Israel’s Genocide in Gaza | 2023- till present

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Iran's best strategy would be to use a low intensity high frequency drumming of Israeli army. make sure the israelis have sleepless nights, while at the same time Iran should keep consolidating their offensive capability in the axis of resistance countries with Chinese and Russian help. Stretch the Israeli army to the breaking point,we know they are a cowardly lot and will run as the soon as it gets too hot for them. Bombs can only take them so far before they have to test their faith and that is where they fall.
 
Create fear to bomb more civilians.


Joe Biden expects Iran to attack Israel 'sooner than later'​

5 hours ago
By Kathryn Armstrong & Hugo Bachega, Middle East correspondent ,in London & Jerusalem
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Getty Images Joe Biden speaking in Washington on 12 April
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Joe Biden warned Iran not to attack Israel
US President Joe Biden says he expects Iran to attack Israel "sooner than later", as fears grow of Iranian retaliation over an air strike that killed top commanders early this month.

Israel has not admitted attacking an Iranian consulate in Syria but is widely believed to have been behind it.

US officials have told CBS News, the BBC's US partner, that a major attack on Israel could happen imminently.

Israel says it is ready to defend itself. Mr Biden told Iran : "Don't."

"We are devoted to the defence of Israel. We will support Israel," Mr Biden said. "We will help defend Israel and Iran will not succeed."


Iran backs Hamas, the Palestinian group fighting Israel in Gaza, as well as various proxy groups throughout the region, including some - such as Hezbollah in Lebanon - that frequently carry out strikes against the Israelis.

On Friday, Hezbollah said it had launched "dozens" of rockets from Lebanon towards Israel. An Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesman said around 40 missiles and two explosive drones had been launched. No casualties were reported and there were no indications of involvement from other actors.

A US official told CBS the barrage was separate from any expected Iranian attack on Israel.

BBC Security Correspondent Frank Gardner says Iran is deliberately keeping the Middle East and Washington guessing.

Ever since the lethal 1 April strike on the consulate building in Damascus, from which Israel believes Iran was directing its covert arms supplies to Iranian proxies in Lebanon and Syria, Iran's security establishment has been debating its response.


This is all about calibration. Hit too hard and Israel will respond with devastating force. Go too lightly and Iran will risk being seen as weak and ineffective. From a tactical perspective, it makes no sense for Iran to respond right now, when the region is on full alert and when the US has been telling the world what to expect.

Pragmatists in Tehran and Qom will be urging restraint, while hawks, including the ageing Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, will be demanding a firm response.

But Iran does not want a full-scale war, nor do its neighbours on the Arab side of the Gulf. Governments there have already asked Iran for restraint. The question now, our correspondent says, is whether it is the hawks or the doves who prevail.

The mounting tensions have led countries including the US, UK, India and Australia to warn against travel to Israel. Germany called on its citizens to leave Iran.


The US state department also barred diplomatic staff and their families in Israel from travelling outside the cities of Tel Aviv, Jerusalem and Beersheba.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has met members of his war cabinet amid the warnings.

Some Israelis said they were not worried about a potential Iranian attack.

"We know that we are surrounded by enemies, in the south, in the north, the east and the west," Daniel Kosman told AFP news agency at a market in Jerusalem. "We are not afraid, I can promise you. Look around: people are going out."

Reuters aftermath of consulate strike
Reuters
Israel has not claimed responsibility for the strike in Damascus but is widely considered to have carried it out

The Israeli government has not issued any new advice to its people on top of existing guidance to stock up on water, food for three days and essential medicine.

Israeli radio, however, reported local authorities had been told to prepare for the possibility of an attack, including by assessing the readiness of public shelters.

Last week, the Israeli military cancelled home leave for combat troops, bolstered air defences and called up reservists.

Thirteen people were killed in the 1 April missile strike on the Iranian consulate in Damascus.

They included senior Iranian military leaders, among them Brig Gen Mohammad Reza Zahedi, a senior commander of Iran's elite Quds Force in Syria and Lebanon.


Israel has not commented but is widely considered to have carried out the attack.

Officials in several countries have been trying to dissuade Iran from launching an attack, fearing it could spark a wider regional war.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has spoken to the foreign ministers of China, Saudi Arabia and Turkey in an attempt to convince them to use their influence with Iran.

After meeting the commander of US Central Command on Friday, Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said the bond between the two countries had been strengthened by the threat, adding "we will know how to respond".

The war in Gaza was sparked when Hamas attacked Israeli communities near the Gaza Strip, killing about 1,200 people, most of them civilians, and taking more than 250 hostage. Israel says that of 130 hostages still in Gaza, at least 34 are dead.


More than 33,600 Gazans, the majority of them civilians, have been killed during Israel's campaign in Gaza, the Hamas-run health ministry says.

The conflict has also seen Israel trade almost daily fire across its northern border with Hezbollah, while Iran-backed groups in Iraq and Yemen have attempted to hit Israeli territory as well as US bases in Iraq and Syria.

Yemen's Houthi movement has also attacked shipping in the Red Sea, sinking at least one ship and prompting the US and UK to conduct air strikes on Houthi targets in Yemen.
 
Notice the maps show attacks on Iran's nuke facilities, Netanyahu gets his wish from a very macabre route.
More deaths and devastation to come from ZioNazi insatiable thirst for blood:-



U.S. moves MORE forces into the Middle East to prepare for 'imminent' Iranian strike on Israel: Pentagon sends aircraft carrier that can intercept missiles to the Red Sea in warning to Tehran​

By WILLS ROBINSON and NIKKI SCHWAB, SENIOR U.S. POLITICAL REPORTER FOR DAILYMAIL.COM IN WASHINGTON, D.C.
PUBLISHED: 13:45 EDT, 12 April 2024 | UPDATED: 14:53 EDT, 12 April 2024
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The U.S. has moved more forces into the Middle East to prepare for what officials believe could be an 'imminent' strike by Iran on Israel that could spark a full-scale war.
The Pentagon is beefing up its presence in the region and the USS Dwight Eisenhower has been sent into the Red Sea in a warning to Tehran and to protect American personnel should the violence spill over, multiple reports suggest.
U.S. officials fear that hundreds of drones and dozens of missiles could be used in a retaliation for an April 1 strike on a building adjacent to the Iranian embassy in Damascus, Syria.




Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei vowed retribution in the wake of the Damascus attack, for which Tel-Aviv has yet to take responsibility.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed to respond with force to any assault by Iran, leaving tensions in the Middle East on a knife-edge.
Defense officials on Friday said they are moving 'additional assets to the area', hours after the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem locked down it's staff.
The USS Dwight Eisenhower would be able to intercept missiles and drones fired by Iran.
The Pentagon is beefing up its presence in the Middle East and the USS Dwight Eisenhower has been sent into the Red Sea in a warning to Tehran and to protect American personnel should the violence spill over

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The Pentagon is beefing up its presence in the Middle East and the USS Dwight Eisenhower has been sent into the Red Sea in a warning to Tehran and to protect American personnel should the violence spill over
83512163-13302397-image-a-10_1712944375868.jpg

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The White House on Friday wouldn't go as far as to say that an attack was 'imminent,' instead calling the threat 'viable.'
'We still deem the potential threat by Iran here to be real, to be viable, certainly credible and we're watching it as closely as we can,' White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby told reporters Friday.
Kirby added that the U.S. was in 'constant communication with our Israeli counterparts about making sure that they can defend themselves against those kind of attacks.'
He added that 'force posture changes' had been made to ensure the US is 'properly prepared' for any Iranian assault, but declined to go into detail.
The NSC spokesperson gave no details on the potential timing of such an attack, amid warnings it could happen within the next 48 hours.
'I really don't want to get into armchair quarterbacking this thing in a public way in terms of the conversations we're having or what we're seeing in the intelligence picture,' Kirby said.
On Thursday, the U.S. embassy in Jerusalem did not explicitly mention Iran but issued a warning to government workers.
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The U.S. embassy in Jerusalem has imposed travel restrictions on diplomats living in Israel as officials fear an Iranian attack could be coming using 100 drones and dozens of missiles
Iranians burn an Israeli flag during a rally marking Quds Day and the funeral of members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps who were killed in a suspected Israeli airstrike on the Iranian embassy complex in Damascus, Syria last week

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Iranians burn an Israeli flag during a rally marking Quds Day and the funeral of members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps who were killed in a suspected Israeli airstrike on the Iranian embassy complex in Damascus, Syria last week
'Out of an abundance of caution, U.S. government employees and their family members are restricted from personal travel outside the greater Tel Aviv, … Jerusalem, and Be'er Sheva areas until further notice,' the security alert read.
The April 1 attack in Damascus killed two senior members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and five other officers, Iran said.
Israel has yet to claim responsibility publicly.
The Washington Post reported Thursday that senior Pentagon officials were frustrated that the U.S. did not get a heads up from Israel before conducting an airstrike on the Iranian site.
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A missile is launched during a military exercise in an undisclosed location in the south of Iran, in this handout image obtained on January 19, 2024
Iran warned arch foe Israel on April 2 that it will punish an air strike that killed seven Revolutionary Guards, two of them generals

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Iran warned arch foe Israel on April 2 that it will punish an air strike that killed seven Revolutionary Guards, two of them generals
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Three unnamed U.S. officials told the paper said Defense Secretary Lloyd Ausin and other senior defense officials believed Israel should have informed the Pentagon ahead of the attack because of the strike's implications for U.S. servicemembers in the region.
Had the U.S. gotten a heads up, the Pentagon would have been able to heighten defense capabilities in order to withstand Iranian retaliation, the sources said.
If Israel and Iran to engage in an all-out war, the consequences could be devastating.
Professor Gerald Steinberg, an expert in conflict management and founder of Jerusalem-based NGO Monitor, said a potential war between Iran and Israel would be both futile and devastating.
'They are on the verge of a confrontation similar to the October 1962 Cuban missile crisis between Washington and Moscow. Both countries can do massive damage to the other, but neither can 'win',' he said.
Wyn Bowen, Professor of International Security at King's College London's Department of War Studies, told DailyMail.com that it is unlikely Iran will seek to directly attack targets on Israeli soil, lest it risk an uncontrollable military response from Israel and its chief ally, the US.
But he also cautioned 'the Iranian leadership is under significant pressure to respond robustly' to the consulate attack, suggesting that a direct conflict, albeit unlikely, must be considered.
IsraelPentagon
 
A summary of the investigation into October 7th

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At 6:30 you can see the journalist/investigator talking to the first responder making the claims himself and calling out on the spot.

This is a very important and damning video about what actually happened on October 7th.
 
Mass starvation crime against humanity and the cold blooded Zions act like Hitler:-

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It would be interesting to know how vulnerable are Israel's nuke facilities and the impact it would have on Plaestine if they were destroyed.


Russia, Germany urge restraint as Iranian threat of strike on Israel puts Middle East on edge

Reuters Published April 11, 2024 Updated a day ago

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Russia and Germany on Thursday urged countries in the Middle East to show restraint and Israel said it was preparing to “meet all its security needs” in a region on edge over an Iranian threat to strike Israel.
The German airline Lufthansa, one of only two Western carriers flying to Tehran, extended a suspension of its flights to the Iranian capital and Russia warned against travel to the Middle East.
Iran has vowed revenge for the April 1 airstrike on its embassy compound in Damascus that killed a top Iranian general and six other Iranian military officers, ratcheting up tension in a region already strained by the Gaza fighting.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel was keeping up its military operation in Gaza but making security preparations elsewhere.
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“Whoever harms us, we will harm them. We are prepared to meet all of the security needs of the State of Israel, both defensively and offensively,” he said in comments released following a visit to an air force base.
Conflict has spread across the Middle East since the eruption of the fighting in Gaza, with Iran-backed groups declaring support for the Palestinians waging attacks from Lebanon, Yemen and Iraq. Tehran has avoided direct confrontation with Israel or the United States while declaring support for its allies.
German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock called her Iranian counterpart Hossein Amirabdollahian to urge “maximum restraint” to avoid further escalation.
Russia’s foreign ministry told citizens they should not travel to the Middle East, especially to Israel, Lebanon and the Palestinian territories.
“Right now it’s very important for everyone to maintain restraint so as not to lead to a complete destabilisation of the situation in the region, which doesn’t exactly shine with stability and predictability,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told a news briefing.



Israel has not claimed responsibility for the April 1 attack, for which Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said on Wednesday that Israel “must be punished and it shall be”, adding that it was tantamount to an attack on Iranian soil.

Biden says Iran threatens ‘significant attack in Israel’​

US President Joe Biden said a day ago that Iran was threatening to launch a “significant attack in Israel”, and that he had told Netanyahu that “our commitment to Israel security against these threats from Iran and its proxies is iron-clad.”
Iran is the third-largest oil producer in the Opec group and oil prices rose after jumping a dollar a barrel in the previous session.
Late on Wednesday, an Iranian news agency published an Arabic report on the X platform saying the air space over Tehran had been closed for military drills, but then removed the report and denied it had issued such news.
Lufthansa said it would probably not fly to Tehran before April 13. Austrian Airlines said it was still planning to fly on Thursday but was adjusting timings to avoid crew having to disembark for an overnight layover.
Iranian air space is also a key overflight route for Emirates’ and Qatar Airways’ flights to Europe and North America.
Emirates, Qatar Airways, Turkish Airlines, Aeroflot and Air Arabia, among the airlines that fly to Tehran, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
 
Wow, that was quick:-

Iran FM opens new Syria consulate after deadly Israeli strike

AFP Published April 8, 2024

Iranian flag flutters on new Iranian consulate building after Iran’s consulate in Damascus was targeted in a suspected Israeli attack on April 1, in Damascus, Syria, April 8. — Reuters

Iranian flag flutters on new Iranian consulate building after Iran’s consulate in Damascus was targeted in a suspected Israeli attack on April 1, in Damascus, Syria, April 8. — Reuters
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Iran’s foreign minister inaugurated the country’s new consulate in Damascus on Monday, a week after a deadly strike blamed on Israel destroyed the former premises, sending regional tensions skyrocketing.
Tehran, a key Damascus ally, has vowed to avenge last Monday’s air strike on the Iranian embassy’s consular section that killed seven Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) members, including two generals.
The strike came against the backdrop of Israel and Hamas’s ongoing fighting, which began with the group’s October 7 attack on Israel.
Damascus and Tehran blame Israel for last Monday’s raid, but it has not commented.

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian inaugurated the new consular section in a Damascus building in the presence of his Syrian counterpart Faisal Mekdad, whom he also met earlier on Monday, state news agency SANA said.
An AFP correspondent at the inauguration said the new consulate was not far from the premises destroyed by the strike in the upscale Mazzeh area, which also houses other foreign embassies and UN offices.
Amir-Abdollahian was also set to meet President Bashar al-Assad, and Syria’s pro-government newspaper Al-Watan said his talks in Damascus would be “mainly focused” on repercussions of last week’s strike.
Iran’s foreign minister began a regional tour Sunday in Oman, long a mediator between Tehran and the West, where Muscat’s foreign minister called for de-escalation.



An adviser to Iran’s supreme leader warned on Sunday that Israeli embassies were “no longer safe” after the Damascus attack.
Analysts saw the raid as an escalation of Israel’s campaign against Iran and its regional proxies that runs the risk of triggering a wider war beyond the Israel-Hamas fighting in the Gaza Strip.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor said 16 people were killed in the consulate strike: eight Iranians, five Syrians, one member of Lebanon’s Hezbollah militant group and two civilians.
Among the dead were generals Mohammad Reza Zahedi and Mohammad Hadi Haji Rahimi, both senior commanders in the Quds Force, the IRGC’s foreign operations arm.
Israel has launched hundreds of air strikes in Syria since civil war broke out 13 years ago, targeting Iran-backed forces, including Hezbollah as well as Syrian army positions and weapons depots.
It rarely comments on individual strikes, but Israel’s raids have increased since the Gaza fighting began.
Tehran backs Hamas but has denied any direct involvement in the group’s October 7 attack, which sparked massive Israeli retaliation in Gaza.
 
At 6:30 you can see the journalist/investigator talking to the first responder making the claims himself and calling out on the spot.

This is a very important and damning video about what actually happened on October 7th.
The guy interviewed isn’t really a real first responder, he is from Hatzalah - they are like Chippa Ambulance for Jews.

But ultimately it just proves these people lied. Al Jazeera did a full report on this, that is the real one worth watching.
 
Problem is ZioNazi Israelis only believe in war and murder and have no repsect for international law as long as they believe they can get away with it:-

ICJ’s new ruling bolsters legal efforts to stop Israeli killing machine: Attorney​

Saturday, 06 April 2024 12:10 PM [ Last Update: Saturday, 06 April 2024 12:10 PM ]



By Alireza Hashemi
The recent ruling by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) has given fresh impetus to the legal battle against Israel’s lack of accountability for genocidal war crimes in the besieged Gaza Strip, says a French attorney.

In an exclusive interview with the Press TV website, Gilles Devers, a well-known French academic and lawyer known for advocating Palestinian rights at the top UN court commended the recent ICJ ruling.
He said the ICJ's fresh provisional measures issued on March 28 help prevent the obstruction of humanitarian aid to Gaza and further isolate the Israeli regime internationally.
The ICJ’s order came in response to a genocide case against Israel filed by South Africa, which led to the World Court issuing an initial emergency order in January demanding Israel avoid genocidal acts in Gaza.
Devers, who has represented Palestine at the ICC since 2009, praised the ICJ's swift response to South Africa's case, labeling it a "profound victory" for Palestinians in the history of their legal struggle to restore the rights that have already forced the Western states to distance themselves from Israel.
The attorney noted that the ruling, which came within a month of the case submission of the genocide case, reflects the court's sensitivity to global public opinion.
Addressing critiques regarding the absence of a ceasefire directive in the ICJ's emergency ruling, Devers clarified that Palestine's non-membership in the Hague-based court precluded such an order.
“Palestine is not a member of ICJ and a party to the genocide case so the World Court couldn’t issue a ceasefire order,” he told the Press TV website.
Countries arming Israel complicit in Gaza genocide, starvation: UN rapporteur
Countries arming Israel complicit in Gaza genocide, starvation: UN rapporteur
Israel is intentionally starving people in Gaza and countries supplying arms to it are complicit in both genocide and starvation of Palestinians, says the UN special rapporteur on the right to food.
ICC arrest warrant against Netanyahu anticipated
Devers said the ICJ rulings help boost a collective complaint he filed to the ICC prosecutor in November, which accuses Israel of genocide and demands arrest warrants to be issued against top Israeli regime officials, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
When asked about the ICC's potential role in aiding Palestinians, Devers highlighted the court's unique recognition of Palestine as a state.
Despite Israel's non-recognition of the ICC, Devers believes the court remains influential, citing a 2021 jurisdictional ruling that it has jurisdiction over grave crimes committed in occupied Palestinian territories, including potential war crimes on the ground.
Devers said with mounting evidence of serious war crimes being committed in Gaza, he hopes the ICC can soon issue arrest warrants against Netanyahu and other Israeli regime officials.
The lawyer explained that threatening the existence of a community, cutting access to basic needs including electricity, water, food, and health services, bombing hospitals and civilians, and forcing people into displacement, amount to genocide.
However, he acknowledged the complexity of the ICC's processes, emphasizing the prosecutor's pivotal role.
He stressed the importance of videos and testimonies, calling for increased international pressure and legal support to persuade the ICC prosecutor to act, asserting that the court's credibility is at stake.
“The prosecutor should be presented with proof and legal arguments and other evidence convincing him. If presented with concrete proof, It's challenging for him not to do anything so the international pressure should increase there. Lawyers and civil society will tell the prosecutor that you’re obliged to do something because the credibility of ICC will be tarnished,” the French lawyer asserted.
Palestinian women persecuted for being Palestinian and women: UN rapporteur
Palestinian women persecuted for being Palestinian and women: UN rapporteur
Reem Alsalem, UN Special Rapporteur on violence against women and girls, tells Press TV that Palestinian women have been persecuted for decades “for being Palestinian and for being women”.
Global legal coalition to support Palestinians
Devers said lawyers can also throw their weight behind the case, further pushing it, and that’s why he has initiated a network of attorneys dedicated to defending the Palestinian cause, particularly at the ICC.
"If the prosecutor works alone and feels pressured by Israel and its powerful supporters, he can hardly do anything. But if the prosecutor feels supported and controlled by hundreds of thousands of lawyers worldwide, he will obtain a result,” he said.
“Lawyers can tell the prosecutor that ‘we know it's difficult for you to open a case due to Israel’s pressure. We can help you. Provide analysis of case and law.’ Genocide is the most important and highest level of crime. We can’t do nothing about genocide.”
Devers is actively rallying a global coalition of lawyers to exert legal pressure on Israel. He recounted the rapid support from over 650 lawyers worldwide for their ICC lawsuit and the subsequent formation of a collaborative network, which is now backed by over 100,000 lawyers.
“In November when we wanted to submit our ICC lawsuit, in less than a week we had 650 lawyers on board coming from all over the world, from Pakistan, to Chile, to European countries to Africa,” he said.
“That's when we decided to take a different route. We started working together, going from country to country with the help of bar associations. At the moment, I believe that more than 100,000 lawyers are supporting our case. That is mainly because in some vast countries, national bar associations have endorsed our efforts, and this has greatly empowered us. For example Algeria and Morocco.”
Asked if the regime will heed the call of the ICC if a ruling is eventually issued, Devers said "in the world, a political regime has no future if it does not respect the decisions of the International Court of Justice, otherwise you become an international thug.”
The French lawyer slammed the West’s silence on Israeli genocidal atrocities in Gaza, saying their refusal to condemn the ongoing genocide committed by Israel will further tarnish their reputation worldwide.
He expressed optimism about the Global South's future role, noting its active stance against the ongoing atrocities and its efforts to bring the atrocities to a halt.
 
The most evil man today is Netanyahu and he is slaughtering the Palestinians for his own politcal survival:-

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The guy interviewed isn’t really a real first responder, he is from Hatzalah - they are like Chippa Ambulance for Jews.

But ultimately it just proves these people lied. Al Jazeera did a full report on this, that is the real one worth watching.
I know Hatzalah. I know people that probably went to join the Hatzalah Ambulances here in New York. Let’s call them volunteer ambulance equivalents. In Israel though, I don’t know their role except what the documentary says, first to respond to clean up the bodies. So there I guess they are volunteers for the coroners office, but in this case also to be propagandists for the state’s narrative.
 
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Incessant slaughter of Palestinians in Rafah continues:-
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To deal with Hezbollah the Nazi Israeli forces need to subdue the West Bank and they are using armed settlers with IDF support :-

Deadly violence after Israeli boy vanishes in West Bank​

3 hours ago
By Laurence Peter,BBC News
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Anadolu/Getty Images Car ablaze after violence in al-Mughayyir, 12 Apr 24
Anadolu/Getty Images
Cars were set ablaze when settlers stormed al-Mughayyir
Violence has erupted during an Israeli search for a missing teenage boy in the occupied West Bank, with a Palestinian man killed and 25 reported hurt in clashes with Jewish settlers.

Israeli troops intervened after dozens of settlers stormed al-Mughayyir, a village near Ramallah, armed with guns and stones. The unrest later subsided.

Missing Benjamin Ahimeir, 14, has not been found. A huge search is under way.

Separately Israeli forces shot and killed two West Bank Palestinians.

One was confirmed by Hamas to be a local commander of the group. The Israeli military say Mohammed Daraghmeh was killed in a shoot-out with their troops.

Violence has escalated in the West Bank since the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza started on 7 October, ignited by the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel which killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians.

Israel is on high alert after US officials said an Iranian strike against Israel might be imminent. Iran has vowed to retaliate for last week's deadly air strike on an Iranian diplomatic compound in Syria, in which several senior Iranian military figures died.


Israel has not commented but is widely considered to have carried out that attack targeting Iran's elite Quds Force.

The Palestinian Red Crescent said at least eight of those injured in the al-Mughayyir violence were hit by live fire.

It is not yet clear whether the man who died, 26-year-old Jehad Abu Alia, was shot by an armed settler or Israeli soldier.

The army says its forces managed to disperse the settlers who had entered the village. Troops have set up roadblocks in the area as the security forces continue searching for the Israeli boy, who had left a settler outpost, Malachi Hashalom, early on Friday.

His sister Hannah, quoted by AFP news agency, said he was familiar with the area, where he had often herded sheep.

The Palestinian health ministry says at least 460 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces or settlers in the West Bank since 7 October.


Israeli sources say at least 13 Israelis have been killed there by Palestinians in the same period.

The surge in West Bank violence has prompted the US, UK and France to impose sanctions on some settlers for the first time.

But the casualties there are dwarfed by the Gaza war: more than 33,600 Gazans, the majority of them civilians, have been killed during Israel's campaign, the Hamas-run health ministry says.

On 7 October gunmen also took more than 250 people hostage. Israel says that of 130 hostages still in Gaza, at least 34 are dead.
 
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