A U.S. Army AH-64D Longbow Apache, 1st Battalion, 101st Aviation Regiment, Fort Campbell Ky., provides ground forces with air support from Forward Operating Base Speicher Iraq, Oct. 21, 2005, during Operation Iraqi Freedom. Credit: U.S. Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Andy Dunaway.
  • Words count:
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    Feb. 13, 2025
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Headline
Administration acts to arm Israel and signals a desire to reform US security assistance
Intro
It takes far too long for allies and partners confronting aggression to acquire the weapons they need, leaving them vulnerable or encouraging them to look elsewhere for self-defense.
text

The Trump administration formally notified Congress last week that it plans to sell Israel more than $8 billion in weapons, advancing sales that the Biden administration slow-rolled for months. The administration’s decision to use lawful means in this instance to bypass one member of Congress’s efforts to block the sales demonstrates the White House’s more assertive approach to security cooperation, as well as its support for the Jewish state, and the realization that a strong and well-armed Israel advances America’s interests. This laudable step by the Trump administration demonstrates an eagerness to restore regular order in Congress when it comes to security assistance and may signal a political willingness to undertake a much broader and desperately needed effort to reform the process by which the United States delivers weapons and munitions to allies and partners.

The State Department formally notified Congress on Feb. 7 of four different arms sales cases to Israel consisting of three foreign military sales (FMS) and one direct commercial sale (DCS). FMS is a mechanism in which a foreign government places an order but the Defense Department contracts with industry on behalf of the foreign government to procure the system or service. In the DCS mechanism, U.S. defense companies sell directly to foreign buyers. The export licenses, however, are approved by the U.S. government and submitted to Congress if they are above a designated dollar threshold.

One FMS for Israel announced last week consists of $6.75 billion in air-launched munitions, including 2,166 GBU-39/B Small Diameter Bombs and 2,800 MK 82 500-pound bomb bodies, as well as thousands of Joint Direct Attack Munition Guidance Kits and associated fuzes for a variety of munitions, including large 2,000-pound bombs and BLU-109 bombs designed to penetrate bunkers. A second FMS, worth $660 million, includes 3,000 AGM-114 Hellfire air-to-ground missiles, which are launched by Israeli AH-64 attack helicopters. A third FMS, worth $312.5 million, is for 10,000 155mm artillery shells.

This sale was not widely reported because it was a modification or addition to an existing contract and therefore did not require a second public press release. The package of notifications also includes a $688 million DCS for 15,500 JDAMs and 615 SDBs. In January, the Trump administration released a shipment of 2,000-pound bombs that the Biden administration decided to stop in May over concerns related to Israeli operations in southern Gaza.

These munitions will help Israel deter and defeat future aggression by replenishing stockpiles depleted in combat with Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Southern Lebanon after the terrorist groups started attacking Israel again in October 2023. The Small Diameter Bombs and BLU-109 bunker penetration bombs, as well as the guidance kits that convert unguided bombs into precise munitions, are especially useful for striking high-value targets while mitigating civilian casualties in urban operating environments. Even as Israel seeks to buy as many munitions as possible from the United States, it is simultaneously seeking to create additional domestic production capacity for the weapons that a future U.S. administration might refuse to provide Israel—namely, air-launched munitions.

Once the State Department adjudicates and approves a requested arms sale to a foreign government above a certain dollar threshold, the department submits an informal notification to the Senate and House Foreign Relations Committee. This process, known as a “tiered review,” permits the leaders of these two committees and their staffs to raise concerns, ask questions and potentially impose a “hold” on the proposed arms sale.

If one of the four leaders of these two committees places a hold on a proposed sale, the State Department usually does not proceed with the formal notification to Congress necessary to advance the sale. This practice is intended to facilitate a constructive consultative process between the executive and legislative branches but in practice permits a single member of Congress to prevent the provision of American weapons to an ally or partner before the U.S.-government-approved sale has even been submitted formally to the legislative branch for consideration.

This practice, while longstanding and usually respected by administrations controlled by both parties, is not required by law as noted by the Congressional Research Service and the State Department’s Office of the Inspector General. Accordingly, the administration can lawfully decide to move ahead with formal notification to Congress even if a “hold” is in place, and that is what the Trump administration did last Friday.

In this case, Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-N.Y.), the ranking member on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, opposed the weapons sales to Israel and used a “hold” to try to stop them, consistent with his previous actions. The DCS case had been in informal, or tiered, review since October, according to one source, and the three FMS cases had been under review for more than 20 days. These delays were exacerbated by the fact that the Biden administration had slow-rolled many Israeli requests for months.

The Republican chairs of the two committees supported the sales, and Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.) lifted her hold. Trump’s State Department answered questions from Meeks and offered briefings, but he kept his hold in place. Only then, after a significant amount of time, the Trump administration decided to proceed with formal congressional notification.

Meeks responded by issuing a press release on Feb. 7 that accused the Trump administration of making a “decision to bypass Congress and immediately proceed with billions of dollars in arms sales to Israel.” That is not accurate. In fact, the Trump administration submitted the sales to Congress for review under the Arms Export Control Act and is now waiting the required time period before proceeding with the sales, consistent with the law.

If he chooses to do so, Meeks can file a joint resolution of disapproval in an effort to stop the sales. But if the past is prologue, such an effort will fail to muster even a simple majority in either chamber, much less the super-majority in both the House and Senate necessary to overturn a presidential veto. Perhaps that’s because Americans understand the horror of what happened in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, support Israel’s right to exist and want the world’s only majority Jewish state to have the means to defend itself against enemies that hate the United States as much as they do Israel.

To be sure, the tiered review process offers a valuable mechanism for key congressional leaders and staff to conduct oversight, ask questions, raise concerns and shape outcomes. That process should be retained and respected, but no administration should allow one or two members of Congress to abuse non-statutory tools indefinitely to unilaterally cancel a government-approved arms sale to our closest beleaguered democratic allies even before other members of Congress and their staffs have had a chance to review the facts.

It is widely understood that the American foreign military sales process is broken. It takes far too long for valuable allies and partners confronting current or potential aggression to acquire from the United States the weapons they need, leaving them vulnerable or encouraging them to look elsewhere for self-defense. One of the causes for many of those delays is a congressional-tiered review process that is too often abused. It is time for reform, and the Trump administration has now taken a vital first step to begin to fix a broken process.

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  • Words count:
    302 words
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    Update Desk
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  • Publication Date:
    March 19, 2025

A terrorist infiltration alert was activated in the Samaria village of Kiryat Netafim on Wednesday after a Palestinian individual jumped the security fence surrounding a building project, according to local authorities.

Residents were warned to remain in their homes "until further notice," and Kiryat Netafim's kitat konenut (rapid response team) was activated and conducted searches for the suspect, who according to local media was apprehended.

Approximately an hour after the alert was issued, the Israel Defense Forces' Home Front Command gave the all clear.

It was not immediately clear whether the infiltrator was a construction worker. Some media reports identified the suspect as a car thief who had jumped the fence to escape the police.

While the military banned Palestinians from working in Jewish towns throughout Judea and Samaria in the initial months following Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023, massacre, Maj. Gen. Yehuda Fox, the then head of IDF Central Command, in late 2023 lifted most of the access restrictions.

Before the war, some 200,000 Palestinian workers were employed throughout the Jewish state, including 30,000 in Judea and Samaria.

Proposals to readmit P.A. workers to Jewish communities were met with dismay by many. A survey taken last year in Eli, a town of some 4,500 inhabitants in the Binyamin region of southern Samaria, showed that 82% of residents were opposed, regardless of added security measures.

However, Israeli courts confirmed in a series of cases that elected local officials do not have the legal right to block Palestinian laborers from entering their communities if the military allows their employment.

Two polls last year found that some two-thirds of Palestinians in Judea and Samaria support the Oct. 7 attacks, in which around 6,000 Hamas-led terrorists broke through the Gaza border, murdered some 1,200 people, wounded thousands more and took more than 250 captive.

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  • Words count:
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    March 19, 2025

Overnight Monday, the Israel Defense Forces launched a large-scale military operation in the Gaza Strip—a precise and determined strike that hit Hamas’s leadership at the exact moment the organization believed it was beginning to recover and rebuild from the previous phase of fighting. The shock within Hamas is evident, as the successful elimination of senior figures in both its military and political wings in Gaza sends a clear and sharp message: Israel will not allow the organization to continue rebuilding its power and conducting negotiations from a position of superiority.

As a well-known Arabic proverb says: “If your enemy is in a hurry, slow him down. If he is slow, confuse him.”

Hamas has applied precisely this strategy—endless, prolonged negotiations aimed at exhausting Israel and improving its own position. The terrorist organization understands that the hostages are its ultimate bargaining chip, which is why it believes that time is on its side.

Hamas is stalling

In recent weeks, it has become clear to all that Hamas is not genuinely interested in reaching a final agreement for the return of all hostages. Instead, it has been using the negotiations as a tactic to strengthen its military and political stance. Hamas has added new demands that were never included in the original document presented by U.S. Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff, insisting on a prolonged ceasefire without making significant concessions, and pinned its hopes on internal pressure within Israel to force it into accepting Hamas’s terms completely.

At the same time, Hamas has continued recruiting fighters, restoring its tunnel network, planting explosives and receiving indirect backing from the Arab League and Egypt—bodies that have not explicitly demanded that Hamas disarm or cease to exist as a political entity.

Breaking the paradigm: Renewing military pressure

Israel has decided to break the paradigm by resuming military action. While this step does carry risks for the hostages, the alternative—giving Hamas more time to prepare and solidify its control—is far worse. Further delays could result in hostages dying in tunnels while the IDF is forced to fight a more fortified and emboldened enemy. Renewing the fighting is meant to exert real pressure, making Hamas leadership understand that it cannot continue to stall and dictate the rules of the game.

As Napoleon Bonaparte once said: “A sudden and painful strike is better than a hundred useless conversations.”

Israel has chosen exactly this strategy—not to be dragged into endless talks that only benefit Hamas, but rather to apply calculated and powerful force to create a real change on the ground.

The analysts were wrong: Trump and the green light to Israel

Even before the renewal of fighting, many analysts in Israel predicted that the Trump administration would not allow Israel to use significant force in Gaza. They claimed that the president was only interested in “ending wars” and would not support a large-scale military operation. These assumptions turned out to be entirely false—anyone familiar with Trump’s character, a tough New York real estate mogul, knew that in a critical moment he would not hesitate to back a forceful response.

Trump, dating back to the 1980s and 1990s, forcibly evicted tenants in Atlantic City and New York, sometimes using mafia-style tactics to advance his real estate projects. This is not to justify or praise his methods—but that’s who he is. When he sees an interest at stake, he acts decisively. Right now, the American interest is to demonstrate control and support Israel against Hamas, Iran and Hezbollah.

A message to Iran and Hezbollah

Israel’s move carries a clear message beyond the Gaza Strip. The fact that the Americans have given a bright “green light” to this operation signals to Hamas and its backers that they should not expect leniency from the United States. Hezbollah, which has refrained from escalating the northern front, understands that Israel has strong backing and that actions by the Houthis or others will not alter the strategic picture. Hamas now finds itself more isolated than ever, as its allies in the Middle East begin to realize that continuing this struggle is a lost cause.

The necessary diplomatic effort

Alongside military pressure, Israel must also act on the diplomatic front to further isolate Hamas. First and foremost, it should push for heavy American pressure on the Arab League and Egypt to make it clear to Hamas that holding its ground will lead to a complete cutoff of support and total isolation. The hasty invitation of a Hamas delegation to Cairo on Tuesday after the attack indicates that Israel’s message has been received loud and clear.

National solidarity

The decision to renew fighting was made unanimously by both Israel's political and security leadership, underscoring its strategic importance. Now, the Israeli public must demonstrate unity and solidarity, avoiding divisive political discourse that could weaken the impact of the operation and strengthen Hamas’s claims in the international arena.

Israel is not falling into Hamas’s time trap and is not allowing it to dictate the rules of the game—it is breaking the paradigm, acting on its own timeline, and redefining the terms of engagement. There is reason to believe that this move will bring Hamas to the negotiating table with a newfound understanding that the rules have changed.

Originally published by the Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs.

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  • Words count:
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    March 19, 2025
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When riots erupted in May 2021 and waves of violence spread from the Galilee to the Shoket Junction—from Ramla to Acre and Lod—we witnessed an event we had warned about months in advance.

In February 2021, we presented the Israeli Minister of Public Security with a detailed plan to establish four combat brigades under the Border Police. We didn’t just bring data from hundreds of security shifts we had conducted, along with photos and evidence of protection rackets, we brought a solution. “We are on the verge of an intifada,” we warned. They wanted to listen, but bureaucracy prevailed over urgency.

Then came May. The Israel Defense Forces’ “Operation Guardian of the Walls” exposed how deep the threat ran. The riots that erupted in Israeli cities gave Hamas a dangerous sense of momentum—the belief that it could unify multiple fronts against Jewish communities. Today, we know this played a role in encouraging their plans for the Hamas-led terrorist attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.

For years, the government responded with vague promises about forming a “National Guard.” In reality, nothing was built to truly confront the threat. And then, the war broke out.

Communities left to fend for themselves re-established their emergency response teams as a desperate measure of self-defense. These civilian units became the first line of protection. In most cases, each community looked out for itself. If a town happened to have a former officer or elite-unit soldier, it had an edge. But the tragic reality is this: Communities are operating like isolated islands.

This is a dangerous break from Israel’s historic security model.

In the days of the Haganah and Palmach, the first thing established was the PASH—mobile field companies. They operated under a simple but crucial principle: Each community was a fortress, but no community stood alone. Every community was responsible for its neighbor, creating a shared defensive barrier. Reconnaissance units weren’t just there to protect their own towns but were designed to secure entire regions. The foundation of our security doctrine was mutual responsibility.

And yet today, despite having hundreds of emergency response teams across Israel, most lack the ability to coordinate with the town next door. There is no unified command structure, no system in place to turn five neighboring communities into a cohesive fighting force when needed. No framework to scale up, so that in times of crisis, 12 communities could form a battalion or 36 could become a brigade.

And that’s just the beginning of the dysfunction. The bureaucratic chaos is staggering: Communities within seven kilometers (a little more than four miles) of the border fall under the IDF’s jurisdiction, rural towns are under the Border Police, and urban areas are left to the civilian police. Sometimes, two neighboring emergency teams are controlled by completely different authorities. In a real crisis, there’s no coordination.

But there is a solution: “Shomrei HaBayit” Brigades.

The good news is that after Oct. 7, most communities have already been armed and equipped. The challenge is no longer about funding or scrambling for ceramic vests. The real problem is command and control.

We are now in what the IDF chief of staff has called “a year of war.” Every hostile front is watching and waiting to see what we have learned. Are we still clinging to a doctrine of containment, or have we shifted to decisive action? Are we paralyzed by existential fear, or are we moving forward with national resolve?

This war is exposing Israel’s deepest vulnerabilities. The lack of synchronization between security forces means that, at best, there is some coordination but no clear chain of command. Who is the one person responsible for managing an operation from start to finish? Right now, that answer doesn’t exist. And if we fail to fix it, Israel will pay for it in blood. Just as this war is a test of military readiness, it is also a test of internal security.

The Galilee and the Negev are burning—not just from rockets but from the lawlessness of protection rackets that are destroying businesses and farmers’ livelihoods. If these communities can defend one another in times of war, why shouldn’t they be able to do so in times of peace? This national plague of extortion must be confronted. The emergency response teams—this incredible resource already embedded in our towns—can become one of Israel’s most powerful tools. With the right operational framework, they can create a visible presence, deter crime and eradicate the protection racket phenomenon once and for all.

This is a revolution, and almost everything needed to make it happen is already in place. The only thing left is to do it.

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  • Words count:
    210 words
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    March 19, 2025

Maj. (res.) Yossi Levi is set to become the first Haredi battalion commander in the Israel Defense Forces, a milestone in integrating ultra-Orthodox soldiers into the country's military.

“I checked—there were no Haredi battalion commanders before me. So here we go, with God’s help," he told Kan News in a profile that aired on Tuesday on the public broadcaster's Channel 11.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YE8h350hBiQ&t=135s

As CEO of the Netzah Yehuda Association, Levi advocates for increased Haredi enlistment, arguing that one regular Haredi battalion could replace 12 reserve units. “It’s incredibly difficult to call up my soldiers for a third round of reserve duty,” he said.

He warned that growing hostility toward Haredim could backfire, noting a shift since Israel’s 2024 draft policy changes. “Before, some felt embarrassed not to enlist. Now, even those not studying Torah say, ‘We won’t enlist.’”

Levi also highlighted the short-lived Haredi volunteer surge after the Hamas-led terrorist invasion on Oct. 7, 2023, and challenged claims that the army threatens religious identity. “Dropout rates are higher in academia than in the IDF. So why study for a degree but refuse to serve?”

Calling for systemic change, he insisted: “There’s no more patience. Something must be fixed.”

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  • Words count:
    217 words
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    March 19, 2025

Israel on Tuesday sharply criticized United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres, after he condemned Israel's airstrikes on Hamas targets in Gaza overnight Monday.

"We are outraged that you are the secretary-general of the United Nations," tweeted Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesperson Oren Marmorstein.

"Not a word about Hamas rejecting two ceasefire extensions [that] Israel accepted. Not a word about Hamas exploiting humanitarian aid or UNRWA employing terrorists. Indeed, we are outraged by your moral bankruptcy," he said, referring to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East.

Guterres had some two hours earlier stated he was "outraged by Israeli airstrikes in Gaza," calling for a renewed ceasefire, uninterrupted aid and the unconditional release of hostages.

https://twitter.com/OrenMarmorstein/status/1902126202242134431

The latest clash follows a series of tensions between Israel and Guterres, who previously angered Israeli officials by stating Hamas' Oct. 7 attack "did not happen in a vacuum." Israel has accused him of bias, pointing to his decision to exclude Hamas from a U.N. list of entities accused of sexual violence, while later blacklisting Israel alongside Russia and terrorist organizations.

Following Iran’s October attack on Israel, then-foreign minister Israel Katz barred Guterres from entering the country, calling him a "disgrace in U.N. history" for failing to condemn Iran unequivocally.

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  • Words count:
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The Israel Defense Forces carried out airstrikes on a Hamas site in the northern Gaza Strip overnight Tuesday after preparations for launching attacks on Israeli territory were identified, the military said on Wednesday morning.

Additionally, during the night, Navy forces targeted several vessels off the coast of Gaza that were being used for terrorist activities by Hamas and Islamic Jihad, according to the IDF.

The military stated that it remains committed to striking terrorist targets in the Gaza Strip to neutralize threats against Israeli civilians and military forces.

The IDF announced early on Tuesday morning that it had launched “extensive” strikes against terror targets in Gaza. The campaign has been officially named "Operation Strength and Sword."

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said the military was acting after the Hamas terror group rebuffed several proposals from U.S. Middle East envoy Steven Witkoff to extend the ceasefire in the coastal enclave during the Ramadan and Passover holidays.

“Israel will, from now on, act against Hamas with increasing military strength,” said Israel’s Prime Minister’s Office. The goal of the military campaign in Gaza remains to achieve “the objectives of the war as they have been determined by the political echelon, including the release of all of our hostages, the living and the deceased,” the statement added.

Netanyahu said on Tuesday night that Hamas in the Gaza Strip has “already felt our strength” since the IDF returned to fighting, warning that future ceasefire negotiations with the terror group “will only take place under fire.”

Hamas, however, insisted that it has not abandoned negotiations. "Hamas has not closed the door on negotiations, but we insist there is no need for new agreements," senior official Taher al-Nunu told AFP from Cairo on Wednesday, calling for international pressure to enforce the ceasefire.

The IDF confirmed on Tuesday night that Essam al-Dalis, “the Hamas prime minister and a senior government figure in the Gaza Strip” was among several senior terrorists killed in the campaign.

Mahmoud Abu Watfa, a deputy minister in Gaza’s Hamas-run Interior Ministry, Ahmed al-Hetta, the justice minister and Bahjat Abu Sultan, head of central operations in the Gaza Interior Ministry, were also killed.

Palestinian Islamic Jihad confirmed on Tuesday evening “with great pride and honor” that its spokesman Naji Abu Saif, known as “Abu Hamza,” was killed in an Israeli strike that day.

Nearly three in five Israelis back the resumption of fighting in the Gaza Strip in the wake of Hamas’s rejection of a U.S. proposal to extend the ceasefire in exchange for the release of more hostages.

According to a survey carried out by Israel’s Direct Polls Institute and published by Channel 14 on Monday night—before the Israel Defense Forces launched a campaign of extensive airstrikes in Gaza—59% of Israelis support the resumption of hostilities.

Some 38% said they opposed it, while 3% of respondents did not express a position.

According to the most recent Israeli government assessments, there are 59 captives remaining under the control of Palestinian terrorists in Gaza. Of those, 24 are believed to still be alive.

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  • Words count:
    412 words
  • Type of content:
    News
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  • Publication Date:
    March 19, 2025

The American Jewish Committee on Tuesday said that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's accusation that Israel “feeds on the blood, lives and tears of the innocent" fuels antisemitism and "distorts reality."

Erdoğan made the statement on Monday at a Ramadan dinner after Israel struck Hamas targets in Gaza following a 58-day ceasefire.

“Erdoğan's ongoing advocacy for Hamas and his relentless demonization of Israel should be met with unequivocal condemnation,” The AJC statement added.

Diliman Abdulkader, a prominent activist for Kurdish rights, also condemned Erdoğan's remarks.

“The terrorist state of Turkey literally just slaughtered an entire Kurdish family of nine, which included seven children. Turkey houses, arms and sponsors terrorism. Islamist Turkey must be booted from NATO,” wrote Abdulkader.

He was referencing reports that a Turkish drone strike had killed nine civilians from the same family in a village south of Kobani in Syria on Sunday night.

Erdoğan has a record of using what his critics decry as blood libels against Israel and Jews.

In June, Erdoğan said in a speech to members of his AK Party that, “The world is watching the barbarity of ... a psychopath, a vampire who feeds on blood called Netanyahu, and they are watching it on live broadcast."

In November 2023, he reiterated at least two libels that he had previously used against Israel. On Nov. 12, 2023, he said that “Israel is now a baby-killer country.” Later that week, he told his party conference, “I say with a clear conscience that Israel is a terrorist state.”

Erdoğan was reacting to Israel’s attacks on Hamas following the terrorist group's Oct. 7, 2023 invasion of Israel, in which its terrorists and other Gazans murdered some 1,200 people and abducted another 251.

The Turkish leader inveighed against Israel also in 2021, during a previous round of hostilities between Israel and Hamas that the terrorist group initiated.

He made a rambling speech in Ankara following a cabinet meeting in which he used “Jews” and "Israelis” interchangeably.

“They are murderers, to the point that they kill children who are five or six years old. They are murderers, to the point they drag women on the ground to their death and they are murderers, to the point they kill old people ... They only are satisfied by sucking their blood,” he said.

The U.S. State Department spokesperson at the time, Ned Price, said “the United States strongly condemns President Erdoğan’s recent antisemitic comments regarding the Jewish people and finds them reprehensible.”

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  • Words count:
    262 words
  • Type of content:
    News
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  • Publication Date:
    March 19, 2025

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa'ar praised U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, (R-S.C.) on Tuesday for his "moral clarity" after the senator criticized the United Nations Human Rights Council.

In a tweet earlier on Tuesday, Graham warned the HRC that if it attempted to create a mechanism to bring action against Israeli citizens, the U.S. Congress would respond with "fire and fury."

He also said the "corrupt" International Criminal Court, which agreed to hear a case accusing Israel of genocide and issued arrest warrants for Israel's leaders, had been marginalized and that any attempt to substitute another U.N. organization would risk that organization's funding.

"Any nation that aids and abets in the endeavor will face sanctions," Graham said, repeating a similar threat he made in November, warning “any U.S. ally—Canada, Britain, Germany, France—if you try to help the ICC, we’re going to sanction you.”

https://twitter.com/LindseyGrahamSC/status/1902071971686576410

On Tuesday, the U.N. Human Rights Council accused Israel of "mass ethnic cleansing."

U.N. Special Rapporteur on the Occupied Palestinian Territories Francesca Albanese said Israel would use the Oct. 7, 2023 Hamas invasion to "acquire Palestinian land and further displace Palestinians," according to a statement on the organization's website.

U.N. Watch, a group that monitors anti-Israel actions in the United Nations, has organized a petition calling for Albanese's ouster, noting that after she denied the Oct. 7 massacre was the worst attack on Jews since the Holocaust, she became the first special rapporteur in history to be condemned for antisemitism by France, Germany and the United States.

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  • Words count:
    285 words
  • Type of content:
    Update Desk
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  • Publication Date:
    March 19, 2025
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Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir visited the Rafah area in southern Gaza on Tuesday, where he reviewed operational plans and defensive preparations amid ongoing military operations against Hamas.

During the field tour, Zamir was accompanied by Gaza Division Commander Brig. Gen. Barak Hiram, Givati Brigade Commander Colonel L. and other senior officers. He addressed soldiers in the field, reinforcing the IDF’s dual commitment to protecting Israeli communities and securing the return of hostages.

Video of Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir touring Rafah, southern Gaza, on March 18, 2025. Credit: IDF.

"Your mission is to protect the communities here," Zamir stated. "We are engaged in an ongoing operation against Hamas, alongside the IDF’s full obligation to bring back the hostages."

The visit comes as the IDF continues its military activities in Rafah, a key area in the conflict against Hamas, with a focus on both offensive and defensive measures.

The IDF announced early on Tuesday morning that it had launched “extensive” strikes against terror targets in Gaza. The Israeli Prime Minister’s Office said the operation came after Hamas rebuffed several proposals from U.S. Mideast envoy Steve Witkoff and others.

“Israel will, from now on, act against Hamas with increasing military strength,” said Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office. The goal of the campaign remains to achieve “the objectives of the war as they have been determined by the political echelon, including the release of all of our hostages, the living and the deceased,” the statement added.

According to the most recent Israeli government assessments, there are 59 captives remaining under the control of Palestinian terrorists in Gaza. Of those, 24 are believed to still be alive.

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