story of the Afghan casualties, however, emerged from at least four cities across Iran — Tehran, Shiraz, Qum and Mashhad — where the bodies of the Afghans were quietly repatriated to their families, according to photos and videos on Iranian media. At the funeral processions, the coffins of the Afghans were draped in green cloth but bore the flag of no nation. In the cities of Mashhad, Qum and Shiraz, they were carried to religious shrines for blessings. Some mourners carried the yellow flag of the Fatemiyoun Brigade with its emblem. Local officials, clerics and a representative from the Revolutionary Guards and members of the Afghan refugee community attended some of the funerals, according to photos and videos. Two little girls wearing matching pink jackets, their hair in ponytails, wailed at their father’s coffin at another funeral on the outskirts of Tehran. “There is growing anxiety among Afghans that they are getting killed and Iran is not protecting them and disowning their martyrs to protect its own interests,” said Hossein Ehsani, an expert on militants and terrorism movements in the Middle East who is Afghan and grew up as a refugee in Iran. “They feel they are used as cannon fodder.” Iran’s mission to the U.N. did not respond to a question about whether Mr. Iravani, the U.N. ambassador, was aware of the Fatemiyoun casualties when he spoke to the Security Council. Afghans, including fighters for the Quds Force, expressed anger and frustration at Iran’s handling of these deaths, posting near-daily messages on a social media channel dedicated to Fatemiyoun voices. Some members questioned the silence of the Quds Force, calling it discrimination. Among the men killed were two senior commanders who were close allies of the slain former Quds Force commander, Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani, according to Iranian media reports and photographs of them together in the Syrian battlefield. They were identified as Seyed Ali Hosseini and Seyed Hamzeh Alavi. Mr. Suleimani was assassinated by the U.S. in 2020 in Iraq. Most of the Afghans who fled to Iran over the years were Hazaras, one of the largest ethnic groups in their country who share the Shiite Muslim faith with most Iranians. At home in Afghanistan, the Hazaras were among the natural allies of American forces because they shared common enemies in the Taliban and in Al Qaeda. But in the convoluted landscape of the Middle East today, they are now aligned with Iran and seeking to chase American forces out of the region. In Syria, the Fatemiyoun force was often the first line of defense in the battle against ISIS and was widely credited for helping take back several Syrian cities. The government newspaper Iran said last week that at least 3,000 members of the force were killed in Syria over the years. The United States designated the Fatemiyoun as a terrorist organization in 2019. A former member of the Fatemiyoun Brigade, an Afghan who was born and raised in Iran and was deployed to Syria three times, said he was drawn to the force because it provided an opportunity to escape crushing poverty and unemployment in Iran and gain legal status. Asking that his that his name not be published for fear of retribution, he said many fighters also joined out of a desire to protect Shiite Islam and defeat a Sunni extremist force similar to the ones that had persecuted Hazaras in Afghanistan. Another Afghan refugee, Mohamad, a 31-year-old Hazara Shiite and a former military officer in Afghanistan who fled to Iran when the Taliban retook the country, said in a telephone interview that he had a master’s degree but works in construction. Afghans also must worry about a growing crackdowns on undocumented migrants and threats of deportation, he said. “One of my Afghan friends who is from my hometown told me he wants to join the Fatemiyoun out of pure financial desperation and fear of being sent back to Afghanistan,” said Mohamad, who asked that his last name not be used for fear of retaliation. “We are stuck, with no way forward and no way back.” Analysts say that there is no evidence that Fatemiyoun forces were directly involved in attacks against American bases in Iraq and Syria, which the Pentagon says have been targeted more than 160 times by Iran-backed proxies since the start of the Israel-Hamas war in October. But the Fatemiyoun Brigade plays a significant role in helping Iran coordinate logistics on the ground for the network of militias it supports, funds and arms across the region. The Fatemiyoun forces oversee bases that serve as key stops along the supply chain of weapons, including drones, missile parts and technology, that makes its way from Iran to Iraq and then Syria and to Hezbollah in Lebanon, according to analysts and a military strategist affiliated with the Guards, who asked not to be identified because he was not authorized to speak publicly. “When the wider Syrian conflict froze several years ago, there was an expectation that Fatemiyoun would go home, disband and demobilize,” said Charles Lister the director of the Syria and Countering Terrorism and Extremism programs at the Middle East Institute in Washington. “But they have kind of melted into the wider regional network and have found a role to play — holding ground, coordinating logistics and wider coordination on the ground.” American fighter jets destroyed the base where the Fatemiyoun were killed in Deir al-Zour, in eastern Syria, leaving a pile of rubble, mangled bricks and debris, according to a photograph published on the website Saberin News, affiliated with Iran’s proxy militias. Maj. Gen. Patrick Ryder, a Pentagon spokesman, declined to comment specifically about the U.S. strikes killing Afghan fighters for Iran. But he said the strikes were conducted to hold the Guard and their proxies accountable and that “initial indications are that over 40 militants associated with Iranian proxy groups were killed or injured.” Iranian commanders and key personnel were evacuated from the bases in anticipation of the American strikes as the Biden administration signaled for nearly a week that attacks were pending. But Afghans remained at the base, one Iranian official affiliated with the Guards said, adding that military bases couldn’t be abandoned. At the funeral for five of the Afghans, including the two senior commanders, Hojatolislam Alireza Panahian, a prominent conservative cleric, told the mourners that the enemy was “dumb” to kill vulnerable Afghans. “They are martyrs without borders, and jihadists for Islam and the resistance front.” Excerpt inside spoiler from "Iran's Qods Force: Proxy Wars, Terrorism, and the War on America" with more background on the Afghan fighters and the IRGC-QF. Click To View Spoiler AFGHANS AND PAKISTANIS The Qods Force also recruited Afghans and Pakistanis for the Syrian war. There was precedent for this dating back to the 1980s, when the IRGC created an Afghan militia called Sepah-e Mohammed, which occasionally fought the Soviets, the Afghan communists, and the Taliban.
To cite another example: during the “Holy Defense” against Saddam Hussein in the 1980s, the IRGC trained and equipped an all-Afghan fighting force, the Abuzar Brigade.30 Many veterans of the Sepah-e Mohammed and Abuzar were still around decades later when Qassem Soleimani created an all-Afghan unit to fight in Syria. T An example is Ali Reza Tavassoli, an Afghan Shia who fought against Iraq in the 1980s, attended seminary in Qom, and was living in Mashhad when the Qods Force recruited him to form the Fatemiyoun Battalion for the Syrian fight. When Tavassoli was killed in 2016, other Afghan veterans of the Abuzar took his place. By the end of that year the Fatemiyoun Division had an estimated 12,000 fighters in its ranks, making it one of the largest foreign units fighting on the Syrian government’s behalf. The IRGC’s primary recruiting pool for Afghan fighters was the refugee population in Iran, which the United Nations high commissioner for refugees estimated at nearly 3 million. Of this number only a third were documented as refugees, while another half a million had temporary documents and limited-residency permits. That left nearly 1.5 million without any papers at all and therefore vulnerable to periodic deportation sweeps. It was this latter group that provided the largest number of recruits for the Fatemiyoun. The Qods Force offered numerous inducements to convince undocumented Afghan refugees to fight in Syria. The financial ones were impressive enough—five hundred to a thousand dollars per fighter per month, a large sum considering that Afghans earned around two hundred dollars a month laying bricks in Isfahan or twenty-five back home in Bamiyan. In addition to the money, some recruits were offered ten-year residency permits that also included their families, school registration for their children, and the lure of eventual Iranian citizenship. Also, Afghans facing criminal charges could avoid fines and imprisonment by fighting the Islamic State. However, there were sticks too, for Afghans who resisted Iranian blandishments. For example, Qods Force recruiters threatened deportation for the undocumented. The IRGC also played on the fears of Afghan Shia regarding their future in Afghanistan. According to one Fatemiyoun recruit, “The Guards commanders were saying that, if it comes to it, we will make Bamian [sic] into a base for you, a base for Fatemiyoun.” Afghan recruits normally received (notwithstanding the Guardian’s interviewee) thirty days of training in Iran, in the Mashhad area or Varamin, prior to deployment. When they reached Syria they were often used as shock troops, spearheading Qods Force assaults to recapture valuable targets like Aleppo, Palmyra, and Daraa. Indeed, the Fatemiyoun casualty numbers were high, if we credit the Iranian media. Before his death in Baghdad in 2020, Qassem Soleimani tried to use the example of Afghan martyrs in Syria to change the negative perceptions that many Iranians had of Afghan refugees: “Thank God, Afghan people are now viewed differently and are well respected. People visit and honor the graves of Afghan martyrs as they visit and honor holy shrines. … Nothing could have impressed part of the Iranian society in its dealings with Afghan families as much as [Afghan fighters’] martyrdom and their selfless defense of ideals did. There is now a great respect for [Afghans] in Iran.”When the Fatemiyoun Battalion was first created, IRGC recruiters also brought in Shia fighters from Pakistan to fight under its aegis. Most of these were recruited from Parachinar, a predominantly Shia Pashtun district on the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan’s Khyber wa Pakhtunwa Province. Later, the Pakistani Shia were numerous enough to create their own Zeinabiyoun Brigade under IRGC management and control.Here was yet another element of Qassem Soleimani’s international division of foreign, mostly Shia, combatants fighting to keep Bashar al-Asad in power. Iran’s cynical use of Afghan refugees to prosecute a foreign war may yet ultimately boomerang against it. Unrest among Afghan refugees is a nearly constant concern as it is for security forces in eastern Iran, but the situation could become explosive as the body bags of “martyred” Afghans continue to flow out of Syria or if the Iranian government fails to honor its pledges of citizenship and residency. |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Times of Israel: IDF strikes Hezbollah arms depots deep inside Lebanon after drone attack on north
Translation: Official source @fouadkhreiss The first raid was near Al-Reem Company’s warehouse and the second raid was near Al-Shahouri Mosque, Al-Regie area, in the Al-Ghaziyeh area, south of the city of Sidon. View Quote Attached File Context for the dramatic air strike videos on twitter this morning. The Israel Defense Forces on Monday afternoon struck what it said were two weapon depots belonging to the Hezbollah terror group near Lebanon’s southern coastal city of Sidon. Lebanese media reported Israeli airstrikes in the town of Ghaziyeh, on the southern outskirts of Sidon, some 30 kilometers (19 miles) from the northern border. IDF Spokesman Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said the Israeli military was behind airstrikes on two weapon depots near Sidon, and that they came in response to the earlier drone attack. The IDF said it was still investigating the Monday morning attack, during which an explosive-laden drone struck an open field near the northern town of Arbel. The suspected drone attack took place some 30 kilometers (19 miles) from Israel’s northern border with Lebanon, far deeper inside Israel than most attacks launched by Hezbollah No warning sirens sounded during the attack. Entire article in quote box The Israel Defense Forces on Monday afternoon struck what it said were two weapon depots belonging to the Hezbollah terror group near Lebanon’s southern coastal city of Sidon. The strikes came as a response to a drone attack on northern Israel hours earlier, which caused no damage or injuries. Lebanese media reported Israeli airstrikes in the town of Ghaziyeh, on the southern outskirts of Sidon, some 30 kilometers (19 miles) from the northern border. Footage posted to social media showed large fireballs and clouds of smoke from the targeted sites. Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency (NNA) said that 14 people in the country were wounded in the strike. Footage posted to social media showed large fireballs and clouds of smoke from the targeted sites. Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency (NNA) said that 14 people in the country were wounded in the strike. NNA claimed that the strikes targeted a warehouse where tires and electricity generators were manufactured, and the vicinity of a factory, left “14 wounded, most of them Syrian and Palestinian workers.” In a televised press conference, IDF Spokesman Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said the Israeli military was behind airstrikes on two weapon depots near Sidon, and that they came in response to the earlier drone attack. The IDF said it was still investigating the Monday morning attack, during which an explosive-laden drone struck an open field near the northern town of Arbel. No warning sirens sounded during the attack. The IDF blamed Hezbollah for the attack, although the Lebanese terror group did not immediately claim responsibility. Images posted to social media showed a small crater in the ground in a field outside the Lower Galilee community, as well as what appeared to be part of the suspected bomb-laden projectile. The suspected drone attack took place some 30 kilometers (19 miles) from Israel’s northern border with Lebanon, far deeper inside Israel than most attacks launched by Hezbollah, which have largely targeted the border region and Upper Galilee. The IDF said it struck several more Hezbollah positions on Monday afternoon, in southern Lebanon’s Mays al-Jabal and Odaisseh. Earlier, the IDF said it hit Hezbollah sites in Dhayra, rocket-launching positions in Aitaroun, and other Hezbollah infrastructure in Odaisseh. It also carried out an airstrike on a building in Ayta ash-Shab, where a Hezbollah operative was spotted entering. Hezbollah, meanwhile, claimed a series of attacks on northern Israel throughout Monday. Since October 8, Hezbollah-led forces in Lebanon have attacked Israeli communities and military posts along the border on a near-daily basis, with the group saying it is doing so to support Gaza during the war there. This has led to Israeli retaliations and regular cross-border fire, and has displaced some 80,000 Israelis in border communities. Israel has warned that it will no longer tolerate the presence of Hezbollah along the Lebanon frontier, where it could attempt to carry out an attack similar to the massacres committed by Hamas on October 7. It has warned that a failure of international diplomacy to force Hezbollah away from the border will necessitate an Israeli offensive. So far, the skirmishes on the border have resulted in six civilian deaths on the Israeli side, as well as the deaths of 10 IDF soldiers and reservists. There have also been several attacks from Syria, without any injuries. Hezbollah has named 206 members who have been killed by Israel during the ongoing skirmishes, mostly in Lebanon but some also in Syria. In Lebanon, another 32 operatives from other terror groups, a Lebanese soldier, and at least 30 civilians, three of whom were journalists, have been killed. View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Institute for Study of War backgrounder 19 Feb Interesting day, the Houthis got lucky and hit a ship in the engine room, crew had to abandon ship. Palestinians shot at drones and helicopters with Manpads, hadn't seen that for awhile. Still fighting by Nasser Hospital, IDF hauled militants out yesterday who were dressed like doctors. West Bank violence skyrocketed in 2023 compared to 2022. IAF and Hamas both carried out deep strikes in each others' territories. Key Takeaways: Yemen Houthi President Mahdi al Mashat issued a decree declaring the United States and the United Kingdom “enemy states of Yemen” on February 19 for their support of Israel. The Houthi movement launched an anti-ship ballistic missile that struck and disabled the UK-owned, Belize-flagged Rubymar cargo ship in the Bab al Mandeb strait on February 18. This incident marks the first time that a crew has had to abandon ship after a Houthi attack since Houthi attacks began during this round of escalation on November 19. The Rubymar’s Lebanon-based management company said that the vessel took on water after the missile struck the vessel’s engine room. The Houthi military spokesperson claimed that the cargo vessel had completely sunk about 22 hours after the attack occurred. Neither the UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) nor CENTCOM has said that the Rubymar sunk. A warship operating under the auspices of Operation Prosperity Guardian and a commercial vessel responded to the attack.[4] The commercial vessel evacuated the Rubymar’s crew to Djibouti. This incident marks the first time that a crew has had to abandon ship after a Houthi attack since Houthi attacks began during this round of escalation on November 19. The Houthi military spokesperson falsely claimed that the Houthis “made sure that the ship’s crew exited safely.” The Houthi movement claimed that it shot down a US MQ-9 Reaper drone over Hudaydah on February 19. The group posted a video showing Houthi surface-to-air missile hitting the drone. The video also showed the drone’s wreckage. The Houthi military spokesperson did not specify what type of missile system the Houthis used to shoot down the drone. Two US officials told the New York Times that the Pentagon is investigating the cause of the drone “crash.” Northern Gaza Strip Israeli forces are constructing a road in the Gaza Strip to divide the northern Gaza Strip from the southern Strip and facilitate Israeli raids. An Israeli journalist embedded with the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) to observe the IDF’s construction of the new road. An IDF battalion commander working on the road said that Israeli forces will use the road to protect the area and control the flow of Gazans from north to south. The journalist reported that “the IDF was preparing for a very long stay” near the road. Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) fighters fired rockets targeting Israeli forces in southern Gaza City, where the IDF are constructing the new dividing road. Hamas and Palestinian Mujahideen Movement fighters conducted combined attacks using man-portable air defense systems to target Israeli drones and helicopters in southwestern Gaza City. Other Palestinian militias fired rockets targeting an IDF supply line and Israeli forces in the northern Gaza Strip. Southern Gaza Strip The IDF reported that Israeli forces are finishing clearing operation in western Khan Younis. Negotiations: The Qatari prime minister said that a ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas should not require a hostage deal. Israeli forces “expanded” ground operations in western Khan Younis on January 22 and have engaged Palestinian militias there on a near-daily basis since. Three IDF brigades are operating in western Khan Younis to target Hamas’ battalion in the area and destroy military infrastructure. Israeli forces used a drone to identify a Palestinian militia cell approaching their position in western Khan Younis on February 19 and directed an airstrike to target the cell. The Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a leftist Palestinian militia aligned with Hamas in the current war, detonated an unspecified explosive device and fired a rocket-propelled grenade targeting Israeli armor near Nasser Hospital. Hamas fighters returned from “areas of fighting” in western Khan Younis and reported that they targeted 15 Israeli soldiers inside a house. These fighters’ inability to communicate with higher headquarters until returning to rear areas indicates that their commanders may be unable to transmit orders to fighters engaged with the IDF. Several other Palestinian militia groups experienced similar delays in reporting as Israeli forces advanced across the Gaza Strip Palestinian Politics Russia invited Palestinian factions, including Hamas and PIJ, to meet in Moscow on February 26 for an “inter-Palestinian meeting.” The Palestinian Authority (PA) Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh said that the PA will see if Hamas “is ready to reach an understanding.” The Qatari prime minister said that a ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas should not require a hostage deal. Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim al Thani said that some unspecified countries believe that a hostage deal must be a condition of a ceasefire deal. Thani spoke at the Munich Security Conference on February 17, emphasizing the need to end the war. One of Israel’s stated war objectives is to recover the Hamas-held hostages from the Gaza Strip. West Bank Israeli forces clashed with Palestinian fighters six times in the West Bank on February 19. Unspecified Palestinian fighters threw an explosive device at a car northwest of Nablus that was operated by an Israeli civilian. The attack injured one person. Israeli Army Radio reported that violence in the West Bank increased 350% in 2023 compared to 2022. The IDF recorded 608 shooting, stabbing, explosive, and vehicle ramming attacks in 2023 compared to 170 attacks in 2022. Three hundred shooting attacks took place in 2023, which is the highest number of shootings recorded since the Second Intifada in the early 2000s. Lebanon The IAF conducted airstrikes that targeted two “Hezbollah military depots” near Sidon, Lebanon on February 19. This is the first time since October 7 Israel has conducted airstrikes in Sidon, which is roughly 30km north of the Litani River and 40km south of Beirut. The IAF conducted airstrikes that targeted two “Hezbollah military depots” near Sidon, Lebanon on February 19. This is the first time since October 7 Israel has conducted airstrikes in Sidon, which is roughly 30km north of the Litani River and 40km south of Beirut. A Reuters journalist reported that the IDF has conducted airstrikes further north into Lebanon at a higher frequency in recent weeks. Proxy News Western media reported on February 19 that Iranian-backed Shia Afghan militias fighters expressed “anger and frustration” at the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC)’s treatment of casualties within their ranks. US airstrikes killed at least 12 fighters in the Fatemiyoun, an Iranian-backed Shia Afghan militia, in Syria on February 2. The New York Times reported that Fatemiyoun members and other unspecified Afghans were angered and frustrated because the IRGC was “silent” on the deaths of the Fatemiyoun fighters. View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Double tap
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
New footage of IDF Operations in Gaza:
More footage from the IDF: The IDF struck and killed a Hamas operative who fired a rocket from central Gaza at southern Israel yesterday, within minutes of the attack. IDF airstrike on a Hezbollah ammunition depot: Israel declares that it will invade Rafah on foot. |
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The military has discovered a video of the Bibas family in the the Gaza Strip, hours after they were abducted by Hamas on October 7.
The clip from surveillance cameras shows hostages Shiri Bibas and her two young children, Ariel and Kfir. The IDF struck several Hezbollah positions in southern Lebanon's Dhayra a short while ago. The IDF releases new footage showing troops of the Egoz commando unit battling a Hamas operative inside a building in southern Gaza's Khan Younis. During the raid on the building, a gunman opened fire at the troops and hurled a grenade at them. The IDF says the troops returned fire, including using a shoulder-launched missile, killing the operative. SICK: Hamas's cruelty exposed – they give food to kids for photos, then snatch it away. Lebanese media report Israeli airstrikes in the town of Ghaziyeh, on the southern outskirts of Sidon. |
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Haaretz | News Israel-Hamas War Day 137 | IDF Chief: 'Israel Maintains Its Humanity, We're Not on a Killing Spree, Revenge or Genocide' Feb 20, 2024
Saudi newspaper Elaph reported that Israeli authorities have information that suggests the Gaza Strip's Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar recently fled to Egypt through the tunnels in Rafah. A senior IDF official said they have no such information IDF denies report it has knowledge that Sinwar left the Gaza Strip for Egypt A senior IDF official said they have no information that the leader of Hamas in Gaza, Yahya Sinwar, has left the Gaza Strip. Earlier, Saudi newspaper Elaph reported that Israeli authorities have information that suggests Sinwar recently fled to Egypt through the tunnels in Rafah, and fear that he took Israeli hostages with him. View Quote RECAP: Hamas delegation arrives for talks in Cairo; IDF chief tells officers to 'maintain humanity' Here's what you need to know 137 days into the war: ■ Hamas confirmed that political bureau head Ismail Haniyeh arrived in Cairo with a delegation of senior Hamas officials for talks with Egyptian officials about the situation in Gaza. ■ The Hamas-run health ministry announced that 29,195 people have been killed in the Gaza Strip since the beginning of the war, with 69,170 wounded. ■ The World Health Organization said it has completed a second evacuation mission from Gaza's Nasser Hospital, transferring a total of 32 critical patients, including children, from the site. ■ Israeli fighter jets attacked a number of Hezbollah targets across five locations in southern Lebanon, the IDF said. Earlier, an anti-tank missile was fired at an open area in northern Israel. ■ IDF Chief of Staff Herzl Halevi called on army officers to uphold certain values while fighting in the Gaza Strip. "We are not on a killing spree, revenge or genocide." ■ Hamas said that if restrictions are placed on the entry of worshippers to Al-Aqsa mosque during Ramadan, "it will blow up in the face of the occupation." ■ The IDF announced that 22-year-old Staff Sgt. Maoz Morell, who was wounded last week in fighting in the southern Gaza Strip, died of his wounds. ■ London-based newspaper Asharq Al-Awsat reported that Hamas had planned to break into a security prison in Israel's south on October 7, in order to release the hundreds of Palestinian prisoners held there. Due to a navigation error, they instead arrived at Netiv Ha'asara. ■ Saudi newspaper Elaph reported that Israeli authorities have information that suggests the Gaza Strip's Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar recently fled to Egypt through the tunnels in Rafah. A senior IDF official said they have no such information View Quote Hamas says imposing restrictions on worshippers at Al-Aqsa will blow up in Israel's face Hamas said that if restrictions are placed on the entry of worshippers to Al-Aqsa mosque during Ramadan, "it will blow up in the face of the occupation." Hamas, whose senior officials landed earlier on Tuesday in Cairo for talks about a cease-fire in gaza, also warned Israel against an "adventure in Rafah" and attacked Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who, according to Hamas, "deceives the families [of hostages] by arguing that the hostages can be released by force." On Sunday, Netanyahu met with ministers and senior officials in the defense establishment for a security consultation ahead of Ramadan, during which a source present said that Netanyahu adopted a position to limit the entry of Arab Israelis to the Temple Mount/Al Aqsa compound in opposition to the Shin Bet security service's position View Quote Report: Hamas planned to break into security prison to free Palestinian prisoners on Oct. 7, but made navigation error London-based newspaper Asharq Al-Awsat reported on Tuesday morning that Hamas had planned to break into Shikma Prison in Ashkelon in Israel's south on October 7, in order to release the hundreds of Palestinian prisoners held there. According to the report, the Hamas force sent to the prison made a navigation error, and arrived at Netiv Ha'asara instead. Palestinian sources told the newspaper that the Hamas force crossed into Israeli territory and encountered IDF troops near the Yad Mordechai area, killing several soldiers. For an unknown reason, the force deviated from its route and turned south towards Netiv Ha'asara, and continued from there to Sderot View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Haaretz Analysis | Iran Avoids Paying Price for Proxy Wars as It Garners Several Strategic Gains
Interesting article from an admittely left leaning paper. One thing I disagree with--we constantly here how Iran's proxies aren't under complete control from Tehran. Fair enough, but I think it's safe to say if Iran was really bothered they would cut funding and arms transfers. Highlights Since February 4, there have been no reports of American targets hit by pro-Iranian militias..in contrast with 160 attacks on US forces in Iraq and Syria since October 7. According to Iranian sources as reported in an Abu Dhabi media outlet this was due to a visit to raq by Esmail Qaani, the commander of the Revolutionary Guards' Quds Force, shortly after the attack on an American base on the Jordanian border at the end of January that killed three American soldiers Qaani met with the heads of pro-Iranian militias in Baghdad and demanded that they stop their attacks. Most of them agreed to obey, aside from one, the al-Nujaba militia, which ultimately joined the others. Halting these attacks did not prevent an American retaliation, but this appeared to be less extensive and intense than what might have been expected, based on hints issued by the administration as to its intentions. Iran insists that each one of its partners in the "axis of resistance". operates independently, "based on conditions and circumstances that suit them in any one of the arenas." However, Qaani's appearance in Baghdad and the resulting 16 days without attacks on US forces is solid proof of he direct link between Tehran and the region's "axis of resistance" militias. There were two reasons for this for Qaani's in person visit even though, unlike Soleimani, he doesn't speak Arabic. First, Iran was concerned that continued clashes between the American army and these militias would delay the US troop withdrawal from Iraq. Qaani had to coordinate the timetable for the American withdrawal and ensure that Iraq does not renege on its decision. Second, Qaani was needed to help resolve the relations between the militias and the Iraqi government. The militias in Iraq are diverse..each one has its own agenda that depends not just on Iran but on its factional bosses within Iraq and on the conduct of Iraq's government under Mohammed Shia al-Sudani. The militias also...threaten the Iraqi government's ability to govern the county...The militias have turned into an economic powerhouse that has taken over government projects, with militia commanders operating private border crossings, mainly on the border with Iran. They threaten foreign investors and manage private banks, thereby blocking the efforts of Iraq's prime minister to recruit foreign investors, mainly from the West. [While] Iran is the one equipping the Houthis with advanced weapons. However, the extent to which Iran can determine Houthi operations and targets is unclear. The Houthis have their own agenda, which is not necessarily dependent on Iran's. Iran understands why Syria cannot take part in the group of "united fronts" against Israel. President Assad has made clear to Iran the boundaries of pro-Iranian militia operations against Israel. Thus, for example, in 2021 Iran was obliged, under instructions of Bashar al-Assad, to return General Ahmad Madani, also known as Haj Javad Ghaffari, to Iran, after serving as the Quds Force commander in Syria. His forced return to Iran was due to his...instigating attacks on Israel and on American targets from Syrian territory which could have led to an Israeli or American attack on Syria. In any case, Iran's proxies and its ability to control at least partially their actions in the war in Gaza has given Iran a unique strategic standing. View Quote Entire article in spoilerClick To View Spoiler Iran avoids paying price for proxy wars as it garners several strategic gains
Since February 4, there have been no reports of American targets hit by pro-Iranian militias, in contrast to around 20 weekly attacks in the preceding period, as well as 160 attacks in Iraq and Syria since October 7. Last week, the Abu Dhabi-registered Aram website reported that behind the halt in attacks, according to Iranian sources, was a visit to Iraq by Esmail Qaani, the commander of the Revolutionary Guards' Quds Force, shortly after the attack on an American base on the Jordanian border at the end of January, in which three American soldiers were killed. According to this report, Qaani met with the heads of pro-Iranian militias in Baghdad and demanded that they stop their attacks. Most of them agreed to obey, aside from one, the al-Nujaba militia, which ultimately joined the others. Halting these attacks did not prevent an American retaliation, but this appeared to be less extensive and intense than what might have been expected, based on hints issued by the administration as to its intentions. The proximity of Qaani's visit and the cessation of attacks on American targets should not be surprising. Iran keeps repeating that each one of its partners in the "axis of resistance," including Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen and the pro-Iranian militias in Iraq, operate independently, "based on conditions and circumstances that suit them in any one of the arenas." However, Qaani's appearance in Baghdad proved overtly, if proof was needed, the direct link between Tehran and the region's "axis of resistance" militias. This link has its own limitations, which illustrate the limits of Iran's influence. One could, for example, question the need for sending Qaani, who doesn't speak Arabic, to hold a meeting with militia leaders, rather than giving instructions over the phone. There were two reasons for this. The Iraqi government has in recent weeks been holding an intensive dialogue with the U.S. army regarding the withdrawal of American forces, numbering 2,500 soldiers, from Iraq. Iran was concerned that continued clashes between the American army and these militias would delay this withdrawal and even provide the Americans a pretext for prolonging their stay in Iraqi territory. Qaani had to coordinate with Iraq's prime minister the timetable for the American withdrawal and ensure that Iraq does not renege on its decision. The other reason relates to the need to resolve the relations between the militias and the Iraqi government. The militias in Iraq are diverse, and each one of them has, in addition to its partnership in the "axis of resistance," its own agenda that depends not just on Iran but on its factional bosses within Iraq and on the conduct of Iraq's government under Mohammed Shia al-Sudani. Prime Minister of Iraq Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani in negotiations on the U.S. withdrawal from the country, in January. Open gallery view Prime Minister of Iraq Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani in negotiations on the U.S. withdrawal from the country, in January.Credit: AFP Thus, for example, in June 2020, six months after the assassination of Qasem Soleimani, Qaani's predecessor, Qaani for the first time had to obtain an entry visa into Iraq in order to be able to hold a working meeting in that country. The prime minister at that time was Mustafa al-Kadhimi, who had decided to reduce the operations and influence of pro-Iranian militias, taking precedent-setting action against them by instructing the anti-terror unit of Iraq's army to raid a base of the Iraqi Hezbollah brigades militia, a base which held weapons, explosives and missiles that were meant to be launched against American targets. Qaani was also not carrying welcome news to militia commanders. He informed them that Iran intended to slash their budgets and that they would have to rely on funds they received from Iraq's defense ministry, then estimated at amounting to $2 billion a year for all the militias. The militias in Iraq have turned not only into a military force attacking American bases; they are threatening the government's ability to govern the county in the same manner Hezbollah operates in Lebanon. The militias have turned into an economic powerhouse that has taken over government projects, with militia commanders operating private border crossings, mainly on the border with Iran. They threaten foreign investors and manage private banks, thereby blocking the efforts of Iraq's prime minister to recruit foreign investors, mainly from the West. Iran may control their operations against American targets, but with regard to their operations within Iraq and in facing Iraq's government, Iran's standing is complex and limited, to the point at which it often seems that in the balance between Iran's interests and those of local bosses, most militias prefer to operate according to instructions from local politicians, rather than on Iranian ones, until it comes to Iran's security and foreign relations. The remote activation of militias and local forces, as part of the "axis of resistance," puts some limitations on Iran in the Yemeni, Syrian and Lebanese arenas as well. Two days ago, it was reported that the Houthis had hit a British vessel and intercepted an American drone. American forces reported for the first time that they had hit an underwater drone operated by the Houthis. The U.S. and Britain are attacking targets in Yemen on a daily basis, but it seems that these attacks have not yet attained the deterrence required to halt the clashes in the Red Sea, whose economic costs are mounting daily. Houthi followers show support for residents of the Gaza Strip in a demonstration in Yemen's capital, Sana'a, in January. Open gallery view Houthi followers show support for residents of the Gaza Strip in a demonstration in Yemen's capital, Sana'a, in January.Credit: Osamah Abdulrahman/AP Iran is the one equipping the Houthis with advanced weapons, as well as with the knowhow and technology enabling them to build their own missiles and drones. However, the extent to which Iran can determine Houthi operations and targets is unclear. The Houthis have their own agenda, which is not necessarily dependent on Iran's. President Biden decided to include them again in the list of terror organizations, in a more limited manner than the status they held when Trump was president, but in a way that allows the imposition of international sanctions. In tandem, the Houthis are continuing their negotiations with the Saudis over ending the war in Yemen. It appears that they intend to exploit the confrontation with coalition forces in the Red Sea in order to extort concessions for their own benefit, unrelated to Iran's position. There is thus no certainty that if a cease-fire is reached in Gaza, the Houthis would join it in their "private" arena, even if Iran demands that they stop their attacks. Iran has also understood that Syria cannot take part in the group of "united fronts" against Israel. Not only are its emissaries in Syria, including senior commanders in the Revolutionary Guards, at risk of being assassinated, President Assad has made clear to Iran the boundaries of pro-Iranian militia operations against Israel. Thus, for example, in 2021 Iran was obliged, under instructions of Bashar al-Assad, to return General Ahmad Madani, also known as Haj Javad Ghaffari, to Iran, after serving as the Quds Force commander in Syria. One of the main reasons for his forced return to Iran was the instigation of attacks on Israel and on American targets from Syrian territory, in a way that could have led to a war against Syria. He was replaced by General Razi Mousavi, who was assassinated last December in an attack attributed to Israel. Syria's President Bashar al-Assad with Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian in Damascus, Syria, last week. Open gallery view Syria's President Bashar al-Assad with Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian in Damascus, Syria, last week.Credit: Syrian Presidency's Telegram channel via AFP It's not only Israel that is operating against Iranian forces in Syria. Russia also limits their operations as part of its understandings with Israel, according to which Israel continues to enjoy freedom of the skies against Iranian targets that are assisting Hezbollah, as long as it doesn't hit Syrian government targets. Iran itself has not yet paid a price for operating militias and organizations acting in its name in the region. Along with its dissociation from any links to these militias, it presents itself as the only country that holds the lever over several violent arenas in the region, even when its control over such organizations is not complete and absolute and is dependent on local factors and considerations which are not always subservient to its guidance. Thus, due to the war in Gaza, it has attained a unique strategic standing which is being bolstered by its renewed diplomatic relations with Saudi Arabia, and by the indirect dialogue it is holding with Washington, which is trying to set boundaries to the arena. |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Israel fears Hamas chief Sinwar escaped to Egypt - report. (warning lots of pop ups in link.)
Entire article inside quote box Israel believes Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar fled the Gaza Strip for Egypt, said Arabic online newspaper Elaph. According to the report, the Hamas chief could have taken an unspecified number of hostages with him. He is believed to have crossed the border through a tunnel he entered in the Refah area with his brother and sister. The report suggested Israel knows of eight tunnels allowing even a car to be transported across the Egyptian border. Earlier in February, Israel gained footage showing Sinwar in the tunnels beneath Khan Yunis, a source confirmed to i24NEWS. He was previously reported not participating in the hostage deal and ceasefire negotiations and to have gone incommunicado. Meanwhile, Hamas is said to be searching for Sinwar's replacement. "There is a bid for who will manage Gaza. There is no party in control. The Khan Yunis Brigade is defeated and no longer functions as a military entity," stated Israel's Defense Minister Yoav Gallant. View Quote
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
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Deckard “nobody wants to know the truth, nobody” Cobra Kai Johnny Lawrence “she’s hot and all those other things” Tucker Carlson 1/10/2018 “I used to be a liberatarian until Google”https://mobile.twitter.com/Henry_Gunn
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UN Food Program announces freeze of aid shipments to northern Gaza amid attacks on aid trucks
Hurricane Katrina level "shoot at rescue helicopters" stupidity here. Now you know why nobody wants these people. The United Nations World Food Program (WFP) announced a freeze on aid shipments to the northern Gaza Strip..due to attacks by civilians. This food distribution had been suspended for the last three weeks after supply trucks of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) were attacked, distribution resumed operations just this week. Sunday aid workers were attacked on the way to Gaza City, when many people surrounded the convoy and tried to climb onto the distribution truck...at the entrance to Gaza City, the convoy was also attacked with gunfire. Palestinians carrying food they "grabbed" from UN aid truck Entire article in quote box The United Nations World Food Program (WFP) announced a freeze on aid shipments to the northern Gaza Strip. This, according to them, was due to attacks by civilians on the distribution trucks. The organization clarified that they will not return to operating in the area "until conditions are created that allows safe distribution of the food." This food distribution line had previously been suspended for three weeks after supply trucks of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) were attacked, and it resumed operation only on Monday. The WFP planned to bring ten trucks into the area this week to try to reduce the plight of hunger, but according to them already on Sunday their people were attacked on the way to Gaza City, when many people surrounded the convoy and tried to climb onto the distribution truck. According to the organization, at the entrance to Gaza City, the convoy was also attacked with gunfire. "Our team managed to distribute a small amount of food along the way," the organization said. "On Monday, the second convoy to northern Gaza faced complete chaos and violence due to the collapse of civil order." The organization added that several trucks were looted between Khan Yunis and Deir al-Balah and that a truck driver was beaten. "The remaining flour was distributed spontaneously from the trucks in Gaza City. The decision to suspend the shipments to the north of the Gaza Strip was not taken lightly, because it is clear to us that the situation on the ground will deteriorate further and people will risk death from starvation." View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
The IDF last week withdrew its last reserve brigade from the Gaza Strip, the 646th Brigade, as the military nears the end of its offensive in Khan Younis.
Troops of the reserve paratroopers brigade first operated in central Gaza and then in Khan Younis in the past months, killing numerous Hamas operatives, locating weapons, and destroying tunnels The IDF carried out airstrikes against several Hezbollah targets in southern Lebanon this morning. The targets included two rocket launchers in Yaroun and Marwahin, two sites belonging to the terror group in Dhayra and Yaroun, and two buildings used by Hezbollah in Houla and Blida. Sites hit by fighter jets in Blida and Ayta ash-Shab included several buildings and other infrastructure used by Hezbollah. Another building where Hezbollah operatives were gathered in Kafr Kila was also struck After the explosive device attack near Homesh, Palestinians report that settlers attacked the adjacent village of Burqa and set fire to a car, according to the Yesh Din rights group. A Hezbollah drone was discovered in a community near Acre earlier today |
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Haaretz | News Israel-Hamas War Day 138 | U.S. Tells ICJ It Can't Order Israel to Withdraw From West Bank, Gaza, Without Security Considerations Feb 21, 2024
A man sweeps rubble near the damaged building in Damascus, on Wednesday. Palestinians inspect a car hit by an Israeli strike, in Deir Al-Balah, in the central Gaza Strip on Wednesday. RECAP: Israel reportedly strikes building in Damascus; IDF top lawyer says some soldiers have engaged in criminal behavior Here's what you need to know in day 138 of the Israel-Hamas war: ■ Israeli strikes hit a neighborhood of the Syrian capital, Damascus, on Wednesday morning, killing two people and causing material damage, Syria's state TV said. There was no confirmation of the strikes from Israel. ■ Iran's semi-official Student News Network said that the attack on a residential building in Damascus did not kill any Iranian nationals or advisers. ■ Israel's top army lawyer Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi said the army has encountered behavior among soldiers in Gaza that crosses the criminal threshold. In a letter she sent to the military prosecutor's office, Tomer-Yerushalmi wrote that "we have come across cases of improper conduct that deviates from IDF values and orders. ■ IDF forces killed three armed men overnight into Wednesday in Jenin during an operation to arrest wanted persons. According to the army's statement, 40 wanted persons were arrested throughout the West Bank and weapons, cargo and money suspected of being used for terrorist purposes were confiscated. ■ The Lebanese News Agency reported that a 40-year-old woman and a 5-year-old girl were killed in an IDF attack in the village of Majdal Zoun in southern Lebanon. ■ The United States said on Wednesday the World Court could not order the immediate withdrawal of Israeli troops from occupied territories without taking into account Israel's security needs. ■ Reports of fatal attack on vehicle in Deir al-Balah in central Gaza. ■ Iran's nuclear chief on Wednesday dismissed a suggestion that the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Rafael Grossi would visit Iran next month, but instead invited Grossi to a conference in Tehran in May. ■ Tel Aviv University announced that it will allow hundreds of reservists to be admitted to all study programs apart from medical school, without the requirement of a psychometric exam. ■ Iran's Oil Minister Javad Owji accused Israel on Wednesday of being behind an attack on gas pipelines which occurred last week, the Tasnim news agency reported View Quote Video from Damascus showing building that was hit. Syrian authorities were quick to announce no Iranians were killed.
Translation The residential building that was subjected to the Zionist aggression in Kafr Sousse, Damascus View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
This month, the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency published a report providing additional visual evidence that Iran is responsible for providing much of the advanced weaponry the Houthis are using against Israel, the U.S., and ships passing through the Red Sea.
This is a link to the 21-page PDF document. Tried making it something other than a PDF but couldn't. Press release JOINT BASE ANACOSTIA-BOLLING – FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE February 6, 2024 DIA report confirms the Houthis’ use of Iranian missiles and unmanned aerial vehicles to conduct attacks across Middle East JOINT BASE ANACOSTIA-BOLLING — Analysis confirms that Houthi forces have employed various Iranian-origin missiles and unmanned aerial vehicles against military and civilian targets throughout the region, according to an unclassified report released today by the Defense Intelligence Agency. “Iran: Enabling Houthi Attacks Across the Middle East” provides a comparative analysis of publicly available images of Iranian missiles and UAVs to those displayed and employed by Houthi forces in Yemen to attack commercial shipping in the Red Sea and civilian and port infrastructure across the region. The report highlights the evolving and strengthening relationship between the Houthis and Iran. Since 2014, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Qods Force (IRGC-QF) has provided the Houthis a growing arsenal of sophisticated weapons and training. Iran’s aid has enabled the Houthis to conduct a campaign of missile and UAV attacks against commercial shipping in the Red Sea since November 2023, threatening freedom of navigation and international commerce in one of the world’s most critical waterways. DIA has released the report as part of ongoing transparency efforts to enhance public understanding of the Defense Intelligence Agency’s mission and to provide insights on Department of Defense and national security issues. Information within the report is considered current as of January 17, 2024 View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
The IDF releases footage of airstrikes from the last few hours, on what it says are Hezbollah sites near southern Lebanon’s Mays al-Jabal and Odaisseh.
Fighting continues in southern Gaza's Khan Younis, with the IDF saying troops of the 7th Armored Brigade killed dozens of Hamas operatives over the past day. The brigade, in addition to using tank shelling and sniper fire, called in several airstrikes on Hamas gunmen, the IDF says. The IDF struck a Hezbollah position in southern Lebanon's Marwahin, where several members of the terror group were gathered. The 146th Division's intelligence and intelligence collection units spotted Hezbollah operatives entering the site earlier today, and quickly called in an airstrike, the IDF says. Last night in Ramallah. Palestinian terrorists settlers hurled Molotov cocktails towards the IDF forces. If an Apache clears the hills first the next night, know the context behind it. |
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More Israeli airstrikes:
Israeli advances and fighting in Khan Younis: |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
The IDF confirms it has launched a new large-scale raid on Gaza City's Zeitoun neighbourhood, killing Hamas operatives and locating weapons in the process, while troops continue to battle the terror group in southern Gaza's Khan Younis.
The IDF says the Israeli Air Force and 215th Artillery Regiment carried out strikes against dozens of Hamas targets in Zeitoun, including observation posts, weapon depots, and tunnels. The 401st Armored Brigade then entered the neighborhood, raiding suspicious buildings. Amid the operation so far, dozens of Hamas operatives have been killed in clashes and by airstrikes, according to the IDF. Israeli troops killed three Palestinian gunmen, detained 14 terror suspects, and carried out an airstrike amid a raid in the West Bank city of Jenin overnight. The operation was carried out by the Duvdevan commando unit, Haruv reconnaissance unit, and Border Police officers. The troops also seized weapons and located explosive devices hidden under the roads in Jenin. The IDF struck three Hezbollah command rooms in south Lebanon, as well as carried out artillery shelling to "remove threats" in Alma ash-Shab and Dhayra. Yesterday, the IDF says the 869th Combat Intelligence Collection Unit spotted several Hezbollah operatives entering a building in south Lebanon's Yaroun, and quickly called in an airstrike against it. The IDF has uncovered another major Hamas tunnel network in southern Gaza's Khan Younis, believed to have been used by the terror group's senior officials. Troops of the elite Yahalom combat engineering unit and additional forces under the 98th Division raided the underground passages, where they encountered several blast doors and other blockages set up by Hamas operatives. The troops breached the barricades and identified Hamas gunmen in the tunnel, who were then killed in close-quarters combat and with other "special means," according to the IDF. The tunnel — more than a kilometer long — included living quarters, as well as water and electricity infrastructure. It estimates that Hamas invested millions of shekels in its construction. |
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Times of Israel: Signs of life from Sinwar, Hamas police opened fire on protestors at anti-Hamas protest in Gaza
Highlights An anti-Hamas Telegram channel shared a series of videos on Tuesday night documenting protests against the terror group in the Strip. Clips published on the “Gaza’s Liberators” channel, people are..chanting slogans against Hamas leaders: “Bring down Hamas,” “The people want a bag of flour, and “Sinwar, Haniyeh, the people are the victims,” referencing Hamas’s Gaza leader Yahya Sinwar and politburo chief Ismail Haniyeh. They [demonstrations] took place in Rafah...and Jabaliya, in the north of the Strip..Israeli TV reported that Hamas security forces opened fire on the crowds. In Jabaliya, one person was reportedly killed and three were seriously wounded. Over the past weeks, videos have emerged showing other...anti-Hamas rallies in the Strip, including one last Friday, when riots broke out at the Rafah Crossing to Egypt, after a Palestinian teen was shot dead by Hamas police as he tried to grab items from a humanitarian aid truck. Various video clips [filmed in Gaza after 7 October] have shown gunmen from the group confiscating trucks carrying aid for civilians. News reports say the aid is sold by Hamas..on the black market. It is unclear whether Sinwar is still running Hamas on the ground in Gaza. He was...out of contact with the terror group’s leadership abroad since the end of January,. Kan news on Tuesday quoted Israeli officials involved in negotiations saying that they had received messages from Sinwar’s entourage. On Sunday,, 19 Feb, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said that Hamas’s leadership abroad was looking to replace Sinwar. On Tuesday, Channel 12 quoted officials from an Arab country close to Hamas saying that the terror leader was suffering from complications of pneumonia. View Quote Entire article in spoiler Click To View Spoiler N]ew footage purportedly shows Gazan civilians protesting against Hamas An anti-Hamas Telegram channel shared a series of videos on Tuesday night purportedly documenting protests against the terror group in the Strip. In the short clips published on the “Gaza’s Liberators” channel, people are seen chanting slogans against Hamas leaders: “Bring down Hamas,” “The people want a bag of flour, and “Sinwar, Haniyeh, the people are the victims,” referencing Hamas’s Gaza leader Yahya Sinwar and politburo chief Ismail Haniyeh. They were reportedly filmed in Rafah, the southern town where over a million displaced Gazans are sheltering from the flighting, and Jabaliya, in the north of the Strip. Another slogan heard in the footage, which rhymes in Arabic, is: “Listen, listen, Haniyeh, come back home from Turkey; listen, listen, [Osama] Hamdan, come back home from Lebanon.” Osama Hamdan is a top Hamas official living in Beirut. Ismail Haniyeh used to divide his time between Turkey, where most of his family resides and where he reportedly owns vast real estate properties, and Qatar. After the October 7 onslaught, Ankara reportedly demanded that Hamas leaders leave the country, and Haniyeh has been based in Doha ever since. In both locations where the footage was apparently filmed, the channel reported that Hamas security forces opened fire on the crowds. In Jabaliya, one person was reportedly killed and three were seriously wounded. The information could not be independently verified, and it is unclear how many people participated in the protests. Three of the clips were shared by the IDF’s Arabic language spokesperson Avichay Adraee on X on Wednesday, who commented: “The people of Gaza know the cause of the tragedy in the Strip and the consequences of the flood of devastation and terror generated by Sinwar and his clique.” “Al-Aqsa flood” was the name given by Hamas to its October 7 terror operation, in which it murdered 1,200 in southern Israel, mostly civilians, and kidnapped 253 into the Gaza Strip. Over the past weeks, videos have emerged intermittently documenting other apparent anti-Hamas rallies in the Strip, including one last Friday, when riots broke out at the Rafah Crossing to Egypt, after a Palestinian teen was shot dead by Hamas police as he tried to grab items from a humanitarian aid truck. Most of the displaced Palestinians in Rafah — more than half of Gaza’s population — have been sheltering in sprawling makeshift encampments near the Egyptian border amid a spiraling humanitarian crisis. Since the beginning of the war, aid groups have charged that they are not receiving enough supplies to meet the demands of Gazans in the embattled enclave. Israel has claimed UN agencies are failing to keep up with the goods transfers. Last week, Israel’s military liaison to the Palestinians COGAT posted photos on X of what it said was “the content of 500 trucks of humanitarian aid on the Gazan side of Kerem Shalom, AFTER Israeli inspection, waiting to be picked up and distributed by UN organizations.” Various video clips circulated after Israel launched the war against Hamas in October have shown gunmen from the group confiscating trucks carrying aid for civilians. Reports indicate that some of the aid is sold by Hamas members on the black market at highly inflated prices. Meanwhile, in northern Gaza, the UN’s food agency said on Tuesday that it had paused aid deliveries to the area after convoys of trucks faced gunfire and looting. The World Food Program (WFP) had resumed deliveries only two days prior after a three-week suspension but its convoy “faced complete chaos and violence due to the collapse of civil order” and its teams reported witnessing “unprecedented levels of desperation,” it said. In another video from late January, a Gazan man addressed Israeli soldiers in Hebrew and lashed out at the terror group’s leadership for abandoning Gazan civilians and living a life of luxury abroad. “We have nothing to do with all of this. It was Sinwar and Haniyeh,” the man shouted. “Haniyeh is at a restaurant in Turkey, and Sinwar is under the ground, eating meat – while we are here, eating bullets to the head.” Amid the devastation, is unclear whether Sinwar is still running Hamas on the ground in Gaza. He was reportedly out of contact with the terror group’s leadership abroad since the end of January, but Kan news on Tuesday quoted Israeli officials involved in negotiations saying that they had received messages from Sinwar’s entourage relayed by foreign mediators. On Sunday, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said that Hamas’s leadership abroad was looking to replace Sinwar. On Tuesday, Channel 12 quoted officials from an Arab country close to Hamas saying that the terror leader was suffering from complications of pneumonia. The Arab officials reportedly pressured the terror group to lay down its arms, since it has “achieved nothing,” and relayed Hamas’s own admission that “its military apparatus has disintegrated.”
Translation: Oh Sinwar, tell Haniyeh, the people are the victims. Go, go, Sinwar. Listen, listen, Haniyeh.. Oh, soul from Turkey. Listen, listen, Hamdan.. Oh, soul from Lebanon. Videos circulating from Jabalia and from Rafah of demonstrations against Hamas leaders. The residents of Gaza know the cause of the tragedy in the Gaza Strip and the results. The flood of devastation and terrorism produced by Sinwar and his group View Quote Tweet from December showing civilians taking supplies from aid truck
Translation: Gaza residents loot aid trucks from the United Arab Emirates that arrived in the Gaza Strip through the Rafah crossing View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Massive New IDF Drone Designed to Carry Air-to-Air Missiles, Guided Bombs and More:
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Institute for Study of War backgrounder 21 February The IDF is running clearing operations in parts of Gaza City that were previously cleared. They are finding new tunnels in areas they've controlled for nearly 3 months. Not criticizing the IDF--just pointing out this operation will last a long time. More reports of EFPs being used in central and northern Gaza strip--saw a lot of them in December and again earlier this month. Not sure if Palestinians import them or they have the capability to make them on their own. Key Takeaways: Gaza Strip The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said that two brigades launched a new clearing operation in Zaytoun, southern Gaza City. The 401st and the Nahal Brigades (both assigned to the 162nd Division) conducted clearing operations targeting Palestinian militia infrastructure and fighters. The 401st Brigade recently completed a similar clearing operation targeting Hamas forces in western Gaza. An Israeli Army Radio correspondent said that the 162nd Division’s operation in Zaytoun captured ammunition manufacturing sites and a tunnel that connects Gaza City to the central Gaza Strip. Such a tunnel may have enabled Palestinian fighters to infiltrate previously cleared areas of the northern Gaza Strip. Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad fighters detonated four explosively-formed penetrators (EFP) targeting Israeli armor in Zaytoun. Israeli forces expanded clearing operations to “new areas” east and west of Khan Younis on February 21. The Givati Brigade killed “many” fighters in new areas of eastern Khan Younis over the past day. ISW-CTP assesses that Israeli forces have not cleared suburban and agricultural land east of Khan Younis. The 35th Paratrooper Brigade (assigned to the 98th Division) expanded operations targeting Palestinian fighters and infrastructure to new areas west of Khan Younis on February 21. Palestinian fighters conducted several attacks targeting Israeli forces operating in Khan Younis. The Popular Resistance Committees and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine—both militias aligned with Hamas in the current war—targeted an Israeli military vehicle in Khan Younis with an EFP. Hamas separately targeted an Israeli tank with an EFP in al Hawuz, western Khan Younis. PIJ and Popular Resistance Committee fighters mortared Israeli armor and infantry positions east of Jabalia in a combined operation on February 21.[57] The IDF said that mortars fired from Jabalia entered Israeli territory. The IDF uncovered and destroyed a 1 km long tunnel used by Hamas leaders in central Khan Younis. Yahalom combat engineers and the 98th Division raided the tunnel to located intelligence and kill the fighters inside. The tunnel had several blast doors, fortifications, electricity, and water infrastructure. The IDF said that the tunnel’s defenses and infrastructure likely cost ”millions of shekels.” The IDF also published a map of Hamas’ tunnel infrastructure that it has located throughout the Gaza Strip. Map of tunnel discovered yesterday--videos of tunnels below. Exchange ceasefire talks Israel is preparing to attend a high-level ceasefire talks in Paris on February 23, according to Israeli media. Hamas Deputy Chairman in Gaza Khalil al Hayya provided Hamas‘ three priorities in negotiations in a February 19 interview with al Jazeera. These priorities were the providing relief to Gazans to enable them to return to their normal lives, ending the war, and concluding a prisoner exchange that frees 10,000 prisoners in Israeli custody. A journalist working with IDF-operated Israeli Army Radio claimed that Lebanese Hezbollah and ceasefire mediators are pressuring Hamas to drop some of their “high” demands in ceasefire and hostage negotiations. Hezbollah is reportedly pressuring Hamas to drop its demand that Israeli release all its Palestinian prisoners, especially those who have been convicted of severe crimes. Southern Lebanon Golan Heights Lebanese Hezbollah conducted at least twelve attacks from southern Lebanon into northern Israel after CTP-ISW's last data cutoff on February 20. Iran Iranian sources told Reuters on February 21 that Iran provided hundreds of short-range ballistic missiles (SRBM) to Russia in early January. Iran’s arms sales to Russia are part of Iran’s efforts to generate revenue to support its deteriorating economy. Iran’s provision of these missile systems could improve Russia’s ability to penetrate Ukrainian air defenses. Iraq-Russia Russian and Iraqi officials discussed deepening judicial and economic ties on February 21. Iraqi Federal Integrity Commission Chairman Haider Hanoun, who is affiliated with the Badr Organization, and Russian Prosecutor General Igor Krasnov signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) for anti-corruption coordination and training on February 21. Iranian-aligned Iraqi actors have previously used Iraq’s judicial system to target political opposition. ISW previously reported on the Kremlin‘s use of the Russian Prosecutor General‘s Office to seize and nationalize assets from Russians and to widely apply administrative law to stifle any perceived source of opposition. Yemen The Houthis likely conducted a missile attack targeting an unspecified commercial vessel in the Red Sea on February 21. The vessel’s crew reported an explosion and flash of light approximately 40 nautical miles west of Houthi-controlled Hudaydah, Yemen. The United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) reported that the vessel and crew were unharmed. Houthi-controlled media claimed that the United States and United Kingdom conducted three strikes on unspecified targets near Houthi-controlled al Salif on February 21.[65]. View Quote Videos of tunnels discovered yesterday in Khan Younis inside spoiler Click To View Spoiler ????? ?????? ?????? | ??"? ????? ????? ?? ????? ????? ?????? ????? ???? ???? | ??"? ???? ???? ?????? ??????? ????? ????? ????? ????? | ??"? ????? ??????? ?????? ?? ????? ???? | ??"? |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Haaretz | News Israel-Hamas War Day 139 | One Killed, 10 Wounded in Terror Attack Near West Bank Settlement of Ma'aleh Adumim Feb 22, 2024
RECAP: One killed, 10 wounded in terror attack near West Bank settlement of Ma'aleh Adumim Here's what you need to know on day 139 of the war: ■ Turkish Foreign Minister Fidan called on the international community to take a more active role towards an urgent cease-fire in Gaza and a two-state solution to the conflict during talks at the G20 meeting in Brazil. ■ China demands World Court to speak out on Israeli occupation as "Justice has been long delayed." ■ Yemen's Houthis say that they will ban all American and British-owned ships from passing through the Red Sea. They added that the ban will also include ships traveling under the flags of the United States and Great Britain from crossing through the area. ■ One Israeli, 26-year-old Matan Elmaliach, was killed and 10 wounded in a shooting attack near Ma'aleh Adumim, a West Bank settlement near Jerusalem. Two of the three terrorists were shot and killed, and the third was wounded. ■ A home in Kfar Yuval, a moshav along the border with Lebanon, was set on fire after it was struck by an anti-tank missile. The fire was put out by fire crews and emergency volunteers, according to the Israel Fire and Rescue Authority. ■ The IDF, Shin Bet and border police arrested 17 wanted persons in the West Bank overnight into Thursday, also confiscating weapons and destroying explosives. ■ UKMTO reported that a ship sailing southeast of the port city of Aden in Yemen was attacked by two missiles and that a fire broke out on board. No further details about the case have yet been provided. ■ Israel's Arrow defense system successfully intercepted an inbound missile over the Red Sea, hours after the U.S. military said it had targeted Houthi sites in Yemen. View Quote
Attached File Houthis say they will ban all American, British-owned ships from crossing through Red Sea Yemen's Houthis say that they will ban all American and British-owned ships from passing through the Red Sea. They added that the ban will also include ships traveling under the flags of the United States and Great Britain from crossing through the area. View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Haaretz | Israel News One Killed, 10 Wounded in Shooting Attack at West Bank Checkpoint
One killed, 10 wounded in shooting attack at West Bank checkpoint 26-year-old Matan Elmaliach was shot and killed in Thursday's attack ■ Eleven people, including a pregnant woman, were wounded ■ Police shot all three terrorists, killing two and wounding one A preliminary investigation of the shooting found that three terrorists arrived in two cars at the Al-Zaim checkpoint, just outside of the settlement, and began shooting cars standing in traffic using automatic weapons, including at M-16 and Carlo gun. Police shot the three terrorists involved in the attack, killing two and wounding one. Officers later discovered a grenade and ammunition in one of their cars. The terrorists have been identified as two brothers – Muhammad Zuahara, 26, and Kadam Zuahara, 31– and Ahmed Alohash, 31, residents of villages in the Bethlehem area. Kadam Zuahara was imprisoned in the past for working in Israel illegally Entire article Click To View Spoiler The scene of the shooting attack near the entrance of Ma'aleh Adumim on Thursday.Credit: Olivier Fitoussi A 26-year-old Israeli was killed and 11 people were wounded in a shooting attack near the West Bank settlement of Ma'aleh Adumim on Thursday. A preliminary investigation of the shooting found that three terrorists arrived in two cars at the Al-Zaim checkpoint, just outside of the settlement, and began shooting cars standing in traffic using automatic weapons, including at M-16 and Carlo gun. Police shot at the three terrorists involved in the attack, killing two and wounding one. Officers later discovered a grenade and ammunition in one of their cars. Hours after the terror attack, the victim was identified as Matan Elmaliach. The terrorists have been identified as two brothers – Muhammad Zuahara, 26, and Kadam Zuahara, 31– and Ahmed Alohash, 31, residents of villages in the Bethlehem area. Kadam Zuahara was imprisoned in the past for working in Israel illegally. Several of the wounded were evacuated to the Shaare Zedek Medical Center and the Hadassah Mount Scopus Hospital, including a pregnant woman. "Based on the amount of weapons seized from the terrorists, this incident could have ended in a much larger number of casualties," said a senior security official. Police estimate the attack was planned for some time. National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir arrived at the scene of the attack and spoke to the press. The minister said he expects more barriers and restrictions on movement for Palestinians, adding that "The right to life of the Jewish residents of Judea and Samaria outweighs the right to freedom of movement of the residents of the Palestinian Authority." Additionally, he said he would continue to distribute weapons to citizens. "A very big disaster was avoided here thanks to the fact that all the police officers have weapons and the citizens have weapons," said Ben-Gvir. "There were those who criticized me for that, but I think that today everyone understands that weapons save lives," he added. Minister Ben-Gvir at the scene of the shooting attack on Thursday.Credit: Olivier Fitoussi Commenting on the attack, the heads of councils of the West Bank settlements said that traffic congestion at the checkpoints in general, and at the Al-Zaim checkpoint in particular, are a security risk and called for a solution, emphasizing West Bank roads where both Israeli and Palestinian vehicles travel. Additionally, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich demanded that Prime Minister Netanyahu "immediately approve plans for thousands of housing units in Ma'aleh Adumim and the entire area." Traffic at the scene of the attack at the checkpoint at the entrace to Ma'aleh Adumim on Thursday.Credit: Olivier Fitoussi Arik Ben-Shimon, whose son Hananya was moderately wounded in the attack, his son shot at the terrorists and was hit with two bullets. He had returned from reserve duty in Khan Yunis last week and was on his way to work as a tour security guard Thursday morning. "He has a long rehabilitation ahead of him, but we're glad he got out alive. And it's clear to us that he's a hero," said Ben-Shimon. Hamas and Islamic Jihad welcomed the attack but did not take responsibility for it. Both organizations called for increasing confrontations with the army and the settlers, especially in Jerusalem. Less than a week ago, last Friday, two people were killed and four were injured in a shooting attack at the Ram intersection, near Gedera, where a terrorist fired at people at a bus stop. |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Institute for Study of War backgrounder 22 Feb Key Takeaways: Yemen The Houthis claimed attacks targeting Israel, a commercial ship, and a US warship on February 22. The group launched two anti-ship ballistic missiles that hit the UK-owned, Palau-flagged MV Islander in the Gulf of Aden. The Houthis separately claimed an attack targeting an unspecified US destroyer in the Red Sea. US CENTCOM stated that it intercepted six Houthi one-way attack drones in the Red Sea. The Houthi military spokesperson claimed the group launched drones and missiles targeting unspecified targets in Eilat, Israel. Israel intercepted a surface-to-surface missile south of Eilat on February 21. Iran and the Houthis are likely using their attacks in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden to test and refine their approach to striking naval targets. Houthi leader Abdulmalik al Houthi stated on February 22 that the group will “escalate” its operations targeting shipping around the Red Sea. Abdulmalik added that the group would introduce "submarine weapons,” likely referring to unmanned underwater vehicles (UUV), but gave no further details. The Houthis — enabled directly by Iran — have used combinations of cruise and ballistic missiles as well as aerial, surface, and underwater drones to attack civilian and military vessels around the Red Sea since November 2023. Iranian military advisers are providing targeting intelligence to support the Houthis’ attacks targeting US naval vessels Northern and Central Gaza Strip The Israel Defense Forces 162nd Division continued to conduct clearing operations in Zaytoun, eastern Gaza City. Israeli forces launched new, “division-wide” clearing operation in Zaytoun on February 20. Israeli forces killed approximately 20 fighters and directed airstrikes to attack over 10 unspecified targets. Palestinian militias, including Hamas, clashed with Israeli forces in Zaytoun using small arms and anti-tank rocket-propelled grenades (RPG). Palestinian militias used mortars and rockets in most of their attacks targeting Israeli forces in the northern Gaza Strip on February 22. The militias targeted Israeli positions in Zaytoun as well as in the northeastern Gaza Strip. The Palestinian Mujahideen Movement mortared an IDF “dispatch site” east of Beit Hanoun. The Palestinian Mujahideen Movement is a Palestinian faction aligned with Hamas that has expressed close ties with Iran. The IDF Nahal Brigade (assigned to the 162nd Division) located and destroyed rocket launchers during clearing operations in the central Gaza Strip on February 22. Palestinian fighters had rigged the launchers to explode, according to the IDF. Southern Gaza Strip Israeli forces continued to conduct clearing operations in western Khan Younis. The IDF Givati Brigade (assigned to the 162nd Division) used sniper fire to ambush a Palestinian fighter cell in western Khan Younis. The IDF 89th Commando Brigade (assigned to the 98th Division) located weapons and documents affiliated with Hamas during clearing operations in the area. The Hamas-run Gazan Health Ministry reported on February 22 that Israeli forces raided Nasser Hospital in western Khan Younis shortly after withdrawing from it. Nasser Hospital had been the largest functioning hospital in the Gaza Strip until Israeli forces raided it on February 15. IIsrael received “credible intelligence” that Hamas-held hostages were in the hospital and detained ”hundreds” of Hamas fighters there. Political Negotiations Hamas said that there may be progress in negotiations with Israel over a prisoner-for-hostage deal. Hamas International Relations head Musa Abu Marzouk said on February 22, “there may be progress in the negotiations of a prisoner swap in the near future.” The Wall Street Journal reported on February 22 that Egyptian officials said that Hamas is ready to lower the number of Palestinian fighters it wants released as part of a deal. Israel previously refused to further engage in hostage talks because Hamas demanded that Israel release thousands of Palestinian prisoners as part of the deal. The Egyptian officials also stated that Hamas will not release Israeli soldiers until there is a permanent ceasefire and a full Israeli withdrawal from the Gaza Strip. West Bank Israeli forces have clashed with Palestinian fighters at least four times in the West Bank. Three Palestinian attackers fired small arms at Israeli civilian vehicles at an Israeli checkpoint outside of Jerusalem on February 22. The attackers killed one Israeli civilian and injured at least eleven others before Israeli police killed all three attackers at the checkpoint. Iraq Former Iraqi Parliament Speaker Mohammad al Halbousi discussed the US military presence in Iraq with US Senate Foreign Relations Committee member Chris Coons and US Ambassador to Iraq Alina Romanowski. Halbousi described the negotiations as important for creating a “sustainable bilateral partnership” between the United States and Iraq. Halbousi, Coons, and Romanowski also emphasized the need to “maintain security cooperation” between the United States and Baghdad to root out the “remnants of terrorism.” Iran and its Iraqi proxy and partner militias have intensified their campaign to expel the United States from Iraq since October 2023. Unspecified individuals unsuccessfully attempted to assassinate State of Law Coalition parliamentarian Bagher Kadhim Naser al Saadi in al Jadriyah, Baghdad, on February 22. This assassination attempt comes amid an uptick in likely politically motivated killings between competing Shia factions in Baghdad and southern Iraq in recent weeks. Iran Iranian Strategic Foreign Relations Council Chairman Kamal Kharazi met with senior Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad officials in Tehran. View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Originally Posted By michigan66: https://www.understandingwar.org/sites/default/files/DraftIsraelCOT%20February%2022%2C2024.png https://www.understandingwar.org/sites/default/files/Gaza%20Clearing%20Map%20February%2022%2C%202024.png Institute for Study of War backgrounder 22 Feb https://www.understandingwar.org/sites/default/files/Houthi%20CoT%20in%20Yemen%20February%2022%2C2024.png View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By michigan66: https://www.understandingwar.org/sites/default/files/DraftIsraelCOT%20February%2022%2C2024.png https://www.understandingwar.org/sites/default/files/Gaza%20Clearing%20Map%20February%2022%2C%202024.png Institute for Study of War backgrounder 22 Feb Key Takeaways: Yemen The Houthis claimed attacks targeting Israel, a commercial ship, and a US warship on February 22. The group launched two anti-ship ballistic missiles that hit the UK-owned, Palau-flagged MV Islander in the Gulf of Aden. The Houthis separately claimed an attack targeting an unspecified US destroyer in the Red Sea. US CENTCOM stated that it intercepted six Houthi one-way attack drones in the Red Sea. The Houthi military spokesperson claimed the group launched drones and missiles targeting unspecified targets in Eilat, Israel. Israel intercepted a surface-to-surface missile south of Eilat on February 21. Iran and the Houthis are likely using their attacks in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden to test and refine their approach to striking naval targets. Houthi leader Abdulmalik al Houthi stated on February 22 that the group will “escalate” its operations targeting shipping around the Red Sea. Abdulmalik added that the group would introduce "submarine weapons,” likely referring to unmanned underwater vehicles (UUV), but gave no further details. The Houthis — enabled directly by Iran — have used combinations of cruise and ballistic missiles as well as aerial, surface, and underwater drones to attack civilian and military vessels around the Red Sea since November 2023. Iranian military advisers are providing targeting intelligence to support the Houthis’ attacks targeting US naval vessels Northern and Central Gaza Strip The Israel Defense Forces 162nd Division continued to conduct clearing operations in Zaytoun, eastern Gaza City. Israeli forces launched new, “division-wide” clearing operation in Zaytoun on February 20. Israeli forces killed approximately 20 fighters and directed airstrikes to attack over 10 unspecified targets. Palestinian militias, including Hamas, clashed with Israeli forces in Zaytoun using small arms and anti-tank rocket-propelled grenades (RPG). Palestinian militias used mortars and rockets in most of their attacks targeting Israeli forces in the northern Gaza Strip on February 22. The militias targeted Israeli positions in Zaytoun as well as in the northeastern Gaza Strip. The Palestinian Mujahideen Movement mortared an IDF “dispatch site” east of Beit Hanoun. The Palestinian Mujahideen Movement is a Palestinian faction aligned with Hamas that has expressed close ties with Iran. The IDF Nahal Brigade (assigned to the 162nd Division) located and destroyed rocket launchers during clearing operations in the central Gaza Strip on February 22. Palestinian fighters had rigged the launchers to explode, according to the IDF. Southern Gaza Strip Israeli forces continued to conduct clearing operations in western Khan Younis. The IDF Givati Brigade (assigned to the 162nd Division) used sniper fire to ambush a Palestinian fighter cell in western Khan Younis. The IDF 89th Commando Brigade (assigned to the 98th Division) located weapons and documents affiliated with Hamas during clearing operations in the area. The Hamas-run Gazan Health Ministry reported on February 22 that Israeli forces raided Nasser Hospital in western Khan Younis shortly after withdrawing from it. Nasser Hospital had been the largest functioning hospital in the Gaza Strip until Israeli forces raided it on February 15. IIsrael received “credible intelligence” that Hamas-held hostages were in the hospital and detained ”hundreds” of Hamas fighters there. Political Negotiations Hamas said that there may be progress in negotiations with Israel over a prisoner-for-hostage deal. Hamas International Relations head Musa Abu Marzouk said on February 22, “there may be progress in the negotiations of a prisoner swap in the near future.” The Wall Street Journal reported on February 22 that Egyptian officials said that Hamas is ready to lower the number of Palestinian fighters it wants released as part of a deal. Israel previously refused to further engage in hostage talks because Hamas demanded that Israel release thousands of Palestinian prisoners as part of the deal. The Egyptian officials also stated that Hamas will not release Israeli soldiers until there is a permanent ceasefire and a full Israeli withdrawal from the Gaza Strip. West Bank Israeli forces have clashed with Palestinian fighters at least four times in the West Bank. Three Palestinian attackers fired small arms at Israeli civilian vehicles at an Israeli checkpoint outside of Jerusalem on February 22. The attackers killed one Israeli civilian and injured at least eleven others before Israeli police killed all three attackers at the checkpoint. Iraq Former Iraqi Parliament Speaker Mohammad al Halbousi discussed the US military presence in Iraq with US Senate Foreign Relations Committee member Chris Coons and US Ambassador to Iraq Alina Romanowski. Halbousi described the negotiations as important for creating a “sustainable bilateral partnership” between the United States and Iraq. Halbousi, Coons, and Romanowski also emphasized the need to “maintain security cooperation” between the United States and Baghdad to root out the “remnants of terrorism.” Iran and its Iraqi proxy and partner militias have intensified their campaign to expel the United States from Iraq since October 2023. Unspecified individuals unsuccessfully attempted to assassinate State of Law Coalition parliamentarian Bagher Kadhim Naser al Saadi in al Jadriyah, Baghdad, on February 22. This assassination attempt comes amid an uptick in likely politically motivated killings between competing Shia factions in Baghdad and southern Iraq in recent weeks. Iran Iranian Strategic Foreign Relations Council Chairman Kamal Kharazi met with senior Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad officials in Tehran. https://www.understandingwar.org/sites/default/files/Houthi%20CoT%20in%20Yemen%20February%2022%2C2024.png The accuracy of the Iranian anti-ship ballistic missiles seems to be increasing. |
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Haaretz | News Israel-Hamas War Day 140 | Netanyahu Unveils Israel's Plan for Postwar Gaza; Palestinian Authority: Proposal Prevents Establishing Palestinian State Feb 23, 2024
RECAP: Netanyahu unveils Israel's plan for postwar Gaza; Israel plans settlement expansion in response to West Bank terror attack Here's what you need to know on day 140 of the Israel-Hamas war: ■ Four and a half months after the start of the Israel-Hamas war, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has unveiled his plan for "the day after," which he brought late Thursday night to the war cabinet from approval. ■ Israel is planning to build thousands of housing units in West Bank settlements in response to Thursday's terror attack in which one person was killed and 10 wounded. ■ PM Netanyahu confirmed an Israeli delegation will fly to Paris Friday for new round of hostage release talks. ■ Israel's defense minister met with the White House envoy to the Middle East and said that Israel is "preparing the continuation of intense ground operations." ■ 13 Jewish House Democrats urged U.S. President Joe Biden to redouble his efforts to facilitate a temporary cease-fire. ■ A leading member of Hamas said he believes a new hostage agreement is possible and that Gaza could also be led by another "competent Palestinian government." ■ Nova music festival survivors announced they were suing the Associated Press for aiding and abetting Hamas on October 7. ■ Reports in Lebanon said that four people were killed and several others wounded in an Israeli drone strike in southern Lebanon, including a senior member of Hezbollah's missile corps. ■ UNRWA has no "plan B" past March should donor countries that withheld funding uphold their suspensions, the head of its Lebanon office said. ■ CENTCOM said that the U.S. shot down six Houthi drones in the Red Sea, and that the Houthis lightly damaged a U.K-owned cargo carrier with two ballistic missiles later Thursday View Quote People inspect a burned car struck from the air by Israeli forces in Jenin, West Bank on Thursday. Palestinian Islamic Jihad: Two members killed by IDF in West Bank The Palestinian Islamic Jihad organization published an obituary after the IDF killed two of its members in the West Bank city of Jenin. According to the statement, those killed in the attack were Said Jaradat and Yasser Hanoun, who was labeled a "field commander.". The statement also reports the two were attacked from the air while in a vehicle. View Quote Pentagon: Austin told Gallant that Israel needs credible plan to protect civilians in Rafah U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin told his Israeli counterpart Yoav Gallant that Israel needs a "credible plan to ensure the safety of and support for the more than one million people sheltering in Rafah before any military operations proceed there." (What Gallant should have said: "Great idea, Mr. Secretary, sir. Please to send me a copy of OPLAN for liberation of Manila in 1945. More info at link here.) In a phone conversation on Thursday, Austin also raised "the need to improve the deconfliction process with humanitarian groups and to ensure more aid reaches Palestinian civilians, as looting and violence hinder access to humanitarian convoys in Gaza," the Pentagon statement said. (Imagine having to listen to this bullshit with a straight face. "Violence hinders access"--no shit Lloyd, that's why we're trying to shoot, drown, blow up, run over, and otherwise kill the ones hindering access--Hamas) View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
Red Sea Update On Feb. 22, at approximately 5 p.m. (Sanaa time), U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) forces conducted self-defense strikes against four Iranian-backed Houthi unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) and two mobile anti-ship cruise missiles (ASCM) that were prepared to launch from Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen towards the Red Sea. On Feb. 23, between 3:30 and 5 a.m., CENTCOM forces shot down three Houthi one-way attack UAV near several commercial ships operating in the Red Sea. There was no damage to any ships. CENTCOM forces identified the UAVs and ASCMs and determined they presented an imminent threat to merchant vessels and to the U.S. Navy ships in the region. These actions will protect freedom of navigation and make international waters safer and more secure for U.S. Navy and merchant vessels View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
The targets included a military post in south Lebanon's Zibqin, from which a missile was fired earlier today at the northern community of Shlomi, an observation post in Khaim, and other Hezbollah infrastructure:
The mortars fired from the Jabaliya area in northern Gaza landed in open areas in Israel, causing no injuries. The IDF says the Gaza Division spotted the launch and called in an airstrike against the operative, which was carried out minutes later. Police release footage from the shooting attack near Ma'ale Admum, showing an officer shooting one of the gunmen dead. The IDF says it is continuing a large-scale operation in Gaza City's Zeitoun neighborhood, during which troops have been raiding Hamas sites and killing its operatives in the process. Over the past day, the IDF says the 215th Artillery Regiment directed airstrikes against some 10 Hamas sites in Zeitoun, as the 401st Armored Brigade killed some 20 operatives in the area. The 401st Brigade also destroyed numerous Hamas sites in the Gaza City neighborhood The IDF carried out airstrikes with fighter jets against Hezbollah sites in southern Lebanon. The targets included a building in Maroun al-Ras and other infrastructure belonging to the terror group in Kafr Kila and Khaim. |
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