Chassidishe Hamas Guy Gets Schooled by Yiddish-Speaking Chilonie
Young Real Jews Showing the Israel Flag to Hamas Chareidim
“I don’t speak because I have the power to speak; I speak because I don’t have the power to remain silent.” Rav Kook z"l
Chassidishe Hamas Guy Gets Schooled by Yiddish-Speaking Chilonie
Young Real Jews Showing the Israel Flag to Hamas Chareidim
The IDF Spokesperson's Unit on Sunday morning cleared for publication of the names of five of the eight soldiers who were killed in the explosion of an APC in Rafah on Saturday:
- Sergeant Elyahu Moshe Zimbalist, 21, from Beit Shemesh.
- Sergeant Itay Amar, 19, from Kokhav Ya'ir–Tzur Yig'al.
Staff sergeant Stanislav Kostarev, 21, from Ashdod.
- Staff sergeant Orr Blumovitz, 20, from Pardes Hanna-Karkur.
- Staff sergeant Oz Yeshaia Gruber, 20, from Tal Menashe.
All of them served in the 601st Combat Engineering Battalion.
On Saturday night, it was cleared for publication that one of the eight IDF soldiers killed in Rafah was Captain Wassem Mahmoud, 23, from Beit Jann.
Mahmoud was a deputy company commander in Engineering Battalion 601. He commanded the APC which went up in flames.
In addition, the IDF cleared for publication on Sunday morning that Captain Eitan Koplovich, 28, from Jerusalem, and Senior Staff Sergeant Major Elon Waiss, 49, from Psagot, fell in battle in the northern Gaza Strip.
Both served in the 129th Armored Battalion of the 8th Armored Brigade.
Two soldiers were seriously injured in the incident in which Koplovich and Waiss fell. They were evacuated for medical treatment at a hospital and their families were notified.
The town of Beit El announced on Saturday night that its resident, Sergeant Shalom Menachem, 21, was one of the victims of the APC disaster in Rafah, which left eight soldiers dead.
"Shalom Menachem was raised in Beit El and is survived by his parents and seven siblings. He fought for five months in Gaza, defending the State of Israel's security, and fell as a hero while serving in his role. The funeral details will be announced later," an announcement read.
The Nahal Sorek Regional Council announced that IDF soldier Yakir Levi, 21, from Kibbutz Hafetz Haim was killed in the Rafah tragedy.
From a preliminary investigation of the event, two options are now being considered. One is that an anti-tank missile hit the APC, and the second is that the APC hit a powerful explosive device that caused the explosives and mines on it to explode.
Commenting on the incident, IDF Spokesperson, Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari, said on Saturday night, "Tonight we delivered the hardest news to the families of eight IDF soldiers who fell in action in Gaza."
"In the early morning, with the completion of the operation on the northwestern part of the area, infantry, armored and engineering troops from the 401st Brigade entered the area in convoys of armored fighting vehicles in order to position themselves in the contact lines. According to the information we have at this stage, a powerful explosion occurred in one of the engineering vehicles in the convoy, seemingly caused by an explosive device planted in the area or as a result of anti-tank missile fire. Inside the armored vehicle were the eight soldiers who were killed," said Hagari.
"Following this difficult incident, a team of experts from the Ministry of Defense and the IDF will examine the armored vehicle and all the details of the incident until we reach findings," he added.
Israel Police on Motzei Shabbos published footage of the moments that Israeli security forces broke into the apartment where hostage Noa Argamani was being held.
“Noa, everything is all right. We’re taking you home,” one of the officers is heard saying. “You’re safe. We’re taking you to the car.”
The video continues in the car and the officers are heard saying: “We’re from Yamam and the Shin Bet. We’re taking you home. We’re very excited that you’re here and we’re proud of you.”
Noa is then heard saying: “I’m excited. I’m simply very afraid of the way back.”
The Yamam officers later said that Noa’s first question was: “Is my mother still alive?”
In a Thursday afternoon post on X, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said that he signed an order transferring about $134 million from the Palestinian Authority’s (PA) frozen funds to victims of terrorism.
Smotrich described the order, which he signed on Sunday, as an act of “historical justice,” saying that the PA “encourages and favors terrorism by paying the families of terrorists, prisoners, and released prisoners.”
“By the judgments that awarded compensation to the victims of terrorism, we offset the same amounts from the PA’s funds and transfer the awarded money to the families of the victims of terrorism,” Smotrich added.
On Thursday, US State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller described Smotrich’s order as “not appropriate” and “an extraordinarily wrongheaded decision by the minister.”
“We have made quite clear to the government of Israel that these funds belong to the Palestinian people. They should be transferred to the Palestinian Authority immediately,” Miller stressed. “They should not have been held. They should not be delayed.
“The money belongs to the Palestinian people, and it’s important that [they] have the ability to fund their government to pursue activities as they deem fit,” Miller further stated.
“But also, the case that we have made to Israel is that this kind of decision is extraordinarily self-defeating,” Miller added. “It doesn’t just hurt the Palestinian people; it hurts Israel as well.”
According to Miller, the PA has worked incredibly hard to maintain calm and stability in the West Bank over the years, especially since October 7.
“And this kind of action by the Israeli government risks destabilizing the West Bank and further harming Israel’s security,” he said.
The Jerusalem Post reached out to a spokesperson for Smotrich for comment.
If you're wondering what happened next? The car is fine, those inside the car are not. pic.twitter.com/9zy5jKb4TI
— Mossad Commentary (@MOSSADil) June 12, 2024
EU countries need this video badly. pic.twitter.com/GSP7Z8TCZP
— Edward-I am (@louiseEdaba) June 13, 2024
A public opinion poll conducted by the Palestinian Center for Survey Research reveals that a significant majority of Palestinians support the October 7 attack against Israel and believe Hamas will return to power in the Gaza Strip after the war.
According to the poll, 66% of respondents expressed support for the October 7 attack, while 73% believed Hamas made the right decision in launching the attack. A staggering 79% of respondents believe Hamas will win the war, the highest rate since the beginning of the conflict.
Furthermore, 96% of respondents denied the massacre in the Gaza envelope, claiming that Hamas terrorists did not commit atrocities against Israeli civilians on October 7.
The poll also indicated that if elections for the Palestinian Authority were held, Fatah leader Marwan Barghouti, who is currently imprisoned for the murder of Jews, would win the majority. In a hypothetical election between Barghouti and Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh, Haniyeh would win around 60% of the votes.
As the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) conducts another assault in the north of Gaza, they face significant criticism from Western officials and analysts who are asking why the IDF is repeatedly going into areas they have already cleared and conducting further operations.
Critics claim this behavior reflects a flaw in operational design or is even proof that Israel’s campaign against Hamas has failed.
The flaw, however, lies in their own assumptions.
These critics are looking at IDF tactics through the lens of Western counterinsurgency (COIN), the doctrine that US and European militaries applied in the failed campaigns in Afghanistan and Iraq.
In the “global war on terror,” Western tactics were to seize a chunk of territory and clear it of enemies through military force.
The plan was then to hold the territory through forward operating bases (or FOBs) and try to conduct alternative governance in those areas while providing security.
The system of FOBs meant that our enemies, embedded in the local civilian population, always knew where we were and what routes we were likely to use. They could mortar, rocket, and IED us at will.
It was a recipe for endless violence and huge numbers of casualties.