Israel’s Genocide in Gaza | 2023- till present

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but those talks were just Hamas-US, without Israeli involvement.

these direct talks are still ongoing with Israel, even though separate Israel-Hamas talks have reached a deadend (for now)? seems strange as any deal will need Israeli approval.
I think that the US is engaged with Hamas and Israel separately and came up with a ceasefire proposal for both sides to study. But Netanyahu has not considered it yet.
 
Zionist terrorists are gaslighting. Don't give them any relevancy.

If Netanyahu, a butcher and war criminal was assassinated, they'd do the same kind of gaslighting as now but much worse.

Basically it's you're not allowed to fight back against Nazis. It's a fear mongering tactic.

Keep the activism at a high level. This incident didn't change anything. It isn't stopping anyone from holding Israel accountable. It won't interrupt efforts to stop the war on Gaza. That's gaslighting by Zionists to try to get the world to fold. Deny them that.
 
The people gaslighting the world and American public over two actual terrorists are calling for a total annihilation and Holocaust of the Palestinian people. They want to destroy Palestine and wipe it off the map.

Imagine cowering to their gaslighting and reward them. Grey rock them and tell them we don't give af about your two terrorist Israeli government officials. And that the world would be better off if the entire Israeli government was destroyed.

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There is hardly any aid entering Gaza. People in various pockets of Gaza are starving to death :

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Israeli Airstrike That Killed Top Hamas Leader in Gaza Hit Meeting of Top Militants​


DUBAI—The Israeli airstrike that targeted Hamas’s Gaza chief this month hit him as he attended a meeting of the group’s highest ranking militants, killing several important operatives and leaving a void in the top leadership of the U.S.-designated terrorist group, Hamas and Arab officials said.

The airstrike killed Mohammed Sinwar, who was quietly buried days later, along with other top militants including Mohammad Shabana, the commander of the group’s Rafah brigade, the officials said.

The Hamas leaders had gathered in a tunnel in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis to discuss matters including their approach to cease-fire talks with Israel when they were hit, the officials said. The meeting went against Hamas’s wartime security protocols and created an opening for Israel to hit several high-value targets at once.
Sinwar became the de facto head of Hamas in Gaza after Israel in October killed his brother Yahya Sinwar, who was the mastermind behind the Oct. 7, 2023, attack that triggered the war. Israel has also killed the leader of Hamas’s military wing, Mohammed Deif, his deputy Marwan Issa, and many other top militants.

The precision and timing of the latest attack demonstrated Israel’s significant intelligence capability, the officials said. Sinwar was known to be very particular about keeping a low profile, and only a handful of people usually knew about his movements or how to contact him, they said. He operated largely behind the scenes, earning him the nickname “Shadow,” the Arab officials said.

Hamas found Sinwar’s body a day after the strike and buried it in a temporary grave in another tunnel after his family was informed, the officials said, confirming Israeli claims that he was likely dead. Hamas plans to move Sinwar’s body to a proper burial site once the fighting stops, the officials said.
Hamas declined to respond to a request for comment.

Earlier this week, Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz told a closed-door parliamentary meeting that Sinwar was likely killed in a strike carried out on the grounds of the European Hospital in Khan Younis, according to an Israeli official familiar with the meeting.

Israel targeted underground infrastructure that it said Hamas was using below the hospital. Palestinian health officials at the time said six people were killed and more than 40 injured as a result of the strike.

Hamas hasn’t confirmed Sinwar’s death, in part because the group’s leadership is figuring out who takes over in the war-torn strip, the officials said. Among the front-runners is Izz al-Din Haddad, Hamas’s military head in northern Gaza, the officials said.

A power struggle or void at the top would come just as Hamas faces a renewed and extensive Israeli military offensive, as well as protests from Gaza’s war-weary Palestinians eager for an end to more than a year and a half of violence and deprivation.

Hundreds of residents have taken to the streets to denounce Hamas and urge an end to the war since March, when a fragile cease-fire in Gaza collapsed.

Hamas has historically been a decentralized organization, building in redundancies that helped the group recover from targeted killings throughout the years. But Yahya Sinwar took steps to centralize power under himself and toward the military wing and away from Hamas’s exiled leadership in Doha.

With the Sinwar brothers dead, Hamas’s leadership in Doha could try to regain influence in Gaza through a more pliable leader there, the officials said.

Mohammed Sinwar was believed to be about 50, and, like his older brother Yahya, joined Hamas at an early age. But unlike his brother, who spent more than two decades in an Israeli prison, Mohammed didn’t spend a significant amount of time in Israeli jail and was less understood by Israel’s security establishment.

He was at the center of Hamas’s revival effort, in which the group recruited new fighters and began to rebuild ahead of Israel’s renewed offensive. Close to Hamas’s military wing, he formerly headed the Khan Younis brigade, which was responsible for the 2006 capture of an Israeli soldier who was ultimately traded for Yahya Sinwar’s release from an Israeli prison.

 
Medical sources tell Al Jazeera: 80 martyrs in Israeli raids on the Gaza Strip since dawn today.

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Israeli Airstrike That Killed Top Hamas Leader in Gaza Hit Meeting of Top Militants​


DUBAI—The Israeli airstrike that targeted Hamas’s Gaza chief this month hit him as he attended a meeting of the group’s highest ranking militants, killing several important operatives and leaving a void in the top leadership of the U.S.-designated terrorist group, Hamas and Arab officials said.

The airstrike killed Mohammed Sinwar, who was quietly buried days later, along with other top militants including Mohammad Shabana, the commander of the group’s Rafah brigade, the officials said.

The Hamas leaders had gathered in a tunnel in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis to discuss matters including their approach to cease-fire talks with Israel when they were hit, the officials said. The meeting went against Hamas’s wartime security protocols and created an opening for Israel to hit several high-value targets at once.
Sinwar became the de facto head of Hamas in Gaza after Israel in October killed his brother Yahya Sinwar, who was the mastermind behind the Oct. 7, 2023, attack that triggered the war. Israel has also killed the leader of Hamas’s military wing, Mohammed Deif, his deputy Marwan Issa, and many other top militants.

The precision and timing of the latest attack demonstrated Israel’s significant intelligence capability, the officials said. Sinwar was known to be very particular about keeping a low profile, and only a handful of people usually knew about his movements or how to contact him, they said. He operated largely behind the scenes, earning him the nickname “Shadow,” the Arab officials said.

Hamas found Sinwar’s body a day after the strike and buried it in a temporary grave in another tunnel after his family was informed, the officials said, confirming Israeli claims that he was likely dead. Hamas plans to move Sinwar’s body to a proper burial site once the fighting stops, the officials said.
Hamas declined to respond to a request for comment.

Earlier this week, Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz told a closed-door parliamentary meeting that Sinwar was likely killed in a strike carried out on the grounds of the European Hospital in Khan Younis, according to an Israeli official familiar with the meeting.

Israel targeted underground infrastructure that it said Hamas was using below the hospital. Palestinian health officials at the time said six people were killed and more than 40 injured as a result of the strike.

Hamas hasn’t confirmed Sinwar’s death, in part because the group’s leadership is figuring out who takes over in the war-torn strip, the officials said. Among the front-runners is Izz al-Din Haddad, Hamas’s military head in northern Gaza, the officials said.

A power struggle or void at the top would come just as Hamas faces a renewed and extensive Israeli military offensive, as well as protests from Gaza’s war-weary Palestinians eager for an end to more than a year and a half of violence and deprivation.

Hundreds of residents have taken to the streets to denounce Hamas and urge an end to the war since March, when a fragile cease-fire in Gaza collapsed.

Hamas has historically been a decentralized organization, building in redundancies that helped the group recover from targeted killings throughout the years. But Yahya Sinwar took steps to centralize power under himself and toward the military wing and away from Hamas’s exiled leadership in Doha.

With the Sinwar brothers dead, Hamas’s leadership in Doha could try to regain influence in Gaza through a more pliable leader there, the officials said.

Mohammed Sinwar was believed to be about 50, and, like his older brother Yahya, joined Hamas at an early age. But unlike his brother, who spent more than two decades in an Israeli prison, Mohammed didn’t spend a significant amount of time in Israeli jail and was less understood by Israel’s security establishment.

He was at the center of Hamas’s revival effort, in which the group recruited new fighters and began to rebuild ahead of Israel’s renewed offensive. Close to Hamas’s military wing, he formerly headed the Khan Younis brigade, which was responsible for the 2006 capture of an Israeli soldier who was ultimately traded for Yahya Sinwar’s release from an Israeli prison.

Fake news. The Jewish extremism is frying your brain.
 
The US exists just to support Israeli sponsored terrorism in the region. It's sad what Jewish people have reduced America to.

Meanwhile no sanctions on rapist terrorist mass murdering Nazis of the Israel.

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**** this Nazi and the Nazi Israeli government. Rest in Hell you piece of shit.

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A horrific situation is unfolding in my hometown. A group of thugs attempted to intercept an aid convoy traveling north on Salah Al-Din Street. Local aid protection committees, composed of volunteers, rushed to confront the thugs and protect the aid. Upon their arrival, the volunteers were immediately bombed by Israeli forces. When residents from the neighborhood rushed to rescue the volunteers, they were also bombed. No one still knows what the fate of the volunteers, the rescuers, and the aid convoy heading north is…

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The moment of the arrest of the executor of the shooting operation on the employees of the Israeli embassy in Washington, which resulted in the killing of two of them, while he was screaming: "Palestine is free."

His name is Elias Rodriguez, 30, from Chicago, not an Arab.

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