JEWISH KING JESUS IS COMING AT THE RAPTURE FOR US IN THE CLOUDS-DON'T MISS IT FOR THE WORLD.THE BIBLE TAKEN LITERALLY- WHEN THE PLAIN SENSE MAKES GOOD SENSE-SEEK NO OTHER SENSE-LEST YOU END UP IN NONSENSE.GET SAVED NOW- CALL ON JESUS TODAY.THE ONLY SAVIOR OF THE WHOLE EARTH - NO OTHER. 1 COR 15:23-JESUS THE FIRST FRUITS-CHRISTIANS RAPTURED TO JESUS-FIRST FRUITS OF THE SPIRIT-23 But every man in his own order: Christ the firstfruits; afterward they that are Christ’s at his coming.ROMANS 8:23 And not only they, but ourselves also, which have the firstfruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body.(THE PRE-TRIB RAPTURE)
ISLAM IN IRAQ ALLOWES PEDOPHILIA MARRIAGE TO 9 YEAR OLD CHILDREN.
STORMS HURRICANES-TORNADOES
LUKE 21:25-26
25
And there shall be signs in the sun,(HEATING UP-SOLAR ECLIPSES) and in
the moon,(MAN ON MOON-LUNAR ECLIPSES) and in the stars;(ASTEROIDS ETC)
and upon the earth distress of nations, with perplexity;(MASS CONFUSION)
the sea and the waves roaring;(FIERCE WINDS)
26 Men’s hearts failing
them for fear,(TORNADOES,HURRICANES,STORMS) and for looking after those
things which are coming on the earth:(DESTRUCTION) for the powers of
heaven shall be shaken.(FROM QUAKES,NUKES ETC)
THE FIRST
JUDGEMENT OF THE EARTH STARTED WITH WATER-IT ONLY MAKES SENSE THE LAST
GENERATION WILL BE HAVING FLOODING (BUT WILL NOT KILL EVERY BODY WITH
WATER)(BUT 50% OF EARTHS POPULATION DIE (4 BILLION PEOPLE) FROM NUCLEAR
WAR)(THE BIBLE SAYS BY FIRE OR ATOMIC BOMBS THIS TIME)
GENESIS 7:6-12
6 And Noah was six hundred years old when the flood of waters was upon the earth.
7 And Noah went in, and his sons, and his wife, and his sons’ wives with him, into the ark, because of the waters of the flood.
8 Of clean beasts, and of beasts that are not clean, and of fowls, and of every thing that creepeth upon the earth,
9 There went in two and two unto Noah into the ark, the male and the female, as God had commanded Noah.
10 And it came to pass after seven days, that the waters of the flood were upon the earth.
11
In the six hundredth year of Noah’s life, in the second month, the
seventeenth day of the month, the same day were all the fountains of the
great deep broken up, and the windows of heaven were opened.
12 And the rain was upon the earth forty days and forty nights.
GOD PROMISED BY A RAINBOW-THE EARTH WOULD NEVER BE DESTROYED TOTALLY WITH A FLOOD AGAIN.BUT FLOODIING IS A SIGN OF JUDGEMENT.
OZONE DEPLETION JUDGEMENT ON THE EARTH DUE TO SIN
ISAIAH 30:26-27
26
Moreover the light of the moon shall be as the light of the sun, and
the light of the sun shall be sevenfold,(7X OR 7-DEGREES HOTTER) as the
light of seven days, in the day that the LORD bindeth up the breach of
his people,(ISRAEL) and healeth the stroke of their wound.
27 Behold,
the name of the LORD cometh from far, burning with his anger, and the
burden thereof is heavy: his lips are full of indignation, and his
tongue as a devouring fire:
MATTHEW 24:21-22,29
21 For then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be.
22
And except those days should be shortened,(DAY LIGHT HOURS SHORTENED)
there should no flesh be saved: but for the elect’s sake (ISRAELS SAKE)
those days shall be shortened (Daylight hours shortened)(THE ASTEROID
HITS EARTH HERE)
29 Immediately after the tribulation of those days
shall the sun be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, and
the stars shall fall from heaven, and the powers of the heavens shall be
shaken:
REVELATION 16:7-9
7 And I heard another out of the altar say, Even so, Lord God Almighty, true and righteous are thy judgments.
8 And the fourth angel poured out his vial upon the sun; and power was given unto him to scorch men with fire.
9
And men were scorched with great heat, and blasphemed the name of God,
which hath power over these plagues: and they repented not to give him
glory.
EZEKIEL 32:6-9
6 I will also water with thy blood the land wherein thou swimmest, even to the mountains; and the rivers shall be full of thee.
7
And when I shall put thee out, I will cover the heaven, and make the
stars thereof dark; I will cover the sun with a cloud, and the moon
shall not give her light.
8 All the bright lights of heaven will I make dark over thee, and set darkness upon thy land, saith the Lord GOD.
9
I will also vex the hearts of many people, when I shall bring thy
destruction among the nations, into the countries which thou hast not
known.
REVELATION 16:3-7
3 And the second angel poured out his
vial upon the sea; and it became as the blood of a dead man: and every
living soul died in the sea.(enviromentalists won't like this result)
4 And the third angel poured out his vial upon the rivers and fountains of waters; and they became blood.
5
And I heard the angel of the waters say, Thou art righteous, O Lord,
which art, and wast, and shalt be, because thou hast judged thus.
6
For they(False World Church and Dictator and baby murderers by abortion)
have shed the blood of saints and prophets, and thou hast given them
blood to drink; for they are worthy.
2 Peter 3:6-7 Amplified Bible (AMP) (HOT SUN, NUKES ETC)
6 By these waters also the world of that time was deluged and destroyed.
7
By the same word the present heavens and earth are reserved for fire,
being kept for the day of judgment and destruction of the ungodly.
We
shall have World Government, whether or not we like it. The only
question is whether World Government will be achieved by conquest or
consent.James Paul Warburg appearing before the Senate on 7th February
1950-Like a famous WWII Belgian General,Paul Henry Spock said in 1957:We
need no commission, we have already too many. What we need is a man who
is great enough to be able to keep all the people in subjection to
himself and to lift us out of the economic bog into which we threaten to
sink. Send us such a man. Be he a god or a devil, we will accept
him.And today, sadly, the world is indeed ready for such a man.
JUDGEMENT-WE ALL(EVERYONE) STAND IN FRONT OF GOD TO GIVE ACCOUNT
JOHN 14:3
3
And if I (JESUS OUR JEWISH MESSIAH) go and prepare a place for you, I
will come again, and receive you unto myself; that where I am, there ye
may be also.
MATTHEW 24:33
33 So likewise ye, when ye shall
see all these things,(IN THERE BEGGINING STAGES-NOT FINAL STAGES) know
that it is near, even at the doors.
LUKE 21:32
32 Verily I say unto you, This generation shall not pass away, till all be fulfilled.
2 CORINTHIANS 5:10
10
For we must all (MEANS EVERYONE EVER BORN ON EARTH FROM ADAM-EVE ON)
appear before the judgment seat of Christ; that every one may receive
the things done in his body, according to that he hath done, whether it
be good or bad.(THIS IS THE CHRISTIANS IN FRONT OF JESUS)
LUKEWARM CHURCHES
REVELATION 3:15-19
15 I know thy works, that thou art neither cold nor hot: I would thou wert cold or hot.
16 So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I(GOD) will spue (VOMIT) thee out of my mouth.
17
Because thou sayest, I am rich, and increased with goods, and have need
of nothing; and knowest not that thou art wretched, and miserable, and
poor, and blind, and naked:
18 I counsel thee to buy of me gold tried
in the fire, that thou mayest be rich; and white raiment, that thou
mayest be clothed, and that the shame of thy nakedness do not appear;
and anoint thine eyes with eyesalve, that thou mayest see.
19 As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten: be zealous therefore, and repent
EARTHQUAKES
EZEKIEL 37:7,11-14
7
So I prophesied as I was commanded: and as I prophesied, there was a
noise, and behold a shaking, and the bones came together, bone to his
bone.(POSSIBLE QUAKE BRINGS ISRAEL BACK TO LIFE-SO NOISE AND
SHAKING-QUAKES WILL ALSO DESTROY ISRAELS ENEMIES)
11 Then he said
unto me, Son of man, these bones are the whole house of Israel: behold,
they say, Our bones are dried, and our hope is lost: we are cut off for
our parts.
12 Therefore prophesy and say unto them, Thus saith the
Lord GOD; Behold, O my people, I will open your graves, and cause you to
come up out of your graves, and bring you into the land of Israel.
13 And ye shall know that I am the LORD, when I have opened your graves, O my people, and brought you up out of your graves,
14
And shall put my spirit in you, and ye shall live, and I shall place
you in your own land: then shall ye know that I the LORD have spoken it,
and performed it, saith the LORD.
MATTHEW 24:7-8
7 For nation
shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there shall
be famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers places.
8 All these are the beginning of sorrows.
MARK 13:8
8
For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against
kingdom:(ETHNIC GROUP AGAINST ETHNIC GROUP) and there shall be
earthquakes in divers places, and there shall be famines and troubles:
these are the beginnings of sorrows.
LUKE 21:11
11 And great
earthquakes shall be in divers places,(DIFFERNT PLACES AT THE SAME TIME)
and famines, and pestilences; and fearful sights and great signs shall
there be from heaven.
REVELATION 11:11-14
11 And after three
days and an half the spirit of life from God entered into them, and they
stood upon their feet; and great fear fell upon them which saw them.
12
And they(ELIJSH-MOSES) heard a great voice from heaven saying unto
them, Come up hither.(REV 4:1 WE KNOW IS THE RAPTURE FOR SURE) And they
ascended up to heaven in a cloud; and their enemies beheld
them.(RAPTURED)
13 And the same hour was there a great earthquake,
and the tenth part of the city fell, and in the earthquake were slain of
men seven thousand: and the remnant were affrighted, and gave glory to
the God of heaven.
14 The second woe is past; and, behold, the third woe cometh quickly.
REVELATION 16:18-20
18
And there were voices, and thunders, and lightnings; and there was a
great earthquake, such as was not since men were upon the earth, so
mighty an earthquake, and so great.
19 And the great city (JERUSALEM)
was divided into three parts, and the cities of the nations fell: and
great Babylon came in remembrance before God, to give unto her the cup
of the wine of the fierceness of his wrath.
20 And every island fled away, and the mountains were not found.
FEARFUL SIGHTS AND GREAT SIGNS FROM HEAVEN
LUKE 21:11
11
And great earthquakes shall be in divers places, and famines, and
pestilences; and fearful sights and great signs shall there be from
heaven.so was not yet deemed a threat to land.The storm was located
about 580 miles (930 kilometers) west-southwest of the southernmost tip
of the Cabo Verde Islands and had maximum sustained winds of 50 mph (85
kph), the center said.The storms churned in the Atlantic as rescuers in
the U.S. Southeast searched for people unaccounted for after Hurricane
Helene struck last week, leaving behind a trail of death and
catastrophic damage.
REV 8:7
7 The first angel sounded, and
there followed hail and fire mingled with blood, and they were cast upon
the earth: and the third part of trees was burnt up, and all green
grass was burnt up.
JAMES 1:11
11 For the sun is no sooner
risen with a burning heat, but it withereth the grass, and the flower
thereof falleth, and the grace of the fashion of it perisheth: so also
shall the rich man fade away in his ways.
The Hebrew noun
accurately translated “oven” refers to a “baking oven” as distinct from a
kiln or smelting furnace—both of which burn much hotter. (The Hebrew
nouns for “kiln” or for “smelting furnace” are more likely to appear in
contexts of God's wrath or judgment.)
21 They have roused me to
jealousy with a non-god, they have exasperated me with their idols. In
my turn I shall rouse them to jealousy with a non-people, I shall
exasperate them with a stupid nation.
22 Yes, a fire has blazed from
my anger, it will burn right down to the depths of Sheol; it will devour
the earth and all its produce, it will set fire to the footings of the
mountains.
23 I shall hurl disasters on them, on them I shall use up all my arrows.
Ecclesiastes 1:6 ESV
6
The wind blows to the south and goes around to the north; around and
around goes the wind, and on its circuits the wind returns.
Jonah 1:4 ESV
4
But the Lord hurled a great wind upon the sea, and there was a mighty
tempest on the sea, so that the ship threatened to break up.
Psalm 135:7 ESV
7
He it is who makes the clouds rise at the end of the earth, who makes
lightnings for the rain and brings forth the wind from his storehouses.
Psalm 78:26 ESV
26 He caused the east wind to blow in the heavens, and by his power he led out the south wind;
Psalm 1:4 ESV
4 The wicked are not so, but are like chaff that the wind drives away.
Acts 27:14 ESV
14 But soon a tempestuous wind, called the northeaster, struck down from the land.
Amos 4:13 ESV
13
For behold, he who forms the mountains and creates the wind, and
declares to man what is his thought, who makes the morning darkness, and
treads on the heights of the earth— the Lord, the God of hosts, is his
name!
The fires consuming Los Angeles are just the beginning -by Myke Cole, opinion contributor - 01/22/25 11:00 AM ET
Three
months ago, I worked the fireline in New York’s Sterling Forest,
fighting what’s commonly known as the Jennings Creek fire. I was only on
the line for a day, but rotating crews battled that monster for two
weeks. In the end, it burned 5,000 acres — the largest and most
destructive fire in the Hudson Valley in recent memory.I spent most of
my time cutting trees with a small electric chainsaw, felling them
before they could become fuel bridges, allowing the fire to escape. I
was shocked to learn that New York State Parks officer Dariel Vasquez
was killed by a falling tree shortly after I came off the line, and
wondered if he had died doing similar work. For the rest of the time
the Jennings Creek fire burned, I ran local calls for other fire
companies whose crews were denuded working in the forest. Complaining to
a friend that I couldn’t do more (I’m a volunteer who serves when I’m
not working my day job), he replied, “Don’t worry, with climate change,
you’ll get another chance and sooner than you think.”Indeed, this
mirrored a warning I sounded just six months ago.And then Los Angeles
burned, and I realized that we’re just getting started. Worse, I
discovered that so much of the discourse around what to do to prevent
this in the future is pointed in the wrong direction. When last we had
an update, the death toll in the Los Angeles fires stood at 27, with
40,000 acres burned and the largest portions of the blaze still not
contained. The number of people under evacuation orders at one point
stood at nearly 200,000. With more than 17,000 structures destroyed so
far, this fire has “jumped the wildland urban interface. This means the
fire moved from the wildland fuels that built and grew it and consumed
structures where urban meets rural.That didn’t happen in the Jennings
Creek fire, but this “was a miracle,” per a local town supervisor.
Jennings Creek wasn’t even close to being as wind-driven as what’s
happening in Los Angeles, but there were certainly moments. I’d be
working the fireline a safe distance from the flames, the wind would
pick up briefly, and within seconds, I’d be standing in them. Fires like
these, starting in the wildland and threatening habitations, need to be
addressed — and urgently.The press is rife with recriminations.
President Trump has blamed California Gov. Gavin Newsom (calling him
“Newscum”) for the disaster. A lot of hay is being made of the fact that
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, who promised not to travel
internationally while serving, happened to be in Ghana at a state event
when the fires broke out.Newsom has ordered an investigation into why
hydrants ran dry. Foreign countries have sent help, and rich folks are
hiring private crews.Manpower and water dominate the headlines, and
those things are important for combatting fires, but I am not seeing
much conversation about fire prevention, specifically about building the
kind of resilient forests that will prevent fires from taking off like
this in the first place. Take Bend, Ore. The city butts up against the
tall Ponderosa pine of the 1.6 million-acre Deschutes National Forest, a
veritable tinderbox on its very doorstep. Bend’s arid climate, hot, dry
summers, abundant grasses and reputation as an outdoor destination for
vacationers make it a prime candidate for the kind of wildfires that
encroach on human habitations — just like what we’re witnessing in Los
Angeles. The city has responded with the kind of preventative thinking
we’re going to need moving into a climate-change-strained future. This
includes the “Own Your Zone” program, helping homeowners develop
“defensible space,” essentially creating home firelines that remove
combustible fuel. In a twist of intense irony, Oregon unveiled new codes
mandating vegetation reduction in certain zones on new maps of
wildfire-susceptible areas on Jan. 7, the very same day the
conflagration kicked off in Los Angeles. But the shining example is the
Deschutes Collaborative Forest Project, a volunteer collaborative
focused squarely on the problem of ensuring healthy forests are getting
the helping hand they need. The collaborative helps to tackle climate
change, and build the kind of resilient wildland that won’t cure
wildfires but can help ensure those wildfires that do break out are
easier to control. Indeed, wildfires shouldn’t be cured, as many
ecosystems are dependent on “normal” natural burns that are nothing like
what we saw in Jennings Creek or what we’re currently seeing in Los
Angeles.This involves a range of commonsense measures which, unlike the
dramatic and immediate impact of assets like additional firefighters,
the gear they need to do their jobs, and abundant water, have to be
undertaken gradually, over many, many years, to help wildlands build the
resilience they need to keep these kinds of blazes manageable. “In
some parts of the forest,” the Deschutes Collabortive notes, “we are
past the point of allowing nature to take its course. These forest
stands need our help to get back to health.” This includes a variety of
forest management practices, including reducing invasive species that
burn more readily than native plants, thinning to remove thick
underbrush that adds to the fire fuel load and opens canopies that
prevents “crown-to-crown” spread of fire through the treetops. Fire
suppression efforts in wildlands are necessary in many cases, but they
also run counter to the natural ecosystem that depends on fire (there
are species of pine and oak that require it) to maintain balance. Big
meadows, cleared by fire, become overgrown, adding to fuel load and
allowing for more rapid spread.Prescribed or controlled burns, where
humans deliberately simulate the natural spread of fire, can help
mitigate this, but it requires funding, skill, and care. Even then,
they’re still risky. In 2022, a controlled burn leapt its bounds to
become the worst wildfire in New Mexico’s history. In fact, some are
arguing that forest management is the real culprit behind the Los
Angeles fires, but these are fringe voices sometimes tied to climate
change denial, and drowned out by the focus on bodies, water and gear.
Back here in New York, there are multiple projects like the Deschutes
Collaborative. There’s the Black Rock Forest Consortium, just down the
road from me. There’s the Hudson Valley Alliance for Housing and
Conservation, which strikes a rare balance between attempting conscious
management of ecosystems alongside the need to provide affordable
housing to the region’s growing population. The Audubon Society runs a
healthy forests initiative in the state that helps create the kind of
wildland resilience that might help prevent the next Jennings Creek
disaster, or at least make it more manageable. All of these efforts,
like Deschutes, are nonprofit, heavily dependent on community
involvement, volunteer labor and public funding. You can’t even call the
Los Angeles fires a warning shot. Rather, they are merely the latest
episode in a rapidly unfolding story. With climate change’s increasing
impact, and the increasingly populated intersection between wildland and
urban environments, we can expect more of the same unless we address it
urgently.Part of that move should absolutely be the tools firefighters
need — more hands to do the hard work, more water to “put the wet stuff
on the red stuff,” more and better gear. But the longer, slower and more
patient work of managing the wildlands where these things start is
going to be a critical part of that fight, demanding volunteers,
dedicated activists and, of course, lots and lots of money.What’s more,
it demands political courage and deft communication to sell the slower
and more complex solution to a public who, as the current news cycle and
social media conversation shows, have short attention spans consumed by
outrage.As we reckon with what is still unfolding around Los Angeles,
we need to be thinking about the full range of solutions to employ to
move toward a time where this becomes a moment in history, and not the
new normal.Myke Cole is a historian, novelist and essayist. His career
spans service in the military, intelligence, law enforcement and
firefighting. His most recent book is “Steel Lobsters: Crown,
Commonwealth, and the Last Knights in England.”
Is There Any
Merit To "Doomsday Fish Theory?" Second Oarfish Recovered in
California-Oarfish, or "doomsday fish," get a bad rap.By Eva
Hagan-Updated Nov. 18 2024, 4:23 p.m. ET
For many, news that a
new species had emerged from the deep sea (or at least, a rare species
not often seen by the general public) would warrant a viral moment.
However, the appearance of oarfish instead sometimes sparks a negative
reaction. Whether it's divers in 2023 spotting the creature or kayakers
in 2024, oarfish don't get the warmest welcome.According to Japanese
folklore, the elusive fish is thought to signify an impending disaster,
historically spotted right before natural disasters like earthquakes and
tsunamis.Keep reading for everything you need to know about the
"doomsday fish theory," explained.What is the "Doomsday Fish" theory?
The "Doomsday Fish theory" is connected to the Japanese myth that the
oarfish is the "Messenger from the Sea God's Palace" and appears in
shallow waters before a seismic or doomsday occurrence. Hence, the
oarfish is often called the "Doomsday Fish," per National Geographic.The
oarfish's "bad omen" reputation has been slightly reinforced over the
years. In 2017 six oarfish were seen just a few days before an
earthquake in the Philippines killed six people, per ABC7.Similarly, in
August 2024, just two days before a 4.6 earthquake struck Los Angeles,
kayakers and snorkelers spotted an oarfish in San Diego, per the New
York Post. While the oarfish in question was tragically deceased,
researchers from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography obtained the
body to determine why a juvenile oarfish was in shallow waters.In
November 2024, a second oarfish was found on a beach in Encinitas in
southern California, as reported by the Scripps Institution of
Oceanography to the Guardian.The "Doomsday Fish" may be no more than a
myth.Many scientists and divers are not convinced of any connection
between earthquakes and the fish. Hiroyuki Motomura, a professor of
ichthyology at Kagoshima University.Motomura told the New York Post in
2023, “There is no scientific evidence of a connection, so I don’t think
people need to worry. I believe these fish tend to rise to the surface
when their physical condition is poor, rising on water currents, which
is why they are so often dead when they are found.”Oceanographer and
ecologist at Louisiana State University, Mark Benfield, told National
Geographic that massive seismic activity would move more than one
oarfish toward the shore.Benfield also said, "It's hard to imagine what
sort of phenomenon would occur before an earthquake that would cause
these oarfish to leave the [mesopelagic zone] to move towards shore and
strand."The zone the oarfish live in, the mesopelagic zone, is actually
several zones removed from the ocean floor, where seismic activity
occurs. Therefore, oarfish are not a good signal for a natural
disaster.The scariest thing about the oarfish is arguably its size.The
oarfish can measure much bigger than six feet. According to National
Geographic, the chilling sea serpent can reach 56 feet in length and
weigh up to 600 pounds. They often have a shimmering silver complexion
with blue spots.National Geographic also reports that although oarfish
live in deep waters, they often rise to temperate and tropical shallow
waters, believed to be pushed to the surface by strong currents.The
species lives 200 to 1,000 meters below the ocean surface. They feed on
small crustaceans and krill, which are harder to find in surface waters.
In addition to the lack of food in shallow waters, oarfish are highly
susceptible to fatal injury from harsh wind, and this could explain why
most oarfish found in shallower waters are often dying or dead.This
article, originally published on July 20, 2023, has been updated.
INVENTION OF THE ATOMIC BOMB.
2 PETER 3:10-11
10
But the day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night; in the which
the heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and the elements
(NUKES) shall melt with fervent heat,(BLAST) the earth also and the
works that are therein shall be burned up.(BUT ITS NO END OF THE WORLD
HOGWASH)
11 Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved,(BY
NUKES INCLUDING 3 BILLION PEOPLE) what manner of persons ought ye to be
in all holy conversation and godliness,
NUCLEAR WEAPONS WILL BE USED.
JESUS
SHED HIS BLOOD FOR US THAT WE CAN BE SAVED FOREVER.AND DURING WW3
PEOPLES BLOOD WILL BE SHED AS A JUDGEMENT FOR HATING HIM AND ISRAEL.GOD
IS NOT MOCKED.
ZEPHANIAH 1:2-3
2 I will utterly consume all things from off the land, saith the LORD.
3
I will consume man and beast; I will consume the fowls of the heaven,
and the fishes of the sea, and the stumblingblocks with the wicked; and I
will cut off man from off the land, saith the LORD.
PSALMS 97:3
3 A fire goeth before him, and burneth up his enemies round about.
EZEKIEL 5:15-17
15
So it shall be a reproach and a taunt, an instruction and an
astonishment unto the (ARAB/MUSLIM) nations that are round about
thee,(ISRAEL) when I shall execute judgments in thee in anger and in
fury and in furious rebukes. I the LORD have spoken it.
16 When I
shall send upon them the evil arrows of famine, which shall be for their
destruction, and which I will send to destroy you: and I will increase
the famine upon you, and will break your staff of bread:
17 So will I
send upon you famine and evil beasts,(WHEN RUSSIA/MUSLIMS GET DEFEATED
THIER BODIES GET EATEN BY BIRDS,ANIMALS IN ISRAEL MIGRATION SEASON) and
they shall bereave thee; and pestilence and blood shall pass through
thee;(NUKES) and I will bring the sword upon thee. I the LORD have
spoken it.
REVELATION 14:18-20
18 And another angel came out
from the altar, which had power over fire; and cried with a loud cry to
him that had the sharp sickle, saying, Thrust in thy sharp sickle, and
gather the clusters of the vine of the earth; for her grapes are fully
ripe.
19 And the angel thrust in his sickle into the earth, and
gathered the vine of the earth, and cast it into the great winepress of
the wrath of God.
20 And the winepress was trodden without the
city,(JERUSALEM) and blood came out of the winepress, even unto the
horse bridles, by the space of a thousand and six hundred furlongs.(200
MILES) (THE SIZE OF ISRAEL)
ISAIAH 66:15-18
15 For, behold,
the LORD will come with fire,(NUKES) and with his chariots like a
whirlwind, to render his anger with fury, and his rebuke with flames of
fire.
16 For by fire and by his sword will the LORD plead with all flesh: and the slain of the LORD shall be many.
17
They that sanctify themselves, and purify themselves in the gardens
behind one tree in the midst, eating swine's flesh, and the abomination,
and the mouse, shall be consumed together, saith the LORD.
18 For I
know their works and their thoughts: it shall come, that I will gather
all nations and tongues; and they shall come, and see my glory.
ISAIAH 26:21
21
For, behold, the LORD cometh out of his place to punish the inhabitants
of the earth for their iniquity:(GOD/ISRAEL HATE AND BRAKING OF HIS
COMMANDMENTS) the earth also shall disclose her blood, and shall no more
cover her slain.(WW3,1/2 earths population die - 3 BILLION).
ISAIAH 13:6-13 KJV
6 Howl ye; for the day of the LORD is at hand; it shall come as a destruction from the Almighty.
7 Therefore shall all hands be faint, and every man's heart shall melt:(FROM FRIGHT)
8
And they shall be afraid: pangs and sorrows shall take hold of them;
they shall be in pain as a woman that travaileth: they shall be amazed
one at another; their faces shall be as flames.
9 Behold, the day of
the LORD cometh, cruel both with wrath and fierce anger, to lay the land
desolate: and he shall destroy the sinners thereof out of it.
10 For
the stars of heaven and the constellations thereof shall not give their
light: the sun shall be darkened in his going forth, and the moon shall
not cause her light to shine.
11 And I will punish the world for
their evil, and the wicked for their iniquity; and I will cause the
arrogancy of the proud to cease, and will lay low the haughtiness of the
terrible.
12 I will make a man more precious than fine gold; even a man than the golden wedge of Ophir.
13
Therefore I will shake the heavens, and the earth shall remove out of
her place, in the wrath of the LORD of hosts, and in the day of his
fierce anger.
ISAIAH 24:17-23 KJV
17 Fear, and the pit, and the snare, are upon thee, O inhabitant of the earth.
18
And it shall come to pass, that he who fleeth from the noise of the
fear shall fall into the pit; and he that cometh up out of the midst of
the pit shall be taken in the snare: for the windows from on high are
open, and the foundations of the earth do shake.
19 The earth is utterly broken down, the earth is clean dissolved, the earth is moved exceedingly.
20
The earth shall reel to and fro like a drunkard, and shall be removed
like a cottage; and the transgression thereof shall be heavy upon it;
and it shall fall, and not rise again.
21 And it shall come to pass
in that day, that the LORD shall punish the host of the high ones that
are on high, and the kings of the earth upon the earth.
22 And they
shall be gathered together, as prisoners are gathered in the pit, and
shall be shut up in the prison, and after many days shall they be
visited.
23 Then the moon shall be confounded, and the sun ashamed,
when the LORD of hosts shall reign in mount Zion, and in Jerusalem, and
before his ancients gloriously.
2 TIMOTHY 3:1
1 This know also, that in the last days perilous (DANGEROUS) times shall come.
JOEL 2:3,30
ZECHARIAH 14:12-13
12
And this shall be the plague wherewith the LORD will smite all the
people that have fought against Jerusalem; Their flesh shall consume
away while they stand upon their feet,(DISOLVED FROM ATOMIC BOMB) and
their eyes shall consume away in their holes,(DISOLVED FROM ATOMIC BOMB)
and their tongue shall consume away in their mouth.(DISOLVED FROM
ATOMIC BOMB)(BECAUSE NUKES HAVE BEEN USED ON ISRAELS ENEMIES)(GOD
PROTECTS ISRAEL AND ALWAYS WILL)
13 And it shall come to pass in that
day, that a great tumult from the LORD shall be among them; and they
shall lay hold every one on the hand of his neighbour, and his hand
shall rise up against the hand of his neighbour.(1/2-3 BILLION DIE IN
WW3)(THIS IS AN ATOMIC BOMB EFFECT)
EZEKIEL 20:47
47 And say
to the forest of the south, Hear the word of the LORD; Thus saith the
Lord GOD; Behold, I will kindle a fire in thee, and it shall devour
every green tree in thee, and every dry tree: the flaming flame shall
not be quenched, and all faces from the south to the north shall be
burned therein.
ZEPHANIAH 1:18
18 Neither their silver nor
their gold shall be able to deliver them in the day of the LORD'S wrath;
but the whole land shall be devoured by the fire of his jealousy: for
he shall make even a speedy riddance of all them that dwell in the land.
MALACHI 4:1
1
For, behold, the day cometh, that shall burn as an oven;(FROM ATOMIC
BOMBS) and all the proud, yea, and all that do wickedly, shall be
stubble: and the day that cometh shall burn them up, saith the LORD of
hosts, that it shall leave them neither root nor branch.
REVELATION 8:7
7
The first angel sounded, and there followed hail and fire mingled with
blood, and they were cast upon the earth: and the third part of trees
was burnt up, and all green grass was burnt up.
REVELATION 9:18
18
By these three was the third part of men killed,(2 BILLION) by the
fire, and by the smoke, and by the brimstone, which issued out of their
mouths.(ATOMIC BOMBS)(RUSSIA CHINA DESTROYED BY ISRAELS ATOMIC BOMBS)
REVELATION 16:12-16
12
And the sixth angel poured out his vial upon the great river
Euphrates;(WERE WW3 STARTS IN IRAQ OR SYRIA OR TURKEY) and the water
thereof was dried up, that the way of the kings of the east might be
prepared.
13 And I saw three unclean spirits like frogs come out of
the mouth of the dragon,(SATAN) and out of the mouth of the beast,(WORLD
DICTATOR) and out of the mouth of the false prophet.(FALSE POPE)
14
For they are the spirits of devils, working miracles, which go forth
unto the kings of the earth and of the whole world, to gather them to
the battle of that great day of God Almighty.(WERE 2 BILLION DIE FROM
NUKE WAR)
15 Behold, I come as a thief. Blessed is he that watcheth, and keepeth his garments, lest he walk naked, and they see his shame.
16 And he gathered them together into a place called in the Hebrew tongue Armageddon.
17
And the seventh angel poured out his vial into the air; and there came a
great voice out of the temple of heaven, from the throne, saying, It is
done.
PROOF HALF ON EARTH DIE DURING THE 7 YR TRIBULATION PERIOD (8 BILLION ON EARTH)
REVELATION 6:7-8 (8 BILLION- 2 BILLION = 6 BILLION)
7 And when he had opened the fourth seal, I heard the voice of the fourth beast say, Come and see.
8
And I looked, and behold a pale horse:(CHLORES GREEN) and his name that
sat on him was Death, and Hell followed with him. And power was given
unto them over the fourth part of the earth,(2 BILLION) to kill with
sword,(WEAPONS) and with hunger,(FAMINE) and with death,(INCURABLE
DISEASES) and with the beasts of the earth.(ANIMAL TO HUMAN DISEASE).
REVELATION 9:15,18 (6 BILLION - 2 BILLION = 4 BILLION)
15 And the four(DEMONIC WAR) angels were loosed,
18
By these three was the third part of men killed,(2 BILLION) by the
fire, and by the smoke, and by the brimstone, which issued out of their
mouths.(NUCLEAR ATOMIC BOMBS)
HALF OF EARTHS POPULATION DIE DURING THE 7 YR TRIBULATION.(THESE VERSES ARE JUDGEMENT SCRIPTURES NOT RAPTURE SCRIPTURES)
LUKE
17:34-37 (8 TOTAL BILLION - 4 BILLION DEAD IN TRIB = 4 BILLION TO JESUS
KINGDOM) (HALF DIE DURING THE 7 YR TRIBULATION PERIOD JUST LIKE THE
BIBLE SAYS)(GOD DOES NOT LIE)(AND NOTICE MOST DIE IN WAR AND
DISEASES-NOT COMETS-ASTEROIDS-QUAKES OR TSUNAMIS)
34 I tell you, in
that night there shall be two men in one bed; the one shall be taken,(IN
WW3 JUDGEMENT) and the other shall be left.(half earths population 4
billion die in the 7 yr trib)
35 Two women shall be grinding together; the one shall be taken,(IN WW3 JUDGEMENT) and the other left.
36 Two men shall be in the field; the one shall be taken,(IN WW3 JUDGEMENT) and the other left.
37
And they answered and said unto him, Where, Lord? And he said unto
them, Wheresoever the body is, thither will the eagles be gathered
together.(Christians have new bodies,this is the people against
Jerusalem during the 7 yr treaty)(Christians bodies are not being eaten
by the birds).THESE ARE JUDGEMENT SCRIPTURES-NOT RAPTURE
SCRIPTURES.BECAUSE NOT HALF OF PEOPLE ON EARTH ARE CHRISTIANS.AND THE
CONTEXT IN LUKE 17 IS THE 7 YEAR TRIBULATION OR 7 YR TREATY PERIOD.WHICH
IS JUDGEMENT ON THE EARTH.NOT 50% RAPTURED TO HEAVEN.
MATTHEW 24:37-42 (THESE ARE JUDGEMENT SCRIPTURES-SURE NOT RAPTURE SCRIPTURES)
37 But as the days of Noe were, so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.
38
For as in the days that were before the flood they were eating and
drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noe
entered into the ark,
39 And knew not until the flood came, and took them all away; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.
40 Then shall two be in the field; the one shall be taken,(IN WW3 JUDGEMENT) and the other left.
41 Two women shall be grinding at the mill; the one shall be taken,(IN WW3 JUDGEMENT) and the other left.
42 Watch therefore:(FOR THE LAST DAYS SIGNS HAPPENING) for ye know not what hour your Lord doth come.
NAHUM 3:13
13
Behold, your troops are women in your midst. The gates of your land are
wide open to your enemies; fire has devoured your bars.
Iraq
passes law that could allow for child marriages-Human rights groups warn
of ‘disastrous effects’ as some clerics interpret Islamic law as
allowing girls to be married as young as 9-By Qassim Abdul-Zahra and
Stella Martany 22 January 2025, 8:12 am
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) —
Iraq’s parliament passed three divisive laws Tuesday, including
amendments to the country’s personal status law that opponents say would
in effect legalize child marriage.The amendments give Islamic courts
increased authority over family matters, including marriage, divorce and
inheritance. Activists argue that this undermines Iraq’s 1959 Personal
Status Law, which unified family law and established safeguards for
women.Iraqi law currently sets 18 as the minimum age of marriage in most
cases. The changes passed Tuesday would let clerics rule according to
their interpretation of Islamic law, which some interpret to allow
marriage of girls in their early teens — or as young as 9 under the
Jaafari school of Islamic law followed by many Shiite religious
authorities in Iraq.Proponents of the changes, which were advocated by
primarily conservative Shiite lawmakers, defend them as a means to align
the law with Islamic principles and reduce Western influence on Iraqi
culture.The parliament also passed a general amnesty law seen as
benefiting Sunni detainees and that’s also seen as giving a pass to
people involved in corruption and embezzlement. The chamber also passed a
land restitution law aimed at addressing Kurdish territorial
claims.Intisar al-Mayali, a human rights activist and a member of the
Iraqi Women’s League, said passage of the civil status law amendments
“will leave disastrous effects on the rights of women and girls, through
the marriage of girls at an early age, which violates their right to
life as children, and will disrupt the protection mechanisms for
divorce, custody and inheritance for women.”The session ended in chaos
and accusations of procedural violations.“Half of the lawmakers present
in the session did not vote, which broke the legal quorum,” a
parliamentary official said on condition of anonymity because he was not
authorized to comment publicly. He said that some members protested
loudly and others climbed onto the parliamentary podium.After the
session, a number of legislators complained about the voting process,
under which all three controversial laws — each of which was supported
by different blocs — were voted on together.“Regarding the civil status
law, we are strongly supporting it and there were no issues with that,”
said Raid al Maliki, an independent MP. “But it was combined with other
laws to be voted on together…and this might lead to a legal appeal at
the Federal Court.”Parliament Speaker Mahmoud al-Mashhadani in a
statement praised the laws’ passage as “an important step in the process
of enhancing justice and organizing the daily lives of citizens.”Also
Tuesday, at least three officers, including the national security chief
of the al-Tarmiyah district north of Baghdad, were killed and four
others wounded in an explosion at an ammunition depot, a security
official said.The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because
he was not authorized to brief the media, said the explosion occurred as
a joint force of the Iraqi army and the national security service
conducted an operation following intelligence reports of the Islamic
State group’s activity and an ammunition cache in the area.
Report:
Smotrich held meeting to plan public campaign to resume Gaza
war-Finance minister said to convene with bereaved families, relatives
of hostages, and strategists to formulate pressure tactics for stopping
ceasefire-hostage deal after 1st stage-By ToI Staff 22 January 2025,
11:57 pm-JAN 22,25
Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich recently
held a meeting aimed at organizing a public campaign to stop the hostage
deal in Gaza after the first phase ends and to resume the war, as he
has been calling for, Channel 12 reported Wednesday.The network said the
meeting included bereaved families of Israelis killed in the war,
relatives of hostages — apparently those who oppose the deal — and
strategists.Halting the ceasefire deal after the first stage would leave
nearly two-thirds of the 91 hostages in captivity, as only 33 are to be
released in the first part of the three-phase ceasefire.A participant
said the meeting focused on mobilizing public and international support
for resuming combat.The participant, who was not named in the report,
told Channel 12: “We were invited to an urgent, secret, and unofficial
meeting. Its purpose was to formulate a strategy to pressure the public
so that we could resume combat immediately after the first phase of the
deal concludes.”In response, Smotrich’s office said he “regularly meets
with bereaved families and families of hostages. The content of these
personal discussions always remains confidential.”Gil Dickman, cousin of
Carmel Gat, who was murdered in a Hamas tunnel in Rafah along with five
other hostages at the end of August as Israeli forces closed in on
them, panned Smotrich for duplicity.“On the one hand, Smotrich welcomes
the hostages who return, and with the other, applies political pressure
on the families of hostages…and tries to shoot down the deal and abandon
hostages to be murdered?” Dickman said to Channel 12.The hostages were
abducted on October 7, 2023, when the Palestinian terror group Hamas led
thousands of terrorists to invade Israel, killing some 1,200 people,
mostly civilians, and abducting 251 to the Gaza Strip. Israel responded
with a military campaign to destroy Hamas, ensure such an attack cannot
be repeated, and save the hostagesFar-right Smotrich, who has called to
encourage Gazans to emigrate and for the establishment of Israeli
settlements in the Palestinian enclave, has also vowed to not allow a
hostage deal that abandons Israel’s stated war goal of destroying
Hamas’s military and governance capabilities in Gaza.The current deal,
reached via international mediators, envisions a three-step process over
the course of 42 weeks, although only the first stage has been agreed
upon so far. During that period, 33 living and dead hostages are to be
released, among them women, elderly men, and captives who are unwell.In
return, Israel is supposed to withdraw from the Gaza Strip and release
thousands of Palestinian security prisoners, including hundreds
convicted of deadly terror attacks on Israelis.Some families of hostages
criticized the deal, fearing that if it does not progress beyond the
first stage, the remaining hostages will be stuck in Gaza
indefinitely.Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has pledged to resume
fighting if the negotiations regarding the terms of phase two do not see
Hamas cede both military and governing powers in Gaza, which the terror
group is not expected to do.Smotrich, leader of the Religious Zionism
party, has said that Netanyahu promised him that fighting will be
renewed after the first phase ends. Religious Zionism says it will quit
the coalition if there is no return to the war at that
point.Disagreement over the ceasefire deal, which started on Sunday with
the release of three women, has left Netanyahu’s coalition
teetering.Fellow far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir
already pulled his Otzma Yehudit party out of the coalition in protest
to the deal, though he said he would not bring down the government.
Netanyahu still controls a majority in the Knesset, but would lose that
edge if Religious Zionism also bolts the coalition.It is believed that
91 of the 251 hostages abducted by Hamas on October 7 remain in Gaza,
including the bodies of at least 34 confirmed dead by the IDF.The terror
group released 105 civilians during a weeklong truce in late November
2023, and four hostages were released before that. Eight hostages have
been rescued by troops alive, and the bodies of 40 hostages have also
been recovered, including three mistakenly killed by the military as
they tried to escape their captors.Hamas is also holding two Israeli
civilians who entered the Strip in 2014 and 2015, as well as the body of
an IDF soldier who was killed in 2014. The body of another IDF soldier,
also killed in 2014, was recovered from Gaza in January.
Iran
reportedly arrests 10 Bahai women in ‘shocking’ raids-Bahai organization
calls arrests part of Tehran’s ‘escalating campaign of persecution’
against members of the religion, including ‘systematic targeting of
women’By AFP 22 January 2025, 11:40 pm
PARIS, France — Iranian
authorities on Wednesday arrested 10 women members of the Bahai
community, a representative group said, warning of escalating repression
against one of the country’s biggest non-Muslim religious
minorities.“Security forces arrested 10 Bahai women, without arrest
warrants or prior notification, in a series of shocking home raids,” the
Bahai International Community (BIC), which represents, at the United
Nations, the interests of faith members worldwide, said in a
statement.It said security agents scaled walls, coerced neighbors and
even posed as utility workers to force entry into the women’s homes,
“subjecting them to distressing and invasive searches.”The women face
charges including participation in conducting “deviant” educational and
propaganda activities contrary to Islamic law.“The Iranian government
has once again shown its true face,” said Simin Fahandej, BIC
representative at the UN in Geneva, calling the raids “yet another
senseless act against women who are completely innocent.”“Their
so-called ‘crime’ was to serve their local communities, and now the
Iranian government has detained them in violent home raids,” she
said.Ten #Bahai women were detained in Baharestan, near Isfahan, #Iran
today by the Islamic Republic's security forces at 6am without warrants
or prior notification. Agents reportedly scaled walls and coerced
neighbors to raid the homes of Boshra Motahhar, Sara Shakib, Sanaz
Rasteh,… pic.twitter.com/eRswlxDgDu — Baha'i International Community
(@BahaiBIC_Rights) January 22, 2025-The BIC called the arrests “part of a
systematic and escalating campaign of persecution against the Bahai.”In
December, UN experts in a statement voiced concern over “what appears
to be an increase in systematic targeting of women” belonging to the
Bahai minority throughout Iran.US-based rights group Human Rights Watch
said in April that the Iranian authorities’ persecution of the Bahais
since the Islamic revolution of 1979 constitutes a “crime against
humanity of persecution.”Unlike other minorities, Bahais have not had
their faith recognized by Iran’s constitution, and have no reserved
seats in parliament.How many members of the community remain in Iran is
not known, but activists believe there could still be several hundred
thousand.The Bahai faith is a relatively young monotheistic religion
with spiritual roots dating back to the early 19th century in
Iran.Senior community figures Mahvash Sabet, a 71-year-old poet, and
Fariba Kamalabadi, 62, were both arrested in July 2022, and are serving
10-year jail sentences. Both women had previously been jailed by the
authorities over the past two decades.Sabet risks being sent back to
prison after being given leave for open heart surgery, supporters have
warned, while Kamalabadi remains in jail.
IDF seizes
truce-violating weapons, including rocket launchers, in south
Lebanon-Foreign Minister Sa’ar tells UN envoy to Lebanon no compromise
on security; strategic affairs minister said to discuss with US security
chief extending ceasefire grace period-By Emanuel Fabian-and ToI Staff
22 January 2025, 10:07 pm
Israel Defense Forces troops operating
on the Lebanese side of Mount Dov in recent days captured numerous
weapons, the military said Wednesday, as it swept the area for Hezbollah
caches, ahead of a planned withdrawal under the terms of a November
ceasefire that ended a war with the Iran-backed terror group.Members of
the 810th “Mountains” Regional Brigade located and seized anti-tank
missiles and launchers, rocket launchers, machine guns, and other
weapons, it said.The IDF is still deployed to some areas of southern
Lebanon, in accordance with the ceasefire agreement.Israel has accused
Hezbollah of violating the ceasefire hundreds of times with terror
operatives moving ammunition, attempting to attack Israeli soldiers, and
preparing to launch rockets toward northern Israel among other
things.As part of the truce agreement signed by Israel and the terror
group on November 27, the IDF is required to cede all of its positions
in southern Lebanon to the Lebanese army within 60 days. At the same
time, Hezbollah is required to retreat north of the Litani River, some
30 kilometers (18 miles) from the border with Israel.With the exit
deadline approaching next week, Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar told the
visiting UN envoy to Lebanon that Israel is committed to upholding the
agreement as long as its security is maintained.“I emphasized that
Israel is committed to implementing the ceasefire agreement, but will
not compromise on its security,” Sa’ar said of his meeting with UN
Special Coordinator for Lebanon Jeanine Hennis. “There is an opportunity
for Lebanon to break free from the Iranian occupation and build a
better future!”By January 26, Israeli troops are scheduled to fully
withdraw from southern Lebanon to complete the ceasefire deal reached in
November, with the Lebanese Army deploying in the area alongside
international peacekeepers. Israel has warned that any violations of the
deal by Hezbollah be answered in kind.Under the ceasefire agreement,
Israel is entitled to act against immediate threats posed by Hezbollah,
but must forward complaints about longer-term threats to an oversight
committee comprised of representatives from the US, France, Lebanon, and
the international peacekeeping force UNIFIL.Strategic Affairs Minister
Ron Dermer spoke on Tuesday with US National Security Adviser Mike
Waltz, the Kan public broadcaster reported. A source familiar with the
call said the two officials discussed lengthening the ceasefire grace
period, an idea that has previously been floated.Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu is to hold a meeting with senior security officials about the
withdrawal date on Thursday, Kan said.According to the network, IDF
officials have repeatedly warned about Hezbollah violations including
three weeks ago when IDF Northern Command, Maj. Gen. Ori Gordin told the
Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee at a special session held
in the north that Hezbollah has broken the terms of the ceasefire
hundreds of times.Gordin told the forum members that the Lebanese army,
which is supposed to be enforcing the ceasefire by preventing
Hezbollah’s presence along the border, is in some places instead helping
the terror group. He reportedly said that is happening in areas where
the Lebanese army commanders on the ground and their units are Shia
Muslims, in line with the ideology of Hezbollah and its sponsor
Iran.According to the report, army representatives gave a similar update
during a closed-door meeting of the committee that was held this week
at the Knesset. Among the examples cited were that Hezbollah is
manufacturing and storing weapons, as well as deploying forces in areas
prohibited under the truce. Some of the violations are not being dealt
with, even by Israel, the representatives said according to the
report.The army told MKS that, given the situation, it cannot withdraw
from south Lebanon next week on the 60th day of the ceasefire as was
agreed in the deal.The IDF did not respond to the report, Kan
said.Speaking to The Times of Israel last month, a military source
confirmed that the IDF was gearing up for the possibility that troops
would stay beyond the 60-day period as the Lebanese army is currently
deploying too slowly to the southern Lebanon area, allowing Hezbollah
time to regroup.In addition to slow deployment rates, the Lebanese army
is failing to attack Hezbollah targets when the opportunity arises.
Nevertheless, the source said that while extending the length of the
IDF’s deployment would test the ceasefire agreement, it would not
necessarily collapse.Lebanon has accused Israel of repeatedly violating
the ceasefire agreement and last month submitted a complaint to the UN
Security Council alleging that Israel launched some 816 “ground and air
attacks” between the start of the ceasefire and December 22, 2024.The
complaint said that the attacks have hindered the Lebanese army’s
efforts to deploy in the south and uphold its end of the agreement, a
claim that Israel disputes.Israel has also complained to the UN Security
Council about Lebanese violations.The war in Lebanon was sparked when
Hezbollah, unprovoked, began firing at Israel on a near-daily basis on
October 8, 2023, a day after fellow Iran-backed terror group Hamas
stormed southern Israel to kill some 1,200 people and take 251 hostages,
starting the war in Gaza.Israel escalated the campaign against the
terror group in September 2024, decimating its leadership, in a bid to
end the persistent rocket fire that had displaced some 60,000
northerners.Fighting came to a halt with the start of the ceasefire
agreement on November 27, despite both parties frequently accusing the
other of violating its terms.
Top Iran official says Tehran
didn’t know about Oct. 7, doesn’t control ‘proxy groups’In Davos,
Mohammad Javad Zarif also says Israel failed in its Gaza war objectives,
Tehran not building nukes; report says Iran to receive missile fuel
shipment from China-By Agencies and ToI Staff 22 January 2025, 9:21 pm
DAVOS,
Switzerland — Iranian Vice President for Strategic Affairs Mohammad
Javad Zarif on Wednesday sought to distance Iran from the Hamas’s
October 7, 2023, assault on Israel, saying that Tehran had been caught
by surprise by its proxy’s attack.“We didn’t know about October 7,”
Zarif, a former Iranian foreign minister said during an interview at the
Davos World Economic Forum, referring to Hamas’s deadly onslaught that
killed some 1,200 and resulted in the kidnapping of 251
hostages.“Actually, we were supposed to have a meeting with the
Americans on [the nuclear deal’s] renewal on October 9, which was
undermined and destroyed by this operation,” he claimed.Zarif also
asserted that Israel has failed in its Gaza war objectives.“Right now,
as you look at Gaza… Netanyahu did not achieve his goal of destroying
Hamas. Hamas is still there. Israel had to come to a ceasefire,” he
said. “I wouldn’t suggest anybody start rejoicing over destroying Hamas
as well as the Palestinian resistance, or cutting Iran’s arms, because
the resistance will stay as long as they’re occupied.”“The resistance is
not dead,” Zarif claimed. “I can tell you that the wishes for the
resistance to go away have been based on a misrepresentation, a framing
by Israel, that this is not an Israeli-Palestinian issue, but an
Israeli-Iranian issue.”He also downplayed allegations by Israel and many
Western nations that Iran has built a network of Middle East proxies
beholden to its expansionist plans.Iran did not know about Oct 7 prior,
actually was planning to meet the US officials to talk JCPOA renewal on
Oct 9 — Javad Zarif at WEF pic.twitter.com/VdeWnc3OiJ — RT (@RT_com)
January 22, 2025“Find me a single instance when these groups, which are I
think erroneously called Iranian proxies, operated on our behalf,” he
demanded.Iran has spent years financing and providing sophisticated
weapons, including missiles, drones, and rockets, to terror groups
across the region, including Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen,
and an assortment of militias in Iraq. All of them attacked Israel in
the wake of the October 7 assault.Zarif also denied widespread reporting
that Israel took out much of the country’s air defense capabilities
during an air offensive in October 2024, which was a retaliation for two
Iranian missile and drone barrages on the country.“The story about
destroying our air defense is a story and there is a reason behind it,”
he said. “We suffered [some damage], but it didn’t mean that we lost our
air defense.”Zarif, who was the lead negotiator on the 2015 deal
between Iran and world powers, denied that Iran is seeking a nuclear
weapon, even when confronted with the Western assessment that Iran can
break out toward creating the material for several bombs within days, if
it chooses.“Had we wanted to build a nuclear weapon, we could have done
it long time ago. A program to build nuclear weapons is not going to be
like our program. You build nuclear weapons in hidden laboratories that
are not subject to international inspection,” he said.Western nations
say Iran’s nuclear enrichment program has no feasible civilian
application. The UN nuclear watchdog has long complained of Iranian
impediments to its inspection work.On Wednesday, IAEA chief Rafael
Grossi said Iran is “pressing the gas pedal” on its enrichment of
uranium to near weapons grade, adding that Iran’s recently announced
acceleration in enrichment was starting to take effect.Zarif also spoke
about newly inaugurated US President Donald Trump, saying that Iran
hopes Trump will choose “rationality” in its dealing with the Islamic
Republic.“I hope that this time around, a ‘Trump 2’ will be more
serious, more focused, more realistic,” Zarif said.In 2018,
then-President Trump reneged on Tehran’s 2015 nuclear deal with world
powers and re-imposed harsh US sanctions as part of his “maximum
pressure” policy against the country.In response, Tehran breached the
deal in several ways, including by accelerating its uranium
enrichment.Trump has vowed to return to the policy he pursued in his
previous term that sought use economic pressure to force the country to
negotiate a deal on its nuclear program, ballistic missile program, and
regional activities.Concerns have grown among Iran’s top decision-makers
that Trump might, in his second term, empower Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu to strike Iran’s nuclear sites while further tightening US
sanctions on its oil industry.Those concerns, coupled with mounting
domestic anger over economic woes, could drive Tehran toward engaging in
negotiations with the Trump administration over the fate of its
fast-advancing nuclear program.Missile fuel from China-According to a
separate report in The Financial Times, two Iranian cargo ships are set
to transport a key ingredient for missile propellant from China to Iran
in the coming weeks.FT reported that the cargo on board the Golbon and
the Jairan, some 1,000 tons of sodium perchlorate, could be used to
manufacture fuel for hundreds of mid-range missiles, the report noted,
citing intelligence from Western security officials.The officials who
spoke to the paper did not know whether Chinese authorities were aware
of the shipments.Officials in Beijing’s embassy in Washington told FT
that China is “not familiar” with the matter, while asserting that it is
committed to “maintaining peace and stability in the Middle East and
Gulf region.”
Afghan man stabs and kills two in Germany,
including a toddler, police say-28-year-old arrested after two people,
including 2-year-old, killed in attack at park in Aschaffenburg, amid
spate of stabbings; AfD leader responds with call for deportations-By
Sebastien ASH 22 January 2025, 8:48 pm
BERLIN, Germany (AFP) — A
2-year-old child and a man were killed by a man wielding a knife, in
Germany, on Wednesday. He also seriously wounded two other people, said
police, who arrested an Afghan suspect at the scene.It is the latest in a
series of deadly knife attacks to have shaken Germany in recent months,
fueling concerns over public safety.The stabbings happened in a public
park in the center of the Bavarian city of Aschaffenburg at around 11:45
a.m. (1045 GMT), police said.The attacker targeted a group of children
from a daycare center who were in the park, according to German
media.“Two people were fatally injured,” police said, while two others
were seriously hurt and receiving treatment in hospital.The suspect, a
28-year-old man from Afghanistan, was arrested “in the immediate
vicinity of the crime scene,” police added, without indicating a
motive.German media reported that the man was said to have psychological
issues for which he had received treatment. The suspect lived in an
asylum center in the area, news outlet Der Spiegel reported.Interior
Minister Nancy Faeser said she was “deeply shocked” by the attack.“The
investigation will clarify the background to this terrible act of
violence,” she said in a statement.Following the attack police said
there were “no indications of other suspects” and no further danger to
the public.A second person who was held by police was being treated as a
witness.Authorities had cordoned off the park in Aschaffenburg, around
36 kilometers (22 miles) southeast of Frankfurt in the west of
Germany.Police said train traffic around the scene had been suspended,
with services delayed or diverted.The suspect tried to flee across the
train tracks, the Sueddeutsche Zeitung newspaper reported.Shaken by
stabbings-Germany has been rocked by a spate of high-profile attacks,
including the death of a policeman in June, after he intervened in a
knife attack at an anti-Islam rally in the city of Mannheim.A man from
Afghanistan was arrested on suspicion of carrying out the stabbing.In
August, three people were killed and eight wounded in a stabbing spree
at a street festival in the western city of Solingen.The attack was
claimed by the Islamic State group, and police arrested a Syrian
suspect.The presumed Islamist motive behind the stabbing in Solingen and
the suspect’s status as a migrant who was facing deportation fueled a
bitter debate over immigration.The government responded to the incident
by tightening controls on knives, limiting benefits for asylum seekers
and handing the security services new powers of
investigation.Wednesday’s attack in Aschaffenburg comes as Germany
prepares for national elections on February 23.The conservative CDU/CSU
alliance currently leads in the polls on around 30 percent, with the
far-right, anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany (AfD) in second with
20%.Both parties have promised to crack down on illegal immigration.The
conservatives have also pledged a “de facto” ban on new asylum requests
at the border.In response to the latest attack, the co-leader of the AfD
Alice Weidel posted a message on X urging “remigration now!” — using a
term that the far right have adopted to call for the mass deportation of
migrants.Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s center-left Social Democrats sit
third in the polls with around 16% of support.
Houthis release
crew of Israel-linked ship over a year after seizure off Yemen
coast-Iran-backed Yemeni rebels say they freed sailors from Philippines,
Ukraine, Bulgaria, Romania, Mexico after Oman’s mediation, ‘in support
of the ceasefire agreement in Gaza’By Agencies and ToI Staff 22 January
2025, 5:24 pm
Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels said Wednesday
they released the crew of the Galaxy Leader, a vehicle carrier seized in
November 2023 at the start of their attacks on shipping in the Red Sea
corridor at the beginning of the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.“This step
comes in support of the ceasefire agreement in Gaza,” the Houthis said
in a statement on rebel-controlled SABA news agency.Israel and the Hamas
terror group reached a hostage-ceasefire deal that went into effect
Sunday and has so far seen the release of three Israeli hostages from
Gaza and 90 Palestinian security prisoners, and a stop to fighting, more
than 15 months after the terror group attacked Israel on October 7,
2023, killing some 1,200 people and taking 251 hostages.The Houthis said
they released the sailors after mediation by Oman, a sultanate on the
eastern edge of the Arabian Peninsula that’s long been an interlocutor
with the Houthis.Oman did not immediately acknowledge the release,
though an Omani Royal Air Force jet took a flight to Yemen earlier
Wednesday.The Houthis also said Hamas separately requested the Houthis
release the ship’s crew of 25, who included mariners from the
Philippines, Bulgaria, Romania, Ukraine and Mexico.A representative for
the Galaxy Leader’s owners had no immediate comment.The Bahamas-flagged,
Japanese-operated Galaxy Leader is owned by a British company, which in
turn is partially owned by Israeli tycoon Abraham “Rami” Ungar.The
Houthis — whose motto calls for “death to Israel” and “a curse upon the
Jews” — hijacked the Galaxy Leader with a helicopter-borne raid on
November 19, 2023, ostensibly over its connection to Israel.Propaganda
footage of the raid has been played constantly by the Houthis, who even
shot a music video aboard the ship at one point and have turned it into a
tourist attraction.The rebels then conducted a campaign attacking ships
in international waters, targeting over 100 merchant vessels with
missiles and drones, seizing one vessel and sinking two, and killing
four sailors.The rebels have maintained that they target ships linked to
Israel, the US or the UK to force an end to Israel’s campaign against
Hamas in Gaza. However, many of the ships attacked have had little or no
connection to Israel or its allies, including some bound for Iran.On
Monday, the Houthis signaled they now will limit their attacks in the
Red Sea corridor to only Israeli-affiliated ships after a ceasefire
began in the Gaza Strip, but warned wider assaults could resume if
needed.As late as Saturday the rebels were still launching drones and
missiles targeting Israel, which has warned it will continue to strike
Houthi leadership.The Houthis have launched more than 40 ballistic
missiles and some 320 drones at Israel since they started attacking the
country in 2023.Israel and Western allies carried out several sorties
against Houthi targets in Yemen, but they have failed to stem the
attacks.In the vast majority of the Houthis’ attacks, the missiles have
been intercepted by Israeli air defenses, or have fallen short before
reaching the country. However, a few drones and missiles have hit
Israel, causing casualties and damage in several cases.
Analysis-As
terrorists go free, Israel debates keeping enemies close or sending
them far away-History shows dangers and possible benefits of setting
killers loose in West Bank or Gaza, but also points to risks that come
with exiling terror leaders beyond Israel’s reach-Amir Bar Shalom-By
Amir Bar Shalom 22 January 2025, 4:13 pm
Recent polling conducted
before the clinching of a hostage release and ceasefire agreement with
Hamas this month found consistently high levels of support for an
agreement that would free captives stuck in Gaza for over 15 months,
even if many Israelis disagreed over the exact contours of the truce or
what concessions should be on the table.Earlier surveys conducted over
the course of the war had shown significantly lower levels of support,
indicating impatience had grown over the fate of the hostages and
exhaustion with the war and with the mounting death toll among Israeli
soldiers still fighting in the Strip.Hostage release deals provide a
hurting nation with a sense of elation at the sight of the emotional
reunions between the hostages and their families. That collective
euphoria can be fleeting, though, as the realization of the price paid
begins to sink in.For Israel, that price includes nearly 2,000
Palestinian inmates to be released for the first 33 hostages alone, with
more expected to be released in exchange for the remaining hostages in
the second and third stages of the agreement.Among those who will walk
free are several Palestinian terrorists serving multiple life sentences
for murder — the “heavies” in Israeli parlance.Israel had little choice
but to agree to the terms of the agreement if it wanted to recover the
97 hostages in Gaza at the time of the deal’s signing, including at
least 35 bodies. While a handful were rescued by Israeli commandos,
military officials had made clear that future attempts would be nearly
impossible and endanger the lives of the hostages, whose conditions are
deteriorating.However, Israel does have choices to make regarding how
best to ensure the worst released terrorists are unable to repeat their
deadly attacks. One of the choices is whether the freed murderers are
authorized to live in the West Bank or Gaza or exiled outside the region
once released.Within the Shin Bet security service, opinions remain
divided.Israel has demanded that the most prominent murderers — those
deemed certain to return to terrorist activity — be deported outside the
region-However, some hold the view that it would be preferable to
release them to the West Bank, where Israel has full operational freedom
and can reach them immediately and relatively easily.Sadly, Israel has
experience to draw on.Dangers near and far-In 2011, when Israel released
1,027 prisoners for captured soldier Gilad Shalit, it allowed many of
them to return to the West Bank. According to Israel, some resumed
terror activities, taking advantage of their easy access to Israeli
targets.But three years later, when Israel launched a major crackdown on
Hamas following the abduction and murder of Israeli teenagers Gil-ad
Shaer, Naftali Fraenkel and Eyal Yifrach, it was able to quickly
rearrest many of them.The seeds of that deadly kidnapping can be traced
to another released Palestinian prisoner, Saleh al-Arouri, who was let
out of prison in 2010 and exiled abroad.Working from his new home in
Turkey, and later Lebanon, Arouri established Hamas’s “West Bank
headquarters,” an operational hub that orchestrated dozens of attacks,
including the June 2014 kidnapping of the three teenagers, which led to
the 2014 war in Gaza.Arouri was also a key figure in building up Hamas’s
armed wing in Gaza, leveraging his ties with Iran and Hezbollah.In
Lebanon, he helped establish a Hamas foothold with the tacit approval of
Hezbollah, which was able to draw on Palestinian operatives from
refugee camps in Tyre as proxies.A barrage of dozens of rockets fired at
Israel in April 2023 was a show of Hamas’s capability and willingness
to open another front against Israel under Hezbollah’s watchful
eye.Israel assassinated Arouri in Beirut in early January 2024, but
decision-makers initially balked at attacking the senior Hamas figure
due to fears of how Hezbollah would respond, underlining the downstream
complexities that can arise from deporting terror leaders.Neither Israel
nor the Palestinian Authority have disclosed what countries could take
in the high-profile prisoners who are deported. Where they end up will
determine how Israel may deal with them if and when these deportees
return to terrorist activities. Turkey and Qatar are off-limits for
Israeli operations, while actions in other countries would depend on
political circumstances and operational opportunities.In Lebanon, for
instance, Israel has retained a policy of taking action against any
emerging threat, even after agreeing to a ceasefire with Hezbollah in
November.Jerusalem has insisted on applying the same to Gaza following
the war and Prime Minister Netanyahu continues to assert that both
former US president Joe Biden and current president Donald Trump have
promised to back Israel should it return to fighting.Israel could decide
to deport some of these terrorists to Gaza. That is where many of those
released in the Shalit deal ended up, including Yahya Sinwar, the late
Hamas leader who masterminded the October 7 massacre.The Gaza
challenge-Beyond attempting to ensure that it does not free the next
Sinwar into the fecund terror environment of Gaza, Israel is also
focusing on the interim goal of preventing Hamas from rebuilding its
military capabilities to a level that poses a renewed threat.This can
only be achieved through the tightest possible closure of smuggling
routes from Egypt — a matter currently at the heart of Israeli-Egyptian
negotiations in Cairo.It’s unclear whether a proposal for a new border
crossing at the Gaza-Egypt-Israel border triangle remains in play. The
idea had been pushed by former defense minister Yoav Gallant, who
envisioned the site being monitored by Israel, Egypt and international
actors.Israeli officials emphasize that they have not abandoned the
war’s primary objective: preventing Hamas from retaining any
governmental or military control. It remains an open question who could
take its place, though.Meanwhile, new challenges are being created with
the looming influx of hundreds of terror convicts into the West Bank,
administered by a weakened and financially drained PA.One of Israel’s
key achievements in the war has been maintaining relative stability in
the West Bank, continuing security coordination with Palestinian
security forces, and preventing the eruption of another front.
Nonetheless, Hamas still views the West Bank as a place where it can
operate with relative ease, and Israel knows it.Both Israel and the PA
would like to clamp down on Hamas. But while the PA wants to act, it
lacks the capability, thus raising major doubts about its ability to
govern Gaza.In the absence of an alternative, Hamas will fill the power
vacuum. On Sunday, when transferring the three freed hostages to the Red
Cross, Hamas demonstrated that it still maintains some control over
Gaza’s streets — a grip that is liable to strengthen as calm there
persists.
UN nuclear watchdog warns Iran is ‘pressing the gas
pedal’ on uranium enrichment-IAEA chief Grossi urges diplomacy between
US, Iran on nuclear issue; UN chief pushes Iran to renounce nuclear
weapons-By Leela de Kretser 22 January 2025, 4:13 pm
DAVOS,
Switzerland (Reuters) – Iran is “pressing the gas pedal” on its
enrichment of uranium to near weapons grade, UN nuclear watchdog chief
Rafael Grossi said on Wednesday, adding that Iran’s recently announced
acceleration in enrichment was starting to take effect.Grossi said last
month that Iran had informed the International Atomic Energy Agency that
it would “dramatically” accelerate the enrichment of uranium to up to
60% purity, closer to the roughly 90% of weapons-grade.Western powers
called the step a serious escalation and said there was no civil
justification for enriching to that level and that no other country had
done so without producing nuclear weapons. Iran, which frequently
threatens to destroy Israel, has said its program is entirely peaceful
and it has the right to enrich uranium to any level it wants.“Before it
was (producing) more or less seven kilograms (of uranium enriched to up
to 60%) per month, now it’s above 30 or more than that. So I think this
is a clear indication of an acceleration. They are pressing the gas
pedal,” Grossi told reporters at the World Economic Forum in
Davos.According to an International Atomic Energy Agency yardstick,
about 42 kilograms (93 pounds) of uranium enriched to that level is
enough in principle, if enriched further, for one nuclear bomb. Grossi
said Iran currently had about 200 kilograms of uranium enriched to up to
60%.Still, he said it would take time to install and bring online the
extra centrifuges – machines that enrich uranium – but that the
acceleration was starting to happen.“We are going to start seeing steady
increases from now,” he said.Grossi has called for diplomacy between
Iran and the administration of new US President Donald Trump, who in his
first term, pulled the United States out of a nuclear deal between Iran
and major powers that had imposed strict limits on Iran’s atomic
activities. That deal has since unraveled.“One can gather from the first
statements from President Trump and some others in the new
administration that there is a disposition, so to speak, to have a
conversation and perhaps move into some form of an agreement,” he
said.Separately, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said at Davos
that Iran must make a first step toward improving relations with
countries in the region and the United States by making it clear it does
not aim to develop nuclear weapons.“The most relevant question is Iran
and relations between Iran, Israel and the United States,” Guterres said
as he discussed the situation in the Middle East at the World Economic
Forum in Davos.“Here my hope is that the Iranians understand that it is
important to once and for all make it clear that they will renounce to
have nuclear weapons, at the same time that they engage constructively
with the other countries of the region.”
Iran claims Swiss man
who died by suicide in prison had photographed military sites-After Bern
demanded probe into death of tourist who was arrested on suspicion of
espionage, Tehran says 64-year-old entered Iran ‘in a car fitted with
various technical equipment’By Agencies 22 January 2025, 3:05 pm
DUBAI
– A Swiss national who Iranian authorities said took his own life while
in an Iranian jail after being arrested on suspicion of espionage had
taken pictures of military sites, Iran’s judiciary spokesperson said on
Wednesday.Switzerland had demanded detailed information on the reasons
for the arrest of the 64-year-old man, who had been traveling in Iran as
a tourist, and a full investigation into the circumstances of his death
earlier this month.“The person had entered the country from Dogharoun
(bordering Afghanistan) in October as a tourist in a car fitted with
various technical equipment meant for different purposes,” the judiciary
spokesperson Asghar Jahangir said.The Swiss Department of Foreign
Affairs (FDFA) has said it was informed by the Islamic Republic about
the arrest of the 64-year-old man on December 10 on suspicion of
espionage.The man had been traveling in Iran as a tourist, and had not
resided in Switzerland for almost 20 years, the FDFA said, adding he had
been living in southern Africa.The Iranian spokesperson said the
detainee had hanged himself with a piece of cloth after turning off his
cell’s light and placing himself out of the view of security
cameras.“After passing through several provinces, he entered Semnan
province and was arrested while being in a military-restricted zone,”
Jahangir said. “He was arrested on charges of taking pictures of the
military zone and collaborating with hostile states.”Iran’s elite
Revolutionary Guards have in recent years arrested dozens of dual
nationals and foreigners, mostly on charges related to espionage and
security.Several Europeans or dual nationals are detained in Iran,
including French couple Cecile Kohler and Jacques Paris, who are accused
of spying.Italian journalist Cecilia Sala, arrested and jailed in Iran
since December, was freed and returned to Rome earlier this month.In
2023, Oman negotiated the release of six Europeans, including Belgian
aid worker Olivier Vandecasteele, who had been convicted of espionage
and spent more than a year in detention.Rights groups accuse Iran of
trying to extract concessions from other countries through such arrests.
Iran denies this.
Analysis-Hamas presence in Gaza during truce
is a message the terror group is still in charge-Though jubilant crowds
celebrating ceasefire have been described by Israel as an exaggeration
of Hamas’s strength, the group has begun to curb looting, restore basic
services By Agencies and ToI Staff 22 January 2025, 1:44 pm
In
neighborhoods leveled by 15 months of war with Israel, Hamas officials
are overseeing the clearance of rubble in the wake of Sunday’s
ceasefire. The Palestinian terror group’s gunmen are guarding aid
convoys on Gaza’s dusty roads, and its blue-uniformed police once again
patrol city streets, sending a clear message: Hamas remains in
charge.Israeli officials have described a parade of jubilant Hamas
operatives that celebrated the ceasefire on Sunday in front of cheering
crowds — including in Gaza City where the terror group released three
Israeli women it had been holding hostage for 471 days — as a carefully
orchestrated attempt to exaggerate its strength.But, in the days since
the ceasefire took effect, Gaza’s Hamas-run administration has moved
quickly to reimpose security, curb looting, and start restoring basic
services to parts of the Palestinian enclave, swaths of which have been
reduced to wasteland by the war, which was sparked by the terror group’s
brutal October 7, 2023, onslaught in southern Israel.Reuters spoke to
more than a dozen residents, officials, regional diplomats and security
experts who said that, despite Israel’s vow to destroy it, Hamas remains
deeply entrenched in Gaza and its hold on power constitutes a challenge
to implementing a permanent ceasefire.The Iran-backed terror group not
only controls Gaza’s security forces, but its administrators run
ministries and government agencies, paying salaries for employees and
coordinating with international nonprofits, they said.On Tuesday, its
police and gunmen – who for months were kept off the streets by Israeli
airstrikes – were stationed in neighborhoods through the Strip.“We want
to prevent any kind of security vacuum,” said Ismail Al-Thawabta,
director of the Hamas-run Gaza government media office. He said that
some 700 police were protecting aid convoys and not a single truck had
been looted since Sunday – a contrast to the massive theft of food by
criminal gangs during the conflict.A spokesperson for the United Nations
in Geneva confirmed on Tuesday there had been no reports of looting or
attacks on aid workers since the ceasefire took effect on Sunday.The
three-phase accord caps a yearlong international effort to get both
Hamas and Israel to agree to a deal meant to end the war and free the
hostages held in Gaza, with 33 captives set to be released over the next
42 days in exchange for nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners, including
several serving multiple life sentences for deadly terror attacks.Also
as part of the initial stage of the accord, which includes a temporary
ceasefire, a major surge of humanitarian aid has begun to flow into
Gaza.In recent weeks, Israeli airstrikes have targeted lower-ranking
administrators in Gaza, in an apparent bid to break Hamas’s grip on
government. Israel had already eliminated most of the terror group’s
senior leadership, including political chief Ismail Haniyeh and the
masterminds of the October 7 attack, Yahya Sinwar and Mohammed
Deif.Despite the losses, Al-Thawabta said the Hamas-run administration
continued to function. “Currently, we have 18,000 employees working
daily to provide services to citizens,” he said.The Hamas-run
municipalities had begun on Sunday clearing the rubble from some roads
to vehicles to pass, while workers repaired pipes and infrastructure to
restore running water to neighborhoods. On Tuesday, dozens of heavy
trucks ferried debris from destroyed buildings along the enclave’s main
arteries.Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has not articulated a vision
for Gaza’s postwar future beyond insisting that Hamas can play no role
and stating that the Palestinian Authority – a body set up under the
Oslo Peace Accords three decades ago that partially administers the West
Bank — also cannot be trusted under its current leadership. The Israeli
government did not respond to Reuters’ questions.Joost Hiltermann, of
the International Crisis Group, said the terror group’s firm grip on
Gaza presented Israel with a dilemma.“Israel has a choice, to continue
fighting in the future and killing people — and that hasn’t worked in
the past 15 months — or it can allow an arrangement where the
Palestinian Authority takes control with Hamas’s acquiescence,”
Hiltermann said.Hamas’s military capability is hard to assess because
its rocket arsenal remains hidden and many of its best-trained fighters
may have been killed, Hiltermann said, but it remains by far the
dominant armed group in Gaza: “Nobody is talking about the PA taking
over Gaza without Hamas’s consent.”While senior Hamas officials have
expressed support for a unity government, Mahmoud Abbas, the head of the
Palestinian Authority and a longtime adversary of Hamas, has not given
his assent. Abbas’s office and the Palestinian Authority did not respond
to a request for comment.Fresh negotiations-Under the terms of the
ceasefire, Israel must withdraw its troops from central Gaza and permit
the return of Palestinians to the north during an initial six-week
phase, in which 33 hostages will be released. Starting from the 16th day
of the ceasefire, the two sides should negotiate a second phase,
expected to include a permanent ceasefire and the complete withdrawal of
Israeli troops and the release of more hostages.Reconstruction,
expected to cost billions of dollars and last for years, would only
begin in a third and final phase.The deal has divided opinion in Israel.
While there was widespread celebration of the return of the first three
hostages on Sunday, many Israelis want to see Hamas destroyed for its
October 7, 2023, massacre, which saw some 3,000 terrorists burst across
the border, killing some 1,200 people and seizing 251 hostages, mostly
civilians, alongside acts of brutality and sexual assault.Even before
the ceasefire took effect, members of Netanyahu’s cabinet said they
favored returning to war to remove Hamas from power, once hostages have
returned home. Three far-right ministers resigned over the halt in
fighting.“There is no future of peace, stability and security for both
sides if Hamas stays in power in the Gaza Strip,” Foreign Minister
Gideon Sa’ar said on Sunday.Hamas spokesman Abu Ubaida told Reuters that
the terror group would honor the terms of the ceasefire and urged
Israel to do the same.Fifteen months of war have left Gaza a wasteland
of rubble, bombed-out buildings and makeshift encampments, with hundreds
of thousands of desperate people sheltering from the winter cold and
living on whatever aid can reach them. The Hamas-run Gaza health
ministry says more than 46,000 people in the Strip have been killed or
are presumed dead in the fighting so far, though the toll cannot be
verified and does not differentiate between civilians and
fighters.Israel says it has killed some 20,000 combatants in battle as
of January and another 1,000 terrorists inside Israel on October
7.Israel has said it seeks to minimize civilian fatalities and stresses
that Hamas uses Gaza’s civilians as human shields, fighting from
civilian areas including homes, hospitals, schools, and mosques.The
ceasefire deal calls for 600 trucks of aid per day to reach Gaza.
Al-Thawabta, the spokesman for the Hamas-run administration, said it was
liaising with UN bodies and international relief organizations about
security for aid routes and warehouses, but the agencies were handling
the distribution of aid.A UN damage assessment released this month
showed that just clearing away the more than 50 million tons of rubble
left in the aftermath of Israel’s bombardment could take 21 years and
cost up to $1.2 billion.On Sunday, as Hamas forces paraded on the
streets, some residents expressed pride that the terror group that rules
Gaza had survived the onslaught.“Name me one country that could
withstand Israel’s war machine for 15 months,” said Salah Abu Rezik, a
58-year-old factory worker. He praised Hamas for helping to distribute
aid to hungry Gazans during the conflict and trying to enforce a measure
of security.“Hamas is an idea and you can’t kill an idea,” Abu Rezik
said, predicting the group would rebuild.Others voiced anger that
Hamas’s October 7, 2023, attack had brought destruction to Gaza.“We had
homes and hotels and restaurants. We had a life. Today we have nothing,
so what kind of a victory is this?” said Ameen, 30, a Gaza City civil
engineer, displaced in Khan Younis. “When the war stops, Hamas must not
rule Gaza alone.”No rivals-While the Palestinian Authority says it is
the only authority with the legitimacy to govern postwar Gaza, it has no
presence in the enclave and little popular support, polls show.Since
2007, when Hamas drove out the Palestinian Authority dominated by the
rival faction Fatah after a brief civil war, it has crushed opposition
in Gaza. Supported by funds from Iran, it built a feared security
apparatus and a military organization based around a vast network of
tunnels — much of which Israel says it destroyed during the war.Israel
floated tentative ideas for postwar Gaza, including coopting local clan
leaders – several of whom were immediately assassinated by Hamas – or
using members of Gazan civil society with no ties to terror groups to
run the enclave. But none has gained any traction.Key donors, including
the United Arab Emirates and US President Donald Trump’s new
administration, have stressed that Hamas — which is designated as a
terrorist organization by many Western countries — cannot remain in
power in Gaza after the war.Diplomats have been discussing models
involving international peacekeepers, including one that would see the
United Arab Emirates and the United States, along with other nations,
temporarily overseeing governance, security and reconstruction of Gaza
until a reformed Palestinian Authority is able to take charge.Another
model, supported by Egypt, would see a joint committee made up of both
Fatah and Hamas run Gaza under the supervision of the Palestinian
Authority.Michael Milshtein, a former Israel Defense Forces intelligence
officer now at the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African
Studies in Tel Aviv, described Hamas’s public willingness to discuss a
unity government as “cosmetic.”“As long as they are behind the scenes,
handling matters, they don’t care that there will be a committee as a
front,” he said.On Monday, shortly after taking office, Trump expressed
skepticism about the Gaza ceasefire deal, when asked if he was confident
that all three phases of the agreement would be implemented. He didn’t
elaborate further.A spokesperson for the Trump camp did not respond to a
request for comment.
More than 2,400 aid trucks enter Gaza under
ceasefire with no major looting, UN says-Senior UN aid official says
some kids tried to loot food baskets, water; believes issue will be
resolved when Gazans realize there’s enough for everyone By Reuters and
ToI Staff 22 January 2025, 12:33 pm
Nearly 900 humanitarian aid
trucks entered the Gaza Strip on Tuesday, the third day of a ceasefire
between Israel and Palestinian terrorists Hamas, as a senior UN official
said so far there had been no apparent law-and-order issues.The latest
arrivals bring the three-day total to more than 2,400 trucks entering
the enclave.Throughout the 15-month war, the UN has described its
humanitarian operation as opportunistic — saying it was facing problems
with Israel’s military operation, access restrictions by Israel into and
throughout Gaza and looting by armed gangs.The Israeli military has
said that attacking and stealing aid is an ongoing problem, especially
in southern Gaza. COGAT, the Defense Ministry body in charge of
humanitarian aid to Gaza, has said convoys are attacked by Hamas
terrorists and known crime families.Israel has also said that it had
been working to address the humanitarian situation since the start of
the war, adding that the main problem with aid deliveries was UN
distribution challenges.Muhannad Hadi, the top UN aid official for Gaza
and the West Bank, said there had been minor incidents of looting in the
past three days, but “not like before.”“It’s not organized crime. Kids
jumped on some trucks trying to take food baskets. There were some other
people (who) tried to take some bottled water,” he told reporters after
visiting the Palestinian enclave on Tuesday.“Hopefully within few days
this will all disappear once the people of Gaza realize that we will
have aid enough for everybody.”The UN Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs said 897 aid trucks entered the Gaza Strip on
Tuesday, citing information it received from Israel and the guarantors
for the ceasefire agreement – the United States, Egypt and Qatar.This
compares with 630 on Sunday and 915 on Monday. The truce deal requires
at least 600 truckloads of aid to be allowed into Gaza every day of the
initial six-week ceasefire, including 50 carrying fuel. Half of those
trucks are supposed to go to Gaza’s north, where experts have warned
famine is imminent.Hadi warned that problems were likely to arise:
“Let’s not assume that because there is a ceasefire life is going to be
rosy and our work is going to be a walk in the park.”He said the aid
operation faced logistical problems because the road network within Gaza
was destroyed, adding that the movement of people within the enclave
was also a complicating factor.OCHA said on Tuesday that humanitarian
priorities in Gaza include food assistance, opening bakeries, providing
healthcare, restocking hospitals, repairing water networks, bringing
material to repair shelters, and reuniting families.
Off-duty
officer who lost hand in Gaza helped chase down terrorist in Tel Aviv
attack-Cpt. ‘Aleph’ says he was with IDF comrades when he saw incident
and pursued assailant, who was shot dead; video shows terrorist stopped
for pizza before attack By Emanuel Fabian-22 January 2025, 11:44 am
An
off-duty Israel Defense Forces tank officer who lost a hand during
fighting in the Gaza Strip last year was among those who attempted to
neutralize a terrorist who stabbed four people in Tel Aviv on Tuesday
night.“I fought in Gaza about a year ago. I was injured and lost my
right hand. Today I am at the Tactical Command College, in the company
commander course,” Cpt. “Aleph” said in a video distributed by the
IDF.“I went out with my friends from the course to Nahalat Binyamin, and
during the outing, a terrorist came and tried to stab one of us. As
soon as I noticed the incident, I tried to hit the terrorist and we
chased him,” he said.Aside from Cpt. Aleph, the victims in the attack in
the Nahalat Binyamin neighborhood included two men aged 24 and 28 in
moderate condition, and another man aged 59 in good condition, according
to the Magen David Adom ambulance service.The Armored Corps officer
said he would return to the course on Wednesday. He was lightly injured
in the attack.The terrorist, named as Abdelaziz Kaddi, a Moroccan
national with a US green card, was eventually shot dead at the
scene.Kaddi was flagged by security when he arrived in the country a few
days ago but was nonetheless granted entry, a decision the Shin Bet
security agency said late Tuesday that it was investigating.Pizza
stop-Before carrying out the attack, Kaddi visited a local pizzeria and
was filmed on surveillance videos buying slices and speaking to the
owner of the eatery.Channel 12 news aired the footage of the terrorist
ordering at the restaurant, and interviewed the owner.“I only realized
later when I got home and images were circulating on WhatsApp. That’s
when I saw a photo of the terrorist,” Chaim Bassan, the owner of Pizza
and Tortilla, told the outlet. “He was so close to us. We saw him. We
talked to him.”“A few minutes after he left the pizzeria, people began
to run,” Bassan said. “They were shouting ‘terrorist’ and I heard
gunfire. So we ran.”“It didn’t occur to me that it was anything to do
with him,” Bassan said, adding that Kaddi spoke to him in English with
an Arabic accent and that he had remarked to him on his choice of
language as he thought it was unusual. “He ate outside, and he even
returned his plate, which not all Israelis do.”Second attack in three
daysThe attack was the second terror stabbing in three days in the
Israeli metropolis.A man in his 30s was seriously injured in another
terrorist stabbing in central Tel Aviv over the weekend before an armed
civilian shot and killed the attacker. The terrorist in that incident
was identified as Salah Yahye, 19, from the West Bank city of
Tulkarem.The attacks came two days after the first stage of a
hostage-ceasefire agreement with Hamas went into effect, under which
Israel will release up to 1,904 Palestinian security prisoners and
detainees, including more than 150 terrorists convicted of murder and
several serving multiple life sentences for deadly terror attacks, in
exchange for 33 Israeli hostages.Israel released 90 Palestinian security
prisoners to the West Bank and East Jerusalem early Monday morning,
hours after Hamas released three civilian hostages Sunday on the first
day of the ceasefire.The war in Gaza erupted after Hamas’s October 7,
2023, massacre, which saw some 3,000 terrorists burst across the border
into Israel by land, air and sea, killing some 1,200 people and seizing
251 hostages, mostly civilians, amid acts of brutality and sexual
assault.
Hezbollah official killed in drive-by shooting outside
his home in eastern Lebanon-Lebanese media identifies official as terror
group’s local commander in Western Bekaa District; motive for attack
not immediately certain By ToI Staff 22 January 2025, 3:30 am
A
senior Hezbollah official in eastern Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley region was
shot dead Tuesday in what Lebanese media reported was an apparent
assassination.The official, named by Lebanon’s National News Agency as
local Hezbollah commander Sheikh Muhammad Hamadi, was shot six times in a
drive-by shooting outside of his home in Machghara in the Western Bekaa
District.The gunmen, who were driving two separate cars, then fled the
scene of the attack, Lebanese news outlets reported, citing the
Hezbollah-affiliated Al-Manar television.Hamadi was transported to a
hospital in the area, where he died shortly later.Lebanese authorities
have opened an investigation into the shooting, and Al-Manar reported
said the motive was not immediately clear. According to An-Nahar news
outlet, however, the assassination stemmed from a years-long
interfamilial feud and was not politically motivated.The deadly shooting
occurred days before the end of the initial 60-day ceasefire agreement
between Israel and Hezbollah.Under the terms of the agreement signed in
late November, Israel has until January 26 to withdraw from southern
Lebanon, while Hezbollah must retreat north of the Litani River, some
30 kilometers (18 miles) from the border with Israel.After the 60 days
are up, the Lebanese Armed Forces and UNIFIL will be the only armed
forces permitted to maintain a presence between Israel and the Litani.
Reports in Israel have suggested that the deadline could be extended,
ostensibly due to the Lebanese military’s failure to deploy throughout
the region quickly enough.The US- and France-brokered ceasefire in late
November came two months after Israel massively escalated operations in
Lebanon in a bid to stem Hezbollah’s persistent rocket fire, which
forced the displacement of some 60,000 residents of northern
Israel.Israel’s offensive in Lebanon all but decimated Hezbollah’s top
brass, drastically weakening the terror group.Unprovoked, Hezbollah
began its near-daily attacks on October 8, 2023 — a day after fellow
Iran-backed group Hamas stormed southern Israel to kill some 1,200
people and take 251 hostages, sparking the war in Gaza.
US green
card holder, a Moroccan national, wounds 4 in Tel Aviv terror stabbing
spree-Two moderately wounded, two others lightly hurt; Shin Bet confirms
it’s probing why the assailant was let into Israel after being
interrogated at airport By Emanuel Fabian-22 January 2025, 12:41 am
Four
people were wounded Tuesday evening by a terrorist who went on a
stabbing spree in a trendy Tel Aviv neighborhood, emergency services and
Israel Police said, before he was shot dead.The assailant who carried
out the stabbing was Moroccan national Abdelaziz Kaddi, a US green card
holder, according to an ID found on his body.Kaddi was flagged by
security when he arrived in the country a few days ago but was
nonetheless granted entry, a decision the Shin Bet said late Tuesday it
was investigating.It was the second terror stabbing in three days in the
Israeli metropolis.The Magen David Adom ambulance service said four
people were wounded in the attack in Nahalat Binyamin. The victims
include two men aged 24 and 28 in moderate condition, and two others
aged 24 and 59 in good condition, MDA said.Kaddi entered Israel on
January 18 with a tourist visa.Interior Minister Moshe Arbel said
immigration officials had identified Kaddi as a threat when he arrived
at Ben Gurion Airport and sought to bar him from entry. He was handed
over to security officials for questioning.“To my regret, they decided
to allow his entry into Israel,” Arbel said in a statement. He called on
Shin Bet chief Ronen Bar to investigate the incident, which the
security agency shortly afterward confirmed it was doing.“Upon the
subject’s entry into Israel, he underwent a security assessment that
included his interrogation as well as additional checks, at the end of
which it was decided that there was no information that established
grounds to prevent his entry into Israel for security reasons,” the Shin
Bet said in response to a query.The attacker apparently stabbed three
people before running to an adjacent street, where he wounded a fourth
person.Victims were taken to the city’s Ichilov Hospital.Amid varying
reports on who shot the assailant, the Ynet outlet cited members of an
unspecified special forces unit, apparently off-duty, who said they
noticed the attack in progress.“We came down from an apartment and saw a
stabber dropping someone to the ground. We shouted to him to stop and
fired when he didn’t comply,” one of them told the outlet, without being
identified.Eyewitnesses told Hebrew media the terrorist arrived on a
motorcycle driven by another person who then left the scene.Police
combed the surrounding area looking for possible accomplices.The attack
came three days after a man in his 30s was seriously injured in another
terrorist stabbing in Tel Aviv.He was also taken to Ichilov Hospital
which later said his condition was stable and there was no threat to his
life.The terrorist in that incident was identified as Salah Yahye, 19,
from the West Bank city of Tulkarem.He was in Israel illegally,
according to defense sources. Medics said he was shot dead at the scene.
Columbia
anti-Israel activists start semester with protest, disrupt Israeli
prof’s class-Activists barge in on modern Israeli history lesson, chant
for ‘intifada’ outside New York campus gates; counter-protesters hold
Israeli flags and chant-By Luke Tress 21 January 2025, 11:49 pm
NEW
YORK — Several hundred anti-Israel demonstrators rallied outside the
gates of Columbia University in New York City on Tuesday, as student
activists vowed to step up their protests with the start of the spring
semester.The renewed protests come as the Trump administration and
Republicans in Congress put pressure on universities to rein in
threatening rhetoric on campuses.The protesters gathered on Broadway
outside a Columbia entrance in the Morningside Heights neighborhood of
Manhattan. They chanted “We will honor all our martyrs,” “Smash the
settler Zionist state,” and “Intifada people’s war” to the beat of a
snare drum.On campus, several dozen activists gathered and chanted “Long
live the intifada” outside the university’s Butler Library, according
to video that students shared with The Times of Israel. The protesters
then marched off campus to join the activists on the street, two
students said. The campus is only open to students and staff with
university identification.“Columbia you will see, we resist till
victory,” the protesters on the street shouted. Most of the protesters’
faces were covered in medical masks or keffiyehs.A handful of pro-Israel
counterprotesters held Israeli flags and chanted, “The people of Israel
live” in Hebrew. Other students and faculty looked on as they waited in
line in the frigid cold to enter the campus. Police set up a metal
barricade separating the line and the activists.The protesters were led
by Columbia University Apartheid Divest, a coalition of student groups
led by the campus branches of Students for Justice in Palestine and
Jewish Voice for Peace. Both groups were suspended last year for
violating university protest policies but continue to operate as part of
the broader coalition. Tuesday’s demonstration was backed by the
off-campus groups Within Our Lifetime, the Palestinian Youth Movement
and National Students for Justice in Palestine.The groups call for the
eradication of Israel and have vowed to continue their activities since
the ceasefire agreement this month.The Columbia students urged
classmates to leave class on Tuesday, the first day of classes for the
semester.“Join us to flood Columbia,” the protest coalition said on
social media. “There will be no school as usual as long as Columbia is
participating in a genocide.”“Ceasefire is only the beginning,” they
said.New York City protest groups often label their rallies “floods,” a
homage to the Hamas term for the October 7, 2023, invasion of Israel,
the “Al Aqsa Flood.”On campus, protesters handed out fliers that said,
“The enemy will not see tomorrow,” with images of masked gunmen and an
inverted triangle, a Hamas symbol, according to images shared online.The
protest organizers told participants to wear masks and be cautious
about using their student IDs to “defend against Columbia’s
surveillance.”“As long as Columbia is responsible for genocide, there
will be no school as usual,” the student protesters said in a
statement.Several pro-Israel students counter-protested on the campus,
holding an American flag and a red banner that said, “Get support for
terrorism off our campus.”Also Tuesday, several activists disrupted a
class on the history of modern Israel taught by an Israeli professor,
Avi Shilon. Elisha Baker, a student in the class, said three
demonstrators entered the classroom, read a speech and threw anti-Israel
fliers that said “Crush Zionism” at the students in the class.“That is
the culture at Columbia University. It is nearly impossible to have a
conversation about Zionism unless it is about criticizing Zionism,”
Baker told The Times of Israel.“It’s also ironic because these
protesters have been talking about academic freedom for the entire year,
but clearly, they don’t care about academic freedom at all because
there’s no such thing as the freedom to intimidate and disrupt inside of
a classroom,” he said.The activists’ faces were covered in keffiyehs
and it wasn’t clear if they were students, though only those with
university IDs can access campus.The protesters called the class
“genocidal propaganda for the apartheid state…from the point of view of
the colonizers,” argued with the professor and refused to leave the
classroom.It’s day 1 of Prof. @shilonavi History of Modern Israel
@Columbia and masked protestors just barged in to intimidate and
disrupt. So much for “academic freedom.”Welcome to Columbia, 2025!
pic.twitter.com/S6GbzKFqut— Elisha (Lishi) Baker (@LishiBaker) January
21, 2025-Shilon told The Times of Israel that he was teaching about the
conflicting Israeli and Palestinian narratives surrounding Israel’s 1948
War of Independence at the time of the disruption.“I was trying to be
unbiased as I’m used to being and then they knock on the door and for
me, as an Israeli, they looked like mehablim,” he says, using the Hebrew
word for terrorists. “They didn’t look like protesters so I was
surprised.”“I didn’t know how to react because if you would be
aggressive they can claim that you pushed them or something, and if
you’re going to be more calm they can continue, so I suggested to them
to join the class and to learn about the conflict,” he said. “They just
shouted ‘genocide,’ ‘criminals,’ and didn’t reply.”University President
Katrina Armstrong condemned the disruption and vowed an
investigation.“No group of students has a right to disrupt another group
of students in a Columbia classroom,” Armstrong said in a statement.
“We want to be absolutely clear that any act of antisemitism, or other
form of discrimination, harassment, or intimidation against members of
our community is unacceptable and will not be tolerated.”Columbia
University Apartheid Divest also posted video on Tuesday showing a
masked individual vandalizing the area around the campus with red spray
paint, writing messages including “Gaza rises Columbia falls” and “fuck
Columbia.”The Columbia students are demanding the university drop all
disciplinary measures against student activists.“Suspension for Gaza is
the highest honor,” they said.The Trump administration and Republicans
in Washington have vowed to put pressure on universities. Last year, the
Republican-led Congressional Committee on Education and the Workforce
grilled Columbia and other top universities over antisemitism.Senator
Ted Cruz, a Texas Republican, told The Free Press this week that he
expected a crackdown.“DOJ is going to go after any university that looks
the other way, that tolerates antisemitic threats of violence,
intimation and threats directed at Jewish students,” Cruz said.
“Columbia is right at the top of the worst offenders and so if they
don’t change their conduct dramatically I think you’re going to see the
Trump administration cut off their federal funds.”Federal Title VI
protections bar universities that accept federal funding from allowing
discrimination based on race or national origin.Trump signed an
executive order on Monday, his first day in office, vowing to protect
Americans against non-citizens who “espouse hateful ideology” or
“support designated foreign terrorists,” including by evaluating visa
programs.A prominent anti-Israel professor left the university earlier
this month after an internal investigation found that she had
discriminated against Israeli students.Protests surrounding the
Israel-Hamas conflict plunged Columbia University into turmoil last
year, culminating in an unsanctioned protest encampment on campus
property, protesters’ forcible takeover of a campus building and dozens
of arrests. Israeli and Jewish students have said the protests and
rhetoric, including from faculty, created a hostile and unsafe
environment for them on campus.The university administration struggled
to tamp down tensions and implemented some counter-measures, including a
task force on antisemitism.
Hamas confirms 4 female hostages to
be released on Saturday, without naming them-IDF says displaced
Palestinians can return to north Gaza next week if Hamas upholds truce;
Mossad, Shin Bet chiefs in Cairo for talks with Egyptian intel chief By
AFP, Amy Spiro,Emanuel Fabian-and ToI Staff 21 January 2025, 3:13
pmUpdated at 6:30 pm
A Hamas official confirmed Tuesday that four
Israeli female hostages would be freed on Saturday as part of the
ceasefire deal that will also see Palestinian security prisoners
released.Taher al-Nunu said Hamas would release “four Israeli female
detainees in exchange” for a second group of Palestinian inmates.He did
not name the four women who will be released after over 470 days in
captivity. The hostage and ceasefire deal states that Hamas is required
to provide the names of the hostages at least 24 hours ahead of their
release, though the terror group failed to meet that condition for the
first three women who were freed on Sunday.Nunu’s statement came after a
spokesperson for the terror group’s prisoners’ office claimed on Monday
that the next hostage release would happen on Sunday, a day later than
agreed, which was followed by a Hamas statement that the release would
take place on Saturday after all.There are seven female hostages
remaining from the original list of 33 to be released in the first phase
of the hostage ceasefire deal. Two of them are civilians: Arbel Yehud,
29, and Shiri Silberman Bibas, 33.There are also five female soldiers in
captivity: Liri Albag, 19, Karina Ariev, 20, Agam Berger, 21, Danielle
Gilboa, 20, Naama Levy, 20.Bibas’s two young sons Ariel and Kfir, now
aged 5 and 2, are also held and are on the list, as is her husband,
Yarden Bibas.For each of the female soldiers, Israel will release 50
Palestinian prisoners, 30 of them convicted terrorists who are serving
life sentences. Early Monday, Israel released 30 prisoners for each of
the three civilian female hostages — Romi Gonen, Emily Damari, and Doron
Steinbrecher — Hamas set free the previous afternoon.Meanwhile, Russian
Ambassador to Israel Anatoly Viktorov said Tuesday that Russian-Israeli
hostage Sasha Trufanov will be released from Gaza in the next few weeks
and that he is “not entirely healthy,” but stable.“Simple mathematics
suggests, unfortunately, that we are not talking about the next waves of
hostage releases, but within 3-4 weeks, judging by the schedule, he
will be released,” Viktorov said on the Russia 24 TV station, according
to the state-run TASS wire agency.Trufanov, 28, was kidnapped on October
7, 2023, from Kibbutz Nir Oz, alongside his mother, grandmother and
girlfriend, while his father was murdered. The rest of his family was
released in November 2023, and Trufanov has since been seen in two
propaganda videos released by the Palestinian Islamic Jihad terror
group.Viktorov said that “unfortunately, there is information that
[Trufanov] was injured and his state of health is not entirely
satisfactory. We hope that for the remaining few days, his health will
not deteriorate.”The ambassador suggested that Trufanov was wounded
during his abduction, but said that Hamas has made a “firm promise” to
Moscow that he will be returned “alive and healthy” to Israel.The dual
Russian-Israeli citizen is on the list of the 33 hostages slated to be
freed during the six-week first stage of the ceasefire, which includes
those considered in the “humanitarian” category — women, children, men
over the age of 50 and the sick and wounded. The expectation is that the
women and elderly will be freed in the earlier stages, and the final 14
hostages will be freed only on the 42nd day.After the four hostages set
to be released this coming Saturday, three hostages will be released
each Saturday over the following four weeks, until the final group of 14
on day 42 of the first phase of the ceasefire.Israel has not been told
how many of the 33 are alive, but under the agreement is expected to
receive a full status report on all those on the list on Saturday.In the
second phase of the deal — if Israel and Hamas reach agreements
preventing the resumption of the war — the terror group would release
the remaining living captives, men under the age of 50. In the third
phase, the bodies of all remaining hostages would be returned.As the
ceasefire held for a third day, the military said Tuesday that displaced
Palestinians would soon be able to return to northern Gaza from the
Strip’s south after being displaced at the beginning of the war, if
Hamas upholds the ceasefire deal.“If Hamas adheres to all details of the
agreement, starting next week, residents of the Gaza Strip will be able
to return to the northern Gaza Strip and instructions will be issued in
this regard,” Col. Avichay Adraee, the IDF’s Arabic-language spokesman,
said on X.Under the agreement, on the seventh day of the ceasefire,
unarmed Gazans will be allowed to return on foot to north Gaza without
any inspection, via the coastal road. Vehicles returning to north Gaza
will be required to undergo an inspection by a private company to be
determined by the mediators and Israel.On day 22, displaced unarmed
Palestinians will be allowed to return to north Gaza on foot via Salah
a-Din road, also without inspection, meaning that the IDF will be
gradually withdrawing from the Netzarim Corridor in the Strip’s
center.Adraee also warned Gazans against approaching areas where troops
are still deployed in Gaza, including the buffer zone along the entire
border, the Netzarim Corridor, the Philadelphi Corridor on the
Egypt-Gaza border, and the shore.Meanwhile, Mossad chief David Barnea
and Shin Bet head Ronen Bar were in Cairo for meetings with Egyptian
intelligence chief Hassan Rashad, the Prime Minister’s Office said,
confirming reports in several Hebrew media outlets.According to Ynet,
the talks are focused on security arrangements for the Philadelphi
Corridor along the Gaza-Egypt border and the continued implementation of
the ceasefire agreement.
IDF launches major counterterror raid
in West Bank’s Jenin, expected to last days-Operation Iron Wall begins
with drone strikes on terror infrastructure; large numbers of troops
enter city; 10 Palestinians said killed, 40 wounded By Emanuel Fabian-21
January 2025, 2:26 pm
The Israel Defense Forces launched a major
counterterrorism operation in the northern West Bank city of Jenin on
Tuesday afternoon, which military sources said was expected to last
several days.The operation began with a series of drone strikes on
infrastructure used by terror groups in Jenin, a military source
said.Palestinian media outlets reported several airstrikes and local
health officials said at least 10 people were killed and 40 were
wounded.Footage published by Palestinian media showed Israeli Air Force
helicopters flying over Jenin.In a brief joint statement, the IDF and
Shin Bet security agency confirmed the operation, dubbed “Iron Wall,”
and said further details would be provided later.IDF sources said large
numbers of troops, including special forces, Shin Bet agents and Border
Police officers, were operating in the city.The goals of the operation
were to “preserve the IDF’s freedom of action” in the West Bank,
neutralize terror infrastructure and eliminate imminent threats,
according to military sources.The sources said the operation would last
at least several days.Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the
operation was “another step in achieving the goal we set, strengthening
security in Judea and Samaria.”Judea and Samaria is the biblical name
for the West Bank.“We are operating in a systematic and decisive way
against the Iranian axis wherever it sends its arms, in Gaza, Lebanon,
Syria, Yemen and Judea and Samaria,” Netanyahu said in a statement
released by his office.On Monday, IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Herzi
Halevi said the military was preparing for “significant operations” in
the West Bank, amid a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip.“Along with the
intense defense preparations in the Gaza Strip, we must be prepared for
significant operations in Judea and Samaria in the coming days in order
to preempt and catch the terrorists before they reach our citizens,” he
said during an assessment, in remarks released by the IDF.On Sunday,
military officials said the Central Command was readying to carry out
offensive actions in the West Bank, to prevent Hamas from establishing a
foothold in the West Bank in light of the release of members of the
terror group in the ceasefire deal.The offensive plans were being
coordinated with the Palestinian Authority, which also fears its rival
Hamas gaining power in the West Bank, the officials said.Hundreds of
Palestinian security prisoners are due to be released to the West Bank
in the hostage deal and ceasefire with Hamas in the Gaza Strip,
including many convicted of deadly terror attacks.The Tuesday raid came a
day after an Israeli reservist soldier was killed and four others were
wounded, including a senior officer in serious condition, when they were
hit by a roadside bomb in the northern West Bank.It also followed a
shaky truce agreement between the Palestinian Authority and terror
groups operating in Jenin that ended a six-week standoff in the northern
West Bank city and adjacent refugee camp.The PA had been targeting the
so-called Jenin Battalion, made up of operatives affiliated with terror
groups such as Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad, in a bid to show
incoming US President Donald Trump that Ramallah can maintain order in
the West Bank, amid its push to take the reins of Gaza from Hamas after
the war there.The IDF, which also staged counterterrorism operations in
the northern West Bank in recent months, has said that it supported
bolstering the PA forces to help them in the fight against the Jenin
Battalion. The military paused its airstrikes on Jenin as PA forces
operated there, but ended that policy last week with a pair of
airstrikes on terror operatives that killed a dozen people, including
civilians.Palestinian media reported Tuesday that as Israeli troops
entered Jenin, PA forces withdrew from the area.The West Bank has seen a
sharp rise in violence since the Gaza war was sparked on October 7,
2023, when thousands of Hamas-led terrorists stormed southern Israel to
kill some 1,200 people and take 251 hostages.Since then, IDF troops have
arrested some 6,000 wanted Palestinians across the West Bank, including
more than 2,350 affiliated with Hamas.According to the Palestinian
Authority health ministry, more than 858 West Bank Palestinians have
been killed in that time. The IDF says the vast majority of them were
gunmen killed in exchanges of fire, rioters who clashed with troops or
terrorists carrying out attacks.During the same period, 46 people,
including Israeli security personnel, have been killed in terror attacks
in Israel and the West Bank. Another seven members of the security
forces were killed in clashes with terror operatives in the West Bank.
Houthis
claim they will now limit Red Sea attacks to Israeli ships-Yemeni
terror group warns it will resume attacks on US and UK ships if
provoked, says it will only stop attacking Israeli ships when all three
phases of ceasefire deal are complete By Agencies 21 January 2025, 11:14
am
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Yemen’s Houthi rebels signaled
Monday they now will limit their attacks in the Red Sea corridor to only
Israeli-affiliated ships after a ceasefire between Israel and the Hamas
terror group began in the Gaza Strip, but warned wider assaults could
resume.The terrorists’ announcement, first made in an email sent to
shippers and others late Sunday, likely won’t be enough to encourage
global firms to reenter the route that’s crucial for cargo and energy
shipments moving between Asia and Europe. Their attacks have halved
traffic through the region, cutting deeply into revenues for Egypt,
which runs the Suez Canal linking the Red Sea to the Mediterranean.“The
ceasefire is considered fragile,” said Jakob P. Larsen, the head of
maritime security for BIMCO, the largest international association
representing shipowners.“It is assessed that even minor deviations from
the ceasefire agreements could lead to hostilities, which would
subsequently prompt the Houthis to again direct threats against a
broader range of international shipping.”That was underscored by a
speech aired Monday from the Houthis’ enigmatic supreme leader,
Abdul-Malik al-Houthi.We are “maintaining constant readiness to
intervene immediately should the Israeli enemy resume any escalation,
commit acts of genocide, impose a siege on Gaza or deny food and
medicine to the people of Gaza,” al-Houthi said. “We are ready to return
to escalation again alongside our brothers, the fighters in
Palestine.”The Houthis made the announcement through their Humanitarian
Operations Coordination Center, saying it was “stopping sanctions” on
the other vessels it has previously targeted since November 2023.For
Israeli ships, those “sanctions… will be stopped upon the full
implementation of all phases” of the ceasefire, it added.However, the
center left open resuming attacks against both the United States and the
United Kingdom, which have launched airstrikes targeting the rebels
over their seaborne assaults.“In the event of any aggression… the
sanctions will be reinstated against the aggressor state,” the center
said. “You will be promptly informed of such measures should they be
implemented.”However, the shipping industry reacted with caution to the
Houthi pledge.“The coming weeks will provide the proof of whether the
Houthi follow suit with their stated intent,” the maritime security firm
Ambrey warned.The Houthis have targeted over 100 merchant vessels with
missiles and drones since the Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip started
in October 2023 with Hamas’s onslaught in Israel in which terrorists
murdered some 1,200 people and took 251 hostages.The Hamas-run Gaza
health ministry says more than 46,000 people in the Strip have been
killed or are presumed dead in the fighting so far, though the toll
cannot be verified and does not differentiate between civilians and
fighters. Israel says it has killed some 18,000 combatants in battle as
of November and another 1,000 terrorists inside Israel on October
7.Israel has said it seeks to minimize civilian fatalities and stresses
that Hamas uses Gaza’s civilians as human shields, fighting from
civilian areas including homes, hospitals, schools and mosques.The
Iranian-backed Houthis have seized one vessel and sunk two in a campaign
that has also killed four sailors. Other missiles and drones have
either been intercepted by separate US- and European-led coalitions in
the Red Sea or failed to reach their targets, which have also included
Western military vessels.The rebels had maintained that they target
ships linked to Israel, the US or the UK to force an end to Israel’s
campaign against Hamas in Gaza. However, many of the ships attacked had
little or no connection to the conflict, including some bound for
Iran.The tempo of Houthi attacks has slowed in recent weeks,
particularly involving ships at sea. That may be due in part to the US
airstrike campaign. The US and its partners alone have struck the
Houthis over 260 times, according to the International Institute for
Strategic Studies. Israel has also launched several rounds of airstrikes
on Houthi targets.However, the rebels have continued to launch drones
and missiles targeting Israel, which has warned it will continue to
strike Houthi leadership.Another wild card is US President Donald Trump,
who started his second term Monday. He may reapply a foreign terrorist
organization designation on the Houthis that former president Joe Biden
revoked, which could spark attacks again.“Uncertainty is further
exacerbated by today’s inauguration of Trump,” Larsen said. “It remains
unclear how the Trump administration will act in the conflict with the
Houthis and whether potential punitive actions against them will be
considered.”Times of Israel staff contributed to this report.
Jeremiah 6:14
14 They have healed also the hurt of the daughter of my people slightly, saying, Peace, peace; when there is no peace.
Isaiah 57:21
21 There is no peace, saith my God, to the wicked.
1 Thessalonians 5:3
3
For when they shall say, Peace and safety; then sudden destruction
cometh upon them, as travail upon a woman with child; and they shall not
escape.
Ephesians 2:2
2 Wherein in time past ye walked
according to the course of this world, according to the prince of the
power of the air, the spirit that now worketh in the children of
disobedience:
Israel downplays PA role in postwar Gaza, denies
promising Saudis a Palestinian state-PM’s office partially refutes
report claiming Palestinian Authority to control Rafah Crossing; Ron
Dermer says there is ‘no promise’ to Riyadh on establishing Palestinian
state By Amy Spiro-22 January 2025, 3:05 pm
Israel attempted on
Wednesday to play down reports and speculation that the Palestinian
Authority would play a larger role in postwar Gaza and that a deal with
Saudi Arabia could include the establishment of a Palestinian state.With
the start of the first stage of the ceasefire deal between Israel and
Hamas, conversation around the “day after” in Gaza has intensified, with
many international figures calling for the PA to return to controlling
the Strip as well as for increased efforts toward reaching a
comprehensive Israeli-Palestinian two-state solution.According to a
report in the Saudi-owned, UK-based Asharq Al-Awsat on Wednesday, Israel
has agreed to allow the PA to take control of the Rafah Crossing
between Gaza and Egypt in future stages of the deal.The report said that
in meetings this week in Cairo between Egyptian intelligence officials
and Shin Bet chief Ronen Bar and Mossad head David Barnea, Israel agreed
to allow the PA to manage the crossing “under international and UN
supervision.” The report, citing a source familiar with the meetings,
noted that the current arrangements are temporary and “concern this
stage only of the ceasefire.”The Prime Minister’s Office partially
denied the report, accusing the PA of attempting to “create a false
picture to the effect that it controls the crossing.”However, the PMO
admitted that the current arrangement at the crossing is “correct for
the first stage of the framework and will be evaluated in the future,”
and that the PA currently plays a limited role at the border
crossing.According to the PMO, the IDF currently controls the crossing
point and “nobody passes through it without supervision, oversight and
advance approval of the IDF and Shin Bet.” It stated that “non-Hamas
Gazans” provide technical management at the crossing with international
oversight, and the PA provides the stamp on passports allowing Gazans to
exit the Strip.Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has publicly refused
to entertain the idea of the PA ruling postwar Gaza, accusing it of
glorifying terror and supporting the October 7 attack. However, many in
the Israeli security establishment have privately backed such a move due
to the lack of any other viable alternative.In March 2024, then-defense
minister Yoav Gallant reportedly told a security cabinet meeting that
PA rule in Gaza was the least bad option facing Israel.Speaking at a
press conference alongside his Italian counterpart on Monday, Foreign
Minister Gideon Sa’ar did not rule out the possibility of the PA playing
a role in postwar Gaza, but said it would need to undergo serious
reforms.If the PA ended its support for terror, “addressed these
problems, and changed their attitudes, it would be a different
Palestinian Authority, and then we could seriously discuss together a
better future for both nations,” Sa’ar said.Speaking in the Knesset on
Wednesday, Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer said Israel is part of
discussions on the vision of a postwar Gaza but that any such
arrangements must include international players.“We’re working on it,
I’m part of that work, on ‘the day after’ in Gaza,” Dermer said,
speaking from the Knesset podium. “But you have to understand that any
Israeli plan will be dead on arrival, because it’s an Israeli
plan.”Dermer said that, therefore, “we need to harness both the United
States and regional powers” to take part in such efforts, declining to
elaborate further on the potential partners.“I’m very optimistic that we
can achieve governance in Gaza the ‘day after’ exactly according to the
framework set out by the prime minister,” Dermer added, shutting down a
further question from an MK and suggesting that Israel needs to “talk
less and do more.”It was apparently the first time that Dermer, who he
rarely gives public statements, has spoken in the Knesset plenum since
his swearing-in as minister in December 2022.The minister, considered a
close confidant of Netanyahu, also denied that Israel has made any
promise to Saudi Arabia that it would support the establishment of a
Palestinian state in return for establishing ties.“There’s no promise
like this whatsoever,” Dermer said.Speaking in Davos on Tuesday,
President Isaac Herzog — who holds a largely ceremonial position — said
that there was “real dialogue between Israel and Saudi Arabia” on
normalization efforts.Herzog said that though he was a longtime
supporter of a two-state solution while leading the left-wing Labor
party, the October 7 attack shook his worldview. Today, he said, he
understands “that there must be political move forward on the
Palestinian front,” but he believes that the “trajectory of moving
forward with Saudi Arabia, with Arab countries, which of course, puts
the Palestinian issue as a focal point in the discussions, is something
which makes more sense to me.”Netanyahu has said that his opposition to
the establishment of a Palestinian state has only intensified following
Hamas’s October 7 massacre, and in February 2024 he said that “everyone
knows that I am the one who for decades blocked the establishment of a
Palestinian state that would endanger our existence.”The Knesset in July
2024 voted overwhelmingly to pass a resolution rejecting the
establishment of a Palestinian state, even as part of a negotiated
settlement with Israel.
Trump considering Mideast visit but ‘not
yet,’ says only his deadline got hostage deal done-‘We have a thing
called “the hostages are coming back” going on right now,’ US president
tells reporters, as envoy Witkoff confirms he’ll go to Gaza to oversee
deal implementation By Jacob Magid-22 January 2025, 10:09 am
US
President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that he’s considering visiting
the Middle East, though not immediately, as he again lauded his new
administration’s role in securing a hostage-ceasefire deal between
Israel and the Hamas terror group that came into effect on Sunday.“We’re
thinking about going to the Middle East — not yet,” he told reporters
on his second day in office.His Mideast envoy, Steve Witkoff, confirmed
Monday that he plans to travel to the Gaza Strip to oversee the
implementation of the three-phase accord.Arab diplomats speaking to The
Times of Israel have credited Trump and Witkoff, who held talks in Qatar
and Israel in the final week of the Gaza negotiations, with helping
bring the deal across the finish line, particularly by pressuring Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.“We have a thing called ‘the hostages are
coming back’ going on right now,” Trump added.Hamas released three
Israeli hostages on Sunday as the deal came into effect, bringing a halt
to the war that began October 7, 2023, when Hamas-led terrorists
invaded southern Israel, killing over 1,200 people and kidnapping 251
hostages.The first stage of the framework, first presented by then-US
president Joe Biden in a May 31, 2024, speech, provides for a temporary
ceasefire, the release of 33 Israeli hostages, and the freeing of nearly
2,000 Palestinian security prisoners and detainees.Trump lamented that
some of the hostages are not in good condition, specifically referencing
former captive Emily Damari, released on Sunday, who had two of her
fingers amputated after being shot during Hamas October 7 onslaught.“If I
weren’t here, that they wouldn’t be back ever,” Trump said of the
hostages.Ninety-one of the 251 hostages abducted by Hamas on October 7
remain in Gaza, including the bodies of at least 34 confirmed dead by
the IDF.“Biden couldn’t get it done, and it was only the imposition that
I put on as a deadline that they got it done,” Trump said.Last month,
Trump threatened “all hell to pay” in the Mideast if the hostages
weren’t released by his January 20 inauguration.Trump’s comments came
after he signed an executive order on Monday rolling back the sanctions
regime Biden implemented last year targeting violent Israeli settlers in
the West Bank.The policy was one of dozens rolled back by Trump hours
after being sworn back into office through a stack of executive orders
he signed first at a post-inauguration rally in front of thousands of
supporters, and then back at the White House.Trump is also looking to
broker a normalization agreement between Israel and Saudi Arabia — a
deal that will likely require Jerusalem to make significant concessions
to the Palestinians. Riyadh has publicly conditioned the agreement on
the establishment of a Palestinian state.Times of Israel staff
contributed to this report.
Inside story-How ‘the stars aligned’
after over a year to reach a hostage release-ceasefire deal-Damage to
Hezbollah, Sinwar’s killing pressured Hamas, officials say, while
Trump’s ‘hell to pay’ threat gave new momentum; Qataris credit
partnership between Biden, Trump advisers-By AP and ToI Staff Today,
1:52 am-JAN 22,25
Inside a lavish clubhouse on Doha’s waterfront,
tensions strained by months of fruitless back-and-forth weighed on
negotiators as the hour neared 3 a.m.On the first floor, a Hamas
delegation whose leader had once evaded an Israeli airstrike that killed
seven family members combed through the details of yet another proposal
to halt the war in Gaza. On the second floor, advisers to Israel’s
intelligence chief, who had vowed to hunt down those responsible for the
October 7, 2023, attack that ignited the war, did the same.With Qatari,
US, and Egyptian mediators pushing for resolution, did the sides — such
bitter enemies that they refused to speak directly to one another — at
last have a deal that would pause the fighting, bring dozens of Israeli
hostages home, and release thousands of Palestinian security
prisoners?“They were extremely suspicious towards each other. No trust
at all,” said an Egyptian official involved in the negotiations, who
spoke on condition of anonymity. The talks that night a week ago dragged
on over disagreements about maps showing where Israel would begin
withdrawing troops and its demand that Hamas provide a list of hostages
who remained alive, he said.“Both parties were looking at each word in
the deal as a trap.”By the time Qatar’s prime minister, Sheikh Mohammed
bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, announced a deal last Wednesday evening,
mediators had scrambled again to defuse objections by both sides. Even
then, disagreements and delays continued over the two days that
followed.But as the fighting in Gaza paused this week, Hamas released
three Israeli women from captivity, and Israel released 90 Palestinian
security prisoners, the agreement, however tenuous, has held.After
months of deadlock, a singular moment for deal-making-The story of how
Israel and Hamas found their way to a deal stretches back over more than
a year. But the timing and unlikely partners who coalesced to push
negotiations across the line help explain why it finally happened
now.“Over the course of the last week, all of the stars aligned finally
in a way that, after 15 months of carnage and bloodshed, negotiations
came to fruition,” said Mehran Kamrava, a professor of government at
Georgetown University in Qatar.The agreement was the product of a
singular political moment, with one US president preparing to hand power
to another.Both were pushing for a deal to free some 100 Israeli
hostages and bring an end to a conflict that began with Hamas’s October
7, 2023 attack, when terrorists invaded southern Israel, killing some
1,200 people and taking 251 hostages. The subsequent war has killed tens
of thousands of Palestinians in Gaza.In tiny but wealthy Qatar, the
talks had a steward that positions itself as a go-between in a region on
edge, one that hosts the largest US military base in the Middle East,
even as it provides offices for leaders of Hamas and the Taliban. Egypt,
eager to ease instability that has driven an influx of Palestinians
across its border and sparked attacks on sea lanes by Houthi rebels,
worked to keep the talks on track.The circumstances partnered Sheikh
Mohammed with improbable allies. Then-president Joe Biden sent Brett
McGurk, a veteran Middle East hand in both Republican and Democratic
administrations. Donald Trump dispatched Steve Witkoff, a Bronx-born
real estate billionaire with little if any diplomatic experience, but a
longtime friendship with the then-president-elect.The deal they brought
together calls for continued negotiations that could be even more
fraught, but with the potential to release the remaining hostages and
end a war that has destroyed much of Gaza and roiled the entire
region.Pressure mounted on Israel and Hamas-In the end, negotiators got
it done in a matter of days. But that followed months of deadlock over
the number of Israeli hostages that would be freed, the number of
Palestinian prisoners to be released, and the parameters of a pullback
by Israeli troops in the embattled enclave.In late May, Biden laid out a
proposed deal, which he said had come from Israel. It drew heavily on
language and concepts hammered out with Qatari and Egyptian mediators,
calling for a phased agreement with continued negotiation toward a
“sustainable calm” – verbiage designed to satisfy both sides.But talks
had stalled even before Ismail Haniyeh, the head of Hamas’s political
bureau, was killed in Iran in late July, an assassination for which
Israel finally took credit last month. And efforts by mediators to
restart them were derailed when Hamas captors executed six Israeli
hostages in a tunnel underneath southern Gaza’s Khan Younis.“Whoever
murders hostages does not want a deal,” Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu said.Pressure on Hamas increased after Israeli forces launched
a devastating offensive against Lebanon’s Hezbollah, the group’s
longtime ally, and killed Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, architect of the
October 7 attack.But Qatari officials, frustrated by the lack of
progress, announced they were suspending mediation until both sides
demonstrated willingness to negotiate.Weeks later, Trump dispatched
Witkoff, a golfing buddy whose most notable prior link to the Middle
East was his $623 million sale of New York’s Park Lane Hotel to Qatar’s
sovereign wealth fund in 2023.Flying to Doha in late November, Witkoff
asked mediators to lay out the problems undermining the talks, then
continued on to meet officials in Israel. The talks restarted soon
after, gaining ground through December.“Witkoff and McGurk were pushing
the Israelis. Qatar was pushing Hamas,” said an official briefed on the
talks who spoke on condition of anonymity.Cooperation between Biden and
Trump advisers was key. Assigning credit for the progress depends on
viewpoint.The Egyptian official recounted the frustration of
successfully pushing Hamas to agree to changes last summer, only to find
Netanyahu imposing new conditions.An Israeli official, who spoke on
condition of anonymity last week because the negotiations were ongoing,
said Sinwar’s death and Iran’s weakening influence in the region forced
Hamas’s hand, leading to real give-and-take, rather than“playing a game
of negotiation.”He and others close to the process said Trump’s rhetoric
and dispatch of an envoy had injected new momentum. The Egyptian
official pointed to a statement by Trump on social media that there
would be “hell to pay” if the hostages were not released, saying it had
pressured both Hamas and Israeli officials to get a deal done.And
mediators said the willingness of Witkoff and McGurk — representing
leaders loath to give one another credit for the deal – to partner up
was critical.“How they have handled this as a team since the election,
without yet being in office, has really helped close the gaps that
allowed us to reach a deal,” Majed Al Ansari, the adviser to Qatar’s
prime minister and spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
said in a statement.In early January, there was a breakthrough in the
talks when Hamas agreed to provide a list of hostages it would release
in the first phase of a deal, an official briefed on the talks
said.McGurk flew from Washington to Doha hours later. Witkoff followed
at the week’s end.The following day – Saturday, January 11 – Witkoff
flew to Israel, securing a meeting with Netanyahu, even though it was
Shabbat. McGurk called in. Netanyahu agreed to send the heads of Israeli
intelligence and internal security back to Doha for negotiations.That
led to extended negotiations, most convening in the Qatari prime
minister’s private office, that lasted late into the night.At points,
mediators shuttled back and forth between adversaries on different
floors. At others, the chief negotiators for the two sides cycled
separately into the Prime Minister’s Office to hash out details.“But the
Hamas and Israeli delegations never crossed paths,” said the official
briefed on the talks.Ceasefire conditions debated up until the last
moment-After the lead negotiators for each side left Sheikh Mohammed’s
office late Tuesday, the work shifted to the waterfront club owned by
the foreign affairs ministry, where “technical teams” from both sides
pored over the specific language, a floor apart.“Until late the first
hours of Wednesday we were working tirelessly to resolve last-minute
disputes,” said the Egyptian official involved in the negotiations.After
extended discussions focused on the buffer zone Israel is to maintain
in Gaza and the names of prisoners to be released, the long night ended
with an agreement seemingly at hand, said the official briefed on the
talks.But with reporters gathering Wednesday evening for an
announcement, “a last-minute hiccup, last-minute requests from both
sides” forced a delay, the official said.Israel accused Hamas of trying
to make changes to already agreed upon arrangements along Gaza’s border
with Egypt. Hamas called the claims “nonsense.”A senior US official
involved in the talks said Hamas negotiators made several last-minute
demands, but “we held very firm.”After calling the Hamas negotiators
into his office, with the media and the world still anxiously waiting,
the Qatari prime minister met separately with the Israelis and US
envoys. Finally, three hours behind schedule, Sheikh Mohammed stepped to
a lectern to announce the parties had reached an agreement.Even then,
negotiations resumed the following day to wrangle with questions about
final implementation of the deal and mechanisms for doing so. By the
time the talks ended, it was 4 a.m.Hours later, President Isaac Herzog
voiced his hope that the deal would bring a national moment of goodwill,
healing, and rebuilding.But no one can say how long it will last.The
deal calls for Israel and Hamas to resume talks just over a week from
now, to work out the second phase. That is supposed to include the
release of all remaining hostages, living and dead, and a permanent
ceasefire. But getting there, observers say, will likely be even tougher
than the agreement to get this far.
Top officials said already
gearing up for 2nd phase hostage talks, ahead of schedule-Qatari PM says
‘pushing for this’; Shin Beit, Mossad chiefs reportedly discussed next
stage in Egypt, two weeks before start date; Trump envoy Witkoff also
expected to be involved-By ToI Staff, Reuters and Jacob Magid-22 January
2025, 8:04 pm
Top officials from the US, Israel, and Egypt were
reportedly already moving on the second stage of the Gaza
hostage-ceasefire deal on Wednesday, some two weeks ahead of the
scheduled date for the discussions to begin.The reports came as Qatari
Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani said he was ready to
start mediating talks on the second stage of the three-phase deal as
soon as possible, and as US President Donald Trump’s Mideast envoy,
Steve Witkoff, asserted his commitment to reaching the second phase amid
concerns that Israel will resume fighting after the first stage is
over.The Qatari prime minister told the Walla outlet that he plans to
speak to Mossad head David Barnea this week to begin discussing
negotiations on the second phase of the agreement: “We are pushing for
this.”Al Thani spoke in Davos, where he is attending the annual World
Economic Forum.Witkoff will also hold talks on the second phase when he
arrives, Walla reported.An unnamed senior Israeli official told the
Walla site that Israel has “no problem” beginning the talks before day
16, but cautioned that the process could be lengthy.“Negotiations on the
first phase lasted months, and reaching an agreement on the second
phase may also take a long time,” the unnamed official said. Previously,
Israeli officials have said the discussions were set to begin on day 16
of the first phase of the deal.Another Israeli official told the site
that Shin Bet chief Ronen Bar and Barnea held talks on the deal during
their Cairo meetings with Egyptian intelligence officials this week, but
noted that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had not yet had a meeting
on the second phase of the deal. Nonetheless, he stressed that Israel
wants to see the ceasefire plan through.Channel 12 reported that while
in Egypt, Bar and Barnea specifically discussed details of the second
phase of the deal, including how many Palestinian security prisoners
would be released for each Israeli hostage set free.Qatar, Egypt, and
the United States brokered the multi-phase deal between Israel and Hamas
terrorists, and the two Arab countries have set up a communications hub
in Cairo to head off new clashes between the foes.Despite the reported
developments, the fate of the latter stages of the ceasefire deal is
still in question. Far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich has said
Netanyahu promised him that fighting will be renewed after the first
phase ends. Smotrich has vowed to not allow a deal that stops the war
before Hamas is destroyed.Even Trump, who has touted his role in
securing the deal, said Monday he was “not confident” that the Gaza
ceasefire and hostage release agreement would be upheld through all
three phases.Trump said Tuesday he is considering a visit to the Middle
East, but not immediately.Arab diplomats speaking to The Times of Israel
have credited Trump and Witkoff, who held talks in Qatar and Israel in
the final week of the Gaza negotiations, with helping bring the deal
across the finish line, particularly by pressuring Netanyahu.Qatar
candidate to normalize ties with Israel-In an interview with Fox News on
Wednesday, Witkoff tied the success of the second stage to the deal
with getting more living hostages out.“We have to make sure that the
implementation goes well, because if it goes well, we’ll get into phase
two, and we’re going to get a lot more live bodies out,” Witkoff
said.Netanyahu has pledged to resume fighting if the negotiations
regarding the terms of phase two do not see Hamas cede both military and
governing powers in Gaza, which the terror group is not expected to
do.Asked about Trump’s lack of confidence, Witkoff said he doesn’t
disagree with the president and that implementation of the deal will
likely be more difficult than the initial agreement.Witkoff said senior
Hamas official Mousa Abu Marzouk’s recent statement to The New York
Times that Hamas is prepared to enter a dialogue with the new Trump
administration would be welcome if accurate.“I’m actually going to be
going over to Israel. I’m going to be part of an inspection team at the
Netzarim Corridor, and also at the Philadelphi Corridor,” Witkoff said
but did not give an exact timeline for when he’ll depart.Netzarim is an
east-west strip that Israel cleared during the war. It prevents
Palestinians’ free movement between northern and southern Gaza.
Philadelphi is a narrow border strip between Gaza and Egypt.“That’s
where you have outside overseers, sort of making sure that people are
safe and people who are entering are not armed and no one has bad
motivations,” Witkoff added. He did not say who else might be part of
the inspection teams.Asked what he told the parties during the
negotiations, Witkoff said he highlighted Trump’s threat of “all hell to
pay” in the region if the hostages weren’t released by his January 20
inauguration.He noted that he wasn’t involved in the crafting of the
deal, whose framework was advanced by the Biden administration. “Our job
was to speed up the process because it felt like it had bogged down… It
doesn’t happen without the president,” Witkoff said.The US envoy is
very close to the president and was seated close to him during Monday’s
inauguration. He was seen briefly speaking to former US president Joe
Biden at the end of the ceremony. Witkoff told Fox News that he was
thanking Biden for allowing him to work on the hostage deal, adding that
the former president thanked him in response.Biden had indeed directed
his team to cooperate with the incoming administration on the hostage
deal following Trump’s November election win. Biden’s White House
Mideast czar Brett McGurk worked closely with Witkoff in the last week
of negotiations.Witkoff spoke to his goal of expanding the Abraham
Accords, insisting that all countries in the region could eventually
join the alliance.“Normalization is an amazing opportunity for the
region. It’s basically the beginning of the end of war [which] means
that the entire region becomes investable [and] financeable,” he said.
“Banks do not have to underwrite whether the Houthis, Hezbollah or Hamas
are going to fire a missile and take down a hyper-scale data center.”He
noted that a precondition to expanding the Abraham Accords has been a
ceasefire in Gaza.“First, we needed the hopeful moment, and I’d like to
think that we’ve achieved that, and we’ll build on that. Then on top of
that, we needed to show people that we could stop the violence and that
we could have conversation and dialogue. This is the beginning of that,”
he adds.Asked who are potential candidates for joining the Abraham
Accords, Witkoff highlighted Qatar, lauding the role of its prime
minister in mediating between Israel and Hamas.Doha has long asserted
that it will not normalize relations with Israel until a Palestinian
state has been established.With the start of the first stage of the
ceasefire deal conversation around the “day after” in Gaza has
intensified, with many international figures calling for the Palestinian
Authority to return to controlling the Strip, as well as for increased
efforts toward reaching a comprehensive Israeli-Palestinian two-state
solution.According to a report in the Saudi-owned, UK-based Asharq
Al-Awsat on Wednesday, Israel has agreed to allow the PA to take control
of the Rafah Crossing between Gaza and Egypt in future stages of the
deal.The Prime Minister’s Office partially denied the report, accusing
the PA of attempting to “create a false picture to the effect that it
controls the crossing.”The Israeli official who spoke to Walla said that
Israel will continue to demand that Hamas not be permitted to govern
Gaza after the war. According to Walla, Egypt has been working with
Palestinian factions in recent weeks to establish what it calls a
“civilian committee” to potentially run Gaza alongside the international
community and representatives of the Palestinian Authority.Hamas
released three Israeli hostages on Sunday as the deal came into effect,
bringing a halt to the war that began October 7, 2023, when Hamas-led
terrorists invaded southern Israel, killing over 1,200 people and
kidnapping 251 hostages.The first stage of the framework, first
presented by then-US president Joe Biden in a May 31, 2024, speech,
provides for a temporary ceasefire, the release of 33 Israeli hostages,
and the freeing of nearly 2,000 Palestinian security prisoners and
detainees.Ninety-one of the 251 hostages abducted by Hamas on October 7
remain in Gaza, including the bodies of at least 34 confirmed dead by
the IDF.
Trump nominee vows to combat ‘antisemitic rot’ at UN,
slams UNRWA’s ‘terrorist ties’Touting her grilling of university heads
over campus antisemitism, Elise Stefanik vows to take similar approach
at UN; also says Israel has biblical right to entire West BankBy Jacob
Magid-and JTA 22 January 2025, 6:48 am
US President Donald
Trump’s nominee to become the ambassador to the United Nations said
Tuesday that she will use the role to combat “antisemitic rot” at the
UN.“Combatting antisemitism is something I am deeply committed to doing
in this role, and it’s one of the reasons why I was interested in this
position during my conversations with President Trump,” US
Representative Elise Stefanik told the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee during her confirmation hearing.She said she used her current
role as a lawmaker in the House of Representatives to combat
“antisemitic rot” in the United States, referencing her tough
questioning of college heads regarding over handling of anti-Israel
protests following Hamas’s October 2023 attack, which first gained
international attention that December when she asked three elite
university leaders whether their schools prohibit calls for genocide
against Jews. Video of the leaders’ answers sparked widespread outrage,
leading two of them to step down.Stefanik said she hopes to take the
same approach at the UN.“The US is the largest contributor to the UN by
far… Our tax dollars should not be complicit in propping up entities
that are counter to American interests, antisemitic, or engaging in
fraud, corruption or terrorism,” she said. “As the world faces crisis
after crisis, with hostages including Americans still held in Hamas
captivity, to national security challenges ranging from China, Russia,
North Korea, and Iran… it has never been more critical for the United
States to lead with strength and moral clarity.”She pointed out that
there are more resolutions at the UN condemning Israel than any other
country and blasted the UN agency for women’s lackluster and delayed
condemnation of Hamas’s October 7 onslaught, which included sexual
violence against Israelis.Stefanik characterized the UN Relief Agency
for Palestinian refugees UNRWA as a “program that is not meeting the
mission of the UN. We need to roll our sleeves up, deliver reforms and
make sure our dollars are going to programs within the UN that work and
have a basis in rule of law, transparency, accountability and strengthen
our national security.”VAN HOLLEN: Do you share the view that Israel
has a biblical right to the entire West Bank?STEFANIK: Yes
pic.twitter.com/q4KQQoINwx— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) January 21, 2025“We
should never tolerate any US taxpayer funds going toward terrorism. I
was one of the members that voted to defund UNRWA… We can look to
organizations within the UN which are proven organizations such as
UNHCR, the World Food Program – which still need reform efforts and
modernization – but don’t have the terrorist ties that UNRWA had that
were exposed during October 7,” she said.Stefanik declined to endorse a
two-state solution or Palestinian rights to self-determination. “I
believe they deserve so much more than the failures they’ve had from
terrorist leadership,” she said.Asked whether she agreed with far-right
lawmakers Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben Gvir that Israel has a
biblical right to the entire West Bank, Stefanik responded in the
affirmative.She also urged an assessment of the UNIFIL observer mission
role, following mounting allegations that it didn’t do anything to stop
repeated Hezbollah violations of Security Council Resolution 1701 in
Lebanon.Stefanik called Iran “the most significant threat to world
peace, and specifically the region,” saying sanctions snapbacks “will be
an important tool to consider in [Trump’s] toolkit as he pushes back on
Iran.”The statements by Stefanik, a close Trump ally and Republican
congresswoman from upstate New York, could position her to be a
successor of sorts to Nikki Haley, who served as UN ambassador at the
beginning of Trump’s first term in office and gained fans among
pro-Israel activists for her outspoken defense of Israel.Democratic
senators noted areas of agreement with Stefanik but also challenged her
at times on accusations of antisemitism in her own party and ideological
camp. Senator Tim Kaine of Virginia raised a past Stefanik campaign ad
that said Democrats want to “overthrow our current electorate” by
permitting undocumented immigrants to come into the country. Critics
said the ad echoed the “great replacement” theory, a right-wing
conspiracy theory alleging that Jews are using mass immigration to
orchestrate the replacement of Western nations’ white populations.Kaine
did not ask a question about the ad, saying he “can separate campaign
rhetoric from government rhetoric.” But Stefanik defended it, saying, “I
stand strongly for border security and that was what the tweet you
referenced was related to.” She and Kaine sparred about whether
Democratic senators supported open borders, but she did not refer to the
charge of promoting antisemitism.Senator Chris Murphy of Connecticut
asked Stefanik for her reaction to claims that Elon Musk, the
billionaire and senior Trump adviser, had performed a Nazi salute at a
rally on Monday. Stefanik responded, “Elon Musk did not do those
salutes,” and praised Musk as an entrepreneur who “loves to cheer” for
Trump.In response to another question, she declined to say directly
whether Palestinian deserve self-determination, though she said, “Of
course they deserve human rights.” She also confirmed that she believes
Israel has a biblical right to the entire West Bank.
HOMOSEXUALS.(SODOMITE RAINBOW GROUPERS)
LEVITICUS 20:13
13
If a man also lie with mankind,(ANOTHER MAN) as he lieth with a woman,
both of them have committed an abomination: they shall surely be put to
death; their blood shall be upon them.
LEVITICUS 18:22
22 Thou shalt not lie with mankind,(ANOTHER MAN) as with womankind: it is abomination.
2 TIMOTHY 3:3
3 Without natural affection,(HOMOSEXUALS) trucebreakers, false accusers, incontinent, fierce, despisers of those that are good,
1 CORINTHIANS 6:9,
9
Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God?
Be not deceived: neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor
effeminate,(HARDENED SODOMITE RAINBOW GROUPERRS) nor abusers of
themselves with mankind,
PSALMS 14:1
1 To the chief Musician,
A Psalm of David. The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.
They are corrupt, they have done abominable works, there is none that
doeth good.
ROMANS 1:18-32
18 For the wrath of God is revealed
from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who
hold the truth in unrighteousness;
19 Because that which may be known of God is manifest in them; for God hath shewed it unto them.
20
For the invisible things of him from the creation of the world are
clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even his
eternal power and Godhead; so that they are without excuse:
21
Because that, when they knew God, they glorified him not as God, neither
were thankful; but became vain in their imaginations, and their foolish
heart was darkened.
22 Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools,
23
And changed the glory of the uncorruptible God into an image made like
to corruptible man, and to birds, and fourfooted beasts, and creeping
things.
24 Wherefore God also gave them up to uncleanness through the
lusts of their own hearts, to dishonour their own bodies between
themselves:(HOMOSEXUALITY,AND ALL SEX SINS)
25 Who changed the truth
of God into a lie, and worshipped and served the creature more than the
Creator, who is blessed for ever. Amen.
26 For this cause God gave
them up unto vile affections: for even their women did change the
natural use into that which is against nature:(LESBIENS)
27 And
likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in
their lust one toward another; men with men working that which is
unseemly,(SODOMITES) and receiving in themselves that recompence of
their error which was meet.(AIDS ETC)
28 And even as they did not
like to retain God in their knowledge, God gave them over to a reprobate
mind, to do those things which are not convenient;
29 Being filled
with all unrighteousness, fornication, wickedness, covetousness,
maliciousness; full of envy, murder, debate, deceit, malignity;
whisperers,
30 Backbiters, haters of God, despiteful, proud, boasters, inventors of evil things, disobedient to parents,
31 Without understanding, covenantbreakers, without natural affection, implacable, unmerciful:
32
Who knowing the judgment of God, that they which commit such things are
worthy of death, not only do the same, but have pleasure in them that
do them.
GOD CREATED THEM MALE AND FEMALE IN MARRIAGE
GENESIS 1:27-28
27 So God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them.
28
And God blessed them, and God said unto them, Be fruitful, and
multiply,(HAVE LOTS OF CHILDREN) and replenish the earth,(HOMOSEXUALS
CAN NOT REPLENISH THE EARTH WITH CHILDREN)(BY HAVING SEX WITH EACH
OTHER) and subdue it: and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and
over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth upon
the earth.
GENESIS 2:21-24
21 And the LORD God caused a deep
sleep to fall upon Adam, and he slept: and he took one of his ribs, and
closed up the flesh instead thereof;
22 And the rib, which the LORD God had taken from man, made he a woman, and brought her unto the man.
23
And Adam said, This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh: she
shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of Man.
24 Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife: and they shall be one flesh.
MATTHEW 19:4-6
4 And he answered and said unto them, Have ye not read, that he which made them at the beginning made them male and female,
5
And said, For this cause shall a man leave father and mother, and shall
cleave to his wife: and they twain shall be one flesh?
6 Wherefore they are no more twain, but one flesh. What therefore God hath joined together, let not man put asunder.
Israeli
LGBTQ orgs slam Trump’s anti-trans measures, warn they could come to
Israel-Responses come after US president, on 1st day in office, signed
executive order recognizing only man and woman as genders and putting in
place measures against trans communityBy ToI Staff 21 January 2025,
3:58 pm
Israeli LGBTQ organizations heavily criticized US
President Donald Trump on Tuesday after he signed an executive order the
previous day declaring that the US would now only recognize “man” and
“woman” as genders.According to the order, the US would officially
classify Americans’ genders based on the reproductive organs they were
born with, meaning the country would no longer recognize transgender or
non-binary as legitimate genders.The order also states that federal
prisons and shelters would be segregated by sex according to the order’s
stipulations and that taxpayers’ money could not be used to fund
services for trans people.Railing against the order, Israeli LGBTQ+
organizations warned that Trump’s move could lead to similar moves
against the Israeli transgender community. Even though Israel does not
recognize genders other than man or woman, it currently does allow trans
people to change the genders listed in their ID cards after they
transition.Trans people can also have their gender-affirming surgeries
subsidized as part of their medical insurance packages and cannot
legally be discriminated against in the workplace. Israel allows youth
under the age of 18 to begin hormone treatments with parental consent
and are given mental and emotional support for the process.Zohar Katan,
the chairperson of the Ma’avarim organization for the Israeli trans
community, was quoted by the Walla news site as saying Trump’s order was
only the first step targeting US trans people and warned that it could
also lead to attacks against gay people and infringe on women’s
rights.“Today, trans people are considering leaving the US or moving to
different states — it’s organized persecution,” she said, contending
that the same measures could also come to Israel.“We may be able to
build our resilience in different ways, mainly with dialogue and
cooperation, but we need to be ready for it. We are raising the flag
already now and it needs to be for every community or organization that
cares about having a democratic society. It may begin with the trans
community, but it can easily escalate to the whole LGBTQ community and
other communities. We will fight for Israel to remain democratic with
human rights and for people to have the rights over their own bodies,”
she added.Nina Halevy, who manages a support program for trans people in
the Gila Project, echoed the warning that similar measures could come
to Israel and compared Trump to Nazi leader Adolf Hitler in a statement
cited by the Walla news outlet, saying that both men identified a
“weakened minority and used it as a scapegoat.”“We are very scared and
are working mainly against organized transphobia and against
organizations that are trying to set a conservative and oppressive
agenda,” she said.She warned that the order would lead to further
legislation against the trans community, especially its youth, due to
misinformation surrounding it.“No one is overdosing them with hormones
or mutilating them,” she said.The Israeli LGBTQ+ Youth Movement, known
as IGY, wrote in a post on X on Tuesday that Trump’s order did nothing
but serve “extremist anti-LGBTQ+ people.”“Protecting the lives of the
youth and our community is not negotiable and we cannot allow this
policy to seep into Israel,” the movement said.The Aguda – The
Association for LGBTQ+ Equality in Israel warned that US transgender
people would soon begin to see the Trump administration damage their
rights in the military, healthcare, employment and education, among
other fields.“Extremist forces have already announced that they intend
to import this dangerous policy to Israel. We will continue to stand as a
wall in the face of anyone who tries to harm the community and
especially people on the trans spectrum,” the Aguda said.