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Israeli settlers attack Palestinian home near Nablus

Israeli settlers attack Palestinian home near Nablus

Middle East Eye11 hours ago
Israeli settlers on Tuesday launched an attack on a Palestinian home in the village of an-Nassariya, near Nablus in the West Bank, Wafa news agency reported on Tuesday, citing local sources.
The attack happened under the protection of the Israeli army.
Settler attacks have disproportionately increased on Palestinian land, property and civilians since Israel's war on Gaza.
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After Iran, will Israel target Pakistan?
After Iran, will Israel target Pakistan?

Middle East Eye

time38 minutes ago

  • Middle East Eye

After Iran, will Israel target Pakistan?

When Pakistan's defence minister, Khawaja Asif, warned last month that Muslim countries must unite or else 'everyone's turn will come', it was less a diplomatic lament than a coded SOS. As Israel struck Iranian territory last month, and western leaders and media inverted reality by declaring Iran to be the threat, a chilling question emerged: who is next? You'd be forgiven for calling this paranoia. But after decades of watching nations demonised, delegitimised and dismantled in the name of 'global security', the pattern is too obvious to ignore. The West no longer needs tanks or UN resolutions. The playbook has evolved. Today, sovereignty is overthrown via headlines, economic chokeholds and narrative warfare. If that fails, the perceived well-being of Israel becomes justification enough for pre-emptive strikes. For once, give Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu credit: he says the quiet part out loud. For decades, he has warned of rogue Muslim regimes gaining nuclear capabilities. Iraq was bombed. Libya was disarmed. Iran is being strangled. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters And Pakistan? That's the final frontier - not because it has invaded anyone, but because it represents strategic, ideological and technological defiance of western and Zionist hegemony. This argument is gaining traction. The Times of India recently amplified a report suggesting Pakistan is developing intercontinental ballistic missiles capable of reaching the US. No confirmation needed; the insinuation alone is enough to rally suspicions. Hollow narrative This isn't 2001. No one is selling 'weapons of mass destruction' on grainy satellite footage. But the ambition remains: to make Pakistan's nuclear capabilities look like a global liability. British tabloids and security think tanks now routinely describe Pakistan as an unstable state, susceptible to extremism and on a hair-trigger for nuclear escalation. A recent Daily Mail piece parrots a tired narrative: Pakistan's military leadership is supposedly on the edge of conflict with India, driven by zealotry, not reason. The commentary - attributed to yet another Indian 'security analyst' - paints Pakistan as morphing into an 'extremist Islamic state'. The West's problem with Pakistan is not what it's done. It's an Islamic republic, a nuclear power, and an ally of China. In today's world order, that trifecta is the ultimate red line Such claims ring hollow to anyone with even a cursory understanding of the region. Despite its many crises, Pakistan has never elected a religious party to power - not in more than seven decades. The electorate has consistently rejected overt theocracy at the ballot box. India, by contrast, has repeatedly and enthusiastically voted for a man widely believed to have presided over - or at best, turned a blind eye to - the 2002 Gujarat pogrom. That man, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, now leads a party openly committed to the creation of a theocratic Hindu state, built on the marginalisation and scapegoating of Muslims and other minorities. Yet, in much of the British and western media, India remains the adult in the room - the rational actor, the democratic beacon. The hypocrisy would be laughable if it weren't so dangerous. Consider the events of this past April, following the tragic Pahalgam attack on Hindu pilgrims. India, without presenting credible evidence of Pakistani involvement, launched cross-border military action. Western media outlets largely accepted New Delhi's narrative at face value. Pakistani officials, meanwhile, were subjected to hostile interviews and again made to answer for the spectre of terrorism - a framing that has become depressingly routine. There is an unspoken but unmistakable logic here: Hindu nationalism, no matter how violent, is framed as a political choice - perhaps regrettable, but legitimate. Islamist politics, even when nowhere near power, are treated as an existential threat. Regional imbalance This isn't just lazy journalism; it enables impunity. By refusing to hold India to the same standard, western media reinforces a regional imbalance in which Pakistan is the perpetual provocateur, and India - despite its authoritarian bent - gets a free pass. This isn't just about fairness. It's about whether peace in South Asia can ever be achieved when one state's aggression is minimised and the other's very existence is seen as a threat. 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All roads in the 21st century lead to Beijing. The US knows it. Britain knows it. Israel knows it. And Pakistan's centrality to the New Silk Road transforms it from a regional irritant into a global pivot. Following the recent Iran-Israel flare-up, Pakistani army chief Asim Munir met US President Donald Trump at the White House - an encounter that raised more questions than it answered. Was it a charm offensive? A warning? A recalibration? Whatever the answer, it underscored Pakistan's uncertain place in the world: simultaneously courted and condemned, needed and distrusted. The West's problem with Pakistan is not what it's done. It's what it represents: an Islamic republic, a nuclear power, and an ally of China. In today's world order, that trifecta is the ultimate red line. Back in 2009, during a postgraduate seminar on the Mongol Empire, a professor slammed a map on the table and asked whether I - a British Pakistani - was aware of a neoconservative plan to balkanise Pakistan. He wasn't trying to provoke. He knew I loved the culture, followed the cricket team, and felt the pulse of the place. It was a warning, not a theory. Today, that map feels less like a conspiracy - and more like a strategy in motion. The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.

Israeli airstrikes kill 12 in eastern Lebanon despite ceasefire
Israeli airstrikes kill 12 in eastern Lebanon despite ceasefire

Dubai Eye

time2 hours ago

  • Dubai Eye

Israeli airstrikes kill 12 in eastern Lebanon despite ceasefire

Share on Facebook Share on Messenger Share on Messenger Share on X Share on Whatsapp Israeli airstrikes killed 12 people in eastern Lebanon, according to a Lebanese security source - the attacks being the deadliest in the area since the US-brokered ceasefire between the two countries last November. The Israeli military said the airstrikes targeted training camps used by Hezbollah and warehouses it used to store weapons in the Bekaa Valley region. Bachir Khodr, governor of the Bekaa region, said seven of the dead were Syrian nationals. Israel dealt Hezbollah heavy blows in last year's conflict, killing its leader Hassan Nasrallah along with other commanders and destroying much of its arsenal. Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said Tuesday's strikes sent a "clear message" to Hezbollah, accusing it of planning to rebuild the capability to raid Israel through the Radwan force. Israel "will respond with maximum force to any attempt at rebuilding", he said. He added that strikes were also a message to the Lebanese government, saying it was responsible for upholding the ceasefire agreement. Hezbollah condemned the Israeli attack on Bekaa Valley, describing it as a "major escalation of ongoing Israeli aggression against Lebanon". It made no mention in its statement on whether some of its fighters were killed in the strikes. There was no immediate public response from the Lebanese government. The US has submitted a proposal to the Lebanese government aimed at securing Hezbollah's disarmament within four months in exchange for Israel halting air strikes and withdrawing troops from positions they still hold in south Lebanon. Under the terms of the ceasefire brokered by the US and France, Lebanon's armed forces were to confiscate "all unauthorized arms", beginning in the area south of the Litani River - the zone closest to Israel.

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