Israel’s Genocide in Gaza | 2023- till present

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So how best do you think Muslims, Arabs, people of conscience should vote this November to reach some half way decent outcome for the people of Palestine and Lebanon. It seems with Harris, what will play out will be the same, just slower. Therefore, if that is better than the whole region see Trump and his control of the US as the naked abuse of power, creating a galvanizing moment to speed up change, perhaps a new and more broader Arab Spring?
There are no really good options. Both Trump and Harris are in Zionists' pockets right now but Trump uses 'Palestinians' as a slur, as he did during the debate with Biden, Trump says 'Israel is too small, needs to be larger', Trump rewards S. Adelson's $100 million by casually giving away Jerusalem and Golan Heights to Israel--something no American President had ever done so in 50 years. On the other hand, Harris did two very notable things: Setting aside the AIPAC pressure to nominate Walz as her VP candidate over AIPAC's Josh Shapiro AND didn't attend Netanyahu's joint Congressional address which a US VP is supposed to attend. Plus Trump feels no pressure from his 'base' to be fair to the Palestinians--on the contrary--while Harris has a significant pro Palestinian base. In light of all that, it is not hard to guess who'd do what after Nov. 5.
Also, currently Harris is bound by Biden; that's how it works in America! But after Nov. 5, she will be her own person and she would not be beholden to the AIPAC money as much to win the elections, which is a very critical factor.
As to your idea that let Trump burn the whole Middle East so that Muslims would awaken: Not only it would destroy the Middle East but also the global economy. Who is going to rise up in a land of ashes within our lifetime?? No Arab Spring, it would be a Middle East Winter instead.
I'm wondering what people expect to happen now. The maximum that Iran can do is to launch all its missiles at Israel and then sit back and get bombed to the stone age. The world stock markets may crash and possibly the Anglo-Zionists will be weakened. But Israel won’t be gone, and the Palestinians won’t get a state, but Iran will be broken.

If Iran sees no point in continuing its long term strategy of slow burn Israel then Iran may go for the broke and destroy the whole Middle East and itself. [Something like that Trita Parsi said in a video I shared above today].

I think this is THE TIME for the various militias to march toward Lebanon, now that Israel has started the ground invasion and there are no brakes until at least the Nov. 5 elections in America.
 
Nice story about the Cult of Settler state

However only reality is the Cult of Settler state is providing genocide Bombs to Zionist Cult , killing Muslims

They don't even allow Muslim / Palestinian a chance to address the group of politician to state their case, even if they are American citizenship holders
 
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Hezbollah's fatal mistake was to believe Israel was bound by the rules of war

Marco Carnelos

30 September 2024 15:21 BST | Last update: 10 hours 54 mins ago

After 7 October, Israel is no longer bound to any rules of engagement, as its military operations in Gaza, Lebanon, Yemen and Iran have proved

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Thirty-two years ago, an Israeli raid killed Abbas al-Musawi, then-secretary general of Hezbollah.

At the time, Israeli newspaper front pages celebrated the event as the ultimate defeat of the Lebanese movement. The last three decades have shown that such optimism was plain wrong. Hezbollah reacted bloodily elsewhere and, in due course, it has become far stronger than it was in the early 1990s.

So far, there is no indication that Hassan Nasrallah’s killing in Beirut on 27 September might precipitate, once again, the demise of Hezbollah.

What Israel and, more generally, western democracies miss in their analysis is that their general concepts of victory or defeat cannot be easily applied to an organisation devoted to martyrdom, as Hezbollah is.

In other words, if Hezbollah wins, this event is celebrated. If it loses, it is celebrated as a martyrdom in a larger conflict against oppression (Israeli occupation of Arab lands) and injustice (western hegemony and double standards in international relations). In one word, this is called resistance.

As with any other organisation, Hezbollah makes mistakes, and in recent times, it has made a lot of them.

The major one was to believe that Israel was still bound to some rules of engagement - a fatal mistake. For after 7 October, Israel is no longer bound to any rules of engagement, as its military operations in Gaza, Lebanon, Yemen and Iran have proven.

Decapitated and weakened​

Shielded by the total impunity that the US and the EU have extended to it, and in some cases also their open complicity, Israel has used its unique intelligence and military capabilities to deliver very hard blows against its enemies. If, in so doing, it has achieved its most important objectives, it is currently harder to tell.

It is still unknown to what extent the spectacular pagers and walkie-talkie explosions allowed Israel to also acquire high-level information, through accessing GPS systems in the devices, about the movements and power structures of Hezbollah’s top leadership.

There is no doubt that in the last 12 months, Israel has decapitated and weakened both Hamas and Hezbollah. It has created confusion and disarray in both organisations, but it is far from certain that it has also succeeded in subduing them once and for all.

It is possible to kill people, but not the ideas and grievances which move them.

Concerning the modalities and timing of Hezbollah’s reaction to the latest blows inflicted by Israel, the standard rule that has remained constant for decades in the organisation should not be forgotten.

Hezbollah is not conditioned by the news-cycle needs of the large western and non-western information networks, and much less so by the expectations of the political classes and security apparatuses of the states it is confronted by, starting with Israel itself.

Aware of its military and technological inferiority, Hezbollah has always tried to use intangible factors, such as time, to its advantage.

Keeping the enemy on the ropes while waiting is often nerve-wracking. Because how and when the retaliation will materialise is already in itself a form of reaction, and punishes one's opponent.

Asymmetrical and hybrid warfare, at a time of their own choosing, is standard for organisations which have made resistance the key driver of their activity. A war of attrition and not open confrontation is always the best option when dealing with Israel.

Mortal blow​

Furthermore, the Axis of Resistance’s reaction to Israel has not yet shown any significant synergy and coordination.

Hamas carries out its rocket launches, as does Hezbollah, the Houthis and the Iraqi Shia militias.

Tehran carried out its own operation after the Israeli attack on Iran’s consulate in Damascus in April. They mostly acted separately from each other.

They have never engaged Israel together at the same time in order to saturate the Iron Dome system and inflict far more significant casualties and damage to Israel. It is not clear if this was a deliberate show of restraint, or the result of technical and logistical difficulties.

Regardless of all these considerations, Israel has inflicted a devastating blow on Hezbollah. But this "success" will be meaningless if it does not also neutralise the threat to its northern communities, which have been displaced for the last 12 months.

If, as claimed, Israel’s main objective is to return to their homes its 60,000 citizens forcefully resettled in the south, it will have to conduct a ground operation in southern Lebanon.

Ideally, it would attempt to re-create the buffer zone it enjoyed between 1982 and 2000. However, in the case of a ground operation, Hezbollah could inflict significant casualties on the Israeli army.

Strategic patience​

Israel should think twice before venturing with its ground forces into southern Lebanon. It may well find a confused and demoralised Hezbollah army, but also one that has significantly increased its fighting capabilities, especially after the experience acquired in fighting during the long Syrian civil war.

Hezbollah's elite forces, the Radwan, deployed along the border, are largely intact.

On the other hand, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu could find himself in a win-win situation.

If nothing else happens, he could claim an important victory against Hamas and Hezbollah by having achieved a significant degradation of their assets and leadership.

If all-out war involving all the Axis of Resistance should instead break out, he could claim the most important Israeli strategic success of recent decades: an escalation which could ultimately draw the United States into an open conflict with Iran.

In such a scenario, his stay in power might be assured for years to come.

There is only one way to avoid such eventuality: the Axis of Resistance should show far more strategic patience than it has demonstrated so far.

 

Israel launches 'targeted' ground invasion of southern Lebanon​

Israel began an incursion into southern Lebanon days after killing Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah

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Israel launched what it called a "targeted and demarcated" ground invasion of southern Lebanon late Monday night local time, on the heels of last week's aerial bombardment of southern Beirut which resulted in the killing of Hezbollah's chief, Hassan Nasrullah.

A statement from the Israeli army stated that it was targeting villages in localised raids near the border that "pose an immediate and real threat to Israeli settlements on the northern border".

Heavy shelling, air strikes and drone strikes preceded the operation in southern Lebanon and strikes southern Beirut continued as the ground incursion began.

Israel's air force and infantry forces accompanied Israel's ground forces according to the statement in an operation titled "Northern Arrows".

Earlier on Monday Lebanese troops pulled back five kilometres from their positions on the southern border while the Israeli military declared three areas in northern Israel as "closed military zones".

In a public address on Monday from Sheikh Naim Qassem, Hezbollah's deputy leader, Hezbollah remained defiant.

“We are quite ready, if the Israelis want a ground incursion, the resistance forces are ready for that,” Qassem declared.

Israeli tanks and soldiers have been massing at the northern border for days, according to open-source imagery.

Israel has also been conducting commando-style raids against Hezbollah inside Lebanon which analysts say are designed to lay the groundwork for a larger deployment of forces.

A US official in the region told Middle East Eye on Saturday that Israeli officials warned the US that they planned to launch a ground invasion.

The US State Department on Monday confirmed that Israel is conducting "limited" ground operations in southern Lebanon.

"This is what they have informed us that they are currently conducting, which are limited operations targeting Hezbollah infrastructure near the border," State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller told reporters.

The US has maintained that Israel has a right to defend itself against Hezbollah, accusing the group of provoking Israel, but said that it is committed to a diplomatic solution and is seeking a ceasefire.

US President Joe Biden said on Monday that he wanted a "ceasefire now".

The US took further steps to bolster its military posture.

The Pentagon said the US was sending to the Middle East “a few thousand” more troops who would come from multiple fighter jet squadrons.

Meanwhile, United Nations secretary general Antonio Guterres said he opposed "any invasion of Lebanon".

Hezbollah and Israel both exchanged fire across the border. The United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon, Unifil, is no longer able to patrol southern Lebanon as a result of fighting, the UN said.

 
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#BREAKING | Israeli media reported a loud explosion in the Tel Aviv Metropolitan Area. Initial reports suggest attempts to intercept a target, though no sirens were sounded. Speculation from Israeli media indicates the possibility of a hypersonic missile being launched from Yemen toward the area.
https://x.com/MayadeenEnglish/status/1840902418017763812/photo/1
 
Are you sure about this? Iran seems to have the ultimate say on whether Hezbollah can deploy it's firepower or not. It's very heavily involved with Hezbollah. Unlike Hamas.

It is Iran preventing them from using their firepower because Iran fears Israel will strike targets in Iran due to Hezbollah firepower overwhelming Israeli defenses. Israelis have put it in your minds that they can kill thousands while if a few Jews are killed by a rocket that went through defenses, then all hell breaks loose. You need to cheapen the life of the Jew. To break them. Not reinforce their the terms of their game.
Hezbollah has no religious obligation to follow Iran. If their intelligence concluded that Nasrallahs life or the party was in imminent danger, and they need to deter that by taking a more offensive stand, they would have attacked regardless of what Iran may have said.
 
This bloody Israhell, nobody likes them except USA. lol.
 
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