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Hamas says to express ‘flexibility’ over Gaza future after war

Gaza War

The source, speaking on condition of anonymity due to the sensitive nature of the topic, also said that Hamas felt the balance of power was “tilting” in its favour as Israel grapples with mounting political divisions over the future of post-war Gaza.

“Hamas is confident that it is deeply rooted in the region and nobody can bypass it,” the source added.

“Nevertheless, Hamas has the political flexibility to accept several formulas… for the future of Gaza. [It is] open to a nationally agreed formula for the good of its people.”

“[But] any settlement that has a chance of being agreed upon nationally should not be imposed by America or Israel. They can not bargain with a weak Palestinian state,” the source continued.

Talks on a ceasefire were due to resume this week, but Hamas told international mediators on Tuesday that it was ending its participation following Sunday’s “massacre” in Rafah by Israel.

At least 45 people were killed and dozens more wounded, most of them women and children, when Israel struck a camp housing displaced Palestinians in the Tel al-Sultan neighbourhood of western Rafah.

The air strikes, which resulted in some Palestinians being burned alive, came just two days after the International Court of Justice (ICJ) ordered Israel to “immediately halt its military offensive in Rafah”.

“Hamas does not have to sit down for negotiations while the Israelis continue killing,” a second source close to the organisation told MEE.

“Continuing negotiations while massacres [still happen] provide cover for the massacres and even led to the killing of an Egyptian soldier. This will not happen again.”

The source stated that Hamas would only resume negotiations if Israel stopped the massacres and left Rafah. The Rafah crossing must return to its previous administration, he added, referring to the pre-7 October arrangement.

Speaking on Saturday before the strikes on the refugee camps, the first source said negotiations had been effectively deadlocked, after the failure of the last round in Cairo and Doha.

He noted that negotiations following Israel’s assault on Rafah were now “at an impasse” and the US needed to address issues with Israel over a permanent ceasefire.

“For Hamas, it is clear that the US has to deal with this negotiation. They [Israel] should respect the document that Hamas accepted, without playing silly games and trying to bypass Hamas’s basic demands.”

Earlier this month, Hamas publicly declared its acceptance of a ceasefire deal put forward by mediators Qatar and Egypt, but Israel said the proposal fell way short of its demands.

After the collapse of the talks in Cairo, US sources blamed Egypt for amending the offer to Hamas in its favour. The claim was greeted with fury in Cairo.

The Palestinian source backed Egypt’s version of events. He said that Egypt had not amended the document and that the US was fully aware of any and all amendments, as CIA chief Bill Burns was present in both Cairo and Doha where the document was being discussed.

“Hamas announced its amendments and they were accepted by the negotiators,” the source continued, adding, “The American side were informed and accepted the document. It’s not the mistake of Egypt.

“The Israelis backed away from the deal and the US did not force them to accept something that would have been in their favour.”

As the war in Gaza grinds on for an eighth month, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed that Israel will maintain security control over Gaza and has been criticised by the US for failing to come up with a credible post-war plan for who governs the shattered enclave.

When he last spoke about the issue in February, he suggested replacing Hamas with local representatives “who are not affiliated with terrorist countries or groups, and are not financially supported by them”.

In reality, the attempt to replace a central government with a network of clan leaders had already run into the ground.

Weeks earlier, tribal leaders in Gaza denounced Israeli army proposals to divide Gaza into areas ruled by tribes or clans rather than a single political entity.

A month later reports emerged that Israel was considering installing Majed Faraj, the head of the PA’s intelligence apparatus, as the administrator of Gaza. But that too failed. An attempt by Faraj to infiltrate a group of armed men posing as protection to an Egyptian aid convoy was rumbled and the group was arrested.

Since then, Hamas has denounced manoeuvres undertaken by the PA, including what it called the “unilateral” appointment of Mohammad Mustafa as prime minister. Hamas announced the decision was taken without consulting it, despite the group taking part in a meeting in Moscow attended by Fatah to end divisions.

Since assuming office, Mustafa has outlined in a mission statement that he wants to reform the PA, reunify the West Bank and Gaza, and oversee the enclave’s reconstruction.

The Palestinian source said despite Netanyahu’s declared aim of destroying Hamas, Israel was now recalculating its position on how to deal with the day-after scenario given that Hamas could not be dislodged.

Militarily, the armed wing of Hamas, the Qassam Brigades, have shown their ability to re-emerge in areas cleared by the Israelis and engage soldiers in close-quarter combat, an issue that has been noted with some frustration by top US generals.

Last week, General Charles Brown, the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, criticised Israel’s strategy in Gaza in a rare public rebuke.

“Not only do you have to actually go in and clear out whatever adversary you are up against, you have to go in, hold the territory, and then you’ve got to stabilise it,” Brown stated, referencing that monumental task Israeli forces face in Gaza.

Only a few days later Hamas claimed to have captured a group of Israeli soldiers in an ambush in a tunnel complex amid heavy fighting in Jabalia refugee camp in the north, which the Israeli army claimed to have cleared in December.

The claim was denied by Israel, but the Qassam Brigades later released a video showing fighters pulling a man inside a tunnel who appeared to be unconscious. He was pulled alongside military gear.

The video separately showed three semi-automatic rifles and other military gear that Hamas said were taken from the captured Israelis.

A third source with knowledge of the situation on the ground in Gaza told MEE that they estimated only 20 percent of the tunnel network had been destroyed by Israel and that the subterranean complex continued to provide shelter, transport, and a venue for weapons and missile manufacturing.

Apart from recycling high explosives from Israeli bombs and missiles that failed to go off, Hamas seized a substantial quantity of small arms and equipment during the recent Israeli offensive in Khan Younis. After each day of fighting, units manned by young reservists would reportedly abandon their positions at night leaving much of their equipment behind, the source added.

The Palestinian source with knowledge of Hamas’ policies said the group was confident about its support base in Gaza, and said despite the widespread destruction, there were greater divisions in Israel over the direction of the war.

“Despite the imbalance of power between Hamas and Israel, Hamas has learned the lessons of previous wars,” the source said.

“The image of resistance [Palestinian groups such as Hamas] among our people in Gaza is that the resistance is fighting on their behalf, whilst the Israelis think that Netanyahu is fighting for his personal interest.”

The source added that despite Israel throwing everything behind its war effort in Gaza, the strategy had failed and so too would the assault on Rafah.

The Israeli army’s eight-month aerial and ground offensive has turned much of the territory that is home to 2.3 million Palestinians into an uninhabitable hellscape.

Whole neighbourhoods have been erased. Homes, schools, and hospitals have been decimated by air strikes and scorched by tank fire. Some buildings are still standing, but most are battered shells.

Nearly the entire population is reported to have fled their homes and those who remained in northern Gaza are on the verge of famine.

“The carpet bombing failed. Creating chaos [in a bid] to turn the people against Hamas failed and using starvation as a means to crush the will of the people failed,” the source said, adding, “They thought eight months ago that Gaza would be easy to crush. It has no neighbours to help it. It has no mountains to protect the people. But Gaza has steadfastness.”

Iran opens registration for presidential election hopefuls

Ahmad Vahidi

The registration period will last for five days for hopefuls seeking to run in the June 28 presidential election.

Prospective candidates need to meet several criteria, including having a minimum of four years of experience in significant political or administrative roles.

They also need to be between 40 and 75 years old, possess at least a master’s degree or equivalent, and demonstrate the health and capability to fulfill presidential duties.

Neither of the main two reformist or principlist camps in the country have revealed their candidates yet.

Extreme-right politician Saeed Jalili and former parliament speaker Ali Alrijani have announced they are among the contenders.

Several top figures, including former foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, have officially ruled out candidacy in the election.

All presidential hopefuls must be vetted by the Guardian Council before officially running for the vacancy.

President Raisi died in a helicopter crash along with his entourage, including Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian, earlier this month, leaving the void.

Israel expects “another seven months” of conflict in Gaza

Gaza War

In a radio interview on the Israeli station Reshet bet on Wednesday, Tzachi Hanegbi said: “It was honestly stated in the first days of presenting the plans to the cabinet that the war would be long”.

“It is built on a staged basis, with the year 2024 defined as a year of combat. We are now in the fifth month of 2024, which means we expect another seven months of fighting to deepen our achievements and achieve our goal of destroying the military and governmental capabilities of Hamas and Islamic Jihad.”

“You need to have patience and know how to stand strong. This resilience is what has allowed this nation to survive for 75 years, and even for 3,000 years before that. Just don’t use a stopwatch on ourselves or set ultimatums,” he added.

Later on Wednesday, an Israeli military spokesman claimed the army had gained “operational control” over the narrow Philadeplhi Corridor, a buffer zone between Egypt and Gaza that was created as part of the 1979 peace treaty between Israel and Egypt.

“In recent days, our forces have taken operational control of the Philadelphi Corridor,” army spokesman Daniel Hagari stated in a televised address.

Hanegbi’s remarks raise questions about the future of Gaza and what kind of role Israel will play in it. Already, top ally the US has demanded that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu produce a postwar vision for the Palestinian territory, and his defence minister and a top governing partner have warned that he must take steps to ensure that Israel does not remain in Gaza indefinitely.

Israel’s assault has already devastated Gaza’s urban landscape, displaced most of the territory’s population and sparked a humanitarian catastrophe and widespread hunger. Israel claims it must dismantle Hamas’s last remaining battalions in Rafah and also announced it will seek indefinite security control over the Gaza Strip.

Hamas has rejected any postwar plan that excludes the group, reiterating that it will remain in Gaza.

More than 36,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s Gaza aggression, according to health officials.

Yemen’s Houthis say downed another US MQ-9 drone

US MQ-9 drone

The group issued a statement on Wednesday saying its Air Defense Forces had shot down an MQ-9 Reaper drone earlier in the day as it was flying in the skies of the central province of Marib.

“The targeting operation was carried out with a locally-made surface-to-air missile,” added the statement.

It was a second time in days that the Yemenis downed an MQ-9 Reaper, a heavy and modern aircraft which is worth around $30 million.

A total of six drones of this type have been dismantled by Yemen since last year when the Arab country launched a military campaign in support of Palestine.

Yemen started targeting Israeli-linked ships in November, a month after the regime invaded Gaza.

Attacks later expanded to cover ships linked to the United States and Britain after the two launched airstrikes on the Arab country to force it to halt its anti-Israeli operations.

The Yemenis have insisted that maritime operations and drone and missile attacks on Israeli-occupied ports will continue until the regime completely stops its attacks on Gaza.

“The Yemeni Armed Forces, by the grace of Allah, continue to develop their defensive capabilities to confront the American-British aggression and all hostile forces,” according to the statement by Yemen’s armed forces on Wednesday.

Iran’s Leader thanks pro-Palestinian students in US for ‘standing on right side of history’

Ayatollah Khamenei

Ayatollah Khamenei addressed the thousands-strong students, who have been rallying and setting up tents across their schools’ campuses in protest at the Israeli regime’s ongoing genocidal war against the Gaza Strip and the US’s untrammeled support for the brutal military onslaught.

“This is our message of empathy and solidarity with you. You are standing on the right side of history — whose pages are being turned,” the letter read.

“You have now formed part of the resistance movement, and have begun an honorable struggle [despite being] under the cruel pressure of your government — which openly defends the usurping and ruthless Zionist regime,” it added.

“The great resistance movement has been waging [a similar] struggle at a distant spot for years [while being affected] with the same understanding and emotions as those of yours today.”

The Leader specified the purpose behind this struggle to be cessation of the “blatant oppression” that a “terrorist and cruel network titled ‘Zionists’” has been imposing on Palestinians for decades.

The oppression has seen Zionists seizing Palestinians’ country and then subjecting them to “the harshest of pressures and tortures,” Ayatollah Khamenei noted.

“The genocide [that is being exercised] by the apartheid Zionist regime today serves as the continuation of [the same] severely oppressive behavior,” the Leader stated, referring to the Israeli regime’s genocidal war against Gaza that has claimed the lives of more than 36,000 Palestinians since its onset in October last year.

Describing the process of usurpation of the Palestinian land, Ayatollah Khamenei noted how Zionist capitalists, who were being aided by the British government, gradually transferred “thousands of terrorists” to Palestine following the World War. Those, the Leader added, killed and displaced tens of thousands of Palestinians before forming the Israeli regime there.

Ayatollah Khamenei, however, described the United States as “the greatest supporter of the usurping regime” following the initial patronage that was provided for the regime by the British.

The American administration, the Leader said, had been providing the regime with continual political, economic, and arms support, and had even “recklessly” paved the way for its production of nuclear weapons.

“The American administration and its partners have not even as much as frowned upon this state terrorism and incessant oppression,” the letter read.

“The ‘resistance front,” it added, “rose amid this dark and bleak atmosphere, and the formation of ‘the Islamic Republic’ in Iran contributed to its expansion and strength.”

Nevertheless, American and European media agencies, which were being influenced by Zionist money and bribery, have been introducing this “human and courageous resistance as terrorism,” the Leader stressed.

Ayatollah Khamenei then asked whether a nation, which was fending for itself against Zionist occupiers inside its own land, was to be considered as “terrorist”.

This situation, though, was changing and a different fate awaited the sensitive West Asia region, the Leader asserted.

“Many consciences have been awakened on the international scale and the truth is being revealed. The resistance front too has become strong and will become [even] stronger,” read the letter by Ayatollah Khamenei.

“The pages of history are being turned,” it added, noting how universities and peoples had joined the protest campaign throughout other countries too.

“I sympathize with you, youths, and value your steadfastness,” the Leader said, and urged the American students to acquaint themselves with the Holy Qur’an, which has promoted steadfastness and discouraged oppression.

Probe rejects sabotage in President Raisi’s copter crash

President Raisi Helicopter Crash

A second report by Iran’s General Staff of Armed Forces, which is investigating the crash, said there’s no evidence that the helicopter had been sabotaged during the flight.

“Considering the sampling and tests conducted on the remains and parts of the helicopter and the pattern of their dispersion and the distance of the parts separated from the main body, the occurrence of an explosion due to sabotage during the flight and moments before the impact on the mountain slopes is ruled out.”

The report also added “no traces of electronic warfare were observed on the crashed helicopter.”

It said the examination of documents related to the maintenance and repair of the crashed helicopter showed no issues that could have contributed to the accident.

The report also ruled out any communication system malfunction or frequency interference preventing the presidential helicopter from contacting the flight group.

The report added the examination of tests and analysis of data will continue until the main cause of the incident is discovered.

The General Staff of Armed Forces issued its preliminary report on the incident on May 24, saying the wreckage did not bear any bullet holes or signs of similar impact.

Late president Raisi along with Amirabdollahian and other dignitaries lost their lives after their helicopter crashed into the mountains and caught fire on May 19.

The crash site was located by Iranian unmanned aerial vehicles at 05:00 a.m. (local time) on May 20, and reached by search teams shortly afterwards.

Iran’s top military chief urges Iraq to disarm terror groups in Kurdistan region

In a meeting with Iraq’s Interior Minister Abdul Amir al-Shamri in Tehran on Wednesday, General Mohammad Bagheri said Iraq must disarm those terrorist groups under a treaty with Iran. He added that the treaty must be fully implemented.

General Bagheri said what is more important is that the expansion of relations with Iraq is a strategic decision in Iran that has been approved by the Leader of Islamic Revolution.

He said the change of administrations in Iran including the tragic passing of president Ebrahim Raisi in a copter crash will not affect relations with Baghdad.

While noting that the position of Iraq’s Ministry of Interior is of great importance in this regard, Iran’s top military chief said fortunately, thanks to efforts by the Iraqi side, security is being strengthened daily, and Iran is ready to share its security experiences with Iraq.

He then spoke about the security of Iranian pilgrims visiting Iraq during the Arbaeen ceremonies that mark the 40th day after the martyrdom of Imam Hussein (PBUH), the third Shia Imam. Bagheri said this is a key issue for Iran.

He further thanked Iraq for its hospitality toward Iranian pilgrims.

The Iraqi interior minister said for his part that during his visit to Tehran, due to the importance of the Arbaeen ceremonies, he has started discussions with his Iranian counterpart and the Iranian police chief.

Shamri added that given Iran’s level of education, Iraq wants to send police officers to study in various military colleges in the Islamic Republic.

He also voiced hope that this interaction will strengthen ties and help both sides share experiences.

Pentagon says aid deliveries into Gaza by sea suspended after damage to US-built pier

US-built pier Gaza

“Due to high sea states and the North African weather system earlier today, a portion of the Trident pier separated from the pier that is currently anchored into the coast of Gaza,” spokeswoman Sabrina Singh told reporters.

“As a result, the Trident pier was damaged and sections of the pier need rebuilding and repairing. Therefore, over the next 48 hours the Trident pier (will) be removed from its anchored position on the coast and towed back to Ashdod where US central command will conduct repairs,” she said.

Work on the pier will take at least a week and following its completion, it will need to be reanchored to the coast of Gaza and humanitarian aid can resume “to the people who need it most,” she added.

US Central Command (CENTCOM) announced Saturday that heavy sea states affected four US Army vessels supporting the maritime humanitarian aid mission in Gaza.

US President Joe Biden ordered in March the establishment of a sea route to deliver food and other aid to Palestinians amid Israeli restrictions and months of conflict in the enclave.​​​​​​​

Israel’s nearly eight-month war on Gaza has led to more than 36,000 deaths in the war-torn coastal enclave and has injured over 81,100 victims.

A Hamas-led cross-border attack that precipitated the current conflict left less than 1,200 people dead, with hundreds more taken to Gaza as hostages.

Israel’s military campaign has turned much of the enclave of 2.3 million people into ruins, leaving most civilians homeless and at risk of famine.

An attack Sunday that killed at least 45 victims, mostly women and children, came despite a ruling by the International Court of Justice last week that ordered Israel to halt its offensive in Rafah where more than 1 million Palestinians had sought refuge from the worsening conflict.

US says G7 can’t agree on confiscating Russian money

Ruble

Washington and its allies froze around $300 billion in Moscow’s assets in February 2022. The US Congress recently granted President Joe Biden the authority to outright confiscate that money, according to Daleep Singh, the deputy national security adviser for international economics.

“That would be the most efficient and potent option for all of us in the G7,” Singh stated on Tuesday, speaking at an event hosted by the Brookings Institution think tank.

“But seizing [the] principal is a red line for many of our G7 partners,” Singh said, adding that “we don’t have consensus as a G7” on taking that step.

In addition to the US, the G7 includes Canada, France, Italy, Japan, the UK and the EU. More than 80% of the frozen Russian assets are held by the EU, which is reluctant to expose its clearinghouse to Moscow’s retaliation. Russia has vowed a reciprocal response to any “theft” from the West.

Arguing in favor of the move, Singh told the audience at Brookings that the “historic decision” to freeze the sovereign funds “did not lead to an appreciable shift away from G7 currencies,” so seizing the interest on it – as both the US and the EU have already agreed on doing – was merely factoring in “the risk already taken.”

The West can’t afford to sit and wait, Singh said, because Ukraine is in a “dire” situation on the battlefield.

“If we have a way to act with solidarity, and with speed, and at appreciable scale – which I would define as at least $50 billion – that’s what you’re supposed to do,” Singh said.

He added that the White House hoped this would happen at the upcoming summit in Italy, not just to fund Ukraine but to send “a signal to [Russian President Vladimir] Putin that we’re not going to fatigue and he’s not going to outlast us, regardless of what happens in the remainder of the year.”

In his Brookings presentation, Singh also revealed that Volodymyr Zelensky’s speech in February 2022 created the “emotional valence” for the EU to agree to the “shock and awe phase of the sanctions campaign,” which had the goal of crashing the Russian currency.

Singh admitted that this objective was not achieved, but insisted that the sanctions worked because the current situation was better than the “counterfactuals” – things that could have possibly happened otherwise, but did not.

Report: Iran provides Yemen’s Ansarullah with anti-ship ballistic missile

The missile was developed by top Iranian commander Brigadier General Hassan Tehrani Moghaddam, known as the father of Iran’s missile technology, before his death in 2011.

Moreover, the Yemeni military forces now have the technology to manufacture the missile.

The Yemeni forces were already in possession of surface-to-surface and surface-to-air missiles.

The recent knowhow gives the Yemen’s military an edge in its confrontations with the Israeli-linked or Israeli-possessed ships in support of Palestine.

The ballistic missile, which has a liquid-fuel first stage and a solid-fuel second stage, has a range of 1,800 to 2,000 km.