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Israel strikes Syrian military airport near Sweida

Israel strikes Syrian military airport near Sweida

Middle East Eye2 days ago
The Israeli military struck Thaala military airfield near Sweida and another site in Daraa in Syria, according to Lebanon's Al Mayadeen.
The report said several members of the Syrian forces were killed and wounded in Sweida.
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Israeli settlers accused of killing 117 sheep in West Bank attack
Israeli settlers accused of killing 117 sheep in West Bank attack

Gulf Today

time31 minutes ago

  • Gulf Today

Israeli settlers accused of killing 117 sheep in West Bank attack

Palestinian Bedouins accused Israeli settlers on Friday of killing 117 sheep in an overnight attack and stealing hundreds of others in an apparent effort to chase farmers off their land in the occupied West Bank. The incident comes amid what the United Nations described this week as intensifying attacks by Jewish settlers and security forces against Palestinians in the West Bank and record mass displacements. The Israeli army did not respond to a request for comment about the mass slaughter of the animals belonging to the Arab Al Kaabaneh Bedouin community, in the Jordan Valley. Veterinarians were called in to treat a handful of sheep which had survived the knife and gun attack, some of the animals shaking uncontrollably and in apparent shock. A Palestinian checks wounded sheep after settlers attack a Bedouin community in the Jordan valley, in West Bank. Reuters Salem Salman Mujahed, a resident of Arab Al Kaabaneh, said multiple groups of settlers working in coordination had orchestrated the assault, and accused the army of standing by. "(Settlers) came near the houses. I asked them what are you doing here then we started fighting with each other," he said. "The army detained me, and they handcuffed me." He said other groups of settlers then attacked the sheep, which are vital to his community's survival. Reuters was unable to independently verify who was responsible for the attack. A Palestinian Bedouin walks in a community as an Israeli settlement stands in the back ground in the Jordan valley, West Bank. Reuters Palestinian Minister Moayad Shaaban condemned the incident, calling it part of a broader strategy to displace Palestinians from the region. "These sheep and animals were slaughtered and shot at," he told Reuters. "They are using these tools to terrify these people to leave these areas, which have been inhabited for dozens of years." MOVING AWAY The attack prompted at least one family to begin relocating. Bedouin Tareq Kaabaneh said he could no longer withstand what he called settler intimidation. "They were armed, they steal donkeys and sheep. In the night they come here and start shooting toward us," Kaabaneh said. "I am moving now from here, I want to protect my kids and my sheep, my livelihood ... yesterday I was safe, but I don't know what will happen to me tomorrow," he added. The United Nations reported this week that mass displacements in the West Bank had reached levels unprecedented since Israel first took military control of the territory nearly six decades ago. The UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in Geneva also said there had been 757 settler attacks on Palestinians or their properties since January - a 13% increase from the same period last year. At least 964 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces and settlers in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, since the start of the war in Gaza in October 2023. The US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee demanded this week a full investigation into the killing of a Palestinian American who was beaten to death by settlers in the West Bank on July 11, describing it as a "criminal and terrorist act." The United Nations' highest court said last year that Israel's occupation of Palestinian territories, including the West Bank, was illegal and should end as soon as possible. Reuters

Israeli settlers slaughter dozens of sheep in attack on Palestinian Bedouins
Israeli settlers slaughter dozens of sheep in attack on Palestinian Bedouins

Middle East Eye

timean hour ago

  • Middle East Eye

Israeli settlers slaughter dozens of sheep in attack on Palestinian Bedouins

At dawn on Friday, groups of Israeli settlers slaughtered dozens of sheep and beat and stole several others in al-Miteh in the Jordan Valley, in the occupied West Bank. The attack forced two Palestinian families to evacuate their homes and relocate to al-Auja, near the city of Jericho. This incident is part of a growing pattern of settler violence targeting Bedouin communities, aimed at driving them from lands coveted by Israeli settlers. The settlers frequently attack livestock as a way to destroy the livelihood of Palestinian families and facilitate the seizure of their lands. Mahmoud Kaabneh, one of the residents forced to flee, told Middle East Eye that on Thursday evening, settlers attacked the home of his brother Salem and attempted to steal donkeys. When the family intervened to stop them, more settlers arrived and began assaulting the homes of Salem and his cousin Suleiman, along with their families. The settlers then opened the sheep pen and stole around 350 sheep. Residents quickly gathered to try to recover the livestock. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters "The Israeli army was present with the settlers and did nothing," Kaabneh said. "But when the residents tried to rescue the livestock, the soldiers attacked the Palestinians instead and chased us down. They arrested 20 men and beat them severely for four hours." 'We were left with nothing' In the early morning hours, residents continued searching for their sheep and discovered that settlers had slaughtered dozens of them. "More than 100 sheep were killed - some slaughtered with knives, others beaten to death, and many left with deep wounds. Some of them were stolen," Kaabneh said. He added that a man from the area was hit on the head with an iron pipe while trying to fend off the settlers. When an ambulance arrived, Israeli soldiers detained him for hours at the Hamra checkpoint near Tubas, preventing him from being transported to hospital. Palestinians left 'without shelter and water' as settlers empty West Bank village Read More » Kaabneh and his brothers, who live nearby, were forced to leave their homes and leave the area after the attack - the fifth time they've been displaced due to settler violence. "We've been displaced since 13 October 2023,' he said. "Each time we're attacked, our children and women are beaten, our sheep stolen. Once, they took everything we owned - our homes, belongings - and we were left with nothing but the clothes on our backs." According to local residents, settler attacks are a near-daily occurrence in the area, but this latest assault was among the most violent, spreading fear among Bedouin families. Aref Daraghmeh, a local anti-settlement activist, said at least 30 Bedouin families have been forced to leave the Jordan Valley due to increased settler violence since the start of the war on Gaza, including 20 families in the past three months alone. Recently, settlers have begun a tactic known locally as flag-based settlement, in which they plant an Israeli flag near the tents of Palestinian residents. If the flag is disturbed or even blown over by the wind, settlers use it as a pretext to attack Palestinians. This tactic has terrified residents, Daraghmeh told MEE, adding that settlers have also been using tractors to ram into homes and animal shelters. "There is no one to protect the Palestinians here," Daraghmeh said. "The Israeli army is supporting the settlers in their attempt to completely evacuate the Jordan Valley of its residents."

From Damascus to Gaza, Israel's doctrine of domination has one fatal flaw
From Damascus to Gaza, Israel's doctrine of domination has one fatal flaw

Middle East Eye

time2 hours ago

  • Middle East Eye

From Damascus to Gaza, Israel's doctrine of domination has one fatal flaw

Israel's latest attack on Damascus was not an isolated air strike. It was a doctrine in motion. On Wednesday, warplanes struck the Syrian defence ministry, military headquarters, and the vicinity of the presidential palace. Not near the frontlines or the border, but in the symbolic and sovereign heart of the Syrian capital. The excuse was thin: a supposed effort to protect Syria's Druze minority. But no one should be fooled. This was not about protection. It was about projection of power and arrogance. It was not about the Druze - who are Syrian Arabs and part of Syria's national fabric - but about imposing a long-standing Israeli doctrine of regional fragmentation, one that stretches from the blood-soaked rubble of Gaza to the bombed ministries of Damascus and the destabilisation of entire nations beyond. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters Israel, which has murdered over 60,000 Palestinians - most of them women and children - in Gaza, wounded more than 130,000, and destroyed nearly 80 percent of the territory's buildings, cannot now masquerade as a protector of minorities. A state that is building what is fast becoming the world's largest open-air concentration camp, uses starvation as a weapon, commits daily apartheid in the Occupied West Bank and enshrines discrimination in its Basic Law, cannot lay claim to any moral high ground. It has none. Least of all when it comes to feigning concern for Syria's Druze - whose fate it exploits to mask far more sinister intentions. A televised humiliation act The choice of target was not strategic. It was symbolic. The Umayyad Square is not merely an intersection - it is the soul of Damascus. It stands as a monument to Syrian pride and Arab dignity. It bears the Damascene Sword and echoes with the legacy of the Umayyad Caliphate, which once stretched from the Pyrenees to the steppes of Central Asia. It was in this very square that Syrians, only eight months ago, celebrated the fall of six decades of dictatorship. Syria after Assad: Sharaa's delicate balancing act with Israel Ali Bakir Read More » And it was there, in the middle of a working day, that Israel struck - knowing the square is surrounded by international and Arab TV stations, and that the footage would loop endlessly across satellite channels and social media feeds. This was not just a bombardment. It was an act of televised humiliation. Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz made that clear when he proudly shared a clip of a terrified Syrian presenter abandoning her seat on live broadcast as the defence ministry burned in the background. It was theatre designed to shock Syrians and to frighten Arabs. This strike was not just illegal or immoral, it was another step in a long-term strategy - a doctrine - that aims to impose Israeli hegemony on a fragmented, weakened, divided region. It is neither new nor reactionary. It is a pillar of Israeli strategy, pursued across decades, governments, borders, and wars. Since the revolution in Syria and the fall of Assad regime, Israel has conducted more attacks on Syria than in all previous decades combined. It has systematically destroyed military infrastructure, launched hundreds of incursions, and deepened its occupation of strategic terrain, including vital mountain ranges in southern Syria. Its air raids have become routine, even banal - intended to normalise violation, erase sovereignty, and dismantle Syria's regional standing. But this goes beyond actions - it is a mindset, one that Israeli leaders have been increasingly explicit about. Gideon Saar, Israeli foreign minister, declared just one day after Assad's flight: "The idea of a single sovereign Syria is unrealistic." Israeli military lecturer Rami Simani went further still: "Syria is an artificial state… Israel must cause Syria to disappear. In its place will be five cantons." And in an unequivocal statement of intent, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich proclaimed: "The fighting will not end until hundreds of thousands of Gazans leave… and Syria is partitioned." This is not rhetoric, it is a policy. And it is being implemented. Undermining Arab unity The roots of this strategy stretch back over seven decades, to the so-called Periphery Doctrine, crafted by David Ben-Gurion and Eliahu Sassoon in the early years of Israel's existence. Its logic was simple and ruthless: since Israel could not integrate into the Arab world, it would encircle it - building alliances with non-Arab powers (Turkey, Iran, Ethiopia) and exploiting internal divisions within Arab states by empowering ethnic and religious minorities. Israel may redraw maps, exploit minorities, strike capitals and starve children, but it cannot bomb its way into permanence and it cannot silence a region forever Its aim was threefold: forge partnerships with non-Arab, western-aligned states; undermine Arab unity by stoking fragmentation from within; and offset the Arab collective opposition to Israel. This strategy helped Israel survive and thrive in its early years. But it was never defensive. It was always expansionist. Ben-Gurion said so himself: "Our aim is to smash Lebanon, Trans-Jordan, and Syria… Then we bomb and move on and take Port Said, Alexandria and Sinai." He added: "We have to create a dynamic state, oriented towards expansion." And again: "There is no such thing as a final arrangement… not with regard to the regime, not with regard to borders, not with regard to international agreements." Elsewhere, he was even more blunt: "The boundaries of Zionist aspirations are the concerns of the Jewish people and no external factor will be able to limit them." These were not idle musings. They were foundational tenets. And they still animate Israeli policy today. As regional dynamics shifted, so too did Israel's targets. Egypt made peace. The Shah of Iran fell. Turkey grew closer to the Palestinians. The doctrine had to evolve. But the core goal - fragmentation - remained constant. Israel has applied the formula in Lebanon, in Iraq, in Sudan. However, Syria remains the crown jewel of this strategy. Why? Because Syria is the most populous Arab state bordering Palestine and Syrians see Palestine not as a foreign cause, but as part of their own historical, geographic, and spiritual territory. Also, Bilad al-Sham is more than geography - it is a shared memory and, quite simply, because Israel is occupying Syrian land. This is why Israel has spent the past decade cultivating relationships with Kurdish and Druze communities - preparing to use them as levers in a future fragmentation. And now, with Assad gone, that future is here. A fatal miscalculation But Syria is no longer the endpoint. It is only the middle. Israel's ambitions now stretch deeper into the region's "periphery", with Iran and Pakistan firmly in its crosshairs. Israel's failure to subdue Iran shows it can no longer dictate the regional order Read More » During the recent war on Iran, Israeli voices - particularly those tied to the Jerusalem Post and neoconservative think tanks - called openly for the country's partition. One editorial urged Trump to: "Embrace regime change… Forge a Middle East coalition for Iran's partition… Offer security guarantees to Sunni, Kurdish, and Balochi regions willing to break away." The Foundation for Defense of Democracies argued that Iran's multiethnic composition should be treated as a strategic vulnerability to be exploited. Even Pakistan is now part of the vision. Israeli-affiliated voices speak of reshaping the region "from Pakistan to Morocco". The Abraham Accords, far from being peace deals, are instruments to normalise this ambition - positioning Israel as the region's economic, security, and technological hub. Israeli officials have become increasingly open about this. Smotrich outlined a vision of Israel at the heart of a new regional order - effectively a protectorate empire - and made it clear that Arab states "need to pay" Israel for its role in shielding them from threats like Iran and Hamas. The subtext is unmistakable: Israel provides the violence, and the neighbours pay the tribute. This is not a partnership, it is domination repackaged as diplomacy. Steven Witkoff, US President Donald Trump's Middle East envoy, put it more suavely: "If all these countries worked together, it could be bigger than Europe… They're in AI, robotics, blockchain… Everyone is a business guy there." This is not integration, it is annexation - of economies, of politics, of sovereignty. It is a plan for an Israeli-led bloc that bypasses Europe and challenges global power centres. Across the Arab world, Israel's genocide in Gaza, its desecration of Damascus, its attacks on Beirut, Sanaa, and Tehran, have unified hearts like no summit ever could But here lies Israel's fatal miscalculation: the more it expands, the more enemies it creates. It begins by seeking alliances on the periphery, it ends up making the periphery existentially hostile. Iran, Turkey, Pakistan - once distant rivals - now see Israel not as a nuisance, but as a direct threat. Across the Arab world, Israel's genocide in Gaza, its desecration of Damascus, its attacks on Beirut, Sanaa, and Tehran, have unified hearts like no summit ever could. The more Israel acts like a regional empire, the more the region begins to see it as a colonial one. And colonial empires, history reminds us, do not last. What it sees as fragmentation may yet turn into unification - of resentment, of a shared realisation that the true threat is not Iran or Syria or even political Islam. It is the doctrine of domination itself. And that doctrine - unlike the missiles Israel fires today - will not go unanswered. The future Israel dreams of - one of dominance and submission - is not the future the region will allow. Because the peoples of this region have been here before. They have outlived empires. They have buried crusaders, colonialists, and tyrants. And they have learned that the only doctrine worth carrying is the one that binds them together, not tears them apart. Israel may redraw maps, exploit minorities, strike capitals and starve children, but it cannot bomb its way into permanence. It cannot silence a region forever. It cannot build its future atop the ruins of others - because those ruins remember. And memory, in this land, is not a wound. It is a weapon. The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.

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