Categories
Saved web pages

How the U.S. secret presence in Israel missed the Hamas attack

Israeli intelligence failed to warn of or avert last weekend’s Hamas strike from Gaza, but U.S. intelligence—with more than 650,000 American citizens and significant military assets at risk on the ground in Israel—also failed to warn of prospective threats.

“The United States and by extension the Biden administration isn’t responsible for Israel’s intelligence failure,” says a senior intelligence official who requested anonymity in order to speak candidly with Newsweek. “But there are plenty of reasons why, purely in our own interests, we should have been on top of this. That we didn’t detect the attacks shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone.”

Israel's Iron Dome fires at Gaza rockets

Israel’s Iron Dome air defence system intercepts rockets launched from the Gaza Strip on October 11, 2023. Exchanges of fire are expected to continue as Israel presses a new offensive into the Palestinian enclave.
BASHAR TALEB/AFP via Getty Images

The reason, that official and others say, is that in the overall list of priorities, even in the Middle East, Israel ranks behind countries like Syria and Iraq where American troops are already engaged in combat. Hamas in particular, officials say, is mostly the responsibility of Israeli intelligence, and the United States relies upon Israel for most of its inside information on the group. where the United States is dependent. Third, the U.S. collects far more than it is able to analyze about Israel and elsewhere, an endemic problem, and one that has dogged the system for decades and is only getting worse.

Obviously, Israel is not some obscure country to U.S. intelligence: The political situation in Israel itself is a high priority for the CIA and other agencies. The Iranian threat to Israel and the region has become one of four national intelligence priorities for the Pentagon, especially as the military alliance between the two countries transformed in the first two years of the Biden administration. The United States has hundreds of troops and contractors in the country and maintains a half dozen secret bases. And constant military deployments and high-level visits formalize the internal mission of “force protection,” the Pentagon’s term used to refer to the program to safeguard U.S. personnel worldwide against potential terrorist attack.

“I’d hate to say that we missed the attack because of Ukraine, because I think we would have missed it anyway, but there are only so many resources to go around and not only is Ukraine taking up all that can be surged, but the Middle East has also lost much of its elevated urgency in recent years compared to other priorities,” says a second military intelligence officer. This official explains that much of the intelligence effort in the Middle East is dominated by those other far-flung wars. “I’m not saying the Middle East or Israel isn’t a priority,” the officer says, “but only that while we are engaged in a half-dozen counterterrorism operations from Afghanistan to Syria, they absorb the most.”

Joe Biden Israel Hamas Palestine

U.S. President Joe Biden confers with his National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan during a roundtable with Jewish community leaders in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building October 11, 2023 in Washington, DC.
Drew Angerer/Getty Images

A security briefing that didn’t mention Hamas

Still, the consistent failure to sense a growing threat is striking. Over Memorial Day weekend this year, U.S. and Israeli soldiers came together at Hatzor (Hatzerim) air force base, just 17 miles (28 km) from Gaza, for a first-of-its-kind military exercise. Codenamed Juniper Caracal, the training tested a new mortuary system for collecting and handling battlefield corpses.

“The U.S. and Israel are going to work more together in the future,” Army Captain Amanda Longoria, the officer in charge of the mortuary affairs team told the Pentagon’s own internal news organization at the time.

As Longoria and other Army reservists from New York and Delaware prepared for their trips to Israel, they were briefed on local security, particularly because the Pentagon calls Israel a “high threat” area. A gaggle of agencies contributed to painting the latest terrorist picture—Army and National Guard intelligence, Central Command, the Defense Intelligence Agency, the State Department, and the American Embassy in Jerusalem.

According to numerous government and military sources familiar with the intelligence, the briefings made no mention of anything brewing with regard to Hamas.

Nor did U.S. intelligence system report any suspicions of Hamas’ preparation for a potential attack during the Intrepid Maven wargame held by U.S. Marines, when they landed on Israel’s shores earlier this year. Nor did it report any unease during exercise Juniper Oak held in July, when some 6,400 Americans deployed to Israel. Nor when the Missouri National Guard exercised with the Israeli Home Front Command, practicing protection of the civilian population during wartime. Nor when the Middle East air commander U.S. Air Force Lt. Gen. Alexus Grynkewich visited Israel last month. Nor did intelligence detect anything brewing despite endless visits by White House and senior cabinet officials and members of Congress.

“Hamas is just not a priority, not that kind of priority,” the military intelligence officer says. “But keeping an eye on the situation inside Israel to protect our deployed troops,” he says, “I’m guessing someone dropped the ball.”

“In addition,” the officer says, “there are more than a half-a-million U.S. citizens in Israel at any time and their security is paramount as well.” The State Department says that there are some 650,000 U.S. citizens residing in or visiting Israel, almost 20 percent of them in Gaza and the West Bank.

While Washington largely depends on Israel to provide the nitty gritty intelligence on the Palestinian situation, its own responsibilities on the ground should have provided some tip offs.

The United States also quietly maintains a half-dozen bases in Israel, the most important being Site 512 in Be’er Sheva, 23 miles (38 km) from Gaza. Home to the American 13th Missile Defense Battery, the base is wholly focused on potential Iranian long-range missile attack. Over 200 Americans, three quarters of them contractors from companies like Lockheed Martin and Raytheon (RTX), operate the missiles, radars and communications link-up with Israel. The U.S. has other bases in Israel, many of which maintain arms and ammunition in gigantic warehouses, equipment meant for U.S. military forces, should they deploy to Israel in its defense. All of these bases are constantly on alert for possible terrorist attacks.

U.S. troops (currently the 56th Infantry Brigade Combat Team of the Texas National Guard) are present on the Sinai Peninsula as part of the Multinational Force and Observers (MFO), an international organization that maintains the treaty agreements between Egypt and Israel by providing a military force buffer. And back in the United States, the 42nd Infantry Division, centered on the New York National Guard, constantly assesses the security situation, being the primary unit that is earmarked in Israel war plans should the United States have to put boots on the ground.

Neither the MFO or the 42nd Infantry detected or received any intelligence indicating a possible Hamas attack, according to military sources. The NSA, which also eavesdrops on Israeli and Palestinian communications, unilaterally and together with its Israeli partners, did not detect preparations for the attack, the officials say.

In response to a request for comment on U.S. intelligence in the Mideast, a U.S. military official said it would not comment on specifics of intelligence sharing. “At this time, we are focused on providing our support to the people of Israel. We have a close partnership with Israel and always share timely intelligence about threats in the region with our partners.”

The 9/11 pattern

So why did U.S. intelligence fail to detect or predict the Hamas buildup and attack on Saturday? The answer is complex, but it follows patterns traceable in the 9/11 attack and other crises: too much information in the system, lower priority compared to other issues, over reliance on what local partners know and report.

Israeli Merkava tank near Lebanon border

Israeli soldiers ride on a Merkava tank as it drives to an undisclosed location in northern Israel near the border with Lebanon on October 9, 2023. Israel is expected to soon launch a ground invasion of the Gaza Strip.
JALAA MAREY/AFP via Getty Images

The senior intelligence official explains: “We aren’t very good at forecasting, especially when tanks aren’t sitting at the starting line, and too much of what we’re collecting is incredibly minute, useful mostly for military functions like targeting. And though all of U.S. intelligence is currently gaga for monitoring social media and so-called ‘open sources,’ there’s much that can be missed, especially when deception is involved, which may have been the case with Hamas.”

This senior intelligence official and others say that it mostly boils down to priorities. Though the U.S. spends well over $100 billion annually on intelligence collection and analysis around the globe, there are still limits to what is collected and where the resources are allocated. When multiple wars are being fought by the United States—from Ukraine to Somalia—supporting those ongoing conflicts is also the number one priority and takes up the vast majority of all resources.

The United States is also a superpower, and though collecting intelligence on Malawi is of far lesser priority than Israel, being everywhere stresses and absorbs untold reserves. There are only so many analysts, and much of what is collected by the United States that might bear upon Hamas and its internal activities—from eavesdropping to social media—is not necessarily always curated by humans, except with regard to indicators of nuclear war and other signs of immediate attack upon the United States.

Finally, multiple government insiders point out, intelligence failure amongst even those who are looking at Israel and Hamas often comes from looking in the wrong direction. “Even the FBI has a Hamas cell,” the senior intelligence official says, “but it looks for potential Hamas attacks in the United States.”

“None of this is an excuse,” the official adds. “I can assure you we’re looking now, now that it’s become a crisis. But will it eventually come out that we missed something, or that we didn’t make Hamas a high enough priority, or that we were hampered by too many other problems that we were looking at? Absolutely, but that also makes the Hamas failure humdrum rather than shocking.”

Categories
Saved web pages

Israel to UN: Northern Gaza Should Evacuate Within 24 Hours

LATEST DEVELOPMENTS:

  • Hamas tells civilians to ignore an Israeli Defense Forces call for 1.1 million civilians to evacuate to northern Gaza for southern areas within 24 hours “for their own safety.
  • The militant group also says Israeli airstrikes in the past 24 hours have killed 13 Israeli and foreign hostages.
  • U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken meets with Jordanian King Abdullah and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in Jordan.
  • Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin meets with senior government leaders in Israel.
  • U.N. says 340,000 people displaced in Gaza.
  • Israel says 1,800 killed in Hamas raid; Gaza says 1,500 killed in retaliatory strikes.

Palestinians living in the northern Gaza Strip scrambled Friday as the clock ticked down on an Israeli order to evacuate to the southern part of the Strip within 24 hours ahead of what many fear will be a major Israeli ground offensive into the Hamas-controlled territory.

The Israel Defense Forces confirmed early Friday that it had notified residents in Gaza City to leave for “their own safety and protection.”

“You will be able to return to Gaza City only when another announcement permitting it is made,” IDF spokesman Jonathan Conricus said in a livestreamed briefing on the social media platform X. “Do not approach the area of the security fence with the state of Israel.”

Hamas, however, has called for everyone to “remain steadfast in your homes and to stand firm in the face of this disgusting psychological war waged by the occupation,” according to the Associated Press.

Palestinian U.N. Ambassador Riyad Mansour told reporters Friday that Israel’s evacuation order amounts to “ethnic cleansing” of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who have nowhere to flee.

“We don’t know what’s happening at this moment in the northern part of Gaza where the Israeli occupying forces told people to evacuate — people don’t know where to go,” Mansour told reporters ahead of a meeting with Arab ambassadors. “There is no safe place in the Gaza Strip.”

United Nations spokesman Stephane Dujarric said late Thursday in New York that the evacuation order applies to about 1.1 million people and is impossible to carry out “without devastating humanitarian consequences.” He urged Israel to rescind the order.

Israel put Gaza under a “complete siege” on Monday, saying it was acting in response to Saturday’s deadly Hamas attacks, which killed more than 1,300 Israelis.

Palestinians are currently without electricity, water and fuel, making a mass evacuation even more risky and complex.

‘Chaos’

“This is chaos, no one understands what to do,” Inas Hamdan, an officer at the United Nations’ Palestinian refugee agency in Gaza City, told the AP, adding that U.N. staff are evacuating northern Gaza.

The U.N.’s Dujarric said the order also applies to all U.N. staff and those sheltering in U.N. facilities — including schools, health centers and clinics.

The U.N. agency that assists Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, says it has relocated its central operations center and its international staff of about 300 to a location in southern Gaza to continue its humanitarian work. UNRWA has about 13,000 staff in Gaza; the overwhelming majority are Palestinian.

“They are U.N. facilities. They must be protected at all times and must never come under attack in accordance with international humanitarian law,” UNRWA said in a statement.

The World Health Organization warned that it is impossible to evacuate hospital patients – many of them children and severely ill or injured people on life support machines – from northern Gaza.

Palestinian children wounded in Israeli strikes wait for treatment in Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, Oct. 13, 2023.


Palestinian children wounded in Israeli strikes wait for treatment in Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, Oct. 13, 2023.

“Moving those people is a death sentence,” said WHO’s Tarik Jasarevic.

An ongoing campaign of Israeli airstrikes that began hours after Saturday’s Hamas incursion has killed at least 1,500 people in Gaza. Israel says it has dropped 6,000 bombs over six days of bombardment.

“The numbers of casualties are increasing every hour,” Bashar Murad, director of the humanitarian group the Palestinian Red Crescent, told Alhurra, an Arabic language satellite TV sister organization of the Voice of America. “The number of dead and injured that arrived to the hospitals is much more than the capacity of these hospitals.”

The United Nations said nearly 340,000 Palestinians have been displaced from their homes in Gaza, with more than two-thirds of them taking shelter in U.N. schools. It launched a humanitarian appeal Thursday for $294 million to meet immediate needs in Gaza and the West Bank.

The U.N. Security Council will hold a closed-door meeting to discuss developments later Friday.

Military buildup

Israel has positioned 300,000 reservists near the border with Gaza but has said no decision has been made on moving forward with an offensive. In the meantime, it continues heavy bombardment of Gaza, vowing there will be no letup until Hamas releases the estimated 150 hostages they are holding.

Israeli and Lebanese media reported clashes along their mutual border Friday.

Smoke rises after Israeli shelling, as seen from Lebanese side near the border with Israel in Alma Al-Shaab, southern Lebanon, Oct. 13, 2023.


Smoke rises after Israeli shelling, as seen from Lebanese side near the border with Israel in Alma Al-Shaab, southern Lebanon, Oct. 13, 2023.

On Thursday, Human Rights Watch claimed that Israel used white phosphorus in military operations in Gaza on Wednesday in what constitutes a violation of international humanitarian law. White phosphorus can cause severe burns and long-term health issues.

“There was no use of white phosphorus in the Gaza Strip. Period,” IDF spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Amnon Sheffler told reporters Thursday.

Meanwhile, the Committee to Protect Journalists has documented at least seven journalists killed in Gaza since Saturday.

Blinken and Austin in region

The United States has said that 27 Americans were killed in the terror attack and 14 are missing.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Friday met with Jordan’s King Abdullah in Amman, a day after holding talks with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Israel.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken shake hands with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, in Amman, Jordan, Oct. 13, 2023. (Jacquelyn Martin/Pool via Reuters)


U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken shake hands with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, in Amman, Jordan, Oct. 13, 2023. (Jacquelyn Martin/Pool via Reuters)

In Amman he also met with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. The Palestinian leader has been reluctant to condemn the Hamas attacks despite no love between the two Palestinian factions but appeared to take a step in that direction Friday.

“We reject the practices of killing civilians or abusing them on both sides because they contravene morals, religion and international law,” the official Palestinian news agency, Wafa, quoted Abbas as saying according to Reuters.

From Jordan, Secretary of State Blinken traveled to Qatar Friday, where he urged Israel to safeguard civilians, but noted that Hamas was reportedly blocking roads and preventing Palestinian civilians from fleeing south.

“Now, efforts to get humanitarian aid into Gaza are complicated by the fact that Hamas continues to use innocent civilians as human shields,” Blinken said, “and is reportedly blocking roads to prevent Palestinians from moving to southern Gaza out of harm’s way.”

Blinken said leaders are working together to urgently rescue Israelis taken hostage by Hamas during its attack on Saturday. The top U.S. diplomat will also visit Bahrain and Saudi Arabia as well as Egypt. This is his largest tour of the region since taking office in January 2021.

At the White House Friday, officials said President Joe Biden took part in a call that included family members of the 14 Americans still unaccounted for following the Hamas attack.

And U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin arrived in Israel Friday for meetings with senior government leaders and to see firsthand some of the U.S. weapons and security assistance that Washington rapidly delivered to Israel in the aftermath of Hamas’s attacks.

“This is no time for neutrality, or for false equivalents, or for excuses for the inexcusable. There is never any justification for terrorism, and that’s especially true after this rampage by Hamas,” Austin told reporters in Tel Aviv.

Israelis take cover as a siren sounds a warning of incoming rockets fired from the Gaza Strip in Rehovot, Israel, Oct. 13, 2023.


Israelis take cover as a siren sounds a warning of incoming rockets fired from the Gaza Strip in Rehovot, Israel, Oct. 13, 2023.

He stressed that Israel has a right to defend itself, adding that his experience working with the Israeli military while he was the general in charge of U.S. military operations in the Middle East leaves him confident, they are and will remain “professional” and “focused on the right things.”

“Terrorists like Hamas deliberately target civilians, but democracies don’t. This is a time for resolve and not revenge, for purpose and not panic, and for security and not surrender,” Austin added.

After meeting with the Israeli War Cabinet, Austin traveled to Nevatim Air Base, where U.S. security assistance continued to arrive Friday.

The defense secretary said that aid included munitions, air defense capabilities such as more interceptors for the Israel’s Iron Dome, along with other equipment and resources.

“The U.S. is the most powerful country in the world … so we will stand with Israel even as we stand with Ukraine,” Austin said.

VOA White House Correspondent Anita Powell, United Nations Correspondent Margaret Besheer and Pentagon Correspondent Carla Babb contributed to this report. Some information for this article came from The Associated Press, Agence France-Presse and Reuters.

Categories
Saved web pages

White House: Humanitarian Corridor for Gaza Is ‘Right Thing to Do’

01000000-c0a8-0242-032c-08dbcb7d93ed_w12

white house — 

The White House echoed calls for humanitarian assistance and a corridor out of Gaza as Israel intensifies its military response to a stunning weekend attack by Palestinian militants, with the top U.S. diplomat landing in the region Thursday for a lightning round of shuttle diplomacy.

Aid officials say the humanitarian needs are overwhelming, and analysts say there is no easy solution to the mounting concerns.

“We are having conversations with Israeli officials about the continued need for humanitarian assistance for the Palestinian people, who are victims here as well,” said John Kirby, director of strategic communications for the National Security Council.

“It’s the right thing to do,” Kirby said, in response to VOA’s question about the White House’s thoughts on the creation of a humanitarian corridor.

White House officials have said this week that they are speaking to Egypt about a possible humanitarian corridor. There are only two official exit points from the Gaza Strip. An Israeli bombardment hit the main one, which goes into Egypt, on Tuesday. The other leads to Israel.

Humanitarian groups and the United Nations have warned of a looming crisis as the Israeli military advances on the Gaza Strip, which is about double the size of Washington, D.C., and home to about 2 million people, according to CIA World Fact Book estimates.

“There is not one immune centimeter in Gaza,” said Hamada El Bayeri of the United Nations’ Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. “So far there are no safe passages or corridors for the civilian population to use or for the humanitarian community also to use.”

Analysts point to Egypt.

“As a beneficiary of extensive U.S. support and as a security partner of Israel, Egypt must step up in the crisis,” said Mark Dubowitz, CEO of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.

“Helping bring in aid is a good start,” he said. “But a humanitarian corridor, if established, should also enable the departure of Palestinian civilians — including, temporarily, into Egyptian territory — so as to spare lives and give Israel the chance to eradicate Hamas. At the same time, Israel should condition the provision of aid on Hamas’ release of hostages.”

Secretary of State Antony Blinken will travel from Israel to Egypt, Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates — all in the space of four days — in an echo of his predecessor Henry Kissinger’s sprint through the region to manage the fallout of Israel’s 1973 war.

The U.S. State Department said Blinken aims to “engage regional partners on efforts to help prevent the conflict from spreading, secure the immediate and safe release of hostages and identify mechanisms for the protection of civilians.”

Mirette Mabrouk, who leads the Egypt program at the Washington-based Middle East Institute, told VOA that the idea of a Gaza-to-Egypt corridor is fraught.

“It sounds like the kind of thing that no one would object to,” she said, speaking to VOA on Zoom. “I mean, it sounds wonderful. The problem is, what that means is, the Israelis would like the Gazans to exit Gaza and move into Egypt. And if that were to happen, history tells us that they will never ever be allowed back in.”

And, she said: “I’ve been speaking to Egyptian diplomats over the last two days, and security people. My understanding is, this just isn’t going to happen.”

Mabrouk recommended another course.

“If we can be persuaded for a cease-fire,” she said, “then at the very, very least, we can see where we go from here. Because otherwise, it’s honestly a zero sum. It’s a zero-sum game.”

U.S. President Joe Biden has not spoken publicly of a cease-fire since the crisis began Saturday.

Jorge Agobian contributed to this report.

Categories
Saved web pages

As Deaths Soar in Gaza From Israeli Strikes, Egypt Offers Aid, but No Exit

12egypt-gaza-1-hvwk-facebookJumbo.jpg

Gazans are blocked from fleeing through Egypt, which has kept tight control of its border. An Israeli invasion of Gaza could test President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi’s approach.

Categories
Saved web pages

Egypt says Israel seeks to empty Gaza, rejects corridors for civilians

33XX98Z-Preview-1697101277.jpg?resize=12

Egypt has discussed plans with the United States and others to provide humanitarian aid through its border with the Gaza Strip but rejects any move to set up safe corridors for refugees fleeing the enclave, according to Egyptian security sources.

Gaza, a coastal strip of land wedged between Israel in the north and east and Egypt to the southwest, is home to about 2.3 million people who have been living under a blockade since Palestinian armed group Hamas took control there in 2007.

list of 3 itemslist 1 of 3list 2 of 3list 3 of 3end of list

Egypt has long restricted the flow of Gaza Palestinians onto its territory, even during the fiercest conflicts.

Cairo, a frequent mediator between Israel and the Palestinians, always insists the two sides resolve conflicts within their borders, saying this is the only way Palestinians can secure their right to statehood.

US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said the US had been holding consultations with Israel and Egypt about the idea of a safe passage for civilians from Gaza, which was hit by a massive Israeli assault in response to a deadly incursion by Hamas fighters into Israel.

Those consultations were continuing, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Wednesday.

One of the Egyptian security sources, who asked not to be identified, told Reuters news agency that Egypt rejected the idea of safe corridors for civilians to protect “the right of Palestinians to hold on to their cause and their land”.

Right to return

Several Arab states still have camps for Palestinian refugees who are descendants of those who fled or left their homes during the war surrounding Israel’s 1948 creation.

The Palestinians and other Arab states have said a final peace deal needs to include the right of those refugees to return, a move Israel has always rejected.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said on Wednesday that crucial life-saving supplies, including fuel, food and water, must be allowed into Gaza.

“We need rapid and unimpeded humanitarian access now,” he told reporters, thanking Egypt “for its constructive engagement to facilitate humanitarian access through the Rafah crossing and to make the El Arish airport available for critical assistance”.

UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric later said: “Civilians need to be protected. We do not want to see a mass exodus of Gazans.”

Egypt has been intensifying its efforts to contain the situation in Gaza, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi told Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani during a meeting in Cairo, a statement from el-Sisi’s office said.

According to the Egyptian security sources, talks between Egypt and the US, Qatar and Turkey discussed the idea of delivering humanitarian aid through the Rafah crossing between Gaza and Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula under a geographically limited ceasefire.

Turkey’s president said work had started to deliver aid, without elaborating.

The Rafah crossing, which is the main exit point from Gaza not controlled by Israel, has been closed since Tuesday after Israeli bombardments hit on the Palestinian side, according to officials in Gaza and Egyptian sources.

Egypt has made repeated statements this week warning against the possibility that Israel’s assault on Gaza could lead to the displacement of residents from the enclave onto Egyptian territory.

Israel’s ambassador in Egypt, Amira Oron, said in a post on social media that Israel had “no intentions in relation to Sinai, and has not asked Palestinians to move there … Sinai is Egyptian territory”.

Asked about the prospect of displacement following a meeting with Tajani, Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry said: “Egypt was keen to open the Rafah crossing to provide humanitarian aid, food and medicine, but instability and the expansion of the conflict leads to more hardship and more refugees to safe areas, including Europe.”

Source: Reuters

Categories
Saved web pages

Egypt rejects proposal for evacuation corridor from Gaza, official says


CRM

  • Those We Have Lost
  • Those we have lost
  • Those We Have Lost
  • Those We Have Lost
  • Those We Have Lost
  • Those we have lost
  • Those We Have Lost
  • Those we have lost
  • Those we have lost
  • Those We Have Lost
  • Those We Have Lost
  • Those we have lost
  • Those We Have Lost
  • Those We Have Lost
Categories
Saved web pages

New York City councilwoman charged after attending Brooklyn pro-Palestine rally with gun visible

WABC logo

Friday, October 13, 2023 3:48PM

BROOKLYN (WABC) — City Councilmember Inna Vernikov was charged with criminal possession of a firearm after showing up to Thursday’s Brooklyn College protest with a gun visible in her hip.

The councilwoman, a Ukrainian-born lawyer who represents southern Brooklyn, surrendered to the 70th Precinct with her attorney and was issued a summons to appear in court at a later date.

She also surrendered both her weapon and her permit to carry a firearm.

Vernikov has a concealed carry license, but appears to be breaking the state law passed earlier this year making it illegal to possess a gun at a protest.

She was counter-protesting the pro-Palestine rally organized by the Brooklyn College chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine Day of Action.

Vernikov is Jewish and has been vocal in support of Israel. She claimed in a statement the rally would make CUNY campuses unsafe.

ALSO READ | How aid groups are responding to the Israel-Hamas war, and where to donate

“At no point in time was anyone menaced or injured as a result of her possessing the firearm at the earlier protest,” a police statement said.

She posted a video Thursday stating, “If you are here, standing today with these people, you’re nothing short of a terrorist without the bombs.”

Gov. Kathy Hochul commented on social media saying, “New York’s gun safety laws apply to everyone.”

CUNY For Palestine, which has a running disagreement with the councilwoman, posted one of the many pictures of her with her weapon and a statemen:

“At today’s rally on Brooklyn College campus led by the students in their SJP chapter, Inna Vernikov showed up showcasing a gun to Palestinian students and their allies. These are the tactics of force and intimidation used by zionist groups to silence any support for Palestine.”

ALSO READ | Upper East Side resident returns to Israel for IDF active duty as war continues

———-

* More Brooklyn news

* Send us a news tip

* Download the abc7NY app for breaking news alerts

* Follow us on YouTube

Submit a tip or story idea to Eyewitness News

Have a breaking news tip or an idea for a story we should cover? Send it to Eyewitness News using the form below. If attaching a video or photo, terms of use apply.

Categories
Saved web pages

Former Mossad chief urges caution as Israel sets out to destroy Hamas

%2Fmethode%2Ftimes%2Fprod%2Fweb%2Fbin%2F

Gaza becoming a ‘hellhole’ as Palestinians ordered to evacuate

October 13 2023, 5.20pm

Alistair Dawber

, Washington |

Joshua Thurston

|

Richard Spencer

, Tel Aviv |

Seren Hughes

| David Harding |

Oliver Wright

|

David Chazan

, Paris |

Kieran Gair

|

Laurence Sleator

Categories
Saved web pages

C.I.A. Reports Contained General Warnings of Potential Gaza Flare-up

13dc-intel-jlgq-facebookJumbo.jpg

Reports issued days before the Hamas attack did not foresee such a deadly strike, but did say rocket attacks were possible.

Categories
Saved web pages

Explosive claims about the Israel-Hamas war are going viral. But the truth is not always so simple

231013093126-02-israel-gaza-viral.jpg?c=

Editor’s Note: A version of this article first appeared in the “Reliable Sources” newsletter. Sign up for the daily digest chronicling the evolving media landscape here.

The public is enveloped in the fog of war.

As the world’s eyes remain fixated on the escalating conflict between Israel and Hamas, viewers are being overwhelmed with dubious claims saturating the global discourse. Adding to the challenge of swimming through the heavily polluted information ocean is the reality that some questionable claims circulating have also been given credence by authoritative sources.

In only the last few days, the Israeli Defense Forces, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office and President Joe Biden made the shocking assertion that Hamas terrorists had beheaded babies, a grisly claim that the White House has since walked back.

As the allegation came under heavy scrutiny, Netanyahu’s office took the extraordinary step Thursday of publicly releasing graphic photos of the bodies of babies who had been murdered and torched by Hamas, a monstrous act beyond comprehension, though inconsistent with the initial claims of decapitation.

Meanwhile, The Wall Street Journal reported that Iran had played a direct role in orchestrating the terror attack on Israel, a claim that has been called into serious question by further reporting, citing US intelligence sources. All the while, an untold number of doctored and misleading images have gone viral online, leaving audiences with a warped perception of what is actually happening in the Middle East.

It goes without saying that war is messy. And from that mess can emerge information that is not entirely accurate. Government authorities and news organizations on the ground encounter a multitude of logistical challenges and ethical dilemmas as they quickly gather information and attempt to verify it. Those challenges are especially pronounced when operating in an environment teeming with high emotion and chaos brought by bombings and gunfire.

Such conditions are fertile grounds for spawning preliminary reports that later prove to be incorrect. Sometimes they turn out to have been exaggerated or missing crucial context. In other cases, they are entirely false. Honest mistakes can occur while working under immense pressure to disseminate information to the public at a hurried pace — even from sources with good track records.

This has been on full display during the Israeli-Hamas war. Usually, a reader can take The WSJ’s reporting to the bank. Usually, when the President of the United States makes an explosive — and especially gruesome — claim, the public can trust that he has done his due diligence.

But that hasn’t been the case, despite the stakes being extraordinarily high — a truth that government officials and journalists must remember as they deliver news and updates to the public.

In our fractured and algorithmically-driven, 24/7 news environment, information can speed across the planet and seep into the public consciousness at an astonishing pace. This too often happens before information is properly scrutinized, verified and wrapped in the necessary context. In the rush to inform, audiences can end up misinformed if proper care is not taken.

Once a narrative has been rooted, it can be challenging to ever ascertain whether it is entirely true. Were babies decapitated by Hamas terrorists? Did Iran directly play a role in orchestrating the attack? The evidence available at the time of this publication paints a less-than-clear picture. A definitive statement simply cannot be made.

That gray area leaves newsrooms with thorny conundrums as they try to fact-check widely circulated claims and sort fact from fiction for their audiences — all while watching the initial narrative’s roots grow deeper and deeper into the public’s understanding of events.

In many cases, powerful media and political figures who have shown little interest or concern with disseminating the facts, are comfortable misleading and/or lying to their audiences in hopes of amassing power or treasure. The result is a muddying of the waters, providing fertile ground for conspiracy theorists and distracting from the very real human impacts taking place in the war zone, where thousands have already been killed and injured.

While social media platforms have slashed moderation and misinformation efforts, news organizations are facing ever greater challenges of reporting on the war in real-time. Their responsibility to get it right could not be more paramount.