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

Avi Primor, ancien ambassadeur d’Israël en UE et en Allemagne et
EFRAIM HALEW
Ancien directeur du Mossad
« C’est Nous le gouvernement Israélien qui avons créé al qaida, daesh et le hamas. »

Avi Primor, former Israeli ambassador to the EU and Germany and
EFRAIM HALEW
Former Director of Mossad
"We, the Israeli government, created al qaeda, daesh and hamas."
 
Les crimes de guerre que le gouvernement israélien se permet avec l'aide des pays occidentaux qu'il tient à sa botte, se retourneront contre lui.
Il serait peut-être temps que le peuple israélien en majorité pacifiste se décide à jouer un rôle en demandant l'éviction de Netanyahu.
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The war crimes that the Israeli government indulges in with the help of the Western countries it holds in its thrall, will backfire.
Perhaps it's time that the Israeli people, the majority of whom are pacifists, decided to play a role by demanding Netanyahu's ouster.
 
With the Zionist groupie we have as president in Argentina, this happens:


Controversial statements by DAIA vice-president: "There are no innocent civilians in Gaza, maybe children under four years old".
Sergio Pikholtz generated a deep uproar within the institution after posting a controversial comment on his Twitter account about the war in the Middle East.

The vice-president of the Delegation of Argentine Israelite Associations (DAIA), Sergio Pikholtz, generated a deep controversy and discomfort after stating that "there are no innocent civilians in Gaza" and insinuating that there should not even be "mercy" with the minors residing there.

"As we tirelessly repeat there are no innocent civilians in Gaza, perhaps only children under the age of four. No mercy on the murderers of Jews. We shall overcome," Pikholtz said in a message he posted on his Twitter profile which he accompanied with a video.

The controversial comment caused deep anger among several members of the institution that Pikholtz represents, where they were debating what to do about it. The words of the leader went viral in the last hours, making DAIA a trending topic in social networks. Some even analyzed whether it would not be better for him to resign from his position.

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And he quickly resigned...


Sergio Pikholtz communicated his decision to leave his position. The Delegation of Argentine Israelite Associations had demanded him to take a leave of absence. It was after the scandal caused by the polemic phrase.
 
From Bloomberg (full article):

Looks like Turkey needed some ‘diplomatic reminders’?
Blinken Says Turkey Ready for Positive Role on Israel-Hamas War


US Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke with Turkish leaders at the start of a diplomatic tour aimed at avoiding a broader war in the Middle East and rallying Arab support for Gaza’s post-conflict governance.


Blinken met Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Istanbul for more than an hour on Saturday after speaking with Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan.


With Israel’s war with Hamas in the Gaza Strip about to enter its fourth month, the US is reaching out to Turkey to use its regional influence, including with Iran, to reduce the risk of a broader conflict. Washington wants to enlist Ankara’s support for plans on how to govern Gaza after the war ends, a senior US official told reporters traveling with Blinken.


“It’s clear that Turkey’s prepared to play a positive, productive role in the work that needs to happen the day after the conflict ends, and as well, more broadly, on trying to find a path to sustainable peace and security,” Blinken told reporters in Chania, a city on the Greek island of Crete, where he met Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis before departing for Amman, Jordan.


Blinken’s schedule involves crisscrossing the Middle East over several days with further stops in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Egypt, Israel and the West Bank. Separately, the European Union’s top foreign policy official was in Lebanon warning against a widened conflict.


“We have an intense focus on preventing this conflict from spreading,” Blinken said. “And a big part of the conversations we’ll be having over the coming days with all of our allies and partners is looking at the steps that they can take, using the influence and ties that they have, to do just that — to make sure this conflict doesn’t spread.”


Blinken and Fidan discussed Sweden’s North Atlantic Treaty Organization accession process and the humanitarian situation in Gaza, the Turkish Foreign Ministry said on X, formerly Twitter.


Blinken is making his fourth trip to the region since war erupted between Israel and Hamas after the Oct. 7 attacks that killed 1,200 Israelis. More than 22,000 people in Gaza have died, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.


On Saturday, Israeli fighter jets struck Hezbollah targets in southern Lebanon after the militant group fired dozens of rockets into Israel. Hezbollah’s rocket volley came after Hamas blamed Israel for a drone strike in the Lebanese capital of Beirut that killed a senior Hamas official this week.


Iranian-backed Houthi rebels said they’ll continue attacks on Red Sea commercial shipping that are disrupting global supply chains.


“Any ship connected to the Zionist state will never pass the Red Sea regardless of the consequence and this decision will continue whatever the price,” Mahdi Al-Mashat, head of the Houthi political council and commander of the group’s armed forces, said in a televised speech Saturday.


Read more: US Braces for High-Stakes Decisions Over Houthi Sea Strikes


European diplomats also expressed growing concern. French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna said on X she called her called her Iranian counterpart, Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, to tell him that “Iran and its cronies must immediately stop their destabilizing actions.”


Josep Borrell, the EU’s foreign policy representative, said in Beirut it’s “imperative” to keep hostilities from escalating.


“I am sending this message to Israel too: nobody will win from a regional conflict,” Agence France-Presse quoted Borrell as telling reporters.


Blinken said US goals include maximizing the protection of civilians and the flow of humanitarian assistance reaching them.


“The situation for men, women and children in Gaza remains dire,” he said. “Far too many Palestinians have been killed — especially children.”


“It’s imperative that we see substantial and sustained increase in the assistance that’s getting to them, as well as the protection of civilians in general,” he said.


Two blasts in Iran this week that killed almost 100 people — the deadliest attacks since the 1979 founding of the Islamic Republic — have also put the region on edge. Islamic State claimed responsibility for Wednesday’s attack.


The US has already struck targets in Iraq in response to attacks by Iran-backed militias on US armed forces in the country. A US-led coalition has also warned Houthi militants in Yemen of unspecified “consequences” should attacks on commercial shipping in the Red Sea continue, raising the possibility of further Western strikes in the region.


Blinken will deliver a message across the region that the Biden administration isn’t interested in escalating the conflict but will respond the attacks on its personnel and interests, the US official said, adding that Washington expects Arab partners to convey that message onto Iran.
 

Retaliation

Hezbollah hits critical Israeli surveillance base with 62 rockets

The large-scale attack has been described as a 'first response' to the Israeli bombing of the Lebanese capital

“At 08:10 AM on Saturday, January 6, 2024, the fighters of the Islamic Resistance targeted the Meron Aerial Surveillance Base with 62 missiles of various types, inflicting direct and confirmed hits,” Hezbollah said in a statement.
The movement described the operation “as a preliminary response” to the Israeli assassination of “great leader Sheikh Saleh al-Arouri and his martyr brothers” in the southern Beirut suburb of Dahiyeh.

⚡📹 Video circulating of #Hezbollah targeting the occupation Meron intelligence base on Mount Jarmaq pic.twitter.com/kGSZnON05P
— Middle East Observer (@ME_Observer_) January 6, 2024

"Meron base is responsible for organizing, coordinating, and managing all air operations towards Syria, Lebanon, Turkiye, Cyprus, and the northern part of the Eastern Mediterranean basin,” Hezbollah’s statement adds. “Additionally, this base is a primary center for electronic jamming operations in the directions mentioned. A large number of elite Zionist officers and soldiers operate at this base.”
The statement added that Israel possesses “no equivalent alternative” to the base.

 

Palestinians rebury bodies exhumed from Gaza cemetery

Hamas on Saturday accused the Israeli military of “destroying 1,100 graves” at the cemetery and “stealing 150 bodies of recently buried martyrs”

GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories: Bereaved Palestinians on Saturday reburied bodies exhumed from a cemetery in Gaza City, where the Israeli army has been leading a ground offensive against Hamas militants since late October, an AFP video showed.
The footage from the cemetery in Al-Tuffah neighborhood showed bodies wrapped in bags and laid out on mounds of soil.
Hamas on Saturday accused the Israeli military of “destroying 1,100 graves” at the cemetery and “stealing 150 bodies of recently buried martyrs.”
When reached for comment by AFP, the Israeli army said they were checking the claims without elaborating further.
“We were surprised to see the bodies exhumed” on Saturday morning, said a local man surnamed Aliwa, who was among the people reburying the bodies. He declined to give his first name. Without offering evidence, he accused the Israeli army of “running over bodies” with a “bulldozer.”
Imprinted in the soil near the graves were what looked like track marks.
We are currently retrieving the corpses present in the cemetery,” he said, adding that only a “small number” of bodies had been identified.

 

In a nutshell, from Sunday, 07.01.2024
■ LEBANON: The IDF said fighter jets attacked Hezbollah military targets in the areas of Labbouneh, Majdal Zoun and Bint Jbeil in southern Lebanon.
  • Rocket sirens blared across northern Israel on Sunday. Fifteen rockets from Lebanon fell in northern Israel, and an anti-tank missile hit a house in the Israeli town of Metula, according to the IDF, which said it retaliated with artillery fire.

  • The IDF said Hezbollah's attack on Saturday caused significant damage to the Meron forward air control base.

  • U.S. officials fear Netanyahu will try to expand the fighting against Hezbollah in Lebanon for the sake of his political survival, the Washington Post reported. It was also reported that a new U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency assessment suggests that the IDF would be hard-pressed to win a large-scale war against Hezbollah.

  • At a cabinet meeting on Sunday, PM Netanyahu said Hezbollah should "learn what Hamas has already learnt…no terrorist is immune. We are determined to protect our citizens and return the residents of the north safely to their homes," adding that "we will do it through diplomatic methods, and if not, we will act in other ways."
■ GAZA: The IDF said it located dozens of rocket launchers, a weapons workshop and several tunnel shafts in raids throughout Gaza. According to the IDF, 11 soldiers were wounded in fighting on Sunday.
  • An airstrike killed two Palestinian journalists in southern Gaza on Sunday, AP reported: Hamza Dahdouh, who worked for Al Jazeera, and Mustafa Tharaya, a freelance journalist.

  • Qatari Prime Minister Mohammad al-Thani said that the killing of senior Hamas official Saleh al-Arouri has made it difficult to move forward with a deal to release Israeli hostages held by Hamas, but added talks are continuing.

  • The Hamas-run Health Ministry in Gaza reported that 22,835 Palestinians have been killed since the start of war.

  • More than 10 children per day, on average, have lost one or both of their legs in Gaza since the conflict erupted three months ago, according to Save the Children.

  • U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken is heading to Qatar after meeting in Jordan with King Abdullah II and other senior Jordanian officials. Blinken stressed "U.S. opposition to forcible displacement of Palestinians," as well as the need to protect West Bank Palestinians from settler violence. Abdullah warned Blinken of "catastrophic repercussions" if the war doesn't end.

  • In a cabinet meeting, PM Netanyahu said that "The war must not be stopped until we achieve all of its goals: Eliminating Hamas, returning all of our hostages and ensuring that Gaza will never again constitute a threat to Israel."
"The question is whether the Lebanese government and the U.S. mediation efforts will manage to sever the Gordian Knot between the Gaza Strip and Lebanon" - Zvi Bar'el

■ ISRAEL: The former president of Israel's supreme court, Aharon Barak, will join the proceedings at the International Court of Justice later this week, where South Africa has filed a petition accusing Israel of genocide, as a judge on Israel's behalf. Israel's legal defense will be led by Prof. Malcolm Shaw, a British expert in international law.
  • In an interview with Israel's public broadcaster, National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir said that the so-called 'voluntary' emigration of Palestinians from Gaza is the 'correct solution,' and that Israelis should re-settle the Strip.

  • Chinese shipping firm COSCO has suspended shipping to Israel, without offering a reason, Israeli financial news website Globes reported on Sunday. The report comes as Yemen's Houthis have been disrupting shipping lanes in the Red Sea.
■ WEST BANK: An East Jerusalem resident was shot dead in his car in the West Bank in what the IDF said was an attack by Palestinian militants. Sources in Ramallah said entry points of the city had been closed because of the IDF's search for suspects. A passerby was also wounded in the shooting.
  • Soldiers opened fire at a driver who tried to ram them near the Ras Bida checkpoint near Givat Ze'ev north of Jerusalem. A 3-year-old Palestinian toddler was killed in a separate vehicle during the incident, according to a police statement.

  • A Border Police officer, 19-year-old Shai Garmai, was killed when an explosive device hit the military vehicle she was in during an overnight operation in Jenin. Three other Border Police officers were wounded, one seriously.

  • Seven Palestinians were killed in an Israeli airstrike in Jenin, the Palestinian Health Ministry said. The IDF said it struck terrorists who were throwing explosives at troops. Sources in Jenin said the men had been unarmed.

  • A Palestinian man was killed by IDF fire in the village of Abwein, south of the settlement of Ariel, the Palestinian Health Ministry reported.
Israel declared war after Hamas killed at least 1,200 Israelis and wounded more than 3,300 in a merciless assault. In Gaza, the Hamas-controlled health ministry reports that at least 22,835 Palestinians have been killed. Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad hold hostage more than 129 soldiers and civilians, dead and alive, including foreign nationals.

The war comes after ten months of the most significant domestic political and social crisis in decades, due to the Netanyahu-led government's judicial coup – legislation aimed at dramatically weakening Israel's judiciary and potentially rescuing Netanyahu from the three corruption trials he faces – and amid an escalation of violence between West Bank Palestinians and Israeli settlers, the latter empowered by Israel's most right-wing government ever.

 

Israel assassinates Hezbollah commander in southern Lebanon​


"A senior commander of the Lebanese resistance movement Hezbollah has been assassinated in an Israeli airstrike on southern Lebanon.
Wissam Hassan al-Tawil was killed when the strike hit the vehicle transporting him in the village of Khirbet Selm on Monday."

 
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