Syria – GS https://t.co/HZXhXwONZF
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U.S. airstrikes hit Iran-linked sites in Syria after attacks on American troopshttps://t.co/WGAqWfFBUD— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) November 13, 2023
Day: November 13, 2023
The US carried out another set of strikes against targets affiliated with Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in eastern Syria, according to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, following continued attacks on US forces in the region.
Austin said the strikes were directed by President Joe Biden and targeted a training facility and a safe house near the cities of Abu Kamal and Mayadin, respectively.
A defense official confirmed Sunday that militia personnel associated with Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) were present at the facilities hit by US air strikes earlier that day. The official said it was unclear, however, how many – if any – of those personnel were killed.
“Initial evaluation of the strikes indicate that U.S. forces successfully destroyed the intended facilities. Additionally, we can confirm the presence of IRGC-related militia personnel, though we’re unable to provide a casualty assessment at this time,” the official said.
The strikes, which took place late Sunday night local time, mark the third time in three weeks that the US has attacked targets in the region, as it holds Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps responsible for repeated rocket and drone launches against facilities housing US troops in Iraq and Syria.
In total, there have been at least 46 attacks on US forces in Iraq and Syria since October 17, and at least 56 troops have been injured. Pentagon deputy press secretary Sabrina Singh said Thursday the injuries were a combination of traumatic brain injuries and minor injuries.
“The President has no higher priority than the safety of U.S. personnel, and he directed today’s action to make clear that the United States will defend itself, its personnel, and its interests,” Austin said in the statement.
On Wednesday, two US F-15 fighter jets struck a weapons storage facility in eastern Syria in what the Pentagon called a “precision self-defense strike,” as the military tried to send a message of deterrence to Iran while avoiding further escalation in the region.
A senior military official said the facility is believed to have housed weapons used in “many of the airstrikes that have taken place against our forces here in the region.”
And on October 26, the US carried out airstrikes against two facilities in eastern Syria linked to Iran’s IRGC and affiliated groups. The strikes targeted a weapons storage facility and an ammunition storage facility.
The US has attempted to send a message of deterrence to Iran through the strikes and the military presence in the region, including two carrier strike groups and an amphibious ready group, as well as additional air defense systems that have been moved to the Middle East.
But the attacks on US forces in Iraq and Syria have persisted, even as the US has tried to separate the conflict in Gaza from the rest of the region.
MI5 are closing down Iran and China spy networks, says Tom Tugendhat https://t.co/teQv5JhakU via @ElPasoInc
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) November 13, 2023
Updated October 21, 2023 at 12:30 PM ET
On Saturday morning, twenty trucks of humanitarian aid crossed into Gaza from Egypt through the Rafah border. The trucks were carrying medicine, medical supplies and food.
As the trucks made their way through, hundreds of foreign nationals gathered at the Gaza side, hoping to escape the violence that has beset the Palestinian territory. But by the afternoon, it had become clear that no one would be allowed to leave for now.
We will continue to update this report as the situation evolves.
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Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.
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Updated with reporting by RBC.
Russian President Vladimir Putin will hold his end-of-year press conference and televised call-in show in a “combined format” this year, the Kremlin announced Thursday.
Set-piece political events involving Putin have been delayed or scrapped altogether in the tumultuous months following Moscow’s February 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
The Russian leader did not hold his Direct Line call-in show or his annual press conference last year — and his annual state-of-the-nation address was delayed to February.
But on Thursday, the Kremlin confirmed that both events would take place by the end of the year.
“It will be a combined format. Yes, it will be this year,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told journalists at a press briefing.
Peskov said that a date has already been set for the event, but added that an official announcement would be made “in due time.”
In June, the Kommersant business daily, citing unnamed sources close to the Kremlin, reported that this year’s Direct Line was “tentatively planned to be held in November-December.”
Peskov on Thursday did not specify how the Kremlin intends to combine Putin’s televised call-in program and the annual press conference. The former event allows ordinary citizens to ask the Russian leader to solve their daily problems, while the latter allows journalists to question the president on a range of issues.
Russia’s RBC business news website on Friday reported that the combined call-in and press conference event was scheduled to take place on Dec. 14, according to two unnamed sources familiar with the planning.
First launched in 2001, Putin’s Direct Line call-in show aims to project an image of the Russian leader as a “problem-solver-in-chief,” as he personally addresses the complaints of ordinary citizens that regional and local officials are accused of ignoring.
On 26 October, a Hamas delegation headed by politburo member Mousa Abu Marzouk turned up in Moscow for talks that – according to Russian readouts – focused on the safety of Russian citizens in Gaza and the release of hostages. The Russians kept tight-lipped about the real purpose of the visit. The simultaneous presence in Moscow of Iran’s deputy foreign minister, Ali Bagheri Kani – who also met Hamas – suggested a troubling degree of coordination between Hamas on the one hand, and Russia and Iran on the other. The Israelis were quick to lodge a protest with Moscow.
Feting Hamas just weeks after its terrorist raid on Israel is part and parcel of Vladimir Putin’s deliberate strategy of bolstering Russia’s waning influence in the Middle East. Deft diplomacy and cynical opportunism can help the Kremlin carve out a role for itself in a region long deemed essential to Russia’s great power ambitions. It would not be the first time.
Russia’s involvement in the Middle East has a long history. During the cold war, Moscow worked to turn Arab nationalism to its own strategic purposes; that is, to undermine western alliances and win clients among up-and-coming Arab states. In the mid-1950s, the Soviet Union extended military aid to Egypt, and later to Syria and Iraq. In 1956 Moscow skilfully used the British-French-Israeli invasion of the Suez canal zone in Egypt to advertise its support for the cause of Arab liberation and to distract attention from the Soviet invasion of Hungary.
After the Soviet Union’s allies suffered a crushing defeat in the 1967 Arab–Israeli war, the Soviets broke off diplomatic relations with Israel but increased their support of the Arabs, rebuilding Egyptian and Syrian armies virtually from scratch. But for all their military aid, what the Soviets really wanted was a comprehensive peace settlement through a Soviet-American agreement, where the US “delivered” Israel, while the Soviet Union “delivered” the Arabs.
Only there was a small problem: neither Israel nor the Arabs were cooperating. Nor did the US seem eager to deal. The Soviets were barely forewarned of Egypt’s and Syria’s decision to go to war with Israel in 1973. The Yom Kippur war left the Soviet leader, Leonid Brezhnev, deeply dissatisfied with his Arab friends. “Fuck them!” Brezhnev was reported as saying. “We’ve been offering them a reasonable way all these years. But no, they wanted to have a fight.”
In the aftermath, Egypt’s president, Anwar Sadat, pursued rapprochement with the US and then with Israel, a policy that led to the signing of the Camp David accords in 1978 and the return of Sinai to Egypt. The Soviets fumed at what to them looked like a break in the united Arab front; they worried, in particular, about the unresolved Palestinian question.
The 1970s were the high point for Moscow’s standing in the Middle East. Its influence there was largely a function of the Soviet ability to furnish a wide-ranging clientele with military aid. Its advocacy on behalf of the Palestinians (including consistent support for Yasser Arafat) helped sustain the Soviet Union’s reputation in the region, even if it was tarnished by the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979.
The end of the cold war witnessed a sea-change. Having shed its pretensions to superpower status, Moscow saw its influence in the Middle East dissipate. It was only with the beginning of the Syrian civil war that Putin saw opportunities for a comeback. His successful backing of Syria’s dictator, Bashar al-Assad, despite the latter’s use of chemical weapons against his own people, was a pointer to Russia’s increasing relevance.
The protracted quagmire of the war in Ukraine has weakened Russia’s ability to meddle in the Middle East (though it retains its naval base at Tartus and an airbase in Latakia, both in Syria). Understanding Russia’s role in Syria as a check on Iran’s influence, Benjamin Netanyahu has tried to maintain a balancing act between supporting Ukraine and maintaining a working relationship with the Kremlin. And Putin, vitally interested in keeping Israel neutral in the Ukraine war, has been careful not to upset Netanyahu. The Hamas attack has blown up this uneasy equilibrium.
Yet today, unlike in the late 1960s and the early 1970s, Russia is not a superpower that can project force across the region and sustain a wide-ranging clientele through military and economic aid.
What Putin can do is leverage his relationship with Iran and Syria, and Russia’s contacts with Hamas, to insert Russia into the peace process in the Middle East. Asked whether Russia could mediate in the conflict, Putin claimed recently that it can, relying on its traditional relations with the Palestinians, and good relations with Israel. By finding a place for itself at the high table of Middle Eastern politics, Putin hopes to regain some of the international stature he had lost by invading Ukraine.
At the very least, he can win the sympathy of regional powerbrokers by championing the Palestinian cause. He has tried to do this by refusing to blame Hamas, and by sponsoring a (failed) ceasefire resolution at the UN security council. Given the scope of Israel’s military operations in Gaza, it won’t be hard for the Russians to deflect any further criticism of their war in Ukraine by pointing to the smoking ruins of the Palestinian enclave.
Precisely because Russia is no longer a superpower, it has little credibility to lose. Its assets in Syria notwithstanding, it does not have to become embroiled in a widening war. Rather, Putin can do what the Soviets did in the 1956 Suez crisis: cheer from the sidelines and score moral victories.
This does not mean that Putin wants an escalation. A broader war that embroils Russia’s key partner, Iran, carries significant risks for Russia too. But, unlike the heyday of Moscow’s involvement in the Middle East, Putin’s decisions have limited bearing on how the current crisis unfolds.
There is one immediately tangible way a war in the Middle East would benefit Putin: by potentially raising the price of oil. So far, the impact has been limited, but we may not have yet seen the worst of it. Russia could yet earn significant dividends on the new woes of a long-suffering region.
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Sergey Radchenko is Wilson E Schmidt distinguished professor at the Henry A Kissinger Center, Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in Baltimore
As Russia’s invasion of Ukraine nears the end of its second year, a conclusion to the conflict seems as distant as ever.
Kyiv’s counteroffensive has failed to decisively break through the Russian Army’s prepared defenses in Ukraine’s southern and eastern regions. Meanwhile, the Kremlin is digging in for a long war and assumes it can outlast the West’s interest and Ukraine’s will to fight.
Without a firm U.S. commitment and strategy to see the war to a victorious conclusion, Putin’s prediction that he can outlast Ukraine and the West may come to pass.
During the summer and fall of 2023, the scale of Russia’s societal, financial and political mobilization to support the war effort became apparent. Under the draft budget passed by the Russian State Duma on Oct. 26, defense spending for 2024 will rise by 68 percent to the equivalent of $115 billion, making up almost a third of total spending.
This explosion in military spending will help buoy the Russian economy for the long haul, even if Russia’s predicted 2024 economic growth rate of 2.3 percent (per the estimate of the Russian Ministry of Economic Development) will be accompanied by the inflationary effects of high social and military spending.
Under the public prodding of President Vladimir Putin, Russia’s defense industry has expanded the production of key munitions and equipment for a long campaign.
Despite initial disruptions to defense production brought on by Western retaliatory sanctions following Russia’s February 2022 invasion of Ukraine, Moscow is reportedly “on track” to manufacture 2 million artillery shells a year. To circumvent challenging U.S. sanctions on the export of critical electronics and chips to Russia, it has turned to creative import workarounds to acquire the critical components it lacks the ability to produce domestically.
Russia is also forging ahead with plans to produce 6,000 Iranian-developed drones in Tatarstan that would be necessary to sustain Russia’s air bombardment campaign against Ukrainian civilian and military targets and to import massive amounts of munitions from North Korea.
Rather than attempting a risky total mobilization of Russia’s population, the Kremlin has continued to choose a more sustainable strategy of partial mobilization to support a long war.
In September 2022, the Kremlin announced a “partial mobilization” program to replace and refine a disjointed shadow mobilization strategy, which avoided a single large manpower push with an eye on long-term viability. With the assassination of Yevgeny Prigozhin in August, the Kremlin power vertical’s most significant “ultra-patriot” challenger from within the ruling elite has been removed. The Wagner boss had already been sidelined after his June mutiny, but his death likely gives the Kremlin reason to believe that it can continue to prosecute the war on its terms without fear of intra-elite challenges for the foreseeable future.
Just as Russia’s logistical legwork to support a long war takes shape, the domestic and international factors that enable sustained U.S. support for Ukraine are weakening. Hamas’s bloody October attack on Israel and Israel’s ground operation in Gaza has already knocked Ukraine out of the headlines. As the U.S. responds to Iranian proxy attacks on its forces and shift forces into the wider Middle East, the threat of an expanding conflict threatens to absorb Washington’s bandwidth.
Encouragingly, the House has resolved its leadership crisis through Rep. Mike Johnson’s (R-La.) selection to lead the chamber. He promised in an Oct. 26 interview that America would not abandon Ukraine. Despite his previous opposition to Ukraine aid legislation as well as the White House and Senate’s preference for a combined Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan and border security package, Johnson plans to “marry” Ukraine aid with border security in a bid to secure their passage together.
No matter how this strategy is received by the conference, Johnson will need to delicately thread a needle of legislative priorities (including passing the fiscal year 2024 budget) to push Ukraine’s aid package across the finish line, all while wrangling a Republican Conference whose interest in providing a large aid package to Ukraine is decidedly mixed.
Nonetheless, Russia’s war effort still faces substantial obstacles. While Russia has boosted its military industry, its economy is distorted by the demands of wartime mobilization. Despite the absence to date of decisive breakthroughs in Ukraine’s counteroffensive, Kyiv’s forces continue to inflict losses on Russian forces and reach into Russia’s rear areas with long-range fires. Ukraine and its Western partners have already demonstrated remarkable staying power in this conflict.
However, staving off defeat will require Washington to provide a sustained flow of aid to Ukraine in pursuit of defined aims, no matter how domestic imperatives and events elsewhere in the world may demand attention elsewhere. Otherwise, the Kremlin’s long bet on Western loss of interest in Ukraine could pay off.
Wesley Culp is a research assistant for defense strategy and great-power competition at the American Enterprise Institute. He can be found on Twitter @WesleyJCulp.
Copyright 2023 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
The Israel Defence Forces says it has secured a “Hamas military stronghold” inside the Gaza Strip.
It said in a statement the stronghold belonged to “the Hamas terrorist organisation in the northern Gaza Strip”.
“Furthermore, IDF troops located a number of Hamas terrorists who barricaded themselves in a building adjacent to the al Quds Hospital, and planned to carry out an attack on the forces from there.”
Anti-tank missiles, launchers, other weapons and “various intelligence materials” were reportedly found inside.
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has hinted at extending “indefinite control” over security in Gaza as Israel ramps up its ground invasion into the region.
“I think Israel will for an indefinite period have security responsibility. We have seen what happens when Israel does not have the security responsibility,” he told ABC news, referencing the 7 October attack.
“When we do not have this security responsibility what we have is an eruption of Hamas terror on a scale we could not imagine.”
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has hinted at extending ‘indefinite control’ over Gaza
An Israeli Defence Forces tank attacked Lebanese territory after it was attack by a “terrorist squad”, a military spokesperson said.
“A short time ago, an IDF tank attacked a terrorist squad in Lebanese territory that tried to launch an anti-tank missile towards Israeli territory near the Shatula area.
“Also, earlier today IDF forces attacked a position of the terrorist organisation Hezbollah, in order to remove a threat,” IDF spokesperon Daniel Hagari said.
Thousands of Gazans are using the evacuation corridor the country has opened along the Salah al Din Road, Israel’s defence ministry agency the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) said.
“Happening now. Thousands pass through the evacuation corridor the IDF opened for civilians in northern Gaza to move southwards,” it said on X, formerly Twitter.
The road allows those in the north to travel to the south, where IDF forces are not yet operating on the ground – although airstrikes are still occurring across the strip.
The United Arab Emirates is to set up a field hospital in the Gaza Strip, it has been reported.
Five aircraft flew out of Abu Dhabi for Arish in northern Egypt carrying equipment and supplies for the 150-bed facility, WAM news agency said late on Monday.
An official contacted by AFP said there was no immediate information on how the equipment will be transferred to Gaza, where there is only one operational border point, the Rafah crossing near Arish.
Palestinians stand above debris after Israeli bombardment in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip
The United Nations has warned that “no place is safe” in Gaza.
No place is safe in Gaza. Sixty-six people have been killed & 540 injured sheltering in 50 UNRWA installations this past month.
“People sheltering under the UN flag- seeking safety in UNRWA schools- were killed in places that should be protected under International Humanitarian Law,” it said on X, formerly Twitter.
People hold Israeli flags in Jerusalem, marking one-month since Hamas’s attacks which left 1,400 dead
People light candles on the one-month anniversary of Hamas’s attack on Israel on 7 October which left 1,400 dead
The Israel Defence Forces have claimed they intercepted “a suspicious aerial target” near the blue-line which marks the UN-drawn boundary between Israel and Lebanon.
“A short while ago, the IDF aerial defence array intercepted a suspicious aerial target that was identified in the area of the border with Lebanon before it crossed into Israeli territory.
“Furthermore, a short while ago, terrorists fired at an IDF post in the area of Aramshe in northern Israel. No injuries were reported. IDF soldiers responded with artillery fire toward the origins of the shooting in Lebanon,” it wrote on Telegram.
Germany has decided to release 71 million euros in aid as part of an ongoing review of its support for Palestinians, and has pledged an additional 20 million euros in new funding, the development ministry said.
Germany responded to Hamas militants’ bloody attack on Israel on 7 October by temporarily suspending its development aid to the Palestinian Territories pending review.
“Due to the fragile situation in the region, the review has not yet been fully completed,” a statement from the ministry said.
Rishi Sunak believes a pro-Palestinian march on Armistice Day would be “provocative and disrespectful”.
The PM’s official spokesman said operational decisions on whether to ban the planned march in London were for the Metropolitan Police. But the spokesman said the Government would “carefully consider” any application to prevent the march.“
The prime minister himself does not think it’s right for these sorts of protests to be scheduled on Armistice Day,” the spokesman said. “He believes that is provocative and disrespectful.”
Rishi Sunak believes a pro-Palestinian march on Armistice Day would be ‘provocative and disrespectful’
Russia is at it again. Using social media and other digital platforms to push disinformation, this time about the situation in Israel and Gaza, said Microsoft President Brad Smith at an international peace forum in Paris on Saturday.
Smith said tech giants like Microsoft had gotten pretty good at detecting misinformation campaigns, and can see that Russia is now engaging in one regarding the Israel-Hamas war.
“We are getting very good at identifying a Russian campaign, like when they tried to tell people not to get the Covid vaccine,” he said. “Or today, when we see Russian disinformation in the Middle East.”
The trouble is that when it comes to conflict in Israel, Western society and the mainstream media behave very differently than in other situations, and will take almost everything they see on social media at face value. And that gives bad actors like Russia, Iran and Hamas an opportunity to manipulate the diplomatic picture.
Will Smith’s words resonate and get people to wake up, to realize they can’t believe everything they are seeing or being told? Or will they continue to swallow the lies because those lies fit their preferred narratives regarding Israel?
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An Oct. 14 Facebook post (direct link, archive link) includes a photo of deceased children it claims was taken amid the Israel-Hamas war.
“CHILD GENOCIDE IN PALESTINE,” reads the post. “614 Palestinian children murdered by the Israeli IOF Forces.”
It was shared more than 40 times in four days. Other versions of the claim were shared widely on Instagram and X, formerly known as Twitter. Democratic Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar also reposted a version of the claim on X, as reported by outlets including the National Review and the New York Post.
Fact check roundup: Israel-Hamas war sparks many misleading claims online. Here’s what’s true and false.
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This photo predates the Israel-Hamas war that began in October by more than a decade. It was taken after a chemical weapons attack in Syria in 2013.
The photo matches one used in a National Geographic article from 2013. The image’s caption says it shows deceased children after a chemical weapons attack near Damascus, Syria, on Aug. 21, 2013.
United Press International and AFP’s photo archives also describe the photo as showing the aftermath of a chemical weapons attack in Syria in 2013.
The Obama administration issued a report later that month saying the U.S. government had “high confidence” the Syrian government was behind the attack. A preliminary assessment reported the strike killed more than 1,400 people, including at least 400 children.
Fact check: Altered video used to make false claim CNN staged Israel-Hamas coverage
Children have been killed in the Israel-Hamas war, though exact figures vary.
UNICEF told CNN on Oct. 14 that more than 700 Palestinian children had been killed, according to local sources. It came a day after the organization more vaguely said “hundreds and hundreds of children” had been killed, in a statement that also called for an immediate ceasefire.
Defense for Children International, an organization focused on protecting children’s rights worldwide, said on Oct. 16 that more than 1,000 Palestinian children had been killed since the conflict began on Oct. 7.
A widely-spreading version of the claim was posted on X by a self-proclaimed journalist under the name Sulaiman Ahmed. The same account previously posted a false claim that Israeli forces destroyed a historic church in Gaza. USA TODAY has debunked that claim and an array of others surrounding the Israel-Hamas war, including false assertions that the Israeli defense minister said the country had “abolished” the rules of war and that a video shows Russian President Vladimir Putin warning the U.S. not to get involved in the conflict.
USA TODAY reached out to users who shared the post for comment but did not immediately receive a response.
AFP, Reuters and Lead Stories also debunked the claim.
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