military · geopolitical

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Two UN peacekeepers wounded in attack on convoy in southern Lebanon

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Two UN peacekeepers wounded in attack on convoy in southern Lebanon Two Unifil peacekeepers from Malaysia were wounded in an attack on a logistics convoy near the village of Haris in southern Lebanon, according to UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric. Dujarric said the peacekeepers were in stable condition and that Unifil would investigate the incident. He did not identify who was responsible for the attack. In a separate incident, Dujarric said an Israeli military tank fired near a UN convoy in the vicinity of Bint Jbeil, forcing the convoy to take an alternative route before safely continuing its journey. He also reported significant drone activity observed by Unifil peacekeepers in the Biyyada area on Wednesday and reiterated the UN's call for all parties to respect the inviolability of UN personnel and assets. Woman sits inside temporary cemetery for Hezbollah fighters and civilians killed in war, in Sidon, Lebanon, 11 June 2026. (Anwar Amro/AFP)

scenario pendingabout 1 month ago

military · geopolitical

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Israeli military says it intercepted drone near Metula

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Israeli military says it intercepted drone near Metula The Israeli military said its air force intercepted a drone that entered an area where Israeli forces were operating in southern Lebanon, after sirens warning of a hostile aircraft sounded in the northern Israeli town of Metula. In a statement, the Israeli army said the drone was identified and intercepted shortly after the alerts were activated. It added that missile and rocket warning sirens were triggered during the interception attempts. The incident comes amid continued Israeli military operations and incursions in southern Lebanon.

scenario pendingabout 1 month ago

military · geopolitical

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Israel reviews Iran strategy amid diplomatic efforts by Washington

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Israel reviews Iran strategy amid diplomatic efforts by Washington Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held "security consultations with senior ministers and defence officials" to discuss developments related to Iran, as Israel closely monitors ongoing negotiations between Washington and Tehran, according to Israeli media reports. The reports said officials assessing the situation warned that a failure to reach an agreement in the coming weeks could increase the likelihood of renewed military confrontation between Israel and Iran. The consultations followed comments by US President Donald Trump indicating that planned strikes against Iran had been cancelled and that a broader regional understanding could be close.

scenario pendingabout 1 month ago

military · geopolitical

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Report says Israeli military responsible for majority of explosive weapon deaths in 2025

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Report says Israeli military responsible for majority of explosive weapon deaths in 2025 More than half of all civilian deaths caused by explosive weapons in 2025 were attributed to the Israeli military, according to a new report by the Explosive Weapons Monitor. The report found that of the 22,600 civilian deaths recorded globally from explosive weapons this year, 56 percent were linked to Israeli military attacks. It also said the use of explosive weapons in attacks affecting humanitarian aid rose by 52 percent in 2025, with around 90 percent of all such incidents recorded in Palestinian territory. “When explosive weapons are used in populated areas, civilians suffer,” said Katherine Young, the organisation’s research and monitoring manager. “What is particularly alarming is that this harm has become persistent across conflicts worldwide, risking the normalisation of civilian suffering on a massive scale.”

scenario pendingabout 1 month ago

military · geopolitical

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Trump says 'settlement' reached to end war on Iran

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Trump says 'settlement' reached to end war on Iran Submitted by Sean Mathews on Thu, 06/11/2026 - 21:28 Iranian media says chances of an agreement are high, but cautions not to take Trump's word until deal officially sealed US President Donald Trump speaks before signing a proclamation in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on 11 June 2026 (Kent Nishimura/AFP) Off Iran and the US both signalled a breakthrough in ceasefire talks on Thursday, with US President Donald Trump saying an agreement to end the war and start wider negotiations could be signed over the weekend, while Iranian media said the chances of a deal were “high”. "We just made a great settlement of the war with Iran," Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Thursday. He added that "subject to finalisation of documents, which should get done, over the next few days, [we will] probably have a signing, maybe in Europe.” Trump now has an established pattern of saying a deal is at hand only for expectations to fizzle and fighting to flare up again. However, Iran’s semi-official Fars News agency reported on Thursday that the text the US accepted was already approved by Iran and that Tehran is likely to seal the agreement. The report added that no formal response has been delivered yet. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office also issued a muted statement suggesting a deal was within reach. .push({}); "President Trump spoke this evening with Prime Minister Netanyahu about the emerging memorandum of understanding with Iran for entry into negotiations," the statement said. "Israel is not a party to the memorandum of understanding, [but] the Prime Minister expressed his appreciation for President Trump's commitment that the final agreement at the conclusion of the negotiations will include the removal of the enriched material, the dismantling of the enrichment infrastructure, the limitation of missile production, and the cessation of Iran's support for its terrorist proxies in the region," the statement added. Iran's Tasnim news agency, which is close to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, dismissed Trump's statement, noting the US president had made similar declarations in the past without any outcome. "Until Iran announces the matter of a potential understanding, any news from Trump on this subject should be regarded as his previous messages," it said. Trump says Vance will go to Europe for deal Trump, however, had already begun to frame expectations for a signing ceremony in Europe, with US Vice President JD Vance in attendance. There "could be a signing over the weekend in Europe....I won't be able to be there, but JD Vance will", he told reporters. .push({}); Trump said the deal meant that "Iran will never have a nuclear weapon" but gave no details of how that would happen. Trump threatens to invade Iran's Kharg Island, then says Americans lack the 'stomach for it' Read More » "It was a big, very big thing, but we have a signing soon, and the documents are in pretty final shape, so we'll see," said Trump. He added that the Strait of Hormuz would also open once the deal was signed. "The whole Middle East is happy, and long beyond the Middle East," Trump said. Trump’s remarks capped a head-spinning Thursday, where he fluctuated from threatening to seize Iran’s Kharg Island, only to back out with the justification that the American people “don’t have the stomach” for a land invasion. Iran's chief negotiator in the talks, parliamentary speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, issued a stark warning in response to Trump’s threats. "Wrong strategies and impulsive decisions will reset the entire board for the worse, explode energy infrastructure and markets and create an endless quagmire that you will be stuck in for years," he said. General Ali Abdollahi, head of the Iranian military's central headquarters, warned that if the US attacked "it will receive a harsher response than before, and the flames of war, in addition to creating insecurity in the region, will become more widespread and far-reaching”. Trump then wrote a social media post retracting his pledge to hit Iran “very hard”. 'Cancelled' air strikes “Based on the fact that discussions with the Islamic Republic of Iran have been brought to the highest level of Iranian leadership and approved, I have…cancelled the scheduled strikes and bombings against Iran,” Trump said on Truth Social. Trump added that “all parties involved” in the talks had agreed on the “final points” of a deal, citing “Israel, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Turkey, Pakistan, Bahrain, Kuwait, Jordan, Egypt and others”. The US and Iran have been trading fire for days now, despite a fragile ceasefire they agreed to in April. US top diplomat picks Bahrain as first wartime Gulf visit, sources say Read More » Iran has responded to US attacks on vessels in the Strait of Hormuz and strikes on its land forces by targeting the US's Arab partners, including Bahrain, Kuwait and Jordan. The New York Times reported on Wednesday that the US bombed water storage facilities in southern Iran. Attacks on civilian infrastructure are generally considered a war crime under international law. Kuwait said Iranian strikes that targeted its territory on Thursday morning caused injuries and damaged its airport radar, causing a temporary closure of its airspace. But behind the bluster, there were signs that backroom diplomacy was taking place. Diplomatic manoeuvres Qatari negotiators travelled to Tehran on Wednesday to finalise a US-Iran ceasefire agreement, Reuters reported. The UAE dispatched diplomats to engage in face-to-face talks with senior Iranian officials this week to de-escalate tensions, Bloomberg reported. .push({}); A Gulf diplomat told Middle East Eye their government believed the meeting was held in Tehran, citing an open-source account on X that tracked an Emirati plane known to carry Emirati officials. MEE revealed this week that US Secretary of State Marco Rubio is planning a trip to the Gulf, where he will visit Bahrain, the UAE and Kuwait - a trip that would likely not take place if fighting erupted again. Any deal between the US and Iran is expected to be temporary, allowing the two sides 60 days to work through negotiations over Iran’s nuclear programme and the fate of the Strait of Hormuz, which has been subjected to competing Iranian and US blockades. Axios News, which is close to the Trump administration and has often reported a deal was close only for talks to fall through, said the agreement still needed to be approved by Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei. The text narrows the differences between the two sides on a mechanism to release Iran’s frozen assets and set up parameters for the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. War on Iran News Post Date Override 0 Update Date Mon, 05/04/2020 - 21:19 Update Date Override 0

scenario pendingabout 1 month ago

military · geopolitical

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Trump calls off latest threats to strike Iran, citing progress in negotiations

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President Donald Trump called off new U.S. military strikes on Iran on Thursday, saying "final points" of an initial peace deal had been approved and details of a signing ​ceremony would ‌be announced shortly. Iran's semi-official Fars news agency reported that Tehran had not approved ⁠the text of any agreement. Since mid-March, Trump has repeatedly claimed that a deal with Iran to ‌end the war is close. FRANCE 24's Carys Garland and Monte Francis report.

scenario pendingabout 1 month ago

military · geopolitical

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Trump threatens to invade Iran's Kharg Island, then says Americans lack the 'stomach for it'

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Trump threatens to invade Iran's Kharg Island, then says Americans lack the 'stomach for it' Submitted by Sean Mathews on Thu, 06/11/2026 - 17:26 US president's flip-flopping on high-stakes military operations comes as he expresses bewilderment that Iran hasn't 'submitted' to his terms A woman walks past a giant banner depicting Iranian missiles and a sword belonging to Imam Ali, the first imam of Shia Muslims, at Vanak Square in Tehran, on 10 June 2026 (Atta Kenare/AFP) Off President Donald Trump threatened to seize Iran’s main oil export hub, Kharg Island, on Thursday, before flip-flopping on the grounds that the American people "don't have the stomach" for what military experts say would be an invasion entailing large US casualties. "The United States will be hitting Iran... VERY HARD TONIGHT," Trump wrote on his Truth Social network on Thursday. "At some point in the not too distant future, we will be taking Kharg Island, and other oil infrastructure points, and assume total control of their Oil and Gas Markets, much like we have with Venezuela," he added. The Trump administration considered launching an operation to take Kharg Island in the first month of the war on Iran, but eventually backed off the plan. Former senior US and western military officials told Middle East Eye at the time that the US would likely be able to establish a bridgehead on Kharg Island, but that a US invading force would face intense fire from Iran as it approached the island and more difficulties trying to hold it. .push({}); But the threat to escalate comes as US Secretary of State Marco Rubio eyes a visit to the Gulf states, stopping in Bahrain, Kuwait, and the UAE, MEE reported. Trump himself appeared to acknowledge the high casualty cost of such an operation. He walked back the threat in an interview with Fox News shortly after his post. 'The country has no appetite for it' "My preference has always been - take Kharg Island...my preference would be that. I don't know that America has the stomach for ​it," Trump told Fox News. Kalev Sepp, a former US special forces officer and emeritus professor at the US Naval Postgraduate School, told MEE that a US invasion force would likely depend on basing in Gulf states such as Saudi Arabia , the UAE or Kuwait . “They can’t do this without neighbouring Gulf states giving them access to bases,” he told MEE. 'Shooting gallery': How a US invasion of Iranian islands might unfold Read More » The Gulf states generally supported US military activity at the height of the war, but have since shifted towards pushing for a negotiated settlement. Even the UAE, which has been the most hawkish Gulf state towards Iran, engaged in face-to-face talks with senior Iranian officials this week in a bid to de-escalate tensions, Bloomberg reported on Thursday. A Gulf diplomat told MEE their government believed the meeting was held in Tehran, citing an open-source account on X that tracked an Emirati plane known to carry Emirati officials. In addition to Gulf buy-in, the bigger strategic challenge for the US would be holding Kharg Island after landing marines or paratroopers there, experts say. “These forces are very good at securing a foothold because they are extremely light and can move quickly. The moment they become static, they become a target that needs to be protected and supplied,” Daniel Davis, a former US Army lieutenant colonel, told MEE. ”It would be a shooting gallery.” 'Submit' Trump’s flip-flopping again underscored the disconnect between his public statements on Iran and its continued demonstration of military capabilities. .push({}); Trump said Iran’s “Navy, Air Force, Radar, Anti Aircraft, and all other forms of Defense, together with most of its offensive capability, are GONE,” which suggests that it would be an easy battle to take Kharg Island. Trump also walked back a threat to attack Iran’s civilian infrastructure, which is a war crime. "I'd rather not do it, because once you do that, the people suffer," Trump said, after threatening to bomb Iran’s power plants and bridges. US top diplomat picks Bahrain as first wartime Gulf visit, sources say Read More » But the US has escalated its strikes on Iran in defiance of a ceasefire it reached with Tehran in April. The New York Times reported that the US on Thursday targeted a drinking-water facility on Iran’s southern coast, which Iranian officials said left 20,000 people without water. Attacking civilian infrastructure like water facilities is considered a war crime under international law. The US also attacked a commercial tanker in the Gulf of Oman on Thursday, killing three Indian crew members. The US said it targeted the ship for failing to abide by its blockade of the waterway. Oman launched a rescue operation after the US strike, and India summoned the US deputy chief of mission at the American embassy in New Delhi to protest against the strike. The US’s attacks come as Trump increasingly expresses his frustration that Iran is failing to agree to his terms to end the war. "The whole thing is crazy, and they're really in submission; they just don't know it yet," Trump told Fox. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, meanwhile, vowed on Thursday to use Iranian funds to pay for damage that the country causes to Gulf allies. Iran has attacked Jordan, Bahrain and Kuwait in response to the US strikes. All these countries are home to US military bases. .push({}); "Any damage it inflicts on our allies in the Gulf will be paid for with funds extracted from Iranian Accounts," Bessent wrote on X. Bessent also said that "any tolls paid to the Persian Gulf Strait Authority will be offset by funds extracted from their accounts". The authority is Iran's new agency for collecting transit fees in the Strait of Hormuz, a critical energy transit waterway that Tehran has essentially closed off since early in the war. War on Iran News Post Date Override 0 Update Date Mon, 05/04/2020 - 21:19 Update Date Override 0

scenario pendingabout 1 month ago

military · geopolitical

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Trump cancels planned strikes on Iran

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US President Donald Trump said on Thursday he had cancelled planned military strikes against Iran after negotiations with Tehran reached what he described as the highest levels of the Iranian leadership and received approval from all parties involved. “Based on the fact that discussions with the Islamic Republic of Iran have been brought to the highest level of Iranian leadership and approved, I have, as President of the United States of America, cancelled the scheduled strikes and bombings...

scenario pendingabout 1 month ago

military · geopolitical

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India calls for end to attacks on ships after three nationals killed

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India calls for end to attacks on ships after three nationals killed The Indian Ministry of External Affairs demanded attacks on ships to cease after a third vessel with an Indian crew was targeted by US forces off the coast of Oman this week. Ministry spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal told reporters on Thursday that a third ship, named Jalveer, was attacked ‌‌by the US Navy, which was confirmed by the US military the same day. “These attacks must cease, and we reiterate our call for dialogue and diplomacy to ensure an early return to peace and stability in the region,” Jaiswal said. He added that the ongoing attacks on “shipping in the region are deeply worrisome and are a direct consequence of the ongoing conflict there”. “The targeting of commercial shipping and civilian infrastructure in the region must end and free and unimpeded navigation and commerce through the international waterways in the region in keeping with international law must be restored at the earliest,” an official statement by India ’s Ministry of External Affairs has said on Wednesday.

scenario pendingabout 1 month ago

military · geopolitical

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Welcome to Trump’s World Cup, a depressingly angry version of football uniting the planet | Barney Ronay

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Ted Lasso will deliver a message of hope before the USA’s first game, in an America that is not a fit or desirable host right now Shortly before 6pm local time on Friday night at the Los Angeles Stadium, the actor who plays Ted Lasso – the fictional manager of a fake team in a falsely heartwarming version of football – will tell hundreds of millions of TV viewers tuning in to watch the start of the American leg of the Fifa World Cup that football unites the world . In an interesting twist, the actor Jason Sudeikis will do this at a time when the World Cup host is simultaneously bombing the second-ranked country in Group G , having recently murdered its head of state. The message of unity is one likely to be heard by the US president, Donald Trump, who has initiated six military conflicts in his second term, and whose brutally divisive immigration policies have now led to the barring of Omar Artan , the reigning African referee of the year. Continue reading...

scenario pendingabout 1 month ago

military · geopolitical

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US confirms it disabled third tanker off Oman this week

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US confirms it disabled third tanker off Oman this week The US military said on Thursday it had disabled a third oil tanker in the Gulf of Oman overnight as it “violated the blockade against Iran by attempting to transport Iranian oil.” This was the third commercial ship disabled by US forces off Oman this week, Centcom said in a post on X. “U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) acted against Guinea-Bissau flagged M/T Jalveer as it attempted to transport oil from Iran through the Gulf of Oman. A U.S. aircraft fired two Hellfire missiles into the ship’s engine room after the crew repeatedly failed to comply with directions from U.S. forces.” It also confirmed that the Palau-flagged vessels Marivex and Settebello were disabled on Monday and Tuesday, respectively.

scenario pendingabout 1 month ago

military · geopolitical

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She survived an Israeli raid that left babies decomposing. Now she awaits treatment

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She survived an Israeli raid that left babies decomposing. Now she awaits treatment Submitted by Maha Hussaini on Thu, 06/11/2026 - 12:03 A Gaza girl survived bombing and an incubator without oxygen. Three years on, Israel is still blocking her from life-changing treatment abroad Nour Abu Samaan fought for her life in a Gaza hospital incubator as Israeli forces advanced on the facility in November 2023, cutting off oxygen supplies (Hani Abu Rezeq/MEE) Off Samar Hammad gave birth to her youngest daughter, Nour Abu Samaan, just hours before the war in Gaza began in October 2023. When she chose the name Nour – Arabic for "light" – the Palestinian mother could not have imagined that her newborn would soon be fighting for her life in a hospital incubator as Israeli forces advanced on the facility, cutting off electricity and oxygen supplies and leaving several newborns dead . Nour survived against all odds, her mother says, but almost three years later she is still living with a disability made worse by Israel’s ongoing siege. "I gave birth to Nour as a completely healthy baby on the eve of the war," Hammad told Middle East Eye from a tent in central Gaza City. Only hours after returning home, she said, Israeli strikes hit near the family's neighbourhood. A building close to their house was bombed, and by the following day, Nour had begun losing consciousness. .push({}); With her condition deteriorating rapidly, Hammad rushed her to al-Nasr Children's Hospital in Gaza City. When doctors saw the infant, they told Hammad she was dying. Nour was later diagnosed with complications caused by inhaling toxic gases released during the bombardment. Nour remained in the hospital for more than a month as Israeli forces advanced deeper into Gaza and fighting intensified around the facility. "The shelling was relentless," Hammad recalled. "Nour was in an incubator with several other newborns. She repeatedly lost oxygen and had to be resuscitated." At one stage, doctors told Hammad there was little more they could do and that the machines keeping her daughter alive were only delaying the inevitable. .push({}); Desperate, she pleaded for permission to hold and breastfeed her baby. Nour Abu Samaan's parents now care for her in a displacement tent in Gaza City (Hani Abu Rezeq/MEE) .push({}); After several requests, hospital staff relented. Within minutes of holding her, Hammad said, her daughter's condition began to improve. "The machines started showing a response," she said. "The doctors were shocked. They told me it was like a miracle." The Israeli army had cut off all food, water and fuel supplies to the Gaza Strip at the start of the war, pushing the enclave's healthcare system to the brink of collapse. The siege was compounded by direct attacks on hospitals and raids on medical facilities, which killed scores of patients, including newborn babies. Hospital raid In Gaza City, al-Nasr Children's Hospital was among the first medical facilities targeted by the Israeli military. As they shelled the hospital buildings, courtyards and their surroundings, staff asked parents of newborns in incubators to evacuate, assuring them their babies would remain safe under medical care. "All the other mothers left their babies and fled south," Hammad said. "But I told the doctors I couldn't leave my daughter behind." After repeated pleas, doctors agreed to release Nour into her mother's care, warning that Israeli forces were rapidly approaching the hospital. "They gave her to me at my own responsibility," Hammad recalled. "I carried her and walked out." On 9 November 2023, she fled the hospital with her daughter. 'I told the doctors I couldn't leave my daughter behind' – Samar Hammad, Nour's mother Later that day, Israeli forces struck the hospital and cut oxygen supplies to the neonatal intensive care unit. The following day, staff were ordered to leave, forcing them to abandon infants who could not be moved without incubators and life-support equipment. Israeli troops subsequently entered the hospital and remained in the area for around three weeks. When healthcare workers returned during a temporary ceasefire on 28 November, they found four babies dead. Abu Samaan was the only infant from the incubator ward known to have survived, after her mother insisted on taking her out shortly before Israeli forces stormed the hospital. For Hammad, however, survival marked the beginning of a new ordeal. Thirst and hunger After leaving al-Nasr Hospital, Hammad carried her daughter from one medical facility to another in search of treatment. Nour's body had gone limp, and as fighting intensified around them, mother and child became trapped inside a school sheltering displaced families. "She cried constantly," Hammad recalled. "People would tell me to make her stop because the tanks were surrounding us, and they were afraid soldiers would hear her." Eventually, she managed to reach al-Ahli Arab Hospital, commonly known as the Baptist Hospital. There, doctors conducted a CT scan and diagnosed Nour with brain calcification. “They said it was most likely due to inhalation of phosphorus gas, and that she needed continuous physiotherapy,” Hammad said. For the next six months, she took Nour for daily treatment at al-Wafa Hospital in Gaza City, hoping the therapy would improve her condition. Torture, executions, babies left to die, sexual abuse… These are Israel’s crimes Read More » But protecting her daughter from bombardment and securing medical care was only part of the struggle. Like countless other families in Gaza, Hammad also faced the daily challenge of finding enough food and water to keep her child alive. “I would walk for hours, sometimes up to seven hours every day, searching for water,” she recalled. As she wandered through the area carrying an empty bottle, repeatedly searching the same streets, an elderly displaced man noticed her desperation. Three hours later, he stopped her and quietly filled her bottle from his family's limited supply. “Water was extremely scarce and almost unavailable; the man had to hide the water bottle in his clothes to secretly fill it,” she said. “As soon as I got the water, I prepared her milk. She drank it and finally fell asleep after hours of crying and inability to sleep.” Following the Hamas-led attacks on Israel on 7 October 2023, then-Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant announced a "complete siege" on Gaza, declaring there would be "no electricity, no food, no water, no fuel". Although Gaza had already been under blockade since 2007, the tightened restrictions effectively halted the entry of essential supplies, triggering severe shortages of food, water, fuel and medical resources and worsening an already fragile humanitarian crisis. Several human rights organisations have concluded that Israel used starvation as a method of warfare and a tool of displacement, aimed at forcing civilians to move from northern Gaza to the south. By late 2025, at least 453 Palestinians had died due to severe malnutrition in Gaza, including 150 children, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health. Waiting lists Despite the hunger and deprivation, Hammad refused to flee south. She said reports of abuse against displaced Palestinians at Israeli military checkpoints left her terrified of making the journey. More than anything, she feared for her daughter's fragile health. As Nour slowly began moving her limbs and grasping objects, Hammad allowed herself a measure of hope. “She was improving, but the doctors told me she needed to be urgently evacuated for treatment abroad, which was nearly impossible at the time.” On 25 December 2024, Hammad travelled to Kamal Adwan Hospital in northern Gaza after hearing of a renowned paediatrician who might be able to help her daughter. “I risked my life after hearing there was a skilled and compassionate paediatrician who might be able to help my daughter. I went to the hospital, but he was overwhelmed with a large number of injured patients,” she said. “Medical staff told me to return after two days to see him. But two days later, the army stormed the hospital and detained him.” The paediatrician was Dr Hussam Abu Safiya, who was detained by Israeli forces on 27 December 2024. According to his lawyers, Abu Safiya was subjected to repeated torture in detention, lost around 40 kilograms and suffered a serious deterioration in his health. He was recently placed in solitary confinement. Nour Abu Samaan's father holds a phone showing a photo of Nour in the incubator at al-Nasr Children's Hospital in Gaza (Hani Abu Rezeq/MEE) Meanwhile, Hammad continued trying to secure treatment abroad for her daughter, despite the strict Israeli siege preventing people from leaving the strip. "She was given a medical referral to Italy," Hammad said. "But we've been waiting for months, along with tens of thousands of other patients." According to the Palestinian Ministry of Health, at least 17,757 people who need critical treatment abroad have been given medical referrals, including around 4,000 children. However, due to severe Israeli restrictions, most remain on waiting lists. 'Her health is hanging on an Israeli permit that would determine whether she can improve or remain disabled' – Samar Hammad Although Israel agreed to a limited reopening of the Rafah crossing with Egypt in February, allowing up to 50 patients a day to leave Gaza, only 1,204 patients had been evacuated through Rafah and Kerem Shalom by 20 May. After everything she had endured, Hammad said her daughter's future now depended on a decision beyond her control. “I have managed to rescue Nour from imminent death in the incubator, found water and milk for her during the harshest times, and took her to hospitals for physiotherapy throughout two years of genocide,” Hammad said. “Now her health is hanging on an Israeli permit that would determine whether she can improve or remain disabled for the rest of her life.” Israel's genocide in Gaza Gaza City, occupied Palestine News Post Date Override 0 Update Date Mon, 05/04/2020 - 21:19 Update Date Override 0

scenario pendingabout 1 month ago

military · geopolitical

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US attack kills three Indian sailors in Gulf of Oman

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US attack kills three Indian sailors in Gulf of Oman Submitted by MEE staff on Thu, 06/11/2026 - 12:28 India summons deputy head of US mission in Delhi after second vessel this week comes under American attack A screengrab of footage released by US Central Command shows the moment the Palau-flagged MT Settebello was struck by US forces in the Gulf of Oman on 10 June 2026 (Screengrab/Centcom) Off Three Indian sailors have been killed after the US military struck a tanker in the Gulf of Oman , a federal minister said on Thursday. The Palau-flagged MT Settebello vessel came under attack early on Wednesday after the US accused it of not complying “with directions from American forces”. The tanker had 24 Indian crew members on board, of whom 21 were rescued. The US has targeted several vessels off the coast of Oman this week. Crews were evacuated from two other ships after they were hit by projectiles. “Sadly, three Indian seafarers initially reported missing are now confirmed dead after bodies have been located and identified,” said Sarbananda Sonowal, India’s shipping minister. .push({}); “This is a profound loss to our maritime family. The Modi Govt stands firmly with the bereaved during this difficult hour and is fully committed to supporting the next of kin. “I have directed officials to ensure immediate repatriation of the rescued crew members and swift return of the mortal remains of the deceased for their final rites.” After the attack, the Indian government summoned the deputy head of Washington’s mission in Delhi. The US military accused the tanker of violating its blockade on Iran ’s ports and attempting “to transport oil from Iran”. “U.S. forces disabled an oil tanker in the Gulf of Oman for the second consecutive day after another vessel violated the ongoing blockade by attempting to transport oil from Iran,” US Centcom wrote on X. Trump threatens to ‘blow up’ Oman despite centuries of US ties Read More » “[We] disabled Palau-flagged M/T Settebello as it transited the Gulf of Oman. A U.S. aircraft fired precision munitions into the ship’s engine room after the crew repeatedly failed to comply with directions from American forces.” It is the third such attack in a few days. On Monday, the US military hit another Palau-flagged tanker with Indian crew members, The Marivex, in the Gulf of Oman. Centcom also accused it of failing to comply with American instructions. All 24 crew members of that vessel were rescued by Oman’s military, according to Indian authorities. India's shipping ministry said all 20 Indian crew members were safe after a new suspected US strike on the asphalt tanker Jalveer off Oman on Thursday “We have learnt of an incident involving a vessel off Shinas port of Oman, earlier today. We are closely monitoring the situation and coordinating with the local authorities for further details,” the embassy said on X. .push({}); “Evacuation of crew from MT Jalveer to Shinas port is being coordinated with assistance from Royal Navy of Oman, and shall soon be completed.” US and Iran trade blows Since the war began in late February, Iran has effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz - the crucial waterway through which a fifth of the world’s crude oil and a fifth of the world’s liquefied natural gas passes. In response, the US has imposed a blockade on Iran’s ports. Centcom said on Wednesday that it had “disabled eight non-compliant vessels, redirected 134 ships that complied, and allowed 42 vessels supporting humanitarian aid to pass since initiating the blockade on April 13.” It comes as the US and Iran continued to exchange strikes overnight and into Thursday. .push({}); The renewed hostilities followed the downing of an American helicopter near the Strait of Hormuz earlier this week, after which Washington launched strikes on Iranian military infrastructure. Iranian media reported explosions in several areas, including Bandar Abbas, Qeshm and Minab, near the Strait of Hormuz. Reports also cited strikes in Karaj, Nazarabad and Pishva, near Tehran. Iranian media said at least three people were wounded in Tehran province. The attacks came after US President Donald Trump accused Tehran of prolonging negotiations to end the three-month war. Speaking on Wednesday, Trump said Iran had been “playing us for suckers” and would “have to pay the price”. Iran’s foreign ministry condemned the US strikes on Thursday, saying they rendered the nearly two-month ceasefire “practically meaningless”. It said Washington bore responsibility for what it called the “extremely serious consequences” of the attacks. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said it retaliated by striking US-linked military targets in Bahrain , Kuwait and Jordan . War on Iran News Post Date Override 0 Update Date Mon, 05/04/2020 - 21:19 Update Date Override 0

scenario pendingabout 1 month ago

military · geopolitical

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US military confirms attack on third Indian-crewed tanker off Gulf of Oman

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US forces disabled a third oil tanker in the Gulf of Oman. The ship was attempting to transport oil from Iran. US aircraft fired missiles into the engine room. This action follows a blockade initiated on April 13. CENTCOM reports disabling nine non-compliant vessels and redirecting many others.

scenario pendingabout 1 month ago

military · geopolitical

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US and Iran trade strikes as ceasefire comes under renewed strain

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US and Iran trade strikes as ceasefire comes under renewed strain Submitted by MEE staff on Thu, 06/11/2026 - 10:39 US forces target Iran-linked shipping passing through Hormuz strait as IRGC hits US-linked military targets in Bahrain, Kuwait and Jordan An image grab from a video released by the US Central Command on 11 June 2026 shows what the military says are strikes targeting "Iranian military surveillance capabilities, communications systems and air defense sites" (AFP/ US Centcom) Off The United States and Iran exchanged strikes on Wednesday and Thursday, placing a fragile April ceasefire under its most serious strain yet and drawing several Gulf states directly into the latest round of escalation. The renewed hostilities followed the downing of an American helicopter near the Strait of Hormuz earlier this week, after which Washington launched strikes on Iranian military infrastructure. US officials said the attacks were aimed at Iranian surveillance, communications and air defence systems that posed a threat to American forces and commercial shipping in regional waters. US Central Command said the latest wave of strikes began at 5:15pm Washington time on Wednesday, early Thursday in Iran, and had been “completed”. It said Marine Corps, Air Force and Navy assets fired precision munitions at targets across Iran. Iranian media reported explosions in several areas, including Bandar Abbas, Qeshm and Minab, near the Strait of Hormuz. Reports also cited strikes in Karaj, Nazarabad and Pishva, near Tehran. Iranian media said at least three people were wounded in Tehran province. .push({}); The attacks came after US President Donald Trump accused Tehran of prolonging negotiations to end the three-month war. Speaking on Wednesday, Trump said Iran had been “playing us for suckers” and would “have to pay the price”. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth suggested the military pressure could continue, saying that if Trump required it, Washington would “negotiate with bombs”. Iran’s foreign ministry condemned the US strikes on Thursday, saying they rendered the nearly two-month ceasefire “practically meaningless”. It said Washington bore responsibility for what it called the “extremely serious consequences” of the attacks. Iranian strikes surprise Israel and raise concern of strategic setback Read More » The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said it retaliated by striking US-linked military targets in Bahrain , Kuwait and Jordan. Iranian state media said the attacks included drones and ballistic missiles targeting the US Fifth Fleet in Bahrain, airbases in Kuwait and the al-Azraq airbase in Jordan . Bahrain issued an air raid alert on Wednesday after Iranian reports said the US base there had been targeted. The interior ministry urged residents to remain calm and move to safe places. In Kuwait, authorities temporarily closed the country’s airspace early on Thursday and diverted flights, citing risks to civil aviation after what they described as Iranian attacks. The military said its air defences were engaging “hostile aerial targets”. Kuwait later announced that commercial air traffic had returned to normal. Jordan’s military said on Thursday that its air defence systems and air force intercepted 20 missiles launched from Iran towards the Azraq area in Zarqa governorate, around 80km east of Amman. It said fragments fell but caused no casualties or material damage. The IRGC, however, claimed that 12 ballistic missiles had hit the al-Azraq airbase and its control centre, saying the attack destroyed facilities and aircraft. The claims could not be independently verified. US targets shipping in Gulf of Oman The escalation also saw US strikes on shipping in the Sea of Oman, one of the world’s most important energy routes. An Iranian cargo barge was hit by a US projectile in the Gulf of Oman early on Thursday, the Iranian governor of Sirik county said, according to Mehr news agency. It was one of several strikes on Indian-crewed vessels by US forces this week. .push({}); The 150-tonne cargo barge, owned by locals from Sirik and carrying essential goods from the Omani port of Khasab, was hit about five nautical miles off Khasab, the Iranian official said. All five crew members were rescued by passing vessels and taken to Oman, he added. How the Strait of Hormuz crisis is reshaping the old world order Read More » US forces have disabled three tankers in the vital waterway this week, leading to the death of three seafarers over enforcement of Iranian ports blockade. Earlier, two Indian seafarers were confirmed killed and one missing after a US attack on the Palau-flagged Settebello oil tanker off the coast of Oman on Tuesday night, according to Indian news outlet The Hindu. Iranian media reported on Thursday that the Iranian navy had hit two ships trying to transit the strait. US Central Command denied that shipping had stopped, saying commercial vessels were still moving in and out of the waterway. Oil prices rose again on Thursday as traders weighed the risk of further disruption. Gulf stock markets also dipped, reflecting wider concern that the confrontation could spread beyond direct US-Iran exchanges. Trump told Fox News that US forces had fired 49 Tomahawk missiles during the latest strikes and claimed Iranian leaders had contacted him while the bombing was under way to ask for it to stop. Iran’s IRGC denied the claim, calling it an attempt to cover for Washington’s position in the war. Despite the military escalation, diplomatic channels remained active. Qatari negotiators travelled to Tehran on Wednesday after consultations with Washington in an effort to bridge remaining gaps between the two sides. The delegation left on Thursday. UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres warned against a return to “full war”, while Iran’s UN ambassador Amir Saeid Iravani said no sustainable agreement could be reached through threats or the use of force. The latest exchanges followed weeks of stalled negotiations over a deal to end the war, which began in February with US-Israeli strikes on Iran. Tehran has also insisted that any settlement include a truce in Lebanon , where Israel has continued to bombard civilian areas, killing 3,696 since March, while Hezbollah has continued to target Israeli forces. War on Iran News Post Date Override 0 Update Date Mon, 05/04/2020 - 21:19 Update Date Override 0

scenario pendingabout 1 month ago

military · geopolitical

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US administration investigating Iran war critic Trita Parsi, says report

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US administration investigating Iran war critic Trita Parsi, says report Submitted by Alex MacDonald on Thu, 06/11/2026 - 09:49 The Free Press reports officials in the US government are looking to deport the Swedish-Iranian analyst Trita Parsi of the Quincy Institute in Washington DC on 12 February 2020 (AFP/Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images) Off The Trump administration has launched an investigation into prominent Iran war critic Trita Parsi, according to a report in the Free Press. According to US officials and documents reviewed by the pro-Trump outlet, officials are looking into the possibility of deporting Parsi, who holds both Iranian and Swedish citizenship. Parsi, who is co-founder and executive vice president of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft and co-founded the National Iranian-American Council (NIAC), has been a vocal opponent of the ongoing US attacks on Iran . A Trump official told the Free Press that US Secretary of State Marco Rubio had been "very clear" in his intentions to tackle “people who support adversaries of ours and whose work furthers their agenda and undermines our security. “Anyone who seeks to undermine the US, we’re taking a hard look at," the official said. .push({}); Since the beginning of the US- Israeli attack on Iran in February, the Trump administration has increasingly targeted figures of Iranian descent in the US. In April, Hamideh Soleimani Afshar and her daughter Sarina were detained and had their residency permits rescinded after they were – incorrectly – identified as relatives of former Iranian military commander Qassem Soleimani by far-right influencer Laura Loomer. Despite denying their links to Soleimani, the pair remain in custody in Texas. The US also detained and revoked the green cards of relatives of former Iranian minister Masoumeh Ebtekar in April. Parsi is a critic of the Islamic Republic whose family fled to Sweden to escape persecution in Iran. He has faced attacks from Iranian monarchists and pro-Trump figures over his opposition to the conflict. .push({}); He has also been highly critical of US backing for Israel's genocide in Gaza and its attacks on Lebanon . US immigration appeals board decides Mahmoud Khalil can be deported Read More » Speaking to Middle East Eye in May, Parsi warned that the US's ability to secure a deal with Iran would ultimately come down to its ability to restrain Israeli attacks in the region. “If Trump either cannot or will not do so, then the value of any agreement with Washington comes sharply into question,” he said. “A ceasefire that leaves Israel free to reignite hostilities at will – while the United States remains unable to prevent itself from being dragged back into conflict – offers little assurance of stability. Under such circumstances, the utility of a deal with Washington diminishes dramatically.” MEE contacted the US State Department and the Department of Homeland Security for comment, but had received no response from either at time of publication. War on Iran News Post Date Override 0 Update Date Mon, 05/04/2020 - 21:19 Update Date Override 0

scenario pendingabout 1 month ago

military · geopolitical

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Ceasefires and construction: How Israel is cementing its presence in Lebanon and Syria

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Ceasefires and construction: How Israel is cementing its presence in Lebanon and Syria Submitted by Daniel Hilton on Wed, 06/10/2026 - 12:56 Satellite imagery shows Israel has developed a string of bases from the Mediterranean to the Yarmouk River in newly occupied territory. Sources say it looks like they're here to stay Israeli soldiers operate at Beaufort Ridge in southern Lebanon, in this handout image released on 31 May 2026 (Israeli military/handout via Reuters) On With its sweeping panoramas of south Lebanon and flags rising over 1,000-year-old battlements, the footage Israel released last week of its troops seizing Beaufort Castle was intended to provoke awe and anger. The Crusader castle is certainly an impressive landmark with a poignant history. But while the eyes of invading Israeli soldiers will have undoubtedly been drawn to the vast basalt blocks of its ancient walls, some vestiges along the western ramparts may have also caught their attention: concrete bunkers. Between 1982 and 2000, Israel maintained a permanent base at Beaufort Castle, one repeatedly shelled by Hezbollah during a guerrilla campaign that eventually forced the occupiers out. A quarter of a century later, Israel has again established fortified military bases on vantage points in newly occupied land. .push({}); This time, they stretch through southern Lebanon and Syria , from the Mediterranean coast to the Yarmouk basin via the summit of Mount Hermon. Developed since late 2024, analysis of satellite imagery reveals a concerted effort to build fortifications and infrastructure that suggests an intention to remain in situ. Syrian and Lebanese military officers and sources close to Hezbollah tell Middle East Eye they are under no illusions: despite promises of withdrawal, Israel intends for these bases to remain permanent. “If you are planning to withdraw, you do not carry out this much work,” a Lebanese military source tells MEE. Lebanon: Invasion, truce and development Israel invaded Lebanon in October 2024, escalating year-long, cross-border clashes with Hezbollah that the Lebanese movement launched in response to the genocide in Gaza . .push({}); By the time Israel agreed to fully withdraw in a 27 November 2024 ceasefire agreement, Lebanon was traumatised. Hezbollah’s leadership had been largely wiped out, 4,000 people had been killed by Israel and more than a million had been displaced from the south and areas of Beirut. Under the terms of that agreement, the Israelis had 60 days to pull out, with Hezbollah promising to retreat north of the Litani River in return. Yet, despite an extension, the deadline came and went, with Israel refusing to leave five positions it established in the first days of the invasion. These five bases were all built on hilltop positions, giving a clear line of sight over large stretches of south Lebanon. Running along most of Lebanon’s 79km border with Israel, they loom over several towns and villages, all of which have now been depopulated and some of which have been levelled. Unifil, the UN peacekeeping force set to wind down its operations in 2027, has operated in the area for two decades, and Israel appears to be making use of - and improvements to - tracks used by its patrols. .push({}); The post at Labbouneh, Israel’s most western position, is just 150 metres from a Unifil base and 2km from the force’s main headquarters on the coast. Similarly, at Tal Dowary near Houla, the Israeli base has been established 1.5km from Unifil peacekeepers. Satellite imagery shows work beginning at the sites in October 2024. At first, nearby buildings are destroyed. Israel has used air strikes, detonations and bulldozers to raze areas close to the border. The images also show roads being widened, land degradation and earth fortifications emerging over the following months. By the turn of the year, accommodation units and vehicles have started appearing at the bases. Work really gets going once the ceasefire begins and Israel has agreed to withdraw. From January to September 2025, Israel rapidly develops the sites. Fortifications are widened, heightened and expanded, including alongside some roads. The perimeters of some bases grow, with roads broadened and watchtowers erected. By November, images show a large increase in accommodation units and vehicles in all the sites. “For 15 months, we watched the Israelis bring in reinforcements, conduct drilling works, and open roads around these sites - steps that suggest an intention to remain permanently,” the Lebanese military source says. Images from October 2023 and December 2025 reveal a new Israeli base, to the right of the image, adjacent to the existing UN base at Labbouneh (MEE) The bases are, says a source close to Hezbollah, operational centres “designed defensively, making it impossible to approach them, while also allowing offensive operations to be launched from them”. According to the source, who is intimately familiar with developments in the south, Israel intended for the bases to provide it with a secure zone five kilometres deep. Yet hostilities broke out again in early March, when Israel killed Iran’s Ali Khamenei, an important spiritual figurehead for many Lebanese Shia, and Hezbollah attacked Israel once again, suspecting an imminent invasion. Weeks later, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reportedly approved the establishment of several new outposts in Lebanese territory. Israeli soldiers have told Haaretz that these newer positions do not appear temporary. “These are permanent outposts that will be manned for a long time,” a soldier told the newspaper. “Nobody really knows where this is going.” The usefulness of Israel’s bases in Lebanon is debatable. Hezbollah, despite being struck almost daily during the supposed ceasefire, has reorganised in the south under Israel’s nose. And since hostilities began again, Hezbollah attacks and operations have been seen in several border areas, with Israeli troops unable to assert control in villages close to their bases, such as Khiam . Similarly, the Israeli hold on positions earmarked to become new outposts has been shaky: Hezbollah even managed to film itself tearing down an Israeli flag from one such post near the western town of al-Bayyada. Images from October 2023 and November 2025 reveal how buildings have been destroyed to make way for a new Israeli base south of a UN post at Tal Dowary (MEE) Last Thursday, a new US-backed ceasefire proposal was put forward. There was no mention of any Israeli withdrawal from the areas it occupies - now a fifth of the whole country. Israel said it agreed to the plan but continued to attack Lebanon and occupy more territory. Hezbollah's secretary-general, Naim Qassem, said his party rejects any ceasefire agreement that does not include a full Israeli withdrawal from Lebanese territory. The source close to the party warns of Israeli attempts to separate the south from the rest of Lebanon entirely. As the satellite imagery shows, Israel used the last ceasefire to cement a more permanent foothold in the country. “According to current assessments, Israel is now trying to entrench itself in every position it has reached and turn those positions into fixed centres,” the source tells MEE. “Yet so far, beyond the positions it already established, fortified and turned into centres during the previous war, everything newly created remains unfortified and vulnerable at any moment to attacks by the resistance.” Syria: Revolution and occupation The end of Israel’s 2024 invasion of Lebanon dovetailed with dramatic events in Syria that opened the door for a new occupation to the east. On 27 November, the day the Lebanese ceasefire began, Syrian rebels charged out of their Idlib province stronghold in an assault that would reach Damascus and topple Bashar al-Assad within a fortnight. As the rebels, led by Ahmed al-Sharaa, celebrated the end to a decade of civil war, Israel pummelled military sites across Syria and moved troops into a neutral UN-monitored buffer zone and beyond. Among the first locations seized was the summit of Mount Hermon, which at 2,814 metres is the Levant’s second-highest peak. 'Israel is now trying to entrench itself in every position it has reached and turn those positions into fixed centres' - Source close to Hezbollah Netanyahu triumphantly visited troops there that December, insisting Israel would not retreat for at least a year. Deep into 2026, Israel remains at the summit. Meanwhile, a series of bases has been established from Mount Hermon’s peak to the Yarmouk River on the Syrian- Jordanian border - a line of control 70km long. MEE has identified at least 10 Israeli bases and observation posts set up in newly occupied areas of Syria since the fall of Assad. Eight are within the neutral buffer zone, which was created along the boundary of the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights after the 1973 Middle East war and is monitored by another UN peacekeeping force, Undof. Satellite imagery also shows Israel has constructed long lines of earth fortifications along that boundary, known as the Purple Line, including elevated mounds allowing vehicles to ascend for surveillance. Israeli bases in Syria (from top left): Hader, Jubata al-Khashab, Khan Arnabeh, Lake Aziz, Al-Hamidiyah and Quneitra (MEE) According to Carmit Valensi, head of the Syrian programme at the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS), Israel’s leading security-focused think tank, the push into Syria was prompted by distrust of Sharaa, who is now president, and his forces. Valensi says the 7 October Hamas-led attacks on southern Israel “shattered” the assumption that deterrence - “the main pillar of Israeli strategy” - would keep its enemies at bay. “From that point on, Israel decided to adopt what we might call the buffer zone strategy, which obviously we can see clearly in Syria and Lebanon and Gaza,” she tells MEE. Israeli bases can now be found in three Syrian provinces: Quneitra, Daraa and the Damascus Countryside. Like in Lebanon, earth berms speckled with watchtowers surround fortified accommodations and vehicle stations. The bases are distributed across strategic hilltops, major road junctions, and dominant terrain overlooking the corridors connecting the Golan Heights to Damascus. At Tulul al-Humr, Israeli troops are situated just 40km from the Syrian capital. “In western Daraa, positions were selected specifically because they provide commanding oversight over valley entrances and surrounding villages” says a source from the new Syrian government’s military. Some Israeli bases here are also close to UN peacekeepers: the position north of the village of Hader in Mount Hermon’s foothills is just 500m from a Undof base. Israeli settlers cross into Syria and Lebanon calling for new settlements Read More » Strikingly, as the Israeli base is developed over a series of months, the Undof position, too, can be seen expanding and developing. Israel’s bases in Syria depart from its five in Lebanon in important aspects. Most of them have been established in areas previously occupied by Assad’s Syrian Arab Army. “Initially, Israel’s ground operations in southwestern Syria focused on the destruction of former Syrian Arab Army positions, followed by the construction of new military infrastructure,” the Syrian military source says. “This process included mine-laying operations, the demolition of civilian homes, forced displacement, and the destruction of agricultural land and forested areas - methods that strongly resemble practices observed in both Gaza and the West Bank.” At the hilltop near Hader, for instance, satellite imagery shows Israel enlarging an old Syrian position, converting it into a larger site that includes new buildings and facilities. In the very south, Israel has taken over al-Jazira military barracks on a hilltop that commands views down both the Yarmouk and Ruqqad rivers. And above and below Quneitra city, the provincial capital turned into a ghost town by Israel decades earlier, are two more Israeli bases that have been constructed on the ruins of old Syrian compounds. While Israel relies on dirt tracks and roads in south Lebanon that pre-existed the conflict, in Syria, it has cut new roads, linking the bases and even stretching into the Golan Heights and its largest town, Majdal Shams. Many of the new and old roads and tracks have been paved, facilitating rapid troop movement. A staging post appears to have been established in the forested area of Jubata al-Khashab, close to the Purple Line, with roads connecting it to more advanced fortified outposts nearby. It is the largest Israeli base in newly occupied Syria, with satellite imagery showing it hosting military vehicles and storage facilities. “In terms of the characteristics of these positions and bases, we can assume that there is a long-term intention,” says Valensi. Calm breeds chaos One recurring pattern in both Lebanon and Syria is Israel’s propensity to rapidly develop military infrastructure during moments of calm. While there is no formal ceasefire or indeed conflict between Israel and Syria, Damascus has sought US help to find an agreement that would end Israeli attacks and occupation of its territory. “Ceasefires have increasingly functioned as diplomatic delays that provide Israel with opportunities to entrench itself militarily, exploit operational gaps, and consolidate territorial control. In practice, there is little evidence of a genuine diplomatic process,” a second Syrian military source said. The source noted that Israel quickly spread its footprint in Syria after the US in January established a “joint fusion mechanism” between the three countries to facilitate coordination and help de-escalation. 'In terms of the characteristics of these positions and bases, we can assume that there is a long-term intention' - Carmit Valensi, INSS Since then, Israeli checkpoints have sprung up on several roads in western Daraa between Tal Ahmar al-Gharbi and al-Jazira military barracks. “Data [on Israeli activity] collected between February and May indicates that Israel is not genuinely pursuing negotiations or diplomacy. Rather, it is using diplomatic processes as windows of opportunity for long-term entrenchment,” the second source says. Valensi believes the occupation of large areas of Syria is unsustainable, with the Israeli military exhausted by two-and-a-half years of constant regional war. She also warns of the effects that a permanent, active and aggressive Israeli presence in Syria is having. “In my opinion, it causes much more damage than advantages,” she says. According to Syrian military sources, Israel has conducted an average of 17.5 raids on villages a month in the past year, alongside arrests, occasional shelling of farmland and forced evictions. “We clearly see the change and the shift in the Syrian discourse towards Israel from rather more moderate, restrained stances into much more radical ones,” Valensi says. Additional reporting by Nadav Rapoport in Tel Aviv, Israel Occupation Adam Chamseddine Levent Kemal Reem Aouir Beirut Ankara Manchester, England London News Post Date Override 0 Update Date Mon, 05/04/2020 - 21:19 Update Date Override 0

scenario pendingabout 1 month ago

military · geopolitical

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Gaza is not an aberration - Israel planned this genocide decades ago

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Gaza is not an aberration - Israel planned this genocide decades ago Submitted by Jonathan Cook on Wed, 06/10/2026 - 09:26 In October 2023, Israel found an excuse to breathe new life into an old story of slaughter and expulsion. The chief differences this time have been of scale and duration An aid worker carries the body of eight-year-old Jad Suleiman, who was among three people killed in an Israeli air strike on Al-Shifa Hospital, Gaza, 8 June 2026 (Salah Hashem/Zuma Wire/Reuters) Off The truth slowly comes to light: Israel 's genocide in Gaza was planned decades ago. Listen to the testimonies of four Israeli soldiers who served in Gaza. Soldier 1: “Human lives didn’t matter. You could kill, there was no law. No one would say a word to you. But it’s not a good feeling. It mainly kills your humanity.” Soldier 2: “At first I wasn’t willing to execute Arabs who weren’t resisting [that is, civilians]. Then we came to the conclusion that we had to kill. We went through the process of ceasing to see them as human beings.” Soldier 3: “We caught guys, lined them up and eliminated them. In retrospect, it looks like murder.” .push({}); Soldier 4: “We would roam through refugee camps in Gaza and carry out purges... Every soldier who was there created a ‘concentration camp’, and they didn’t hesitate to kill people who caused a slight disturbance.” No, these testimonies are not new. The whistleblowers did not serve in Gaza during the current, ongoing genocide there. These accounts are nearly 60 years old, published last week by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz under the headline " We were ordered to kill ”. Israeli soldiers interviewed shortly after the 1967 war - often referred to as the Six-Day War - not only confessed that they and others routinely committed war crimes but they pointed out that they did so under orders from their commanders. The accounts were compiled into a book, The Seventh Day: Soldiers Talk About the Six-Day War , by Avraham Shapira, though many testimonies were not included because they were too shocking. None of this should be simply of historical interest. These accounts are a vivid reminder that what Israel has been doing during its current, near three-year destruction of Gaza - levelling all homes, hospitals, schools, universities, bakeries and government offices; murdering tens of thousands , more likely hundreds of thousands , of Palestinian civilians ; and blocking aid and starving the population - is part of a decades-old pattern of Israeli military conduct. .push({}); Nothing “started” on 7 October 2023, when Hamas broke out for a single day of the Gaza “concentration camp” - the plight of Gaza’s Palestinians noted 59 years ago by Soldier 4. Rather, Israel found an excuse that day to breathe new life into an old story, one in which it has been slaughtering and expelling Palestinians for decades. The chief difference this time is simply one of scale and duration. Washington and other western capitals have given Israel the time and space to finish in Gaza what, earlier, it had only been able to achieve in part. Israel’s much greater firepower today, provided by modern munitions supplied by the United States, has allowed Israel to realise what before it could only dream of doing: wiping Gaza off the map. Policy of starvation The whistleblowing soldiers of 1967 admitted their job was not to “fight the enemy” - or “eradicate the terrorists”, as Israeli leaders now term it. It was to kill and terrorise Palestinian civilians under cover of war. Few soldiers were shy of saying why they were committing atrocities. Their task was to create a reign of terror, integral to Israel’s efforts to expel as many Palestinians as possible from the last remaining parts of the Palestinian homeland, the territories captured by the Israeli military in 1967 and then illegally occupied. Israel’s much greater firepower today, provided by modern munitions supplied by the United States, has allowed Israel to realise what before it could only dream of doing: wiping Gaza off the map This was seen as a new opportunity to complete the ethnic cleansing campaign begun by Zionist militias in earnest in 1947 and 1948 as the British Mandate authorities withdrew from Palestine. By the end of that campaign, some 80 percent of Palestinians had been expelled from their homes inside the borders of the newly declared Jewish state. Many ended up in refugee camps in neighbouring states such as Lebanon and Syria . But some fled into the surviving pockets of historic Palestine in the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza - the 22 per cent of their homeland that had been shielded from further Israeli advances in 1948 by Jordan and Egypt . The 1967 war was seen by the Israeli leadership as a second bite of the cherry: a chance both to seize and colonise all of historic Palestine through military occupation and the establishment of Jewish militia settlements, and to expand the ethnic cleansing operation to rid historic Palestine of its native inhabitants. Weeks after Israel seized the Palestinian territories, the prime minister of the time, Levi Eshkol , told his cabinet where the expulsions must begin. “We are interested in emptying out Gaza first,” he said. Given international pressures, he was clear that the ethnic cleansing of Gaza would need to proceed by stealth, so as to attract less attention. Foreshadowing Israel’s 16-year siege of Gaza that started in 2007, he proposed that Palestinians could be forced out of Gaza “precisely because of the suffocation and imprisonment” Israel was imposing there. The ethnic cleansing programme could be hastened, he suggested , by depriving the population of essentials like water. “Perhaps if we don’t give them enough water, they won’t have a choice, because the orchards will yellow and wither.” In this spirit, 40 years later, Israel would go on to calculate the minimum number of calories to allow into Gaza so that the people there would grow steadily more malnourished. Or as senior government adviser Dov Weisglass explained in 2006: "The idea is to put the Palestinians on a diet , but not to make them die of hunger." Seventeen years after Gaza was forced on to its “diet”, when Hamas briefly broke out of the enclave, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his generals seized their moment. They destroyed those “orchards” and transformed the “diet” into a full-blown starvation blockade - a crime against humanity for which Netanyahu and his former defence minister, Yoav Gallant, are wanted by the International Criminal Court. Targeting innocents The crimes of 1967 were understood long ago by Palestinian historians , who were, of course, not listened to. Israeli historians took much longer to start piecing together the story as they gained access to parts of Israel’s military archives. .push({}); Haaretz’s new investigation, based on research by the Akevot Institute , provides details of the ruthlessness of the mass expulsions of Palestinians beginning in 1967. As the paper reports: “The historical inquiry shows that Israel expelled and drove out some 300,000 Arabs from the West Bank, Gaza and the [Syrian] Golan Heights. And as in 1948, the expulsion included killing civilians, sowing terror in Arab communities, looting and ultimately, destruction.” Having managed in 1967 to again expel large numbers of Palestinians, the next task - as in 1948 - was to prevent their return. Israel's killing of aid workers is no accident. It's part of the plan to destroy Gaza Read More » Uri Avnery, a journalist and member of the Israeli parliament, recorded testimonies from soldiers stationed at the borders with Jordan and Egypt, into which Palestinians had been expelled. The soldiers’ job was to murder any Palestinian families trying to get back to their homes. Here is one soldier’s testimony, reported by Haaretz, that Avnery noted in his autobiography: “We blocked these crossings and received orders to shoot to kill, without prior warning. Indeed, such shots were fired every night at men, women and children, even on moonlit nights when it was possible to identify those crossing. That is, to distinguish between men and women and children. “In the morning, we would go out to scan the area, and we would kill, by explicit order of the officer present, those who were alive, including those hiding and the wounded. After the killing was over, we would cover the bodies with dirt until a tractor arrived.” Today’s Israeli whistleblowers warn that this military doctrine is unchanged. Over the past three years, investigations have repeatedly shown Israel trying to conceal its crimes by secretly bulldozing its civilian victims into mass graves in violation of international law. It did so, for example, when troops massacred Palestinians seeking aid a year ago, and again when soldiers executed 15 Palestinian emergency workers in an ambush on ambulances in March 2025. Another soldier troubled by the 1967 shoot-to-kill policy recalled a conversation with his commander: “I asked the officer: And if I hear babies crying, should I shoot them too? The answer I received was: Don’t be a girl.” There is nothing exceptional about this. Israel is known to have killed more than 1,000 babies in Gaza under the age of one since 7 October 2023, not all of them anonymously in strikes from the air. The Israeli military allowed a group of five premature babies in al-Nasser hospital to die and decompose in their incubators after its soldiers took over the building in late 2023. Israeli commanders also knew that the first to die from a blockade of aid would be the most vulnerable. Babies froze or starved to death as the population was deprived of shelter, baby formula and food, with their mothers lacking sufficient nutrition to produce milk. As Soldier 2 noted, Israeli military doctrine encourages soldiers to stop seeing Palestinians, even Palestinian babies, as “human”. Their lives are considered worthless. Past familiar Israeli soldiers murdered another Palestinian baby last week in the West Bank, after they ambushed a car driven by a lecturer from Bethlehem university, Fahd Abu Haikal, in the Palestinian city of Hebron, which is under particularly brutal occupation. One of the soldiers fired into the car, as it was slowing to a halt , from only a few metres away, from where he must have been able to see the passengers inside. The bullet killed Abu Haikal’s seventh-month-old baby, Sam, and wounded his wife, who was holding the infant. Abu Haikal’s 11-year-old son, also in the car, watched his baby brother bleed to death. Israeli soldiers have been murdering Palestinian babies for decades. Yet none of it has roused an ounce of the outrage uniformly expressed by western media and politicians at Israel’s entirely fabricated claim that Hamas killed 40 babies on 7 October 2023. In fact, only one Israeli baby was killed that day : nine-month-old Mila Cohen, who, like Sam Abu Haikal, was shot in her mother’s arms. Israel’s 1967 campaign of expulsions in Gaza and the West Bank was not improvised, nor was it done on the spur of the moment. According to Haaretz, the policy had been carefully planned many years in advance. Eid in Gaza was another bloodbath. The ceasefire is a lie Read More » Since 1948, Israel had been waiting for a moment to carry out additional expulsions and seize the last parts of the Palestinian homeland, the territories it had been denied for the completion of its violent settler colonial project. The 1967 war - against Egypt, Syria and Jordan - provided the pretext. Ishai Amrami, a senior battalion commander in that war, later admitted: “This thing, which I experienced first hand, was an attempt at massive population transfer.” As Haaretz observes: “The Palestinians were mere bystanders in this story. Defence Minister Moshe Dayan wrote in his memoirs that the Palestinians residing in the West Bank did not take part in the war, and that it was not their war. Nevertheless, they were the ones who paid its price.” Israel began the mass destruction of Palestinian communities, as it had done after 1948, so there would be no homes for Palestinians to return to. But as Haaretz notes, Israel became a victim of its own rapid military success. “This was one of the rare instances in the history of the conflict where Israel was forced to back down due to heavy international pressure.” It hardly needs pointing out that, unlike 1967, such international pressure has been sorely missing over the past three years. The new cast of western leaders, like Britain’s Sir Keir Starmer, once a noted human rights lawyer, have justified Israel’s explicitly exterminationist agenda against the Palestinians of Gaza, terming it “self-defence”. Unlike their predecessors in the 1960s, today’s western leaders and their media chose to buy Israel the diplomatic time and space it needed - as well as providing the weapons and intelligence - to destroy Gaza. The genocide would have been impossible without their assistance. Buoyed by this impunity, Israel has tried to spread the destruction further afield , with limited success in Iran and much greater success in south Lebanon . As western politicians and media happily forget Gaza, Israel keeps up the relentless pressure and misery there. A so-called “Yellow Line” , demarcating Israeli military control over the destroyed enclave, an area off-limits to Palestinians, has gradually expanded from half the land to 70 percent. The people of Gaza are quite literally being squeezed out of the ruins of their homeland, as Israel scrambles to find a third country - Egypt , or perhaps Somaliland - willing to take them in. Excising context As the US cosmologist Carl Sagan famously observed: "You have to know the past to understand the present." Which is precisely why western politicians and media have been so careful to strip out the past, excising the context and background, such as Israel’s violent ethnic cleansing campaigns of 1948 and 1967, that explain Israel’s behaviour in the present - in Gaza, the West Bank and south Lebanon. Western audiences, deprived of the region’s history, have been more easily manipulated into believing that Israeli atrocities are a response - and a supposedly “proportionate” one, at that - to Hamas’ one-day attack on Israel in late 2023. An obvious truth has been obscured: that for at least eight decades, Israel has been exploiting any opportunity it could find to expel the Palestinians from their homeland. The October 2023 Hamas attack was not a turning-point or a rupture, as it is so often presented in the West. In 1967 - that is, 56 years before the Hamas attack - Eshkol advised that unforeseen events might accelerate Israel’s stealthy programme of ethnic cleansing . A moment might arrive in the future - what he called an “unexpected luxury solution” - when Israel could rapidly realise its dream of a Palestinian-free Palestine. “Perhaps we can expect another war, and then this problem will be solved. But that’s a type of ‘luxury,’ an unexpected solution,” he explained to the cabinet. With the missing context added, as Israel’s Haaretz has done with its new article, the story is transformed. The events of 7 October 2023 look less like simple savagery and more like a desperate, last-roll-of-the-dice response to decades of Israeli atrocities designed to make conditions for Palestinians so miserable - through pauperisation, confinement, starvation, and murder - that they either flee their homeland or die in situ. With the missing context added, Israel’s supposed “retaliation” in Gaza - its genocidal rampage - looks like what it actually is: a continuation of its eight-decade ethnic cleansing campaign. In fact, its final instalment. Its denouement. David Ben Gurion , Israel’s founding father, wrote to his son in 1937, 11 years before Israel’s creation: “We must expel the Arabs and take their places.” In a diary entry during the mass expulsions of 1948, Ben Gurion summarised the mood among his generals: “If we accuse a family - we need to harm them without mercy. Women and children without mercy. Otherwise this is not an effective reaction. During the operation, there is no need to distinguish between guilty and not guilty.” How a regional defence pact could deal the final blow to Israel's violent expansionism Read More » The goal was the weaponisation of fear, making Palestinians too terrified to remain in their homeland. Mordechai Maklef, a senior commander in the fledgling Israeli army, noted two years later, in 1950, the logic behind Israel’s policy: “It is impossible to expel 114,000 people who lived in the Galilee without terror.” Even if we ignore Palestinian accounts from those times, the small sections of the Israeli archives that have so far been opened to Israeli historians document massacres and systematic rapes of Palestinians in 1948. In recent Israeli films such as Tantura - the village where a terrible massacre of Palestinians was carried out - old men who served as Israeli soldiers at the time confirm the archival documents, recounting how they personally witnessed Palestinian girls being raped. Let us note that weaponised rape continues to this day - in what the Israeli human rights group B’Tselem calls Israel’s “network of torture camps” . These rapes - now often using dogs specially trained for the purpose - are so widespread that they have become impossible to conceal. They have even come, very belatedly, to the attention of mainstream media like the New York Time s, provoking a cacophony of protest and threats from Netanyahu to sue . So routine is the sexual abuse of those Israel detains that international peace activists suffered systematic rapes when hundreds of them were seized last month in international waters off Cyprus, as they began their journey to Gaza to break Israel’s genocidal blockade. Israel wants the fear to spread, from Palestine itself to anyone who wishes to show solidarity with its people. Western politicians and the media have barely referred to these horrific crimes against their own citizens. Why? Because to acknowledge those crimes would be to concede that even worse atrocities are being meted out to Palestinians under Israeli rule. Prisons of complicity Gaza is not an aberration. It is fully in accord with an eight-decade-long Israeli military strategy. Westerners aren’t aware of that only because their political and media class have worked strenuously to stop them from learning about it. If western publics knew what has really been happening to Palestinians for 80-plus years - first, from the Zionist movement and then from the Israeli state - they might swell further the ranks of the protest marches, making these demonstrations politically impossible to ignore. Were Israel's decades-long pattern of murdering, raping, and expelling Palestinians known, western publics might wake up to the fact that their political and media class are not moral actors If westerners knew what has really been happening to Palestinians, they might join activists who have been trying to incapacitate Israeli weapons factories, like Elbit Systems , operating quite openly in western countries such as Britain. They might, as a result, manage to smash the supply of drones and other weapons being used to massacre the people of Palestine and Lebanon. Instead of thousands, there might be tens or hundreds of thousands of people willing to hold up a placard in the UK opposing genocide, and be arrested as a “terrorism supporter”, overwhelming the prison system and making a mockery of Britain’s supposed “justice” system. Armed with knowledge rather dulled by ignorance, more westerners might board boats, amassing an armada that it would be impossible for the western media to disregard. But most critically of all, were the real context understood - were Israel’s decades-long pattern of murdering, raping, and expelling Palestinians known - western publics might wake up to the fact that their political and media class are not moral actors. They are not upholding the values of a superior civilisation. They are not the guardians of international law and a democratic liberal order. They are imposters. Or more accurately, they are working within political and financial structures that make it impossible to tell truths that would rock a system of power in the West that enriches a tiny elite through a lucrative war machine used to protect the gargantuan profits of the fossil fuel industries. That system of power drives some Palestinians into an early grave, and others into concentration camps, or exile, or penury. Meanwhile, it drives us in the West into prisons without physical walls - prisons either of ignorance and complicity, or of knowledge and impotence. Either way, like Soldier 1, we find our humanity deadened. Our hearts are hardened or broken. The challenge we face is the same as the Palestinians: to find a path out of our confinement. Israel's genocide in Gaza How Israel planned Gaza genocide decades ago Opinion Post Date Override 0 Update Date Mon, 05/04/2020 - 21:29 Update Date Override 0

scenario pendingabout 1 month ago

military · geopolitical

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Morning update

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Morning update Good morning Middle East Eye readers, The situation between the US and Iran continues to escalate, as strikes were exchanged overnight and early on Thursday morning. Washington began its attacks at 9.15pm GMT, citing Tehan’s "unwarranted and continued aggression". Explosions were heard in various cities across Iran, including near the capital Tehran, Sirik in the south, Karaj in the west, and Abyek in the Qazvin province. Meanwhile, Iran launched fresh assaults across the region, targeting various US structures in Kuwait, Bahrain and Jordan. The countries issued several alerts for civilians to seek immediate shelter from the attacks. Here are some of the latest developments: US President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that Washington will resume bombing Iran if no nuclear deal is reached. "We're going to be attacking them and attacking them very hard," Trump told reporters. Iran's Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters, the country's top joint military command, said it will target any ship transiting the Strait of Hormuz, according to the Tasnim news agency. It also added that the strait is now "completely closed to all types of vessel", following fresh US attacks against the country. Tehran's state media denied US President Donald Trump's claims that he had direct contact with Iranian officials following American attacks on the country. "Trump's false claim that Iranian officials contacted him is a cover to evade war with Iran," an unnamed official was quoted as saying. Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Aerospace Force chief has vowed "hell" in the region following the latest wave of US attacks. "This is the response to the audacity of the Americans in the region, God willing," he added. Flights at the Kuwait International Airport have resumed after they were suspended due to Iranian attacks, the Civil Aviation Authority announced.

scenario pendingabout 1 month ago

military · geopolitical

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Roebuck: Another Phase In the Messy Ceasefire In Iran

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Oil rose as the US completed a fresh set of strikes in Iran for a second day in a row, including military surveillance capabilities, communication systems, and air defense sites. Iran retaliated by attacking American airbases in Kuwait, Bahrain, and Jordan. William Roebuck, Executive Vice President at the Arab Gulf States Institute, & Former US Ambassador to Bahrain spoke to Bloomberg’s Abeer Abu Omar on Horizons Middle East and Africa on the recent reescalation. (Source: Bloomberg)

scenario pendingabout 1 month ago