DAILY ALERT |
Sunday, September 29, 2024 | ||
In-Depth Issues:
27 Israeli Children Were Shot and Burned Alive on Oct. 7, Forensic Evidence Shows - Ariela Ayalon (Ynet News)
Israel Police data released on Thursday revealed 27 children between the ages of 0-17 were shot and burned alive on Oct. 7, 2023. The report described the recording of a girl at a kibbutz near the Gaza border who was on a call with the police emergency center while being held by a terrorist. She begged the terrorist to let her go, saying she was just a child and had school the next day. The terrorist shot her to death. Her burnt remains were later located. The evidence was gathered from CCTV cameras, testimonies from hostages and ZAKA volunteers, Hamas terrorists' body cameras, and social media posts. "That children were burned, shot and murdered alongside their parents is a proven fact. Children witnessed their parents being murdered and we found a scene with a pile of bodies from the same family more than once," said Commander Dudi Katz, cyber unit chief of the Israel Police special investigations unit Lahav 433. Katz described a photograph of a baby who was murdered alongside her father who tried to protect his family. Another case was the tragic story of the Taasa family from Netiv HaAsara where the father, Gil, threw himself on a grenade that terrorists had tossed into their home to save his children. In a video, "We identified a child around six or seven years old whose body was burnt, but his face remained intact. His glazed expression indicated that he had been burned alive," Katz recounted.
Movie Review - "Surviving October 7th: We Will Dance Again" - Jasper Rees (Telegraph-UK)
"Surviving October 7th: We Will Dance Again" (BBC Two) is pieced together from footage recorded by Hamas killers and their prey. "It's like seeing a horror movie with your own eyes," remembers one survivor. Except that they're the ones filming the horror. "I'm filming so that I believe it myself," says one teenage boy. The most chilling clip was caught by a student who hid in a bunker crammed with nearly naked corpses, all murdered by Kalashnikov. The image is over in a blink, but that split-second collapses the distance between the Nova Festival and Auschwitz. The subject of Yariv Mozer's blistering documentary is terror: raw, pure, uncut, as it happened and as it is traumatically relived by those who saw and felt it.
Hamas Terrorists Murder Gaza Aid Worker - Nidal Al-Mughrabi (Reuters)
Gunmen in Gaza riding in three cars intercepted Islam Hejazy, Gaza program manager at HEAL Palestine, on Thursday and sprayed her vehicle with dozens of bullets.
Abbas Calls to Strip Israel of UN Membership - Tovah Lazaroff (Jerusalem Post)
Israel must be stripped of UN membership, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas told the UN General Assembly on Thursday. "We are going to submit an application to the UNGA on this matter," he said.
Israel Doesn't Need to Get U.S. Approval for Its Operations Against Hizbullah - Gen. (ret.) Jack Keane, former U.S. Army Vice Chief of Staff (Fox News)
Q: We're told that in Israel's recent operations against Hizbullah, they don't run these operations by the White House. What do you make of that? Gen. Keane: "I don't think they need to....Let's face it, the United States, with some exceptions, has left Israel on its own." "They micromanaged how to run their operations in Gaza. They pulled back giving them the weapons they needed, to get their attention not to conduct a campaign against Hizbullah in Lebanon. They've been pulling them back."
Israel Sends Nasrallah to His Just Reward - Editorial (Wall Street Journal)
The press is predictably describing Israel's strike against Hizbullah leader Hassan Nasrallah as "escalatory." It isn't. The escalation started against Israel last Oct. 7 with Hamas's massacre, followed a day later by rockets fired by Hizbullah that haven't stopped. The strike against Nasrallah was a justified defense against the leader of an Iran-backed terrorist proxy waging war against Israel. By degrading Iran's front-line proxy in Lebanon, Israel has substantially weakened its enemies. Israel's experience in the last year is a lesson to the West about the cost of failed deterrence and what is required to restore it.
Some in Syria and Iran Hail the Death of Hizbullah Leader (Times of Israel)
Some in Syria and Iran took to the streets to celebrate the demise of Hizbullah leader Hassan Nasrallah. In areas outside government control in Syria, some waved Syrian flags and handed out sweets early Saturday, cheering and honking car horns. Many Syrian opposition supporters despise Hizbullah, which inflicted heavy losses on rebel forces in a number of areas. A video from Iran sent "a congratulatory message to everyone for the death of Hassan Nasrallah," adding a thank you for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Some Iranians also gathered outside the Israeli Embassy in London to celebrate, singing and thanking Israel.
Don't Interfere with Israel While It's Working - Ben-Dror Yemini (Ynet News)
The U.S. does not wish for an escalation - but we live in the Middle East. After nearly a year of restraint, Israel did the right thing because it cannot afford to suffer from the blindness that the Free World suffers from. No major Western media outlet mentioned the fact that the Shiite terror organizations, like the Sunni, have declared their desire to take over the world. In June, the head of Hizbullah's foreign relations said that "Israel is only a means to an end. The real goal is the war with America." They mean every word. Hizbullah has been carrying out deadly terrorist attacks for over four decades. Whoever wants peace must keep striking at Hizbullah, while threatening Iran's vulnerable oil export terminal at Khark Island.
Israel's War Is Against Hizbullah, Not the Lebanese People - Bassam Tawil (Gatestone Institute)
How would the U.S. respond if a terrorist organization in Mexico launched thousands of missiles and drones into American cities? Would the U.S. tolerate such attacks for nearly a year? Would the U.S. accept a situation where tens of thousands of its own citizens are forced to flee their homes and become refugees in their own country? How would France respond if its cities came under attack from terrorists based in neighboring countries? Would the French call for negotiations with the terrorists, or would they practice their right to self-defense? The war in Lebanon could end tomorrow if Hizbullah stopped its rocket and drone attacks on Israeli towns and cities. Hizbullah, however, has so far indicated that it has no intention of halting them. Hizbullah has left Israel with no choice but to wage a counterterrorism offensive to defend its own citizens.
Harvard's Antisemitism Begins in the Classroom - Dara Horn (Wall Street Journal)
Last fall I served on Harvard's Antisemitism Advisory Group. It went so badly that I wound up as a witness in Congress's investigation of Harvard. No one in the advisory group argued against free speech. Students can chant "globalize the intifada" all they want. But why is Harvard full of screaming racists? The Harvard course catalogue and events calendar frequently feature "Palestine" and "decolonization." But students need to dig deep to find a course or lecture mentioning that Hamas and Hizbullah are proxies of Iran, or that Israel has been fighting a multifront war against Iran for decades. Academia doesn't seem to attract many courageous people. The tenure process encourages conformity, and students also perform to conform. When Harvard and its academic departments are invested in the bogus story in which the villains are Jews and the heroes are federally-designated terrorist organizations, there's no incentive for anyone to disagree.
Israel Under Fire - The Israeli Economy during the October 7, 2023, War and Its Aftermath - David Brodet (Jerusalem Center for Foreign Affairs)
The Israeli economy was in good shape before Oct. 7, 2023. The foreign currency reserves were high ($200 billion). The balance of payments was good (a surplus of $20 billion). Israel was lending (net) about $200 billion to the world. There was full employment, a low debt-to-GDP ratio (61%), and a reasonable expected budget deficit (less than 2%). Because of the economy's strength, the financial crisis due to the war is not immediately apparent. The duration of the war increases the economic damage. The direct expenses of the war, military and civilian, are assessed at about NIS 180 billion from the last quarter of 2023 to the end of 2024 (without American aid). The writer served as Commissioner of the Budget and Director-General of the Israel Ministry of Finance. |
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Global Commentary and Think-Tank Analysis:
Hizbullah Israeli Security How the World Views Israel Observations: Netanyahu to UN: Israel Chooses Reconciliation between Arab and Jew over Iran's Unremitting Aggression (Prime Minister's Office) Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addressed the UN General Assembly on Sep. 27, 2024:
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