WAR Regional conflict brewing in the Mediterranean

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Cohen: US must immediately issue credible military threat against Iran​


Charles Bybelezer​



The Israeli foreign minister’s call comes after IAEA inspectors discover uranium enriched to near weapons-grade in the Islamic Republic.



Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen on Tuesday called on the United States to issue a credible military threat against Iran, after International Atomic Energy Agency inspectors found uranium enriched to near weapons-grade in the Islamic Republic.
“Iran is very close to 90% enrichment of uranium. The United States must put a credible military threat on the table immediately,” said Cohen at an event in Jerusalem hosted by the Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish Organizations. Cohen also slammed Iran for being the world’s “number one” financier of global terrorism.

The IAEA said on Monday it was in talks with Tehran after inspectors last week detected uranium enriched to 84% in the Islamic Republic.
Bloomberg reported on Sunday, citing two senior diplomats, that the IAEA was trying to clarify how Tehran accumulated the material, which is at the highest level of enrichment found by monitors in the country to date.
Iran has been enriching uranium to up to 60% since April 2021. Three months ago, it started enriching to 60% at a second site at Fordow.

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Earlier this month, the IAEA chastised the Islamic Republic for modifying the connection between the two groups of high-tech machines at its Fordow plant. The change was discovered during an unannounced inspection on Jan. 21 at the Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant (FFEP), a location built into a mountain where inspectors are beefing up checks after Iran said it would drastically increase enrichment.

A diplomat cited in a Reuters report implied that the 84% enriched uranium was found at the same site as the reconfigured cascades, or clusters, of centrifuges.
The spokesman for Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization on Monday described the accusation as “slanderous.”
Prior to his visit to Israel earlier this month, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that while Washington prefers a diplomatic path forward with Iran, all options remain on the table.
In an interview with Al Arabiya’s Nadia Bilbassy at the U.S. embassy in Cairo, the top American diplomat said Iran had turned its back on a diplomatic solution.

“Iran had an opportunity to get back into the [2015 nuclear deal] at the end of this past summer,” Blinken said.
“Unfortunately, they rejected what was on the table and had been agreed to by everybody. Now our focus is on the many things that have happened since, including the horrific repression of the Iranian people on the streets of Iran, as young people, women in particular, have been standing up for their basic rights, and very important communities across Iranian society are doing the same thing and are being repressed violently by the regime,” he added.
When asked by Bilbassy whether the United States would pursue a military option if necessary, Blinken replied, “Everything is on the table.”

On Sunday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that Iran was constantly attempting to attack the Jewish state.
“On the Iranian front, our efforts are unceasing for the simple reason that Iran’s acts of aggression are unceasing. Last week, Iran again attacked an oil tanker in the Persian Gulf and struck at the international freedom of navigation,” said Netanyahu.
Iran rejected on Monday Jerusalem’s assertion that Tehran was behind the Feb. 10 attack on the Campo Square, whose owner is Zodiac Maritime, a shipping company led by Israeli billionaire Eyal Ofer.
Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant told the annual Munich Security Conference on Friday that Tehran was also currently engaged in negotiations to sell dozens of countries advanced weapons ahead of the upcoming expiration of a U.N. arms embargo on the Islamic Republic.

“Iran is no longer a ‘local supplier’ serving proxies in the Middle East. It is a ‘multinational corporation,’ a global exporter of advanced weapons,” said Gallant. “From Belarus in Eastern Europe to Venezuela in South America—we have seen Iran delivering UAVs with a range of up to 1,000 kilometers. In fact, Iran is currently holding discussions to sell advanced weapons … to no less than 50 different countries.”
Gallant called on world powers to take concrete steps to prevent the proliferation of Iranian arms once the U.N. arms embargo expires on Oct. 18 in accordance with the terms of the 2015 Iran nuclear deal—the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) from which the United States withdrew in May 2018.
 

jward

passin' thru
US Navy Mideast chief says Iran has 'attention of everyone'
ABC News
5–6 minutes

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates -- Iranian attacks in the waterways of the Middle East and elsewhere in the region “have the attention of everyone” as tensions rise over Tehran's advancing nuclear program, the head of the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet said Tuesday.

Vice Adm. Brad Cooper also told The Associated Press that he's seen a rise in what he described as Iran's “malign activities” in the region over his two years leading the Bahrain-based 5th Fleet.

While Cooper pointed to recent seizures of weapons by American and allied forces in the region as a success, he acknowledged that Iran has been able to carry out drone attacks targeting shipping in the Mideast and other assaults in the region.

“We’re focused on expanding our partnerships," Cooper said on the sidelines of Abu Dhabi's International Defense Exhibition and Conference. "The short answer is the Iranian actions have the attention of everyone.”

Iran's mission to the United Nations did not immediately respond to a request for comment over Cooper's remarks.

The 5th Fleet patrols the crucial Strait of Hormuz, the narrow mouth of the Persian Gulf through which 20% of all oil transits. Its region also stretches as far as the Red Sea up to the Suez Canal, the waterway in Egypt linking the Mideast to the Mediterranean Sea, and the Bab el-Mandeb Strait off Yemen.

Under Cooper's command, which will end with the upcoming arrival of Rear Adm. George Wikoff in Bahrain, likely later this year, the 5th Fleet vastly expanded its use of drones and artificial intelligence to patrol those waterways.

Cooper said the Navy has reached the halfway mark of his goal to have 100 unmanned drones, both sailing and submersible, operating in the region with America's allies. The Navy also conducted a drill Monday with the United Arab Emirates with the systems, he added.

But concerns about Iran have only grown in recent months as Tehran enriches uranium closer than ever to weapons-grade levels and has enough fissile material for several nuclear bombs if it chooses to build them.

There have been several Iranian attacks on commercial shipping the region, including a still-murky drone assault on the tanker Campo Square on Feb. 10 that's been cited by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Iran carried out that attack, which wounded no one on board, according to a U.S. defense official who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence matters.

Iran has denied targeting the vessel, though it has denied other attacks attributed to it since the collapse of the nuclear deal following America's withdrawal from the accord in 2018.

“Obviously the nuclear component is all being handled via diplomatic means," Cooper said. "I think over a two-year period, we have for sure seen an increase in the number of malign activities, much of which we’ve been catching just in the last 60 to 90 days.”

The United States has, however, interdicted a number of ships carrying weapons bound for Yemen's Houthi rebels from Iran, and France as well as seized one. A United Nations arms embargo has prohibited weapons transfers to the Iranian-backed Houthis since 2014.

Cooper declined to say whether the increase in seizures represented new intelligence obtained by the U.S. or an increasing number of vessels heading to Yemen.

“I won’t be able to get to the intelligence piece of it other than to say it’s an area that we’re clearly focused on with our partners," Cooper said. "We’ve had a lot of success and we’re our job is to just remain vigilant and keep at the mission.”

Iran also has briefly seized several of the American drones being tested in the region in late August and early September. However, Cooper said Iran hadn't made an attempt to do so again.

“The Iranian attempted seizures were flagrant. They were unwarranted. They were certainly unprofessional, but most importantly, they were a gross violation of international law,” Cooper said.

“Since then, we’ve had six exercises of varying scale, bilaterally and multilaterally. We’ve had no issues with Iran attempting to do anything with the drones.”

Cooper added that with Israel now working directly with the U.S. military’s Central Command — as Arab nations in the region do — also offered additional support to counter Iran.

“The perspective among regional leaders that the No. 1 threat, or the most-serious threat, is from Iran has allowed us to work more closely with Israel,” he said.
 

jward

passin' thru
Iranian_Nuclear_Program

Report: Israel significantly increasing its preparations for an attack on Iran​

Top defense officials recently participated in five secret discussions, at the end of which a message was conveyed that Israel will not hesitate to act against Iran.​

Israel National News
Israel National News
Feb 22, 2023, 12:05 AM (GMT+2)

IranIsrael-IranIranian Nuclear Program
Israel National NewsDefense/SecurityReport: Israel significantly increasing its preparations for an attack on Iran

Iranian_Nuclear_Program
Report: Israel significantly increasing its preparations for an attack on Iran
Top defense officials recently participated in five secret discussions, at the end of which a message was conveyed that Israel will not hesitate to act against Iran.
Israel National News
Israel National News
Feb 22, 2023, 12:05 AM (GMT+2)
Iran
Israel-Iran
Iranian Nuclear Program



In recent weeks, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has held five secret discussions on the Iranian issue, in which it was decided to significantly raise the level of Israeli preparation and readiness for an attack on the nuclear facilities in the Islamic Republic, Channel 12 News reported on Tuesday.

According to the report, Israel’s top defense officials participated in the discussions, including Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, IDF Chief of Staff Herzi Halevi, the head of the Mossad, the head of the National Security Council, the head of the Military Intelligence Directorate, the head of the Operations Directorate, as well as the operational ranks of the relevant units in the IDF.

The summaries of these meetings, from which messages were conveyed by Prime Minister Netanyahu to US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, President Joe Biden’s National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan and French President Emmanuel Macron, made it clear that if the world does not act against Iran - Israel will be forced to act and will not hesitate to do so.

Related articles:

Israeli-owned tanker attacked by Iranian drones in Persian Gulf
Israel believes Isfahan strike achieved its goals
Iran threatens Israel after drone attack
'Drone attack in Isfahan was the work of the Mossad'

The discussions were convened in light of reports that Iran has enriched uranium to a level of 84%, only 6% short of the enrichment level required for a nuclear bomb.

Meanwhile, Israel in recent days has conveyed messages to Hamas and Hezbollah, noting that the fact that there is an "explosive" political situation in Israel does not mean that Israel is not militarily prepared for any possibility - and will react disproportionately to any attempt to harm it.
 

jward

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Emanuel (Mannie) Fabian
@manniefabian
26m

Replying to
@manniefabian
Palestinian death toll of IDF operation in Nablus rises to nine, the Palestinian Health Ministry says. Another 97 wounded.
.Three of the dead are Lion's Den members. One is wanted over the shooting attack that killed Staff Sgt. Ido Baruch. Another one is also affiliated with PIJ.



9 Palestinians said killed in Nablus amid clashes between gunmen, Israeli forces​


PA health ministry says another 97 wounded in firefights as military surrounds house where 3 terror suspects were hiding out​

By Emanuel Fabian and Alexander Fulbright Today, 1:12 pm


Palestinians clash with Israeli forces during a raid in the northern West Bank city of Nablus, on February 22, 2023. (Zain Jaafar/AFP)
Palestinians clash with Israeli forces during a raid in the northern West Bank city of Nablus, on February 22, 2023. (Zain Jaafar/AFP)



Heavy gun battles between Israeli forces and Palestinian gunmen were reported Wednesday in Nablus after the military said troops were operating in the northern West Bank city.
The Palestinian Authority’s health ministry said nine Palestinians were killed and 97 hurt in the clashes, including six seriously. It did not specify the involvement of those killed and wounded.
There was no immediate statement from the Israel Defense Forces, which announced the operation earlier without giving further details.



Soldiers surrounded a home where three suspects, members of the Lion’s Den terror group, were holed up, demanding they turn themselves in.
The suspects, however, refused to do so, leading the Israeli forces to fire a missile at the building, which the soldiers destroyed.


Reports named two of the suspects as Husam Isleem and Muhammed al-Junaidi, who was also Islamic Jihad’s military commander in Nablus, both of whom were reportedly killed.


One of the suspects was the third member of a cell that killed Staff Sgt. Ido Baruch during a shooting attack in October.


تغطية صحفية: "الطواقم الطبية تواصل نقل المصابين برصاص الاحتلال في نابلس". pic.twitter.com/mkifd2mCTV

Advertisement


— وكالة شهاب للأنباء (@ShehabAgency) February 22, 2023

No Israeli troops were hurt in Wednesday’ raid.

For the past year, the IDF has been conducting near-nightly raids in the West Bank amid a series of Palestinian terror attacks that killed 31 people in 2022, and another 11 since the beginning of the year.


The IDF’s year-long operation has netted more than 2,500 arrests in near-nightly raids. 171 Palestinians were killed in 2022, and another 49 have been killed since the beginning of the year, most of them while carrying out attacks or during clashes with security forces, but some were uninvolved civilians and others under circumstances that are being investigated.
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
Iranian_Nuclear_Program

Report: Israel significantly increasing its preparations for an attack on Iran​

Top defense officials recently participated in five secret discussions, at the end of which a message was conveyed that Israel will not hesitate to act against Iran.​

Israel National News
Israel National News
Feb 22, 2023, 12:05 AM (GMT+2)

IranIsrael-IranIranian Nuclear Program
Israel National NewsDefense/SecurityReport: Israel significantly increasing its preparations for an attack on Iran

Iranian_Nuclear_Program
Report: Israel significantly increasing its preparations for an attack on Iran
Top defense officials recently participated in five secret discussions, at the end of which a message was conveyed that Israel will not hesitate to act against Iran.
Israel National News
Israel National News
Feb 22, 2023, 12:05 AM (GMT+2)
Iran
Israel-Iran
Iranian Nuclear Program



In recent weeks, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has held five secret discussions on the Iranian issue, in which it was decided to significantly raise the level of Israeli preparation and readiness for an attack on the nuclear facilities in the Islamic Republic, Channel 12 News reported on Tuesday.

According to the report, Israel’s top defense officials participated in the discussions, including Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, IDF Chief of Staff Herzi Halevi, the head of the Mossad, the head of the National Security Council, the head of the Military Intelligence Directorate, the head of the Operations Directorate, as well as the operational ranks of the relevant units in the IDF.

The summaries of these meetings, from which messages were conveyed by Prime Minister Netanyahu to US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, President Joe Biden’s National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan and French President Emmanuel Macron, made it clear that if the world does not act against Iran - Israel will be forced to act and will not hesitate to do so.

Related articles:

Israeli-owned tanker attacked by Iranian drones in Persian Gulf
Israel believes Isfahan strike achieved its goals
Iran threatens Israel after drone attack
'Drone attack in Isfahan was the work of the Mossad'

The discussions were convened in light of reports that Iran has enriched uranium to a level of 84%, only 6% short of the enrichment level required for a nuclear bomb.

Meanwhile, Israel in recent days has conveyed messages to Hamas and Hezbollah, noting that the fact that there is an "explosive" political situation in Israel does not mean that Israel is not militarily prepared for any possibility - and will react disproportionately to any attempt to harm it.







EndGameWW3

@EndGameWW3
·
59m

Benjamin Netanyahu preparing for ‘attack on Iranian nuclear installations’
 

jward

passin' thru
#BREAKING Israeli airstrikes hit Gaza strip: @AFP
journalists
#UPDATE The Israeli army launched air strikes on targets in the Gaza Strip at dawn on Thursday, after rockets were fired from the territory into Israel about two hours earlier.

An Israeli army statement says it is "carrying out strikes in the Gaza Strip"
View: https://twitter.com/AFP/status/1628618111112081408?s=20


russia is a terrorist state
@ignis_fatum
⚠️Reports of IDF strikes in northern #Gaza
View: https://twitter.com/ignis_fatum/status/1628613486405115909?s=20


Video from the IDF strikes in #Gaza this morning
#Israel
View: https://twitter.com/ignis_fatum/status/1628614103483789312?s=20


Reports in #Gaza that Hamas launched 2 surface to air missiles that exploded midair as always
⚠️
IDF confirmed that 2 targets were struck, strikes over
 

jward

passin' thru
OSINTdefender
@sentdefender
7h

Israeli De
fense Officials are warning that a War in Gaza could soon breakout if the Negotiating Parties do not come to the Table; this comes after 11 People were Killed this week during Anti-Terror Operations in Nablus.

Aurora Intel
@AuroraIntel
7h

Even the smaller brigades associated to the factions are issuing statements/posts, those that are usually quiet are not today.

Joe Truzman
@JoeTruzman

Official social media channels run by Palestinian militants have strongly signaled a response for the Israeli operation in Nablus today. I'll add that IF anything happens it might not come today, could be in days, weeks or they might not to do anything at all. Though the hints are quite strong compared to previous events in the West Bank.

Last edited
4:19 PM · Feb 22, 2023
 

jward

passin' thru
EndGameWW3
@EndGameWW3
3h

Romania announces the arrest of Muhammad Ibrahim, one of the most prominent financiers of the Lebanese Hezbollah militia.
Ibrahim, classified on the US terrorist list, was arrested upon his arrival at Bucharest Airport.
 

jward

passin' thru
I went ahead n put it on the main, earlier, too-
 

jward

passin' thru
EndGameWW3
@EndGameWW3
2h

The security establishment is preparing for the possibility of launching rockets from the Gaza Strip, so Defense Minister Galant ordered a state of alert in the Gaza border.
 

jward

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timesofisrael.com
IDF bolsters forces in West Bank amid manhunt for Huwara gunman, settler riots
By Emanuel Fabian
6–8 minutes

The Israel Defense Forces on Monday morning said it was bolstering its West Bank division by a third infantry battalion after two were deployed following a deadly shooting attack in the West Bank town of Huwara and subsequent settler rioting in the area a day earlier.

The IDF was continuing a manhunt for a Palestinian gunman who carried out the attack on Sunday morning, killing Hallel and Yagel Yaniv as they drove through Huwara, a Palestinian town regularly traversed by Israeli motorists and often a flashpoint of tensions.

Palestinian media said the IDF had “tightened a siege” around Nablus following the shooting and the riots. Palestinian stores along the Route 60 highway in Huwara were reportedly ordered shut.

The military said that as “part of the expanding security activity” in the Nablus area, the army would “increase the security checks on routes leading in and out of the city.”

The 202nd Paratrooper Battalion was deployed on Sunday evening, the 435th Battalion of the Givati Brigade was deployed on Monday morning, and the 846th Givati Reconnaissance Battalion was to also be deployed on Monday.

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Generally, the IDF’s West Bank division has 13 battalions. Over the past year, that number has fluctuated amid an anti-terror offensive following a series of deadly Palestinian terror attacks, reaching a height of 26 battalions in October, before dropping back down by several battalions.

Settler groups had called for demonstrations to avenge the Palestinian shooting attack in Huwara earlier in the day, and on Sunday evening rampaged through the town, setting fire to homes, storefronts, and cars.

Shortly before the arson attacks began, hundreds of settlers began marching toward Huwara chanting “Revenge,” Army Radio reported.

Israeli troops conduct scans in the West Bank town of Huwara for a gunman who killed two Israelis, February 26, 2023. (Israel Defense Forces)

Palestinian medics said one man was killed, four others were badly wounded, and hundreds more were treated for smoke and tear gas inhalation during the violence in Huwara and other villages neighboring Nablus.

Palestinian media said some 30 homes and cars were torched. Photos and videos on social media showed large fires burning throughout Huwara and lighting up the sky.

Israeli security forces failed to contain the violence for hours despite the early warnings of a planned protest in the Palestinian town. Troops were also preoccupied with searching for the attacker.

A security source cited by the Kan public broadcaster said the rioting only made it harder for the troops to search for the gunman who carried out the attack in the area.

Soldiers are legally permitted — even required in some cases — to intervene to prevent violent attacks, regardless of nationality. The military generally prefers that police deal with the attacks and settler arrests, but police forces are stretched thin in the West Bank.

Still, later Sunday the IDF said “violent riots that erupted at a number of locations” in the West Bank were “being dealt with” by troops and police officers, without mentioning the identity of those involved.

Border Police officers reportedly attempted to disperse the settlers with tear gas.

A spokesperson for Border Police did not respond to requests for comment on the violence.

Hebrew-language media reports said six settlers were detained over the rioting, although some reports suggested four of them had already been released. There was no confirmation from police on the arrests.

The rampage drew angry denunciations from the PA, the European Union, the United States and many Israelis.

A man films with a phone outside a building that was torched overnight in the West Bank town of Huwara near Nablus February 27, 2023. (JAAFAR ASHTIYEH / AFP)

The IDF said the Palestinian gunman opened fire from close range on the Yanivs’ car on the Route 60 highway, then fled the scene, apparently on foot. The brothers were driving from their hometown, the settlement of Har Bracha.

There have been several shooting attacks on Israeli motorists on Route 60 in Huwara. There are plans to build a bypass road for settlers to avoid having to travel through the Palestinian town, but the construction work has been stalled.

In recent months, Palestinian gunmen have repeatedly targeted military posts, troops operating along the West Bank security barrier, Israeli settlements and civilians on the roads.

Tensions between Israel and the Palestinians have been high for the past year, with the IDF conducting near-nightly raids in the West Bank amid a series of deadly Palestinian terror attacks.

However, the nightly raids have been on pause since Wednesday, ahead of and following a Jordan-hosted meeting between Israeli and Palestinian officials on Sunday whose goal is to restore calm to the West Bank and the Gaza Strip amid deadly violence.

Brothers Hallel (left) and Yagel Yaniv, who were killed in a terror attack in the West Bank town of Huwara on February 26, 2023. (Courtesy)

Incidents of vandalism against Palestinians and Israeli security forces are commonly referred to as “price tag” attacks, with far-right perpetrators claiming they are retaliation for Palestinian violence or government policies seen as hostile to the settler movement.

Arrests of perpetrators are rare and rights groups lament that convictions are even more unusual, with the majority of charges in such cases being dropped.

Reports of nationalist crimes against Palestinians in the West Bank surged in recent weeks, following several terror attacks.

Some 500,000 Israelis live in settlements in the West Bank. Among them are several hundred known as the “hilltop youth,” who seek to settle every corner of the biblical land of Israel.

Military officials say there are at most 150 hilltop youth involved in serious incidents of violence against Palestinians, but are worried about the increasing number of “mainstream” settlers supporting their actions or participating themselves.

Ghassan Douglas, a Palestinian official who monitors Israeli settlements in the Nablus region, estimated around 400 Jewish settlers took part in the attack on Sunday night.

Times of Israel staff contributed to this report.
 

jward

passin' thru

Netanyahu bows to U.S. pressure to distance Israel from Putin​


By Tovah Lazaroff​


JERUSALEM — Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has long leaned into his relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin, leveraging it to act as an intermediary between the Kremlin and Washington and to help secure Israel’s northern border with Syria.

What a difference 18 months makes.

Netanyahu returned to power in late December amid expectations that he would pivot Israel in the direction of Russia. He has instead shored up his country’s backing of Kyiv under pressure from Israel’s most significant ally, the U.S. Now he has to weigh alienating Putin by providing defensive arms to Ukraine, a move he has yet to agree to and which Russia has already made it clear would be a red line.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy publicly asked Israel for its advanced David’s Sling system in his virtual address to the Munich Security Conference on Feb. 17, expressing confidence that Israel would eventually acquiesce.
“We do not have yet the David’s Sling from Israel, but I believe it is just temporary,” Zelenskyy said.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba also laid out his country’s demands when he met with his Israeli counterpart, Eli Cohen, in Kyiv on Feb. 16.
“Israel knows perfectly well the list of our military and defensive requests which we have provided … to this government, and we will be waiting for some decisions to be taken,” he said. “We are talking about the provision of the Ukrainian skies.”

Cohen, who was the first high-level Israeli official to visit Ukraine since the start of the war, went to Kyiv on a solidarity trip that included a meeting with Zelenskyy, but he left without promising defensive military help.
Senior Israeli lawmakers have already called on Netanyahu to provide Ukraine with anti-drone and anti-missile systems.
Yuli Edelstein, a member of Netanyahu’s Likud Party who heads the parliamentary Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, traveled to Ukraine and met with Zelenskyy on Feb. 20, along with opposition legislator Ze’ev Elkin, with a message that was markedly different from Cohen’s.
They promised Zelenskyy to do everything possible to help ensure Israel sends defensive weapons.
“Israel can and should do much more than it has done so far,” they said in a statement after the meeting. “We must stop being afraid, and take an active unequivocal position in accordance with the basic moral values, as would be expected from any Western country.”

Automatic sympathy

Elkin and Edelstein both immigrated to Israel from Ukraine decades ago and say they feel automatic sympathy with its citizens under fire. But they also add that they broke ranks with their government, both from a moral position and then a policy one, given Russia’s growing military alliance with Iran, which has said it wants to see Israel wiped off the map.

Tehran has already shown its enmity to Kyiv by providing Russia with battlefield weapons such as armed drones, which Moscow has used against Ukraine, a move that has automatically tightened ties between Netanyahu and Zelenskyy.
So the strengthening of the Russian-Iranian alliance threatens the security not only of Ukraine, but also of Israel, Edelstein and Elkin said, saying both countries were now on the same side when it came to defending their citizens against Iran.
In Jerusalem at the end of January, Secretary of State Antony Blinken pointed to Russia’s growing dependence on Iran to supply weapons for the war and explicitly demanded that Israel boost its support for Kyiv.

“Tehran’s deepening ties with Moscow and the sophisticated weaponry that they’re exchanging to enable one another’s aggression are among the many reasons that we’ve raised with Israel the importance of providing support for all of Ukraine’s needs — humanitarian, economic and security — as it defends its people against Russia’s brutal war of aggression,” Blinken told reporters.

In a sign of a possible concession to Washington, Netanyahu indicated in an interview with CNN that aired immediately after Blinken’s visit that he was weighing Ukraine’s long-standing request to provide anti-drone and anti-missile technology.
“I am certainly looking into it,” Netanyahu said. In an unusually blunt statement, he also indicated that Israel was working covertly to prevent Iranian-made arms from arriving in Russia, with its regional policy of attacking Iranian targets connected to arms production or arms flow. Israel is “taking action against certain weapons development that Iran has, and Iran invariably exports them,” he said.

An example of that kind of action was most likely on display this month as Damascus blamed Israel over a rocket attack against a gathering of Syrian and Iranian technical experts in drone manufacturing, according to Reuters.

Avoiding a Russian-Israel conflict

Moscow has focused on Israel’s public actions rather than its covert ones. Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova warned this month that Israel’s provision of defensive military equipment to Ukraine would lead to an “escalation of the crisis.”
Countries “supplying weapons should understand that we will consider these weapons as legitimate targets,” she said, adding that the position “is well-known to all.”
Netanyahu told NBC News in December that he wanted to avoid a Russian-Israeli war. The question of whether Netanyahu, who despite his hawkish reputation is historically loath to use the country’s full military might, should put Israel on a possible collision course with Russia has been a growing debate in Israel.
Israel’s well-understood beneficial relationship with Russia — a relationship that has been personalized by Netanyahu’s strong ties to Putin — has made many hesitant to have Netanyahu pivot fully to Ukraine.

U.S. demands are testing Vladimir Putin and Benjamin Netanyahu's strong relationship.Aleksey Nikolskyi / Sputnik via AP
On the security front, Russia has been Netanyahu’s partner in neighboring Syria, where it is one of President Bashar al-Assad’s most important military backers. An agreement with Israel has made it possible for the Israeli army to conduct aerial raids against Iranian-linked targets there.
“We are in a very different situation than Europe and the U.S.” when it comes to Russia, said political science professor Reuven Hazan of Jerusalem’s Hebrew University. “Israeli prime ministers know the relevance of an open dialogue with Russia when it comes to our national security.”

Zvi Magen, who first was Israel’s ambassador to Ukraine and then to Russia in the 1990s, said that if Israel were to give Ukraine weapons, especially ones that would change the balance of the conflict, it would be “going to war with Russia.”
There is the danger, Hazan said, that Russia could close the airspace over Syria, turning to a “land bridge” for the advanced weapons that Iran is trying to ship to Hezbollah in Lebanon, he said.
Israel has also been concerned by the impact on Russia’s Jewish community of 83,000 should ties be severed.
But those and other considerations appear to be giving way to the threat posed by Iran.

 

jward

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VivaRevolt
@VivaRevolt
·
2h
Breaking News: The head of the Joint Chief of Staff General Mark Milley has arrived into the areas under the control of Syrian Democratic Forces in Syria, and is conducting meetings there
 

jward

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Israel Radar
@IsraelRadar_com
1m

US gives Israel green light to sell Arrow-3 air defenses to Germany, @kann_news
reports; early warning system & possibly launchers may be deployed in other NATO countries to counter Russian threat, report says.
 

jward

passin' thru

went ahead n put it on main too... :: shrug :: that seems to be the magic potion that keeps things from materializing.
:: crosses fingers n uncaps the tums bottle ::
 

jward

passin' thru

Netanyahu Compares Israel Defense against Iran to Book of Esther, Slams IAEA Chief's Comments That a Strike Would be 'Illegal'​


John Waage

3–4 minutes




Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu chairs the weekly cabinet meeting at the Prime Minister's office in Jerusalem, Sunday March 5, 2023. (Gil Cohen-Magen/Pool via AP)
JERUSALEM, Israel – Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sharply criticized remarks by the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), who suggested Saturday that a potential Israeli strike on Iran's nuclear facilities would be "illegal."
Speaking at Sunday's cabinet meeting, as Israelis prepared to celebrate Monday and Tuesday's Purim holiday, Netanyahu compared Israel's defense against Iran today to the story of Esther in the Bible, when she convinced the Persian king to reverse an edict that called for all Jews to die.
Netanyahu said, “2,500 years ago an enemy arose in Persia who sought to destroy the Jews. They did not succeed then, neither will they succeed today,”
The prime minister asked, “Is Iran, which openly calls for our destruction, permitted to defend the destructive weapons that would slaughter us? Are we permitted to defend ourselves? It is clear that we are, and it is clear that we will do so.”
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He was responding to comments made in Tehran over the weekend by IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi. According to a JNS News report, Grossi spoke at a joint press conference with Iran's Atomic Energy Organization Director Mohammed Eslami, saying, “I think any attack, any military attack on a nuclear facility is outlaw[ed]—is out of the normative structures that we all abide by.”
The IAEA and Iran said in a joint statement that they would work in a "spirit of cooperation," despite the IAEA's own report issued Feb.28, which warned that Iran had enriched uranium to a level near 84 percent and could possibly manufacture a nuclear bomb within 12 days.
Netanyhau called Grossi "a worthy gentleman who said something unworthy."
Meanwhile, Ynet News military analyst Ron Ben-Yishai published a column Sunday saying the Biden administration has concerns that Israel would not notify them before carrying out a strike to prevent Iran from going nuclear. The column cites a visit to Israel this past Friday by Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman, Gen. Mark Milley, who met with top Israeli defense officials.
The column quotes a senior Israeli defense official who says the White House and the Pentagon fear an Israeli surprise attack on Iran while the U.S. and its allies are heavily invested in Ukraine and the rise in tensions with China.
***Please sign up for CBN Newsletters and download the CBN News app to ensure you keep receiving the latest news.*
 

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Pentagon chief, on surprise trip, says US troops to stay in Iraq​


Al Jazeera​



In Baghdad, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin pledges continued US troop presence in fight against ISIL.
US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin has made an unannounced trip to Iraq, during which he said the United States is committed to keeping its military presence in the country and continuing the fight against ISIL (ISIS).
The Pentagon chief’s trip to Baghdad on Tuesday came just before the 20-year anniversary of the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, which led to the deaths of tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians, toppled leader Saddam Hussein and helped unleash forces that paved the way for the rise of ISIL.

The US withdrew its forces in 2011, but the administration of former President Barack Obama sent thousands of soldiers back into Iraq and neighbouring Syria three years later to bolster the fight against ISIL.
Currently, the US has 2,500 soldiers in Iraq and 900 in Syria to help advise and assist local forces in combating ISIL, which in 2014 seized swathes of territory in both countries.
Despite their territorial defeat in Iraq in late 2017, ISIL fighters are still launching attacks in the country as well as in Syria. ISIL attacks have killed and wounded dozens of Iraqi soldiers in recent months.

“We are focused on the mission of defeating Daesh [ISIL], and we are here for no other purpose,” Austin said. “Any threats or attacks on our forces only undermine that mission,” he added, apparently referring to Iran-backed fighters who have been blamed for attacks on facilities housing US troops in Iraq.
Austin, the most senior official in President Joe Biden’s administration to visit Iraq in recent years, was the last commanding general of US forces there after the invasion.

“US forces are ready to remain in Iraq at the invitation of the government of Iraq,” Austin told reporters after meeting Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed al-Sudani and Defence Minister Thabet Muhammad Al-Abbasi.
He said these forces are operating in a non-combat and advisory role in support of the “Iraqi-led fight against terrorism”.
“The United States will continue to strengthen and broaden our partnership in support of Iraqi security, stability and sovereignty,” he said.

Al-Sudani’s office, meanwhile, said he and Austin discussed cooperation between their countries in the fight against ISIL.
The prime minister reaffirmed his government’s “keenness to strengthen and consolidate relations with the United States of America at various levels and fields”, it said.

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mIiAA4UeHG8


RT<30m
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n3oVj-BH1T8


 

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US defense chief delays arrival to Israel, will meet Netanyahu near airport​


Jared Szuba @JM_Szuba​


US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin has shortened a planned visit to Israel amid security concerns in Tel Aviv ahead of mass protests against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's judicial overhaul.
Austin was originally scheduled to arrive in Israel on Wednesday night after meeting with Egypt's President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and top military officials in Cairo.
He is now set to arrive in Tel Aviv on Thursday morning and will meet Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant and Netanyahu near Ben Gurion Airport, Pentagon Press Secretary Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder confirmed in a statement to Al-Monitor.

“At the request of the Israeli Ministry of Defense, the location of Secretary Austin’s bilateral meetings Thursday in Tel Aviv with Israeli leaders will be relocated from the Ministry of Defense to a location near the airport,” Ryder said.
Israeli officials insisted upon the location change over security concerns about the planned demonstration near the Defense Ministry at Kirya, a second US defense official speaking not for attribution confirmed to Al-Monitor. “Secretary Austin is ready to meet his counterpart and the prime minister wherever they prefer and looks forward to productive discussions,” the second official said.
The US defense chief’s visit to Israel is expected to be the last leg of Austin’s second tour of the Middle East since taking office. It has thus far has included visits to Jordan, Egypt and Iraq.
Senior Pentagon officials are seeking to reassure leaders of Middle Eastern states aligned with the United States of Washington’s commitment to security relations even as the Biden administration prioritizes strategic competition with China and Russia.

Austin is expected to reaffirm the US commitment to Israel's security regarding Iran and its armed proxies in the region as well as US concerns about China's inroads in the region.
"He'll also be quite frank with Israeli leaders about his concerns regarding the cycle of violence in the West Bank and consult on what steps Israeli leaders can take to meaningfully restore calm before the upcoming holidays," a senior US defense official said ahead of the visit.
Organizers of the protests against the judicial overhaul have called on people to arrive en mass at Ben Gurion and disrupt operations there. They are particularly targeting Netanyahu's trip to Rome scheduled for Thursday evening, during which he is expected to meet with Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. According to Israeli news reports, Netanyahu might arrive to the airport by helicopter rather than by car because of the demonstrations.

Over the past few days American officials have amplified their warnings about the danger of increased violence in the West Bank, calling on Israeli leaders to work to calm the situation. The Israel Defense Forces fired at a Hamas military in Gaza in retaliation for a rocket fired overnight Tuesday from the Palestinian enclave toward the south of Israel.
Austin's visit comes amid a flurry of top-level national security coordination between the United States and Israel over Iran's nuclear enrichment.
Last weekend, Washington's top general, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley, met with IDF chief Herzi Halevi in Tel Aviv to discuss close coordination between the United States and Israel on preventing Tehran from obtaining a nuclear weapon should its government pursue one.

Israel’s national security adviser Tzachi Hanegbi and Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer traveled to Washington earlier this week to meet with US national security adviser Jake Sullivan and top US defense and intelligence officials.
They group "pledged to enhance coordination on measures to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon and to further deter Iran’s hostile regional activities" and "reviewed recent joint military exercises between the US military and the Israel Defense Forces," according to the White House statement.
US Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines said Wednesday that Iran threatens both Israel and the United States. The Iranian threat to Israel, she noted, takes the form of missiles, drones and its support for Hezbollah and other proxies.
 

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Israel Radar
@IsraelRadar_com
3m

Initial reports of shooting in Tel Aviv: several wounded in suspected terror attack, unconfirmed reports say shooter captured, large police forces mobilized to central Tel Aviv.
 

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Guy Elster
@guyelster
5h

Tenth weekend of protests in #Israel against the judicial plan
View: https://twitter.com/guyelster/status/1634584752794607617?s=20


The political pressure to fire him came from the National Security Minister @itamarbengvir

#BREAKING Israel Police chief reverses course, says Tel Aviv region commander will stay in his place amid political pressure on him
View: https://twitter.com/guyelster/status/1634625968273801219?s=20

12:11 PM · Mar 11, 2023
·
3,036
Views
 

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A new intifada? Young Palestinian fighters rise as West Bank boils​


7 minute read
March 14, 2023
1:09 AM CDT
Last Updated 33 min ago


JERICHO, West Bank, March 14 (Reuters) - Before a group of young men from Aqabat Jabr refugee camp mounted a botched attack on a restaurant in Jericho popular with Israeli settlers in January, they declared allegiance to Hamas.
That was a surprise to their families - and to Hamas.
"They weren't members of Al Qassam until that moment," said Wael Awdat, father of Ibrahim and Rafat, two members of the group, using the name of the armed wing of Hamas. "They had a normal life. This was something personal."

Their story illustrates the complex mix of spontaneous action and association between established factions and new groups during an upsurge in violence in the occupied West Bank that has fuelled fears of a new Palestinian intifada to follow the uprisings of the 1980s and early 2000s.
Alienated from mainstream Palestinian leadership and raised in an era of social media, a new generation of Palestinians has formed a clutch of militant groups, from the Lion's Den based in Nablus to the Jenin Brigade.

Latest Updates​

Often with just a handful of fighters, the militant groups springing up across the West Bank over the past year have only loose ties to factions such as Hamas, Fatah or Islamic Jihad.
With tight surveillance making it impossible to operate normally in the West Bank, Hamas, which runs the blockaded Gaza Strip, is relying on more flexible, informal networks to avoid detection, two Hamas officials told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of Israeli reprisals.

A Hamas cadre in Jericho, normally a tranquil city, popular as a weekend getaway spot near the Dead Sea, told Reuters the movement had not known of the cell behind the restaurant attack but said: "Any faction would be happy to claim them as members."
A few days after the attack, which failed when a gun jammed, the young men in the group were killed in an Israeli raid.
"All the signs are that the intifada is coming," said the Hamas cadre, who declined to be named for fear of Israeli reprisals. "There is a new generation of people who believe the only solution is armed struggle."

TIKTOK, POSTERS AND SONGS​

Spontaneous offshoots of the established factions, such as the previously unknown Aqabat Jabr Battalion formed by the Awdat brothers and their friends, have proliferated.
"Today we have a new generation that is aware of the resistance, and this is a generation that knows the ferocity of occupation," said one masked young fighter at a rally in Jenin this month, with the colours of Al Qassam around his head.

"It does not fear arrest, injury or martyrdom. It is not afraid of anything," he told Reuters.
With no central leadership, the groups get their message out though songs, TikTok videos and posters of fighters on walls, offering a model to young men angered by what they feel as repeated humiliations by Israeli soldiers and settlers.
"The number of fighters is growing all the time and the enemy needs to know that violence against our people and our camps is increasing their number not reducing it," a masked gunman from the Jenin Brigade said.
Over the past year, Israeli forces have carried out near-daily raids in the West Bank as part of a crackdown started in the wake of a spate of deadly attacks in Israel by Palestinians.

More than 200 Palestinians, including both militants and civilians have been killed - about 80 this year alone - while over 40 Israelis and foreign nationals have been killed in attacks by Palestinians in Israel, the West Bank or around Jerusalem.
As the Muslim holy month of Ramadan and the Jewish Passover approach, fears of more violence have grown, with a flood of weapons being smuggled in from Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, Lebanon, Jordan and Israel itself, Palestinian and Israeli officials say.
"It's proper weapons, it's M16s, Kalashnikovs, it's pistols, it's ammunition, it's not weapons you can make at home, it's weapons that countries buy," said a senior Israeli officer, who spoke to Reuters on condition he would not be named.
In addition, the officer said the new generation of militants were using social media effectively to mobilise.
"We have the most lethal weapon there is, that nobody talks about, which is the telephone, so on social media networks very easily things pass from hand to hand over TikTok, etc," he said.

PLEAS FOR CALM​

While the lack of leadership has reduced the political focus of the new groups, Israeli officers say their fluid nature and the large number of lone attackers, with no known militant connections, has made them much harder to control.
Incidents such as the Feb. 26 shooting of two Israelis in the West Bank by a Hamas gunman that triggered a revenge rampage by hundreds of settlers against the nearby Palestinian village of Huwara have shown the volatility of the situation.
The violence has been constant, taking place amid a daily experience for Palestinians of confrontations with soldiers at checkpoints who have stepped up the search for "lone wolf" attackers, or with Israeli settlers, some of whom taunt and attack Palestinians with apparent impunity.

As one killing succeeds another, there have been increasingly urgent pleas for calm from an alarmed international community. But neither Israel, now run by one of the most right-wing, nationalist religious governments in its history, nor the Palestinian fighters, appear ready to back down.
"What do I fear? No, I carry my weapons and stand against the army," said Ahmed Ghoneim, whose two brothers were killed in an Israeli raid in January, at a parade in the Jenin refugee camp on March 3 to honour a founder of the Jenin Brigade.
The rally was a classic display of force, with some 250 fighters from various factions parading in a courtyard, its walls plastered with pictures of their dead, posing with guns and the cropped hairstyles popular among young West Bank men.

Four days later, Israeli security forces raided the camp, killing at least six gunmen, including the Hamas member behind the Feb. 26 Huwara shooting. Two days after that, three Islamic Jihad gunmen were killed in a raid nearby and on Sunday, three Lion's Den militants died in a shootout with Israeli forces.

BITTERNESS SPREADS​

Israeli officials often blame the surge in violence on a Palestinian Authority that nominally exercises a limited degree of rule in the West Bank but which is in reality effectively powerless in flashpoint areas such as Jenin.
To make matters worse, the Authority has been preoccupied for months with the future of its 87-year-old President Mahmoud Abbas, whose eventual exit risks setting off a factional power struggle.

For its part, the Palestinian Authority says its control is constantly undermined by Israeli actions, which both weaken its authority and fuel resentment among the young, already struggling with high unemployment and scarce prospects.
The bitterness has now spread from radical fringes to affect even comparatively well-off Palestinians, such as the Awdat brothers, neither of whom fitted the classic profile of disaffected young men with no education or prospects.
Speaking outside his house in Aqabat Jabr, a relatively calm area that resembles a rural village more than the crowded camps in Nablus or Jenin, their father, Wael Awdat, said his sons had appeared happy.

Ibrahim, 27, operated a water tanker business in Aqabat Jabr and, like his 22-year-old brother Rafat, an electrician, had done two years of college. One member of their cell had a poultry business and drove a recent model BMW, Awdat said.
"It's a good life here, it's like a family in the camp," he said. "But there is something bad happening every day. At some point, everyone reacts."
 

OldArcher

Has No Life - Lives on TB

A new intifada? Young Palestinian fighters rise as West Bank boils​


7 minute read
March 14, 2023
1:09 AM CDT
Last Updated 33 min ago


JERICHO, West Bank, March 14 (Reuters) - Before a group of young men from Aqabat Jabr refugee camp mounted a botched attack on a restaurant in Jericho popular with Israeli settlers in January, they declared allegiance to Hamas.
That was a surprise to their families - and to Hamas.
"They weren't members of Al Qassam until that moment," said Wael Awdat, father of Ibrahim and Rafat, two members of the group, using the name of the armed wing of Hamas. "They had a normal life. This was something personal."

Their story illustrates the complex mix of spontaneous action and association between established factions and new groups during an upsurge in violence in the occupied West Bank that has fuelled fears of a new Palestinian intifada to follow the uprisings of the 1980s and early 2000s.
Alienated from mainstream Palestinian leadership and raised in an era of social media, a new generation of Palestinians has formed a clutch of militant groups, from the Lion's Den based in Nablus to the Jenin Brigade.

Latest Updates​

Often with just a handful of fighters, the militant groups springing up across the West Bank over the past year have only loose ties to factions such as Hamas, Fatah or Islamic Jihad.
With tight surveillance making it impossible to operate normally in the West Bank, Hamas, which runs the blockaded Gaza Strip, is relying on more flexible, informal networks to avoid detection, two Hamas officials told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of Israeli reprisals.

A Hamas cadre in Jericho, normally a tranquil city, popular as a weekend getaway spot near the Dead Sea, told Reuters the movement had not known of the cell behind the restaurant attack but said: "Any faction would be happy to claim them as members."
A few days after the attack, which failed when a gun jammed, the young men in the group were killed in an Israeli raid.
"All the signs are that the intifada is coming," said the Hamas cadre, who declined to be named for fear of Israeli reprisals. "There is a new generation of people who believe the only solution is armed struggle."

TIKTOK, POSTERS AND SONGS​

Spontaneous offshoots of the established factions, such as the previously unknown Aqabat Jabr Battalion formed by the Awdat brothers and their friends, have proliferated.
"Today we have a new generation that is aware of the resistance, and this is a generation that knows the ferocity of occupation," said one masked young fighter at a rally in Jenin this month, with the colours of Al Qassam around his head.

"It does not fear arrest, injury or martyrdom. It is not afraid of anything," he told Reuters.
With no central leadership, the groups get their message out though songs, TikTok videos and posters of fighters on walls, offering a model to young men angered by what they feel as repeated humiliations by Israeli soldiers and settlers.
"The number of fighters is growing all the time and the enemy needs to know that violence against our people and our camps is increasing their number not reducing it," a masked gunman from the Jenin Brigade said.
Over the past year, Israeli forces have carried out near-daily raids in the West Bank as part of a crackdown started in the wake of a spate of deadly attacks in Israel by Palestinians.

More than 200 Palestinians, including both militants and civilians have been killed - about 80 this year alone - while over 40 Israelis and foreign nationals have been killed in attacks by Palestinians in Israel, the West Bank or around Jerusalem.
As the Muslim holy month of Ramadan and the Jewish Passover approach, fears of more violence have grown, with a flood of weapons being smuggled in from Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, Lebanon, Jordan and Israel itself, Palestinian and Israeli officials say.
"It's proper weapons, it's M16s, Kalashnikovs, it's pistols, it's ammunition, it's not weapons you can make at home, it's weapons that countries buy," said a senior Israeli officer, who spoke to Reuters on condition he would not be named.
In addition, the officer said the new generation of militants were using social media effectively to mobilise.
"We have the most lethal weapon there is, that nobody talks about, which is the telephone, so on social media networks very easily things pass from hand to hand over TikTok, etc," he said.

PLEAS FOR CALM​

While the lack of leadership has reduced the political focus of the new groups, Israeli officers say their fluid nature and the large number of lone attackers, with no known militant connections, has made them much harder to control.
Incidents such as the Feb. 26 shooting of two Israelis in the West Bank by a Hamas gunman that triggered a revenge rampage by hundreds of settlers against the nearby Palestinian village of Huwara have shown the volatility of the situation.
The violence has been constant, taking place amid a daily experience for Palestinians of confrontations with soldiers at checkpoints who have stepped up the search for "lone wolf" attackers, or with Israeli settlers, some of whom taunt and attack Palestinians with apparent impunity.

As one killing succeeds another, there have been increasingly urgent pleas for calm from an alarmed international community. But neither Israel, now run by one of the most right-wing, nationalist religious governments in its history, nor the Palestinian fighters, appear ready to back down.
"What do I fear? No, I carry my weapons and stand against the army," said Ahmed Ghoneim, whose two brothers were killed in an Israeli raid in January, at a parade in the Jenin refugee camp on March 3 to honour a founder of the Jenin Brigade.
The rally was a classic display of force, with some 250 fighters from various factions parading in a courtyard, its walls plastered with pictures of their dead, posing with guns and the cropped hairstyles popular among young West Bank men.

Four days later, Israeli security forces raided the camp, killing at least six gunmen, including the Hamas member behind the Feb. 26 Huwara shooting. Two days after that, three Islamic Jihad gunmen were killed in a raid nearby and on Sunday, three Lion's Den militants died in a shootout with Israeli forces.

BITTERNESS SPREADS​

Israeli officials often blame the surge in violence on a Palestinian Authority that nominally exercises a limited degree of rule in the West Bank but which is in reality effectively powerless in flashpoint areas such as Jenin.
To make matters worse, the Authority has been preoccupied for months with the future of its 87-year-old President Mahmoud Abbas, whose eventual exit risks setting off a factional power struggle.

For its part, the Palestinian Authority says its control is constantly undermined by Israeli actions, which both weaken its authority and fuel resentment among the young, already struggling with high unemployment and scarce prospects.
The bitterness has now spread from radical fringes to affect even comparatively well-off Palestinians, such as the Awdat brothers, neither of whom fitted the classic profile of disaffected young men with no education or prospects.
Speaking outside his house in Aqabat Jabr, a relatively calm area that resembles a rural village more than the crowded camps in Nablus or Jenin, their father, Wael Awdat, said his sons had appeared happy.

Ibrahim, 27, operated a water tanker business in Aqabat Jabr and, like his 22-year-old brother Rafat, an electrician, had done two years of college. One member of their cell had a poultry business and drove a recent model BMW, Awdat said.
"It's a good life here, it's like a family in the camp," he said. "But there is something bad happening every day. At some point, everyone reacts."

With the Chinese, Iranians, and others bankrolling the new Intifada, this will not end well. Israel will have to remove the velvet glove from the mailed fist. Israel is not going to be able to negotiate. This is war, at a simmer. Won’t take much to boil over.

Shaalu Shalom Yershalyim-
Pray for the peace of Jerusalem

OA
 

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Gallant says he held meetings with top officials over unspecified ‘security incidents’​


By Emanuel Fabian





In an unusual statement, Yoav Gallant’s office says the defense minister has held a number of security assessments over the past day due to unspecified “security incidents.”
His office says the meetings were held with top army and defense officials, including IDF Chief of Staff Herzi Halevi and head of the Shin Bet, Ronen Bar.
The officials presented Gallant with “preliminary findings from the investigation of the incidents,” Gallant’s office says.

“The defense minister instructed to continue efforts to ensure the daily routine of Israeli citizens,” his office adds.
The recent incidents are not detailed in the statement due to security concerns and ongoing investigations.


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passin' thru
Amichai Stein
@AmichaiStein1
4m
#BREAKING: Israeli President Herzog will present at 20:30 his proposal and plan for changes in the judicial system
 
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