PALESTINE

Sun 03 May 2026 6:10 pm - Jerusalem Time

Systematic Looting: How the Theft of Civilian Property Became an Israeli Military Policy?

The violations committed by occupation soldiers in military theaters of operation are no longer mere individual incidents; rather, they reflect a recurring pattern that transcends incidental behaviors to reach the level of a systematic phenomenon. Recent reports have shed light on widespread looting operations targeting civilian property in southern Lebanon, the Gaza Strip, and the West Bank, placing the military establishment before heavy legal and ethical accusations.

In this context, an investigation published by Haaretz newspaper in April 2026 revealed shocking testimonies from soldiers and field officers who participated in ground operations. The testimonies confirmed that looting operations in southern Lebanon were not secret, but rather took place openly and under the eyes of commanders, with stolen items including electrical appliances, household furniture, and even gold bars transported in army vehicles.

One of the participating soldiers described the situation as a 'crazy phenomenon,' noting that soldiers carried stolen goods in their private or military vehicles when leaving the borders without any attempt to conceal them. This scene reflects a complete absence of military discipline and audacity resulting from the certainty of impunity and lack of accountability from higher levels.

Data indicates that military leaders, from battalion to brigade level, were fully aware of these practices but chose silence or merely ineffective verbal reprimands. Observers attribute this laxity to the commanders' desire to maintain the morale of reserve soldiers who had served for long periods exceeding 500 days since the start of the war.

Despite the occupation army's claim that it deals with these incidents seriously, the reality on the ground revealed a stark contradiction, as military police checkpoints, which were designated to prevent looting, were removed. This supervisory vacuum encouraged soldiers to consider civilian property as 'spoils' or items destined for destruction amidst ongoing military operations.

In the West Bank, looting takes on a more complex character, where military action intertwines with systematic settler attacks under the protection of occupation forces. Human rights reports document repeated instances of seizure of money, jewelry, and personal belongings during night raids on homes and commercial establishments in cities such as Bethlehem and Ramallah.

The olive harvest season in the West Bank also serves as a scene for the theft of agricultural crops by settlers, while Palestinian farmers are prevented from accessing their lands. These attacks, often occurring in the presence of soldiers, reinforce an environment that erodes the legal protection of private Palestinian property and turns it into a free-for-all.

In the Gaza Strip, the picture appears even bleaker due to widespread destruction and the difficulty of field documentation in militarily closed areas. Nevertheless, human rights estimates indicate that the value of property seized by soldiers from displaced persons' homes could reach tens of millions of dollars, including cash savings and valuable electronic devices.

Soldiers in Gaza exploited the mass displacement and emptying of entire neighborhoods of their residents to carry out widespread seizures away from the eyes of media scrutiny. Leaked recordings have emerged of soldiers boasting about items they stole from Gazan homes, confirming that the phenomenon is not confined to one front but is an institutional behavior.

Legally, this behavior constitutes a blatant violation of Article 33 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, which absolutely prohibits looting in armed conflicts. The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court also classifies looting as a war crime, especially when it acquires a systematic or widespread character as documented in these reports.

Israeli military leadership bears direct legal responsibility under the principle of 'command responsibility,' as their knowledge of the crimes and their failure to prevent them or punish their perpetrators makes them complicit. The failure to take deterrent punitive measures sends a message of encouragement to soldiers to continue these violations without fear of prosecution.

Analysts believe that opening an investigation by the military police at the order of the Chief of Staff may be nothing more than an attempt to absorb media outrage and avoid international prosecutions. Previous experiences indicate that most of these investigations end with files being closed without actual charges being brought or looted property being returned to its rightful owners.

The link between what is happening in southern Lebanon, Gaza, and the West Bank reveals a structural flaw in the ethics of the occupation army and its dealings with the property of the 'other.' Looting here is not merely a desire for material gain, but rather part of a policy aimed at stripping residents of their livelihoods and property as a form of collective punishment.

In conclusion, documenting these crimes remains an essential step in building future international accountability files, despite the political obstacles that prevent effective justice. The continuation of these practices confirms that the issue concerns an entrenched military approach that violates all civilian aspects in order to achieve political and military objectives.

Anyone who takes something like televisions, cigarettes, and tools immediately puts it in their car; it's not a secret, everyone sees and understands it.

PALESTINE

Sun 03 May 2026 6:10 pm - Jerusalem Time

The 'Orange Line' Deception: Israel Swallows 64% of Gaza's Area and Prepares to Resume Fighting

International reports and UN organizations have revealed a new Israeli strategy to expand field control over the Gaza Strip by imposing what is known as the 'Orange Line'. This line represents a new military demarcation extending beyond the 'Yellow Line' to which Israeli forces previously withdrew, increasing the area militarily encircled to about 64% of the total area of the Strip.

Media sources reported that the occupation army gradually pushed this line towards the western areas over the past few months, with the control percentage jumping from 53% at the signing of the ceasefire agreement in October 2025 to about 59%, reaching the current percentage that devours nearly two-thirds of Gaza's area.

Recent satellite images analysis showed intensive movements of Israeli vehicles, with yellow concrete blocks being moved to deeper locations within the Strip. These images confirm that the occupation seeks to establish a new geographical reality that goes beyond declared understandings, putting thousands of civilians in direct confrontation with the risk of death.

Sources quoted local residents in Gaza giving shocking testimonies, confirming that they wake up to find military lines have moved closer to their tents and destroyed homes. These residents suddenly find themselves inside 'open fire zones' without prior warning, leading to hundreds of casualties since the fragile truce began.

On the construction front, the Israeli army reinforced its fortifications by building massive earth embankments extending over 16 kilometers, aimed at providing wide viewing angles for snipers and tanks. The occupation also built 32 fortified military sites, seven of which were completed in recent months, indicating a clear intention to turn these lines into permanent borders.

Regarding the secret 'Orange Line', sources revealed that Israel handed over special maps to international relief organizations in mid-March containing this line. The line defines an additional restricted area extending up to 500 meters outside the declared Yellow Line, without Palestinian civilians being informed of its existence or dangers.

The Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) refused to provide clear answers about the criteria for updating these maps or the reasons for concealing them from the population. An official in the authority merely stated that the boundaries of these areas are subject to continuous operational assessments, which gives the army loose legal cover to target any movement in those areas.

For its part, UNRWA documented the repercussions of this field expansion, noting that Israeli forces continue their intensive military activity in areas such as Jabalia. The agency confirmed that 127 of its facilities are now located behind Israeli lines, requiring complex security coordination to access them and provide services to refugees.

The spokesperson for the UN Secretary-General, Stéphane Dujarric, expressed the organization's grave concern about these developments, confirming receipt of the 'Orange Line' maps. Dujarric clarified that the UN was informed of the need for prior coordination for the movements of relief teams, considering these measures to hinder humanitarian work and increase the suffering of the besieged population.

On the ground, civilians have paid a heavy price for this policy, with more than 800 Palestinians martyred by occupation fire since last October, most of them in areas near the military lines. The list of victims included workers from international organizations such as UNICEF and the World Health Organization, who were targeted while performing their duties in the area between the lines.

In a related context, Hebrew sources revealed pressures exerted by senior officials in the Israeli General Staff to resume comprehensive combat operations in Gaza. These officials believe that 'the mission is not complete' and demand that the current time be used to resolve the confrontation with resistance factions that reject disarmament conditions.

Recent military movements indicate the seriousness of these threats, as the army reduced its forces in southern Lebanon and transferred regular brigades to the Gaza and West Bank fronts. The Southern Command has completed the preparation of its operational plans, awaiting the green light from the political level to return to a full-scale war.

These developments come at a time when the region is witnessing a wide escalation, with the occupation army issuing evacuation orders for 11 towns in southern Lebanon, along with intensified air raids and artillery shelling. This interconnectedness between the fronts reflects an Israeli desire to redraw the security map of the entire region under the guise of ongoing military operations.

The fate of two million Palestinians in Gaza remains suspended between the hammer of a suffocating siege and the anvil of military expansion that shrinks living spaces day by day. Amid the faltering international political initiatives, it seems that the 'Orange Line' is not just a mark on a map, but a new wall added to the large prison of Gaza.

The Yellow Line is a literal and metaphorical indicator that things are not going in the right direction, and we continue discussions to clarify the issue of the Orange Line.

PALESTINE

Sun 03 May 2026 6:10 pm - Jerusalem Time

Drums of War Beat Again: 'The Cabinet' Discusses Resuming Aggression on Gaza and a New Field Reality Devouring the Strip's Area

The omens of a comprehensive confrontation in the Gaza Strip are escalating with the Israeli Broadcasting Corporation's announcement of an upcoming meeting of the Ministerial Security Cabinet 'The Cabinet' this Sunday evening. The meeting aims to discuss the possibility of resuming widespread military operations, despite a ceasefire agreement in effect since last October, which puts the fragile calm on the brink of collapse.

These political moves coincide with military reports indicating that the Israeli General Staff views Gaza as 'an uncompleted mission'. Circles within the occupation army claim that a return to fighting has become a necessity to target what remains of Hamas's military capabilities, especially given the stalled disarmament issue that Tel Aviv stipulates for moving to the second phase of the agreement.

On the ground, informed sources revealed fundamental changes in troop deployment, as the Israeli army withdrew regular brigades from the southern Lebanon front and transferred them to the vicinity of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank. These movements reflect the readiness of the Southern Command to implement new operational plans as soon as the political decision is issued by the government.

In a dangerous development affecting Palestinian geography, occupation forces expanded their control within the Strip by creating what is called the 'Orange Line'. This measure led to the encroachment on additional areas of land where Palestinians were allowed to be present, raising the percentage of the occupied area from 53% to about 60% of the total area of the Strip.

UN sources confirmed the existence of new maps illustrating this geographical encroachment westward, forcing hundreds of displaced families to leave their tents and flee again towards the crowded coastal areas. This expansion was accompanied by a significant increase in the pace of air raids and sniping operations against anyone approaching the new lines drawn by the occupation.

For its part, Hamas considered these daily violations and the policy of 'land grabbing' as a clear disavowal of the obligations of the first phase of the agreement. The movement affirmed in a statement that the occupation seeks to impose a new demographic and security reality that undermines opportunities for stability and the return of displaced persons to their original areas.

Regarding the negotiation process, political sources reported that the movement showed flexibility in discussing comprehensive security arrangements, but linked this to achieving the political rights of the Palestinian people. The resistance rejects the Israeli proposal for disarmament as a precondition, considering that the occupation must first fulfill the requirements of reconstruction and opening crossings.

Observers of Israeli affairs believe that Netanyahu is trying to turn Gaza into a 'compensatory arena' to appease his partners in the far-right. Whenever he faces pressure on other issues, he resorts to escalating the war machine in the Strip to bridge the gap with domestic public opinion, whose polls show a desire for continued military operations.

Voices are rising within the Israeli government, especially from Settlement Minister Orit Strock, who explicitly called for the resumption of military operations within weeks. These calls align with the right's desire to implement forced displacement plans, exploiting the destruction that has affected 90% of Gaza's infrastructure.

Military analyst Amos Harel, in turn, warned that repeated leaks about the growing strength of Hamas are not a coincidence, but rather media groundwork for a new attack. Harel indicated that Netanyahu aims to keep the flame of war burning, especially with the approaching date of the Israeli general elections scheduled for next October.

On the humanitarian front, the residents of the Strip are living in catastrophic conditions amid the continued closure of crossings and the shortage of medicines and basic necessities. Field reports confirm that the policy of starvation and siege is still being used as a political and military pressure tool against defenseless civilians who have lost their property and livelihoods.

Questions arise within the Israeli military establishment about the reserve army's ability to bear the burdens of a new large-scale round of fighting. With the annual service rate for reserve soldiers reaching 80 days, some commanders fear the depletion of human resources and its impact on the army's combat efficiency in the long run.

The new reality that Israel is trying to impose through 'colored lines' aims to tear apart what remains of the geographical unity of the Strip and turn it into isolated enclaves. This plan faces widespread Palestinian and international rejection, as it undermines the foundations of any future agreement and establishes a new phase of bloody conflict.

In conclusion, 'The Cabinet's' decision tonight remains a crucial indicator for the course of events in the coming days, either moving towards a sustainable calm that meets the needs of the population, or sliding again into a spiral of violence that may be the deadliest since the aggression began on October 7, 2023.

The mission in Gaza is not complete, and the army is forced to return and target Hamas due to its continuous refusal to disarm.

PALESTINE

Sun 03 May 2026 6:09 pm - Jerusalem Time

Israeli estimates suggest a resumption of confrontation with Iran and imminent escalation in Gaza and Lebanon

Estimates are growing in Israeli political and security circles that the United States may soon move towards activating the military option against Iran, driven by what is described as President Donald Trump's dwindling patience. These circles believe that ending the current confrontation without achieving the declared strategic goals would constitute a severe loss for Benjamin Netanyahu's ruling coalition, which is banking on dismantling Iran's nuclear project.\n\nThere is a conviction within the occupation government that Iran's exit from the current crisis without strict restrictions would grant it greater confidence and the ability to accelerate the nuclear arms race. This perception is pushing Tel Aviv to press for a shift from economic blockade to direct military confrontation, considering that this would also give it a free hand on the Lebanese front, which is experiencing a state of security confusion.\n\nIn the field context, Israel faces increasing challenges in Lebanon due to drones for which defense systems have failed to find radical solutions. Hezbollah appears to be adopting a different strategy in this confrontation, putting Israel's deterrence prestige to the test, especially after previous agreements failed to achieve the desired stability for the occupation.\n\nAs for the Gaza Strip front, Israeli intelligence reports indicate that the Hamas movement has succeeded in reorganizing its military ranks despite continuous operations for more than two years. This reality has pushed the Netanyahu government to seek an opportunity to restore its image before the Israeli public, especially with the crucial general elections approaching in six months.\n\nIn recent hours, there was a sudden cancellation of a meeting of the ministerial cabinet (the "Kabinett") that was dedicated to discussing the Gaza file, without clear reasons being given. This postponement comes at a time when indicators are increasing that Netanyahu desires to achieve quick field gains to strengthen his political position as a 'master of security' before heading to the polls.\n\nMedia sources quoted military analyst Amos Harel as saying that Trump and Netanyahu fully realize that the war has not yet achieved its objectives. Harel indicated that Trump's recent statements about his dissatisfaction with Iranian offers for a settlement reinforce the hypothesis of a return to intensive aerial operations, an option strongly favored by Netanyahu.\n\nIn the context of field preparations, the United States continues to send more military reinforcements to the region, coinciding with raising the alert level within Israel at both military and civilian levels. These moves reflect a shared understanding between Washington and Tel Aviv that the continuation of the status quo undermines the prestige of both parties and their ability to impose settlement terms.\n\nFor his part, the outgoing commander of the Israeli Air Force, Tomer Bar, warned in closed meetings that failure to resolve the enriched uranium issue would be considered a historical failure of the war. Bar called for a new round of aerial bombardment targeting the Iranian regime and Revolutionary Guard to force them to respond to American and international demands.\n\nOn the other hand, voices within Israel are emerging, warning against being drawn into a 'pathological revenge campaign' that could lead to catastrophic results. Analyst Ksenia Svetlova believes that focusing on the personal and political calculations of Trump and Netanyahu could deepen the crisis, especially with the continued closure of the Strait of Hormuz and rising global oil prices.\n\nIn the Gaza Strip, the field escalation has not stopped, with sources reporting the martyrdom of a Palestinian due to an Israeli drone strike east of Deir al-Balah on Saturday. Occupation forces also carried out widespread demolition operations of residential buildings in the eastern areas of Khan Younis city, indicating the continuation of the scorched-earth policy in the border areas.\n\nThe Hamas movement adheres to its demands regarding the necessity of obliging Israel to implement the commitments of the first phase of the understandings, including opening crossings and introducing humanitarian aid. The movement's spokesman, Hazem Qassem, affirmed that they dealt positively with the proposals of mediators in Egypt, Qatar, and Turkey, holding the occupation responsible for the continuous obstruction.\n\nObservers believe that Netanyahu is trying to escape his internal dilemmas by escalating external fronts, whether in Gaza, Lebanon, or Iran. Electoral calculations play a pivotal role in current security decisions, as the ruling coalition seeks to avoid any agreement that appears to be a surrender to resistance factions.\n\nReports indicate that the gap between Israeli expectations and the reality on the ground remains wide, as military force has failed to definitively resolve the battle. Analysts confirm that relying solely on force without a clear political path in the West Bank and Gaza will ultimately lead to "one big failure," as some military leaders have described it.\n\nIn conclusion, the regional scene remains suspended, awaiting the final decision from the White House, amidst anticipation of the possibility of launching preemptive air strikes. The Palestinian front remains the hottest spot, where military field calculations intertwine with the political ambitions of the occupation leaders at a pivotal stage in the region's history.\n\nLeaving the issue of enriched uranium and nuclear weapons in Iran unresolved means one big failure for the war.

ISRAELI AFFAIRS

Sun 03 May 2026 6:09 pm - Jerusalem Time

'Noose' Cake.. Ben Gvir's Birthday Celebration Sparks Widespread Anger

Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir sparked a massive wave of public and human rights outrage after appearing at his 50th birthday celebration, where he received a controversial symbolic gift. The gift, presented by his wife 'Ayala,' was a cake meticulously designed in the shape of a noose, a clear and direct reference to his absolute support for the legislation of the death penalty for Palestinian prisoners, a policy championed by his far-right party.

The celebration took place last Saturday in an area near the occupied city of Ashdod and was attended by prominent leaders from the Israeli police and prison service officials, in addition to a crowd of far-right activists. Observers considered the presence of official figures at such a celebration to reflect the infiltration of extremist ideology within law enforcement institutions in the occupying state, and their alignment with the incitement rhetoric led by Ben Gvir.

The symbolism was not limited to the cake's shape; it also included the phrase 'Sometimes dreams come true' written next to the noose, reflecting the fervent desire of this movement to turn racist legislative proposals into tangible reality. The Israeli Knesset had made progress in this direction at the end of last March when it approved in preliminary reading a bill allowing the imposition of the death penalty on Palestinian prisoners who carry out operations against the occupation.

This behavior was met with angry reactions on social media platforms, where media personalities and activists described this act as evidence of 'mental illness' and a complete lack of human values. Media sources indicated that celebrating tools of killing at social events reflects the extent of extremism reached by the current Israeli government and its disregard for international laws and conventions that prohibit inhumane treatment.

In the context of comments, activists considered what Ben Gvir and his wife are boasting about today to represent the peak of intellectual and political terrorism, asserting that history always proves that injustice cannot last, no matter how powerful the oppressor. Bloggers stressed that brandishing execution ropes and rejoicing in death expresses an ingrained criminal mentality, warning of the dangerous repercussions of legislating such laws on regional stability and increasing the pace of violence.

It is worth noting that the law on the execution of prisoners faces widespread international opposition and warnings from human rights organizations, which consider it a blatant violation of the right to life and a dangerous escalation against the Palestinian people. Nevertheless, Ben Gvir continues to exploit all platforms, even personal occasions, to promote his agenda, which targets Palestinian existence and calls for tightening the security and repressive grip inside and outside prisons.

Sometimes dreams come true.. a phrase placed next to the noose on Ben Gvir's birthday cake.

ARAB AND WORLD

Sun 03 May 2026 12:48 pm - Jerusalem Time

United States Awaits Crucial Midterm Elections for the Future of Trump's Second Term

The United States is entering the countdown phase for the midterm legislative elections scheduled to take place in six months, a pivotal moment that will largely determine the trajectory of President Donald Trump's second term. These elections come at a sensitive time, two years after the profound changes Trump initiated in the structure of the state and American institutions.

Mindy Romero, director of the Center for Inclusive Democracy at the University of Southern California, described the current stakes as extremely high, considering the results will be a watershed moment in the history of both parties. Observers believe the battle extends beyond mere parliamentary seats to a struggle over the country's political identity in the coming phase.

The Democratic Party seeks to regain control of Congress, considering continued Republican dominance an existential threat to traditional American principles. Democrats focus their campaigns on criticizing the current administration's policies on immigration, the economy, and strained international relations.

In contrast, President Trump, 79, aspires to maintain the parliamentary majority to ensure the passage of the remainder of his ambitious legislative agenda. Trump constantly warns his supporters that losing the majority would open the door for Democrats to initiate impeachment proceedings and obstruct his judicial and administrative appointments.

The upcoming elections in November include the renewal of all 435 seats in the House of Representatives, in addition to 33 out of 100 seats in the Senate. Republicans currently hold a slight numerical advantage, making the competition for each seat a fierce battle between the two political poles.

Recent polls indicate bleak prospects for Republicans, as public dissatisfaction with the president's performance has reached record levels. Julia Azari, a professor of political science, believes that a loss of popularity is usually a strong indicator of the ruling party's weak performance in midterm elections.

A wide segment of Americans suffers from economic disappointment, with many believing that the Republican billionaire's electoral promises have not translated into tangible improvements in their livelihoods. Military tensions with Iran have also led to a significant rise in fuel prices, exacerbating living pressures on voters.

Trump's policies towards immigrants face sharp criticism, with opponents describing them as oppressive and harsh, violating humanitarian values. Despite this dissatisfaction, the Democratic opposition still faces challenges in mobilizing sufficient enthusiasm among its electoral base to ensure a large turnout at the polls.

Azari explained that voters feel general dissatisfaction with the current political trajectory and the performance of both parties equally. However, she expects dissatisfied voters to lean towards Democrats as an alternative option to protest the current White House policies.

The issue of redistricting stands out as one of the most controversial topics in the current campaign, as Trump has taken steps to modify districts in red states. These moves aim to fragment Democratic voting blocs to ensure Republicans win additional seats and strengthen their grip on parliament.

Democrats have not stood idly by, responding with similar measures in states they control, such as California and Virginia. This legal and political struggle over electoral districts reflects the depth of division in American society and each side's attempt to impose rules of the game that serve its interests.

The Supreme Court's decision, dominated by conservative judges, further complicated the scene after limiting safeguards protecting minority representation in electoral districts. Governors of southern states like Louisiana and Alabama have announced explicit plans to redraw districts in a way that reduces Democrats' chances of winning.

Political circles describe this intense competition as creating a state of 'electoral chaos' that raises concerns about the integrity and stability of the democratic process. Experts believe that these structural changes may have a long-term impact beyond the results of the upcoming November elections.

In conclusion, Mindy Romero likened the ambiguity surrounding the American political scene to 'a moving chess game on a rugged rural road.' With only six months remaining, the question remains open about Trump's ability to withstand the wave of dissatisfaction, or the Democrats' success in bringing about the desired change.

The stakes are very high, and these midterm elections will be a pivotal moment for both the Republican and Democratic parties.

PALESTINE

Sun 03 May 2026 12:48 pm - Jerusalem Time

On their World Day.. Palestinian Journalists Face a War of Annihilation and Demands for International Prosecution of Occupation Leaders

Palestinian journalists in the Gaza Strip and the occupied West Bank face complex suffering that extends beyond professional work to targeting their very existence and lives. With the arrival of May 3rd, World Press Freedom Day, media professionals find themselves in direct confrontation with the Israeli killing machine, which has not stopped targeting them since the beginning of the ongoing war of annihilation.

The profession of hardship in Palestine has turned into a blood tax, with statistics indicating the martyrdom of 262 Palestinian journalists since October 2023. This shocking number reflects a systematic policy aimed at obscuring the truth and preventing the transfer of the image of crimes committed against civilians in the Gaza Strip to global public opinion.

The targeting was not limited to individuals but extended to the entire and deliberate infrastructure of Palestinian media. The occupation army destroyed more than 150 media institutions, including radio stations, press offices, and production companies, in an attempt to cut off communication channels and silence the Palestinian narrative that exposes the falsity of the occupation's claims.

In light of this tragic reality, the Deputy Head of the Journalists' Syndicate, Tahseen Al-Astal, affirmed that this year carries a painful and different specificity. He pointed out that the meeting of the International Federation of Journalists in Paris, with the participation of 120 unions, represents a necessary platform to demand urgent international intervention to stop these unprecedented massacres against free speech.

Al-Astal stressed in press statements the necessity of transforming verbal solidarity into practical and tangible measures that make the occupation feel that there is a heavy price for its crimes. He clarified that the responsibility lies with the international community to break the state of impunity enjoyed by the leaders and soldiers of the Israeli occupation army.

The Deputy Head also called for accelerating the prosecution of occupation leaders before the International Criminal Court, demanding the lifting of the immunity provided to them by the American administration. He considered that the pressures exerted on the international court hinder justice and contribute to the continued bleeding of journalists in the occupied Palestinian territories.

Al-Astal noted that the occupation openly boasts about targeting journalists and wages a comprehensive war against them to reshape the reality in the Gaza Strip. He affirmed that restoring the dignity of Palestinian journalists requires rebuilding their destroyed institutions and providing real protection that guarantees them the ability to practice their work without fear of assassination or arrest.

For its part, the Palestinian Journalists' Forum described what is happening as the largest targeting of journalism in contemporary history. The forum affirmed in a statement that journalists represent the first line of defense in confronting aggression, and that the blood of their martyrs has kept the Palestinian truth present despite all attempts to obliterate it.

The forum pointed out that targeting media headquarters and killing those working in them constitutes a blatant violation of the Geneva Conventions and Security Council Resolution No. 2222. It considered that international silence towards these violations is alarming silence that encourages the occupation to proceed with its policy of silencing voices through direct killing.

While the occupation continues to detain about 36 journalists in harsh conditions, the need for an urgent global appeal arises. This appeal must clarify that obstructing the work of the International Criminal Court in prosecuting the killers of journalists is an additional crime added to the record of ongoing Israeli violations.

Despite the bombing, displacement, and destruction, journalists in Gaza, the West Bank, and Jerusalem continue to perform their mission with unparalleled heroism. These professionals embody the highest meanings of steadfastness, as they insist on conveying the news from amidst the rubble, defying all attempts by the occupation to create buffer zones and hide the features of the crime.

The field reality indicates that the occupation seeks to impose a new military reality in the Strip by expanding buffer zones and establishing military sites. In this context, the presence of a journalist becomes an obstacle to the occupation's plans, which explains the intensity of the targeting directed against them in areas witnessing military incursions.

Palestinian journalistic circles demanded that international federations take punitive steps against the occupation, including expelling it from international journalistic organizations. They considered that the continued impunity of the occupation empties World Press Freedom Day of its content and makes international slogans mere words with no basis in reality.

In conclusion, the Palestinian word remains the strongest witness to the war of annihilation, and the Palestinian journalist remains steadfast in his field despite the heavy price. Loyalty to the blood of 262 martyrs of journalism requires international legal action that puts an end to the systematic killing spree and ensures the protection of the remaining guardians of truth.

Journalism is the first line of defense in confronting aggression, and the voice of the Palestinian journalist will remain stronger than all attempts at silencing and assassination.

PALESTINE

Sun 03 May 2026 12:48 pm - Jerusalem Time

Armed Settler Militia War Escalates in the West Bank: (799) Attacks by Settlers and Demolition of (101) Homes and Structures Last April

The Palestinian Liberation Organization's Department of Work and Planning issued its monthly report on settler attacks and the demolition of homes and structures in the West Bank and occupied Jerusalem, highlighting the following:-

First: Attacks by Settler Gangs:

During last April, settler gangs carried out (799) attacks against Palestinian citizens and their properties, an increase of 135% compared to the same period last year 2025.

These bloody Nazi attacks resulted in the martyrdom of six unarmed Palestinian citizens, who were killed while defending their land, villages, and homes against the open war waged by the armed settler army, supported by the Zionist occupation army and political patronage from its extremist fascist government. The martyrs are: Martyr Ali Majed Hammadneh (23) years old from Deir Jarir village, Martyrs Jihad Marzouq Abu Na'im (32) years old and child Martyr Aws Hamdi Al-Na'san (14) years old from Al-Mughayyir village, and Martyr Ouda Atef Awawdeh (26) years old from Deir Dibwan town, all from Ramallah and Al-Bireh Governorate, killed as a result of direct live ammunition while defending their properties and land. In Tubas and the Northern Jordan Valley Governorate, young man Alaa Khaled Sbeih (28) years old from Tayasir village was martyred as a result of being shot by settlers. In Hebron Governorate, child Muhammad Majdi Al-Ja'bari (16) years old was martyred as a result of being run over by a settler while on his way to school at the eastern entrance of Hebron. Thus, the number of martyrs due to criminal settler attacks since the beginning of the year until today has risen to (18) martyrs, most of whom were martyred as a result of live ammunition injuries.

Meanwhile, (97) citizens were injured with various wounds as a result of being attacked by gunfire, beating, and stone-throwing, including (14) children and (13) women.

Attacks included (37) shooting incidents, while criminal settler gangs destroyed and uprooted (2414) fruitful trees, and stole and killed (488) head of livestock belonging to Palestinian farmers with the aim of restricting them and increasing the cost of their presence on the land. Damage was inflicted on (53) vehicles as a result of burning or stone-throwing, while settler gangs destroyed and burned (5) homes and agricultural, animal, and service facilities in Jerusalem and Nablus governorates.

In the context of pastoral settlement expansion, the Department of Work and Planning monitored during the past month attempts to establish (20) new pastoral outposts, the highest number recorded in a month, including areas and villages of Madama, Jalud, Burin, Qabalan, Awarta, Beita, and Aqraba in Nablus Governorate, Aboud, Beit Liqya, and Ain Sinia in Ramallah and Al-Bireh Governorate, Wadi Al-Rakheem, Tal Ma'in, Al-Jawaya, and Umm Al-Khair in Masafer Yatta, Dhahiriya, Shuyukh, and Sa'ir in Hebron Governorate, and Marah Ma'alla, Kisan, and Jib Al-Dhib in Bethlehem Governorate.

Criminal attacks were concentrated in Nablus Governorate (209) attacks, Hebron Governorate (153), Ramallah and Al-Bireh Governorate (150), Bethlehem Governorate (65), Salfit Governorate (61), Tubas and Northern Jordan Valley Governorate (46), Jenin Governorate (40), Jerusalem Governorate (31), Jericho Governorate (22), Qalqilya Governorate (20), and Tulkarm Governorate (2) attacks.

First: Demolition of Homes and Structures:

Israeli occupation authorities demolished (101) homes and structures in the West Bank and occupied Jerusalem last April, including the demolition of (43) homes and (58) structures, among them (23) self-demolition operations in the towns of Jabal Al-Mukaber, Sur Baher, Silwan, Ras Al-Amud, and Al-Sawana in occupied Jerusalem, carried out by their owners to avoid paying exorbitant fines. Demolition operations included the governorates of Jerusalem, Hebron, Ramallah and Al-Bireh, Nablus, Tulkarm, Jenin, Jericho, Salfit, and Bethlehem.

Settler gangs continued to vandalize and destroy citizens' facilities in villages and cities of the West Bank, where the department documented settlers burning and destroying five homes and facilities in Nablus and Jerusalem governorates.

Occupation authorities issued (85) demolition, stop-construction, and confiscation orders for homes and structures, including the governorates of Hebron, Ramallah and Al-Bireh, Jerusalem, Jenin, Nablus, Salfit, Bethlehem, and Qalqilya.

ARAB AND WORLD

Sun 03 May 2026 12:48 pm - Jerusalem Time

Israel expands evacuation orders north of the Litani, Hezbollah targets Avivim with rockets

The Israeli occupation army has taken a new escalatory step in southern Lebanon, issuing immediate evacuation orders for residents of 11 towns located north of the Litani River. These orders go beyond the boundaries of the so-called 'security zone' that Israel defined since the fragile ceasefire agreement came into effect on April 17, indicating the occupation's intention to expand the scope of its ground and air operations.

Field sources reported that the Israeli warnings included villages distributed across the Tyre and Bint Jbeil districts, while the largest number of them were concentrated in the Nabatieh district. The issuance of these orders coincided with an intensification of air raids carried out by warplanes and drones, with shelling hitting the towns of Zawtar Sharqiyeh, Srifa, Al-Shihabiya, Al-Qusaybah, and Al-Duwair, in addition to a direct targeting of the town of Siddiqin via a drone.

In the context of the field response, the occupation army announced the detection of six rockets launched from Lebanese territory towards the settlement of 'Avivim' in the Upper Galilee. Israeli military sources confirmed that air defense systems intercepted five of these rockets, while the sixth rocket fell in an open area without causing human casualties, in an operation that falls within Hezbollah's continuous responses to Israeli transgressions.

The past hours witnessed intense artillery shelling launched from occupation positions stationed in the town of Khiam, targeting the vicinity of the towns of Mansouri, Qleileh, and the hills of Majdal Zoun. Reports from the region indicated that some villages were subjected to heavy shelling even before the official evacuation orders were issued, while shells hit other villages not covered by the warnings at all, leading to a state of panic and forced displacement among civilians.

Regarding destructive operations, occupation forces continued to blow up homes and facilities within the border villages they had infiltrated, particularly in the towns of Shama and Al-Bayadiyah. These operations, according to observers, aim to create a buffer zone devoid of residents and urban landmarks, which represents a continuous violation of international understandings that sought to establish calm in the border region.

This week is considered the most violent on the ground in weeks, with local sources counting more than 60 Lebanese towns subjected to air raids or concentrated artillery shelling. In contrast, Hezbollah has escalated its military operations, targeting gatherings of occupation soldiers within the occupied villages, in addition to announcing the destruction of a number of military and engineering vehicles and artillery positions belonging to the Israeli army.

Field data indicate that the occupation is racing against time as the extended truce period approaches its end, by imposing a new geographical reality in the south. Fears are growing of the situation sliding towards a comprehensive confrontation in light of Israel's insistence on crossing previously drawn red lines, and its disregard for all warnings about the consequences of targeting areas north of the Litani.

Amidst this escalation, Lebanese and international political circles are awaiting the outcomes of these developments, especially with the expansion of displacement from the villages covered by the new evacuation orders. The field situation remains prone to further explosion, as long as the Israeli military machine continues to shell deep into Lebanese territory and expand the scope of its aerial and artillery targeting away from the direct border strip.

The Israeli army is practically expanding the geographical scope of villages targeted by warplanes, and the raids included towns located outside the previously defined security zone.

OPINIONS

Sun 03 May 2026 12:48 pm - Jerusalem Time

When the Nun is Struck... The City is Exposed

In Jerusalem, it's not just a nun's body that is struck, but the very meaning of a city remaining a city is tested. In one of the Old City's alleys, where a nun in her white habit passes quietly, a single violent act is enough to shatter this fragile scene, revealing what accumulates silently: that violence is no longer an exception, but a constant possibility in daily life.The incident in which a Christian nun was injured by a settler is not a fleeting detail in the news record, but a revealing moment that shatters the old illusion that some areas are still outside the scope of targeting. The nun is not a political adversary, nor a voice in a conflict zone. She is, in her deep human meaning, a choice for a peaceful life: service, prayer, and withdrawal from the world's clamor. Therefore, the assault on her is not understood as a casual friction, but as an act directed against a symbol – against the image of peace itself.The numbers here are not neutral. In just three years, attacks on Christians and their symbols in Jerusalem and its surroundings rose from 89 incidents to 155. This is not a natural escalation, but a clear slide. Among these incidents are dozens of physical assaults, and hundreds of daily insults ranging from spitting and curses to harassment. Most dangerously, religious men and women are the most targeted—because they are visible, because their identity is not hidden, but carried on their bodies and walked through the street.However, the real danger lies not in the number alone, but in its significance. Spitting on a monk, or chasing a nun, or attacking a church, are not random acts. They are a complete language. A language that says the other is no longer seen as a human being with full dignity, but as a presence that can be insulted without significant cost. And with the repetition of this language in the public sphere, it transforms from an aberration into a pattern, and from individual behavior into a general atmosphere.The question is no longer whether what is happening is wrong—that is morally settled—but how it became possible in the first place. How was the barrier that separated difference from assault broken? And how did the religious symbol, which is supposed to be outside the conflict, become within the daily targeting circle?From a psychological perspective, these actions are not separate from a deeper structure of tension seeking an outlet. In such environments, the target is chosen carefully: to be different, clear, and less able to retaliate. And the nun, with her habit and silence, meets these conditions. But she is not just an easy target, but an intensified target; because assaulting her gives the aggressor an illusion of control over a meaning, not over a person.Socially, the real danger begins the moment the event loses its uniqueness. When an assault becomes fleeting news, moral sensitivity erodes. What was unequivocally rejected becomes open to interpretation, then to disregard. At this threshold, violence no longer needs justification; it is enough that it has been repeated until people have become accustomed to it.Politically, this scene cannot be separated from its broader context. International reports, including those published by the Associated Press, indicate a link between the escalation of these attacks and a charged atmosphere, and a feeling among some aggressors that they are operating within a margin of tolerance or lack of accountability. And this feeling, regardless of its accuracy, is what transforms the act from an individual incident into a repeatable phenomenon.But the deepest impact is not measured by the moment of the assault, but by what it leaves behind. These incidents do not change the city all at once, but slowly reshape it. They push an entire community to feel vulnerable, turn belonging into a daily burden, and plant the question of survival in a place that, for centuries, was an authentic part of its living fabric.Jerusalem does not need more slogans about its sanctity. It needs a simple and clear test: that people within it are safe, because a city that cannot protect its weakest loses its ability to protect itself. And sanctity that is not reflected in human dignity turns into a suspended idea, with no impact on reality.When a nun is struck in the streets of Jerusalem, she is not the only one harmed. The meaning of coexistence is harmed, the idea of the city is scratched, and an unpostponable question arises: what sanctity can endure if human beings within it are no longer protected?Jerusalem does not lose its sanctity when its stones are touched, but when people within it are humiliated... and that becomes normal.

OPINIONS

Sun 03 May 2026 12:47 pm - Jerusalem Time

Palestinians in the West Bank are treated as if they are in a large prison, and reaching Jerusalem has become a dream

By what right do the occupation authorities impose a ban on Palestinians from the West Bank from reaching Jerusalem, except by obtaining impossible permits, which have become extremely difficult and complicated to obtain these days? Where is the justice in preventing Palestinians, whether Christian or Muslim, from coming to Jerusalem for prayer or work, while military checkpoints stand in wait for Palestinians, preventing them from reaching their holy city? Many these days speak of an impending war, and they ignore and forget what Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank are subjected to. What is currently happening in the West Bank, and to all Palestinians, is a policy of humiliation, starvation, and abuse, by preventing Palestinians from reaching their work. Many Palestinians in the West Bank have been unemployed for more than two years, living in abject poverty, and suffering from policies of humiliation, starvation, and abuse. Palestinian Christians, residents of the West Bank, are also prevented from reaching Jerusalem, and from reaching their workplaces through which they support their families. A large percentage of Christians, especially young people in the West Bank, suffer from unemployment, poverty, and destitution, and even churches are often helpless and unable to secure the required permits for them. In Christian schools in Jerusalem, there are a number of teachers from the West Bank, numbering in the hundreds, who are distinguished by their giving, culture, and sophistication, and churches are asked to abandon them because the Israeli authorities will not grant them permits to reach their schools in Jerusalem. We are facing a state of siege and isolation for Palestinians in the West Bank, as the Palestinian in all cities, governorates, and towns is intended to be besieged, as if living in cantons separated from each other. For a Palestinian from the West Bank to come to Jerusalem, this has become extremely complicated and difficult, as has moving from one governorate to another, and from one city to another, which has also become extremely difficult and complicated, in light of the closures, gates, and the spread of settlers in more than one place in the Palestinian territories. Where are the human rights organizations in the world from the policy of imprisoning Palestinians, isolating them, and expelling them from Jerusalem? We said at one time that Gaza is the largest prison in the world, but the West Bank has also turned into a large prison; there are Palestinians languishing in occupation prisons, but there is also a large prison in which Palestinians live, and are prevented from freedom of movement and access to their holy sites, jobs, and businesses. Christians in the West Bank live in deprivation, hardship, poverty, and destitution, as is the case for all our people, especially in the Bethlehem Governorate and its cities, where tourism has stopped since the beginning of the war, hotels have closed, and the lack of tourist movement has negatively affected all restaurants and shops in the Bethlehem Governorate. They want to humiliate, starve, and subjugate the Palestinian, and what is currently happening in the West Bank is a war in a different way. Silence in the face of these injustices is not permissible. The Christian churches in this Holy Land must make their voices heard, and this voice must reach all churches and spiritual authorities in this world. The voice of the oppressed and besieged Palestinians must reach everywhere, especially to the leaders and political leaders in this world who turn a blind eye to the suffering of our people and what this oppressed people are subjected to. Surrender and acceptance of policies of isolating Palestinians and expelling them from their holy city as an inescapable reality is not permissible. It is not permissible to surrender to the culture of preventing Palestinians from exercising their natural right to reach Jerusalem and their workplaces, and this is not a generosity or a favor from anyone, for this is a legitimate right that every Palestinian must enjoy. I hope that Palestinians inside will intensify their trips and visits to the West Bank areas, especially the Bethlehem Governorate and other governorates, for whoever is able to reach the West Bank must do so, perhaps such visits will offer something, however simple and modest, to our steadfast people in the West Bank who remain in their land, but steadfastness and remaining require components. May God help our people and our families in the West Bank who have come to live as if in a large prison. A few days ago, a 30-year-old young man from Bethlehem told me: "I have never visited Jerusalem even once, and what I know about Jerusalem is only what I read and what I see in pictures through various social media." So where is the justice in all of this? And reaching Jerusalem has become a dream for many Palestinians who are prevented from freedom of movement and access to their holy city.

OPINIONS

Sun 03 May 2026 10:10 am - Jerusalem Time

Palestinian Collective Consciousness: Between Stagnation and Movement in a Complex Reality

In political discourse, sharp vocabulary is often used to describe the relationship of peoples with their reality. But this vocabulary always needs to be deconstructed before being adopted as a framework for understanding. The question “Can the Palestinian people be tamed and a reality imposed upon them?” is not merely a description; rather, it tests the possibility of subjugating collective consciousness and transforming it into permanent passive acceptance. Historical experience, as well as tools of political and social analysis, indicate that the matter is far more complex than this simplistic perception.

For decades, Palestinians have lived in a highly complex political context, where geography intertwines with politics, economics with security, and identity with history. In this reality, one cannot speak of “normalization with reality” as a unified option. Positions vary from individual to individual, from generation to generation, and from one social environment to another. There are those who choose pragmatism for survival and improving daily life, and there are those who adhere to a firm national discourse that rejects the existing reality, and a third group oscillates between daily necessity and political awareness.

The idea of “taming peoples,” as it is sometimes presented, implicitly assumes that humans can be transformed into fully disciplined beings within conditions imposed upon them from outside. But reality proves that collective consciousness is not a rigid structure; rather, it is a living entity that is constantly shaped under the influence of daily experience, historical memory, and cultural symbols. Even in the most severe conditions of oppression, political consciousness does not disappear; instead, its form changes and it may sometimes retreat inward, but it never ceases to exist.

Collective memory plays a pivotal role in the Palestinian situation. The issue is not merely a current political situation, but an extension of a long historical narrative, passed down through generations via education, storytelling, national symbols, and daily experience. This memory is not easily erased, nor can it be quickly reshaped according to the variables of the political moment. On the contrary, the power of symbols and identities often increases during times of crisis, because they are a means to interpret reality and bear its burdens.

However, this does not mean that Palestinian society remains in perpetual conflict or absolute rejection of reality. History shows that peoples, under long-term attrition or the absence of a clear political horizon, may tend towards forms of partial adaptation. This adaptation is not a final acceptance, but a strategy for survival: minimizing losses, securing a minimum of stability, and managing life within the limits of what is possible. But it remains a conditional adaptation, which does not easily turn into a permanent conviction.

It is also important to distinguish between the individual and collective levels. Individuals may change their priorities under the pressure of daily life, but this does not mean a radical transformation in the political structure of society. Major transformations usually require deep changes in the economic and social structure, or comprehensive political settlements, or major historical shifts, and not merely social exhaustion.

The Palestinian reality is not static; rather, it is dynamic and contested, and has not yet settled into a final form. This makes any notion of final normalization with reality unresolved, both theoretically and practically.

From another perspective, the existing authority in Israel is not necessarily interested in Palestinians normalizing with the existing reality. Rather, it often adopts policies of calculated provocation and agitation to extract Palestinians from the state of forced stagnation imposed by daily restrictions on movement and economy. This strategy is linked to calculations of political and economic profit and loss, where limited escalation can serve the interests of control, negotiation, resource depletion, or managing the international situation to serve its strategic objectives.

In addition, we must consider the multiplicity of factors and actors within and outside Palestinian society. Each party, whether Palestinian factions or Israeli entities, operates according to its own interests, ideologies, beliefs, and visions, and does not necessarily accept the idea of a consensus around the “best option” for Palestinian collective consciousness. In this case, the option of inaction or partial adaptation to reality becomes just one vision among several competing visions. Each party tries to extract the Palestinian people from a state of forced stagnation according to its assessment, whether through motivation, pressure, provocation, or seizing available opportunities, all according to its interests, ideologies, and visions.

It is clear that the collective consciousness of the Palestinian people often surpasses the understanding and decisions of its leaders or other parties. The people, with their daily experiences, historical memory, and interaction with pressures, possess an ability to read reality and adapt to it in a way that often transcends the calculations of various parties, whether Palestinian or Israeli. This collective consciousness makes any attempt to simplify the relationship between the people and their reality or to speak of their “taming” misleading. It demonstrates the community's ability to resist complete surrender, and to act according to its own rules in managing daily challenges despite all pressures and calculated moves.

Ultimately, the relationship between the Palestinian people and their political reality is not merely a matter of taming. What actually exists is closer to a long struggle between adaptation and rejection, between daily need and historical identity, between political pragmatism and collective memory, and between the interests of various parties, each of which tries to extract the Palestinian reality from forced stagnation in a way that serves its own calculations. This struggle is not resolved by subjugation, but through long paths of political and social transformations that may reshape reality itself, not merely reshape the behavior of individuals towards it.

The Palestinian reality is not amenable to simplification. Collective consciousness, resistant to stagnation and pressures, remains the most important factor in shaping the community's path, between adaptation, steadfastness, and achieving its political and social choices in the long term.

"Finally, any attempt to impose a vision or policies that contradict the collective consciousness of the Palestinian people often leads to negative and destructive counter-results. These results can manifest in widespread popular rejection, escalation of protests and conflicts, and undermining the political legitimacy of any leadership or party seeking to impose this vision. Moreover, attempts at subjugation or overriding the will of the community usually strengthen collective identity and social cohesion, making any future policy or settlement more difficult to implement, and increasing the difficulty of managing conflicts in the long term. In short, ignoring the collective consciousness of the people only exacerbates the conflict and significantly complicates the political and social situation."

ARAB AND WORLD

Sun 03 May 2026 10:10 am - Jerusalem Time

Nick Stewart's Appointment to the American Negotiation Team: A Clear Message of Escalation Towards Tehran

The decision-making circles in Washington have witnessed a fundamental shift in their approach to the Iranian file, with the announcement of Nick Stewart joining the office of the US Special Envoy for Peace Missions, Steve Witkoff. This step comes amidst a state of political deadlock and stagnation that overshadows the course of negotiations between the United States and the Islamic Republic of Iran.

White House spokeswoman Olivia Wells confirmed that Stewart possesses extensive field and leadership experience, making him a valuable addition to Witkoff's team, especially in matters related to Iranian policy. Stewart effectively began his duties by participating in the high-level delegation that visited Islamabad early last April, which included Vice President J.D. Vance and Jared Kushner.

Nick Stewart is classified among the hawks in Washington, known for his absolute support for the 'maximum pressure' strategy adopted by the Republican administration. His name was previously associated with the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD Action), a think tank that adopts firm stances and openly calls for the use of military force to deter Iranian ambitions.

US Senate records reveal Stewart's extensive activity in lobbying groups since 2023, where he oversaw the expenditure of over two million dollars to influence foreign policy. His efforts focused on crucial legislation, including the Iran Sanctions Enhancement Act of 2026, and other laws targeting Russia and the Muslim Brotherhood.

Overlapping reports indicate that Stewart's appointment was not a coincidence, but came at the direct recommendation of Jared Kushner, President Donald Trump's son-in-law. This appointment reflects the growing influence of the wing that calls for tightening the noose on Tehran, and rejecting any compromises that do not guarantee comprehensive and fundamental Iranian concessions in the nuclear and regional files.

Sources indicate that this diplomatic move comes in response to the stalled negotiations that have reached a dead end recently. President Trump's objection to recent Iranian proposals to end the war has further complicated the scene, prompting the administration to search for more effective and influential pressure tools in the political arena.

Regarding his vision for national security, Stewart adopts a radical stance that sees the only solution in the complete dismantling of Iran's nuclear infrastructure. Not only that, but he emphasizes the necessity of stripping Tehran of its ability to support armed factions that Washington accuses of destabilizing the Middle East region.

The new member of the negotiation team believes in what is called 'coercive diplomacy,' a strategy that combines suffocating economic sanctions and a serious and credible military threat. Stewart strongly criticizes the policies of the previous administration, considering that it was lenient in implementing sanctions, especially those related to oil exports, which represent the lifeline of the Iranian economy.

Washington's escalation of its negotiating team comes amidst a highly complex regional environment, where fears of an explosion of the situation are increasing due to the absence of a political horizon. Observers believe that the presence of a figure like Stewart at the heart of the negotiations reduces the chances of compromise solutions, and pushes towards a more fierce diplomatic or economic confrontation.

In conclusion, Nick Stewart's appointment represents a clear message from the White House that the next phase will not see free concessions to Tehran. With the diplomatic track remaining suspended, the question remains whether these pressures will force Iran to return to the negotiating table on Washington's terms, or whether they will lead the region to a new round of open escalation.

The only acceptable outcome for US national security is the complete dismantling of Iran's nuclear infrastructure.

ARAB AND WORLD

Sun 03 May 2026 10:10 am - Jerusalem Time

Iranian 14-point initiative to end the war: Demands for withdrawal of US forces and lifting of sanctions

Informed sources revealed that Tehran has submitted an official response to a US proposal, conveyed through a Pakistani mediator, aimed at ending ongoing military operations in the region. The sources clarified that the Iranian side, in its response, focused on the necessity of a radical end to the war, considering the American formula that proposed a two-month ceasefire insufficient and not meeting the requirements for lasting stability.

The Iranian proposal included a comprehensive 14-point roadmap, outlining Tehran's red lines and defining paths for a political and security solution. The initiative stipulates that all outstanding issues must be addressed within a timeframe not exceeding 30 days, emphasizing that the ultimate goal is a comprehensive cessation of hostilities on all active fronts, including the Lebanese arena.

Among the Iranian points are strategic demands related to regional security, with Tehran calling for documented guarantees of non-aggression and the withdrawal of US forces present in Iran's geographical vicinity. The Iranian paper also included the necessity of establishing a new international or regional mechanism to regulate navigation in the Strait of Hormuz, ensuring the rights of all parties and preventing future tensions in this vital shipping lane.

On the economic front, the initiative stressed the need for a complete lifting of the imposed naval blockade, in addition to the immediate release of frozen Iranian assets abroad. Tehran demanded financial compensation for damages resulting from the conflict, considering the lifting of economic sanctions a fundamental pillar of any agreement aimed at ending the state of war and establishing peace in the region.

Reports from the Iranian capital confirmed that this proposal was only sent after undergoing thorough reviews within the highest decision-making institutions and receiving all necessary political and security approvals. Political circles in Tehran are currently awaiting the official response from the US administration to these points, amidst cautious hopes for a breakthrough in the escalating crisis.

The Iranian proposal focuses on a comprehensive end to the war instead of merely extending a ceasefire for temporary periods.

PALESTINE

Sun 03 May 2026 10:10 am - Jerusalem Time

Open sit-in in Madrid demanding the release of abducted 'Freedom Flotilla' activists

Dozens of demonstrators and activists gathered in the Spanish capital, Madrid, on Saturday afternoon, in a permanent sit-in in front of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, expressing their anger at the continued detention of international activists from the 'Freedom Flotilla'. Participants demanded that the Spanish government take urgent action and pressure the Israeli occupation authorities to ensure the immediate release of the detainees who were on a humanitarian mission to break the siege on the Gaza Strip.

The protesters' demands focused on the need to release Brazilian activist Thiago Avila and Spanish activist of Palestinian origin Saif Abu Kishk, who were abducted after Israeli forces intercepted the flotilla's ships on April 29. The sit-in participants stressed that these Israeli practices in international waters require a firm diplomatic response that goes beyond traditional condemnation statements.

The demonstrators called on the Spanish government and other European governments to take effective steps, including cutting diplomatic and trade relations with Israel, in response to its continuous crimes against the Palestinian people and international solidarity activists. The organizers affirmed that the sit-in in front of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs will remain ongoing and open until all demands are met and the activists return safely to their families.

Participants in the event raised slogans calling for the freedom of Palestine and an end to the occupation, chanting slogans emphasizing the continuation of the struggle until complete victory is achieved and the land is liberated from the river to the sea. The protesters considered that the international community's silence regarding the occupation's piracy in international waters encourages it to commit more blatant violations of international laws and norms.

For her part, Maria Elena Delia, spokesperson for the Italian delegation participating in the flotilla, explained that the detention operation took place illegally from a boat flying the Italian flag. She pointed out that this act constitutes a clear violation of the law of the sea, especially since the ships were in international waters about 20 nautical miles from the Greek island of Crete.

Delia warned that European leniency with the detention of citizens from ships flying EU flags constitutes a dangerous precedent and a challenge to international security and law. She added that what the activists were subjected to is not just an individual assault, but rather part of a systematic policy pursued by the occupation to intimidate solidarity activists and prevent the delivery of essential humanitarian aid to the besieged residents of the Gaza Strip.

The 'Spring 2026 Mission' had set sail from the Italian island of Sicily last week, carrying dozens of solidarity activists seeking to break the unjust siege imposed on the Strip. However, the Israeli navy launched an aggression in the open sea off Greece, detaining about 180 activists, most of whom were later deported to Greek territory, while Abu Kishk and Avila were transferred to Ashdod port for investigation.

It is worth noting that this initiative is the second of its kind for the 'Global Freedom Flotilla' in two years, preceded by an attempt in September 2025 which also ended with an Israeli military attack and the arrest of hundreds of activists. These repeated attempts confirm the international solidarity movement's determination to continue its efforts to lift the siege on Gaza despite the security risks and continuous attacks by the occupation army.

The detention of activists from a ship flying the Italian flag in international waters represents a dangerous escalation and a systematic violation of international law and the law of the sea.

ARAB AND WORLD

Sun 03 May 2026 9:01 am - Jerusalem Time

The Pakistani Role in Mediation Between Tehran and Washington: Implications of Geography and Political Calculations

Pakistan has recently emerged as a pivotal state playing the role of mediator and sponsor for direct and indirect negotiation tracks between Tehran and Washington. Since the first round that brought together the American and Iranian delegations in Islamabad, the state has appeared as a weighty sponsor capable of opening parallel diplomatic channels to protect a political solution.

Choosing Pakistan to host these negotiations is an indicator with major political implications, as this role aligns with the complexities of the military and security landscape in the region. The American and Iranian delegations left the Pakistani capital after a first round whose tracks were not completed, following the American delegation's decision to cut off negotiations and leave angrily.

The reasons for the failure of the first round are attributed to what informed sources described as a policy of intransigence and mutual conditions, as Tehran insists on lifting the American naval blockade on its ports. In contrast, the American side exerts great pressure to obtain immediate concessions, which put the negotiation process at the mercy of a conflict of wills.

Pakistani diplomacy is making diligent and intensive efforts with regional and international parties to bring the two sides back to the negotiating table in an anticipated second round. Islamabad is moving in this framework supported by its strategic relations with major powers such as China and Russia, in addition to its coordination with influential countries such as Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Turkey.

Observers believe that the road to Islamabad is still fraught with political landmines and traps set by both parties, despite US President Donald Trump's insistence on achieving a quick agreement. Pakistan realizes that the failure of these efforts could mean a return to military escalation options that would have dire consequences for the future of the region.

In the context of international positions, statements by German Chancellor Friedrich Merz emerged, addressed to Trump, warning of the American and Israeli labyrinth in dealing with the Iranian file. Merz described Iran as stronger than previously thought, considering that Washington lacks a convincing negotiation strategy.

Analysts considered the German Chancellor's words to represent the fall of the last European cover for American policies towards Tehran. In the same context, Hebrew media sources indicated that Trump himself began to feel weary of the continued state of war, and shows a clear desire to end the conflict through a political agreement.

On the other hand, Israel stands out as a fierce opponent of any Pakistani role in the region, as the far-right government in Tel Aviv rejects any rapprochement that might lead to de-escalation. Benjamin Netanyahu seeks to influence the decision-maker in the White House to push things towards a comprehensive confrontation instead of diplomatic solutions.

Pakistan bases its mediation on professional tools and a comprehensive vision of the conflict in the Middle East, relying heavily on the concept of the "Islamic bond." Its deep relations with Riyadh, Cairo, and Ankara also play a vital role in bringing viewpoints closer with the Iranian side and narrowing the gap of disagreement.

Geography is a crucial factor in the Pakistani role, as the country shares a land border with Iran extending for about 900 kilometers. The importance of these borders is highlighted amid American attempts to create internal chaos in Iran and tighten the naval blockade, which makes land routes a strategic lifeline.

Recent regional tensions have revealed the strength of the military and economic alliance between Pakistan and China, especially under the "Belt and Road" initiative. This close cooperation has brought Pakistan closer to the Eastern bloc, while India appears as a closer ally to the United States and Israel in the region.

Pakistan's shift towards engaging in Middle Eastern issues as a weighty mediator is a strategic indicator moving in directions contrary to plans aimed at dividing the region. Islamabad seeks through this role to prevent the redrawing of the region's maps according to ambitions and expansionist projects that threaten the stability of states.

The success of Pakistani mediation remains contingent on overcoming the technical and political negotiation stumbling blocks between Washington and Tehran. If intransigence continues, the conflict may slide again into a state of resource depletion, or enter a "no peace, no war" situation that exhausts all concerned parties.

In conclusion, Pakistan and the parties to the conflict realize that the current confrontation transcends diplomatic dimensions to reach the level of a struggle for existence and survival. Hence the importance of clinging to the threads of political hope led by Islamabad, as the only alternative to avoid a comprehensive explosion that may have dire consequences in the region and the world.

Iran is stronger than believed, and the Americans do not have a convincing negotiation strategy.

PALESTINE

Sun 03 May 2026 9:01 am - Jerusalem Time

Alert in the occupation navy to confront a huge Turkish fleet heading to break the Gaza blockade

Media sources revealed an increased state of alert within the Israeli occupation army's navy, in anticipation of the arrival of a new fleet of pro-Palestinian ships departing from Turkish ports. These preparations come just days after an Israeli attack targeted the 'Flotilla of Steadfastness' ships in international waters near the Greek island of Crete, which ended with the abduction of dozens of international solidarity activists.

According to Hebrew reports, the Turkish Humanitarian Relief Foundation (IHH) is responsible for organizing this new naval movement, the same organization that oversaw the famous 'Mavi Marmara' flotilla in 2010. The ships are expected to sail from the Turkish city of Marmaris towards the Gaza Strip, in a renewed attempt to challenge the naval blockade imposed on the Strip for many years.

Sources indicated that the occupation army's assessments place the upcoming flotilla in the category of 'most important and dangerous' compared to previous movements, as security concerns prevail regarding activists' insistence on reaching Palestinian shores. Based on these assessments, the Israeli navy has prepared reinforced forces and special units for rapid intervention with the aim of intercepting the ships and preventing their advance before they reach the territorial waters of the Strip.

In a related context, activists returning from the 'Flotilla of Steadfastness' gave harsh testimonies about the violations they were subjected to during their detention by the occupation forces last Thursday. Participants who were on board 20 ships confirmed that the occupation soldiers deliberately used excessive force and carried out systematic sabotage targeting navigation, communication, and engine systems, which led to a complete paralysis of ship movement.

Istanbul Airport witnessed on Friday evening the arrival of a private plane carrying 59 international activists, including 18 Turkish citizens, who had been detained among 175 activists during the recent Israeli aggression at sea. Upon their arrival, the activists confirmed that work is underway to prepare a huge flotilla comprising between 100 and 150 ships currently gathering in several Turkish ports in preparation for a collective sailing.

The naval movements are not limited to Turkish ports but also extend to include other European initiatives, as a convoy departed from the Italian island of Sicily as part of the 'Spring 2026 Mission'. This mission had actually begun on April 12 with the departure of 39 boats from the Spanish city of Barcelona, with plans to increase the number of participating ships to exceed one hundred ships departing from Spain, Italy, and Tunisia.

These developments bring back memories of the 'Mavi Marmara' flotilla incident in May 2010, when Israeli commando forces attacked the Turkish ship in international waters, resulting in the martyrdom of 10 solidarity activists and the injury of dozens. That incident caused a deep diplomatic crisis between Ankara and Tel Aviv, and it seems that the scene is repeating itself today with the insistence of international organizations to break the blockade imposed on Gaza.

It is worth noting that the history of attempts to break the naval blockade witnessed limited successes in its early stages, as the ships 'Freedom' and 'Free Gaza' managed to reach the Strip in August 2008. The Qatari ship 'Al-Karama' was the last ship to successfully break the naval cordon and reach Gaza port in December of the same year, before the occupation tightened its military grip and prevented all subsequent attempts.

Estimates indicate that the new flotilla will be more significant than its predecessor, and there are fears of attempts to break the naval blockade by force.

ARAB AND WORLD

Sun 03 May 2026 9:00 am - Jerusalem Time

Tehran Submits 14-Point Proposal to Washington to End War via Pakistani Mediation

Iranian authorities, through Pakistani mediation, have formally submitted a 14-point proposal to the United States, aiming to bring an end to the ongoing war between the two parties. This Iranian move comes in response to a previous American offer consisting of 9 points, with Tehran seeking, through its new draft, to draw a concrete roadmap that guarantees its strategic interests and ends the state of armed conflict.

Media sources indicated that the new proposal underwent precise and in-depth reviews within decision-making circles in Tehran before its final adoption. The document received all necessary approvals from sovereign entities, reflecting the Iranian side's seriousness in presenting diplomatic alternatives that adhere to the red lines previously set by the Iranian leadership in any future negotiations.

Pakistan plays a pivotal role in bridging the views between Washington and Tehran, leveraging its long land borders with Iran and its balanced relations with international powers. Islamabad coordinates its efforts with regional and international allies, including China, Russia, and Saudi Arabia, to tip the scales towards negotiated solutions, despite field challenges such as the American delegation's angry withdrawal from previous rounds.

On the ground, the region is experiencing a fragile truce that began on April 8th, following a bloody conflict that erupted in February and left thousands of casualties. The extension of this truce came at the direct request of the Pakistani government to provide an additional opportunity for diplomacy, at a time when international parties, led by the German Chancellor, are pressing for a more realistic American strategy to deal with Iranian influence.

In a related context, reports indicate an urgent desire by the current US administration, specifically Donald Trump, to reach a quick agreement that ends direct military involvement. In contrast, Tehran insists that any final agreement must include a complete lifting of the naval blockade imposed on its ports, which constitutes a fundamental cornerstone of the 14-point proposal.

On the other hand, Israel is observing these diplomatic moves with extreme caution, expressing clear objection to the growing Pakistani role in regional issues. Tel Aviv is trying to influence the American position to ensure that no concessions are made that affect its security, amidst the continued close military and economic cooperation between Pakistan and China, which casts a shadow over the balance of power in the region.

The Iranian proposal includes Tehran's red lines and presents a clear roadmap for ending the war after being reviewed by higher decision-making mechanisms.

PALESTINE

Sun 03 May 2026 9:00 am - Jerusalem Time

Arrest of a man in his thirties in occupied Jerusalem on suspicion of assaulting a nun

Informed sources reported that the occupation authorities announced on Saturday the arrest of a 36-year-old man, suspected of involvement in an assault on a nun in the occupied city of Jerusalem. The arrest came after extensive investigations conducted by security agencies following the incident, which sparked a wave of widespread condemnation in religious and local circles.

A statement issued by the relevant authorities clarified that the suspect was identified through the use of advanced digital technology, which enabled field teams to accurately and quickly track the perpetrator's movements. The sources indicated that the immediate response by security personnel contributed to identifying the person and his whereabouts immediately after the assault.

The occupation authorities claimed in their statement their full commitment to what they described as 'protecting freedom of worship' and providing security for religious figures of various denominations in the holy city. They also stressed that such behaviors, which they described as racist, would not be tolerated, considering that targeting religious figures represents a serious crossing of red lines.

In a related context, the detainee is currently undergoing in-depth investigations by the competent authorities to determine the true motives behind the commission of this crime. The suspect is scheduled to be brought before the competent court immediately after the completion of the necessary legal procedures to ensure accountability for the actions attributed to him.

It is worth noting that this incident comes amid escalating tensions, as France had earlier condemned this assault as 'shocking,' demanding severe penalties against the perpetrators. This incident reflects the extent of the challenges faced by religious institutions in occupied Jerusalem in light of repeated attacks targeting symbols and holy sites.

Harming religious symbols is a red line that aims to disturb the peaceful coexistence in the holy city.

PALESTINE

Sun 03 May 2026 9:00 am - Jerusalem Time

The 'Orange Line' plan.. a new Israeli encroachment swallows 60% of the Gaza Strip's area

Palestinians in the Gaza Strip are facing a changing reality on the ground characterized by the expansion of the Israeli occupation army's geographical control, nearly 200 days after the ceasefire agreement came into effect. Instead of a gradual withdrawal, the occupation authorities have introduced what is known as the 'Orange Line,' a new demarcation that goes beyond the 'Yellow Line' agreed upon in October 2025.

This shift constitutes a clear violation of the understandings that stipulated the separation of the army's control areas in the east from the areas where Palestinians are allowed to be present in the west. Under this new encroachment, the occupation has seized additional areas deep within the Strip, turning areas that were classified as safe zones into areas under direct military control.

Hamas leader Basem Naim confirmed that the occupation has shifted the Yellow Line towards the western areas by an additional area estimated at about 8 to 9 percent. This measure has increased the total area controlled by the Israeli army to more than 60 percent of the total area of the Gaza Strip, tightening the noose on the residents.

For its part, the United Nations expressed its grave concern about these developments, with the spokesperson for the Secretary-General, Stéphane Dujarric, indicating that Israel has expanded its occupation by establishing the 'Orange Line.' Dujarric clarified that the organization received maps including this new line, which imposes additional restrictions on the movement of humanitarian aid.

UN sources reported that the occupation stipulated that relief teams coordinate their movements in advance when crossing this line, which Dujarric considered an indication that things are not going in the right direction. These Israeli demands reflect a desire to transform the western areas into unstable security zones under the administration of the army.

The announcement of the 'Orange Line' was not a surprise to observers, but rather came as a result of a series of field measures that included land leveling and the removal of yellow concrete blocks. Eyewitnesses confirmed that the army had been working for months to move these virtual border markers deeper into citizens' lands.

This repeated violation led to new waves of displacement, as dozens of Palestinian families were forced to leave their homes and tents in Khan Yunis, Al-Zaytoun neighborhood, and Jabalia and head west. This encroachment was accompanied by air and artillery strikes targeting anyone approaching the new lines, resulting in dozens of martyrs and wounded.

Hamas condemned these violations in an official statement, considering that the shifting of the colored lines represents clear evidence of the Netanyahu government's reneging on the efforts of mediators. The movement said that the occupation seeks to thwart the agreement by imposing a new geographical and security reality that contradicts the spirit of the international understandings reached.

Hamas indicated in a detailed memorandum that the occupation imposed additional fire control zones, reaching in some areas an additional depth of 1700 meters, especially in the northern part of the Strip. The area of this fire control reached about 34 square kilometers, which the movement described as the 'actual demolition' of the principle of redeployment and gradual withdrawal.

These measures are reshaping the lives of more than two million Palestinians, who are now confined to an area not exceeding 38 percent of the total area of the Strip. Residents near these lines live under constant threat from drones and artillery shelling, making their daily lives a continuous hell amid catastrophic humanitarian conditions.

On the Israeli side, official statements show a clear intention to turn these lines into permanent borders, with Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir describing the Yellow Line as 'the new border.' Zamir considered that these areas constitute an advanced military base to protect settlements and carry out rapid offensive operations within what remains of the Strip.

In the same context, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant affirmed that the army will not retreat one millimeter from these positions until the war's objectives are achieved and the resistance is disarmed. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also reinforced these trends by announcing that more than half of Gaza's territory is effectively under Israeli military control.

These field developments come amid a political stalemate surrounding the discussions aimed at activating the second phase of the ceasefire agreement. Diplomatic efforts are clashing with complex Israeli conditions, at a time when Palestinian parties are demanding the necessity of implementing the requirements of the first phase and stopping the geographical encroachment.

It is worth noting that the Gaza Strip is suffering from massive destruction affecting 90% of its infrastructure as a result of the ongoing war since October 2023, which has left unprecedented human and material losses. The United Nations estimates the cost of reconstruction at about 70 billion dollars, amid the continuation of starvation and siege policies and the closure of vital crossings.

The Yellow Line constitutes a new border line, an advanced defense line for settlements, and a military base for carrying out rapid attacks.

PALESTINE

Sun 03 May 2026 9:00 am - Jerusalem Time

Two martyrs and wounded in continuous Israeli violations of the Gaza ceasefire agreement

Israeli violations of the ceasefire agreement in the Gaza Strip continued, with two Palestinians martyred and others injured by the bullets and shelling of the occupation army in various areas in the central and southern parts of the Strip. These bloody field developments come amid the ongoing truce agreement, which was supposed to be in effect since October 10, 2025, and which has witnessed repeated violations leading to hundreds of casualties.

In details of the field attacks, medical sources confirmed the martyrdom of the young man Ammar Talal Abu Shab after he was directly shot by occupation forces in the eastern Al-Satar area, located north of Khan Yunis city. This coincided with Israeli military movements in the border areas of the Strip, leading to a state of extreme tension among citizens attempting to inspect their properties.

In the central Strip, an occupation drone launched a raid targeting the vicinity of Al-Qastal towers east of Deir al-Balah city, resulting in one martyr and another citizen sustaining various injuries. Local sources reported that the shelling targeted a gathering of citizens, and the victims were transferred to nearby hospitals amid the continued hovering of drones in the region's airspace.

According to the latest data issued by the Ministry of Health, the total death toll from the occupation's aggression on the Gaza Strip since October 7, 2023, has risen to 72,608 martyrs, in addition to 172,445 injured. These figures reflect the scale of the ongoing humanitarian catastrophe despite international attempts to establish a ceasefire that remains fragile.

Regarding the violations of the recent agreement, the Ministry stated in a statement on Saturday that the number of martyrs since the truce began last October reached 828 martyrs and 2,342 injured. These statistics indicate that Israeli military operations have not actually stopped, but have taken forms of concentrated targeting, and intermittent aerial and artillery shelling.

Politically, informed sources revealed intentions by the administration of US President Donald Trump to close the civil-military coordination center run by Washington near the Gaza Strip. This intention comes amid sharp criticism of the center for its failure to effectively monitor the truce, and its limited ability to secure access to necessary humanitarian aid for the besieged population.

In contrast, the so-called 'Peace Council' denied these reports, asserting that the coordination center would continue its duties in the region to ensure communication mechanisms. However, observers believe that the center lacks the real powers that would enable it to enforce a ceasefire on the ground, especially with the Israeli side's insistence on continuing its military operations within the cities and camps of the Strip.

Israeli violations of the agreement since its inception have resulted in the martyrdom of 828 Palestinians and the injury of 2,342 others.

PALESTINE

Sun 03 May 2026 8:59 am - Jerusalem Time

New Israeli Escalation: Zamir Orders Strikes Deep Inside Lebanon to Target Drone Factories

The Israeli occupation army announced a series of wide-ranging airstrikes targeting various areas in southern Lebanon, claiming to have destroyed dozens of Hezbollah sites. According to a military statement, the attacks included the destruction of approximately 70 buildings allegedly used for military purposes, in addition to 50 other infrastructure sites, despite a fragile ceasefire agreement being in effect.

In a significant development, media sources revealed instructions issued by the Chief of Staff of the occupation army, Eyal Zamir, to expand the targeting scope to include deep inside Lebanese territory. These orders come at a time when ceasefire understandings impose restrictions on military operations, limiting confrontations to only southern Lebanese areas.

Zamir's directive focused directly on the necessity of striking Hezbollah's production line of explosive drones, which have become a major security problem for the occupation. Through this strategy, the army seeks to shift the battle from attempting to intercept drones in the air to destroying them at their primary manufacturing and assembly centers.

There is widespread skepticism regarding the accuracy of Israeli intelligence information about the locations of these factories, and whether the previous abstention from striking them was due to technical or political reasons. Sources indicated that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu might override American reservations to carry out qualitative operations deep inside Lebanon to impose a new reality on the ground.

Observers believe that Zamir's moves are primarily aimed at absorbing public anger and sharp criticism directed at the military establishment due to its failure to counter the drone air force. Recent confrontations have demonstrated Hezbollah's ability to penetrate Israeli defense systems and reach sensitive targets with high precision.

Hezbollah had introduced new types of drones into service, including the 'optical drone,' which is difficult to detect by traditional radars. This technological development has increased the complexity of the occupation army's defensive mission, prompting the military leadership to search for alternative offensive solutions deep within Lebanese territory.

Reports indicate that Netanyahu is banking on a margin of maneuver with the American administration, allowing him to target vital facilities under the pretext of 'preemptive defense.' The occupation has previously targeted energy and gas infrastructure in Lebanon, despite previous international promises not to repeat such attacks that affect civilian and vital facilities.

In contrast, Hezbollah continues to carry out qualitative operations using kamikaze drones against gatherings and bases of the occupation forces, achieving direct hits as acknowledged by field commanders. These ongoing operations confirm that the option of escalation deep inside could lead to unexpected reactions, putting the ceasefire agreement on the brink of total collapse.

Zamir's statements fall under an attempt to reassure Israelis that the solution is to target factories, given the inability to intercept drones in the air.

PALESTINE

Sun 03 May 2026 8:59 am - Jerusalem Time

Gaza workers demonstrate in Khan Yunis condemning hunger, unemployment, and demanding an end to the siege

Hundreds of Palestinian workers in the city of Khan Yunis, southern Gaza Strip, marched on Saturday in a large protest that swept through the city's streets. Participants in the event demanded the securing of their basic rights to work, food, and shelter, warning of the continued deterioration of humanitarian and living conditions, which have reached catastrophic levels as a result of the ongoing war.

This march was organized at the call of leftist Palestinian factions, coinciding with the commemoration of International Workers' Day, which falls on May 1st of each year. Demonstrators raised banners condemning international silence regarding the suffering of workers in Gaza, emphasizing that the working class is the most affected by the policies of siege and continuous aggression on the Strip.

Participants, through their chants and slogans, stressed the urgent need for intervention by international and Arab bodies to open closed crossings and ensure the flow of humanitarian aid. They also demanded a complete end to the war and the initiation of reconstruction plans to compensate for the enormous losses incurred by economic and productive facilities.

Ashour Banat, a leader in the Palestinian People's Party, affirmed during a speech at the march that Gaza workers today face the triangle of hunger, siege, and deprivation. Banat explained that workers' demands currently focus on stopping the aggression, ensuring fair wages, and providing a safe and healthy working environment that befits the dignity of the Palestinian human being.

For his part, Issam Muammar, a member of the Workers' Union in Khan Yunis, indicated that this event is a clear message to the world about the extent of the tragedy experienced by workers. He explained that the war has caused a near-complete paralysis in the agricultural and industrial sectors, leading to hundreds of thousands of workers losing their only sources of livelihood.

Muammar called on labor unions around the world to show effective solidarity with Palestinian workers and provide urgent material and relief support to their families. He considered that continued silence regarding what is happening in Gaza represents a green light for the continuation of the systematic starvation policy practiced against the population and displaced people in tents.

In a related context, Hani Al-Assar, a member of the Political Bureau of the Palestinian Arab Front, stated that the occupation deliberately destroyed economic infrastructure, including factories and agricultural lands. Al-Assar affirmed that this systematic destruction aims to push the Palestinian economy towards complete collapse and transform society into one entirely dependent on aid.

The latest data issued by the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics showed shocking figures regarding the reality of the labor market in the Strip during 2025. The unemployment rate jumped to 68 percent, an unprecedented rate reflecting the scale of the catastrophe that has befallen the Palestinian workforce as a result of ongoing military operations.

Statistics also indicated a sharp decline in the labor force participation rate, which fell from 40 percent before the outbreak of the war to only about 25 percent. This means that about three-quarters of those previously working in the public and private sectors are now out of the labor market or among the unemployed.

These protests coincide with international reports describing the economic situation in the Palestinian territories as the deepest and harshest in their modern history. The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) confirmed that the Gaza Strip faces a comprehensive economic collapse that will require many years of recovery if the war stops and the siege is lifted.

Currently, about 1.9 million displaced people live in temporary tents and very harsh living conditions, out of a total population of 2.4 million in the Strip. Despite the ceasefire agreement coming into effect last October, restrictions on crossings still hinder the arrival of basic necessities and fuel.

The suffering of workers continues under a tight siege imposed since 2007, exacerbated by the war of extermination that began in October 2023. This war, according to medical and local sources, has resulted in hundreds of thousands killed and injured, as well as widespread destruction of Palestinian cities and towns in various areas of the Strip.

Gaza workers do not celebrate their international day; instead, they face hunger, siege, and deprivation of the most basic rights amidst an unprecedented economic collapse.

OPINIONS

Sun 03 May 2026 8:10 am - Jerusalem Time

Iran Proposes New Plan to End War… Trump Faces Accusations of Turning Military Superiority into Political Quagmire

Washington – Said Arikat – 3/5/2026

News Analysis

Iran has presented a 14-point response to the American proposal aimed at ending the war that erupted following US and Israeli strikes against it on February 28. This move reflects Tehran's attempt to extract political and strategic gains from a military confrontation that continues to weigh heavily on Gulf security, energy markets, and international navigation.

According to the semi-official Tasnim news agency and official Iranian media, the Iranian plan demands an end to the war and the resolution of all outstanding issues within just thirty days, instead of a two-month truce previously proposed by Washington. Iranian demands also include guarantees against any future military attack, the withdrawal of US forces from Iran's vicinity, the lifting of the naval blockade, the unfreezing of Iranian assets, compensation payments, the lifting of economic sanctions, a halt to fighting in Lebanon, and the establishment of a new mechanism for regulating navigation in the Strait of Hormuz.

While none of the US media outlets have independently confirmed the authenticity of the points in the Iranian proposal, an Iranian official stated that the document was delivered to Pakistan, without officially disclosing its details. In response, US President Donald Trump announced on Saturday that he is reviewing the new proposal, while the Associated Press quoted him as saying he is "not satisfied" with the Iranian offer so far.

The United States had previously put forward a 15-point framework that included, among other things, the full reopening of the Strait of Hormuz and the complete termination of Iran's nuclear program. Tehran considers these conditions closer to "surrender dictates" than to a negotiated settlement.

Observers believe that the Iranian response reflects an understanding within the Iranian leadership that Washington, despite its military superiority, faces increasing difficulty in translating military pressure into lasting political achievement. After months of military operations, naval blockades, and reciprocal strikes, the region does not appear closer to stability, but rather to a more complex and dangerous phase.

An increasing number of strategic experts in Washington believe that Trump succeeded in achieving a limited tactical victory through the initial military strikes against Iranian infrastructure, but failed to turn that into a sustainable political gain. The blockade imposed on Iranian ports, the disruption of navigation, and the rigidity in negotiation terms have all pushed Tehran towards greater intransigence instead of collapse. According to these experts, the "complete strangulation" policy adopted by the White House has transformed a moment of American military superiority into a state of strategic stalemate, even into something resembling a political defeat that is draining Washington and its allies economically, securely, and diplomatically.

The latest Iranian demands confirm that Tehran seeks to redefine the rules of engagement in the Gulf, not just a temporary ceasefire. The reference to a "new mechanism" for regulating the Strait of Hormuz carries political dimensions that go beyond maritime security, as it practically means Iran's demand for a recognized regional role in managing one of the world's most important oil passages.

The demand to end fighting in Lebanon also reveals the interconnectedness of regional confrontation arenas, amid escalating tensions on the Lebanese-Israeli border and the widening scope of the conflict to more than one front. Analysts believe that Tehran is trying to use its regional influence as part of a comprehensive deal, rather than limiting negotiations to the nuclear file only.

Researchers at American think tanks believe that Trump made a classic strategic error by overusing economic and military force simultaneously. The naval blockade on Iranian ports, instead of pushing Tehran to a quick surrender, gave it an opportunity to portray itself as a "besieged and attacked" country, which helped it mobilize the Iranian interior and gain relative international sympathy, especially in Asia and some countries of the Global South. They emphasize that maximum sanctions and comprehensive blockades rarely produce stable political solutions, but often lead to prolonging the conflict and expanding its cost for everyone.

Meanwhile, the US administration faces a complex equation. Retreating from the blockade policy could be interpreted domestically as weakness, while continuing it threatens further escalation in a region on which global markets depend for energy supplies. These concerns have already been reflected in oil prices and maritime shipping, amid growing anxiety about any long-term disruption to navigation through the Gulf.

Iran's demand for the unfreezing of its assets and the lifting of sanctions also indicates that the economic file has become central to any potential settlement. Tehran understands that easing financial pressures could give it internal breathing room, while Washington fears that this could strengthen Iranian influence regionally.

Critics of Trump's policy say that the US president turned an opportunity to contain the crisis into an open confrontation with no clear horizon. Instead of leveraging American military superiority to impose a quick and balanced settlement, he chose a policy of naval blockade and maximum pressure, which pushed Iran to intransigence and to link any agreement to broad demands that go beyond the nuclear file. They believe that the continued strangulation of Iranian ports and the threat to its oil exports did not lead to the collapse of the Iranian state as some American circles expected, but rather created a regional attrition that harms American interests themselves and weakens Washington's international image as a power capable of managing crises.

In contrast, Trump insists that maximum pressure is necessary to force Iran to make real concessions, considering that any easing of sanctions before achieving Washington's goals would be seen as an Iranian victory. However, this argument faces criticism even within conservative American circles, where some Republicans warn against being drawn into a long and costly war of attrition in the Middle East.

Analysts suggest that the current Iranian response may be an attempt to test Washington's willingness to make actual concessions, especially in light of global economic pressures and increasing international criticism of the continued war and blockade.

According to experts in international relations, the most dangerous outcome of Trump's policy is not just the stalled negotiations, but the entrenchment of a conviction among Washington's adversaries that the United States is capable of starting wars but less capable of ending them politically. The blockade on Iranian ports and the disruption of maritime trade have created widespread global tension, without achieving a decisive negotiating breakthrough. They believe that Iran, through steadfastness and maneuvering, has managed to turn American pressure into an element of exhaustion for Washington itself, making the initial American "tactical victory" now appear closer to a strategic quagmire open to dangerous and uncalculated possibilities.

As the exchange of political and military messages continues, eyes remain on whether Washington and Tehran will succeed in moving from a logic of blockade and deterrence to a logic of settlement, or whether the region is heading towards a more turbulent phase, in which the Strait of Hormuz and other Middle Eastern arenas will be hostages to an open-ended conflict with no clear end.

ARAB AND WORLD

Sun 03 May 2026 8:10 am - Jerusalem Time

Trump Awaits Details of Iranian Proposal and Threatens Military Option

US President Donald Trump confirmed that he had received a briefing on the broad outlines of a potential agreement with the Islamic Republic of Iran, indicating that he is awaiting the precise and final wording of this proposal. Trump's statements came before his departure to Florida, where he clarified that the US administration is carefully studying the ideas presented before making any final decision on them.

In a cautionary tone, Trump did not rule out returning to the military option and targeting Iranian sites again if Washington deemed Tehran to be misbehaving. He added in statements via social media platforms that Iran has not yet paid a sufficiently heavy price for its past actions, reflecting skepticism about accepting the current proposals.

For its part, media sources revealed that Tehran had delivered a comprehensive 14-point proposal to the American side via the Pakistani mediator, in response to a previous American offer. This proposal includes a concrete roadmap aimed at ending ongoing hostilities and has undergone careful reviews within Iranian decision-making institutions before its adoption.

The Iranian provisions include fundamental demands, foremost among them the withdrawal of US forces from areas surrounding Iran and the complete lifting of the economic blockade imposed on it. Tehran also demands the release of all frozen financial assets abroad, financial compensation, and the lifting of sanctions that have burdened the Iranian economy for many years.

On the regional level, the Iranian proposal links ending the war in the region with a cessation of fighting on all active fronts, including the Lebanese arena. The Iranian side also proposes creating a new monitoring mechanism for navigation in the Strait, to ensure the stability of vital waterways and avoid any future military friction in the region.

In return, the Iranian proposal stipulates international guarantees from the United States and Israel not to launch any future attacks against Iranian territory in exchange for fully opening navigation. Tehran considers these guarantees to be the cornerstone of any long-term agreement that ensures mutual security and ends the existing state of tension in the Middle East.

For his part, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi stressed that his country remains open to the diplomatic path, but linked the success of this path to Washington changing its current approach. Araghchi clarified that Tehran is ready for serious negotiations if it perceives a genuine desire from the other side to respect Iranian sovereignty and adhere to international agreements.

Despite these diplomatic moves, the US President insists on his position rejecting Iran's possession of any nuclear weapons, considering this red line non-negotiable. These developments come at a sensitive time, as the international community monitors the extent of the two parties' ability to reach a compromise that spares the region a comprehensive military confrontation that could have catastrophic consequences.

If they misbehave, if they do something bad, we'll see then. But that's a possibility that could happen.

OPINIONS

Sun 03 May 2026 8:09 am - Jerusalem Time

The New School Student Union Freezes Hillel Funding Amid Rising American Anger Over the War on Gaza

Washington Message

Washington – Said Arikat – 5/2/2026

In an unprecedented move within an American university, the Student Union at The New School in New York City voted to place the Hillel student organization branch in a state of “ineligibility,” meaning it will be deprived of funding, logistical support, and joint activities provided by the Student Union. This decision comes amidst accusations related to supporting programs linked to the Israeli army during the ongoing war on the Gaza Strip.

The decision, approved by a majority vote on May 1st, followed a lengthy investigation by the Student Union's compliance committee, which concluded that Hillel had violated university principles that oblige student organizations to respect and adhere to international law.

According to the report on which the vote was based, the Hillel branch at The New School and its affiliated Baruch College branch participated in promoting programs that send students to Israel for volunteer work at military bases and to provide logistical support to the Israeli army. Among these programs are: "Hillel on Peace," "Onward Israel," and "Volunteers for Israel."

The student committee considered these programs to represent direct support for a military institution accused of committing widespread violations against Palestinians in Gaza, at a time when international criticism of the Israeli war and its widespread destruction and significant human casualties is increasing.

The report also pointed to direct financial partnerships worth millions of dollars between “Hillel International” and the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which it said were aimed at “promoting pro-war propaganda” within American university campuses.

This decision is a significant development in the context of escalating student protests within American universities against the Israeli war on Gaza, where universities have, in recent months, become arenas of political and moral confrontation between students supporting Palestinian rights and groups supporting Israel.

Hillel International is considered one of the largest Jewish Zionist student networks in the United States and the world, active in hundreds of universities by offering cultural, political, and religious programs for Jewish students. However, the organization has faced increasing criticism for years due to its close ties to official Israeli institutions and its continuous defense of Tel Aviv's policies, including military operations against Palestinians. Student and human rights movements also accuse it of promoting the Israeli narrative within American universities and funding visit programs and activities aimed at strengthening political and moral support for Israel and justifying its aggressive policies against Palestinians historically.

It is worth noting that The New School was founded in 1919 as a progressive academic institution dedicated to freedom of thought and research, and includes several prominent colleges, including "Parsons" School of Design, "Eugene Lang" College of Liberal Arts, the College of Performing Arts, in addition to the College of Social Sciences.

The Student Union's decision comes at a time when the United States is witnessing a remarkable expansion of popular criticism of Israel, especially among youth and students, many of whom believe that the war on Gaza has exposed the limits of traditional American discourse on human rights and democracy.

The widening scope of protests within American universities indicates a profound shift in public sentiment, especially among young people who now view unconditional support for Israel as complicity in violence against Palestinians. After months of images of destruction and killing in Gaza, the official American narrative is no longer able to convince large segments of students and academics. Anger increases when university funds are used to support institutions linked to programs serving the Israeli army. This shift does not reflect fleeting sympathy for Palestinians, but rather a deepening crisis of confidence in political and media elites who have ignored the extent of suffering under decades of continuous military occupation.

Increasing criticism within American circles of Israel is no longer limited to traditional activists or human rights groups, but has extended to students, professors, artists, and even Jewish figures who oppose occupation policies. Many believe that successive American governments have granted Israel political immunity, encouraging it to continue using excessive force against Palestinian civilians in Gaza and the West Bank. A wide segment of Americans also feel resentment at attempts to silence voices critical of Israel through ready-made accusations of antisemitism. Therefore, universities today appear to be an arena of political and moral confrontation reflecting a growing American division over the limits of support provided to Tel Aviv domestically.

Decisions by student bodies in some American universities reflect a growing feeling that pro-Israel institutions ignore human rights principles when it comes to Palestinians. Many students believe that the continuation of the war on Gaza, and the accompanying killing, starvation, and widespread destruction, has exposed the double standards in Western discourse on freedom and democracy. Moreover, American political and media support for Israel has aroused increasing resentment among young people who see their country spending billions on foreign wars while social crises worsen domestically. For this reason, boycott and protest campaigns are expanding within universities as a means of moral and political pressure against the Israeli occupation in the current phase.

Observers believe that the escalating anger within American universities towards Israel reflects a clear generational shift in understanding the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. While previous American generations adopted the Israeli narrative as an almost absolute truth, students today rely on independent media and digital platforms that transmit images of Palestinian victims directly from Gaza and the West Bank. This daily influx of bloody scenes has made many question the unconditional pro-Israel American political discourse. It has also led youth segments to consider the defense of Palestinians a matter of human justice, and not merely a political stance related to the Middle East alone in the United States over the years.

OPINIONS

Sun 03 May 2026 8:03 am - Jerusalem Time

How Trump Turned Strategic Advantage Into Another Iran Failure

By: Said Arikat


May 2, 2026


News analysis


Washington, D.C-Trita Parsi’s latest analysis offers one of the most penetrating critiques yet of Donald Trump’s Iran policy and Washington’s enduring addiction to coercion. Writing in Responsible Statecraft, Parsi, a well known scholar and author, argues that Trump managed, once again, to “snatch defeat from the jaws of victory” by embracing the maximalist fantasies of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), the hawkish Washington think tank ( launched by the Israeli army some 25 years ago, and funded by Sheldon and Miriam Adelson),  that has long promoted economic strangulation and military escalation against Tehran. The result, according to Parsi, is a self-inflicted strategic reversal that has weakened Washington’s position, destabilized global markets, and further narrowed the prospects for diplomacy.


Parsi’s central argument is both simple and devastating. Following the recent ceasefire between Iran and the United States, Trump had actually secured an advantageous position. The ceasefire allowed him to exit an increasingly dangerous confrontation without becoming trapped in another costly Middle Eastern war. Iran, meanwhile, lost its principal leverage: the inflationary shock caused by soaring oil prices and instability in the Strait of Hormuz. Tehran still faced crushing sanctions and remained dependent on negotiations with Washington if it hoped to secure meaningful economic relief.


This imbalance favored Trump heavily. The United States had time on its side, while Iran faced mounting economic pressure and diminishing leverage. Oil prices were stabilizing, global markets were calming, and Washington could have approached negotiations from a position of relative strength. In Parsi’s telling, Trump had inadvertently stumbled into a quiet strategic victory.


Yet instead of consolidating that advantage through diplomacy, Trump once again succumbed to the illusion that Iran could be forced into total capitulation through overwhelming pressure. Encouraged by FDD and allied hawks, the administration embraced a blockade strategy designed to choke off Iranian oil exports entirely. Advocates of the policy promised rapid economic collapse inside Iran, insisting that Tehran’s oil revenues would vanish within days and that its storage facilities would soon overflow, forcing the shutdown of oil production itself.


Trump reportedly celebrated the plan as “genius,” believing it would compel Iran to surrender without requiring additional military action. But as Parsi carefully documents, reality has moved in the opposite direction. Satellite imagery continues to show Iranian oil shipments moving through Kharg Island despite the blockade. The predicted collapse never materialized. Instead, the restrictions tightened global supply and pushed oil prices even higher than during the war itself.


The consequences extend far beyond Iran. Rising oil prices threaten inflation, increase domestic political pressure on the White House, and deepen economic uncertainty worldwide. Even more alarming are warnings that disruptions linked to the blockade could trigger fertilizer shortages and broader food insecurity in vulnerable regions. In other words, the policy designed to strengthen American leverage has instead amplified global instability while leaving Iran standing.


Parsi’s broader insight concerns what he describes as Washington’s pathological search for a “silver bullet” against Iran. Across nearly five decades, successive American administrations have convinced themselves that one more escalation, one more sanction regime, one more military threat, or one more covert operation would finally force Tehran into submission. Diplomacy, compromise, and mutual accommodation are repeatedly discarded in favor of fantasies of decisive victory.


Trump’s conduct exemplifies this cycle. First came the belief that military threats alone would intimidate Iran into surrender. When Tehran refused to yield, Washington escalated further through regional deployments and direct confrontation. Then came the fantasy that assassinating Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei would trigger either regime collapse or immediate capitulation. Even large-scale bombardment campaigns against civilian infrastructure failed to produce the promised breakthrough.


Each escalation generated more instability without delivering strategic success. Yet the architects of these policies continue to insist that the next escalation will finally work. Parsi’s critique is particularly powerful because it exposes the intellectual emptiness beneath these recurring schemes. The problem is not simply tactical failure. It is the refusal to accept that Iran cannot be coerced into unconditional surrender without catastrophic regional consequences.


What emerges from Parsi’s analysis is a portrait of a superpower trapped by its own illusions. Rather than recognizing the limits of coercion, Washington repeatedly mistakes resistance for weakness and escalation for strategy. The blockade represents merely the latest iteration of this destructive pattern.


Parsi’s profound assessment cuts through the rhetoric that often dominates Washington’s Iran debate. He demonstrates that the pursuit of domination rather than negotiated coexistence repeatedly transforms limited gains into setbacks. In doing so he offers a reminder that diplomacy remains the only path forward.

ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 02 May 2026 7:31 pm - Jerusalem Time

Trump Rejects Three-Point Iranian Proposal to End Crisis via Pakistani Mediator

US President Donald Trump announced his reservations and dissatisfaction with a new negotiating proposal put forward by Tehran aimed at ending the current state of tension between the two countries. Trump affirmed in his statements that Washington does not intend to retreat or withdraw early from the current confrontation strategy with Iran, emphasizing the need to ensure that the same crises do not re-emerge in the near future.

In a related context, informed sources reported a significant development in the mediation process, as Tehran conveyed new amendments through the Pakistani mediator related to previous negotiating papers. These amendments include an updated vision based on the paper presented by Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi during his recent diplomatic tour, in an attempt to formulate understandings acceptable to the American administration.

The available data indicate that the Iranian initiative focuses on three strategic axes, foremost among them being a comprehensive cessation of hostilities in exchange for an American commitment not to launch any future attacks on Iranian territory. This axis aims to establish a state of mutual security stability as a first step to building trust between the two parties, who are experiencing a continuous state of crisis.

As for the second axis, it concerns the reformulation of security and navigation arrangements in the Strait of Hormuz, a file that is highly sensitive for global trade and energy security. The third axis focuses on the Iranian nuclear file, where reports speak of the possibility of an active Russian role in shaping this technical and political path to ensure its outcome in a balanced international format.

Despite these intensive diplomatic moves, indicators from the White House suggest a continued stalemate in the negotiation process. Observers believe that Trump's insistence on formulating a comprehensive agreement that ends all Iranian threats at once makes it difficult to accept fragmented proposals, leaving the door open to all possibilities in the region.

The United States does not want to withdraw early from its confrontation with Iran only for the problem to reappear.

PALESTINE

Sat 02 May 2026 7:30 pm - Jerusalem Time

Appointment of an envoy to the Christian world…a propaganda step and an attempt to beautify the ugly face of the occupation

Hatem Abdel Qader: The Christian world must stand up to its responsibilities in restraining the occupation from harming Islamic and Christian holy sites and change its behavior on the ground

Dimitri Diliani: A propaganda step to mislead public opinion and cover up the occupation's crimes against religions, the latest of which was an Israeli soldier destroying a statue of Christ in Dabel

Nevin Abu Rahmoun: The discourse collapses due to its contradiction with the facts, and any attempt at beautification through symbolic appointments will not change the reality that justice is not managed by diplomacy but measured by actions

Amir Makhoul: The appointed envoy to the Christian world does not represent Christians inside or in Palestine and does not speak on behalf of the church, which has condemned Israeli violations

Antoine Shalhat: A purely Israeli propaganda step to contain the isolation suffered by the occupying state in the Christian world due to multiple backgrounds

Jack Sara: The reality on the ground that the world sees is the decisive factor in changing public opinion, and no matter how many attempts are made, they will not succeed in beautifying the image of the occupation

Exclusive to "Al-Quds"-

In an attempt to improve its image, after many crimes and violations that caused criticism in the Christian world, the latest of which was a soldier destroying a statue of Christ in southern Lebanon, Israel announced the appointment of former ambassador George Deek as a special envoy to the Christian world, with the aim of "strengthening Israel's relations with Christian communities around the world."

Observers and analysts, in interviews with "Al-Quds," view this step as propaganda to mislead global public opinion and an attempt to improve Israel's image, which is increasingly politically isolated, noting that it will not be able to beautify Israel's ugly image, whose ugliness reached a great extent when an Israeli soldier destroyed a statue of Christ in southern Lebanon, in a crime that reflects a violation of religious symbols and a provocation to the feelings of millions of Christians and Muslims.

He considered that as long as violations against holy sites continue and access to Al-Aqsa Mosque and the Church of the Holy Sepulchre is restricted, any discourse about religious openness loses its meaning and becomes merely a political cover, pointing out that the relationship with any religious community is not built through envoys, but through actual respect for worship rights and the preservation of holy sites.

An ironic step

Hatem Abdel Qader, Secretary-General of the Islamic-Christian Commission for the Support of Jerusalem and Holy Sites, describes Israel's appointment of a Christian envoy to the Christian world as an absurd and ironic step that will not be able to beautify Israel's ugly image, whose ugliness reached a great extent when an Israeli soldier destroyed a statue of Christ in southern Lebanon, in a crime that reflects a violation of religious symbols and a provocation to the feelings of millions of Christians and Muslims.

Abdel Qader asks: Can a job title repair an ugly and shameful image of the occupation, shattered by documented criminal acts against Islamic and Christian holy sites and symbols? And does Israel believe that improving its image in the Christian world can be managed through the appointment of an envoy while the occupation persists in its violations against holy sites, imposing arbitrary restrictions that prevent worshipers from reaching their holy places, whether Al-Aqsa Mosque or the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, in addition to assaulting celebrants during Christian holidays, as happened on glorious Easter, and preventing the Patriarch of Jerusalem from entering the Church of the Holy Sepulchre?

The Christian world will not fall for black propaganda

Abdel Qader affirms that the Christian world will not fall for this black propaganda, and Israel will not succeed in deceiving anyone, because the truth has become clear to everyone that behind every envoy is a cover for the truth with a diplomatic cloak that reveals what is beneath it.

Abdel Qader concludes his statement by saying: The Christian world has a duty to stand up to its responsibilities in restraining the occupation from harming Islamic and Christian holy sites, and to send a clear message to the occupation that without a change in behavior on the ground, no envoy can beautify an ugly face.

Misleading international public opinion

Dimitri Diliani, head of the National Christian Gathering in the Holy Land, says: "The announcement by the foreign minister of the Israeli extermination state, Gidon Sa'ar, of the appointment of a so-called 'special envoy to the Christian world' is a propaganda step aimed at misleading international public opinion and covering up the occupation's crimes against religions. The latest of these crimes was an Israeli extermination army soldier destroying a statue of Christ in the Lebanese village of Dabel, and filming and boasting about committing this crime on social media."

Targeting the Palestinian Christian presence

Diliani affirms that the targeting of the Palestinian Christian presence is carried out through policies of uprooting and ethnic cleansing that have targeted all members of our Palestinian people for decades, and that these crimes against humanity are escalating in the context of a colonial reality that is inhumane par excellence.

Diliani reveals that the data available to the National Christian Gathering in the Holy Land records 111 attacks against churches, cemeteries, Christian clergy, nuns, and pilgrims during 2024, including 46 physical assaults and 35 attacks targeting churches, monasteries, and cemeteries. The number of attacks rose to 181 during the past year, including 109 physical assaults committed by settlers against Christian clergy and pilgrims.

He also affirms that the Israeli occupation authorities impose strict restrictions on the practice of religious rituals, especially during Easter at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, thereby depriving Christian worshipers of their right to worship freely in their holy city, just as their Muslim brethren are deprived.

Diliani adds that the Israeli extermination army bombed the historic Saint Porphyrius Church in Gaza, leading to the martyrdom of 18 citizens, and the Holy Family Church was subjected to repeated Israeli attacks that resulted in martyrs and wounded among the displaced families there, in the context of ongoing hate crimes and genocide that have claimed more than 73,000 martyrs, including approximately 5% of Christians in Gaza over the past two and a half years.

Diliani stresses that Palestinian Christians are an integral part of the national fabric, bearing with the rest of the Palestinian people the responsibility of defending the land and identity, and no colonial propaganda will succeed in obliterating this truth.

It is unacceptable to turn religious and humanitarian issues into tools for polishing an image

Political writer Nevin Abu Rahmoun says: It is unacceptable to turn religious and humanitarian issues into tools for polishing an image.

Abu Rahmoun adds: When violations against holy sites continue and access to Al-Aqsa Mosque and the Church of the Holy Sepulchre is restricted, any discourse about religious openness loses its meaning and becomes merely a political cover.

Abu Rahmoun points out that "this is not a communication crisis with the Christian world but a credibility crisis," stressing that the relationship with any religious community is not built through envoys, but through actual respect for worship rights and the preservation of holy sites.

The issue is what Israel does, not who speaks for it

She says: What is happening on the ground presents a completely opposite picture, affirming that both political and moral stances necessitate rejecting this approach: rejecting the transformation of diplomacy into a mask, and rejecting dealing with violations as if they were a detail that can be overcome by a media campaign, stressing that the issue is not who speaks for Israel but what Israel does on the ground.

Abu Rahmoun says: When facts contradict discourse, discourse collapses, and any attempt to beautify the scene through symbolic appointments will not change one truth: justice is not managed by diplomacy but measured by actions.

The whole matter is largely flimsy

Amir Makhoul, a writer specializing in Israeli affairs, points to a popular proverb that says: "What can a hairdresser do with a sour face?" indicating that the whole matter is largely flimsy, and reflects a propaganda nature more than an expression of the reality on the ground.

Makhoul adds that the violations extend from the destruction of the statue of Christ in Lebanon, to the assault on holy sites in Jerusalem, through the demolition of churches in Gaza, and the assault on the Church of the Holy Sepulchre on glorious Easter, in addition to the assaults on Islamic endowments that seem to be permissible.

A message that the Islamic world is not of interest

Makhoul explains that the implicit message from appointing an envoy to the Christian world suggests that the Islamic world is not of interest, and that its oppression and the obliteration of its features can continue, especially regarding Islamic holy sites, foremost among them the blessed Al-Aqsa Mosque.

He affirms that no matter how much Israel tries to beautify its image, the truth on the ground remains stronger than any promotional campaigns, especially in light of the practices committed by the Israeli government, including the war on Gaza and the accompanying violations.

The Church's positions are clear in rejecting Israeli violations

Makhoul points out that the person appointed as an envoy to the Christian world does not represent Christians inside or in Palestine in general, and does not speak on behalf of the Church, which in turn expressed a clear position weeks ago through statements issued by churches in the region, condemning Israeli practices, including assaults on clergy, restrictions, and ongoing violations.

Makhoul also notes that the Church's positions were also evident through the statements of the Pope of the Vatican, who expressed clear humanitarian positions.

Makhoul affirms that the problem is not in the image that Israel is trying to improve, but in the essence of policies and practices on the ground, pointing to a shift in the army's identity towards religious Zionism, and the ideological dimensions that this entails, which are reflected in the targeting of religious symbols, including Christian ones.

Makhoul concludes by saying: This appointment will not change anything in reality, and he describes it as a formal procedure that will not affect Israel's image, which is shaped by the facts on the ground, stressing that the Palestinian narrative remains the strongest, because it is based on what the world sees as facts, and does not need propaganda campaigns as much as it needs the world to pay attention to these facts.

A predictable and not surprising step

Political writer Antoine Shalhat views the step of appointing G. Deek as Israel's ambassador to the Christian world as a purely Israeli propaganda step to contain the isolation suffered by the occupying state in the Christian world due to several backgrounds, including the war of extermination and comprehensive destruction against Palestinians, especially in the Gaza Strip, Israeli policy against Christian holy sites in the Holy Land, and Jewish religious extremism that affects Christianity and its symbols with repeated touching and assaults.

Writer Shalhat believes that it is a previously expected step and not surprising. But what is unexpected and surprising is that a Christian person from the 1948 Palestinians agrees to perform such a dirty mission, being one of the most prominent victims of criminal and hateful Israeli policy, whether against Palestinians or against Christians, simply because he is Palestinian and Christian.

Condemnation and denunciation

Shalhat adds: Therefore, it is natural that his step arouses a great deal of condemnation and denunciation, as well as wishes that his mission will suffer a dismal failure, in light of the increasing awareness throughout the world regarding the essence of Israeli policy despite all the propaganda efforts made to cover it up or beautify it.

Shalhat points out that despite this, this step reflects the political isolation that Israel has been suffering from recently, which warns that it will turn into a pariah state in the longer term.

Political isolation is increasing

He points out that this political isolation is increasing at the level of relations with states, but it has become exacerbated at the level of global public opinion, and is reflected, according to what is frequently published even in the media and research institute studies in Israel, in several manifestations, most notably the decline in popular support in Europe and America, especially among young people, the expansion of boycott movements, and the escalation of criticism within diaspora Jewish circles.

Shalhat adds: There is a consensus among everyone that the future implication of these developments lies in deepening the gap between the governmental policies of states supporting Israel and public opinion in these states.

Israel's image will remain bleak

For his part, the coordinator of the Holy Land Christian Forum, Wadie Abu Nassar, affirms that this step is in the right direction, but it may be insufficient, stressing the need to complete it with two main things.

Abu Nassar explains that the first is for Israel to reconsider its calculations regarding the violations and crimes it commits, not only against holy sites, but also against innocent people.

He affirms that such measures, even if a large number of envoys are appointed, will not improve Israel's image as long as these practices continue, especially those emanating from some soldiers and settlers.

Abu Nassar adds that the second is the importance for Israel to reconsider its decision-making mechanisms, explaining that it is not enough to appoint an envoy to polish the image, but it is necessary for decision-makers to surround themselves with honest and aware advisors, capable of understanding reality as it is, and contributing to changing it for the better.

Abu Nassar points out that in the absence of these fundamental reviews, any attempts at clarification or beautification will remain limited in effect, and Israel's image will remain bleak, and more importantly, violations will continue.

Abu Nassar concludes his statement by emphasizing the need for a radical change in policies, not just cosmetic adjustments in positions and roles.

An image stained with the blood of innocents

Jack Sara, President of Bethlehem Bible College, affirms that Israel does not lack money, recruits, employees, or envoys to try to beautify its image.

Sara points out that this image has been stained with the blood of the people of Gaza and with many crimes, both those committed against holy sites and against humanity and people on the ground.

He adds that this reality is not new, as much has been heard about initiatives and attempts, both from within and from various parts of the world, to improve its image.

Sara refers to a comment by one of the most prominent supporters, who expressed his anger at what an Israeli soldier did to a statue of Christ in southern Lebanon, saying that they work hundreds of days and spend thousands of dollars to beautify Israel's image, only for one soldier to undermine all those efforts with his actions.

Sara stresses at the end of his speech that no matter how many attempts are made, they will not succeed in beautifying the image, because the world today sees what is happening on the ground.

He says: Christians in this country are not represented only by church institutions or church leaders, despite the importance of their positions and statements, affirming that the reality on the ground has become the decisive factor in shaping public opinion.

PALESTINE

Sat 02 May 2026 7:29 pm - Jerusalem Time

Injuries among Palestinians following settler attacks in Nablus and Hebron

Various areas in the occupied West Bank witnessed a new wave of attacks by extremist settlers on Saturday, resulting in injuries among Palestinian citizens. These attacks focused on the town of Jalud, south of Nablus, as well as the Jabal Jales area in the eastern part of Hebron, leading to seven people sustaining various injuries and bruises.

Regarding the attack on Jalud, local sources reported that a group of settlers attacked the Al-Dhahr area and violently attempted to storm citizens' homes. The town's residents confronted this attempt with their bare chests, leading to clashes that resulted in three citizens being injured. They were immediately transported to a medical center in the neighboring town of Qabalan for necessary treatment.

In Hebron, the attack was characterized by excessive brutality, as armed settlers from the 'Havat Gal' settlement targeted citizens in the Jabal Jales area. The attack was carried out with direct support from occupation soldiers, resulting in four citizens being injured, including two women, amid a state of panic among the families residing in that settlement-targeted area.

Palestinian Red Crescent teams transferred three injured individuals from Hebron to the government hospital, among them the 71-year-old elderly woman 'Umm Hamed Al-Zarou Al-Tamimi'. Medical sources confirmed that the elderly woman was severely beaten by the settlers, necessitating urgent medical intervention to monitor her health condition, which was damaged due to the physical abuse.

Citizen Rashed Al-Zarou Al-Tamimi explained that large numbers of settlers gathered in the Jabal Jales area in a clear attempt to seize citizens' lands and expand the settlement area. He pointed out that these attacks are not isolated but come within a systematic policy aimed at pressuring residents and pushing them towards forced displacement to abandon their lands and properties.

These field developments come amid an escalation in the violence perpetrated by settlers in various governorates of the West Bank, with the protection and facilitation of the occupation army. Residents in threatened areas are appealing for urgent international protection to stop these crimes that target the Palestinian presence and work to change the demographic and geographical reality in the region.

Residents are subjected to continuous abuse aimed at forcibly displacing them for the benefit of settlement expansion in the Jabal Jales area.