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Cairo slams Israeli intel document proposing relocation of Gazans to Egypt as “ludicrous”

Gaza War

“I don’t think we would — anyone would — raise such a ludicrous proposition,” Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry said in an interview with CNN’s Christiane Amanpour on Thursday.

“If that was the case, maybe the United States would also contemplate providing the same access to its southern border that might be expected for us in the Sinai.”

The document — downplayed earlier this week by the office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — proposes relocating Gaza’s civilian population to the northern Sinai, arguing such a plan would be best for Israel’s long-term security. Tent cities would be constructed in the area under the plan, with more permanent cities being constructed at a later date.

The plan also calls for a humanitarian corridor to aid the resettled population and a security perimeter be created to prevent them from entering Israel.

Shoukry told Amanpour he had not communicated with Israel about the plan.

“States are sovereign and they are well-defined by their borders, by their populations. And the issue of displacement in itself is a matter that is in contravention, is in violation of international humanitarian law,” Shoukry stated.

“So I think that nobody would undertake an illegal activity,” he added.

Netanyahu’s office downplayed the document in a statement, writing, “This is a preliminary paper, like dozens of such papers prepared by all political and security echelons”.

“The ‘day after’ is a topic that has not been discussed by official Israeli channels, which are now focused on dismantling Hamas’ governing and military abilities,” the statement read.

Israel to cut “all contact” with Gaza, send workers back to besieged enclave

Gaza War

Prior to Hamas’ October 7 attacks and kidnapping rampage, about 18,000 Gazans had permits to cross into Israel and work, where they could earn significantly more than in Gaza.

“Israel is severing all contact with Gaza. There will be no more Palestinian workers from Gaza,” the government press office said Thursday.

“Those workers from Gaza who were in Israel on the day of the outbreak of the war will be returned to Gaza,” it added.

The statement did not detail how or when the workers would return to what is now an active warzone that is being bombarded hundreds of times per day.

Intl. lawyer slams world’s inaction against Israel’s use of banned weapons in Gaza

Israeli Army

On his X account, Reza Nasri said Israel has rained down 6 tons of bombs on a Gaza refugee camp alone and that the Chemical Weapons Convention has also confirmed Israel’s use of white phosphorus against civilians in the territory.

“Why should such a regime be allowed to have a secret nuclear arms program without any oversight?” the international lawyer asked.

Nasri also said, “Where does Israel’s immunity come from?”

The death toll in Gaza from the Israeli regime’s war is reaching the 9,000-mark. Thousands of the deaths are children.

Iran’s Leader: Israel becoming helpless and confused amid war with Hamas

Ayatollah Khamenei

In a post on X, formerly Twitter, Ayatoolah Khamenei also said the Israeli regime was “lying” to its people when it expressed concern over hostages held by Hamas in Gaza while shelling areas where they might be held.

“Without American support” Israel “will be silenced within days”, he added.

His remarks come days after Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi said Israel had “crossed the red lines” in Gaza, which “may force everyone to take action”.

On Wednesday, Ayatollah Khamenei called on Muslim-majority countries to stop economic cooperation with Israel, including oil and food exports to Tel Aviv.

Iran Leader advisor advocates for common ground between Tehran, Beijing

Rahim Safavi

Rahim Safavi proposed the prioritization of implementing common security and sustainable peace within the member nations of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and advocated for the formulation of a non-aggression pact.
He suggested that the prevention of aggression among Shanghai Cooperation Organization members could serve as a paradigm for such initiatives.

Furthermore, he hailed China’s recognition of Iran’s role in regional affairs and its congratulations to the Islamic Republic of Iran for its membership in both the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and BRICS.

Addressing the United States “unlawful and inhumane unilateral coercive measures”, Rahim Safavi underscored the crucial role of the Chinese government in countering the American government’s pursuit of hegemonic power and unilateral policies.

In other comments Rahim Safavi, emphasized the oppression against Palestinian people and their legal rights.
He considered the Al-Aqsa Flood operation by the Palestinian resistance group Hamas against Israel,  legitimate act of defense against the Zionist regime’s over 75 years of occupation.

Transport corridor protocol linking China to Europe via Iran sealed in historic deal

Iran Railroad

Representatives, including an envoy from Iran, formalized agreements on unified tariffs, streamlined transport procedures, and border processes aimed at bolstering the east-west transit route’s efficacy.

Amid discussions, the focus centered on financing infrastructure projects, particularly with the Asian Development Bank’s involvement.

Dialogue encompassed strengthening regional corridors and addressing missing links, emphasizing routes connecting key cities such as Tehran, Islamabad, Istanbul, and Almaty, and further bolstering east-west corridors linking China to Europe and Caspian Sea routes.

Additionally, considerations were made to adapt to pandemic-related disruptions and geopolitical shifts affecting transport systems in the ECO region.

Iran’s representative, Shahriar Afandizadeh, introduced the Iran Transportation Initiative, underscoring its potential to facilitate safe and affordable regional access.

Concluding the meeting, ministers highlighted the need for enhanced transportation and transit development in the region.

The 13th Minister of Transport meeting is set to take place in Tehran, marking the continued commitment to advancing regional connectivity.

Cop killed in terror attack in southeast Iran

Crime Scene

The dastardly attack in which Master Sergeant Ali Qorbani was killed, happened in the town of Bampour in Sistan-and-Baluchestan Province.

Iranian law enforcement forces in Sistan-and-Baluchestan Provincem, have, on numerous occasions, been targeted by terror attacks aimed at undermining security in the region.

Iranian officials say, some terror cells, operating near the border in Iran’s eastern neighbors, send in their elements to carry out acts of terror in the country.

Over 400 children are killed or injured each day in Gaza during Israeli bombardment: UNICEF

Gaza War

Some 3,500 children have reportedly been killed and more than 6,800 children reportedly injured during 25 days of “ongoing bombardment” since October 7, the United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund, UNICEF, said in a statement on Wednesday.

“This cannot become the new normal,” the statement read.

“Children have endured too much already. The killing and captivity of children must stop. Children are not a target,” added the statement, which was released following the second consecutive day of deadly Israeli airstrikes on the Jabalya refugee camp in northern Gaza.

“The scenes of carnage coming out of Jabaliya camp in the Gaza Strip following attacks yesterday and again today are horrific and appalling,” UNICEF announced.

The UN agency said it does not yet have estimates of the death toll of children from the camp. Medical officials on the ground have confirmed hundreds were injured and killed, including many children, following the airstrikes.

UNICEF announced refugee camps are protected under international law and “parties to conflict” have obligations to respect and protect civilians from attack.

“UNICEF reiterates its urgent call to all parties to the conflict for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire, to ensure the protection of all children, and for safe and unimpeded humanitarian access to deliver lifesaving aid at scale across the Gaza Strip, according to International Humanitarian Law,” the statement added.

The Palestinian Ministry of Health has announced at least 9,061 people have been killed since 7 October, including 3,760 children and 2,326 women. At least 32,000 people have been wounded.

Around 2,000 people are still missing in Gaza, including 1,100 children. The vast majority of these people are believed to be dead and buried under rubble.

Biden doubts Netanyahu will last long as Israeli PM amid Gaza war: Report

Biden Netanyahu

The topic of Netanyahu’s short political shelf life has come up in recent White House meetings involving Biden, according to two senior administration officials. That has included discussions that have taken place since Biden’s trip to Israel, where he met with Netanyahu.

Biden has gone so far as to suggest to Netanyahu that he should think about lessons he would share with his eventual successor, the two administration officials added.

A current US official and a former US official both confirmed that the administration believes Netanyahu has limited time left in office.

The current official said the expectation internally was that the Israeli PM would likely last a matter of months, or at least until the early fighting phase of Israel’s military campaign in the Gaza Strip was over, though all four officials noted the sheer unpredictability of Israeli politics.

“There’s going to have to be a reckoning within Israeli society about what happened,” stated the official who, like others, was granted anonymity to detail private conversations.

“Ultimately, the buck stops on the prime minister’s desk.”

The administration’s dimming view of Netanyahu’s political future comes as the president and his foreign policy team try to work with, and diplomatically steer, the Israeli leader as Tel Aviv pursues a complicated and bloody confrontation with Hamas, the Palestinian group that controls Gaza and attacked Israel on Oct. 7.

At one point during the trip, Biden advised Netanyahu to consider the scenario he was leaving for his successor — an implicit suggestion that Netanyahu might not be in power for the duration of what will likely be a lengthy conflict.

A separate White House official downplayed the idea that Netanyahu’s future was a topic of interest, saying that any chatter was just idle speculation and insisting that the administration’s focus was squarely on supporting Israel’s security.
Netanyahu is Israel’s longest-serving prime minister and his political obituary has been prematurely written before.

And after the publication of this story, a spokesperson for the National Security Council stated the topic of Netayahu’s future “has not been discussed by the President and is not being discussed”.

“Our focus,” said NSC spokesperson Adrienne Watson, “is on the immediate crisis.”

But the current US official stated that Netanyahu’s shaky hold on power is always “in the background” during internal Biden administration talks about the Middle East. And Biden aides already are engaging an array of other Israeli politicians — some in power, some not — on the war effort.

According to the two senior administration officials as well as the current and former US official, those talks have also provided a way to gauge the thinking of various Israelis who might take the helm of the country.

Behind the administration’s view of Netanyahu is the belief that he has been significantly weakened by Israelis’ anger over the failure of Israel’s security and intelligence sectors to prevent Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack, which killed some 1,400 people. The growing international opposition to the current Israeli military campaign in Gaza — which has killed thousands of Palestinian civilians — has further shaken his standing.

US officials have taken note of Netanyahu’s falling approval ratings. They also point to the wave of public reporting about the massive Israeli intelligence failures and predict that any forthcoming internal Israeli assessment — and one done by their American counterparts — will likely be even more damning, dealing more of a blow to Netanyahu.

While Biden administration officials have offered public declarations of solidarity with the Israeli government during the current crisis, aides are also trying to get ahead of what Netanyahu’s downfall could mean for the future Israeli-US relationship. Among other things, the Biden administration is discussing “day after” scenarios for the Gaza Strip once the fighting ends, including the possibility of sending a multinational force — though not necessarily one with US troops — to stabilize the territory.

After publication, an official with the Israeli embassy in Washington did release a statement: “At no point in recent weeks did the internal political scenario reported in this article come up in the conversations between President Biden and Prime Minister Netanyahu.”

Netanyahu hasn’t been a favorite of the Biden team. He was a loud supporter of former President Donald Trump, the Republican whom Biden defeated in the 2020 US presidential election and may face again in 2024. And he was a sharp critic of the Iran nuclear deal the Obama-Biden administration helped craft.

His increasingly hardline positions over the years have upset Biden aides who still support creating a Palestinian state. Over the past year, he sparked public pushback from Biden over his desire to overhaul Israel’s judiciary, an effort many Israelis viewed as damaging to their democracy.

But Biden and Netanyahu also have known each other for decades and have managed to remain publicly friendly despite their differences. And in the wake of the Hamas attacks, Biden threw his full public support behind Netanyahu and Israel.

Behind the scenes, however, Biden has been unsparing in his assessment of what he believes are Netanyahu’s undemocratic tendencies that, in part, distracted his government from being ready for the Hamas attack.

“They know that this is who they have to work with right now, and no one has suddenly had a revelation about who they are dealing with,” said a person familiar with the administration’s thinking on Israel.

With an eye toward the future, US officials are talking to Benny Gantz, a member of the current unity government; Naftali Bennett, a former prime minister; and Yair Lapid, an opposition leader and former prime minister, among other Israeli figures, the former official added.

The Biden administration has had limited luck convincing Netanyahu and his aides to take their military advice. In particular, American officials have been frustrated over an initial Israeli evacuation order issued for northern Gaza as well as Israel’s apparent cutting off of communications in Gaza ahead of the ground invasion.

The US isn’t willing to back international calls for a cease-fire, but Israel also hasn’t agreed to American calls for a “humanitarian pause” in the fighting.

The Biden administration fears Netanyahu may be linking his own political future to the war and could at some point move to escalate the conflict, according to the two senior administration officials.

“Even the best case scenario for Israel in this war would not likely keep Netanyahu in power because the horror of the Oct. 7 terrorist attack will remain fresh, and because so many Israelis already directly attribute the lack of security to Netanyahu’s policies,” said Hagar Chemali, a former National Security Council and Treasury Department official in the Barack Obama administration.

“Conversely, even if the war drags on or additional fronts open,” Chemali continued, “I still believe Netanyahu is on his way out because Israelis are already publicly questioning whether he is really the right person, not just to win this specific battle against Hamas, but the broader war for a peaceful and secure Israel.”

Nearly half of Gaza’s hospitals out of service: Health ministry

Gaza War

The Turkish-Palestinian Friendship Hospital, which is the leading cancer hospital in Gaza, is among hospitals that have stopped operating, the health ministry said in a statement Wednesday.

Palestinian Health Minister Mai al-Kaila, based in Ramallah, said on Wednesday that the lives of 70 cancer patients at the Turkish-Palestinian Friendship Hospital are seriously threatened, adding that the lives of about 2,000 other cancer patients are also under serious threat amid “catastrophic health conditions” due to the conflict.

Hospital director Sobhi Skaik stated on Monday that the center was damaged in an Israeli attack, with its third floor suffering a direct hit causing damage to oxygen and water supplies, though no one was injured.

The Palestinian health ministry further warned that Gaza’s largest hospital could be out of service very soon.

“Al Shifa Medical Complex will stop working in less than 24 hours due to running out of fuel,” the ministry announced, adding that the hospital’s vicinity has been repeatedly hit by Israeli airstrikes.

The ministry called for Israeli attacks to stop, which it announced would allow medical supplies and volunteer teams to enter, as well as wounded people to leave the strip for treatment.

Ashraf Al-Qudra, a spokesperson for the Gaza health ministry, also told Reuters the main power generator at the Indonesian Hospital was no longer functioning due to lack of fuel.

The hospital was switching to a backup generator but would no longer be able to power mortuary refrigerators and oxygen generators.

“If we don’t get fuel in the next few days, we will inevitably reach a disaster,” he stated.

8,805 people have been killed in the Gaza Strip since 7 October, the enclave’s health ministry said on Wednesday. In a statement, the ministry added that the death toll included 3,658 children and 2,290 women.