Chanukah menorah. Credit: Saildancer/Pixabay.
  • Words count:
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Chanukah, canceled
Intro
I don’t recall public Christmas celebrations being shut down across the United States after the U.S. military entered Iraq.
text

Anyone still clinging to the belief that there is a difference between hating Jews and wanting Israel to disappear now needs to explain away another inconvenient truth. Scheduled Chanukah celebrations across the United States, Canada and elsewhere have been scrapped. One of the reasons cited is that hosting such holiday events would imply support for Israel in its war against the Gaza-based Hamas terrorist organization.

A Chanukah candle-lighting that was due to take place at a music and arts festival in Williamsburg, Va., was canceled by the festival’s founder because the lighting of a menorah “seemed very inappropriate” given current events in Israel and Gaza.

Let us conduct a quick thought experiment. Even supposing that holding Jewish people everywhere accountable for Israel’s actions since the Oct. 7 massacre was somehow valid, at what point did a country’s right—obligation—to defend itself against a group that invaded its territory, murdered 1,200 people, kidnapped more than 200 men, women and children, and drove over 200,000 citizens from their homes become “inappropriate”?

Moreover, this fear of being seen as siding with Israel over Hamas has not extended to Muslim-themed events and ceremonies in the United States and Canada, which continue to be held. When it comes to Muslim communities residing in these countries, there is a clear line being drawn between Hamas in Gaza and law-abiding citizens in Los Angeles, New York, Virginia and Toronto exercising their right to worship and assemble as they see fit.

Despite this discrepancy between how two minority groups are being treated, Washington has repeatedly equated the plight of American Jews to that of Muslims living in the United States. Responding to a question about soaring rates of antisemitism and the wave of canceled Chanukah celebrations, White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said this week: “We have seen an uptick in hate, just more broadly, in different communities—obviously, also in the Muslim community. And so, we will do everything that we can to make sure that these communities feel safe.”

Like Israel in 2023, the United States responded militarily to a Muslim leader with genocidal intentions in 2003. For years leading up to the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, Saddam Hussein had backed up his threats with devastating action: the taking of Kuwait, the Persian Gulf War, the Scud missile attacks on Israel, the assault on the Kurds, the oppression of his own people.

But while some of the arguments in support of that war have not stood the test of time and even though approximately 200,000 civilians were killed, I don’t recall public Christmas celebrations being shut down across the United States after the U.S. military entered Iraq. The spate of Chanukah cancellations in countries founded on the principle of religious freedom highlights the fact that antisemitism is not just another form of prejudice. What makes Judeophobia unique is its shapeshifting, sometimes even contradictory, nature.

Today, the trope about Jews having an unnatural lust for money is commonplace. But in pre-Enlightenment Europe Jewish, people were reviled for the exact opposite reason: They were desperately poor. If once upon a time Jewish people were scorned for isolating themselves from the wider society, nowadays they are lumped in with the privileged, white, oppressor majority, even though they remain a microscopically small community outside of Israel. While Jews these days are treated with suspicion for their supposed lack of religiosity, history shows that they were similarly derided for living by a set of strange religious beliefs.

And whereas Jews used to be hated for being a landless people, today they are ridiculed because of the existence of Israel.

In other words, the difference between antisemitism and anti-Zionism is little more than linguistic, a phantom distinction.

Even the halls of Congress are not immune from the contradictory nature of antisemitism. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.)’s support for bizarre anti-Semitic conspiracies and related comments she made before being elected to the U.S. House of Representatives unleashed a media firestorm. Meanwhile, Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.)’s incessant demonizing of the world’s only Jewish state in the days following Hamas’ attack on Israel led to her being censured by the House.

By comparing the historic hatred of Jews to other types of bigotry, the serious risk Jewish people around the world today face is being diluted.

Yet as supposed bastions of inclusion cancel Chanukah, the “Festival of Lights” will still be held in cities and homes around Israel, where men and women are fighting the good fight to banish the darkness and preserve religious freedom for all its citizens.

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Iran is "ready" to respond to any renewed military action against it and has the capabilities to deal "even bigger blows" to the United States and other militaries, Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei warned on Wednesday.

The Islamic Republic "not only does not fear America—it instills fear in it," Khamenei declared, speaking to the country's judiciary officials in his second public appearance since the June 13-24 war with Israel.

"Although we consider the Zionist regime [Israel] a cancer and the U.S. a criminal due to its support of that regime, we did not seek war," he said. "Yet whenever the enemy attacked, our response was forceful and firm."

Israel was "brought to its knees" by Iran and "desperately turned to the U.S." to strike the regime's key nuclear facilities on June 22, Khamenei claimed, adding that Jerusalem "realized it cannot handle" Tehran.

The Iranian supreme leader described Tehran's counterattack to the U.S. airstrikes as "significant," adding that "once media censorship is lifted, it will become clear how great a blow Iran delivered." He added: "Of course, even bigger blows could be dealt to the U.S. and others."

Tehran "possesses all necessary tools, from logic to military power—and whether on the battlefield of diplomacy or in military conflict, we will enter, Allah willing, from a position of strength," Khamenei stated.

Jerusalem's June 13 opening strikes in the Islamic Republic wiped out Tehran's top military command, including the chief of staff of its army, with more officials killed during the subsequent 12 days of fighting.

After the United States joined the war, striking the Natanz, Isfahan and Fordow nuclear sites on June 22, Iran launched 14 missiles at the U.S. military's Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar. Doha said it downed 13 of the projectiles and that the Iranian attack resulted in no casualties.

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and the foreign ministers of France, Germany and Britain agreed in a phone call on Monday that they would give Tehran until the end of August to reach a new nuclear deal, Israel's Channel 12 News outlet reported on Wednesday, citing three sources.

The report came a day after French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot told Reuters that Paris, Berlin and London would activate the snapback mechanism by the end of August if no concrete progress has been made.

Reimposition of the U.N. sanctions on Tehran over its nuclear program will lead to an "appropriate and proportionate response," the Iranian regime warned earlier this week.

"The threat to use the snapback mechanism lacks legal and political basis and will be met with an appropriate and proportionate response from the Islamic Republic of Iran," Reuters quoted Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei as saying at a press conference.

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Following condemnations by U.S. officials of proposed Irish legislation that would boycott Israeli products from Judea and Samaria, former Irish Justice Minister Alan Shatter warned on Wednesday that a ban would neither be “well received” nor go “unnoticed” in Washington, D.C.

The remarks were made following a discussion on Tuesday in the Irish Parliament’s joint Committee on Foreign Affairs and Trade on the “Israeli Settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (Prohibition of Importation of Goods) Bill 2025,” which is being readied for a plenum vote.

U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee, Senator Rick Scott (R-Fla.) and others have previously rebuked the bill.

“This foolish move not only wrongfully targets Israel and the Jewish Community, but also harms American businesses,” Scott wrote on X on Tuesday. “They should think twice about the message they’re sending by passing this bill, which complicates our economic relationship and targets our ally.”

 Huckabee wrote on X: “Did the Irish fall into a vat of Guinness and propose something so stupid that it would be attributed to [an] act of diplomatic intoxication? It will harm Arabs as much as Israelis. Sober up Ireland!” He added that the Irish government should call Israel’s foreign ministry and “say you’re sorry.”

In an interview with JNS after the sitting, Shatter said: “I think what's happening in Ireland is now going global. It's getting noticed, particularly in the United States.”

For U.S. multinational companies located in Ireland, especially, “there's no doubt this bill will create major difficulties,” with potential consequences for as many as 350,000 earners in Ireland working for that sector “directly and indirectly,” he added.

Shatter also spoke at the parliamentary committee hearing on the bill, which he called antisemitic.

“In its essence, the bill is the first initiative of any European government to enact legislation to intentionally discriminate against Jews since the defeat of Nazi Germany in 1945,” said Shatter, who spoke as a representative of the Ireland Israel Alliance along with jurist Natasha Hausdorff, a member of U.K. Lawyers for Israel.

“This antisemitic symbolism is reinforced by the fact that the bill contains no similar prohibition relating to the residents of any other occupied territory,” added Shatter. Other critics of the bill at the meeting included Maurice Cohen, chair of the Jewish Representative Council of Ireland, and Irish Chief Rabbi Yoni Wieder.

Four major Jewish-American organizations—the American Jewish Committee, the Anti-Defamation League, B'nai B'rith International and the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations— also condemned the bill. “The law could create significant risks for U.S. companies doing business in Israel and would fuel rising antisemitic and anti-Zionist sentiment in Ireland and elsewhere,” they warned in a statement on Tuesday.

The bill “singles out Israel and it undermines the prospect for a negotiated two-state solution by attempting to unilaterally predetermine the final status of disputed territories,” the statement continued. “We are very worried about rising antisemitism in Ireland and note with tremendous concern” Cohen’s assertion that the Irish Jewish community is “increasingly fearful," it said.

At the parliamentary discussion, Cohen said the bill “might drive Jewish communities here in Ireland further into fear and isolation.” Whereas criticism of Israel is not antisemitism, he said, “when criticism becomes a campaign, when it becomes law—and no other state is treated the same—we have to pause. We have to question.”

Representing the anti-Israel side of the debate were John Reynolds of the Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign; Fatin al Tamimi of the Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign; and Éamonn Meehan of Sadaka – the Ireland Palestine Alliance.

“When Ireland starts, everybody will follow on because it’s a legal obligation, it’s a moral obligation for all countries, including Ireland,” Al Tamimi told the committee.

The committee’s members were not receptive to the pro-Israel side, Shatter told JNS.

“They had no real interest, I think, in anything we had to say, beyond trying to get us to agree with them in the points they kept on making. They didn't really engage,” he said.

Beyond the bill’s potential impact on Irish-U.S. ties, it could, if passed into law, complicate Ireland’s position within the European Union, said Shatter, who served as Ireland’s minister of defense and justice for three years until 2014.

There are “complicated European Union legal issues relating to it,” because Ireland  “can't simply unilaterally impose import restrictions on goods coming in from a third country with which the European Union has a trade agreement,” he told JNS. Such a law would trigger legal challenges in European courts, he added.

The bill states: “The importation of goods originating in an Israeli settlement is prohibited,” clarifying that “Israeli settlement” means “a city, village or industrial zone located in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem.”

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U.S. ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee on Wednesday attended a hearing in the Tel Aviv District court on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s trial, saying the unusual step was a matter of representing the position of the U.S. president.

“I’m an observer, it’s an open trial. I wanted to see what was happening,” the diplomat told Israeli reporters when asked why he decided to come.

However, as Huckabee took a seat in the courtroom, the proceedings moved behind closed doors and he was required to leave the room, according to Hebrew-language outlet Ynet News.

A photo of Huckabee standing next to Netanyahu and Knesset Speaker Amir Ohana inside the court surfaced online, in an apparent show of support for the Israeli premier.

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In late June, U.S. President Donald Trump reiterated his call that the corruption charges against Netanyahu be dropped.

Calling the premier a “war hero” who did a “fabulous job” coordinating with the U.S. on defeating Iran’s nuclear threat, Trump then turned to the efforts to reach a hostage deal with Hamas terrorists in Gaza.

Trump wrote in a post on his Truth Social platform that it is “terrible what they are doing in Israel to Bibi Netanyahu... How is it possible that the Prime Minister of Israel can be forced to sit in a Courtroom all day long, over NOTHING (Cigars, Bugs Bunny Doll, etc.). It is a POLITICAL WITCH HUNT, very similar to the Witch Hunt that I was forced to endure.”

The longtime Israeli leader is “right now in the process of negotiating a deal with Hamas, which will include getting the hostages back,” Trump continued, warning that this “travesty of ‘Justice’ will interfere with both Iran and Hamas negotiations.

“The United States of America spends Billions of Dollar[s] a year, far more than on any other Nation, protecting and supporting Israel. We are not going to stand for this,” he wrote. “Let Bibi go, he’s got a big job to do!”

Following his show up in court on Wednesday, Huckabee shared Trump’s message from late June on X and wrote, “I stopped by the trial of [Netanyahu] in Tel Aviv today. My conclusion? [President Trump] is right... again.”

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Earlier on Wednesday, Huckabee spoke at the Muniworld 2025 Urban Innovation Conference in Tel Aviv and revealed his intention to visit the court later in the day.

“I’m going to go by today and sit through a little of [the trial]. It should be very interesting to be a witness to it,” he said in footage posted on Ynet.

Further explaining his decision to attend the trial, the ambassador said that “It’s a matter of representing what the president has said repeatedly. [Trump] has made his position very clear. He has not intervened in the proceedings or in the outcome; he recognizes that has to go its own way... But it’s a personal thing for him. He considers the prime minister a friend. I think that friendship was certainly enhanced last week by their relationship—they had an extraordinary bonding, if you will,” the diplomat continued, referring to Netanyahu’s latest trip to the White House.

He went on to say that “there’s such a partnership between the United States and Israel, it’s an important partnership. I say all the time, we have friends, we have allies, but we only have one partner, Israel. It’s a unique relationship, but it’s one that’s important not just for Israel, it’s important for the United States,” Huckabee stressed.

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The Israel Defense Forces announced on Wednesday that it had completed the opening of the Magen Oz corridor during a special operation in the Khan Yunis area of southern Gaza.

According to the IDF, the security corridor spans 15 kilometers (9.32 miles), cutting through Khan Yunis between its eastern and western sectors. The military described the corridor as a strategic element in exerting pressure on Hamas and securing the decisive defeat of its Khan Yunis Brigade.

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Troops from the 36th Division’s 188th Armored Brigade and the Golani Brigade were involved in establishing the corridor, which links to the Morag corridor that separates Khan Yunis from Rafah.

The IDF also reported that soldiers killed dozens of terrorists and located and dismantled terrorist infrastructure, including weapons stockpiles and tunnel routes.

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"The Southern Command continues to expand and solidify operational control over the central corridor and operate to protect the security of the civilians of the State of Israel, and the residents of the communities near the Gaza Strip in particular," the IDF stated.

Israeli forces remain active throughout the Palestinian enclave as part of the months-long “Operation Gideon’s Chariots,” a campaign within the broader war that began on Oct. 7, 2023, when Hamas launched its deadly cross-border assault on southern Israel.

In the northern Gaza Strip, Israeli troops eliminated a terror cell shortly after it fired an anti-tank missile at forces. No injuries were reported in the incident.

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Additionally, IDF troops dismantled a rocket launch site used to fire on Israeli communities near Gaza on Monday and eliminated several terrorists attempting to plant explosives in the area.

In 24 hours between Monday and Tuesday, the Israeli Air Force struck more than 120 targets across the Strip, including terrorist cells, weapons storage facilities and underground infrastructure.

On Tuesday, the IDF said troops had uncovered and dismantled a significant terror tunnel network stretching more than 2 miles long (3.5 kilometers) in Khan Yunis.

The tunnel network, described as a “major route,” reportedly consisted of multiple branches and was used by terrorists as a hideout. Inside, engineers and troops uncovered forms of terrorist infrastructure, including concealed storage areas for explosives and weapons.

During the mission, soldiers also uncovered and deactivated explosive devices that were believed to be intended for attacks on Israeli forces operating in the area. Additional arms caches were discovered during sweeps of the tunnel complex and surrounding locations.

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    July 16, 2025

Surgeons at Ziv Medical Center in the northern Israeli city of Safed delivered two sets of triplets just hours apart on Sunday, the hospital announced Tuesday.

The first set of triplets was delivered via scheduled cesarean section at 34 weeks’ gestation, while the second was born during an emergency procedure at 26 weeks after early labor began, the hospital said. Both sets included two boys and one girl.

The two mothers—one from Kibbutz Mahanaim near Rosh Pina and the other from the Arab Israeli village of Tuba-Zangariyye—were reported to be recovering together in the hospital’s postpartum unit, while their six newborns were admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit for observation.

“Triplet births are always challenging and emotional,” said Dr. Inbar Ben-Shahar, director of Ziv Medical Center’s Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology. “It’s important to emphasize that, from a medical standpoint, this is considered a very high-risk pregnancy,” she added.

Prof. Eric Shinwell, director of neonatology at Ziv Medical Center, said the newborns were "in good condition," adding that while they require close monitoring, "they are in the best hands."

"The arrival of triplets in the NICU requires special preparation—three incubators, three doctors, three nurses—everything times three. But at Ziv, we are prepared for this," he said.

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    July 16, 2025

Lebanon’s central bank has barred banks and financial institutions from conducting transactions with Al-Qard Al-Hassan, a financial entity linked to the Hezbollah terror organization, according to a circular dated July 14, Reuters reported on Tuesday.

The decision reflects Hezbollah’s relative weakness following its battering by Israel in the fall of 2024, and comes on the heels of U.S. Treasury sanctions earlier this month targeting seven Hezbollah operatives for their roles at the bank.

Al-Qard Al-Hassan, founded in the early 1980s, has been described as the financial backbone of Hezbollah’s state-within-a-state in Lebanon. Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, who was killed in an Israeli strike on Sept. 27, 2024, had been the bank’s chief decision-maker. The institution reportedly serves around 300,000 people.

The U.S. Treasury sanctioned Al-Qard Al-Hassan in 2007, describing it at the time as “the financial backbone of Hezbollah, Hamas, [and] PIJ [Palestinian Islamic Jihad].”

Saudi Arabia designated the bank as a terrorist entity in 2021. Israel followed suit in October, adding it to its list of terrorist organizations and targeting several of its branches in airstrikes that same month.

“It is a very good thing that the Lebanese Central Bank is acting against Al-Qard Al-Hassan,” Haig Melkessetian, a former intelligence operative for the U.S. Defense and State Departments who has investigated Lebanese banks and their ties to terror financing, told JNS.

 ‘The obstacle to banking reforms’

Lebanon’s move was likely prompted by a major conference of the Law Enforcement Coordination Group (LECG), held on July 9-10 and attended by representatives from about 30 countries, Melkessetian said. The LECG was established by the United States and Europol in 2014 to strengthen international coordination against Hezbollah.

The group warned that Hezbollah’s “shaky financial state” is likely to drive increased fundraising efforts in the Western Hemisphere, Africa, and other regions. A U.S. State Department press release noted that participants highlighted recent government actions aimed at “countering Hezbollah’s financial mechanisms and criminal schemes.”

Melkessetian emphasized that further action is needed, pointing to Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, who has held the post since 1992, as the next key figure to target for sanctions. He described Berri as “the last remnant” of the entrenched corruption that Lebanon now appears intent on leaving behind.

“To really cut off the Hezbollah financing network, the U.S. Treasury needs to sanction Berri. He is the obstacle to banking reforms in Lebanon,” Melkessetian said.

Berri presents himself as a friend to the U.S. and Europe, but he is allegedly trying to obstruct Lebanon’s efforts to address financial corruption by placing his own allies in key positions at the central bank. Melkessetian stated that Berri’s aim is to undermine reform initiatives by the bank’s new governor, Karim Souaid, who was appointed in March.

“He wants to put his own guys in so they can cover for what he did wrong for years. It’s like the mafia putting a corrupt cop in charge of an FBI investigation,” Melkessetian said.

Melkessetian added that other institutions also need to be sanctioned, specifically highlighting the Middle East & Africa Bank (MEAB). As the 15th largest bank by deposits in Lebanon, MEAB has managed to slip through the cracks of enforcement.

Melkessetian said that MEAB played a crucial role in helping Al-Qard Al-Hassan evade sanctions, as the latter is not directly connected to the international banking system. MEAB, along with other institutions, provided indirect access to the system for Al-Qard Al-Hassan.

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Dozens of European Jewish leaders on Wednesday condemned the May 14 raid by Belgian authorities on the home of several mohalim, or ritual circumcisers, urging the European Union to reprimand the country.

The Belgian police's actions "represent a breach of an E.U. fundamental right, that of freedom of religion," the 60 rabbis and Jewish community leaders, led by the Brussels-based European Jewish Association, wrote in a letter to European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

According to the missive, Jewish communities across Europe "remain horrified of what took place in Antwerp" two months ago, when police, "in echoes of one of the darkest chapters in European history" raided homes of mohalim, in search of a list of infants they had circumcised.

Brit milah is "much more than a key tenet of Judaism," they added. "It is what defines the Jewish male, a religious commandment. It represents a core pillar of our faith and a practice carried out over millennia without incidents by meticulous and highly-trained mohalim."

The European Jewish Association attached an open letter by 19 doctors from across Europe affirming that the benefits of circumcision "greatly outweigh the potential negatives, over the lifetime of a male."

According to the missive signed by the 60 rabbis and Jewish leaders, "attempts to ban male circumcision in Belgium or criminalise it are associated with some of the darkest chapters of European history."

"We urge you, Madam President, to register the deep concerns of Jews in Europe on this matter to the government of Belgium," the open letter to von der Leyen concluded.

Belgian had police raided the home of at least one mohel in Antwerp and confiscated his medical equipment in connection with complaints lodged against him by a fellow rabbi, JNS reported on May 14.

According to reports, the homes of several other mohels were raided in addition to that of Rabbi Aharon Eckstein, one of the most experienced mohels in the country.

The search was based on a complaint filed against the mohels by another rabbi, Moshe Aryeh Friedman, who has criticized multiple customs that are important to Haredi Jews in Belgium and Antwerp, where they account for most of the city's 18,000 Jewish population.

Friedman claimed the six mohels, whom he identified to police, had endangered newborns by sucking the blood from their penises after performing the Jewish ritual, a custom known as metzitzah b'peh.

Eckstein does not perform this controversial custom, he and several people who had their children circumcised by him confirmed to JNS.

Belgium is among several European nations that have recently outlawed Jewish kosher slaughter and its Islamic counterpart, dabhiha or zabiha. These ritual methods, requiring animals to be conscious at the time of their killing, are criticized by animal rights advocates as inhumane. 

A comparable controversy is playing out around the circumcision of Jewish and Islamic boys. However, unlike ritual slaughter, the latter practice has not yet been banned in any European country.

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The Israel Defense Forces on Wednesday attacked the entrance to the Syrian regime's military headquarters in the Damascus area in response to reports of atrocities against local Druze residents.

"The IDF continues to monitor developments and the regime's actions against Druze civilians in southern Syria," the military said. "In accordance with directives from the political echelon, the IDF is striking in the area and remains prepared for various scenarios."

"Air Force aircraft have attacked over the past 24 hours—and continue to strike—tanks, rocket launchers, combat equipment and pickups armed with heavy machine guns making their way to the Sweida area of southern Syria," the IDF announced in a separate statement.

"Additionally, access routes were attacked to establish blockades in the area," according to the military.

Earlier on Wednesday, Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz warned that IDF strikes against Syrian regime forces near Sweida would intensify if threats to the Druze population persist.

“The Syrian regime must leave the Druze in Sweida alone and withdraw its forces,” Katz stated. He emphasized that Israel will not abandon the Druze community and will enforce its disarmament policy in the area.

Katz warned that if Damascus fails to heed Israel's warnings, military responses will escalate. “The IDF will continue to strike until regime forces withdraw—and will soon raise the level of its responses if the message is not understood,” he said.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR), a U.K.-based war monitor, updated the death toll from the clashes in southern Syria to 248 as of Wednesday.

SOHR, long affiliated with the Syrian opposition, also reported widespread destruction of civilian infrastructure, including churches and residential homes, describing government-backed assaults as attacks on the “dignity and property” of Druze residents in the Sweida region.

The IDF has bolstered its presence along the Israel-Syria border with the deployment of three additional companies amid concerns that members of Israel’s Druze community may attempt to cross into Syria en masse.

According to Army Radio, the reinforcements include two new units—one from the Border Police and another from the Golani Brigade’s training base—joining a Border Police company already deployed to the area on Tuesday. Military police forces are also operating along the border.

Israeli Druze spiritual leader Sheikh Mowafaq Tarif revealed in a Wednesday interview with Ynet that he had met a day earlier with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Katz, stating that dialogue was ongoing and expressing hope that Israeli strikes would intensify.

Druze community leaders on Wednesday announced an immediate general strike and several "days of rage" in light of "the massacre taking place in Syria.”

“Silence and standing by are not possible,” Druze leaders said, calling on local community members to prepare to cross into Syria to offer assistance. Shortly after, dozens of Druze crossed the border fence but were returned to Israeli territory by IDF soldiers.

Attempts to cross the northern border continued on Thursday, with the IDF confirming that multiple Israeli civilians entered Syrian territory from the area of Majdal Shams, a Druze town in the Golan Heights.

"IDF troops are currently operating to safely return the civilians who crossed the border," the military announced on Thursday afternoon.

At the same time, "dozens" of suspects attempted to enter the territory of the Jewish state from the Hader area in southern Syria, according to the IDF. It said soldiers were operating alongside Israel Border Police officers "to prevent the infiltration and disperse the gathering."

On Tuesday, Israeli forces launched a series of airstrikes against Syrian government troops in the Sweida area of southern Syria’s Jabal al-Druze (Druze Mountain) region, targeting armored vehicles and convoys sent by Damascus amid deadly sectarian clashes between Druze militias and forces loyal to the Sunni Islamist regime.

The IDF stated that it had struck “armored vehicles, including tanks, armored personnel carriers and rocket launchers, as well as access routes, to disrupt their arrival in the area.”

Netanyahu and Katz told the IDF to “immediately strike regime forces and weaponry that were brought into the Sweida area of Syria’s Jabal al-Druze [Druze Mountain] region for regime activity against the Druze,” according to the statement.

Damascus had violated “the demilitarization policy that was decided upon, which prohibits the entry of [regime] forces and arms into southern Syria that could endanger Israel,” it continued.

“Israel is committed to preventing harm to the Druze in Syria due to the deep fraternal alliance with our Druze citizens in Israel, as well as their familial and historical ties to the Druze in Syria,” according to the PMO.

Large columns of Syrian regime forces rolled into Sweida on Tuesday morning, a day after the IDF intervened by striking several tanks attempting to move to the Jabal al-Druze area.

Israeli Minister for Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemitism, Amichai Chikli, has been documenting atrocities and acts of humiliation by Syrian regime forces against the local Druze community on his X account.

In a strongly worded statement on Wednesday, Chikli compared the violence against the Druze minority to the horrors of Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel.

“The Islamo-Nazis of Al-Sharaa are forcing their victims to bark like dogs before murdering them,” Chikli wrote. “This is the October 7th of the Druze minority in Syria—and it’s simply astonishing to witness the total silence of Western leadership.”

New Syrian leader Ahmed al-Sharaa, also known as Abu Mohammed al-Jolani, is a former Al-Qaeda terrorist.

Chikli criticized key international figures, including French President Emmanuel Macron and U.N. officials such as Secretary-General António Guterres and Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese, for what he called their silence in the face of such human rights abuses.

Following the overthrow of the Bashar Assad regime in December 2024 by Sunni jihadists, Israel took control of portions of the Syrian side of the Golan Heights. The move was aimed at creating a security buffer to protect Israeli communities from hostile elements operating in the power vacuum.

During a visit to the Syrian Hermon in January, Katz declared: “The IDF will remain at the summit of the Hermon and the security zone indefinitely to ensure the security of the communities of the Golan Heights and the north, as well as all the residents of Israel.”

Netanyahu has stated that he will not permit forces loyal to al-Sharaa to deploy in the area south of Damascus.

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The U.S.-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation on Wednesday said it had “credible reason” to believe that armed men affiliated with the Hamas terrorist group were responsible for an incident earlier in the day in which 20 Palestinians in Gaza were trampled to death at one of its food distribution centers.

“We are heartbroken to confirm that 20 people died this morning in a tragic incident in [the southern city of] Khan Yunis,” said GHF.

“Our current understanding is that 19 of the victims were trampled and one was stabbed amid a chaotic and dangerous surge, driven by agitators in the crowd,” the statement continued. "We have credible reason to believe that elements within the crowd—armed and affiliated with Hamas—deliberately fomented the unrest."

GHF reported that, for the first time since the start of its operations in late May, its personnel had identified multiple firearms in the crowd of aid seekers, one of which was confiscated. During the incident, an American staff member was also threatened at gunpoint.

The organization added that the incident followed a “troubling pattern” that had emerged in recent days.

“False messages about aid site openings, including at SDS4 (Wadi Gaza) and the long-closed SDS1 (Tal Sultan), have circulated widely on Telegram and other platforms, fueling confusion, driving crowds to closed sites, and inciting disorder,” the agency said.

GHF issued a warning late on Tuesday night to ignore this misinformation and to refer only to its official channels.

Last week, the Washington Free Beacon reported that U.S. State Department documents confirm that Hamas is targeting GHF personnel through a campaign of bounties and violence.

A June 30 cable sent from the U.S. embassy in Jerusalem states that the terrorist group has “formally placed bounties” on U.S. and Palestinian workers of GHF, a joint U.S.-Israeli aid effort to replace the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA).

The bounties imperil “Palestinian workers and the U.S. security contractors helping to protect the GHF distribution sites,” the cable, marked “sensitive but unclassified,” reads, according to the Free Beacon’s report.

GHF on Tuesday said that it had delivered almost 1.3 million meals to Palestinians in the Gaza Strip the previous day, bringing the total amount to more than 74 million meals distributed since it began operations in May.

Distribution at all sites ran “smoothly” and ensured “the protection of all civilians present,” the organization said, adding that it had received “an overwhelming response from organizations and individuals” to collaborate on providing assistance.

GHF also denied claims made in a July 11 statement from the U.N. human-rights office regarding the body’s “concerns” about the number of “casualties of Palestinians seeking aid, tying them to GHF sites.”

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