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The Indo Daily: Israel-Iran - 'The next 24 to 36 hours are crucial in the way this war may develop'

The Indo Daily: Israel-Iran - 'The next 24 to 36 hours are crucial in the way this war may develop'

Israel launched sustained airstrikes on Iranian nuclear sites on Friday and Iran has hit back hard, sending missiles raining down on Tel Aviv and Haifa.
But the real bombshell is Tehran's threat to walk away from the nuclear treaty that's kept the lid on the region for decades.
Today, Fionnán Sheahan is joined on the Indo Daily by Bel Trew, chief international correspondent with the UK Independent, and by Paul Rogers, emeritus professor of Peace Studies at Bradford University, to ask are we heading for a full-on war and could this spiral into a nuclear confrontation? And where does the EU – and Ireland – fit into a fight that's happening thousands of kilometres away, but edging dangerously close to our doorstep?
The Indo Daily: Israel-Iran - 'The next 24 to 36 hours are crucial in the way this war may develop'
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Israeli hostages not a priority for ministers planning Gaza takeover
Israeli hostages not a priority for ministers planning Gaza takeover

Irish Times

time4 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Israeli hostages not a priority for ministers planning Gaza takeover

Those of us who uphold the UN charter and support the right of Israel , a sovereign UN member state, to exist within its internationally-recognised lawful boundaries and to defend that sovereignty are equally entitled to call out the actions of its government, the Netanyahu coalition, and its army, the IDF , for the barbarity and slaughter that Israel collectively has unleashed on the Palestinian Arab population in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank . I use the term 'collectively' not because there are not many people in Israel who personally condemn the actions of their own government and army, but because the state of Israel is a collective entity that asserts its democratic credentials, and its citizens are collectively responsible for what its democratic institutions do in their name and with their collective democratic mandate and authority. I fully understand that Israel has faced very real existential and aggressive armed challenges and threats from Arab and Islamist ideologues who deny its right to exist. Israel is entitled to defend itself from such threats and challenges – whether they emanate from Iran , Hizbullah , Hamas , the Houthis , other states or from people whose parents were forcibly displaced and expelled from its internationally-recognised sovereign territory as established in 1948. Israel, as a matter of international law and under the UN charter, was and is entitled to use military force, reasonably and proportionately, to pre-empt, counter and defeat those challenges and threats in the exercise of its right of self-defence. READ MORE But – and there must be a 'but' – Israel is not entitled to seek to expand its territory by force to include what its government calls 'the lands of Judea and Samaria' (the West Bank) or the Gaza Strip. De-facto annexation through settlement of the remaining lands occupied by Palestinian Arabs since 1948 is a breach of international law. Full stop. And its violent maintenance by military means, including a policy of encroachments and expulsions as practised by the state of Israel and its army, amounts to war crime. Full stop. What the Israeli government and its army have done to the civilian population in Gaza and in many parts of the West Bank since the Hamas atrocities of October 2023 amounts to war crime. It is all the more unforgivable in that it was entirely foreseeable and foreseen. I was not alone writing here and speaking in the Seanad in October 2023 warning about the likely sequence of awful events that have since unfolded. You did not need to be a clairvoyant to see what Binyamin Netanyahu would do – rolling destruction of the Gaza Strip, herding its population from one ruinous place to another, killing more than 61,000 people, nearly all civilians, and injuring, maiming and inflicting tens of thousands of others, causing irreversible psychological trauma to hundreds of thousands of others, and mass detentions of semi-naked male civilians to be subject to routine torture in Israeli detention centres. I did not then foresee the brutal Israeli deployment of starvation and famine to compound those barbarities. But I did know that Hamas – which had, with Israeli encouragement, turned into a brutal, terrorist-dominated administration of the entire Gaza Strip – could not be destroyed by a precision military operation to decapitate the movement. Netanyahu has brought about a growing international consensus, which excludes the US but includes Canada, Australia, all of Europe and the great majority of UN member states, that there must be a just peace based on a viable two-state solution. The 20 to 30 surviving hostages are most unlikely to survive a further IDF occupation of the Gaza Strip or the total annihilation of their brutal Hamas captors. We cannot forget what tragically happened to three escaping hostage Israelis who stripped themselves and emerged from captivity, speaking in Hebrew under a white flag only to be mown down by trigger-happy members of the IDF who assumed they were terrorists. Relatives of the surviving hostages are right in resisting Netanyahu's plans to intensify war on Gaza. Sadly, the hostages do not feature in the political calculus of some Israeli ministers. Netanyahu and finance minister Bezalel Smotrich are pursuing a very different expansionist agenda that is turning Israel into an international pariah state. They have brought about a tipping point that increasingly leaves the Trump administration as their only remaining ally. The huge protest march across the Sydney Bridge was not composed of anti-Semites, as Netanyahu would have us believe. Nor was the protest against the proscription of Palestine Action, which resulted in the ludicrous mass arrest of hundreds of decent Londoners . Trump may still dream of a Palestinian-free riviera in Gaza. But he will wake up in the real world where his policies are causing nightmares. Whack-a-mole repression of international protest and opinion – whether in US college campuses or across the globe – is futile and doomed.

Letters to the Editor, August 13th: On  Gaza atrocities, Ukraine, small SUVs, and protecting your bike
Letters to the Editor, August 13th: On  Gaza atrocities, Ukraine, small SUVs, and protecting your bike

Irish Times

time8 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Letters to the Editor, August 13th: On Gaza atrocities, Ukraine, small SUVs, and protecting your bike

Sir, – The cynic in me cannot help but wonder why some people are only now finding the moral courage to speak out against the atrocities in Gaza. Starvation doesn't happen overnight. Complete siege-like conditions were imposed by Israel on October 9th, 2023, lasting until October 21st, with limited and totally inadequate supplies being allowed in thereafter. From March 2nd this year, a full blockade on everything was again imposed. It is not too difficult to predict the effects of withholding the essentials of life from an already malnourished and weakened population (whose agricultural land has also been destroyed) for five months. So why has it taken the evidential photos of skeletal children to evoke a reaction when the facts and logic already spoke for themselves? READ MORE Outrage has been expressed at the most recent killing of five Al Jazeera journalists, but their deaths were preceded by over 180 others. Why has every media report not included the reminder that Palestinian journalists were risking their lives daily in order to tell the world about what Israel refused to let foreign journalists in to see for themselves? Only now does Germany have scruples about arming Israel. The fact that as far back as November 2024 over 710 babies under one year had been killed in Israeli strikes didn't resonate as grotesque enough a statistic to provoke a crisis of conscience. For those whom German military aid has been involved in killing and wounding, the gesture is too late. Footage has been available since October 2023 of the systematic annihilation of the physical structures of the Strip. Is it the recent statistic that 70 per cent are uninhabitable and 25 per cent totally destroyed that affects politicians who now see 'war crime' written in these numbers and try to exculpate themselves by promising to recognise the state of Palestine? As if that will magic infrastructure back into being. We have all had access to the same knowledge for 22 months but some have chosen to not see and to not speak. Currently, the avalanche of those wanting to be seen to line up on what is now being perceived as 'the right side' can only be construed as that of people afraid that their shameful silence (or worse, overt support) has been exposed by the headlights of accountability and is a form of complicity in what will surely rank as one of the worst episodes in the history of the modern world. – Yours, etc, MARY MORAN, Shannon, Co Clare. Sir, – Following the brutal killing of five media workers from Al Jazeera, including the high profile and much loved journalist Anas Al Sharif, the hunting, targeting and assassination of Palestinian journalists by Israel in Gaza has been rightly condemned in the strongest terms around the world. However, many news outlets have been at pains to report these events accompanied by what appear to be official Israeli government statements or Israeli media quotes, presumably for 'balance'. Surely, for the sake of accuracy, when such material is quoted by the likes of RTÉ, the BBC, the Guardian and The Irish Times, it should be clearly noted that every single news item, quote and press report coming out of Israel is subject to strict military censorship. Perhaps they should add that Israel (often cited as the only democracy in the Middle East) ranks at 112 out of 180 in the RSF World Press Freedom Index for 2025 (just below Haiti at 111). I do question whether these news outlets would give the same credence and unquestioning respect to Haiti's official press statements as they do to those emanating from Tel Aviv. – Yours, etc, TRISH LAVELLE, Skibbereen Co Cork. Sir, – It amazes me that Germany, with its history before 1945, continues to support a country which is committing genocide, killing journalists and denying access to foreign journalists to report the truth in Gaza – while using every opportunity to starve and kill civilians. I thought that history was a learning process. – Yours, etc, ALASTAIR WHITE, Foxrock Manor, Dublin. Small SUV supporter Sir, – On two previous occasions I wrote to you outlining why I now drive a small SUV. At this stage I have had hip surgery on three occasions but I can honestly say that I can get into and out of the SUV without major pain and discomfort. That is the one reason why I drive this make of car. Why have you not printed a single letter in praise of the SUV? Balance and all that kind of thing, you know – Yours, etc, RICHARD ALLEN, Cummeen, Sligo. Sir, – SUVs are frequently referred to as off-road vehicles. In my experience, the only time most of them are off-road is when they are parked on and obstructing the footpath. – Yours, etc, BEN DUNDON, Kingswood Heights, Dublin 24. Bicycle theft Sir, – My strategy of temporarily pauperising the appearance of my relatively expensive bicycle by always tying a suitably threadbare plastic bag over the saddle before locking the two-wheeler on public streets seems to work. Not only have I enjoyed a lifetime of theft-free cycling, but even on the most inclement occasions I manage to arrive home with a bone-dry posterior. – Yours, etc, KIERAN FLYNN, Ballinasloe, Co Galway. Sir, – I see that William Smith (Letters, August 12th) has built a thief-proof bicycle. What a great idea – I think I'll steal it. – Yours, etc, RORY NOONAN, Dalkey, Co Dublin. Is this a record? Sir, – The current thread in the letters page reminds me of a letter decades back when a writer (whose name eludes me) described being in his garden and hearing the sound of Delius's On Hearing the First Cuckoo of Spring, sung by John McCormack, as it was carried on the wind from a location nearby. He wondered if it was a record? – Yours, etc, MICHAEL KEEGAN, Booterstown, Co Dublin. Sir, – Further to recent correspondence, I once had an Opel car that clocked up nigh on 300,000 miles during its lifespan. Is this a Rekord? – Yours, etc, PAUL DELANEY, Dalkey, Dublin. A deal for Ukraine Sir, – Geoffrey Roberts (Letters, August 12th) asserts that the great majority of Ukrainians want peace 'even if it means harsh compromises'. This is a simplistic interpretation of Ukrainian public opinion. Some polls, like Gallup, ask whether Ukraine should fight the war until victory or negotiate. Faced with these two stark options most Ukrainians do favour negotiation. The results are not as straightforward when Ukrainians are asked more detailed questions about conditions for a peace agreement. When asked about how peace should be achieved most Ukrainians are not keen on 'harsh compromises' at all. Most do not want Ukraine to give up any territory, even if that means the war continues. A vast majority – 74 per cent – will only accept a peace agreement if Ukraine is allowed to retain its sovereignty and its trajectory towards the EU and Nato. And if Ukraine receives either Western peacekeepers to guarantee against further Russian aggression or is armed to defend itself in the future. Instead of Volodymyr Zelenskiy and Europe falling in line with the US, as Roberts suggests, perhaps the US should fall in line with Ukrainian popular opinion that wants peace but with guarantees? Respecting what Ukrainians want would mean taking Ukrainian sovereignty and hopes seriously. It would mean respecting the victims of Vladimir Putin's war rather than rewarding the aggressor in the war in the vainglorious pursuit of a Nobel Prize. Such respect is unlikely to come from Putin and Donald Trump given Putin does not believe Ukraine to be a state and Trump's narcissism. It is vital, therefore, that Europe and Zelenskiy do not give in to any US attempt at imposing a peace. If there is to be a permanent peace Ukraine needs to be a party to the terms of that peace and its people's wishes taken into account. Ukraine should not a sacrificial lamb to Putin's regime and Trump's ego. – Yours, etc, NEIL ROBINSON, Professor of Comparative Politics, University of Limerick, Co Limerick. Sir, – Geoffrey Roberts is naive if he thinks a peace deal between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin will save Ukraine from Russian domination. Putin has no interest in an independent sovereign Ukraine, even one with reduced territory. He doesn't even believe that Ukrainians are a separate people, only that they are deluded Russians led astray by western propaganda. Like Neville Chamberlain, Trump will surrender parts of Ukraine to Russia to appease Putin. If Putin is smart, he will wait a few years, rebuilding his strength, and after Trump leaves office, attack and capture the rest of Ukraine. Europe learned the hard lesson in the 1930s that appeasement doesn't stop wars, it encourages more of it. As a professor of history, you would think Mr Roberts would know that. – Yours, etc, JASON FITZHARRIS, Swords, Co Dublin. Cancelling India Day Sir, – I was very saddened to read about the cancellation of India Day in Dublin this year, on what would have been its 10th anniversary. More than a missed celebration of culture and inclusion, the event's cancellation is a grim reminder of the growing shadow of racism and online hate in Ireland. We must confront the roots of recent attacks on innocent Indian people in Ireland with honesty and urgency. What are we allowing to fester in our society that makes such violence against immigrants and their children possible? India Day may not go ahead this year, but I hope the spirit of the festival can live on. I will be thinking about the many Indian immigrants who have positively shaped my life over the years, especially the medical professionals who recently tended to my mother in her dying days, and the childcare worker who is a light in my young son's life. To our Indian community, let us stand together in solidarity and support. Ar scáth a chéile a mhaireann na daoine. – Yours, etc, MÉABH NÍ CHOILEÁIN, Terenure Road West, Dublin. Sir, – It is with a heavy heart I read that India Day, due to have taken place this Sunday in Farmleigh, is now cancelled due a series of unprovoked attacks on Indian nationals in Ireland. Having worked as a GP for 40 years I can only say that my Indian colleagues make a huge and positive contribution to our health service. In particular, the Indian nurses working in many of our nursing homes are almost unparalleled in the courtesy, professionalism, dedication, and care they give to our elderly. Many of their offspring also make huge contributions to diverse areas of Irish society, including to the highest level of government. – Yours, etc, GARRETT IGOE. Virginia, Co Cavan.

The Irish Times view on the killing of Anas al-Sharif: Israel is targeting journalism
The Irish Times view on the killing of Anas al-Sharif: Israel is targeting journalism

Irish Times

time13 hours ago

  • Irish Times

The Irish Times view on the killing of Anas al-Sharif: Israel is targeting journalism

There is a shameless, unintentional black humour to Israel's insistence that it cannot let international journalists into Gaza because it cannot guarantee their safety. The Committee to Protect Journalists, an NGO, reports that some 186 journalists have been killed in Gaza since the start of the Israel-Hamas war in October 2023, at least 178 of them by Israel. Dozens of journalists remain confined to its jails. The Watson School of International and Public Affairs calculates that more journalists have been killed in Gaza than in both world wars, the Vietnam war, the wars in Yugoslavia and the US war in Afghanistan combined. Most who have died appear to have been so-called 'collateral' damage, victims of the illegal killing of civilians, located beside what the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) regarded as 'legitimate targets'. However, Anas al-Sharif, the renowned Al Jazeera reporter killed in a tent alongside four journalistic colleagues and two others at the weekend was deliberately targeted by the IDF. He was accused by Israel publicly a week ago of allegedly having a 'military affiliation to Hamas', suggesting he headed a terrorist cell responsible for planning rocket attacks against Israeli civilians and soldiers. There was no evidence produced to support this claim that he was effectively a combatant, which Al Jazeera strongly denies . READ MORE Rather, it appears that Al-Sharif's real 'crime', in the eyes of the Israeli authorities , was in fearlessly recording and publicising Israel's criminal campaign in Gaza, representing all those journalists who were and are still denied access by the Israeli government to the territory. His farewell message, penned in advance of the death he knew was coming, is moving testimony to his undimmed spirit: 'I have lived through pain in all its details, tasted suffering and loss many times, yet I never once hesitated to convey the truth as it is, without distortion or falsification.' The UN has, quite rightly, called for a rigorous and independent inquiry. But without Israeli cooperation it will come to nothing.

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