Israel-Palestine War: Hamas Breaks Out of Gaza, Israel Responds With Genocide

Kim Jong un: “We are on the threshold of World War III and everyone must PREPARE!”

We are about to witness a MAJOR WAR.

US halts exports of most civilian firearms for 90 days​


The U.S. has stopped issuing export licenses for most civilian firearms and ammunition for 90 days for all non-governmental users, the Commerce Department said on Friday, citing national security and foreign policy interests.

The Commerce Department did not provide further details for the pause, which also includes shotguns and optical sights, but said an urgent review will assess the "risk of firearms being diverted to entities or activities that promote regional instability, violate human rights, or fuel criminal activities."

The Commerce Department declined to comment beyond the posting on its website.

The halt covers most of the guns and ammunition that could be purchased in a U.S. gun store, said Johanna Reeves, a lawyer who specializes in export controls and firearms with the law firm Reeves & Dola in Washington.

Reeves said she had not seen the Commerce Department take such a sweeping action like this before. "For sure they have individual country policies – but nothing like this," she said.

 
Drones will be the nightmare of U.S., as we can see in the Ukrainian conflict they fly by hundreds if not thousands on the battlefield.
Like a modern slingshot weapon... used to tease the giant.

I was asking if you knew where they (F16s) were flying out of.
Maybe from here... or is it too far away ?
"

Drones attacks US base near oil field in Syria​


BEIRUT, October 28. /TASS/. A US military base near the al-Omar oil field in eastern Syria has been attacked by drones, Al Mayadeen television reported.

Powerful explosions rang out at the base, the report said, giving no further details.
The television channel said drones also struck an airfield in the province of al-Hasakah, which is used by US forces stationed in Syria.
The Iraqi Islamic Resistance movement, which includes Shiite fighters who fought against terrorists from the Islamic State group (banned in Russia), claimed responsibility for the attacks."
 
Kim Jong un: “We are on the threshold of World War III and everyone must PREPARE!”
I'll never forget the following interaction between a history teacher and one of his pupils:
Teacher: Why do you think we should study history?

Pupil raises his hand.

Pupil: So that we can learn from our mistakes.

Teacher grins.

Teacher: Well, there was World War I... then there was World War II...

The entire class bursts out laughing.
 
Morning recap: Day 22

Communication in the Gaza Strip continues to remain cut off following what appears to be have been one of the most intense nights of bombing in the besieged enclave, according to what little information has been trickling out.

The death toll of Palestinians stood at 7,300 yesterday, but the loss of communication means the true figure could be much higher.

Here’s what you need to know from the past few hours:

  • Unicef and Doctors Without Borders say they are no longer in contact with their colleagues in Gaza following communications blackout.
  • Israel claims to have “hit 150 underground targets” in Gaza overnight.
  • Thousands of Palestinians across the West Bank take part in dawn prayers for the people of Gaza.
  • Footage from Gaza depicts desperate pleas and screaming amid bombardment in Al Shati camp.
  • US Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield says in statement the lives of "innocent Palestinians must be protected."

+ Israel releases footage of tanks operating inside Gaza

The Israeli army has released video footage apparently showing tanks operating within Gaza:

תיעוד מפעילות כוחות קרקעיים של צה״ל ברצועת עזה: pic.twitter.com/9dqUzXP7in
— צבא ההגנה לישראל (@idfonline) October 28, 2023


+ World Health Organisation still out of touch with staff and facilities in Gaza
The World Health Organisation (WHO) continues to be out of touch with its staff and health facilities in Gaza, the organisation's chief said on Saturday.

"The blackout is also making it impossible for ambulances to reach the injured," Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus wrote in a post on social media.

"The evacuation of patients is not possible under such circumstances, nor to find safe shelter."


+ Hundreds arrested after Jewish-led sit-in at New York's Grand Central Station


Jewish protesters that are calling for a ceasefire in Gaza are getting arrested in New York in a large emergency sit-in at the Grand Central Station concourse in New York City on Friday pic.twitter.com/PPalvS9DyO

— Middle East Eye (@MiddleEastEye) October 28, 2023


 
Les Juifs appelant au cesser le feu ont pris le contrôle de la grande gare centrale de New York au nom des Palestiniens .
1698484429689.png
Jews calling for a ceasefire took control of New York's main train station on behalf of the Palestinians.
 
The ground operation is not very successful yet.
The Israeli army suffered the largest losses in a day, Colonel Yair Shalom was captured by Hamas
During the past night, the Israel Defense Forces suffered significant losses in the Al-Bureij area. According to Arab TG channels, this happened as a result of a powerful counterattack by the Hamas movement. The information that Colonel Yair Shalom was captured caused a great resonance.

So far, Israeli officials have not confirmed or denied this information. There are also no comments on the colonel's condition and the conditions of his detention. This incident increases tensions in the region, where the conflict between Israel and Hamas continues to escalate.

The Al-Mayadin TV channel claims that the losses of the Israel Defense Forces over the past day may exceed 80 soldiers. This is certainly one of the biggest incidents in recent years within the framework of the conflict between the parties.
Израильская армия понесла за сутки крупнейшие потери, в плен к ХАМАС попал полковник Яир Шалам

One of the possible results of the negotiations in Moscow. Let's see what happens in the end.
Hamas announced its readiness to release hostages from the list of citizens transferred to the Russian Federation
Abu Marzouk: Hamas is ready to release the hostages, whose data was requested by Russia

Russia has handed over to representatives of the Hamas movement a list of eight people allegedly being held hostage. This was announced on Saturday, October 28, by a member of the politburo and the head of the Department for external Relations of the movement, Musa Abu Marzouk.

According to him, Hamas is looking for these people and is ready to let them go.

"From the Russian side, through the Foreign Ministry, we received a list of citizens who have dual citizenship. We are very attentive to this list and will carefully process it," Marzuk told RIA Novosti.

He added that the movement treats the civilians who were captured and are now in Gaza "as guests."

"As for the civilians who were taken and are now in Gaza, we treat them as guests. Now we are looking for those people,
  • which were transferred by the Russian side. It's difficult, but we're looking. And as soon as we find it, we will let it go," Marzuk said.

    The Hamas delegation arrived in Moscow on a visit on October 26. At the meeting with the delegation, the Russian side discussed the release of hostages and the evacuation of Russians from the Gaza Strip.

    On October 27, Marzouk said that Hamas was ready to release civilian hostages, but could not do so because of the shelling of the Gaza Strip. On the same day, Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesman Daniel Hagari reported that Hamas was holding 229 hostages in the Gaza Strip.
 
The former French prime minister, Dominique de Villespin, who opposed the Iraq war was interviewed yesterday. I found most of the interview on Telegram, translated into English apart from the first 2 minutes. He talks about looking for an enlightened diplomatic solution on Palestine instead of senseless revenge, which only furthers the problem. It is nice to see somebody in the West seeing things more nuanced than the usual black and white.

Here is the interview.

And here most of the translation (Telegram channel, Geroman):
Absolutely masterful interview on Gaza of Dominique De Villepin, former Prime Minister of France, who famously led France's opposition to the Iraq war and who, IMHO is the best diplomat the West has produced in decades.

This is so important, so incredibly well argued, that I decided to translate it in full:

"Hamas has set a trap for us, and this trap is one of maximum horror, of maximum cruelty. And so there's a risk of an escalation in militarism, of more military interventions, as if we could with armies solve a problem as serious as the Palestinian question.

There's also a second major trap, which is that of Occidentalism. We find ourselves trapped, with Israel, in this western bloc which today is being challenged by most of the international community.

[Presenter: What is Occidentalism?]

Occidentalism is the idea that the West, which for 5 centuries managed the world's affairs, will be able to quietly continue to do so. And we can clearly see, even in the debates of the French political class, that there is the idea that, faced with what is currently happening in the Middle East, we must continue the fight even more, towards what might resemble a religious or a civilizational war. That is to say, to isolate ourselves even more on the international stage.

This is not the way, especially since there's a third trap, which is that of moralism. And here we have in a way the proof, through what is happening in Ukraine and what is happening in the Middle East, of this double standard that is denounced everywhere in the world, including in recent weeks when I travel to Africa, the Middle East, or Latin America. The criticism is always the same: look at how civilian populations are treated in Gaza, you denounce what happened in Ukraine, and you are very timid in the face of the tragedy unfolding in Gaza.

Consider international law, the second criticism that is made by the global south. We sanction Russia when it aggresses Ukraine, we sanction Russia when it doesn't respect the resolutions of the United Nations, and it's been 70 years that the resolutions of the United Nations have been voted in vain and that Israel doesn't respect them.

[Presenter: Do you believe that the Westerners are currently guilty of hubris?]

Westerners must open their eyes to the extent of the historical drama unfolding before us to find the right answers.

[Presenter: What is the historical drama? I mean, we're talking about the tragedy of October 7th first and foremost, right?]

Of course, there are these horrors happening, but the way to respond to them is crucial. Are we going to kill the future by finding the wrong answers...

[Presenter: Kill the future?]

Kill the future, yes! Why?

[Presenter: But who is killing whom?]

You are in a game of causes and effects. Faced with the tragedy of history, one cannot take this 'chain of causality' analytical grid, simply because if you do you can't escape from it. Once we understand that there is a trap, once we realize that behind this trap there has also been a change in the Middle East regarding the Palestinian issue... The situation today is profoundly different [from what it was in the past]. The Palestinian cause was a political and secular cause. Today we are faced with an Islamist cause, led by Hamas. Obviously, this kind of cause is absolute and allows no form of negotiation. On the Israeli side, there has also been a development. Zionism was secular and political, championed by Theodor Herzl in the late 19th century. It has largely become messianic, biblical today. This means that they too do not want to compromise, and everything that the far-right Israeli government does, continuing to encourage colonization, obviously makes things worse, including since October 7th. So in this context, understand that we are already in this region facing a problem that seems profoundly insoluble.

Added to this is the hardening of states. Diplomatically, look at the statements of the King of Jordan, they are not the same as six months ago. Look at the statements of Erdogan in Turkey.

[Presenter: Precisely, these are extremely harsh statements...]

Extremely worrying. Why? Because if the Palestinian cause, the Palestinian issue, hasn't been brought to the forefront, hasn't been put on stage [for a while], and if most of the youth today in Europe have often never even heard of it, it remains for the Arab peoples the mother of all battles. All the progress made towards an attempt to stabilize the Middle East, where one could believe...

[Presenter: Yes, but whose fault is it? I have a hard time following you, is it Hamas's fault?]

But Ms. Malherbe, I am trained as a diplomat. The question of fault will be addressed by historians and philosophers.

[Presenter: But you can't remain neutral, it's difficult, it's complicated, isn't it?]

I am not neutral, I am in action. I am simply telling you that every day that passes, we can ensure that this horrific cycle stops... that's why I speak of a trap and that's why it's so important to know what response we are going to give. We stand alone before history today. And we do not treat this new world the way we currently do, knowing that today we are no longer in a position of strength, we are not able to manage on our own, as the world's policemen.

[Presenter: So what do we do?]

Exactly, what should we do? This is where it is essential not to cut off anyone on the international stage.

[Presenter: Including the Russians?]

Everyone.

[Presenter: Everyone? Should we ask the Russians for help?]

I'm not saying we should ask the Russians for help. I'm saying: if the Russians can contribute by calming some factions in this region, then it will be a step in the right direction.

[Presenter: How can we proportionally respond to barbarism? It's no longer army against army.]

But listen, Appolline de Malherbe, the civilian populations that are dying in Gaza, don't they exist? So because horror was committed on one side, horror must be committed on the other?

[Presenter: Do we indeed need to equate the two?]

No, it's you who are doing that. I'm not saying I equate the faults. I try to take into account what a large part of humanity thinks. There is certainly a realistic objective to pursue, which is to eradicate the Hamas leaders who committed this horror. And not to confuse the Palestinians with Hamas, that's a realistic goal.

The second thing is a targeted response. Let's define realistic political objectives. And the third thing is a combined response. Because there is no effective use of force without a political strategy. We are not in 1973 or in 1967. There are things no army in the world knows how to do, which is to win in an asymmetrical battle against terrorists. The war on terror has never been won anywhere. And it instead triggers extremely dramatic misdeeds, cycles, and escalations. If America lost in Afghanistan, if America lost in Iraq, if we lost in the Sahel, it's because it's a battle that can't be won simply, it's not like you have a hammer that strikes a nail and the problem is solved. So we need to mobilize the international community, get out of this Western entrapment in which we are.

[Presenter: But when Emmanuel Macron talks about an international coalition…]

Yes, and what was the response?

[Presenter: None.]

Exactly. We need a political perspective, and this is challenging because the two-state solution has been removed from the Israeli political and diplomatic program. Israel needs to understand that for a country with a territory of 20,000 square kilometers, a population of 9 million inhabitants, facing 1.5 billion people... Peoples have never forgotten that the Palestinian cause and the injustice done to the Palestinians was a significant source of mobilization. We must consider this situation, and I believe it is essential to help Israel, to guide... some say impose, but I think it's better to convince, to move in this direction. The challenge is that there is no interlocutor today, neither on the Israeli side nor the Palestinian side. We need to bring out interlocutors.

[Presenter: It's not for us to choose who will be the leaders of Palestine.]

The Israeli policy over recent years did not necessarily want to cultivate a Palestinian leadership... Many are in prison, and Israel's interest - because I repeat: it was not in their program or in Israel's interest at the time, or so they thought - was instead to divide the Palestinians and ensure that the Palestinian question fades. This Palestinian question will not fade. And so we must address it and find an answer. This is where we need courage. The use of force is a dead end. The moral condemnation of what Hamas did - and there's no "but" in my words regarding the moral condemnation of this horror - must not prevent us from moving forward politically and diplomatically in an enlightened manner. The law of retaliation is a never-ending cycle.

[Presenter: The "eye for an eye, tooth for tooth".]

Yes. That's why the political response must be defended by us. Israel has a right to self-defense, but this right cannot be indiscriminate vengeance. And there cannot be collective responsibility of the Palestinian people for the actions of a terrorist minority from Hamas.

When you get into this cycle of finding faults, one side's memories clash with the other's. Some will juxtapose Israel's memories with the memories of the Nakba, the 1948 catastrophe, which is a disaster that the Palestinians still experience every day. So you can't break these cycles. We must have the strength, of course, to understand and denounce what happened, and from this standpoint, there's no doubt about our position. But we must also have the courage, and that's what diplomacy is... diplomacy is about being able to believe that there is light at the end of the tunnel. And that's the cunning of history; when you're at the bottom, something can happen that gives hope. After the 1973 war, who would have thought that before the end of the decade, Egypt would sign a peace treaty with Israel?

The debate shouldn't be about rhetoric or word choice. The debate today is about action; we must act. And when you think about action, there are two options. Either it's war, war, war. Or it's about trying to move towards peace, and I'll say it again, it's in Israel's interest. It's in Israel's interest!"
 
Lovely manuals, these are in use today, right now. it is horrible reading this, something I wanted to introduce to this event. Of note: I could not find the ones for Israel, obviously hidden to reduce the possibility that they will be read by anyone. Did find one web page at bottom. It will probably all happen very soon. (My comments in italics)

1698496899960.png

DoD Law of War Manual - June 2015 Updated Dec 2016.pdf (defense.gov) (this is older instances but still followed)

MacLeod v. United States, 229 U.S. 416, 425 (1913) (“There has been considerable discussion in the cases and in works of authoritative writers upon the subject of what constitutes an occupation which will give the right to exercise governmental authority. Such occupation is not merely invasion, but is invasion plus possession of the enemy’s country for the purpose of holding it temporarily at least.”)

MacLeod v. United States, 229 U.S. 416, 424-25 (1913) (“When the Spanish fleet was destroyed at Manila, May 1, 1898, it became apparent that the Government of the United States might be required to take the necessary steps to make provision for the government and control of such part of the Philippines as might come into the military occupation of the forces of the United States. The right to thus occupy an enemy’s country and temporarily provide for its government has been recognized by previous action of the executive authority and sanctioned by frequent decisions of this court. The local government being destroyed, the conqueror may set up its own authority and make rules and regulations for the conduct of temporary government, and to that end may collect taxes and duties to support the military authority and carry on operations incident to the occupation. Such was the course of the Government with respect to the territory acquired by conquest and afterwards ceded by the Mexican Government to the United States.”).

MacLeod v. United States, 229 U.S. 416, 432-33 (1913) (“A state of war as to third persons continued until the exchange of treaty ratifications, and, although rice, not being contraband of war, might have been imported, the authority of the military commander, until the exchange of ratifications, may have included the right to control vessels sailing from Manila to trade in the enemy’s country and to penalize violations of orders in that respect. But whatever the authority of the commander at Manila or those acting under his direction to control shipments by persons trading at Manila and in vessels sailing from there of American registration, such authority did not extend to the second collection of duties upon a cargo from a foreign port to a port occupied by a de facto government which had compulsorily required the payment of like duties.”).

1958 UK MANUAL ¶416 (“It is also an abuse of the flag of truce to use a white flag for the purpose of making the enemy believe that a parliamentary is about to be sent when there is no such intention, and to carry out operations under the protection granted by the enemy to the pretended flag of truce.”)

G. Brand, The War Crimes Trials and the Laws of War, 28 BRITISH YEAR BOOK OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 414, 416 (1951) (“Thus the doctrine of universality of war crimes is now generally accepted. Account has been taken of the crime itself rather than of (a) the nationality of the victim, provided that he has been, from the point of view of the court, an Allied national or could be treated as such; (b) the nationality of the accused, provided that he can be regarded as having identified himself with the enemy; or (c) the place of the offence.”)

1698496882251.png

Authority for Use of Military Force to Combat Terrorist Activities within the United States (justice.gov) (hold on folks.)

Further support for our position comes from Scheuer v. Rhodes, 416 U.S. 232 (1974). In that case, the Court clearly recognized that the "probable cause" requirement could not be imposed on high ranking executive officials ordering military actions to be taken in situations of civil disorder. Scheuer was an action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the Governor of Ohio and other State officials, alleging that they had recklessly deployed the Ohio National Guard onto the campus of a State university and had ordered the Guard to perform illegal acts resulting in the deaths of several students. Although it denied that the Governor's executive immunity was absolute, the Court did emphasize the difference, for the Fourth Amendment and official immunity analysis, between decisions taken at that level of executive authority and at the police level:

When a court evaluates police conduct relating to an arrest its guideline is "good faith and probable cause." In the case of higher officers of the executive branch, however, the inquiry is far more complex since the range of decisions and choices - .. . is virtually infinite. In common with police officers, however, officials with a broad range of duties and authority must often act swiftly and firmly at the risk that action deferred will be futile or constitute virtual abdication of office. . . . Decisions in such situations are more likely than not to arise in an atmosphere of confusion, ambiguity, and swiftly moving events and when, by the very existence of some degree of civil disorder, there is often no consensus as to the appropriate remedy. In short, since the options which a chief executive and his principal subordinates must consider are far broader and far more subtle than those made by officials with less responsibility, the range of discretion must be comparably broad.

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ZDv 3/12 (bmvg.de) (Why have one that you do not follow other than in opposition, definitely a CYA manual)

Expert Guidance: Law of Armed Conflict in the Israel-Hamas War (justsecurity.org) (This is one that is showing everything that Israel is currently doing not protecting against.)

It is amazing on how many of these statures are followed and how many are not (but used in opposition) in all of these. Haiku …
 

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