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)
MIDEAST NEWS PLUS.
HOARDING OF GOLD AND SILVER
JAMES 5:1-3
1 Go to now, ye rich men, weep and howl for your miseries that shall come upon you.
2 Your riches are corrupted, and your garments are motheaten.
3
Your gold and silver is cankered; and the rust of them shall be a
witness against you, and shall eat your flesh as it were fire. Ye have
heaped treasure together for the last days.
REVELATION 18:10,17,19
10
Standing afar off for the fear of her torment, saying, Alas, alas that
great city Babylon, that mighty city! for in one hour is thy judgment
come.(IN 1 HR THE STOCK MARKETS WORLDWIDE WILL CRASH)
17 For in one
hour so great riches is come to nought. And every shipmaster, and all
the company in ships, and sailors, and as many as trade by sea, stood
afar off,
19 And they cast dust on their heads, and cried, weeping
and wailing, saying, Alas, alas that great city, wherein were made rich
all that had ships in the sea by reason of her costliness! for in one
hour is she made desolate.
EZEKIEL 7:19
19 They shall cast
their silver in the streets, and their gold shall be
removed:(CONFISCATED) their silver and their gold shall not be able to
deliver them in the day of the wrath of the LORD: they shall not satisfy
their souls, neither fill their bowels: because it is the
stumblingblock of their iniquity.
MARK OF THE BEAST (engraved microchip in your hand or forehead)
REVELATION 13:16-18
16
And he(FALSE POPE) causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor,
free and bond, (SLAVE) to receive a mark in their right hand, or in
their foreheads:(CHIP IMPLANT)
17 And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name.
18
Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding count the number of the
beast: for it is the number of a man; and his number is Six hundred
threescore and six.(6-6-6) A NUMBER SYSTEM
REVELATION 16:1-2
1
And I heard a great voice out of the temple saying to the seven angels,
Go your ways, and pour out the vials of the wrath of God upon the
earth.
2 And the first went, and poured out his vial upon the earth;
and there fell a noisome and grievous sore upon the men which had the
mark of the beast, and upon them which worshipped his image.
I
KNOW THIS MARK WILL BE A MICROCHIP IMPLANT UNDER THE SKIN. LETS LOOK UP
WHAT THE WORD MARK SAYS IN REVELATION 13:16-18, 14:9,11, 15:2, 16:2,
19:20, 20:4-ALL THESE VERSES FROM THE BOOK OF REVELATION SPEAK OF THIS
DICTATORS MARK. NOW LETS SEE WHAT IT MEANS FROM STRONGS EXAUSTIVE
CONCORDANCE OF THE BIBLE. UNDER MARK PAGE 684.MARK UNDER MARK. THE OLD
TESTAMENT IS UNDER HEBREW AND THE NEW TESTAMENT IS UNDER GREEK. SO WHEN
WE LOOK UNDER REVELATION 13:16-17 WE SEE IT IS UNDER GREEK, SO WE GO TO
GREEK IN THE BACK SECTION AND GO TO 5480 TO SEE WHAT IT SAYS THIS MARK
WOULD BE. SO LETS GET TO IT.MARK IN STRONGS GREEK 5480 XAPAYUA CHARAGMA,
KHAR-AG-MAH: FROM THE SAME AS 5482: A SCRATCH OR ETCHING, I.E STAMP (AS
A BADGE OF SERVITUDE), OR SCULPTURED FIGURE-(STATUE):-GRAVEN, MARK FROM
5482 XAPAE CHARAX, KHAR-AX; FROM XAPAOOW CHARASSO (TO SHARPEN TO A
POINT; AKIN TO 1125 THROUGH THE IDEA OF SCRATCHING); A STAKE, I.E
(BYIMPL.) A PALISADE OR RAMPART (MILITARY MOUND FOR CIRCUMVALLATION IN A
SIEGE): - TRENCH FROM 1125 YPAPOE GRAPHO, GRAF-0; A PRIM. VERB; TO
"GRAVE", ESPEC. TO WRITE; FIG. TO DESCRIBE:-DESCRIBE, WRITE (-ING,
-TEN).G5516-GO TO G4742-666 - STRONGS NT 4742: στίγμα - στίγμα,
στιγματος, τό (from στίζω to prick; (cf. Latinstimulus, etc.; German
stechen, English stick, sting, etc.; Curtius, § 226)), a mark pricked in
or branded upon the body. According to ancient oriental usage, slaves
and soldiers bore the name or stamp of their master or commander branded
or pricked (cut) into their bodies to indicate what master or general
they belonged to, and there were even some devotees who stamped
themselves in this way with the token of their gods (cf. Deyling,
Observations, iii., p. 423ff); hence, τά στίγματα τοῦ (κυρίου so Rec.)
Ἰησοῦ, the marks of (the Lord) Jesus, which Paul in Galatians 6:17 says
he bears branded on his body, are the traces left there by the perils,
hardships, imprisonments, scourgings, endured by him for the cause of
Christ, and which mark him as Christ's faithful and approved votary,
servant, soldier (see Lightfoots Commentary on Galatians, the passage
cited). (Herodotus 7, 233; Aristotle, Aelian, Plutarch, Lcian, others.)
THE INVENTOR OF THE MICROCHIP IMPLANT-CARL SANDERS MICROCHIP ENGINEER LEADER
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rgH9D6n4ZWo
THE MICROCHIP IMPLANT IN YOUR RIGHT HAND OR FOREHEAD.
LEVETICUS 19.28
Ye shall not make any cuttings in your flesh for the dead, nor print any marks upon you: I am the LORD.
FAMINE
EZEKIEL 5:16
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:
REVELATION 6:5-6
5
And when he had opened the third seal, I heard the third beast say,
Come and see. And I beheld, and lo a black horse; and he that sat on him
had a pair of balances in his hand.
6 And I heard a voice in the
midst of the four beasts say, A measure of wheat for a penny, and three
measures of barley for a penny; and see thou hurt not the oil and the
wine.(A DAYS WAGES FOR A LOAF OF BREAD)
MATTHEW 24:7-8
7For
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: 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, and famines, and
pestilences; and fearful sights and great signs shall there be from
heaven.
DEUTORONOMY 28:24
24 The LORD shall make the rain of thy land powder and dust: from heaven shall it come down upon thee, until thou be destroyed.
LOCUSTS (DEMONIC) TORTURES SINNERS 5 MONTHS
REVELATION 9:1-6
1
And the fifth angel sounded, and I saw a star fall from heaven unto the
earth: and to him was given the key of the bottomless pit.
2 And he
opened the bottomless pit; and there arose a smoke out of the pit, as
the smoke of a great furnace; and the sun and the air were darkened by
reason of the smoke of the pit.
3 And there came out of the smoke
(DEMONIC) locusts upon the earth: and unto them was given power, as the
scorpions of the earth have power.
4 And it was commanded them that
they should not hurt the grass of the earth, neither any green thing,
neither any tree; but only those men which have not the seal of God in
their foreheads.
5 And to them it was given that they should not kill
them, but that they should be tormented five months: and their torment
was as the torment of a scorpion, when he striketh a man.
6 And in those days shall men seek death, and shall not find it; and shall desire to die, and death shall flee from them.
Will Trump’s pick to lead the FTC halt privacy rulemaking, AI enforcement? Dec 13, 2024, 4:06 pm EST | Anthony Kimery
Andrew
N. Ferguson is President-elect Donald Trump’s choice to head the
Federal Trade Commission (FTC). If approved by the Republican-controlled
Senate, his selection could indicate an inclination by the incoming
Trump administration to deprioritize FTC rulemaking and enforcement
activities related to data privacy and AI. This also could indicate a
broader regulatory philosophy that emphasizes legislative action over
administrative rulemaking.Ferguson’s stated regulatory philosophy and
strategic priorities, if implemented as FTC chair, would have profound
implications for industry and consumers. Critics argue that this shift
would mean that critical privacy issues will be given short shrift as
technologies like AI and data analytics rapidly evolve and outpace
regulatory schema.Meanwhile, Trump announced that he intends to nominate
Mark Meador to be an FTC commissioner. Meador is a partner at
Washington, D.C.-based Kressin Meador Powers. He also was an antitrust
counsel to Republican U.S. Senator Mike Lee. While specific details
about Meador’s positions on privacy and AI regulation are scant, given
his antitrust expertise it is plausible that he would advocate for a
more balanced approach to regulation, aiming to foster innovation while
ensuring consumer protection, a perspective that aligns with the broader
Republican emphasis on limited government intervention and
market-driven solutions.Ferguson is the former solicitor general of
Virginia, a former counsel to Republican Senator and Senate Minority
leader Mitch McConnell, and he a clerked for U.S. Supreme Court Justice
Clarence Thomas. If confirmed, he will inherit a slew of regulatory
actions against Big Tech and a half-dozen lawsuits by companies arguing
that the FTC overstepped its authority. There’s also the FTC’s
investigation – launched in July 2023 – of OpenAI for possible privacy
issues.Ferguson has voted in favor of every privacy-related FTC
enforcement action as an FTC commissioner, but he also has consistently
emphasized the importance of congressional authority in crafting
comprehensive data privacy laws.In a leaked memo he wrote to Trump
reportedly advocating for the top FTC post, he said the FTC under his
direction will “stop abusing FTC enforcement authorities as a substitute
for comprehensive privacy legislation,” and that there will be “no more
novel and legally dubious consumer protection cases.”One matter in
particular that Ferguson will have to contend with, and which will have
to be addressed, is the complaint and proposed Decision and Order that
the agency has taken against two Virginia-based data brokers. The
complaint alleges that they unlawfully tracked and sold sensitive
consumer location data. Ferguson supported two of the counts that the
commission brought against the firms, but dissented from the
commission’s counts that accuses them of unfairly categorizing consumers
based on sensitive characteristics and of selling those categorizations
to third parties.In his dissent, Ferguson argued that the FTC Act
explicitly prohibits the collection and subsequent sale of precise
location data without the consumer’s consent. He emphasized that data
brokers are required to take reasonable measures to verify that
consumers initially consented to the collection of the data being
utilized and sold.Ferguson agreed that if a company aggregates and
categorizes data that were collected without proper consent and then
sells those categorizations, it violates Section 5 of the FTC Act. But
he also argued that the violation arises from the lack of consent for
the original data collection, not from the specific categories into
which the data are organized.Ferguson said the FTC Act imposes consent
requirements in defined circumstances, but it does not restrict how
legally acquired data may be analyzed, or the conclusions that may be
drawn from such analysis. That line of thinking begins to walk a very
fine line. Yes, data is acquired legally. But highly granularized
analysis of an individual’s aggregated data, and the sorts of personal
conclusions that can be inferred from it, begins to edge very close to
raising legitimate privacy concerns. It also raises the incentive for
bad actors to steal the information – in bulk.Ferguson said the FTC
commissioners have an erroneous view of the FTC Act as being “a
comprehensive privacy law,” adding that “comprehensive privacy
regulation involves difficult choices and expensive tradeoffs. Congress
alone can make those choices and tradeoffs. We must not stray from the
bounds of the law.”Indeed. Ferguson believes broad regulatory
initiatives on privacy should emerge from Congress, not an
administrative federal agency, an approach that underscores his critique
of what he views as regulatory overreach by administrative bodies. The
FTC’s role, Ferguson has said, should focus on enforcing existing laws
rather than expanding its mandate through rulemaking.Ferguson has been
highly critical of what he perceives to have been regulatory overreach
under previous FTC leadership. He’s argued that the FTC should focus on
its core competencies – namely, enforcing existing laws – rather than
creating new rules that could extend its mandate without clear
legislative backing.“Commissioner Ferguson has made no secret of his
preference for Congress, rather than the FTC, to set clear privacy
guardrails,” said Cobun Zweifel-Keegan, managing director at the
International Association of Privacy Professionals. “This means
rulemaking activities at the commission are likely to be
deprioritized.”Privacy advocates fear this deprioritization could kill a
proposed rule on commercial surveillance and data security that the FTC
announced in August 2022 that it is considering. The commission at that
time published an advance notice of proposed rulemaking to request
public comment – for the purpose of the rulemaking – on the prevalence
of commercial surveillance and data security practices that harm
consumers. The FTC said at the time that the new rule will focus on data
security, data minimization, and algorithmic accountability.Under
Ferguson’s leadership, the FTC would likely redirect resources toward
enforcement of existing laws such as the Children’s Online Privacy
Protection Act (COPPA) and provisions under Section 5 of the FTC Act
which targets unfair or deceptive practices. This strategy would suggest
a preference for addressing specific harms through targeted actions
rather than introducing broad, preemptive regulations. Indeed, rather
than pursuing expansive, preemptive rulemaking initiatives, the focus is
more likely to lean towards addressing specific, well-defined harms
like deceptive practices by data brokers.And as for data brokers – which
have come under withering criticism and congressional scrutiny in the
wake of an unprecedented security breach this summer – they could face
less systemic scrutiny under a Ferguson FTC. Enforcement actions may
become more sporadic and narrowly defined. Rather than proposing rules
to regulate the industry, the FTC might instead rely on case-by-case
enforcement, potentially creating an inconsistent and less predictable
regulatory environment. Ferguson’s stance aligns with Republicans’
broader emphasis on ensuring regulatory clarity and avoiding undue
burdens on businesses.This approach diverges sharply from the path that
was set by Ferguson’s predecessor, Lina Khan, who championed a more
proactive regulatory approach. It was under Khan’s leadership that the
FTC issued the impending rulemaking on commercial surveillance and data
security practices, which seeks to address systemic issues in privacy
and consumer protection.Ferguson’s position, on the other hand,
represents a stark departure, potentially one that could pause or roll
back such initiatives. Critics have argued that this could delay
progress in protecting consumer data in an era of rapid technological
change. Ferguson’s departure from this activism could signal a rollback
of momentum in establishing comprehensive privacy standards.Ferguson’s
strategy, while appealing to those who advocate for limited government
intervention, poses certain risks. The absence of federal rulemaking
could perpetuate a fragmented regulatory landscape where states enact
their own privacy laws. This patchwork will only further complicate
compliance for businesses, especially those operating across multiple
jurisdictions. And consumers could see delayed protections against data
misuse and breaches. And enforcement actions alone likely would not
adequately address systemic vulnerabilities in data security.For the
business community, especially Big Tech, Ferguson’s position offers a
reprieve from the immediate pressures of adapting to new federal
regulations. Established companies, especially in the tech and data
brokering industries, would undoubtedly find this environment more
favorable for their operations. Smaller firms and startups though would
encounter challenges navigating the inconsistencies of state laws
without clear federal guidelines. Such regulatory uncertainty could
stifle innovation in some sectors while empowering larger entities to
consolidate their influence.Ferguson’s overall approach to privacy
regulation reflects a broader effort to balance enforcement with
fostering innovation. He has expressed concerns that excessive
regulatory measures could stifle technological advancement and impede
competition, a position that’s been signaled by the incoming Republican
dominated Congress. Republican lawmakers have favored a more
market-driven and hands-off approach when it comes to regulating
consumer data privacy than their Democratic counterparts. By focusing on
enforcement of existing rules rather than expansive rulemaking,
Ferguson would seek to maintain this balance, even if it means delaying
the establishment of universal protections.Ferguson’s position on
deprioritizing privacy rulemaking could also signal a shift in the FTC’s
focus toward narrower enforcement and a reliance on Congress for
broader legislative solutions. While this approach aligns with his
regulatory philosophy, it raises concerns about the FTC’s ability to
address emerging privacy challenges effectively in an increasingly
complex digital environment.With the rise of AI technologies, Ferguson’s
reluctance to engage in privacy-related rulemaking could hinder the
FTC’s ability to establish clear guidelines on the use of consumer data
in AI training and applications. Ferguson has said that he would “end
the FTC’s attempt to become an AI regulator.” His unabashed approach to
AI reflects a desire to foster innovation and competition while avoiding
premature or overly burdensome regulations that could stifle
technological advancement.Wedbush analyst Dan Ives said in a client note
that: “We expect Ferguson to continue to have a keen eye on the tech
world … he will clearly roll back Khan’s head-scratching anti-tech
agenda, including ending efforts to regulate AI.”Such a restrained
position though raises questions about the adequacy of existing legal
frameworks to address the unique challenges and risks that increasingly
are posed by AI technologies.Ferguson has expressed skepticism about the
FTC’s attempts to position itself as a primary regulator of AI. He
critiqued initiatives under Khan that sought to expand the FTC’s role in
governing AI systems, arguing that such actions could exceed the
agency’s statutory authority. He’s said that he favors a measured
approach that focuses on enforcing existing laws against deceptive or
unfair practices in the use of AI. This approach could possibly
translate into investigating AI systems that mislead consumers,
perpetuate fraud, or violate privacy laws.The impact of Ferguson’s
stance on AI regulation is multifaceted. On the one hand, it could
create a more innovation-friendly environment by giving developers and
businesses greater latitude to experiment with AI technologies without
immediate regulatory constraints, but it could also accelerate
technological progress, particularly in areas where regulatory
uncertainty has previously slowed investment and development. Businesses
operating in AI would benefit from clearer, more predictable
enforcement under existing laws rather than having to navigate a
potentially ambiguous or stringent new regulatory landscape.On the other
hand, though, this approach could leave critical gaps in oversight. AI
technologies introduce unique risks, such as algorithmic bias, lack of
transparency, and the potential for misuse in areas like surveillance or
misinformation. Existing laws, which were not designed with AI’s
complexities in mind, could prove insufficient to address these risks
comprehensively. By refraining from proactive rulemaking, the FTC could
miss opportunities to establish clear guidelines for responsible AI
development and deployment, which could lead to inconsistent standards
across industries.Another significant implication of Ferguson’s position
is the likelihood of increased reliance on state or sector-specific
regulations to fill the gap left by federal inaction. For example,
states like California and New York may continue to advance their own
AI-specific laws, creating a fragmented regulatory landscape. While
larger companies may have the resources to navigate this complexity,
smaller firms could struggle to comply, potentially disadvantaging
startups and innovators.
Liminal, Microblink forecast 2025 trends
in identity document verification-Harangued by GenAI-enabled fraud, IDV
demands layered security approach-Dec 13, 2024, 3:46 pm EST | Joel
R. McConvey
Synthetic identities, deepfakes and other AI-driven
attacks are prompting a surge in interest in custom fraud protection
tools. In a recent webinar, executives from Liminal and Microblink offer
insights into how fraud is driving change in the whirlwind world of
document verification.Will Charnley, COO of Liminal, says that, both
inside and outside identity document verification, the last 20-plus
years have seen a physical-first consumer environment to one built
primarily on digital experience – a digital transformation that was
expedited by the Covid-19 pandemic. At present, the average online
person interacts regularly with at least twenty digital accounts every
year. Most importantly, people like digital interactions: Charnley says
83 percent of consumers express a preference for them
exclusively.Identity document verification is, by necessity, changing in
tandem with broader digital transformation. Charnley says its market is
changing, too. “What we’re seeing is that buyers need better built
solutions, depending on their pain points and use cases, to meet
consumer demand when it comes to privacy, when it comes to security,
when it comes to customer experience.”Many identity verification
providers’ long-term focus on financial services is shifting. Charnley
says the market is evolving outside of its historical roots in
compliance to service buyers beyond the banking and financial services
sectors.New digital identity cases are emerging in parts of the customer
journey beyond account opening; Charnley cites age assurance as a prime
example, noting Australia’s recent move to restrict users under 16 from
creating social media accounts. Market options, likewise, are
expanding. “There are different ways to verify age and finding the right
size for your use case is incredibly important.”92% of businesses not
equipped to fight GenAI fraud-New types of mobile digital transactions
mean more entry points for fraud. Charnley says that it’s more
challenging than ever to prevent rapidly accelerating fraud, losses from
which are projected to crest 100 billion by 2030. Synthetic identities,
Gen-AI created deepfakes and other hostile avatars make fraud
prevention crucial across evolving use cases.“Things are clearly getting
worse,” Charnley says. Financial services buyers expect AI-enabled
fraud to grow substantially in the next two years. “Generative AI has
made committing fraud incredibly easy and the quality has gone way up.
So we have higher volumes of fraud, more sophisticated fraud attacks,
and it’s more accessible to anyone.”It’s all forcing organizations to
change their fraud assessment models from the ground up: 92 percent say
they do not have adequate defenses against GenAI and deepfakes.Albert
Roux, EVP of product for Microblink, says firms probably have more fraud
than they think, and that deepfake detection is far more complicated
than simply honing in on widely-used platforms like ChatGPT. Multimodal
biometric protections and effective liveness detection are needed for a
layered approach to defense against fraud.As with underwear, so with
user experience: friction most unwelcome-Biometric authentication, in
particular, is popular with buyers looking for a way to secure customer
authentication and simplify account recovery. Roux discusses “device
intelligence” that ties a device to an identity and can access
behavioral biometrics, perform facial recognition, and so on.Trust is,
as always, a major concern for customers using businesses outside of
banking, with 31 percent expressing concern about data privacy. But so
is the often-neglected UX factor. Friction applied long enough will
eventually burn: 15 percent of customers still say there is too much
friction in user experience, and 26 percent say account openings take
too much time. Abandonment is common.Charnley says “now is the right
time to act” on securing identity document verification using biometric
security tools and other layered security measures, but that it’s key to
implement tailored solutions that are optimized or designed for
specific use cases.“You really need to, as a practitioner, make sure
you’re buying a solution that fits your specific needs.” Find solutions
with expertise outside of financial services, and the results are likely
to be less tied to a compliance model and more attuned to new types of
digital fraud.Many identity verification systems are still holdovers
from the compliance days. But those are over now: identity verification
is not just for banks anymore, and customers across the spectrum want
smooth, secure experiences they can trust. In the prism of digital
identity, new facets and colors continue to emerge.
New year will
see mobile driver’s licenses come of age: Trinsic CEO-Remote identity
verification standards seen as major driver of mDL adoption-Dec 13,
2024, 11:40 am EST | Joel R. McConvey
A recent webinar from
Trinsic takes stock of the eID sector in 2024 and looks ahead to
upcoming launches and adoption trends for 2025.For Trinsic, eIDs are
government-led identity schemes and credentials. (Versus reIDs, which
are private sector reusable identities, and bankIDs, which are digital
IDs specific to banks.) Across government initiatives globally, the
coming year is set to bring rapid transformation in the areas of mobile
driver’s licenses (mDLs), national digital identities, wallets, trust
frameworks and decentralized identity.Half of U.S. states to have mDL
programs running in 2025-Trinsic’s webinar zooms in on key advancements
in mobile driver’s licenses in 2024 and what they mean for the future of
identity verification. Company CEO Riley Hughes predicts that in 2025,
50 percent of U.S. states will have a live digital driver’s license –
not a given, but not a radical prediction, given that 14 already have
active mDL programs and another 15 are mDLs planning to launch
soon.Still, after a long period of drag, recent growth has been swift,
and more is coming. The recently published winter market snapshot from
the Secure Technology Alliance’s Identity and Access Forum (IAF), nearly
70 percent of states are anticipated to adopt mDLs in the next two
years.Hughes says that talking about mDLs a year ago, “everybody would
have basically said, ‘we’re watching it and we’ll see.’ Now you talk to
folks and the conversation is much more like, not only are we watching
it but we are planning around this. We’re expecting this to be relevant
soon and we’re planning for it.”eIDAS, verification standards driving
mobile driver’s licenses uptake-The same goes for eIDAS 2.0, which has
matured from a thing that’s going to happen into a thing that is
happening now. Hughes notes the large-scale pilot program for the EUDI
wallet scheme as a major shift in digital culture.Identity verification
is increasingly common across platforms, as digital regulations finally
catch up with technology. Hughes cites the publication of ISO/IEC TS
18013-7:2024 as an enabler of remote identity verification using mDLs as
a major driver of uptake.National ID systems continue to grow globally,
with Hughes pointing to Nigeria, the Philippines and India’s Aadhaar as
notable examples. Private reusable IDs, such as those provided (in
large numbers) by Clear and ID.me, are also on the rise, with new
reusable ID launches from Shufti Pro and Ondato. And in 2024, more
digital platforms, such as Uber and LinkedIn, embraced identity
verification measures.Trust frameworks crucial in busy digital ID
market-In 2025, it’s likely more of the same – which is to say, more
transformation in the areas of mDLs, national digital identities,
wallets, trust frameworks and decentralized identity.Mobile driver’s
licenses will continue to expand in the States. Hughes says eight states
will launch mDLs in 2025: Illinois, Montana, Tennessee, New Jersey,
North Dakota, Wyoming, North Carolina and West Virginia.He believes more
national IDs will come into being (in Jamaica and Papua New Guinea, for
instance) and mDLs are likely to spread globally, as well, with Hong
Kong, for one, preparing a launch in 2025. In terms of decentralized
identity, protocols such as QuarkID are “expanding geographies.”Wallets
will be big, as EU nations roll out their national digital ID wallets.
Hughes gives special attention to trust frameworks as a key part of the
equation. “Trust frameworks are really important,” he says, “especially
in a world where consumers have a lot of choice with regard to digital
ID. So we’re watching out for these schemes or trust frameworks and
paying close attention to how these different ID networks are governed
and accepted around the world.”More businesses to accept digital IDs in
2025-Hughes’ formal predictions for 2025 do not veer too far off script.
More businesses will accept digital IDs. Government digital IDs will
open up to identity verification from private sector third parties.
Overall progress on eIDAS will be on the slow side but individual
nations will launch early.One prediction comes from the pages of
Biometric Update – specifically the Oct 17, 2024 report that Amazon is
planning to start accepting digital IDs like mDLs in 2025. Hughes calls
the move “totally reasonable,” given the present state of the industry,
particularly advances in remote verification of mDLs.Reusable IDs will
become the norm for identity verification vendors. “I think that by the
end of 2025 it’s going to be rare to find document-based identity
verification companies that don’t offer a reusable ID product,” Hughes
says.Finally, he believes private sector reusable IDs will be
“aggressive in building their networks,” pointing to Clear’s significant
recent increase from 17 million identities to 25 million identities.
DIF Lab launches to propel decentralized digital ID projects-Dec 13, 2024, 11:39 am EST | Chris Burt
The
Decentralized Identity Foundation (DIF) is launching a new initiative
to help build, test and scale decentralized digital ID solutions.DIF
Labs began operating with a beta cohort in November, and has identified
three projects to start. The idea, according to an announcement by DIF,
is to support project-based innovation to bridge the gap between the
standards development process, which is slow due to consensus and
governance requirements and the incubators and accelerators that can
help get projects off the ground, but come with a cost in equity.The
first three projects DIF Labs is taking on are a Bitcoin ordinals
verifiable credentials framework, linked claims for disaster recovery
validation and a protocol for anonymous personhood verification called
“VerAnon.”The beta cohort is set to run until a show-and-tell event on
February 18, 2025.DIF has named 10 mentors to help steer the cohort and
projects, along with Andor Kesselman of Andor Labs, Ankur Banarjee of
Creds.xyz and cheqd and Daniel Thompson-Yvetot or Tauri Apps and
CrabNebula as DIF Labs chairs. The organization also invites
decentralized identity developers to participate in the Labs
initiative.DIF has been busy of late, between taking over TBD’s
developer tools, announcing the winners of its 2024 Hackathon and the
launch of the DID Traits and Trust DID Web initiatives in September.
Datasonic transforming into NexG with end-to-end digital ID plan, fundraise-Dec 13, 2024, 11:33 am EST | Chris Burt
Datasonic’s
acquisition of Innov8tif Holdings is just one part of a transformation
plan that also includes a major capital exercise and a rebrand.The
combined entity should be known as NexG Bhd, Datasonic has proposed,
according to Business Today. The 40 million Malaysian ringgits
(approximately US $9.1 million) deal to give Datasonic a 51 percent
stake in Innov8tif was announced last month.The acquisition and
transformation plan will be funded, at least in part, through a RM554.95
million ($124.7 million) capital exercise. Datasonic plans to issue up
to 1.55 billion warrants, worth two shares each. More strategic
investments are expected to follow.Datasonic Executive Deputy Chairman
and CEO Datuk Hanifah Noordin says the acquisition of Innov8tif will
give the company immediate access to new markets in banking,
telecommunications and credit reporting.“It also positions the group to
secure new projects related to integrated identity verification,
biometric security and digital onboarding services for enterprises and
governments,” Hanifah says.Independent Non-Executive Director Datuk
Puvanesan Subenthiran has been redesignated as executive
director.Company shareholders rejected a proposal to relax the
conditions for adopting written resolutions from directors, however, at
an extraordinary general meeting, The Edge Malaysia reports. The
proposal would have required only a majority of entitled directors to
vote for resolutions, rather than a majority of all directors. A
regulatory filing noted that 70 shareholders representing 57.74 percent
of voting shares voted against the proposal, which was supported by 25
shareholders making up the remaining 42.26 percent.Employee stock
options (ESOs) were approved for Hanifah and executive director Erna
Ismail, but rejected for non-executive director Tunku Datuk Nooruddin
Tunku Shahabuddin, who was appointed to the role in August.That was one
in a series of changes to Datasonic’s board, ahead of a new plan to
provide end-to-end security solutions for physical and digital
identity.Meanwhile, the company has confirmed that talks with Malaysia’s
Ministry of Home Affairs for a contract related to the issuance of the
country’s biometric passports are ongoing.Datasonic held contracts
ending in 2021 to supply 12.5 million computer chips for passports,
13.42 million booklets, and 9.96 million polycarbonate biodata sheets,
worth a combined RM812.83 million ($182.6 million), according to The
Edge.More recently, the company’s biometric gates have been selected for
installation at Kuala Lumpur International Airport.
ROC brings on DoD, FBI biometrics veteran to strengthen US federal market position-Dec 13, 2024, 10:49 am EST | Chris Burt
ROC
is positioning itself to make inroads in the U.S. government biometrics
market with the appointment of Sam Cava as an advisor. In his new role,
Cava will be tasked with expanding the delivery of ROC biometrics at
the federal, state and local government levels, but with a focus on
national security.The company’s new principal strategist is the
architect of the U.S. Department of Defenses (DoDs) automated biometric
identification system (ABIS) and the FBI’s National Security biometrics
systems, according to the company announcement.ROC CEO B. Scott Swan led
the development of the FBI’s Next Generation Identification (NGI)
capability, so the appointment of Cava adds to an extensive base of
experience working with U.S. government biometrics.Cava brings more than
30 years of experience in developing enterprise biometrics for the FBI,
DoD and intelligence community. That includes a stint as director of
the DoD Biometrics Fusion Center, where he led the ABIS project. Cava
was also responsible for the rapid prototyping and deployment of the DoD
BISA (Biometric Identification System for Access) to protect U.S.
military facilities and personnel stationed in Iraq and Afghanistan. He
has worked on mission-critical biometrics tools for special agents,
soldiers and intelligence operatives and negotiating exchanges of
biometric data from terrorist suspects with allies.In his most recent
role as FBI Multimedia Exploitation Unit chief, Cava provided direct
support for numerous high-profile investigations. His work has involved
multimodal biometrics, facial recognition, iris and fingerprint
biometrics.Cava is also a former U.S. Air Force officer, and like Swann,
a native of West Virginia.Swann calls his experience “unparalleled.”“He
has an exceptional ability to assemble and lead some of the most
talented people who then turn around and deliver innovations that
actually work in tactical environments,” Swann says. “I’m excited that
Sam will be a key player as we begin rolling out ROC ABIS with
disruptive capabilities such as the world’s fastest latent fingerprint
matcher. ROC ABIS delivers innovation that our law enforcement partners
have been demanding. Watch this space.”The company also recently
appointed a special advisor for India and the Southeast Asia region.ROC
recently emerged as the American developer with the best performance by
mean absolute error in NIST’s evaluation of Age Estimation and
Verification based on face biometrics.
Puerto Rico latest
government in U.S. to launch its mDL for Apple Wallet-Digital license
around since 2020 joins list of TSA-eligible digital IDs at SJU-Dec 13,
2024, 10:27 am EST | Joel R. McConvey
Contrary to certain
recent public opinions about Puerto Rico, the island is among U.S.
leaders in adopting mobile driver’s licenses (mDLs). PR’s Department of
Transportation and Public Works first rolled out a “virtual license” to
its app in 2020. Now, in collaboration with the Transportation Security
Administration (TSA), it has enabled airline passengers to use
state-issued mDLs or mobile ID cards stored in Apple Wallet to complete
identity verification during airport security screening.A release says
that means passengers at Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport (SJU)
can now add an mDL to Apple Wallet and use an iPhone or Apple Watch to
verify their identity by holding the device up to a credential
authentication technology (CAT-2) reader.Minimal necessary data will be
shared with the reader, and only after authorization from the user. The
device need never leave a traveler’s hand. To maximize efficiency, TSA
recommends adding an mDL to Apple Wallet before arriving at the TSA
checkpoint.Although the release does not specify who provides the Puerto
Rico mDL, PR-based firm Innovato developed the government’s CESCO app
and has made statements suggesting it is also behind the digital
credential.Announcement of Apple support comes with the usual proviso
informing passengers that they must still carry and have ready a
physical driver’s license or identification card. However, TSA appears
increasingly keen on mDLs: SJU is now one of 27 airports accepting
digital identity credentials at TSA checkpoints. Apple saw five states
or territories join its wallet fold in 2024. New Mexico just rolled out
their mDL for Apple and Google Wallet. And more are in progress, with
predictions saying more than half of U.S. states will have mDLs by the
end of 2025.The digital wheels keep on turning in mDLs, and at this rate
it seems highly likely that the next five years will see a full
transition to mobile driver’s licenses, as digital natives become the
majority.
Singapore expands passport-free biometric clearance-Malaysian border gates crash-Dec 13, 2024, 10:20 am EST | Lu-Hai Liang
At
Singapore’s bus halls of Woodlands and Tuas checkpoints, travellers
will soon be able to enjoy passport-less clearance using face or iris
biometrics, in addition to Marina Bay Cruise Centre Singapore
(MBCCS).Passport-less clearance will be replaced by QR code clearance at
land checkpoints, and token-less clearance at air and sea checkpoints.
The implementation of passport-less clearance at these locations will
start from December 16.Trials of the selected automated lanes and
Special Assistance Lanes (SALs) commenced from November 21, at the
arrival and departure bus halls of Tuas and Woodlands checkpoints. More
than 48,000 travellers had participated in the trials as of December 1.
Feedback from the trials allowed Singapore’s Immigration &
Checkpoints Authority (ICA) to finetune and improve the QR code
clearance experience for bus travellers, according to the authority.Tuas
checkpoint will be the first to get QR code clearance from December 16,
while ICA is aiming for completion of implementation at both land
checkpoints by mid-January 2025. ICA is urging all travellers at land
checkpoints to use the QR code for faster and more convenient
immigration clearance. More information can be found on the ICA website
here.Singapore Changi Airport went fully passport-free with biometric
clearance in October.Meanwhile, on the Malaysian and Singapore border a
mystery border control outage caused severe delays. The problem started
around midday on Sunday, at a very busy checkpoint at Johor Bahru’s
Sultan Iskander Building. The glitch shut down biometric border control
gates and caused travellers trying to cross between Johor Bahru and
Singapore to wait up to four hours in line. Immigration officers were
forced to clear travellers manually.Malaysia’s biometric e-gates are
supplied by Datasonic.Extra lanes were opened to relieve the congestion,
and ten hours after the delays began operations were declared back to
normal. The border crossing is one of the busiest in the world, with
around 350,000 people using the route each day, along with more than
100,000 vehicles. The outage mostly affected people travelling by bus,
which is some 45 percent of people coming into Singapore, according
ICA’s December 2023 statistics. The cause of the outage remains unknown.
The border crossing system was recently revamped with the QR code-based
system.The Johor Bahru checkpoint reportedly settled on using the
MyBorderPass app in the bus lane entry the week before the outage,
according to The Star, following a period trialling other apps.
MyBorderPass currently supports QR codes but will add face biometrics at
an unspecified later date.Malaysia, which shares land and maritime
borders with Brunei, Indonesia and Thailand and maritime boundaries with
the Philippines, Singapore and Vietnam has been overhauling its border
controls with an emphasis on biometrics. The QR codes and facial
recognition systems are part of a larger border tech update.
Keyless, Digidentity, Ping Identity announce new integration partnerships-Dec 13, 2024, 9:24 am EST | Masha Borak
While
Keyless and Microblink join Microsoft and Google’s marketplaces,
Digidentity finds its way to a UK government supplier list.Keyless joins
Microsoft Azure Marketplace-Passwordless authentication startup Keyless
is now available on the Microsoft Azure Marketplace, allowing Azure
cloud users to access its multi-factor facial biometrics
authentication.The UK-based company will integrate its product with
Microsoft’s ecosystem including platforms such as Microsoft Azure Active
Directory B2C and Microsoft Entra ID. The solution includes advanced
passive liveness and authenticates users without storing biometric data,
making compliance with data privacy regulations easier, according to
the firm.“This collaboration will also enhance the procurement
experience for our prospects while helping them reduce their Microsoft
Azure Consumption Commitment,” says Andrea Carmignani, Keyless
co-founder and CEO.Keyless has previously integrated its zero-knowledge
biometric technology with Entra ID.This year, the company was also
selected to join Microsoft for Startups Pegasus Program, which provides
access to AI tools, guidance and support to expand its market reach.The
firm has been busy with striking other partnerships, including with
European SaaS platform WithLess, specializing in software subscription
and renewal management, and credit card issuing fintech
Zorrz.Digidentity lands on UK govt supplier list-Identity verification
firm Digidentity has been included in the UK government procurement
platform for cloud-based services for the public sector.As a supplier
for the supplier on the Crown Commercial Service’s G-Cloud 14 Framework,
the Dutch firm will be able to offer its identity verification
solutions, Right-to-Work (RtW) and Right-to-Rent (RtR) checks, e-Seals
and qualified electronic signatures (QES). The G-Cloud 14 Framework
focuses on central government departments, public sector organizations
and charities.Digidentity is already working within the country’s public
sector: The UK’s General Medical Council selected the digital ID vendor
to create identity verification for doctors.Vidos integrates with Ping
Identity-Decentralized identity company Vidos is integrating Ping
Identity’s no-code platform for managing decentralized identities and
credentials, PingOne DaVinci. The product makes it easier to manage
decentralized identities and verifiable credentials, simplifies
interoperability across systems, enhances digital ID verification, and
supports wallet-based credentials.Dublin-headquartered Vidos develops
infrastructure for scalable for digital ID verification. The company is
joining a growing network of technology partners developing integrations
with DaVinci through the Ping Identity Global Technology Partner
Program, the two firms say in a release.Microblink now available on
Google Marketplace-AI vision developer Microblink is making its identity
document verification products available on the Google Cloud
Marketplace.The new partnership means that businesses will be able to
add the New York-based company’s document-checking software BlinkID and
BlinkID Verify to their existing systems on Google Cloud.BlinkID
extracts information from over 2,500 types of IDs around the world while
BlinkID Verify can confirm the authenticity of IDs with more thorough
checks and live detection. The tools are used in industries such as
finance, banking, cryptocurrency, insurance, and travel.
Russia popularizing biometric technologies in domestic universities-Dec 13, 2024, 9:19 am EST | Eugene Gerden
The
Russian government will start more active popularization of biometric
technologies among young people by signing of a serious of cooperation
agreements between the country’s biometrics operator Center for
Biometric Technologies (CBT) and some leading universities of Russia.An
example is an agreement, signed on December 5th, by the South Ural State
University, one of leading higher education institutions in Russia,
based in the Urals region and CBT. The agreement is aimed at developing
educational and scientific projects in the field of biometrics and
information technology and involves training young specialists in
biometric systems and information security.Under the terms of the
agreement, the partners plans to organize practices, internships, joint
research and competitive events that will be dedicated to biometrics and
various technologies, based on it.According to Vladislav Povolotsky,
CEO of CBT, the Center already cooperate with more than 40 universities
across the country, conducting various courses dedicated to the issues
of biometrics.In September, the CBT already launched a course of
educational lectures for students on biometrics. The project was
presented at the Technoprom forum, one of Russia’s leading events in the
field of technologies, held in Novosibirsk. It will cover more than 40
universities including MIPT, RANEPA, Polytechnic University, Tomsk
Polytechnic University, Synergy University, Novosibirsk State
University, MAI and others.Alexander Stepanov, Deputy General Director
of JSC CBT, comments:“The development of biometric technologies requires
highly qualified specialists, who are not yet being trained in Russian
universities. We see the direction in which the industry is developing
and are working ahead of the trend. Together with universities, we are
planning to start training specialists that will be in high demand in
the domestic biometrics sector already in the short-term».Biometric
technologies are already used by Russian universities. For example,
earlier this year the Russian Ministry of Digital Development, the
Ministry of Education and Science, and the Center for Biometric
Technologies (CBT) completed the development of a roadmap for
identifying students using biometrics to conduct distance exams.In fact,
an experiment on using biometrics to identify students during exams was
already conducted in Russian universities in 2022 and received positive
feedback. As a result of this experiment, the Ministry of Digital
Development proposed using biometrics in distance learning on a
permanent basis.According to a spokesman of CBT, verification using
biometrics for remote final and midterm assessment ensures clear
identification, eliminating the possibility of falsifying the results of
the exam. He expects that the service will be useful not only for
out-of-town students, but also for students with disabilities. At the
same time, the use of the service is completely voluntary.As a
representative of Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology (MIPT), one
of Russia’s leading higher education institutions in the field of
physics, told in an interview with the Russian Vedomosti business paper,
identification by biometric data is becoming more and more widespread
in Russian universities, as it is important when each examiner know and
recognized their student.In the meantime, a similar position is shared
by the head of the research center for systems of assessment and
management of the Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy Boris
Ilyukhin, according to which, many universities have already developed
their own proctoring systems, also based on biometrics, which include
not only identifying students, but also monitoring their computer
screens, blocking the use of the Internet and much more.
Drone
sightings spread beyond New Jersey as officials express outrage over
federal response-Authorities in New York, Maryland and Connecticut have
joined the chorus calling for a more urgency from the federal government
to the mysterious unidentified flying objects.Dec. 13, 2024, 1:11 PM
EST / Updated Dec. 13, 2024, 3:36 PM EST-By Kyla Guilfoil, Sophia Pargas
and Jonathan Dienst
The hundreds of mysterious New Jersey drone
sightings are sparking mounting demands for a more forceful federal
response, calls that come as even more sightings are being reported in
New York, Pennsylvania and Maryland. “What is happening is outrageous.
Thousands of drones and unmanned aerial systems flying above us, and our
government is not telling us who’s operating them and for what
purpose,” Rep. Nicole Malliotakis, R-N.Y., said a press conference in
Staten Island on Friday. “I don’t believe that the United States of
America, with its military capabilities, does not know what these
objects are. And what I’m asking, and what we’re all asking, is for you
to be straight with us and just tell us what is going on,” Malliotakis
said. Despite mounting concerns from a growing bipartisan chorus of
elected officials, the White House said yesterday that the Department of
Homeland Security, the FBI and state and local law enforcement agencies
“have not been able to corroborate any of the reported visual
sightings.” In a statement to NBC News, the U.S. Secret Service
confirmed it “does not currently have any unmanned aerial systems
operating in or around New Jersey or New York.”New York Gov. Kathy
Hochul said in a post on X Friday that while she knows New Yorkers have
spotted drones this week, “at this time, there’s no evidence that these
drones pose a public safety or national security threat.”The statements
come as dozens of on-camera sightings have been captured in New Jersey
and as concerns for safety and privacy continue to grow. Overnight, 79
sightings were reported across New Jersey alone, a senior official
briefed on the drone sightings told NBC News.The sightings — which occur
up to 180 times per night, according to several New Jersey officials —
have remained consistent for nearly a month. 'Response is entirely
unacceptable'Former Republican Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan said in a post
on X Friday that he personally witnessed “dozens of large drones” above
his home, adding that “neither the White House, the military, the FBI,
or Homeland Security have any idea what they are, where they came from,
or who has launched or is controlling them–and that they pose no
threat.” “That response is entirely unacceptable,” Hogan wrote. “I join
with the growing bipartisan chorus of leaders demanding that the federal
government immediately address this issue. The American people deserve
answers and action now.”In a statement to NBC News, “The U.S. Secret
Service does not currently have any unmanned aerial systems operating in
or around New Jersey or New York.”Democratic New Jersey Gov. Phil
Murphy wrote letters to President Joe Biden, Sens. Chuck Schumer and
Mitch McConnell, Rep. Mike Johnson and Rep. Hakeem Jeffries urging
Congress to take action. Murphy said he wants to “encourage Congress to
pass legislation empowering state and local law enforcement entities to
use advanced detection and mitigation technologies to deal with UAS.”
Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., wrote his own letter to DHS, FBI, FAA
and the Department of Defense on Friday, requesting a briefing on drone
activity no later than Dec. 18. “I am writing to express my deep
concerns regarding the increased reporting of drone activity in the
airspace near New England. As you are aware, these states are home to
some of the busiest and most complex airspaces in the country,”
Blumenthal wrote. Calls for flight restrictions, no-fly zones-Staten
Island Borough President Vito Fosella and Malliotakis said that they
reached out to the FAA last week after the first reported sighting on
Staten Island. Malliotakis said that when she urged the FAA to impose
flight restrictions, she “got a cookie cutter response,” adding that she
was “not happy about it.” “The people of this city and state and region
deserve answers of what the heck is going on,” Fossella said
Friday.Malliotakis added that she’s concerned that drones were spotted
overhead at a Coast Guard base on Staten Island, adding to reports of
drone activity over military bases in New Jersey. An ongoing
investigation leads officials to believe previously reported New Jersey
sightings over the Picatinny Arsenal in Morris County and Trump National
Golf Club in Bedminster were indeed drones, a senior official briefed
on the drone sightings told NBC News.A spokesperson from the Naval
Weapons Station Earle, in Colts Neck, New Jersey, said in a statement
Friday that they were “aware of the recent reports of drone sightings
across New Jersey” and coordinating with federal and state agencies.
"While no direct threats to the installation have been identified, we
can confirm several instances of unidentified drones entering the
airspace above Naval Weapons Station Earle,” the statement said.
Montvale, New Jersey Mayor Michael Ghassali said Friday that the
response to the sightings is “now becoming a complete joke,” in a post
on his Facebook account. Ghassali said that he is issuing an emergency
declaration for Montvale for a no fly zone for drones due to a lack of
federal response in the town. “The feds can’t control the air space, and
yesterday my phone didn’t stop with drone sightings messages,” he said.
'Hobbyists' or 'weapons of war'?Sen. Andy Kim, D-NJ, wrote a letter
Thursday alongside Sens. Gillibrand, Schumer and Booker to DHS, FBI and
FAA urging the agencies to hold a briefing on how they are responding to
the drones. He posted a thread on X Friday describing drones he
witnessed in New Jersey.
Firefighters up containment of
California wildfire that has burned over 4,000 acres-The fire erupted
Monday night amid strong Santa Ana winds.ByBill Hutchinson-December 12,
2024, 4:51 PM
Franklin fire spreads throughout MalibuThe Santa
Ana winds have fueled the flames, with the blaze burning over 3,000
acres.Firefighters battling a raging wildfire in Malibu, California,
significantly increased containment on the blaze Thursday after it
spread to over 4,000 acres, destroying homes and leaving more than
20,000 people under evacuation, including 98-year-old Dick Van Dyke and
other celebrities in the oceanfront community.The Franklin Fire, which
erupted Monday night near the campus of Pepperdine University, was 20%
contained as of Thursday afternoon, up from 7% Wednesday night. More
than 1,900 firefighters are battling the blaze in the rugged and hilly
terrain of Malibu Canyon, according to the California Department of
Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire).Burning through thick dry
vegetation, the fire has been fueled by Santa Ana winds that have topped
90 mph, officials said.The Franklin Fire burns next to powerlines at he
Pacific Coast Highway in the morning on December 11, 2024 near Malibu,
California."Firefighters are taking advantage of the cooler weather and
higher humidities to gain containment and strengthen fire lines around
the fire," Cal Fire said in an update Thursday.Red Flag warnings issued
by the National Weather Service signaling the high risk of fire danger
had all expired.In a message posted on his Facebook page, Van Dyke, who
is set to turn 99 on Friday, said he and his wife, Arlene, were forced
to evacuate as flames threatened their home in the secluded community of
Serra Retreat in the hills of lower Malibu Canyon. He said all of his
pets, except for his beloved cat Bobo, managed to escape.On Thursday,
Van Dyke posted an update on Facebook saying his cat was found alive
when he and his wife were allowed to return home."We found Bobo as soon
as we arrived back home this morning," Van Dyke wrote. "There was so
much interest in his disappearance that Animal Control was called in to
assist. But, thankfully he was easy to find and not harmed."Dick Van
Dyke and Arlene Silver poses at the 51st annual Daytime Emmys Awards at
The Westin Bonaventure Hotel & Suites, Los Angeles on June 07, 2024
in Los Angeles, California.Other celebrities residing in the area were
forced to flee the flames or stay on lockdown. Recent Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame inductee Cher also evacuated, according to her publicist."Star
Wars" actor Mark Hamill said in an Instagram post that he has also been
affected by the fire."We're in lockdown because of the Malibu fires,"
the 73-year-old Hamill said in the post. "Please stay safe everyone! I'm
not allowed to leave the house, which fits in perfectly with my
elderly-recluse lifestyle."The Franklin Fire erupted just before 11 p.m.
Pacific time on Monday and quickly grew amid the blustery Santa Anna
winds, which blow southwest toward the Pacific Ocean.At least seven
homes have been destroyed by the fire and another eight have been
damaged, according to Cal Fire.Power to about 40,000 customers was shut
off by Monday night, including 11,000 in Los Angeles County, as Southern
California Edison worked to mitigate the impacts of the Santa Ana
winds, whose strong gusts can damage electrical equipment and spark more
wildfires.There have been no reports of deaths or injuries. The cause
of the fire remains under investigation.Pepperdine University canceled
classes on Tuesday and Wednesday. When the fire erupted, officials put
the campus on lockdown for about six hours before the order was lifted.
As the fire grew on Tuesday, students were again ordered to seek shelter
in the campus center and library, where students said they watched
flames creep onto campus."The Franklin Fire continues to burn in the
Santa Monica Mountains but is no longer near or threatening the Malibu
campus. The weather has improved considerably from a fire perspective.
Winds are relatively calm, and the red flag warning has ended," the
university said on its website on Thursday.
DAMASCUS DESTROYED
ISAIAH 17:1,3,13-14
17 The burden of Damascus. Behold, Damascus is taken away from being a city, and it shall be a ruinous heap.
3
The fortress also shall cease from Ephraim, and the kingdom from
Damascus, and the remnant of Syria: they shall be as the glory of the
children of Israel, saith the Lord of hosts.
13 The nations shall
rush like the rushing of many waters: but God shall rebuke them, and
they shall flee far off, and shall be chased as the chaff of the
mountains before the wind, and like a rolling thing before the
whirlwind.
14 And behold at eveningtide trouble; and before the
morning he is not. This is the portion of them that spoil us, and the
lot of them that rob us.
JEREMIAH 49:23-27
23 Concerning
Damascus. Hamath is confounded, and Arpad: for they have heard evil
tidings: they are fainthearted; there is sorrow on the sea; it cannot be
quiet.
24 Damascus is waxed feeble, and turneth herself to flee, and
fear hath seized on her: anguish and sorrows have taken her, as a woman
in travail.
25 How is the city of praise not left, the city of my joy!
26
Therefore her young men shall fall in her streets, and all the men of
war shall be cut off in that day, saith the Lord of hosts.
27 And I will kindle a fire in the wall of Damascus, and it shall consume the palaces of Benhadad.
Macron
names centrist ally Bayrou as France’s fourth prime minister of
2024-Amid months of political crisis, Bayrou becomes 6th prime minister
under French president’s mandate; Macron had apparently been leaning
toward naming defense minister to role
By Francesco FONTEMAGGI, Stuart Williams and Anna SMOLCHENKO Today, 9:54 pm
PARIS,
France (AFP) — French President Emmanuel Macron on Friday named
centrist François Bayrou as prime minister, handing him the daunting
task of hauling France out of months of political crisis.The 73-year-old
head of the MoDem group, which is allied with Macron’s party, was
appointed nine days after parliament ousted Michel Barnier’s government
in a historic no-confidence vote following a standoff over an austerity
budget.“The president of the Republic has appointed Mr. François Bayrou
as prime minister and tasked him with forming a government,” the
presidency said.The announcement capped hours of drama that saw Bayrou
summoned to a morning meeting at the Élysée palace — where he was
reportedly told Macron would choose another figure — only for the
presidency to finally announce he had the post.Bayrou is the sixth prime
minister of Macron’s mandate, with his predecessor Barnier, France’s
shortest-serving premier, having lasted only three months.He is also
Macron’s fourth prime minister of 2024.Bayrou faces an immediate
challenge to form a cabinet that can survive a no-confidence vote in a
divided parliament and to thrash out a 2025 budget in a bid to limit
economic turmoil.‘Himalayas loom ahead’At the traditional handover
ceremony with Barnier, Bayrou declared: “No one knows better than me the
difficulty of the situation,” with France facing a ballooning budget
deficit coupled with political instability.“I am fully aware of the
Himalayas that loom ahead of us,” he said of the budget deficit which is
now 6.1 percent of GDP.He also vowed to fight what he described as the
“glass wall that has risen up between citizens and the
authorities.”Handing over, Barnier told his successor: “Our country is
in an unprecedented and grave situation.”Several sources told AFP that
the morning meeting between Macron and Bayrou, far from marking the
anointment of the new prime minister, had been a stormy affair, with the
president leaning toward naming his loyal Defense Minister Sebastien
Lecornu as premier.Losing his temper, Bayrou threatened to break the
alliance with Macron, who decided it would be best to plump for Bayrou
in the name of unity, the sources said.“Sebastien Lecornu should have
been the one named,” a source close to the talks said. But Macron “did
not have the choice.”Mujtaba Rahman, the Europe director at the risk
analysis firm Eurasia Group, commented: “In the long history of the
Fifth Republic (founded in 1958), this may have been the first time that
a prime minister chose himself.”Bayrou will be tasked with holding
dialogue with all political forces except the far-right National Rally
(RN) and hard-left France Unbowed (LFI) parties “in order to find
conditions for stability and action,” a member of Macron’s team said on
Friday.“François Bayrou’s name emerged in recent days as the most
consensual choice,” said the source, asking not to be named.Macron was
first expected to name a new prime minister in an address to the nation
last week.In a sign of the stalemate, Macron did not name Barnier’s
successor then and also missed a 48-hour deadline he gave at a meeting
of party leaders on Tuesday.No confidence a ‘lever’The president has
been confronted with a complex political equation since snap
parliamentary elections in July. He has needed to secure his government
against a no-confidence vote in a bitterly divided lower house where no
party or alliance has a majority.Far-right leader Marine Le Pen, who
teamed up with the left to topple the Barnier government, said her RN
party would not automatically work to oust Bayrou but did not rule out
exploiting such a “lever.”“I’m not threatening no-confidence motions
morning, noon and night. I’m just saying that I’m not giving up on this
tool,” she said.The LFI said it would table such a motion.Socialists
quickly posed conditions for not supporting a no-confidence motion in an
open letter to Bayrou.He must agree not to ram laws through without a
parliamentary vote and not to rely on support from the far right, the
party’s board said, adding that they would not accept ministerial posts.
Trump
weighing options to stop Iran going nuclear, including preemptive
strikes – report-Incoming US administration said to be planning ‘maximum
pressure 2.0’ campaign against Tehran, may threaten military action or
even back Israeli attack — but still seeks to avoid war-By ToI Staff
Today, 10:03 am-DEC 13,24
US President-elect Donald Trump is
weighing options to prevent Iran from building a nuclear weapon,
including preventative airstrikes, The Wall Street Journal reported
Friday.The report came as Israel reportedly draws up plans for a
potential attack on Iranian nuclear facilities, amid growing concern
that the Islamic Republic, poised to build a bomb, could rush to finally
do so; Iran and its proxies are weakened right now, after more than a
year of war against Israel that began when the Hamas terror group in
Gaza attacked the Jewish state on October 7, 2023.Trump has told Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in recent calls that he wants to avoid an
Iranian breakout during his term in office, the report said — though he
seeks a means of stopping the Islamic Republic from going nuclear that
does not trigger a new war, especially one in which US troops would
become involved, according to the report, which cited transition
officials.The incoming administration is currently working on a “maximum
pressure 2.0” plan, the report said, recreating the policy of
aggressive sanctions on Iran that Trump pursued during his first term,
having pulled out of the Obama-era agreement with the country meant to
limit its nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief.Sources
familiar with the plan told the Journal that there were several
different ways military pressure could be used to deter Tehran.Firstly,
they said, Washington could send more forces, ships, and warplanes to
the region while also bolstering Israel’s offensive capabilities through
the sale of bunker-busting bombs. If that fails, however, the US could
take a more combative stance and threaten to use direct military force,
the sources were quoted as saying.In an interview with Time Magazine
published Thursday, Trump said of a potential war with Iran, “Anything
can happen. It’s a very volatile situation.”Trump considered
preventative strikes on Iran’s nuclear sites during the latter part of
his first term but decided against it. This time, according to the WSJ
report, his administration may be open to supporting an Israeli strike
against the Islamic Republic’s nuclear facilities.Among the reasons
Trump may be more open to military action this time cited in the report
were Iran’s alleged efforts to kill the president-elect.Israeli military
officials said Thursday that they believe there is now an opportunity
to strike Iran’s nuclear sites, and are continuing preparations for a
potential attack, following the collapse last weekend of the Bashar
al-Assad regime in Syria, a close ally of Iran.The Israel Defense Forces
believes that Iran — isolated after the fall of the Assad regime and
the weakening of its main proxy group Hezbollah in Lebanon — may push
ahead further with its nuclear program and develop a bomb as it
scrambles to replace its deterrence.Iran has denied seeking nuclear
weapons and says both its space program and nuclear activities are for
purely civilian purposes. However, US intelligence agencies and the IAEA
say Iran had an organized military nuclear program up until 2003 and
continued to develop its nuclear program beyond civilian necessity.
Israel contends that the Islamic Republic never truly abandoned its
nuclear weapons program.Iran is committed to Israel’s destruction. Over
the past year, it has twice fired massive barrages of missiles at
Israel, which has vowed to prevent Tehran from obtaining nuclear
weapons. Israel has struck key Iranian military facilities in
retaliation for both attacks, which came in the context of the
multifront war opened by Iranian terror proxies on the Jewish state.The
Israeli strikes did not include major attacks on the country’s nuclear
sites — though they did target one research facility reportedly
connected to efforts to build a nuclear weapon — but crippled Iranian
air defenses, which, together with newly-acquired air superiority over
Syria, could pave the way for a future attack.On Thursday, Netanyahu
published a video directed at citizens of Iran, telling them the regime
in Tehran is “terrified of you, the people of Iran. And one day, I know
that, one day this will change. One day Iran will be free.” It was his
third such video in recent months.
Some Syrian Druze ask Israel,
the ‘lesser evil,' to annex-Katz says IDF troops will stay atop Syrian
side of Mount Hermon during winter months-As Syrians celebrate first
Friday since Assad’s downfall, US and Turkey agree to keep ensuring
Islamic State won’t ‘rear its head again,’ amid international gestures
to rebel leader-By Emanuel Fabian,ToI Staff and Agencies Today, 2:46
pm-DEC 13,24
Defense Minister Israel Katz said Friday that he had
ordered the military to prepare to stay atop the Syrian side of Mount
Hermon during the coming winter months as Israel aims to prevent the
border region from falling into the wrong hands following the ouster of
Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad on Sunday.Katz’s announcement came as
top diplomats of Turkey and the United States, which back warring rebel
factions in Syria, met to discuss their joint effort to prevent Islamic
State from resurging after Assad’s downfall, amid international efforts
to gauge Syria’s new leadership.Meanwhile, Damascus celebrated its first
Friday prayers since Assad’s ouster, with rebel leader Abu Mohammed
al-Golani calling on Syrians “to go to the streets to express their joy”
at the “victory of the blessed revolution.” Thousands attended prayers
at Damascus’s landmark Umayyad mosque.Al-Golani, whose Islamist Hayat
Tahrir a-Sham originated in Al-Qaeda and has since broken with it, has
remained largely mum as Israel struck what remained of Assad’s military
equipment and entered the Syrian buffer zone delineated in a 1974
agreement.The area includes Syrian-controlled sections of the Golan
Heights and Mount Hermon — Syria’s highest peak, which has long boasted a
UN observation post at the summit.The Foreign Ministry on Thursday
pushed back on international criticism of the takeover, saying the move
was a temporary measure to prevent the border region from falling into
extremists’ hands.In a statement Friday, Katz said that “due to what is
happening in Syria, there is a huge security importance to our holding
of the Hermon peak and everything must be done to ensure the IDF’s
preparations in the area, to allow the troops to stay there in the
difficult weather conditions.”Katz ordered the move during an assessment
he held on Thursday with IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi and
other top officers.Israel captured most of the Golan Heights from Syria
during the Six Day War in 1967. It held onto the territory during the
1973 Yom Kippur War and in 1981 annexed the area in a move since
recognized by the United States.An unverified video circulating on
social media purported to show a man from the Druze village of Hader —
in the Syrian buffer zone — asking to be annexed to the Israeli side of
the Golan Heights.In front of a large crowd, the man said Israel was the
“lesser evil” facing the community — with the greater evil apparently
being the Islamist rebels led by al-Golani.The Druze of Mt. Hermon have
officially requested to be annexed to Israel.
pic.twitter.com/X6qTnZXhzP— Mira ⛥ (@MiraMedusa) December 13,
2024-Blinken and Fidan discuss Islamic State, rival allies in Syria-At a
meeting in Ankara Friday, meanwhile, US Secretary of State Antony
Blinken discussed with his Turkish counterpart Hakan Fidan the two
countries’ “imperative” to continue yearslong work “to ensure the
elimination of the territorial caliphate of ISIS [and] to ensure that
threat doesn’t rear its head again,” according to a statement from
Washington.ISIS, or Islamic State, controlled up to a third of Syria,
mainly in the northeast, in a reign of terror that was defeated in 2019
by a coalition including the US and Turkey.Fidan said he discussed with
Blinken Turkey’s aim “to prevent terrorism from gaining ground [in
Syria] and to prevent Islamic State and the PKK from dominating there,”
referring to the Kurdistan Workers Party, which is considered a terror
group by both Ankara and Washington.NATO allies Washington and Ankara
supported Syrian rebels during the 13-year civil war, but their
interests clashed when it came to one of the rebel factions — the
Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces.The SDF is the main ally in the
international coalition against the Islamic State. It is spearheaded by
the People’s Protection Units (YPG), which Ankara sees as an extension
of PKK, whose activists have fought for independence against Turkey for
the past 40 years.Earlier this week, Turkish-backed forces seized the
northern city of Manbij from the SDF, which then headed east of the
Euphrates River.A Syrian opposition source told Reuters that the US and
Turkey had reached an agreement on the withdrawal. Neither Blinken nor
Fidan made any reference to any agreement between Turkey-backed Syrian
forces and the SDF.Blinken, whose term will end in January, is in Turkey
on his 12th trip to the Middle East since Hamas attacked Israel on
October 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 people and taking 251 hostages,
sparking the war in Gaza. As part of his meeting with Fidan on Friday,
Blinken also discussed efforts to bring home the remaining 100
hostages.On Thursday, Blinken also met with Turkish President Tayyip
Erdogan and said that there was broad agreement on what Turkey and the
US would like to see in Syria after Assad’s fall.The meeting with
Erdogan came amid news that Ankara would reopen its embassy in Damascus,
as regional powers began to adapt to the new reality there.According to
Turkey’s state-run Anadolu news agency, Burhan Koroglu, the Turkish
ambassador in Mauritania, was named as temporary charge d’affaires to
lead the reopening.The embassy in Damascus had suspended operations in
2012 due to the escalating security problems during the Syrian civil war
and embassy staff and their families were recalled to Turkey.On
Thursday, Jordan’s foreign ministry said it would host a summit “to
discuss developments in Syria,” with the foreign ministers of Jordan,
Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Lebanon, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain,
Qatar and Turkey, as well as their US and EU counterparts and the UN
envoy for Syria.Bahrain’s King Hamad said in a letter to the rebel
leader al-Golani — whom he addressed by his real name, Ahmed al-Sharaa —
that Bahrain was ready to “continue consultations and coordination with
Syria,” Bahrain’s official BNA news agency reported Friday.
In
Turkey, Blinken reports ‘encouraging signs’ Gaza hostage-truce deal is
possible-Secretary of state says DC appreciates Ankara’s ‘voice with
Hamas’ after terror group reportedly agrees to temporary IDF presence in
Gaza, provided list of hostages to be released-By Agencies and ToI
Staff Today, 2:15 pm-DEC 13,24
US Secretary of State Antony
Blinken said Friday that he had discussed the importance of achieving a
hostage-ceasefire deal between Israel and the Hamas terror group in
meetings with Turkey’s president and foreign minister, and expressed
some optimism about the prospects.“We’ve seen in the last couple of
weeks more encouraging signs that [a deal] is possible,” Blinken said in
Ankara, on his twelfth trip to the Middle East since war broke out last
October, when Hamas attacked Israel.The American diplomat’s comments
came the morning after a report that Hamas had eased some of its demands
and provided Israel with a list of hostages to be released in the first
phase of an agreement. They also came as US National Security Advisor
Jake Sullivan was in the midst of yet another Mideast trip to push for a
deal.Sullivan, who is also set to travel to key mediator countries
Egypt and Qatar during this trip, yesterday denied assertions that Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was stalling to try to reach a deal after
US President-elect Donald Trump enters office on January 20. Sullivan
said his goal was to be able to close a deal by the end of December.The
US president-elect has said repeatedly that he wants the war in Gaza to
end by the time he returns to the White House, and threatened that there
will be “hell to pay” for anyone in the region who is still holding
hostages when he is inaugurated.Blinken said on Friday that he had
spoken with both Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Turkish
Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan about “the imperative of Hamas saying yes
to the agreement that’s possible to finally help bring this to an
end.”“We appreciate very much the role that Turkey can play in using its
voice with Hamas, to try to bring this to a conclusion,” Blinken
said.Turkey is an outspoken supporter of Hamas and has frequently
praised the Iran-backed terror group’s October 7, 2023 attack which
started the ongoing war, when thousands of terrorists invaded southern
Israel from the Gaza Strip, killing some 1,200 people and taking 251
hostages.The country hosts several Hamas officials, and was also
expected to absorb more of them when Qatar expelled the terror group’s
leadership last month, reportedly under pressure from the US.The Wall
Street Journal reported Thursday that Hamas had given in to an Israeli
demand that the IDF remain in Gaza temporarily, after demanding for long
months that it would not agree to a deal unless it included a permanent
end to the war and a full withdrawal of Israeli troops from the
enclave. Hamas has also provided mediators with a list of hostages that
it would release in the first phase of a new deal, the Journal
reported.The report added that Israeli negotiators were pushing for more
hostages to be released in the initial phase of the ceasefire. At the
same time, it said they had agreed to a gradual withdrawal from the
Philadelphi Corridor on the Gaza-Egypt border. Hamas has also reportedly
agreed that it would not have any involvement in running the
Palestinian side of the Rafah Crossing between Egypt and Gaza.A source
familiar told The Times of Israel that Mossad chief David Barnea met
with Qatari Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani in Doha on
Wednesday to discuss a potential hostage release and Gaza ceasefire
deal, confirming an Axios report.According to the WSJ, the proposal
being negotiated would see up to 30 hostages released in a 60-day
ceasefire in exchange for which Israel would release Palestinian
security prisoners from its prisons and up the amount of humanitarian
aid entering the Gaza Strip.Numerous attempts to reach a new hostage
deal have repeatedly failed over the last year or so as Israel and Hamas
have accused each other of sabotaging efforts and have refused to budge
on key issues.However, negotiators have hoped to use the momentum of a
ceasefire deal between Israel and the Hezbollah terror group last month,
as well as the recent fall of the Iran-backed regime in Syria last
weekend, and Trump’s election win in the US, to reach an agreement.It is
believed that 96 of the 251 hostages abducted by Hamas on October 7,
2023, remain in Gaza, including the bodies of at least 34 confirmed dead
by the IDF.Hamas released 105 civilians during a weeklong truce in late
November, and four hostages were released before that. Eight hostages
have been rescued by troops alive, and the bodies of 38 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 bodies
of two IDF soldiers who were killed in 2014.
Lebanon says 1
killed in Israeli strike on border town that IDF left amid
ceasefire-Attack on Al Khiam also injured one, says Lebanese health
ministry; troops find Hezbollah arms in scan of south Lebanon; Amnesty: 4
Israeli strikes in Lebanon could be war crimes-By Emanuel Fabian-and
ToI Staff Today, 1:16 pm-DEC 13,24
Lebanon accused Israel on
Thursday of killing one person in an airstrike on the border village of
Al Khiam, from which the Israel Defense Forces recently withdrew as part
of the ceasefire agreement with Hezbollah.The accusation came as the
Israeli military said troops had located Hezbollah arms in southern
Lebanon.In a statement, Lebanon’s health ministry said that “the Israeli
enemy strike on the town of Al Khiam killed one person and injured
another.”Israel had said earlier that it was targeting Hezbollah
operatives violating the late November ceasefire agreement, which gives
the IDF 60 days to withdraw from Lebanon.On Wednesday, the IDF confirmed
it had withdrawn from Al Khaim — the first border town Israel ceded
since the ceasefire — and the Lebanese army said it had deployed there
in coordination with the international peacekeeping force
UNIFIL.Meanwhile, the IDF said Friday that troops operating in southern
Lebanon amid the ceasefire were still finding Hezbollah weaponry, with
soldiers of the 769th “Hiram” Regional Brigade capturing anti-tank
missiles, assault rifles, RPGs, mortars, and other weapons and equipment
during a scan of the area.The soldiers also located an anti-tank
missile launch site previously used by Hezbollah to attack Israeli
border towns, the military added.Amnesty accuses IDF of violating laws
of war in Lebanon-Amnesty International, which has accused Israel of
committing genocide in Gaza, said Thursday that four Israeli airstrikes
in Lebanon “must be investigated as war crimes.”The strikes, carried out
between September and October, were said to have killed at least 49
civilians. Amnesty said its report on the strikes was part of an ongoing
investigation into violations of the laws of war in Lebanon.The rights
group said it interviewed survivors and witnesses, examined evidence,
and found no military targets near the sites of the four strikes. The
IDF gave no warnings and did not respond to Amnesty’s inquiries, the
group claimed.According to Amnesty, the first strike, on September 29,
hit the village of al-Ain in northeast Lebanon’s Bekaa valley, killing
nine members of the same family; the second strike, on October 14, hit
the northern village of Aitou, killing 23 displaced people, including a
5-month-old baby; the third strike, on October 16, hit the municipal
headquarters of south Lebanon’s Nabatieh, a Hezbollah stronghold,
killing 11 people, including the mayor; the fourth strike, on October
21, hit eastern Lebanon’s Baalbek city, killing six members of the same
family.“These four attacks are emblematic of Israel’s shocking disregard
for civilian lives in Lebanon and their willingness to flout
international law,” said Amnesty International’s Erika Guevara Rosas,
Senior Director for Research, Advocacy, Policy and Campaigns.A fragment
from the attack site in Aitou — where Israel was reportedly targeting a
senior Hezbollah official — was identified by an Amnesty weapons expert
as likely part of an Mk-80 series aerial bomb, weighing at least 500
pounds. These munitions are primarily supplied to Israel by the United
States, Amnesty said.The IDF has said its strikes are intelligence-based
and target Hezbollah operatives, and that precautions are taken to keep
civilians safe, including evacuation orders and prior warning. The
military also stresses that the Iran-backed terror group embeds itself
in civilian infrastructure, and has found ammunition belonging to the
terror group in civilian homes in south Lebanon.Unprovoked,
Hezbollah-led forces began attacking Israel on a near-daily basis on
October 8, 2023, a day after its ally Hamas stormed southern Israel to
kill some 1,200 people and take 251 hostages, sparking the war in
Gaza.Fearing a similar Hezbollah onslaught, Israel evacuated residents
of border towns. Hezbollah’s persistent rocket fire prevented some
60,000 displaced northerners from returning home.In a bid to stop the
rocket fire, Israel stepped up operations against Hezbollah in late
September, all but decimating the terror group’s leadership.Agencies
contributed to this report.
Profile-Asma al-Assad: From Syria’s
‘desert rose’ to international pariah-UK-born Syrian former first lady
stood by in silence as her husband’s regime carried out appalling acts
of violence; accused of being ‘one of Syria’s most notorious war
profiteers’By Marie Heuclin Today, 6:14 pm-DEC 13,24
LONDON (AFP)
— Once celebrated as an advocate of women’s rights in the Middle East,
Syria’s British-born former first lady Asma al-Assad has fled into exile
with her husband, with UK officials saying she is not welcome to return
to London.Asma al-Assad, 49, her husband and three children have sought
refuge in Moscow after rebels ousted Bashar al-Assad from power,
according to Russian state news agencies, although the Kremlin has not
confirmed the reports.It is just the latest blow to the shredded
reputation of a woman whose glamour and charm had been seen in the past
as a key asset to the Syrian government.Asma al-Assad was born in London
in 1975 and has spent half her life in the UK, with her parents still
living in the west of the capital city.She retains British citizenship,
but foreign minister David Lammy said Monday that she was no longer
welcome in the country, suggesting she may soon lose her UK
passport.“I’ve seen mentioned in the last few days, Asma Assad [is]
potentially someone with UK citizenship that might attempt to come into
our country, and I want it confirmed that she’s a sanctioned individual
and is not welcome here in the UK,” he told parliament.Asma al-Assad had
her UK assets frozen in March 2012 amid growing protests against her
husband’s rule, as part of a European sanction program that London
maintained after Brexit.The UK has previously stripped citizens of their
nationality for joining the Islamic State group, Bader Mousa Al-Saif, a
researcher at the Chatham House think tank, told AFP.“If that could be
happening to an unknown in an extremist camp, I think the same, if not
more, warrants for the case of Asma al-Assad,” he added.Prime Minister
Keir Starmer said on Monday that it was “far too early” to discuss such a
measure, while Minister Pat McFadden told the BBC that “we have had no
contact” with the former first lady.Road to Damascus-Asma al-Assad was
born to cardiologist father Fawaz al-Akhras and retired diplomat Sahar
Otri, both from Syria.She grew up in the leafy west London neighborhood
of Acton where the Akhras still live, although some UK media reported
Monday that they were thought to have flown to Russia to be with their
daughter.Asma al-Assad attended a local primary school, where she went
by the name of Emma, before studying at the prestigious Queen’s College
private school.She later graduated from London’s King’s College
University with a degree in computer science and French literature
before moving into finance, working at Deutsche Bank and JP Morgan.It
was in this line of work that she met Bashar al-Assad in the late 1990s,
and the couple married a few months after he succeeded his father,
Hafez, as Syrian president in July 2000.The couple have two adult sons
and a daughter, with the eldest recently graduating in mathematics from
the University of Moscow.The Syrian presidency announced in May that
Asma had leukemia, having already been treated for breast cancer between
2018 and 2019.‘War profiteer’Asma al-Assad is from a Sunni family
whereas Bashar al-Assad belongs to the Shiite Alawite movement, which —
along with her promotion of women’s rights — helped burnish her
reputation as a transformative and modernizing first lady.Feted by the
Western media for her looks and style, Asma became the toast of high
society, hosting celebrities such as Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie while
enjoying a lavish reception overseas.Fashion bible Vogue called her the
“Desert Rose.”But her reputation crumbled when she stood by her
husband’s side as he cracked down on anti-government protests that
erupted in 2011, turning into a full-scale civil war in June 2012.She
was heavily criticized for remaining silent during the violence and was
dubbed “Marie Antoinette” and “predator in chief.”Detractors also
accused her of enriching herself through the Syria Trust for
Development, a charity she founded that centralizes most of the funding
coming from abroad.She and her husband also took charge of many parts of
the Syrian economy using frontmen, according to news site Syria
Report.In 2020 the United States imposed sanctions on Asma al-Assad, her
parents and two brothers, with then-secretary of state Mike Pompeo
describing her as “one of Syria’s most notorious war profiteers.”
Desperate
Assad deceived those around him in last hours before stealthy flight
from Syria-Former Syrian president kept officials and relatives,
including brother, in the dark about his exit plan; hunted for outside
help to maintain his rule, before eventually fleeing-By Samia Nakhoul,
Maya Gebeily, Parisa Hafezi and Suleiman Al-Khalidi Today, 5:54 pm-DEC
13,24
DUBAI (Reuters) — Bashar al-Assad confided in almost no one
about his plans to flee Syria as his reign collapsed. Instead, aides,
officials and even relatives were deceived or kept in the dark, more
than a dozen people with knowledge of the events told Reuters.Hours
before he escaped for Moscow, Assad assured a meeting of about 30 army
and security chiefs at the defense ministry on Saturday that Russian
military support was on its way and urged ground forces to hold out,
according to a commander who was present and requested anonymity to
speak about the briefing.Civilian staff were none the wiser, too.Assad
told his presidential office manager on Saturday when he finished work
he was going home but instead headed to the airport, according to an
aide in his inner circle.He also called his media adviser, Buthaina
Shaaban, and asked her to come to his home to write him a speech, the
aide said. She arrived to find no one was there.“Assad didn’t even make a
last stand. He didn’t even rally his own troops,” said Nadim Houri,
executive director of the Arab Reform Initiative regional think tank.
“He let his supporters face their own fate.”Reuters was unable to
contact Assad in Moscow, where he has been granted political asylum.
Interviews with 14 people familiar with his final days and hours in
power paint a picture of a leader casting around for outside help to
extend his 24-year rule before leaning on deception and stealth to plot
his exit from Syria in the early hours of Sunday.Most of the sources,
who include aides in the former president’s inner circle, regional
diplomats and security sources and senior Iranian officials, asked for
their names to be withheld to freely discuss sensitive matters.Assad
didn’t even inform his younger brother, Maher, commander of the Army’s
elite 4th Armored Division, about his exit plan, according to three
aides. Maher flew a helicopter to Iraq and then to Russia, one of the
people said.Assad’s maternal cousins, Ehab and Eyad Makhlouf, were
similarly left behind as Damascus fell to the rebels, according to a
Syrian aide and Lebanese security official. The pair tried to flee by
car to Lebanon but were ambushed on the way by rebels who shot Ehab dead
and wounded Eyad, they said. There was no official confirmation of the
death and Reuters was unable to independently verify the incident.Assad
himself fled Damascus by plane on Sunday, Dec. 8, flying under the radar
with the aircraft’s transponder switched off, two regional diplomats
said, escaping the clutches of rebels storming the capital. The dramatic
exit ended his 24 years of rule and his family’s half a century of
unbroken power, and brought the 13-year civil war to an abrupt halt.He
flew to Russia’s Hmeimim airbase in the Syrian coastal city of Latakia,
and from there on to Moscow.Syria’s first lady Asma Assad, second left,
listens to her husband Assad’s immediate family, wife Asma and their
three children, were already waiting for him in the Russian capital,
according to three former close aides and a senior regional
official.Videos of Assad’s home, taken by rebels and citizens who
thronged the presidential complex following his flight and posted on
social media, suggest he made a hasty exit, showing cooked food left on
the stove and several personal belongings left behind, such as family
photo albums.Russia and Iran: No military rescue-There would be no
military rescue from Russia, whose intervention in 2015 had helped turn
the tide of the civil war in favor of Assad, or from his other staunch
ally Iran.This had been made clear to the Syrian leader in the days
leading up to his exit, when he sought aid from various quarters in a
desperate race to cling to power and secure his safety, according to the
people interviewed by Reuters.A group of people take a family photo
while sitting on a couch in a hall of Syrian President Basha.Assad
visited Moscow on Nov. 28, a day after Syrian rebel forces attacked the
northern province of Aleppo and in a lightning drive across the country,
but his pleas for military intervention fell on deaf ears in the
Kremlin which was unwilling to intervene, three regional diplomats
said.Hadi al-Bahra, the head of Syria’s main opposition abroad, said
that Assad didn’t convey the reality of the situation to aides back
home, citing a source within Assad’s close circle and a regional
official.“He told his commanders and associates after his Moscow trip
that military support was coming,” Bahra added. “He was lying to them.
The message he received from Moscow was negative.”Kremlin spokesman
Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Wednesday that Russia had spent a lot of
effort in helping stabilize Syria in the past but its priority now was
the conflict in Ukraine.Four days after that trip, on Dec. 2, Iranian
Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi met with Assad in Damascus. By that time,
the rebels from the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) Islamist group had taken
control of Syria’s second-largest city Aleppo and were sweeping
southwards as government forces crumbled.Assad was visibly distressed
during the meeting, and conceded that his army was too weakened to mount
an effective resistance, a senior Iranian diplomat told Reuters.Assad
never requested that Tehran deploy forces in Syria though, according to
two senior Iranian officials who said he understood that Israel could
use any such intervention as a reason to target Iranian forces in Syria
or even Iran itself.The Kremlin and Russian foreign ministry declined to
comment for this article, while the Iranian foreign ministry was not
immediately available to comment.Assad confronts own downfall-After
exhausting his options, Assad finally accepted the inevitability of his
downfall and resolved to leave the country, ending his family’s dynastic
rule which dates back to 1971.Three members of Assad’s inner circle
said he initially wanted to seek refuge in the United Arab Emirates, as
rebels seized Aleppo and Homs and were advancing towards Damascus.They
said he was rebuffed by the Emiratis who feared an international
backlash for harboring a figure subject to US and European sanctions for
allegedly using chemical weapons in a crackdown on insurgents,
accusations that Assad has rejected as a fabrication.The UAE government
didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.Yet Moscow, while
unwilling to intervene militarily, was not prepared to abandon Assad,
according to a Russian diplomatic source who spoke on condition of
anonymity.Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, attending the Doha
forum in Qatar on Saturday and Sunday, spearheaded the diplomatic effort
to secure the safety of Assad, engaging Turkey and Qatar to leverage
their connections to HTS to secure Assad’s safe exit to Russia, two
regional officials said.One Western security source said that Lavrov did
“whatever he could” to secure Assad’s safe departure.Qatar and Turkey
made arrangements with HTS to facilitate Assad’s exit, three of the
sources said, despite official claim by both countries that they had no
contacts with HTS, which is designated by the US and the UN as a
terrorist organization.Moscow also coordinated with neighboring states
to ensure that a Russian plane leaving Syrian airspace with Assad on
board would not be intercepted or targeted, three of the sources
said.Qatar’s foreign ministry didn’t immediately respond to queries
about Assad’s exit, while Reuters was unable to reach HTS for comment. A
Turkish government official said there was no Russian request to use
Turkish airspace for Assad’s flight, though didn’t address whether
Ankara worked with HTS to facilitate the escape.Assad’s last prime
minister, Mohammed Jalali, said he spoke to his then-president on the
phone on Saturday at 10:30 p.m.“In our last call, I told him how
difficult the situation was and that there was huge displacement (of
people) from Homs toward Latakia … that there was panic and horror in
the streets,” he told Saudi-owned Al Arabiya TV this week.“He replied:
‘Tomorrow, we will see’,” Jalali added. “‘Tomorrow, tomorrow’, was the
last thing he told me.”Jalali said he tried to call Assad again as dawn
broke on Sunday, but there was no response.
Amid rolling
blackouts in Iran, some blame power-intensive cryptocurrency
mining-Government won’t publicly connect bitcoin mining to energy
problems, but cheap electricity, plus possible IRGC involvement to fund
terror groups, makes country hotbed for cryptoBy AP Today, 1:03 pm-DEC
13,24
TEHRAN — Iran’s capital and outlying provinces faced
rolling power blackouts for weeks in October and November, with
electricity cuts disrupting people’s lives and businesses. And while
several factors are likely involved, some suspect cryptocurrency mining
has played a role in the outages.Iran’s economy has been hobbled for
years by international sanctions over its advancing nuclear program. The
country’s fuel reserves have plummeted, with the government selling off
more to cover budget shortfalls as wars rage in the Middle East and
Tehran grapples with mismanagement.The demand on the grid has not let
up, however — even as Iranians stopped using air conditioners as the
weather cooled in the fall and before winter months set in when people
fire up their gas heaters.Heavy government subsidies on electricity in
Iran — the state invests almost a fifth of its GDP in that sector — have
made it home to the world’s cheapest electricity, at just
$0.002/kilowatt in August 2024, as reported by the Pakistan-based
Express Tribune — making it among the cheapest countries in which to
mine bitcoin, a project whose main expense is electricity.According to
crypto site NFT Evening, the cost to mine one bitcoin in Iran was just
$1,324 as of November 2024, compared to more than $100,000 in the US, or
more than $300,000 in Ireland, for example — both higher than the price
of bitcoin today.In recent months, however, electricity has become more
expensive, jumping as much as 83 percent since September for high
consumers, according to the Iran Focus website, amid what the UK-based
Iran International reports is about a 40% spike in the cost of living
generally.Meanwhile, bitcoin’s value rocketed to all-time highs after
the US election was clinched by Donald Trump. It hit the $100,000 mark
for the first time last week, just hours after the president-elect said
he intends to nominate cryptocurrency advocate Paul Atkins to be the
next chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission.The surge has led
some to suspect that organized cryptocurrency mining — sucking away huge
amounts of power — has played a part in the outages in
Iran.“Unfortunately, some opportunistic and exploitative individuals use
subsidized electricity, public networks and other resources for
cryptocurrency mining without authorization,” Mostafa Rajabi, the CEO of
Iran’s government-owned power company, said back in August.Iran’s state
energy company did not respond to a request for comment.Power outages
have come and gone in the past in Iran, which struggles with aging
equipment at many of its plants. Over the summer, sustained blackouts
struck industrial parks near Tehran and other cities. Then in October
and November, rolling power cuts across Tehran’s neighborhoods became
the norm in daylight hours.Climate change has been blamed in part, with
persisting droughts and less water running through Iranian hydroelectric
dams.Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian ordered several power plants to
stop burning mazut, a high-polluting heavy fuel common in the former
Soviet Union countries. Tehran has used it in the past to make up the
difference in electricity generation.Fuel reserves, both in diesel and
natural gas, also remain low even though Iran is an OPEC member and home
to one of the world’s second-largest reserves of natural gas, behind
only Russia. There’s been no explanation for the decision to keep those
reserves low, though critics have suggested Iran likely sold the fuel to
cover budget shortfalls.For his part, Pezeshkian has said that he must
“honestly tell the public about the energy situation.”“We have no choice
but to consume energy economically, especially gas, in the current
conditions and the cold weather,” he said in mid-November. “I myself use
warm clothes at home; others can do the same.”Still, winter heating
isn’t in full swing quite yet in Tehran — raising questions about where
the power is going.In many poor and densely populated neighborhoods
across the country, people have access to free, unmetered electricity.
Mosques, schools, hospitals, and other sites also receive free power.And
with electricity in general sold at subsidized rates, bitcoin
processing centers have boomed. They require immense amounts of
electricity to power specialized computers and to keep them
cool.Determining how much power is used up by cryptomining is difficult,
particularly as miners now use virtual private networks that mask their
location, said Masih Alavi, the CEO of an Iranian-government-licensed
mining company called Viraminer.Also, miners have been renting
apartments to hide their rigs inside empty homes. “They distribute their
machines across several apartments to avoid being detected,” Alavi
said.In 2021, one estimate suggested Iran processed as much as $1
billion in bitcoin transactions. That value likely has spiked, given the
rise of bitcoin. Meanwhile, Iran’s blackouts began in earnest as
bitcoin spiked from around $67,000 to over $100,000 in its historic
rally.Rajabi, the state electricity company CEO, said his firm would
offer rewards of $725 for people to report unlicensed bitcoin farms.The
farms have caused “an abnormal increase in consumption, disruptions, and
problems in power networks,” Rajabi said.The amount of power used by
some 230,000 unlicensed devices is equivalent, he said, to the entire
power needs of Iran’s Markazi province — one of the country’s chief
manufacturing sites.Iranian officials and media have not linked
bitcoin’s surge and the ongoing blackouts but the public has, with
social media users resharing a video showing a massive bitcoin farm
earlier this year uncovered in Iran. A voice off-camera asks how it was
possible the electrical company did not discover the farm sooner.The US
Treasury and Israel have targeted bitcoin wallets that they’ve alleged
are affiliated with operations run by Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary
Guard to finance allied terror groups in Mideast war zones.That suggests
the Guard itself — one of the most powerful forces within Iran — may be
involved in the mining.In contrast, Iranian media reports nearly every
day on individual mining operations being raided by police.Iran may see
bitcoin as a hedge against increased pressure from the incoming Trump
administration and as regional allies are engulfed in turmoil, said
Richard Nephew, an adjunct fellow at the Washington Institute for Near
East Policy.“The question for the economists inside Iran is do we trust
this enough to fund the government,” said Nephew, who has long worked on
Iran issues and sanction strategies in the US government.However, he
cautioned against thinking of bitcoin as a magic bullet for Iran,
particularly as bitcoin wallets can be targeted in sanctions.“A pattern
of behavior screams out to intelligence services,” Nephew said. “It
screams out to bank compliance departments.”Times of Israel staff
contributed to this report.
PA admits its own forces shot man in
West Bank, after falsely blaming ‘lawbreakers’Rahbi Shalabi, 19, was
killed in Jenin amid clashes between PA and Hamas, Islamic Jihad groups;
video of incident shows victim shot after approaching PA vehicle on
scooter-By Agencies and ToI Staff Today, 11:38 am-DEC 13,24
The
Palestinian Authority on Thursday admitted that its forces were
responsible for the death of a 19-year-old Palestinian man during unrest
this week in the West Bank city of Jenin.Rahbi Shalabi was killed on
Monday amid rare clashes between local terror groups and PA security
forces, who exercise limited authority in the West Bank.The security
forces had initially claimed Shalabi was beaten to death by
“lawbreakers.”But on Thursday, the PA said in a statement that “after a
diligent follow-up and reviewing all the details… the Palestinian
National Authority bears full responsibility for his martyrdom.”The PA
added that it was “committed to dealing with the repercussions” of the
deadly incident “in a manner that ensures justice and respect for
rights.”After the clashes that killed Shalabi and wounded a 16-year-old
relative of his, the Hamas terror group condemned the security forces of
the PA, which is dominated by its political rival Fatah.Yesterday, the
Ramallah Authority’s forces opened fire on the unarmed Palestinian youth
Rabhi Shalabi, killing him on the spot in the West Bank.
pic.twitter.com/sGJfmJFKpp— Warfare Analysis (@warfareanalysis) December
11, 2024-A video circulating on social media, which AFP was unable to
independently verify, appeared to show Shalabi and his younger relative
stopping their scooter near an armored vehicle belonging to the PA
security forces before being shot.Tensions have been running high in the
West Bank after the PA arrested several terror operatives earlier this
month.On Thursday last week, armed men seized two official PA vehicles
and paraded through the Jenin refugee camp waving flags of the Islamic
Jihad group, which is allied with Hamas in the Gaza Strip.There were
then gunfights in the area which continued into Monday, despite efforts
to calm the situation.There was significant damage from the gun battles,
with AFPTV footage showing smashed windows and fire damage at the local
hospital on Saturday night.The clashes between local terror operatives
and PA forces have added to the already soaring violence in the West
Bank, with Israeli military raids and settler attacks increasing since
the October 7, 2023, Hamas massacre in southern Israel triggered the
ongoing war.Since then, Israeli troops have arrested some 5,250 wanted
Palestinians across the West Bank, including more than 2,050 affiliated
with Hamas.According to the PA health ministry, more than 716 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, 42 people, including Israeli security personnel, have been
killed in terror attacks in Israel and the West Bank. Another six
members of the security forces were killed in clashes with terror
operatives in the West Bank.
Hezbollah said to have helped Assad
officials flee to Lebanon, sparking furor in Beirut-Newspaper opposed to
terror group bemoans cost to Lebanon, risk of Israeli strikes; analyst
says Israel apparently refrained from shooting down 4,000 evacuating
Iranian troops-By ToI Staff Today, 11:38 am-DEC 13,24
An
anti-Hezbollah Lebanese newspaper reported that the terror group helped
hundreds of Syrian intelligence officers flee to Lebanon in the days
before forces opposed to Syria’s strongman Bashar al-Assad captured
Damascus on Sunday.The Nidaa al-Watan newspaper this week seethed at the
price Lebanon was paying to keep some of the top officials safe, and
expressed fears that the presence of Assad’s allies in Lebanon could
draw Israeli strikes.Some Lebanese leaders also expressed concern over
the report, which followed the discovery of a large secret tunnel in
Syria’s Qalamoun Mountains, a Hezbollah stronghold near Damascus and the
border with Lebanon, apparently used to store and transfer arms.
However, the officers who escaped to Lebanon were said to travel via
overland border crossings.Citing two security officials — whose
nationality was unclear — Nidaa al-Watan on Monday reported that
Hezbollah had given Lebanese license plates to Assad officials who
entered Lebanon via the Masnaa border crossing. The newspaper also said
that thousands of Syrian security officials were estimated to have
crossed into Lebanon illegally via the Hermel crossing, farther
north.According to the officials cited in the report, the smuggling of
Syrian officers was facilitated by bribes to members of Lebanon’s
General Security Directorate. Among the latter, the newspaper singled
out Hezbollah ally Ahmed Nakad, a senior Directorate border patrol
officer said to have close ties with Ali Mamlouk, head of the National
Security Bureau of Assad’s Ba’ath party.Nidaa al-Watan said Mamlouk,
whom Lebanon has accused of carrying out “terrorist acts” against two
mosques in the country, was in hiding in Hezbollah’s stronghold in
Beirut’s southern Dahiyeh suburb. Video circulating on social media,
which could not be independently verified, purported to show Mamlouk
fleeing Syria on a rubber boat.WATCH⚡️The dramatic escape of Ali
Mamlouk, head of Syria’s secret service and security advisor to
President Assad. Just a rubber boat, a suitcase, and a getaway…Via
@inside_IL_intel pic.twitter.com/7bQdbnrj5T — Open Source Intel
(@Osint613) December 12, 2024-Also said to be in Beirut — reportedly at
the five-star Phonecia Hotel — was Ghada Adib Mhanna, Assad’s aunt by
marriage and mother of his close ally, telecom magnate Rami Makhlouf;
and — in the Movenpick, another luxury hotel — Firas Issa Shaleesh,
nephew of Dhu al-Himma Shalish, Assad’s late cousin and presidential
security chief who had been implicated in massacres carried out under
Assad’s father and predecessor, Hafez.Khaled Qaddour, a Syrian
businessman under US sanctions for his ties to Maher al-Assad, the
dictator’s brother, was also reportedly staying at the Movenpick
Hotel.According to Nidaa al-Watan, both luxury hotels were being
patrolled by Lebanese state security.The newspaper editorialized that
Lebanon, which Hafez and Basher al-Assad’s forces occupied for some
three decades until 2005, would end up “bearing the cost of facilitating
the hiding of those wanted by the Lebanese state.”“Also, the presence
of Assad’s lackeys in the suburbs and Beirut exposes the capital to the
risk of Israeli strikes,” the newspaper said.A similar warning was
voiced by Lebanon’s Progressive Socialist Party, which is led by the
Jumblatt family, a prominent Druze clan that is generally aligned with
Hezbollah. Lebanese caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati said Tuesday
that he was working with the judiciary and the General Security
Directorate to address the issue in a manner that would “serve Lebanon’s
interests and maintain relations with the Syrian people.”Israel and
Hezbollah had concluded a ceasefire deal in late November after a
two-month, intense Israeli bombing campaign against the terror group.
The campaign came after a year of the Iran-backed terror group’s
persistent rocket fire, which had prevented some 60,000 residents of the
north from returning home.Fearing a Hezbollah onslaught in the north,
Israel evacuated the residents shortly after Hamas attacked the south on
October 7, 2023, when thousands of terrorists invaded to kill some
1,200 people and take 251 hostages, sparking the war in Gaza.Soon after
the ceasefire came into effect, Syrian rebels launched an offensive in
northern Syria, upending the 13-year stalemate in the country’s civil
war, and ultimately toppling the decades-long Assad regime, which was
propped up by Iran and its proxies.Iran said this week that it had
evacuated some 4,000 of its own troops from Syria following Assad’s
ouster.Channel 12 Arab affairs analyst Ehud Yaari, who on Thursday cited
the Assad officials’ reported escape to Lebanon, noted that Israel had
apparently refrained from shooting down the Iranian air convoy.
What
Matters Now to Ksenia Svetlova: Women are the canary in the Mideast
coal mine-As the rebel factions in Syria continue to fight to wrest
control, the world looks at their treatment of women. Middle East
analyst, a former MK, ranks Israel and its neighbors.With:Amanda
Borschel-Dan-Ksenia Svetlova-Today, 8:50 am-DEC 13,24
Welcome to
What Matters Now, a weekly podcast exploring key issues currently
shaping Israel and the Jewish World, with host deputy editor Amanda
Borschel-Dan speaking with Middle East expert Ksenia Svetlova.As the
rebel factions in Syria continue to fight to wrest control — from the
fallen Assad regime as well as from each other — one of the ways to
measure how the country will emerge is to look at the factions’
treatment of women: On Tuesday, for example, the Biden administration
said it will recognize and support a new Syrian government that
renounces terrorism, destroys chemical weapons stocks and protects the
rights of minorities and women.In 2020, Svetlova published a
Hebrew-language book, “On Heels in the Middle East,” depicting her
travels throughout the Middle East as a female (and sometimes overtly
Jewish) journalist.Born in Moscow, Svetlova immigrated to Israel at the
age of 14. She is a journalist and analyst and was a member of the 20th
Knesset for the Zionist Union party. Today she is the executive director
of ROPES, which works to connect “forward-thinking Israeli and
Palestinian emerging leaders with like-minded peers from across the
Middle East and North Africa.”In our conversation, she draws on her
experiences reporting from inside the region’s Islamic countries to
evaluate and rank their women’s rights and freedoms. We discuss which
country most supports women’s rights — Tunisia — and the many countries
that vie for the least free.Later, we hear Svetlova’s thoughts on future
Russian influence in Syria and the region.So this week, as all eyes are
on Syria and the rebels that hope to rule it, we ask Ksenia Svetlova,
what matters now.
Biden grants clemency to 1,500 people, pardons
39: ‘The most ever in a single day’All had been placed on home
confinement during pandemic, White House says; move comes after outgoing
president was excoriated on both sides of the aisle for pardoning son
Hunter-By Danny Kemp Today, 8:49 am-DEC 13,24
WASHINGTON (AFP) —
Outgoing US President Joe Biden said Thursday that he had commuted the
sentences of nearly 1,500 people and pardoned 39 others, in what the
White House called the largest single-day act of clemency in US
history.The move comes just over a week after the 82-year-old Biden
pardoned his troubled son Hunter, something he had previously promised
not to do, prompting anger from both sides of the political
divide.“America was built on the promise of possibility and second
chances,” Biden said in a statement announcing the action. “As
president, I have the great privilege of extending mercy to people who
have demonstrated remorse and rehabilitation.”Democrat Biden — who hands
over power to Republican Donald Trump on January 20 — is following in
the footsteps of many lame-duck presidents who have issued a flurry of
acts of clemency in their final days in the Oval Office.All of the 1,499
people — “the most ever in a single day” — whose sentences were
commuted were placed on home confinement during the Covid-19 pandemic,
the White House said.Biden said they had all “successfully reintegrated
into their families and communities and have shown that they deserve a
second chance.”The 39 pardons were all for what the White House called a
“non-violent offense” or a “non-violent drug offense.”Those getting
relief from the president on Thursday included a “decorated military
veteran and pilot who spends much of his time helping his fellow church
members.”A nurse “who has led emergency response for several natural
disasters” and an addiction counselor “who volunteers his time” were
also singled out for relief.“I will take more steps in the weeks ahead,”
Biden said.‘Retribution’But Biden has already sparked outrage among
both Republican rivals and Democratic allies alike with the pardon of
his son Hunter, 54, on December 1.Hunter Biden pleaded guilty in a tax
evasion trial in September and was facing up to 17 years in prison, and
had separately been convicted of federal gun charges, for which he was
facing 25 years in prison.When pardoning him, Biden said that Hunter had
been “singled out” because of his surname and that “raw politics” had
infected the process of justice — a nod to his Republican foes.Biden has
meanwhile reportedly been debating whether to issue blanket pardons for
some allies and former officials amid fears they could be targeted for
what Trump has previously called “retribution.”“I’m not going to get
into the President’s thinking,” White House Press Secretary Karine
Jean-Pierre told a briefing when asked about the possibility of such
preemptive pardons.“He’s going to have conversations with his team, he’s
going to review clemency petitions, he’s going to review options on the
table, and so that’s where I’m going to leave it.”The spokeswoman also
refused to comment on calls for clemency for people on the US federal
death row.Biden’s controversial pardon of his son followed in the
footsteps of his predecessors, who also gave reprieves on their way out
the door to family and well-connected allies.Bill Clinton, for example,
granted a pardon on his last day in office to his half-brother Roger,
who had served time in prison on drug charges.Trump pardoned his
son-in-law’s wealthy father, Charles Kushner — whom he has now nominated
as US ambassador to France.Meanwhile, Trump has vowed to pardon at
least some if not all of the rioters jailed for storming the US Capitol
on January 6, 2021, to protest his defeat by Biden in the 2020
election.In an interview with Time magazine marking the second time he
has received its “Person of the Year” award, Trump said he would start
“in the first hour that I get into office.”“A vast majority of them
should not be in jail, and they’ve suffered gravely,” he said, adding
that he would look at each case individually.
Blinken says US
working to bring home citizen found in Syrian regime prison-Missouri
native Travis Timmerman, who traveled to Syria on Christian pilgrimage
in June, says he wasn’t beaten during time in prison, but could hear
guards hitting other inmates-By Agencies Today, 8:36 am-DEC 13,24
The
United States is working to bring home an American citizen found on
Thursday in Syria, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that day in
Jordan, where he held meetings to discuss the political transition in
Syria.In media reports, the man was identified as Travis Timmerman,
29.“In terms of [the] American citizen who was found just today, I can’t
give you any details on exactly what’s going to happen, except to say
that we’re working to bring him home, to bring him out of Syria,”
Blinken told reporters in Aqaba.“But for privacy reasons, I can’t share
any more details about this,” Blinken added.CBS News reported Timmerman
identified himself as an American from Missouri and that he was freed
from prison earlier in the week after Syrian rebel groups ousted the
country’s longtime President Bashar al-Assad over the
weekend.Timmerman’s mother, Stacey Collins, told Reuters she thought her
son was dead after being missing for seven months.A man identifying
himself as an American from Missouri, Travis Timmerman, has been found
in Syria after he said he was freed from a prison earlier in the week,
when dictator Bashar al-Assad was forced from power.Timmerman told
@CBSLizpalmer that he had been trying to make his…
pic.twitter.com/P9ybbxuwGg— CBS Mornings (@CBSMornings) December 12,
2024“I really truly did. But I didn’t want to give up. I didn’t want to
give up on my son,” Collins said.Collins said she was excited to hear
about her son, particularly since his father had taken ill.Timmerman
told CBS he had been detained in prison after entering Syria without
permission seven months ago for Christian “spiritual purposes.”White
House spokesperson John Kirby said in a briefing that the US had no
prior indication that the man was in Syria. “We are just getting word of
this, and we’re trying to confirm his identity at this point, so the
State Department is working hard on that right now.”Assad fled to Russia
after a 13-year civil war and more than five decades of his family’s
autocratic rule, during which Syria ran one of the most oppressive
police states in the Middle East.Following his ouster, Syrians flocked
to the infamous prisons where the Assad regime is estimated to have held
tens of thousands of detainees-Speaking to AP on Thursday, Timmerman
said he was released Monday morning alongside a young Syrian man and 70
female prisoners, some of whom had their children with them.He had been
held separately from Syrian and other Arab prisoners and said he didn’t
know of any other Americans held in the facility.“I was there seven
months. There were women there up above me,” Timmerman said. He heard
the women singing and teaching their children and could hear some of the
men being beaten regularly. “I was never beaten,” he said.He was
detained after he crossed into Syria from a mountain along the eastern
Lebanese town of Zahle in June. He was questioned for three and a half
hours by interrogators who thought he must be a spy. In a brief second
interview, they searched his mobile phone, and in the last interview, he
started discussing his dreams with his captors.He said their threat of
using violence against him was “implicit” because he could hear daily
beatings next door. But his captors let him use his mobile to call his
family three weeks ago. At the time, Timmerman didn’t tell his family he
was in Damascus, only that he was fine.He said later in his detention,
he could hear explosions — at a time when Israel was intensifying its
strikes in Syria. Israel’s war with the Hezbollah militant group had
intensified in September before a ceasefire was reached last month.“I
heard some explosives that shook the building,” he said.In his prison
cell, Timmerman said he had a mattress, a plastic drinking container,
and two others for waste. He had three bathroom breaks and exercise
breaks in the first half of his stay.He said the Friday calls to prayers
helped him keep track of days.He said he gained weight at first because
he ate unleavened bread, rice, and oats. Sometimes he would get a
potato or a tomato — a treatment clearly reserved for non-Syrian
prisoners, who often ended up emaciated or sick.“It is a time of solace
and you can meditate on your life,” he told AP. “It was good for
me.”Timmerman was disheveled, with a scraggly beard and long hair and
nails. He said he had a good sleep and a meal on Thursday.He said he
planned to return to Damascus.In describing his release from prison,
Timmerman said the action outside his cell woke him up. Those who came
to release him spoke to him in Arabic. “It was an excited scene. It was
not clear if the guards who were there were still there,” Timmerman
said. “I didn’t know if they were taking us out in the midst of a war
zone … in hindsight, this shooting was not actual clashes.”He said he
was panicked for a moment. But he realized some of the gunfire was
celebratory from blanks. One man was shooting from an AK-47. At one
point, he went running back into the prison with two other prisoners. A
fellow prisoner helped him out, holding his arm, and speaking Arabic to
those around. They both accompanied a female prisoner to her home.He
spent two nights in Damascus, one in an abandoned apartment in the old
town and another at a new friend’s house.He then started walking toward
Jordan, when a Syrian family found him barefoot on a main road in the
countryside of Damascus early Thursday.The Syrian family told AP that
Timmerman appeared cold and hungry so they brought him back to their
home.“I fed him and called a doctor,” said Mosaed al-Rifai, the
68-year-old waste collector who first found Timmerman.A few hours after
al-Rifai discovered him, rebels arrived at the family’s house to pick
him up, he said.Mouaz Mostafa, the executive director of the Syrian
Emergency Task Force, a US-based nonprofit group, who was in Damascus
learned of Timmerman’s location, reached him, and contacted US
authorities about him.Timmerman is now recovering until the rebels can
figure out how to hand him to US authorities, Moustafa said.In Aqaba,
Blinken added that efforts to locate Austin Tice, another US citizen who
was abducted in Syria over a decade ago were continuing.“No update on
Austin Tice, except to say that every single day, we are working to find
him and to bring him home, making sure that the word is out to everyone
that this is a priority for the United States,” Blinken said.Tice, a
former US Marine and a freelance journalist, was 31 when he was
kidnapped in August 2012 while reporting in Damascus.US President Joe
Biden said on Sunday that Washington believes Tice is alive.When asked
about reports Tice might be in Iran, Kirby said Washington has ways of
being in touch with interlocutors around the world. “It’s a full-court
press to see what we can do to find out more about Austin Tice, and that
includes having a lot of conversations with a lot of different folks,”
he added.
Syrian rebels find heaps of illicit stimulant
trafficked by Assad regime-Islamist-led fighters vow to destroy the vast
quantities of captagon, the lucrative trade which helped keep the
now-deposed strongman in power amid Syria’s civil war-By Dave Clark
Today, 2:44 am-DEC 13,24
DAMASCUS, Syria (AFP) — The dramatic
collapse of Bashar al-Assad’s Syrian regime has thrown light into the
dark corners of his rule, including the industrial-scale export of the
banned drug captagon.Victorious Islamist-led fighters have seized
military bases and distribution hubs for the amphetamine-type stimulant,
which has flooded the black market across the Middle East.Led by the
Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) group, the rebels say they found a vast haul
of drugs and vowed to destroy them.On Wednesday, HTS fighters allowed
AFP journalists into a warehouse at a quarry on the outskirts of
Damascus, where captagon pills were concealed inside electrical
components for export.“After we entered and did a sweep, and we found
that this is a factory for Maher al-Assad and his partner Amer Khiti,”
said black-masked fighter Abu Malek al-Shami.Household appliances-Maher
al-Assad was a military commander and the deposed strongman’s brother,
now presumed on the run. He is widely accused of being the power behind
the lucrative captagon trade.Syrian politician Khiti was placed under
sanction in 2023 by the British government, which said he “controls
multiple businesses in Syria which facilitate the production and
smuggling of drugs.”In a cavernous garage beneath the warehouse and
loading bays, thousands of dusty beige captagon pills were packed into
the copper coils of brand new household voltage stabilizers.“We found a
large number of devices that were stuffed with packages of captagon
pills meant to be smuggled out of the country. It’s a huge quantity.
It’s impossible to tell,” Shami said.Above, in the warehouse, crates of
cardboard boxes stood ready to allow the traffickers to disguise their
cargo as pallet-loads of standard goods, alongside sacks and sacks of
caustic soda.Caustic soda, or sodium hydroxide, is a key ingredient in
the production of methamphetamine, another stimulant.Assad fell at the
weekend to a lightning HTS offensive, but the revenue from selling
captagon propped up Assad’s government throughout Syria’s 13 years of
civil war.Captagon turned Syria into the world’s largest narco state. It
became by far Syria’s biggest export, dwarfing all its legal exports
put together, according to estimates drawn from official data by AFP
during a 2022 investigation.Experts — like the author of a July report
from the Carnegie Middle East Center — also believe that Assad used the
threat of drug-fueled unrest to put pressure on Arab
governments.Captagon fuelled an epidemic of drug abuse in wealthy Gulf
states, even as Assad sought ways to end his diplomatic isolation among
his peers, wrote Carnegie scholar Hesham Alghannam.‘Huge amount,
brother’Assad, he wrote, “leveraged captagon trafficking as a means of
exerting pressure on the Gulf states, notably Saudi Arabia, to
reintegrate Syria into the Arab world,” which it did in 2023 when it
rejoined the Arab League bloc.The caustic soda at the warehouse, in the
Damascus suburbs, was supplied from Saudi Arabia, according to labelling
on the sacks.The warehouse haul was massive, but smaller and still
impressive stashes of captagon have also turned up in military
facilities associated with units under Maher Assad’s command.Journalists
from AFP this week found a bonfire of captagon pills on the grounds of
the Mazzeh air base, now in the hands of HTS fighters who descended on
the capital Damascus from the north.Behind the smoldering heap, in a
ransacked air force building, more captagon lay alongside other illicit
exports, including off-brand Viagra impotence remedies and poorly-forged
$100 bills.“As we entered the area we found a huge quantity of
captagon. So we destroyed it and burned it. It’s a huge amount,
brother,” said an HTS fighter using the nom de guerre “Khattab.”“We
destroyed and burned it because it’s harmful to people. It harms nature
and people and humans.”Khattab also stressed that HTS, which has formed a
transitional government to replace the collapsed administration, does
not want to harm its neighbors by exporting the drug — a trade worth
billions of dollars.
In video appeal to Iranian citizens,
Netanyahu says ‘one day Iran will be free’In 3rd such message in recent
months, PM says Iranian axis is falling apart due to a ‘chain reaction’
set off by Israel, calls to transform Mideast ‘into a beacon of
prosperity’By ToI Staff 12 December 2024, 11:51 pm
Issuing a
video message aimed at the people of Iran, Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu on Thursday said the Iranian axis was crumbling due to a
“chain reaction” set off by Israel, and expressed his hope that Iran can
“be free” and make peace globally.Speaking in English with Persian
subtitles, Netanyahu pointed out that Iranian leaders “spent over 30
billion dollars supporting [Bashar] Assad in Syria” before his regime
“collapsed into dust.”“Your oppressors spent billions supporting Hamas
in Gaza. Today their regime lies in ruins,” he added. “Your oppressors
spent over 20 billion dollars supporting Hezbollah in Lebanon. In a
matter of weeks, most of Hezbollah’s leaders, its rockets and thousands
of its terrorists went up in smoke.”Netanyahu — in his third video
message addressing Iranians in recent months — said that the new reality
in the Middle East today is due to “a chain reaction — a chain reaction
to the pounding of Hamas, the decimation of Hezbollah, the targeting of
[Hezbollah chief Hassan] Nasrallah, the blows we delivered to the Iran
regime’s axis of terror. And all this came, as President Trump pointed
out this week, ‘because of Israel and its fighting success.'”He said
that while Iran’s leaders “seek to conquer other nations, to impose
fundamentalist tyranny on the Middle East,” Israel is seeking only to
“defend our state. But in so doing, we’re defending civilization against
barbarism.”Addressing Iranian citizens, the prime minister said he
believes that “just as we want peace with you, you want peace with
us.”“But you suffer under the rule of a regime that subjugates you and
threatens us,” he said. “You know what this regime is truly terrified
of? It’s terrified of you, the people of Iran. And one day, I know that,
one day this will change. One day Iran will be free.”Netanyahu cited
the chant “Women, Life, Freedom,” which became the rallying cry of mass
anti-government protests in Iran in 2022 after the death of Mahsa Amini
at the hands of Iran’s so-called morality police after she was detained
for not fully covering her hair.“That is the future of Iran,” he added.
“That is the future of peace. And I have no doubt that we will realize
that future together – a lot sooner than people think. I know and I
believe we will transform the Middle East into a beacon of prosperity,
progress and peace.”In a similar video message issued last month,
Netanyahu said that the money the Iranian government spent on attacking
Israel in October “could have added billions to your transportation
budget. It could have added billions to your education budget. But
instead, [Ayatollah Ali] Khamenei exposed the regime’s brutality and
turned the world against your country. He robbed you of money that
should have been yours.”And in late September — just days after an
Israeli airstrike in Beirut assassinated Hassan Nasrallah, the longtime
head of Iranian proxy Hezbollah, Netanyahu issued a video saying that
Iran’s “puppets” were being eliminated, and that there was “nowhere in
the Middle East Israel cannot reach. There is nowhere we will not go to
protect our people.” He called on Iranians not to “let a small group of
fanatic theocrats crush your hopes and your dreams.”Lazar Berman
contributed to this report.
'I support whatever gets us to
peace'Trump says Netanyahu knows he wants Gaza war to end; won’t commit
to 2-state solution-Speaking to Time magazine after being again named
‘Person of the Year,’ president-elect avoids backing his own ‘deal of
the century,’ doesn’t come out against West Bank annexation-By Jacob
Magid-12 December 2024, 10:55 pm
US President-elect Donald Trump,
again named Time’s “Person of the Year,” told the magazine on Thursday
that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu knows he wants the Gaza war to
end, hinted a war with Iran could be in the cards and refrained from
endorsing a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, even
though his “deal of the century” proposed a version of Palestinian
statehood in 2020.“The Middle East is going to get solved. I think it’s
more complicated than the Russia-Ukraine, but I think it’s easier to
solve,” Trump said, according to a transcript of the interview.Asked
about the chances of war with Iran, Trump paused before replying,
“Anything can happen,” in a shift from his messaging during the
campaign, when he pledged that he wouldn’t start any new wars.The
wide-ranging interview appears in the upcoming issue of Time, which
named Trump as “Person of the Year” for the second time, the first being
after he first won the White House in 2016. Netanyahu was also
shortlisted for the accolade.Time said Trump was chosen “For marshaling a
comeback of historic proportions, for driving a once-in-a-generation
political realignment, for reshaping the American presidency and
altering America’s role in the world.”The magazine’s title cover
features Trump sporting his distinctive red tie and striking a
commanding pose.Trump rang the opening bell at the New York Stock
Exchange to applause from traders on Thursday, flanked by his wife
Melania Trump and Vice President-elect JD Vance, with his Time Magazine
cover displayed prominently behind him.Calls for end to Gaza war,
appears to repeat claim most hostages dead-Speaking about the war in
Gaza, Trump said Netanyahu “knows I want it to end.”According to Time,
Trump informed Netanyahu of his stance during phone calls the two held
during the US election campaign.Asked if Netanyahu has given him
assurances about ending the Gaza war, Trump declined to respond
directly, saying, “I don’t want people from either side killed… whether
it’s the Palestinians and the Israelis and all of the different entities
that we have in the Middle East.”When Time asked if he trusted
Netanyahu going into the second term, Trump took a second before
answering: “I don’t trust anybody.”The Times of Israel revealed in
October that Trump told Netanyahu during a meeting at his Mar-a-Lago
resort that he wants the war wrapped up by the time he enters office.In
the past, Israel has bristled at such public calls from world leaders,
arguing that they unfairly direct the pressure at Israel instead of
Hamas. Trump did publish a post on social media earlier this month in
which he warned of “all hell to pay” if hostages in Gaza weren’t
released by his January 20 inauguration. The president-elect didn’t
mention Hamas or Israel in that statement, though.Speaking to Time,
Trump also appeared to reiterate his assessment that most of the
hostages were no longer alive.“The other thing that’s happening are the
hostages. Where are the hostages? Why aren’t they back? Well, they could
be gone… I think Hamas is probably saying, Wow, the hostages are gone.
That’s what they want,” Trump said.President Isaac Herzog reportedly
tried to sway Trump away from that belief last month, sharing with him
Israeli intelligence assessments that roughly half of the 100 remaining
hostages are alive.Netanyahu has thus far balked at ending the Gaza war
in exchange for the release of the hostages, arguing that this would
allow Hamas to revive. His coalition also leans on far-right partners
who have threatened to topple the government should the premier agree to
such a deal.Israel’s security establishment has been more open to the
trade-off, arguing that Israel can return its troops to Gaza if need be
after withdrawing and warning that there won’t be many hostages alive if
Israel waits much longer to strike a deal.In recent days, Israeli
officials have been sounding increasingly optimistic about the chances
of a deal.An Arab diplomat familiar with the talks told The Times of
Israel that both sides have indicated a willingness to compromise
regarding the terms of Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza, but no agreement
has been reached regarding the longstanding obstacle in the talks —
whether the ceasefire will be permanent or temporary.The mediators are
still pushing a three-phase deal, similar to the one submitted by Israel
and publicly backed by US President Joe Biden in May, the Arab diplomat
said.Israel is more focused on the first 40- to 60-day phase of the
deal, with the Arab official saying Hamas again fears that Israel will
subsequently resume fighting after Trump enters office.President-elect
won’t commit to two-state solution — even his own-Asked if he still
supports his 2020 “deal of the century,” Trump responded: “I support a
plan of peace, and it can take different forms.”“I support whatever
solution we can do to get peace. There are other ideas other than
two-state, but I support whatever is necessary to get not just peace,
[but] a lasting peace. It can’t go on where every five years you end up
in tragedy. There are other alternatives,” he said.This is the latest of
several shifts Trump has taken on the issue over the past decade. At
the beginning of his first term, Trump declared, “I’m looking at two
states and one state, and I like the one that both parties like.”Several
days later, Trump appeared to backtrack, saying, “I like the two-state
solution,” while again insisting that he’d “ultimately like what both
parties like.”The next year, Trump said, “I like the two-state solution…
That’s what I think works best,” but the next day, he declared: “If the
Israelis and Palestinians want one state, that’s okay with me… If they
want two states, that’s okay with me.”Two years later — in 2020 — Trump
unveiled a peace plan that he framed as a “realistic” two-state
solution. The “deal of the century,” formally entitled “Peace to
Prosperity: A Vision to Improve the Lives of the Palestinian and Israeli
People,” offered the Palestinians a state on roughly 70% of the West
Bank that wouldn’t include Israel’s settlements, as well as a chunk of
the Negev desert and a hefty economic aid package.The Palestinian
Authority rejected the offer outright. After his first term, Trump also
accused Netanyahu of being non-committal to Israeli-Palestinian
rapprochement.As Trump’s second term approaches, some of his prospective
officials have voiced support for a two-state solution.Massad Boulos,
Trump’s newly appointed senior adviser on Mideast and Arab affairs — and
father-in-law of his daughter Tiffany — told Le Monde last week that “a
road map that would lead to a Palestinian state” would be an important
part of US-Saudi talks about a normalization agreement between Riyadh
and Jerusalem during the next administration.Boulos highlighted the
“deal of the century” as a frame of reference, indicating that Trump
still endorses the plan.Trump’s former Iran envoy Brian Hook, in an
interview with CNN last month, also said the 2020 deal would likely be
back on the table in a second Trump presidency. Hook noted that Israel’s
appetite for a two-state solution has diminished after October 7, 2023,
when thousands of Hamas-led terrorists stormed southern Israel to kill
some 1,200 people, sparking the war in Gaza.Doesn’t rule out Israeli
annexation of West Bank-In the Time interview, Trump also would not come
out against a possible Israeli annexation of the West Bank.Israel
captured the territory from Jordan in the 1967 war and maintains
security control there. As part of the 2020 Abraham Accords that Trump
brokered between Israel and four Arab nations, Israel backed down from
its bid to annex part of the territory.Asked whether he still stands
behind his “deal of the century,” or if he would let Israel proceed with
the annexation, Trump responded: “What I want is a deal where there’s
going to be peace and where the killing stops.”Asked again if he would
prevent Netanyahu from annexing the West Bank, Trump avoided responding
directly. Instead, he acknowledged having stopped Netanyahu from taking
the step, and then changed the subject to Hamas’s October 7 attack.When
his interviewers pushed him on the question, Trump responded: “I want a
long-lasting peace. I’m not saying that’s a very likely scenario, but I
want a long-lasting peace, a peace where we don’t have an October 7 in
another three years.”“There are numerous ways you can do it. You can do
it two-state, but there are numerous ways it can be done,” Trump
reiterated. “I’d like to see everybody be happy. Everybody go about
their lives, and people stop from dying. That includes on many different
fronts.”At least two former Trump officials have warned senior Israeli
ministers not to assume that the president-elect will support Israel
annexing the West Bank in his second term. The warning came after
far-right ministers Itamar Ben Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich hailed Trump’s
reelection as an opportunity for Israel to declare sovereignty in the
territory.Times of Israel staff and AFP contributed to this report.
IDF
strikes targeting Hamas fighters trying to loot aid reportedly kill
13-Military says strikes intended to allow aid convoy to reach
civilians; IDF also orders evacuation of Gaza City neighborhood after
Hamas launched rockets from there on Wednesday-By Agencies and ToI Staff
12 December 2024, 10:17 pmUpdated at 12:54 am
The Israel Defense
Forces said it carried out strikes on two groups of terrorists trying
to loot humanitarian aid in Gaza on Thursday morning. Hamas officials
said 13 people were killed in the strikes.“All of the terrorists who
were eliminated were Hamas terrorists who planned to violently take
control of humanitarian aid trucks and transfer them to the Hamas
terrorist organization,” the IDF said in a statement. “The strike was
intended to allow the humanitarian aid to reach the residents of the
Gaza Strip safely.”“We emphasize that the IDF did not attack
humanitarian aid trucks and that the aid truck transit route remained
open and active,” the military said.The statement said the Hamas members
aimed to hijack the aid “in support of continuing terrorist
activity.”The Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza said that 13
Palestinians were killed in the pair of airstrikes. The 13 were among
the 58 Palestinians that the ministry reported were killed in Israeli
strikes across the Strip on Thursday, a dozen of whom it described as
guards securing aid trucks.The Hamas figures cannot be verified and do
not differentiate between terror operatives and civilians.According to a
report in Reuters, citing sources close to Hamas, “many of those
killed” in the strikes had links to the terror group.Also on Thursday,
the IDF and Shin Bet announced that, earlier this week, an airstrike in
Gaza eliminated a top commander in Hamas’s weapons manufacturing
division.According to the military, the strike against a Hamas commander
center embedded within the al-Hurriya school in Gaza City, killed the
commander, Ammar Daloul, and several other operatives including one who
participated in the October 7 onslaught.Daloul served as a department
head in Hamas’s manufacturing division and a company commander in the
terror group’s Zeitoun Battalion, according to the IDF.The military said
the strike also killed Hamas terrorists Jihad Yassin, a company
commander in the Zeitoun Battalion; Yahya Masoud Muhammad Ashqar, who
infiltrated Israeli territory and participated in the October 7
massacre; Kamal Saber Salim Arafat; Muhammad Akram Aaraj; Loay Farid
Faiz Hussein Ali, a platoon commander; Imad Aouni Ibrahim Rayan; and
Raed Samir Masoud Harazayn, a member of Hamas’s internal security
forces.Before carrying out the strike, the IDF said it took steps to
mitigate civilian harm.Later on Thursday, the IDF issued an evacuation
warning to several neighborhoods in Gaza City, following rocket fire
from the area at Israeli troops operating in the Strip.“Terror
organizations are once again firing rockets from this area. The
specified area has been warned several times in the past,” Col. Avichay
Adraee, the IDF’s Arabic-language spokesman said, publishing a map of
the zones that are to be evacuated-Civilians in the area were called to
move to shelters in the center of Gaza City.Palestinian officials and
residents accuse Israel of depopulating the areas on the northern edge
of the enclave to create a buffer zone, something Israel denies.The war
began on October 7, 2023, when Hamas led a devastating cross-border
attack on Israel that killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians. The
thousands of terrorists who burst into the country also abducted 251
people who were taken as hostages.The Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza
said Thursday that at least 44,835 people have been killed in the
fighting, though the toll cannot be verified and does not differentiate
between civilians and fighters.Some 1.9 million Palestinians of the 2.3
million Gazan population are residing in the Israeli-designated
“humanitarian zone,” according to IDF assessments.The zone is located in
the al-Mawasi area on the southern Strip’s coast, western neighborhoods
of Khan Younis, and central Gaza’s Deir al-Balah.The size of the zone
has changed multiple times, amid evolving IDF operations against the
Hamas terror group. As of late August, the zone is just over 46 square
kilometers (17.7 square miles), or nearly 13 percent of the total size
of the Gaza Strip.
Khamenei says US, Israel were behind fall of
Syrian regime, also alludes to Turkey-Iranian leader, in first remarks
about Syria since sudden ouster of ally Assad, says Iran itself not
weakened by rebel takeover, seeks to keep ‘friendly relations’ with
country-By ToI Staff Today, 1:16 pm-DEC 11,24
Iranian Supreme
Leader Ali Khamenei on Wednesday blamed Israel and the United States for
the fall of the Bashar al-Assad regime in Syria, accusing the countries
of planning the dictator’s collapse, and vowing that the so-called Axis
of Resistance, of which Assad’s government was a part, will only grow
stronger moving forward.“There should be no doubt that what happened in
Syria was plotted in the command rooms of the United States and Israel.
We have evidence for this,” the Shiite cleric said, in remarks quoted by
state media.The remarks, delivered to a crowd of supporters, were
Khamenei’s first public comments on Syria since the dramatic toppling of
the Assad regime on Sunday by a jihadist-led coalition of rebel groups,
following a two-week lightning offensive that broke a years-long
stalemate after over a decade of civil war.“One of the neighboring
countries of Syria also played a role,” he added, in an apparent
reference to Turkey, “but the primary planners are the US and the
Zionist regime.”Turkish officials have strongly rejected claims of
involvement in the anti-government offensive. Analysts say, however,
that the rebel offensive would have been impossible without a green
light from Turkey.Prior to Khamenei’s remarks, Iran’s Vice President for
Strategic Affairs Mohammad Javad Zarif was more explicit, saying
Tuesday that “Turkey’s role in this matter is very clear,” in remarks
quoted by Iran International.According to Khamenei, different “invaders”
in Syria are pursuing different aims.“Their goals are different. Some
of them are seeking to seize the lands of northern or southern Syria.
America is seeking to strengthen its position in the region,” he
said.Turkey has forces in northern Syria, while in the south the Israeli
army has sent troops into a buffer zone east of the Golan Heights.
Khamenei said the US, which also has some troops in Syria aiding Kurdish
forces, will ultimately be driven out by the so-called Axis of
Resistance.In video of his speech posted to social media, audience
members in the sex-segregated crowd could be seen raising their fists
and shouting, “Death to America! Death to Israel!”#Iran's Leader: Some
are attempting to seize territory in #Syria from north or south. US is
seeking to strengthen its foothold in the region. The occupied areas of
Syria will be liberated by Syrian youth. US will also be expelled from
the region by the Resistance Front. pic.twitter.com/KyyLPqM449— Iran
Nuances (@IranNuances) December 11, 2024-The toppled Assad, who has
since fled to Moscow, was a crucial ally of Iran, and Syria was a
central throughway for the Iranian supply of weapons to its proxy forces
throughout the region.One of those proxies is Hezbollah in Lebanon,
with which Israel entered a shaky ceasefire last month following more
than a year of daily attacks by the terror group, in support of its ally
Hamas in Gaza, also backed by Iran, which launched a deadly
cross-border onslaught in Israel last year, starting the ongoing war.In
his speech, Khamenei claimed Hezbollah had delivered a “harsh slap” to
Israel, forcing the Jewish state into the ceasefire.The agreement,
reached about two months into an Israeli ground operation and some three
months into a larger Israeli offensive against the group, came after
thousands of Hezbollah’s fighters were killed, along with almost all of
its senior leadership, and most of its weapons were
destroyed.Hezbollah’s weakness amid its fight against Israel has been
cited as one of the reasons for the success of the Syrian rebels, a
coalition of groups led by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, a Sunni jihadist group
that began as an offshoot of al-Qaeda.In addition to fighting the Assad
regime, HTS has also fought with US-backed, Kurdish-led forces elsewhere
in Syria.Despite the factional differences between Iran and the rebel
groups, Khamenei said in a statement prior to his remarks that Iran
expects to continue “friendly” relations with Syria, saying, “Iran and
Syria have a long history, and we expect our friendly relationship to
continue.”Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned the new government in
Syria that “if this regime allows Iran to reestablish itself in Syria,
or allows the transfer of Iranian weapons or any other weapons to
Hezbollah, or attacks us, we will respond forcefully and we will exact a
heavy price from it.”Khamenei said Wednesday it was “ignorant” to
believe that “when the resistance becomes weak, Islamic Iran will also
become weak,” saying that with the help of God, “Iran is strong and
powerful and will only grow more powerful.”He denied, however, that any
real damage could be done to the “resistance” anyway, saying, “the more
you push, the stronger it becomes,” and vowing, “the domain of
resistance will cover the entire region, more than before.”AP
contributed to this report.
After fall of dynasty, tomb of
Assad’s father set on fire in Syria hometown-Ordinary citizens wander
through home of ousted president, loot luxury goods; Syrian refugees
stream back home through Turkish border, hope for better life-By
Agencies Today, 5:34 pm-DEC 11,24
The tomb of ousted Syrian
president Bashar al-Assad’s father Hafez was torched in his hometown of
Qardaha, AFP footage taken Wednesday showed, with rebel fighters in
fatigues and young men watching it burn.The Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights war monitor told AFP the rebels had set fire to the mausoleum,
located in the Latakia heartland of Assad’s Alawite community.AFP
footage showed parts of the mausoleum ablaze and damaged, with the tomb
of Hafez torched and destroyed.The vast elevated structure atop a hill
has an intricate architectural design with several arches, its exterior
embellished with ornamentation etched in stone.It also houses the tombs
of other Assad family members, including Bashar’s brother Bassel, who
was being groomed to inherit power before he was killed in a road
accident in 1994.Hafez al-Assad, then-defense minister, seized power in
Syria on November 13, 1970, in a bloodless coup. He was elected
president in a vote asking citizens to either approve or reject his
candidacy months later.Rebels in #Syria have set on fire the mausoleum
of Hafez al-Assad, founder of the #Assad dynasty who ascended to power
in a 1970 coup, establishing a brutal regime that ruled Syria with an
iron grip for over five decades, killing hundreds of thousands of
Syrians and Lebanese. pic.twitter.com/GXfu7b9x0O— War_Room_ME
(@WarRoomME) December 11, 2024-He consolidated power by bringing into
key positions members of his Alawite sect, a minority in Sunni-majority
Syria, and established a Soviet-style single-party police state with the
help of omnipresent intelligence officers — the feared Mukhabarat.Assad
was particularly hated for a vicious crackdown on an armed uprising by
the Muslim Brotherhood in the city of Hama in February 1982. Between
10,000 and 40,000 people died at the hands of the Syrian army.On Sunday,
a lightning offensive by Islamist-led rebels seized key cities before
reaching Damascus and forcing his son Bashar to flee, ending more than
50 years of his family’s rule.The end of Assad’s reign came 13 years
after his crackdown on anti-government protests ignited Syria’s civil
war, which has drawn in foreign powers, and jihadists and claimed more
than half a million lives.Syrians wonder around Assad’s home-Roaming the
opulent Damascus home of the ousted Syrian president, Abu Omar said he
felt a sense of giddy defiance being in the residence of the man he felt
had long oppressed him.“I am taking pictures because I am so happy to
be here in the middle of his house,” said the 44-year-old, showing
photographs he took on his mobile phone.He was among the dozens an AFP
correspondent saw Sunday entering Assad’s home after Assad fled the
country.“I came for revenge. They oppressed us in incredible ways,” Abu
Omar added from the compound of three six-story buildings in the upscale
al-Maliki neighborhood.Jubilant men, women and children wandered the
home and its sprawling garden in a daze, the rooms stripped bare except
for some furniture and a portrait of Assad discarded on the
floor.Residents in the Syrian capital were seen cheering in the streets,
as the rebel factions heralded the departure of “tyrant” Assad.‘Sale!
Sale!’On Sunday, video circulating online showed crowds peeking into the
bedrooms in the Assad residence, which was previously off-limits to
ordinary citizens.They could be seen snatching clothes, plates and
whatever belongings they could find including a Louis Vuitton cardboard
shopping bag.In one video, a man could be heard yelling that everything
was on “Sale! Sale!”Umm Nader, 35, came with her husband from a nearby
district to tour the residence that once inspired fear and awe, and
which one visitor now described as a “museum.”“I came to see this place
that we were banned from, because they wanted us to live in poverty and
deprivation,” she told AFP.Nader said the former inhabitants of the
residence had left without cutting off the heating and electricity,
“meanwhile our children are getting sick from the cold.”Daily power
outages that last for hours have been a fact of life in Syria, reeling
from successive economic crises after more than a decade of war and
Western sanctions.Most of the population has been pushed into poverty,
according to the United Nations.An AFP correspondent also saw a charred
reception hall at the Damascus presidential palace a couple of
kilometers away.As he moved from room to room, Abu Omar said he felt
overjoyed.“I no longer feel afraid. My only concern is that we unite (as
Syrians) and build this country together,” he said, full of
emotion.Syrians stream back home through Turkish border-Syrians
continued to flow back into the country after the longtime dictator had
fled, speaking of their expectations for a better life following what
was for many a decade of hardship in Turkey.“We have no one here. We are
going back to Latakia, where we have family,” said Mustafa as he
prepared to enter Syria with his wife and three sons at the Cilvegozu
border gate in southern Turkey. Dozens more Syrians were waiting to
cross.Mustafa fled Syria in 2012, a year after the conflict there began,
to escape conscription into Assad’s army. For years he did unregistered
jobs in Turkey earning less than the minimum wage, he said.“Now there’s
a better Syria. God willing, we will have a better life there,” he
said, expressing confidence in the new leadership in Syria as he watched
over the family’s belongings, clothes packed into sacks and a
television set.Turkey, which hosts three million Syrians, has extended
the opening hours of the Cilvegozu border gate near the Syrian city of
Aleppo seized by rebels at the end of November.A second border gate was
opened at nearby Yayladagi in Hatay on Tuesday.Around 350-400 Syrians a
day were already crossing back to rebel-held areas of Syria this year
before the opposition rebellion began two weeks ago. The numbers have
almost doubled since, Ankara says, anticipating a surge now Assad has
gone.Turkey has backed Syrian opposition forces for years but has said
it had no involvement in the rebel offensive which succeeded at the
weekend in unseating Assad.Around 100 trucks were waiting to cross the
border, carrying goods including dozens of used cars. Security forces
helped manage the flow of people, while aid groups offered snacks to
children and tea and soup to adults.‘Our own people’ are now in
charge-Haya was waiting to enter Syria with her husband and three
children. They have lived in a nearby container camp since devastating
earthquakes in February 2023 killed more than 50,000 people in Turkey
and Syria.“We had good neighbors and good relations, but a container is
not a home,” Haya said as she comforted her six-month-old baby and her
daughter translated her comments from Arabic.“We are going back to
Aleppo. Iman has a school here, but we have nothing else. We are going
back home, to our family,” Haya said, adding that her brother had been
released after years in prison following Assad’s ouster.Syria’s new
interim prime minister has said he aimed to bring back millions of
Syrian refugees, protect all citizens and provide basic services but
acknowledged it would be difficult because the country, long under
sanctions, lacks foreign currency.Mustafa voiced confidence in the new
leadership after Assad was ousted by rebels led by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham,
a former al Qaeda affiliate that has since downplayed its jihadist
roots.“Those who have taken power are no strangers. They didn’t come
from the United States or Russia. They are our own people. We know
them,” he said.
Op-ed: Day 432 of the war-Israel pulls itself
together; Iran’s axis falls apart-The jihadists’ lightning takeover of
Syria was followed by the IAF’s vital lightning destruction of Assad’s
military infrastructure. Now Iran may think it has only one option
left-By David Horovitz-Today, 5:09 pm-DEC 11,24
This Editor’s
Note was sent out earlier Wednesday in ToI’s weekly update email to
members of the Times of Israel Community. To receive these Editor’s
Notes as they’re released, join the ToI Community here.One hundred
hostages are still held in Gaza. Tens of thousands of Israelis are only
just beginning to hope that stability has been restored to the north.
Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis are still capable of launching rockets
and drones. Soldiers are still losing their lives in Gaza and in south
Lebanon.But 14 months after Hamas invaded, on the worst day in modern
Israeli history, it is the Iranian “Axis of Resistance” that is falling
apart, and the State of Israel that is pulling itself together.After the
unfathomable failure to defend against Hamas’s overt preparations for
invasion and slaughter in the south, and a subsequent slow and
protracted military campaign in Gaza, Israeli intel, ground and air
forces over the past three months devastated Hezbollah — Hamas’s far
more powerful terrorist army across the northern border — and in so
doing rendered Bashar Assad’s regime in Syria vulnerable to a jihadist
overthrow.This would not have happened if Netanyahu had been prepared to
end the war in Gaza in order to secure a deal for the hostages. It
could have happened earlier if the Gaza war had been less ponderous and
the IDF had been freed up more quickly to effectively tackle
Hezbollah.Deeply wary about assurances from Syria’s new jihadi leader
Abu Mohammed al-Golani that Syria is “exhausted” by war and won’t be
embarking on new ones, Israel reacted to the Islamist rebels’ lightning
takeover in Damascus with a lightning strategic assault of its own:
destroying not Bashar Al-Assad’s Syrian Army per se — its troops had
melted away — but Assad’s Syrian armaments.Al-Golani’s very name
underlines his roots in the Golan Heights; his Hayat Tahrir al-Sham
group’s name translates as “Organization for the Liberation of the
Levant” — historically seen as the area covering today’s Syria, Lebanon,
Jordan and, yes, Israel. He has been wanted for terrorism by the United
States since 2017, with a $10 million reward for information leading to
his capture.On Sunday, the very day he hailed victory in an address at
Damascus’s Umayyad Mosque, a knot of unidentified rebels, also in a
mosque in Syria’s capital, proclaimed that they would, in time, be
heading to Israel’s capital: “This is the land of Islam, this is
Damascus, the Muslim stronghold. From here to Jerusalem. We’re coming
for Jerusalem. Patience, people of Gaza, patience,” declared one of
them, a promise endorsed by the gunmen around him with cries of “Allahu
akbar!” (“God is greatest” in Arabic.)-Deep Israeli wariness, and taking
measures to prevent worst-case scenarios, are thus precisely what was
needed. If only Israel had done the same before October 7.Syria had been
a potent threat to Israel in the past — a ferocious, deadly enemy in
the 1973 Yom Kippur War, and a would-be nuclear power until Israel
intervened to destroy its North Korean-built nuclear reactor in 2007. As
of last week, it boasted the largest concentration of air defense
systems in the world, according to former Israel Air Force chief Ido
Nehoshtan.It also had vast arrays of weaponry, chemical weapons
infrastructure and substantial arms-production facilities.An estimated
80 percent of that Syrian military capacity has now been eliminated by
the Israel Air Force — giving Israel air supremacy along the very
corridor where the ayatollahs had sought to hold sway — from the
Mediterranean, through Lebanon and Syria to Iraq and Iran.Necessarily,
too, Israel has taken over the buffer zone on the Syrian border,
including the Syrian side of the strategic Mount Hermon. Iran-backed
Assad was a potentially potent threat but not an immediate one. The
border was stable.That is no longer reliably the case, and thus Israel
moved quickly to ensure that its citizenry is protected.Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu has described this as a temporary measure, and indeed
it is, in theory. It’s just hard to foresee how and when Israel wil
deem it safe to withdraw.Israel is doubtless also watching with concern
the potential for violent insurrection in Jordan, the state with which
it shares its longest border, and that constitutes a crucial bulwark
against Iran. Jordan is led by a domestically unpopular monarchy that is
publicly and relentlessly critical of Israel even as bilateral security
coordination is strategically vital. The two leaderships dislike and
mistrust each other; it is in both countries’ core interest to work to
improve that relationship.But the key strategic concern in an era where
almost all bets are off in this region, and when staggeringly dramatic
events are playing out on a weekly basis, is, of course, Iran.The
Islamic Republic’s two main proxies in the bid to destroy Israel have
been massively degraded, Bashar al-Assad’s regime briskly despatched,
and its own vulnerabilities exposed and magnified by the relative
failure of its two strikes on Israel and the potency of what was a
relatively limited Israeli response.The fear is that the ayatollahs,
running out of options, may conclude that Assad in Syria, like Muammar
Qaddafi in Libya and Saddam Hussein in Iraq before him, proved
vulnerable because he never got to the bomb, and that they will expedite
their nuclear weapons drive. They are already openly discussing the
issue. They are already accelerating uranium enrichment. They already
have potent long-range missile capabilities. They are already deeply
alarming US intelligence and the UN’s nuclear watchdog.We must hope that
US and Israeli intelligence know everything they need to know about how
far the regime has already progressed on the road to weaponization, and
how urgent is the imperative to thwart it.Incidentally, while
Netanyahu’s legal tactics have been a central factor in the inordinate
length of his corruption trial, and while Netanyahu routinely spends a
great deal of his time on ceremonial and self-promotional activity, it
is plainly not good for Israel to have its prime minister testifying in
court three days a week right now and doubtless spending many more hours
working on his testimony.A less onerous court schedule would seem more
appropriate, since Israeli law enabled him to refuse to step down when
he was indicted, since the legal authorities reached an agreement with
him under which he continues to serve as prime minister even when
testifying in his own defense, and since these are radically atypical
and fateful times for Israel.
Biden okays memo that may guide
Trump policy on China, Iran, North Korea and Russia-As cooperation
between US rivals intensifies, current White House suggests next
administration boosts interagency ties, intel sharing between allies,
sanctions effectiveness-By AAMER MADHANI Today, 4:15 pm-DEC 11,24
WASHINGTON
(AP) — US President Joe Biden has approved a new national security
memorandum ahead of Donald Trump’s return to the White House that could
serve as a road map for the incoming administration as it looks to
counter growing cooperation among China, Iran, North Korea and Russia,
the White House said Wednesday.Biden administration officials began
developing the guidance this summer. It was shaped to be a document that
could help the next administration build its approach from day one on
how it deals with the tightening relationships involving America’s most
prominent adversaries and competitors, according to two senior
administration officials.The officials, who spoke on the condition of
anonymity under ground rules set by the White House, said the classified
memorandum would not be made public because of the sensitivity of some
of its findings.The document includes four broad recommendations:
improving US government interagency cooperation, speeding up the sharing
of information with allies about the four adversaries, calibrating the
US government’s use of sanctions and other economic tools for maximum
effectiveness, and bolstering preparation to manage simultaneous crises
involving the adversaries.The US for many years has been concerned about
cooperation among the four countries. Coordination has accelerated
between the countries in the aftermath of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine
in 2022.The officials noted that as Russia has become more isolated by
much of the world, Moscow has turned to Iran for drones and missiles.
From North Korea, the Russians have received artillery, missiles, and
even thousands of troops that have traveled to help the Russians try to
repel Ukrainian forces from the Kursk region. China, meanwhile, has
supported Russia with dual-use components that help keep its
military-industrial base afloat.In return, Russia has sent fighter jets
to Iran and assisted Tehran as it looks to bolster its missile defense
and space technology.North Korea has received from Russia much-needed
fuel and funding to help build out its manufacturing and military
capabilities. The officials added that Russia has “de facto accepted
North Korea as a nuclear weapon state.”China, meanwhile, is benefiting
from Russian know-how, with the two countries working together to deepen
their military technical cooperation. The two nations are also
conducting joint patrols in the Arctic region.Biden and Trump have
sharply different worldviews, but officials in both the incoming and
outgoing administrations said they have sought to coordinate on national
security issues during the transition.One of the officials said that
the Biden White House memo “isn’t trying to box (the Trump
administration) in or tilt them toward one policy option or another.”The
official said the document is intended to help the next administration
build “capacity” as it shapes its policies on some of the most difficult
foreign policies it will face.
Rare four rockets launched at
Israel from Gaza, causing no damage-Two missiles intercepted, rest fall
in open areas; IDF issues evacuation orders for launch site areas; Hamas
authorities say dozens killed in Israeli strikes-By ToI Staff and
Agencies Today, 2:22 pm-DEC 11,24
Four rockets were fired from
the Gaza Strip at Israel on Wednesday, causing no damage and prompting
the military to issue evacuation orders to Gazans in the area from which
they were launched.Pairs of rockets from Gaza were fired in two
volleys, the first pair hitting open areas and the second intercepted by
air defense systems, the Israel Defense Forces said.After 14 months of
war that began when Palestinian terror group Hamas led a massive attack
on southern Israel — which included a barrage of thousands of rockets at
many other areas of the country — rocket fire from Gaza has become a
rarity. Airstrikes and IDF troops, operating on the ground in Gaza, have
greatly depleted Hamas’s arsenal. The last rocket fired from the
coastal enclave was over a week ago on December 2.Following the rocket
attack, the IDF issued evacuation orders for specific areas in the
Maghazi refugee camp in Gaza. The IDF’s Arabic language account on
social media platform X published details and a list of blocks to be
evacuated.It urged residents to head toward a humanitarian-designated
zone near the Mediterranean coast.“Terrorist organizations are once
again firing rockets from your area,” the post read. “This particular
area has been warned several times before. For your own safety, you must
evacuate this area immediately and move to the humanitarian zone.”The
IDF has laid out a safe zone for non-combatants to stay in during the
fighting.Evacuation orders usually come before airstrikes on the
areas.Meanwhile, Israeli attacks across the Gaza Strip overnight and
during the day killed at least 33 Palestinians, most of them in an
airstrike on a house in Beit Lahiya in the north of the enclave,
according to medics in the Hamas-controlled Strip.The Beit Lahiya strike
killed at least 22 people, including women and children, Hamas-run
health officials said, without differentiating between fighters and
non-combatants. Relatives listed the names of the dead on social
media.More than 30 people were living in the multi-story building before
it was struck, and several family members remained missing as rescue
operations continued through the morning, the Palestinian WAFA news
agency said.The military said it was checking the report.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.In nearby Beit Hanoun,
where the IDF has operated since October, medics said an Israeli
airstrike killed and wounded several people, without giving an exact
toll. Rescue workers said several people were trapped under
rubble.Earlier on Wednesday, at least seven Palestinians were killed and
several others wounded in an Israeli airstrike on a house in the
Nuseirat camp in central Gaza, medics told Reuters.The Palestinian Civil
Emergency Service and medics said four other people were killed in
separate Israeli airstrikes on two houses in Gaza City.Israeli forces
have been operating in Beit Hanoun, Beit Lahiya and the nearby Jabalia
refugee camp since October 5, fighting Hamas members waging attacks from
those areas and preventing them from regrouping the Israeli military
says.Earlier this week, three Israeli soldiers were killed in a Hamas
attack in Jabalia. The next day the IDF said an airstrike killed 10
Hamas members involved in the attack.Palestinian officials and residents
accuse Israel of depopulating the areas on the northern edge of the
enclave to create a buffer zone, something Israel denies.The war began
on October 7, 2023, when Hamas led a devastating cross-border attack on
Israel that killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians. The thousands of
terrorists who burst into the country also abducted 251 people who were
taken as hostages.The Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza said Wednesday
that at least 44,805 people have been killed in the fighting, though the
toll cannot be verified and does not differentiate between civilians
and fighters.Some 1.9 million Palestinians of the 2.3 million Gazan
population are residing in the Israeli-designated “humanitarian zone,”
according to IDF assessments in July.The zone is located in the
al-Mawasi area on the southern Strip’s coast, western neighborhoods of
Khan Younis, and central Gaza’s Deir al-Balah.The size of the zone has
changed multiple times, amid evolving IDF operations against the Hamas
terror group. As of late August, the zone is just over 46 square
kilometers (17.7 square miles), or nearly 13% of the total size of the
Gaza Strip.
Russia spirited Assad out of Syria in ‘secure
manner,’ Moscow’s deputy FM reveals-Speaking to NBC News, Sergei Ryabkov
says Russia acted as required ‘in such an extraordinary situation,’
indicates Syrian strongman won’t be handed to ICC for trial-By Reuters
and ToI Staff Today, 11:48 am-DEC 11,24
Russia transported Bashar
al-Assad, who was ousted as Syria’s president by a lightning rebel
offensive, very securely to its territory, the country’s deputy foreign
minister, Sergei Ryabkov, told NBC News in an interview aired on
Tuesday.The Kremlin said on Monday that President Vladimir Putin made
the decision to grant asylum to Assad. His fall is a big blow to Iran
and Russia, which had intervened in Syria’s 13-year civil war to try to
shore up his rule, despite Western demands that he leave power.“He is
secured, and it shows that Russia acts as required in such an
extraordinary situation,” Ryabkov said, according to a transcript on
NBC’s website. He added that he would not elaborate “on what happened
and how it was resolved.”Asked whether Russia would hand over Assad for
trial, Ryabkov said: “Russia is not a party to the convention that
established the International Criminal Court.”He also advised Israel “to
seriously consider what is going on in the Golan Heights,” and “not to
infringe” on Syrian territory.Israel sent troops into a buffer zone with
Syria established in the 1974 Agreement on Disengagement between the
two countries, which concluded the Yom Kippur War.Israel said it would
not become involved in the conflict in Syria and that its seizure of the
buffer zone, which is Syrian territory, was a defensive move.Israel
also launched a massive bombing campaign in the country, with the IDF
saying on Tuesday that it had destroyed most of the former Assad
regime’s strategic military capabilities, in an effort to prevent
advanced weaponry from falling into the hands of hostile elements.The
Kremlin on Wednesday played down the damage to Russian influence in the
Middle East from the fall of Assad’s regime, saying that its focus was
Ukraine and that Moscow was in contact with the new rulers of Syria.When
Russia intervened in the Syrian Civil War in 2015, it helped tip the
balance in Assad’s favor, so his fall from power dealt a serious setback
to both Russia, which is fighting a major land war in Ukraine, and to
Iran, which is battling US-backed Israel across the Middle East.“You
know, of course, that we are in contact with those who are currently in
control of the situation in Syria,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told
reporters.Asked how much the fall of Assad had weakened Russia’s
influence in the region, Peskov said that Moscow maintained contacts
with all countries in the region and would continue to do so.Moscow’s
priority, Peskov said, was the war in Ukraine, which President Vladimir
Putin calls a “special military operation.” Russia invaded Ukraine in
2022.Moscow has supported Syria since the early days of the Cold War,
recognizing its independence in 1944 as Damascus sought to throw off
French colonial rule. The West saw Syria as a Soviet satellite.On
Tuesday, Syria’s new interim leader announced that he was taking charge
of the country as caretaker prime minister, with the backing of the
former rebels who toppled Assad.Separately, Ryabkov, the Russian deputy
foreign minister, said his country would “definitely be prepared to
consider” another prisoner swap, similar to the August exchange that
involved Wall Street Journal reporter journalist Evan Gershkovich and
ex-US Marine Paul Whelan.A new deal would be “a healthy step forward,
especially at the beginning of the next administration,” Ryabkov told
NBC, adding he would not want to “pre-empt anything.”
3 Israelis
lightly hurt as gunmen open fire during uncoordinated visit to Nablus
tomb-IDF says ultra-Orthodox pilgrims held for questioning by police;
men said to be members of Shuvu Bonim cult-By ToI Staff Today, 10:56
am-DEC 11,24
Three Israelis who visited Joseph’s Tomb in the
Palestinian city of Nablus overnight without coordination with the
military were lightly injured when gunmen opened fire at their vehicle,
Hebrew-language media reported Wednesday.The three fled and received
medical treatment at a Jerusalem hospital, reports said.The Israel
Defense Forces said the men “breached a checkpoint” and were being held
for questioning by police. There was no comment on whether the gunmen
had been detained.According to the Kan public broadcaster, the Israeli
men are members of the ultra-Orthodox Shuvu Bonim cult led by convicted
sex offender Rabbi Eliezer Berland.In June, a number of members of the
sect entered Nablus in an attempt to visit the tomb on an uncoordinated
visit, leading the army to send a large number of forces into the area
to retrieve them.Before the war, busloads of Orthodox Jews visited
Joseph’s Tomb under IDF protection on a nearly monthly basis, and the
pilgrimages almost always sparked violent clashes with Palestinian
locals.The IDF bars Israeli citizens from entering Palestinian cities
without prior authorization and protection, and some criticize the
monthly incursions as an unnecessary provocation that additionally
places Israeli soldiers at risk.The shrine, regarded by some as the
final resting place of the biblical patriarch Joseph, is located inside
Area A of the West Bank, which is officially under complete Palestinian
Authority control, though the Israeli military regularly enters, despite
Palestinian opposition.Berland, 86, has served separate prison
sentences in the past for sex offenses and fraud. He had previously
spent years on the lam from Israeli authorities and was also detained in
connection with murders allegedly carried out by members of his cult,
before being released.
American hostages' daughter issues rare
critique of Biden-1st hostage to return from Gaza meets Trump, urges him
to do all he can to free captives-Judith Raanan, taken with teen
daughter while visiting Nahal Oz and released two weeks later, gives US
president-elect a painting and tells him about her time in captivity-By
ToI Staff and Jacob Magid-Today, 12:08 pm-DEC 11,24
An
Israel-American former hostage met US President-elect Donald Trump in
Florida and urged him to do everything he can to free the remaining 100
captives held by terrorists in Gaza, according to a Tuesday statement by
the Hostages and Missing Families Forum.Judith Raanan was kidnapped
from Kibbutz Nahal Oz during Hamas’s October 7, 2023, onslaught, along
with her 18-year-old daughter, Natalie. Less than two weeks later, on
October 20, the pair became the first to be released by Hamas.Raanan
gave Trump a painting of hers and told him about the kidnapping and her
time in captivity in Gaza, according to the Families Forum statement.The
statement noted that Raanan’s main message was that she trusts Trump
and asked him to do everything in his power to secure the return of all
the hostages, both the living and the dead.Judith and Natalie, residents
of Evanston, Illinois, outside of Chicago, had been in Israel to
celebrate a relative’s 85th birthday and the Jewish holiday season when
they were kidnapped from the Gaza border community.The mother and
daughter were set free unilaterally by the terror group. The exact
mechanism behind the transfer was not clear — Hamas said that the
release was made “for humanitarian reasons.”For more than a year,
several waves of negotiations have stalled and failed to reach a sequel
to an agreement reached in late November 2023, in which 105 hostages
were released in a weeklong truce.Israel believes that 96 of the 251
hostages kidnapped on October 7 are still in Gaza, including the bodies
of at least 34 confirmed dead by the Israel Defense Forces. Over the
past 14 months, IDF troops have rescued eight hostages and recovered the
bodies of 38.Hamas is also holding two Israeli civilians who entered
the Gaza Strip in 2014 and 2015, as well as the bodies of two IDF
soldiers who were killed in 2014.The outgoing Biden administration is
still working to secure a deal before leaving the White House.Talks for a
potential deal were recently renewed following the ceasefire in
Lebanon, and recent regional developments, along with Trump’s threat
that there will be “hell to pay” if the hostages are not released by the
time he enters office on January 20, 2025.Three hostages with US
citizenship — Edan Alexander, Sagui Dekel-Chen and Keith Siegel — are
believed to still be alive. The bodies of four other Americans — Omer
Neutra, Judith Weinstein, Gadi Haggai and Itay Chen — are still being
held in Gaza.A rare critique of Biden from a hostage family-Relatives of
those seven hostages met with US National Security Adviser Jake
Sullivan later Tuesday to receive an update on the Biden
administration’s efforts to secure a hostage deal before Sullivan
himself headed to the region to advance that aim.One of the participants
in the White House meeting with Iris Weinstein Haggai, daughter of
slain hostages Judi and Gadi.Speaking to The Times of Israel after the
meeting, Weinstein Haggai said US President Joe Biden should have issued
the kind of statement released last week by President-elect Donald
Trump, who warned of “all hell to pay” if captives in the Middle East
were not immediately released.“All world leaders should have done on
October 8, 2023, what Trump did in his tweet,” Weinstein Haggai said.
“Our situation would have been a lot different. We would have saved many
lives — not only Israelis, not only hostages’ but also Palestinians —
if only world leaders took a stand for the unconditional release of all
these hostages.”Asked specifically whether her critique of world leaders
extended to Biden, Weinstein Haggai responded, “definitely,” taking
ownership of a rare critique of the outgoing president who has
repeatedly been heralded by the American hostage families for his
efforts to secure their loved ones’ release.She recognized that Biden
has several times throughout the war called for the unconditional
release of the hostages, and she expressed appreciation for the
president’s decision to visit Israel days after October 7. “But the
demand for them to be released ‘or else,’ is what I’m looking for,” said
Weinstein Haggai, whose parents’ bodies have been held in Gaza since
they were murdered during the Hamas onslaught.Weinstein Haggai clarified
that she doesn’t expect Hamas to immediately comply with such demands,
but stated they would lead the terror group to understand the
international community is not accepting its narrative and that it
therefore doesn’t have legitimacy to raise demands in negotiations or
refuse to engage in talks at all.“When these Hamas terrorists… see that
world leaders don’t pressure them… it sends a message to them that they
can execute six beautiful young people and there are no consequences,
that they can release these propaganda videos and nobody’s going to do
anything,” she said.While many world leaders have demanded the immediate
release of the hostages, they have done so as part of calls for a
ceasefire in Gaza, which the hostages’ daughter laments is something
they haven’t done when addressing other conflicts.“It hurts my soul to
see what’s happening in Gaza. My family lived a mile from Gaza for a
reason. We were the first in line to advocate for peace and for a
two-state solution, but the hostages can’t be used to solve the Middle
East crisis,” Weinstein Haggai argued.Regardless, she said it was “never
too late” for world leaders to issue the kind of statement Trump did.