Israel’s Genocide in Gaza | 2023- till present

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The Nazi occupation army forces are currently burning and blowing up citizens' homes in the Bir al-Naja and al-Saftawi areas, west of Jabalia camp, north of the Gaza Strip.

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At the end of the day, Muslim votes don’t count for much. Neither do Jewish votes. Neither community makes up more than 2% of the population. What matters is the money that is given to the candidates. AIPAC I heard has a budget of over $500 million per year. They give money to all the candidates and every Congressman has an AIPAC minder who they have to report to on a regular basis. Anyone who votes against Israel faces certain defeat as they pump $10-20 million to his opponent.

Muslim Americans will only be able to counter AIPAC if they also get organized and contribute hundreds of millions of dollars to a political action committee.

True. Money counts a lot. But there are the Swing States where even a few hundred votes, here and there would make a difference. And looking at the Non Committed votes in Michigan and a few other critical States, the Muslim/Arab vote bank would play a hugely outsized role. You know how in 2000, the few thousand progressive votes which went to Nader in Florida, made the difference: G.W Bush became the President by the thinnest of the margins.
I know for personal interaction with a WASP Trumpeter friend: He is very happy the pro Palestinian voter, which is not just Arab/Muslim, is either staying home or voting for Jill Stein.
 
I'm not aware that T.F. is an Israeli, much less a Zionist.
Thomas Friedman is considered a Centrist Zionist. He may have the American citizenship but everyone knows about his loyalties.
I could but you know what? Now, when Israel's very existence is under attack, is not a sensible time to discuss it.

You are right: Israel's very existence is at stake now. Gone are the days of Israelis boasting about destroying all of Israel's enemies. Even if Israel, with the American help, destroys Iran, the hundreds of thousands of pro Palestinian fighters spread over several countries will not let Israel be in peace. There are not enough bombs in the entire world to destroy them.
 
The major operations carried out by the Palestinian and regional resistance groups on 14 and 15 October are as follows:

Al-Qassam Brigades' operations on Oct. 14:
  • Targeted a gathering of Israeli forces present in the "Netzarim" axis with heavy-caliber mortar shells in a joint operation with the Al-Quds Brigades.
  • Targeted an Israeli military personnel carrier with a tandem shell north of Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip.
  • Targeted an Israeli military D9 military bulldozer with a high-powered explosive device near Hafsa School, west of Jabalia camp, northern Gaza Strip.
  • Detonated an anti-personnel “Ra'adiya” explosive device on a number of occupation soldiers while they were trying to enter a house, near Al-Sirat Mosque in Al-Jneina neighborhood east of Rafah city in the southern Gaza Strip.
  • Targeted an Israeli military Merkava tank with Yassin 105 shells near Al-Sirat Mosque in Al-Jneina neighborhood in Rafah city, southern Gaza Strip.
Al-Quds Brigades' operations on Oct. 14
  • Engaged in fierce clashes at point-blank range against an Israeli infantry force surrounding the Al-Faluja Cemetery in the center of Jabalia camp, northern Gaza Strip.
  • Targeted a gathering of Israeli soldiers and military vehicles at Mount Al-Kashef east of Jabalia camp, northern Gaza Strip, with mortar shells.
Al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades' operations on Oct. 14:
  • In a joint operation with the Mujahideen Brigades, targeted Israeli military forces stationed in the "Netzarim Axis" with two 107 mm missiles.
  • Engaged in fierce clashes with Israeli forces storming Jenin camp in the occupied West Bank, using machine guns and explosive devices.
Martyr Omar Al-Qasim Forces' operations on Oct. 14
  • Engaged in fierce clashes with Israeli forces that penetrated the vicinity of the Al-Faluja Cemetery, west of Jabalia camp in the northern Gaza Strip.
Mujahideen Brigades' operations on Oct. 14:
  • In a joint operation with Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, targeted Israeli forces stationed in the "Netzarim Axis" with two 107 mm missiles.
Al-Qassam Brigades' operations on Oct. 15:
  • Detonated a barrel explosive device on a special Israeli military force, east of the Al-Rayyan area, east of the city of Rafah, southern Gaza Strip.
Al-Quds Brigades' operations on Oct. 15:
  • Targeted an Israeli military Merkava tank with an RPG shell infiltrating near the Umm Al-Mu'minin Aisha Mosque in the Al-Qasasib neighborhood, central Jabalia camp, northern Gaza Strip.
  • Targeted a gathering of Israeli forces and their military vehicles with standard 60 mm mortar shells in the Civil Administration area east of Jabalia camp, northern Gaza Strip
Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades' operations on Oct. 15:
  • Engaged in fierce clashes with Israeli forces and their military vehicles that invaded the Al-Hadaf neighborhood using machine guns and explosive devices.
  • Trapped an Israeli military force in the Al-Hadaf axis in a tight ambush and targeted them with machine guns.
  • Targeted a gathering of Israeli forces with standard mortar shells near the Civil Administration east of Jabalia camp, northern Gaza Strip.
Al-Nasser Salah Al-Din Brigades' operations on Oct. 15:
  • In a joint operation with the Al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades, targeted positions of Israeli soldiers stationed in the “Netzarim” military axis with 107mm rockets.
Martyr Omar Al-Qasim Forces' operations on Oct. 15:

  • Detonated an explosive device on an Israeli military Merkava tank during its incursion into the Al-Salam neighborhood east of the city of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip.
 

The force that isn’t keeping the peace in Lebanon: 4 scenarios for the future of UNIFIL

PM charges Hezbollah terror group uses UN peacekeepers as human shields, while ex-IDF intelligence expert Tal Beeri says it’s long been clear that the force isn’t fulfilling its mandate​

By Gianluca Pacchiani

14 October 2024, 4:46 pm
A UNIFIL vehicle patrols near a billboard with a portrait of Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah, in the southern town of Adaisseh, on August 30, 2023. (Mahmoud ZAYYAT / AFP)
A UNIFIL vehicle patrols near a billboard with a portrait of Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah, in the southern town of Adaisseh, on August 30, 2023. (Mahmoud ZAYYAT / AFP)
In recent days, at least five UNIFIL peacekeepers have been lightly wounded as Israel expands its fight against the Hezbollah terror group in southern Lebanon.

The IDF took responsibility for two separate incidents on Thursday and Friday in which four UN soldiers from Indonesia and Sri Lanka were wounded, and said that in both cases it was aiming at Hezbollah positions nearby and that it warned UNIFIL it was about to shoot. As for the fifth soldier, who was wounded on Friday night, the UN admitted it did not know the origin of the gunfire.

Still, UNIFIL — the United Nations Interim Forces in Lebanon — accused the Israeli military of firing “deliberately” on its positions, and the 40 countries that contribute troops to it unanimously condemned the incidents and highlighted the mission’s aim to bring “lasting peace in South Lebanon.”


In response to the international outcry, Israel has made the case that the UNIFIL force hinders its efforts to eradicate Hezbollah from the border and called for the peacekeepers’ withdrawal from combat areas.

On Sunday night, IDF Arabic-language spokesman Avichay Adraee said around 25 rockets and missiles were fired at Israeli towns and forces by Hezbollah from next to UNIFIL posts over the past month. One of the attacks launched from next to a UNIFIL position killed two IDF soldiers, said Adraee.

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Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a statement addressed to UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, also on Sunday that UNIFIL soldiers were “hostages” of Hezbollah and being used as “human shields.”


Illustrative: A general view of a base of the United Nations peacekeeping forces in Lebanon (UNIFIL) at the Lebanese-Israeli border, in the southern village of Markaba, on April 7, 2023. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar, File)
“This endangers both them and the lives of our soldiers,” the prime minister said, noting that Israel has requested their withdrawal multiple times in the past and was always met with refusal.

The terror group’s exploitation of the peacekeeping mission as cover is nothing new, according to some Israeli pundits. In the first weeks of the war, the Alma Research Center, a privately funded nonprofit that monitors security developments on Israel’s northern border, published a map showing five UNIFIL bases that had been used by Hezbollah as cover for rocket launches on Israel.

Recently, Alma followed up with a study of four potential scenarios outlining the future of the “failed” UN peacekeeping force.


Tal Beeri, Alma’s director of research, said that UNIFIL is “unwilling and unable to confront Hezbollah.” Beeri served for decades in IDF intelligence units.

“When Hezbollah places a rocket launcher next to one of UNIFIL’s positions, 99.9% of the time UNIFIL will not do anything about it. They are afraid,” said Beeri.

“If Hezbollah tells UNIFIL forces not to get into a certain area, they won’t. If they do it anyway without prior coordination, they can get physically hurt or abducted,” said Beeri. “It has happened in the past, before this war.”

Among past incidents, in May 2013, a UNIFIL base was overrun, its ammunition stolen, and three soldiers were briefly detained. In December 2022, a UNIFIL vehicle came under gunfire and an Irish peacekeeper inside it was killed. A Hezbollah official said the terror group was not involved in the shooting but noted that the vehicle had taken an “unusual route.”


Members of UNIFIL patrol the area of Naqura, south of the Lebanese city of Tyre, along the border with Israel on June 6, 2022. (Mahmoud Zayyat/AFP)

UNIFIL’s failure to fulfill its core mission​

UNIFIL was first deployed in 1978 after the IDF invasion of southern Lebanon. The operation came in response to the “coastal road massacre,” a terror attack in which 35 Israeli civilians were killed on a bus near Tel Aviv by Palestinians who infiltrated from Lebanon into Israel.

The Lebanese government said it had no connection to the Palestinian terrorist commandos and requested UN intervention to ensure the withdrawal of IDF troops from its territory. The UN decided to send a peacekeeping mission to restore stability to the area.

[photo in original] Tal Beeri, a former IDF intelligence officer and director of the research department at the Alma Center, a nonprofit that monitors security developments along Israel’s northern border, 2024 (courtesy)
During the years of the Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon, from 1982 until 2000, UNIFIL remained behind Israeli lines and provided humanitarian assistance to the local population, but was unable to fulfill its mandate and prevent clashes between the IDF and its Lebanese allies against “resistance” groups such as Hezbollah.

In 2006, after the end of the Second Lebanon War, UNIFIL’s mandate was confirmed and expanded by UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which called for an immediate cessation of hostilities between Hezbollah and Israel and for the creation of a buffer zone in Lebanon south of the Litani River, which was supposed to remain free of arms and militias other than those of UNIFIL and the Lebanese government.

UNIFIL’s mission was extended annually over the following years. The last time its mandate was renewed was on August 28 by the UN Security Council.

However, the UN peacekeeping force has been unable to fulfill its mission, despite its massive contingent of 9,500 troops of some 50 nationalities.


Illustrative – Peacekeepers of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) man their armored vehicle in Lebanon’s southern town of Naqoura near the border with Israel, on October 15, 2023. (AFP)
Resolution 1701 has largely gone unimplemented as Hezbollah progressively entrenched itself in the border area, storing weapons there, firing countless rockets into Israel, and allegedly positioning its forces for a mass invasion of Israel last year.

While UNIFIL has made an important contribution to the residents of southern Lebanon, running projects to provide electricity, healthcare through 15 UNIFIL-run hospitals, and education, and by supporting the local economy through the presence of its thousands of soldiers, it has not fulfilled its core mission — namely, to ensure that the area of southern Lebanon between the border with Israel (the so-called Blue Line) and the Litani River remains demilitarized.

Beeri cited two recent examples of the incapacity or the unwillingness of the UN mission to deal with the terror group that it is supposed to hold at bay.

In December 2018, the IDF uncovered six tunnels dug by Hezbollah that crossed from Lebanon into Israel. The Israeli army said it provided a map of the tunnels to UNIFIL’s commander at the time, Maj. Gen. Stefano Del Col, and called on the UN peacekeeping force to destroy the passages on the Lebanese side of the border, but UNIFIL never complied, Beeri said.


Israeli soldiers show UNIFIL commander Maj. Gen. Stefano Del Col a Hezbollah tunnel that penetrated Israeli territory from southern Lebanon, on December 6, 2018. (Israel Defense Forces)
On September 1, 2019, Hezbollah fired several anti-tank missiles at a military jeep and an IDF base in Avivim, in northern Israel, causing no injuries. Despite Israeli requests, UNIFIL forces have yet to visit the site from where those rockets were launched, Beeri said.

UNIFIL’s spokesperson did not respond to repeated requests for comment by The Times of Israel, about either these two claims or the allegation made by Netanyahu that it serves as Hezbollah’s “human shield.”

Four scenarios for the future of UNIFIL​

In early September, before the ongoing escalation in Lebanon, the Alma Research Center published a report outlining four scenarios for the future of UNIFIL.

Maintaining the status quo is undesirable for Israel, as the IDF runs the risk of inadvertently hitting UNIFIL positions that Hezbollah allegedly uses for cover.


A picture taken from Kibbutz Manara shows UNIFIL peacekeepers driving past Hezbollah and Palestinian flags as they patrol along the border with Israel in the southern Lebanese village of Houla, August 26, 2020. (Jalaa Marey/AFP)
Completely disbanding UNIFIL would also not be a sensible option. The peacekeeping force serves as a “mediation mechanism to resolve tactical conflicts on the ground,” the report indicated.

Expanding and strengthening UNIFIL to perform its mandate and actually confront Hezbollah on the ground does not seem like a realistic scenario at the moment, the report suggested, as Hezbollah would begin targeting UN troops and there would be casualties, and, as a consequence, few countries would agree to maintain their forces in Lebanon under pressure from their citizens.

Reducing the UNIFIL mandate and downsizing its deployment would appear to be the best option, as it would allow the force to preserve its liaison role and its humanitarian projects, and strengthen its reporting function, the report concluded.

However, in light of the ongoing ground offensive by the IDF in south Lebanon, uncertainty still prevails as to what force could guarantee security and confront the threat of Hezbollah fighter cells once the IDF withdraws its troops.

Lazar Berman and Times of Israel staff contributed to this report.
In your sick twisted mind, Israel can do no wrong as it commits genocide and anyone who is witness to this.
 
True. Money counts a lot. But there are the Swing States where even a few hundred votes, here and there would make a difference. And looking at the Non Committed votes in Michigan and a few other critical States, the Muslim/Arab vote bank would play a hugely outsized role. You know how in 2000, the few thousand progressive votes which went to Nader in Florida, made the difference: G.W Bush became the President by the thinnest of the margins.
I know for personal interaction with a WASP Trumpeter friend: He is very happy the pro Palestinian voter, which is not just Arab/Muslim, is either staying home or voting for Jill Stein.

Voting for Jill Stein may not get you the results you want for this election cycle. But if if that vote is substantial in the Democrats losing, then you establish yourself as a meaningful voting block. Otherwise, you continue to be irrelevant.

Vote Jill Stein and punish the genocide enablers. Nothing else matters.

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When it comes to this conflict, there ARE potentially effective pressure points the Muslim/Arab/Progressive voters can exert. The margin of error is too small for both the Democrats and the Republicans. The Jewish money is big but the pro Palestinian votes are not insignificant either if they act in unison especially in the Swing States: Make a bargain. If the Democrats betray after winning the elections then organize better for the next time and make the message more clear for the next time. What else can be done?!

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Voting for Jill Stein may not get you the results you want for this election cycle. But if if that vote is substantial in the Democrats losing, then you establish yourself as a meaningful voting block. Otherwise, you continue to be irrelevant.

Vote Jill Stein and punish the genocide enablers. Nothing else matters.

I don't believe in the 'punishing' method in this election cycle. Time is of the essence and time is running out to make the Democrats understand about the potential impact next time. I think the Pro Palestinian Voters still have the time to make a deal with the Democratic setup for the upcoming elections. Please see my post just above about the tossup States.
The Pro Palestinian voters need to act in unison. AIPAC is using its money. But that is not everything that matters: Votes do count, especially in the Swing States. And as we learned from the Nader 2000 impact in Florida, only a few hundred votes can lead to the Finish Line.
 
... AIPAC I heard has a budget of over $500 million per year.
Open Secrets: link

Lobbying

RanksMore info 205 of 8,781 in 2024
$1,624,425in 2024
$3,059,885in 2023

Contributions

RanksMore info 12 of 36,359
$41,892,684


They give money to all the candidates and every Congressman has an AIPAC minder who they have to report to on a regular basis.
🤣
 
I don't believe in the 'punishing' method in this election cycle. Time is of the essence and time is running out to make the Democrats understand about the potential impact next time. I think the Pro Palestinian Voters still have the time to make a deal with the Democratic setup for the upcoming elections. Please see my post just above about the tossup States.
The Pro Palestinian voters need to act in unison. AIPAC is using its money. But that is not everything that matters: Votes do count, especially in the Swing States. And as we learned from the Nader 2000 impact in Florida, only a few hundred votes can lead to the Finish Line.


In essence it may not matter who is voted in next month as both Trump and Harris will be tightly controlled by the Zionists(Jewish and Christians).

In the UK, it was worthwhile to vote for the opposition party as they have already made many policy changes from the previous Zionist-stooge party in government.

Yes Kamala in her heart will be sympathetic to Palestinians but she is little more than a figurehead when those that matter in US are all Zionist fanatics.

There is a case of Americans coming out and voting for "Jill Stein" to show the Democrats that they cannot rely on being the "lesser of two evils" to stay in power. Only when they realise they may never get back into power will they start the purge of the Zionists that have hijacked their party.

US may need to "burn the house down" to become a normal country that respects human rights and international norms.
 

Lebanon's PM condemns Israeli attack on Nabatieh​

Lebanon's prime minister has condemned the Israeli strikes on Nabatieh - which his office say "intentionally targeted a meeting of the municipal council".

Prime Minister Najib Mikati says "this new aggression, coupled with all the crimes committed by the Israeli enemy against civilians, is a design of the world that is deliberately silent about the crimes of the occupation, which encourages it to persist in its transgression and crimes".

He also questions the use of demanding a ceasefire from the UN, "if all the countries of the world are unable to deter a blatant aggression against the Lebanese people.

"What can deter the enemy from its crimes that have reached the point of targeting peacekeeping forces in the south? What solution can be hoped for in light of this reality?"

Smoke rises above Nabatieh after strikes
How did they know about this meeting? I am amazed at the level of infiltration
 
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