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US policies encourage Israel to continue massacre of Gazans: Iran FM

Josep Borrell & Hossein Amir Abdolahian

Amirabdollahian made the comment in a Saturday phone call with the European Union’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell.

During the conversation, Iran’s top diplomat stressed the necessity of putting an immediate end to the Zionist regime’s crimes against Palestinians.

“The Zionist regime’s military attacks against the people of Gaza must stop as soon as possible to pave the way for the dispatch of humanitarian aid,” he said.

Amirabdollahian emphasized that “supportive policies adopted by the United States have encouraged the Zionist regime to continue its military aggression and massacre of civilians in Gaza,” and also play an important role in continuation and further spread of the war.

Iran’s foreign minister issued a stern warning about the Zionist regime’s plan to forcefully expel Palestinians from their occupied lands.

“The root cause of the current situation [in the occupied territories] is the Zionist regime’s occupation and aggression. If the Israeli regime’s war crimes against [the Palestinian people] in Gaza and the West Bank do not stop, it is possible for the war to further deepen and spread to [other parts of] the region,” he added.

Borrell, for his part, noted that tensions in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank must end as soon as possible, noting that the European Union is trying to make Israel respect its obligations under international law.

Touching on Iran’s role in helping reduce regional tensions, the European Union’s foreign policy chief stated the bloc believes that diplomacy is the best solution to the issue of Palestine and continuation of military strikes will only make the crisis worse.

Israel launched a new series of indiscriminate strikes on the Gaza Strip soon after a seven-day truce deal with Gaza’s Hamas resistance movement came to an end on Friday.

More than 15,200 people have so far been killed in Gaza with over 40,000 people wounded. According to Gaza’s Health Ministry, 70 percent of victims of Israeli strikes on the blockaded territory are women and children.

World’s inaction embolden Israel: Iran president

Raisi and Kishida

Raisi made the remarks in a Saturday phone call with Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, during which the two sides discussed bilateral relations and the latest developments related to the situation in the occupied Palestinian territories.

“We believe that the silence and inaction of the world’s leaders and officials only embolden child-killing Zionist rulers [of Israel],” the Iranian president said.

He added that various countries, including Japan, must make diplomatic endeavors in pursuit of four important priorities, which include “putting and end to Israel’s bombardment of Gaza, sending humanitarian aid to the people of Gaza, lifting the siege of the territory, and restoring the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people.”

The Israeli regime launched its brutal war on Gaza on October 7 following a surprise operation by the territory’s resistance movements.

More than 15,200 people have so far been killed in Gaza with over 40,000 people wounded. According to Gaza’s Health Ministry, 70 percent of victims of Israeli strikes on the blockaded territory are women and children. Thousands more are missing and feared buried under the rubble.

Elsewhere in his remarks, Raisi pointed to the United States’ all-out backing for Israel’s military onslaught, calling Washington “the main sponsor and supporter of the Israeli regime’s war machine.”

The US, Israel’s biggest and oldest ally, has provided the regime with thousands of arms consignments since the war on Gaza started. Washington, which has backed Tel Aviv’s ferocious attacks as a means of “self-defense,” has been also casting its veto against the UN Security Council resolutions that called on the occupying regime to cease its aggression.

“With direct support from the US and by trampling on more than 400 international resolutions, the Zionist regime has dropped the equivalent of seven Hiroshima atom bombs on the people of Gaza since the beginning of the war on Gaza,” the president continued.

“At the same time, the United States brazenly calls on other countries to show self-restraint in the face of such crimes, so that, the fake Zionist regime would be able to continue its crimes and genocide with ease of mind.”

Raisi urged Japan and other countries to hold referendums “to objectively witness the extent of their people’s support for the Palestinian nation, though the Western countries are very afraid of such a referendum.”

The Japanese prime minister, for his part, lauded Raisi’s positions on the ongoing developments in Gaza, while expressing concern about the continuation of humanitarian crisis in the territory.

He also stressed the need for putting an end to attacks on civilians and sending humanitarian aid to the people of Gaza.

Israel-Palestine conflict LIVE: Hamas says no negotiations or prisoner exchange with Israel until there is ceasefire in Gaza Strip

Gaza War

IDF says two more soldiers killed in Gaza offensive

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said two more soldiers have died in their offensive in the Gaza Strip.

The IDF announced one died of wounds sustained three weeks ago, and a second was killed on Saturday. A total of 66 soldiers have died since Israel launched its ground offensive on Gaza last month, the IDF added.

The latest deaths come after Israel resumed its offensive in Gaza.


Palestinians officials say 700 killed in 24 hours

Israeli bombing has killed at least 700 people in the last 24 hours, the Gaza government media office has announced.

Israeli fighter jets bombed heavily across Gaza’s north and south on Saturday night and Sunday morning, levelling dozens of homes.

The escalation comes after US officials say they have urged Israel to show “restraint” following the resumption of bombing on Friday.


Report reveals Israel’s AI-driven military campaign in Gaza

Israel’s war on Gaza has seen it strike the Palestinian enclave with new and deadly ferocity. That onslaught, according to a recent report, is being powered with an artificial intelligence system that experts warn is indiscriminate and inherently faulty.

During a collaborative investigation, Israeli publications +972 Magazine and Local Call carried out interviews with various ex and current Israeli intelligence officials, Middle East Eye reported.

These discussions uncovered that the military’s expectations for minimising civilian targets were lower than what was previously assumed.

The combination of relaxed operational guidelines and the deployment of “Habsora” (“The Gospel” in Hebrew), an AI system capable of rapidly generating targets, led to what a former intelligence officer described as a “mass assassination factory”.

According to the reports by officials, residences of lower-ranking members of Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups were deliberately targeted, even at the cost of potential casualties in the entire building.


Palestinian man shot dead in occupied West Bank

Adnan Issam Zaid, 21, was shot dead by Israeli forces on Sunday, Palestinian WAFA news agency reported.

The killing took place during an Israeli raid in Qalqilya in the occupied West Bank.

Since October 7, more than 250 people have been killed in the occupied West Bank, more than a quarter of them were minors.


Hamas says it launched a barrage of rockets at Tel Aviv

The military wing of Hamas, Al-Qassam Brigades, has launched a barrage of rockets toward Tel Aviv, it said in a statement late Saturday local time.

The group claimed the action is in response to what it calls “Zionist massacres against civilians.”

The rockets were fired from a location in the northern Gaza Strip, according to Izzat al-Rishq, a member of Hamas’ political bureau.

It was the second round of threats over the city since the truce between Israel and Hamas ended.


Estimated 300 killed in Shujaiya ‘massacre’: Palestinian civil defence

An estimated 300 people were killed in a single Israeli attack on a residential block in the Gaza Strip on Saturday, according to the Palestinian civil defence.

Hundreds more are feared wounded, the spokesperson for the civil defence in Gaza, Mahmoud Basal, told Al Ghad TV, after 50 residential buildings were levelled by Israeli fighter jets.

Residents say up to 1,000 people lived in the targeted area in Shujaiya, a densely populated neighbourhood in eastern Gaza City.

“The numbers are huge,” Basal continued, stating, “At least 300 are dead and many more are missing under the rubble.”

Basal added the civil defence teams do not have the means nor the equipment to handle the “massacre”.


Hamas says no negotiations or prisoner exchange with Israel until there is ceasefire in Gaza

Saleh Al-Arouri, deputy head of the political bureau of Hamas, conveyed the group’s official stance on negotiations and hostage-prisoner exchanges in an interview with Al Jazeera TV on Saturday.

He said “there are no negotiations now” and there will be no more prisoner exchanges until there is a ceasefire in Gaza and “until the Zionist terrorist aggression is completely ended.”

The remaining hostages still being held captive by Hamas are soldiers and former soldiers, according to Al-Arouri, who added that “there will be no negotiations regarding them until the end of the aggression.”

Al-Arouri said adult male hostages — “all of whom served in the army, with some still on the reserve list” — are now subjected to different standards by Hamas. The Israeli prime minister’s office said Saturday that 117 men remain captive.

“We said from day one that the price for releasing Zionist prisoners is the liberation of all our prisoners, after the ceasefire,” Al-Arouri added.

The negotiations between Israel and Hamas over hostages held captive in Gaza broke down Saturday after Israel continued to insist on the release of a group of women and Hamas refused, according to reports.


Israel will continue ground operations in Gaza until all goals are met: Netanyahu

Israel will continue ground operations in Gaza until all of its goals are achieved, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reiterated in a press conference Saturday.

“We will continue the war until we achieve all our goals, and we can’t achieve these goals without the ground maneuvering,” Netanyahu said.

“There are no other ways to achieve these goals but to win, and there is no way to win other than ground maneuvering.”

Netanyahu added Israel’s goals are freeing hostages, eradicating Hamas and preventing a “regime of terror” in Gaza.

“We must achieve these goals; this is the only thing that is important to me,” he continued.

Netanyahu also spoke of the freed hostages, but declined to provide details on the conditions in which they were kept in Gaza.

“As evidence has been gathered, you realize they experienced hell,” he said.

Netanyahu also reiterated his warning against Hezbollah becoming more involved in the conflict.

“In the north, we are operating all the time against Hezbollah, eliminating terror squads bringing terrorists further from the border,” Netanyahu added.

“We are on the offensive and, let me declare, we are committed to bring security both to the north and the south; if Hezbollah makes such mistake and enters the expanded war, it will demolish Lebanon single-handedly,” the prime minister continued.


Israeli DM claims Hamas violated agreement to return 15 women and 2 children

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant blamed Hamas for breaching the truce agreement with Israel.

“Hamas explicitly violated the agreement we reached with the US, Egypt and Qatar,” Gallant said in a news conference Saturday.

The truce between Israel and Hamas collapsed after Hamas promised to return the remaining 15 women and two children but did not follow through, Gallant claimed.

Gallant also addressed Hamas’ Wednesday claim that two young children — 4-year-old Ariel and 10-month-old Kfir Bibas — had been killed in an Israeli airstrike, stating only that they had been photographed alive earlier.

“Hamas promised to bring women and children; there have been 17 left behind. We need all 17, two kids of the Bibas family and 15 women,” Gallant stated.

“This is their obligation because we agreed on it,” he added.


Destruction of Hamas would take a decade of war: Macron

French President Emmanuel Macron said the total destruction of Hamas would take 10 years of fighting, adding that Israel needs to further define its end goal with the war.

Speaking at a press conference at the COP28 climate talks in Dubai, Macron said he would be traveling to Qatar to “work together on a new truce as soon as possible.”

Israel on Saturday recalled its team of negotiators from Qatar after reaching a “dead end” in talks, according to a statement from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office.

Macron stated there needs to be a permanent ceasefire.

“I think we’re at a moment when Israeli authorities will have to more precisely define their goal and the final outcome they’re trying to achieve. What does the total destruction of Hamas mean? Does anyone think it is possible?” Macron continued.

“If this is the case, the war will last 10 years, and I don’t think that anyone is really able to define that goal. So it will need to be better defined,” he added.

Macron has reiterated Israel’s right to defend itself, but he stressed “the right for defense does not give you, in any way, the right to attack civilians.”


ICRC says conditions in Gaza do not allow for ‘meaningful humanitarian response’

The International Committee of the Red Cross said the current conditions in Gaza “do not allow for a meaningful humanitarian response”.

In a statement released on Saturday, Pascal Hundt, the head of the ICRC’s Gaza operations, stated: “A very high number of civilians have been killed and maimed, including thousands of children. Homes, hospitals and other infrastructure critical to the survival of the civilian population have suffered colossal destruction…”

“Current conditions do not allow for a meaningful humanitarian response and fear will spell disaster for the civilian population.”


Hamas blames Israel and the US for war resuming after latest truce talks break down

After talks on a fresh truce broke down Saturday, Hamas announced Israeli authorities had made a “predetermined decision to resume the criminal aggression.”

A Hamas spokesperson stated the group had offered to exchange prisoners and hand over the bodies of hostages it said died during Israel’s bombardment of Gaza, but that Israel “refused to consider all these offers.”

“The occupation and the US administration are the ones responsible for the resumption of the war and the continuation of the massacres in Gaza,” the spokesperson said in a statement.

Israel recalled its negotiators from Qatar on Saturday because of what it described as a “dead end” in the talks.

The Israeli prime minister’s office announced in a statement that Hamas didn’t “fulfill its part in the agreement, which included the return of all women and children held hostage, in accordance with a list sent to Hamas and approved by them.”

Israeli and US officials believe Hamas continues to hold hostage a number of women between the approximate ages of 20 to 30 – many of them kidnapped from the Nova music festival – CNN previously reported. Hamas has been insisting that some of the remaining women they were holding hostage were considered part of the Israel Defense Forces, which Israel denies.


Civilians ‘centre of gravity’ in Gaza war: Pentagon chief

US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin delivered his strongest remarks to date over Israel’s need to protect civilians in Gaza on Saturday, calling them the centre of gravity in Israel’s war with Hamas and warning over the risks of their radicalisation.

“In this kind of a fight, the centre of gravity is the civilian population. And if you drive them into the arms of the enemy, you replace a tactical victory with a strategic defeat,” Austin said, drawing on his experience as a four-star general overseeing the battle against Islamic State militants.

“So I have repeatedly made clear to Israel’s leaders that protecting Palestinian civilians in Gaza is both a moral responsibility and strategic imperative,” he added.


US VP says Israel must do more to protect civilians: “Too many innocent Palestinians have been killed”

While the US supports Israel’s “legitimate military objectives” in Gaza, the civilian suffering in the enclave has been too high, US Vice President Kamala Harris said Saturday.

Harris, who met several key leaders in the region on the sidelines of the COP28 climate summit in Dubai, stated she spoke with them in depth Saturday about what expectations the US will have in regard to post-conflict planning.

“As Israel defends itself, it matters how. The United States is unequivocal: International humanitarian law must be respected. Too many innocent Palestinians have been killed. Frankly, the scale of civilian suffering, and the images and videos coming from Gaza, are devastating,” Harris said at a news conference during the COP28 climate summit in Dubai.

“It is truly heartbreaking.”

“As Israel pursues its military objectives in Gaza, we believe Israel must do more to protect innocent civilians,” she added.

Harris and US President Joe Biden are already having discussions with their national security team and partners in the region about what a future path forward could look like for Gaza and the West Bank, Harris told reporters.

There are five principles currently guiding their approach: No forcible displacement of the Palestinian people, no reoccupation of Gaza, no siege or blockade, no reduction in territory, and no use of Gaza as a platform for terrorism, she continued.

“I’ve had a number of in-depth conversations with Arab leaders here in Dubai. Specifically, I proposed three areas of focus,” Harris said, pointing first to the reconstruction of critical infrastructure in Gaza, then strengthening the Palestinian Authority’s security services, and lastly, revitalizing the PA’s governance structure.

“When this conflict ends, Hamas cannot control Gaza, and Israel must be secure. Palestinians need a hopeful political horizon, economic opportunity and freedom and the region more broadly, must be integrated and prosperous. And we must, we must work toward that vision,” she added.


The US will “under no circumstances” permit forced relocation of Palestinians: VP

Washington will not allow for the forced relocation of Palestinians or any redrawing of the current border of the Gaza Strip, US Vice President Kamala Harris said in a meeting Saturday with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi.

“Under no circumstances will the United States permit the forced relocation of Palestinians from Gaza or the West Bank, the besiegement of Gaza, or the redrawing of the borders of Gaza,” Harris stated, according to a statement from the White House.

Israel says its military campaign in Gaza is aimed at destroying Hamas, the group responsible for the October 7 terror attack that left more than 1,200 Israelis dead and saw another 240 taken hostage.

However, regional leaders like Jordan’s King Abdullah II have expressed concerns that Israel could use the conflict to seize parts of Gaza or expel its Palestinian residents.

It’s also unclear what role Israel plans to play after the conflict ends. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claimed in November that Israel’s security role in a post-war Gaza would be an “over-riding, over-reaching military envelope,” but did not explain what that meant.

During their meeting, Harris and Sisi discussed “ideas for post-conflict planning in Gaza including efforts on reconstruction, security, and governance,” the statement read.

“She (Harris) emphasized that these efforts can only succeed if they are pursued in the context of a clear political horizon for the Palestinian people towards a state of their own led by a revitalized Palestinian Authority and have significant support from the international community and the countries of the region.”


Israel negotiators reach “dead end” in Qatar talks: PM’s office

Israel has recalled its team of negotiators from Qatar after reaching a “dead end” in talks, according to a statement released by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office.

“The Hamas terror organization did not fulfill its part in the agreement, which included the return of all women and children held hostage, in accordance with a list sent to Hamas and approved by them,” the statement said.

The negotiators were from Israel’s Mossad intelligence agency. The statement added it was the head of the agency, David Barnea, who recalled the team.

An agreement between Israel and Hamas was reached with the help of foreign mediation and saw a seven-day pause in fighting, with the release of Israeli hostages in exchange for Palestinian prisoners. More aid was also able to flow into the enclave during the truce.

The pause began on November 24 and was renewed twice before ending on Friday morning.


PRCS receives 100 aid trucks at Rafah crossing

The Palestine Red Crescent Society received 100 aid trucks at the Rafah border crossing between Egypt and the Gaza Strip on Saturday, the humanitarian organisation has said.

The trucks contained food, water, relief assistance, medical supplies and medicines, the PRCS added.

Report: West seeking to tighten Russian oil sanction regime

Russia Oil

According to the report, Russian tankers sometimes switch their flags to those of the above-mentioned countries, practicing so-called “flag-hopping” to transport oil sold above the Western price cap.

The calls to enforce oversight of the ships reportedly came from the US, EU, and UK in letters signed by Lindsey Whyte, head of international finance at the UK Treasury, John Berrigan, head of the European Commission’s financial services unit, and Brian Nelson, a terrorism and economic intelligence official at the US Treasury.

The price cap bans Western firms from providing insurance and other services to shipments of Russian crude unless the cargo is purchased at or below the $60-per-barrel price cap. While imposed nearly a year ago, the cap was not enforced until October this year, when the US started trying to close loopholes in the mechanism by sanctioning oil tankers and maritime companies suspected of transporting Russian oil above the price ceiling.

Many in the West lament that the price cap is not working. The mechanism initially aimed to force Russia to continue exporting oil to prevent global prices from spiking while reducing Moscow’s revenue from crude sales. However, according to a Bloomberg report last month citing a study of trade and shipping data by the KSE Institute, over 99% of Russian seaborne oil sold in October alone was $79.40 per barrel, well above the Western cap.

US admits time running out for Ukraine cash

Russia Ukraine War

Kirby claimed a new Russian campaign against Ukrainian critical infrastructure was imminent, and, despite the US and Kiev “working aggressively” for months to prepare for it, there were still things to be done.

“We have more work to do in support of Ukraine, and we need Congress to take action to pass additional supplemental funding so that we can keep providing Ukraine with air-defense assess – assets, the protection equipment, and the backup supplies that they need,” Kirby stated.

The window of opportunity for securing the funding is getting narrower, the official admitted, urging Congress to allocate it finally.

“The supplemental funding is important. We didn’t pull those figures out of thin air. We need that funding. We continue to urge Congress to pass that supplemental as soon as possible,” he added.

“Again, as I said before many times, the runway is getting shorter. And we think we got until, you know, about the end of the year before it gets really, really hard to continue to support Ukraine. And the end of the year is coming soon.”

For weeks, the Biden administration has unsuccessfully tried to push its new “national security” funding package for Kiev through Congress. The latest iteration of the package includes roughly $106 billion for combined aid for Israel, Ukraine, and Taiwan.

The new attempt to pass the package will be undertaken in the first week of December, according to US Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer. According to Schumer, “the biggest holdup” to passing the supplementary funding was the opposition of Republicans and their insistence on tying foreign aid to US border security policy changes.

“One of the most important tasks we must finish is taking up and passing a funding bill to ensure we, as well as our friends and partners in Ukraine, Israel, and the Indo-Pacific region, have the necessary military capabilities to confront and deter our adversaries and competitors,” Schumer wrote in a letter to senators.

The senior lawmaker claimed that Kiev was likely to lose the conflict with Russia without receiving further funding from the US.

Since the beginning of the Russia-Ukraine conflict in February 2022, the US has provided Kiev with more than $76 billion in military hardware and other aid but recently warned that available funds were running out.

Iran’s top general visiting Iraq for talks 

Major General Mohammad Bagheri

Bagheri said he will hold talks with various Iraqi officials and that exploring areas of expanding military ties will top the agenda of the negotiations.

Bagheri said Iran has no security problems with Iraq, describing the Arab country as a brotherly nation.

Iran has been expanding its ties with Iraq over the past few years in all areas. Tehran and Baghdad have close security ties as well that recently saw the elimination of some anti-Iran armed groups in northern Iraq.

Accordfing to General Bagheri, some Iraqi citizens are studying at Iranian academies.

Iran-based Asiatic cheetah cubs doing well one year after birth

Asiatic cheetah cub

The five were found by a shepherd on 2 December 2022. Back then, Azar and Tooran were only 20 days old.

One year on, they are in good health and doing well.

Cheetahs become adults from the age of 2, and until then we must take care of these gifts of nature. Cheetahs, the world’s fastest land animals, once stalked habitats from the eastern reaches of India to the Atlantic coast of Senegal, but are now an endangered species and have practically disappeared from North Africa and Asia.

Their population has shrunk due to threats from both human beings and the nature. Iran is the last habitat of the species that are fighting for their survival.

They can be found in parts of Iran including the provinces of Semnan, Yazd, Kerman, and Fars.

Iran tourism: Taq-e Bostan in autumn                                                   

Iran Taq-e Bostan

It’s a magnificent and magical building dating back to the Sassanid ear.

Taq-e Bostan is visited by large numbers of domestic and foreign tourists every year.

Take a look at the images of this historical masterpiece:

Bloody hostage-taking ends in Iran’s Shiraz following police intervention

Iran Police

A police official said, 3 hostage-takers abducted two young people in Shiraz, the capital city of Shiraz, due to personal differences and drove to a beltway linking the southern Iranian city to a suburban area.

The official said security forces chased the abductors and clashed with them on the beltway.

At the end, the hostage takers killed their male hostage.

The security forces succeeded in rescuing the girl who was injured in the incident.

One hostage taker got killed in the firefight while the other was arrested.
The third one is at large.

A police officer sustained injuries in the fighting.

Lebanese PM: Israel causing climate crisis through bombings, phosphorus weapons

Israeli Army

“The serious environmental deterioration in Lebanon is one of the effects of the Israeli aggression underway,” Mikati said at the COP28 UN Climate Change Conference in Dubai, the United Arab Emirates.

“The Israeli use of indiscriminate weapons, such as white phosphorus weapons, causes the irreparable damage of more than 5,000 square meters of agricultural land and forests, which is destroying the livelihoods and revenue sources of our people,” he added.

Amnesty International said on Oct. 31 that the Israeli army fired artillery shells containing white phosphorus, an incendiary weapon, in military operations along Lebanon’s southern border between Oct. 10 and Oct. 16.

Mikati stressed the need “to recognize the disastrous consequences of war on the environment.”

The prime minister also emphasized the need “to tackle the growing climatic challenges by rebuilding sustainable and green economies.”

He called on “all to go beyond our differences, and to work for the benefit of all, to ensure a better world for future generations.”

The COP28 event is attracting over 180 heads of state and governments from across the globe, and over half a million people applied to attend.