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Thread: Israeli-Arab War

  1. #1641
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    Default Re: Israeli-Arab War

    Those poor "Palestinians"...


    Booby-Trapped Explosives Built into Walls of UNRWA Clinic

    Over 80 kilograms of explosive material built into rigged UN-funded clinic; no response from UNRWA

    July 31, 2014

    New details have emerged about the booby-trapped clinic explosion that killed three IDF Maglan unit soldiers in Gaza earlier this week - Sergeant First Class Matan Gottlieb, 21, from Rishon LeZion; Sergeant First Class Omar Chai, 21, from Savion; and Sergeant First Class Guy Algranati, 20, of Tel Aviv, hy"d.

    Over eighty kilograms of explosives were built into the UN-funded hospital's walls themselves, it was cleared for publication Thursday - revealing that the clinic itself was built to mask, and perform, potential acts of terror on the IDF.

    Moreover, the clinic was built over tens of terror tunnels, according to the report.

    The UNRWA (United Nations Relief and Works Agency) has yet to respond to the revelations, and has still not responded to the deaths of the Israeli soldiers Wednesday.

    On Tuesday, Hamas and Islamic Jihad rocket arsenals were found in a UNRWA school for the third time this month.

    After the first finding of rockets at an UNRWA school, it was reported that rather than destroying the rockets, UNRWA workers called Hamas to come remove them.

    While it would not comment on the deaths of the three soldiers, UNRWA was quick to place blame on Israel for a rocket strike on one of their schools in Gaza.

    The UN agency also immediately blamed Israel for a strike on Gaza’s Shifa hospital, resulting in the deaths of over a dozen Gazans. It was later revealed that in all likelihood, a misfired Hamas Fajr-5 Iranian-made 100 kg warhead destined for Israel had struck the hospital.

  2. #1642
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    Whorealdo is getting ripped apart by the chicks on 4 against 1 or whatever the hell they call this show. LMAO.

    He just got called "People like you" and he said "What are people like me?" She said, "An apologist for the Palestinians" LOL!!!!!
    Libertatem Prius!


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  3. #1643
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    Egypt Steps In And Pushes The Obama Regime Out Of Gaza

    By Cultural Limits on • ( 2 )

    Just what did they have in those tunnels?
    Secretary of State John Kerry, no Nobel Peace Prize for you this year:
    Israel said it withdrew the last of its ground forces from Gaza on Tuesday as it and Hamas began a temporary cease-fire. The calm sets the stage for talks in Egypt on a broader deal for a long-term truce and the rebuilding of the battered, blockaded coastal territory.
    Both sides halted cross-border attacks as the three-day truce took effect at 8 a.m. (0500 GMT) Tuesday. The shelling stopped and in Gaza City, where streets had been deserted during the war, traffic picked up and shops started opening.
    If the calm holds, it would be the longest lull in almost a month of fighting that has killed nearly 1,900 Palestinians and 67 Israelis. SOURCE – New York Daily News
    Well, at least somebody got them to quit fighting.
    It’s nowhere close to over yet and both sides are taking a wait and see attitude, but there is something more significant happening here: the more “moderate” and stable Arab nations now recognize that the United States at this time does not know which end is up or who their real friends are. They also are taking deliberate steps to keep the more violent and unconstructive Islamic forces at bay (Hamas, ISIL, etc.) as troops are being amassed on borders between Saudi Arabia and Iraq to keep the violence away from additional Muslim holy sites. The leadership in the countries surrounding the troublemakers know that ISIL and Hamas have no respect for religious matters, let alone humans. They might be Muslim, but the non-Muslim Brotherhood sorts want no part of what the more violent element brings.
    That alone is encouraging. Islam policing its own. For now.
    Seriously, this is a wait and see occasion, but it looks like the Egyptians, at least, are willing to play adult and begin to get the true extremist violence under control. That’s not going to stop them from exporting Islam to unsuspecting nations, but less people will die in this chapter of the holy wars, and holy sites of all stripes will be respected.
    And John Kerry won’t get his Nobel Peace Prize. Oh, well.
    Libertatem Prius!


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  4. #1644
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    I saw something out of the corner of my eye last week about "Divine Intervention" and forgot to get back to it. Here's one for today though.

    Hand of God sent missile into sea’

    05 Tuesday Aug 2014
    Posted by Daniel Crane in Hamas/Hezbollah, Israel, World News





    More claims of divine intervention are being reported in the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, with an operator of Israel’s Iron Dome missile-defense system saying he personally witnessed “the hand of God” diverting an incoming rocket out of harm’s way.


    Israel Today translated a report from a Hebrew-language news site, which noted the Iron Dome battery failed three times to intercept an incoming rocket headed toward Tel Aviv last week.


    The commander recalled: “A missile was fired from Gaza. Iron Dome precisely calculated [its trajectory]. We know where these missiles are going to land down to a radius of 200 meters. This particular missile was going to hit either the Azrieli Towers, the Kirya (Israel’s equivalent of the Pentagon) or [a central Tel Aviv railway station]. Hundreds could have died.


    “We fired the first [interceptor]. It missed. Second [interceptor]. It missed. This is very rare. I was in shock. At this point we had just four seconds until the missile lands. We had already notified emergency services to converge on the target location and had warned of a mass-casualty incident.


    “Suddenly, Iron Dome (which calculates wind speeds, among other things) shows a major wind coming from the east, a strong wind that … sends the missile into the sea. We were all stunned. I stood up and shouted, ‘There is a God!’


    “I witnessed this miracle with my own eyes. It was not told or reported to me. I saw the hand of God send that missile into the sea.”


    It was a partial quote from Barbara Ordman, who lives in Ma’ale Adumim on the West Bank.


    Her exact quotation was: “As one of the terrorists from Gaza was reported to say when asked why they couldn’t aim their rockets more effectively: “We do aim them, but their God changes their path in mid-air.”






    She opened her piece by noting: “In October 1956, [Israeli Prime Minister] David Ben Gurion was interviewed by CBS. He stated: ‘In Israel, in order to be a realist, you must believe in miracles.’”


    Ordman also noted religious texts, specifically the Jerusalem Talmud, teaches Israelis not to depend on miracles for survival.


    “It argues that we must not desist from our obligations and must not wait for miraculous intervention from the Supernatural,” she wrote.


    Meanwhile, the Times of Israel reported a senior officer in Israel’s army said divine miracles protected his soldiers during fighting in the Gaza Strip.


    Read more at WND
    Libertatem Prius!


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  5. #1645
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    Default Re: Israeli-Arab War

    Appears the truth is coming out now...


    #AceNewsGroup 13:48 on August 5, 2014 Reply | Follow

    GAZA CITY: ‘ Snippets From The Front Line When is the Truth The Real Truth ‘





    Rate This


    #AceWorldNews – GAZA CITY – August 05 – The account promoted by Hamas and repeated by the United States and the U.N. on Sunday was that an Israeli mortar hit a U.N. school, killing 10 people, including children reported by Truth Revolt.
    However, evidence is emerging that the Israeli strike hit outside of the school and the bodies were moved into the courtyard to make it look like Israel hit the school.
    As reported by Rick Moran at the PJ Tatler, the U.K Guardian pointed out the attack was outside the gates of the school:
    #ANS2014
    Libertatem Prius!


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  6. #1646
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    The empty spaces in Gaza

    The empty spaces in Gaza, Gatestone Institute, Alan M. Dershowitz, August 5, 2014
    How many times have you heard on television or read in the media that the Gaza Strip is “the most densely populated area in the world”? Repeating this statement, however, does not make it true. There are dense parts of Gaza, especially Gaza City, Beit Hanoun and Khan Younis, but there are far less dense areas in Gaza between these cities. Just look at Google Earth, or this population density map.
    (Image source: Peace Now)
    The fact that these sparsely populated areas exist in the Gaza Strip raise several important moral questions: First, why don’t the media show the relatively open areas of the Gaza Strip? Why do they only show the densely populated cities? There are several possible reasons. There is no fighting going on in the sparsely populated areas, so showing them would be boring. But that’s precisely the point—to show areas from which Hamas could be firing rockets and building tunnels but has chosen not to. Or perhaps the reason the media doesn’t show these areas is that Hamas won’t let them. That too would be a story worth reporting.
    Second, why doesn’t Hamas use sparsely populated areas from which to launch its rockets and build its tunnels? Were it to do so, Palestinian civilian casualties would decrease dramatically, but the casualty rate among Hamas terrorists would increase dramatically.
    That is precisely why Hamas selects the most densely populated areas from which to fire and dig. The difference between Israel and Hamas is that Israel uses its soldiers to protect its civilians, whereas Hamas uses its civilians to protect its terrorists. That is why most of Israeli casualties have been soldiers and most of Hamas’ casualties have been civilians. The other reason is that Israel builds shelters for its civilians, whereas Hamas builds shelters only for its terrorists, intending that most of the casualties be among its civilian shields.
    The law is clear: using civilians as human shields—which the Hamas battle manual mandates—is an absolutewar crime. There are no exceptions or matters of degree, especially when there are alternatives. On the other hand, shooting at legitimate military targets, such as rockets and terror tunnels is permitted, unless the number of anticipated civilian casualties is disproportionate to the military importance of the target. This is a matter of degree and judgment, often difficult to calculate in the fog of war. The law is also clear that when a criminal takes a hostage and uses that hostage as a shield from behind whom to fire at civilians or police, and if the police fire back and kill the hostage, it is the criminal and not the policeman who is guilty of murder. So too with Hamas: when it uses human shields and the Israeli military fires back and kills some of the shields, it is Hamaswho is responsible for their deaths.
    The third moral question is why does the United Nations try to shelter Palestinian civilians right in the middle of the areas from which Hamas is firing? Hamas has decided not to use the less densely populated areas for rocket firing and tunnel digging. For that reason, the United Nations should use these sparsely populated areas as places of refuge. Since the Gaza Strip is relatively small, it would not be difficult to move civilians to these safer areas. They should declare these areas battle free and build temporary shelters—tents if necessary—as places of asylum for the residents of the crowded cities. It should prevent any Hamas fighters, any rockets and any tunnel builders from entering into these sanctuaries. In that way, Hamas would be denied the use of human shields and Israel would have no reason to fire its weapons anywhere near these United Nations sanctuaries. The net result would be a considerable saving of lives.
    But instead the UN is playing right into the hands of Hamas, by sheltering civilians right next to Hamas fighters, Hamas weapons and Hamas tunnels. Then the United Nations and the international community accuses Israel of doing precisely what Hamas intended Israel to do: namely fire at its terrorists and kill United Nations protected civilians in the process. It’s a cynical game being played by Hamas, but it wouldn’t succeed without the complicity of UN agencies.
    The only way to assure that Hamas’ strategy of using human shields to maximize civilian casualties is not repeated over and over again is for the international community, and especially the United Nations, not to encourage and facilitate it, as it currently does. International law must be enforced against Hamas for its double war crime: using civilian human shields to fire at civilian Israeli targets. If this tactic were to be brought to a halt, then Israel would have no need to respond in self-defense. Applying the laws of war to Israel alone will do no good, because any country faced with rockets and tunnels targeting its civilians will fight back. When the fighters and tunnel builders hide behind human shields, there will inevitably be civilian casualties—unintended by Israel, intended by Hamas—regardless of how careful the defenders are. Israel has tried its hardest to minimize civilian casualties. Hamas has tried its hardest to maximize civilian casualties. Now the United Nations and the international community must try their hardest to become part of the solution rather than part of the problem.
    Libertatem Prius!


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  7. #1647
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    Default Re: Israeli-Arab War

    Cease-Fire in Gaza Expires, and Strikes Resume

    By ISABEL KERSHNER and JODI RUDOREN


    Photo

    An Israeli airstrike in Gaza City on Friday. Credit Hatem Moussa/Associated Press
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    JERUSALEM — As a 72-hour truce in Gaza expired at 8 a.m. Friday, Palestinian militants fired barrages of rockets into Israel and the Israeli military responded with airstrikes, one of which killed a 10-year-old boy, according to relatives.
    The renewed hostilities interrupted the indirect talks in Cairo, brokered by Egypt and backed by the United States, for a more durable cease-fire agreement. While the rocket fire signaled Hamas’s refusal to extend the temporary lull and its desire to apply pressure for its demands to be met at the talks, the Israeli government said in a statement that “Israel will not hold negotiations under fire.”
    Israel had said it was willing to extend the truce unconditionally, but the Cairo talks, which began on Wednesday, appeared to have yielded few results.
    After three days of quiet, the Israeli military said, at least 33 rockets and mortars were fired into southern Israel between 8 a.m. and 1 p.m. Some were intercepted by Israel’s missile defense system, while others fell in open ground and a few landed short in the Gaza Strip. An Israeli civilian and a soldier were injured in one of the attacks, according to the military, and a building was damaged. The military also reported two launchings of rockets or mortar shells from Gaza before dawn.
    Continue reading the main story


    Graphic: In Gaza, a Pattern of Conflict

    In Gaza, Ibrahim Dawawsa, 10, was killed in a strike from an Israeli drone as he played in the yard of a mosque in the Sheik Radwan neighborhood of Gaza City, according to his brother, Zuheir, 19.
    Sami Abu Zuhri, a spokesman for Hamas, wrote in an Internet posting on Friday morning that it did not accept an extension of the lull, adding, “We will continue negotiations.” Islamic Jihad, a militant Palestinian faction that has taken part in the fighting alongside Hamas and is represented at the talks in Cairo, took responsibility for firing rockets.
    Lt. Col. Peter Lerner, a spokesman for the Israeli military, said in a statement: “The renewed rocket attacks by terrorists at Israel are unacceptable, intolerable and shortsighted. Hamas’s bad decision to breach the cease-fire will be pursued by the I.D.F. We will continue to strike Hamas, its infrastructure, its operatives and restore security for the State of Israel.”
    The Israeli government statement said that Israel had informed the Egyptians that it was ready to extend the cease-fire by another 72 hours before the rocket fire resumed. “Israel will continue to act by all means to defend its citizens, while making an effort not to harm civilians in Gaza,” it said. “Hamas, which violated the cease-fire, is responsible for the harm to Gaza’s citizens.”
    Just at 8 a.m., as television correspondents stood on the beachside road in Gaza City to do their live reports, the first rocket was fired. The signature white plume of the Israeli interception was visible in the air for miles. A few more booms were heard in the next 15 minutes, but they hardly disrupted the trickle of donkey carts on the street.
    Continue reading the main story


    Interactive Map: Assessing the Damage and Destruction in Gaza

    People were out in the streets of Gaza City, and some stores were open, much as during the previous three days of cease-fire. Children roamed outside, men sat on sidewalks, and a line of a few dozen waited to buy bread at the Khouli bakery.
    Continue reading the main story Continue reading the main story
    Farther north, in Jabaliya, where thousands of people have been sheltering in United Nations schools, the streets were teeming with people. An elderly man was walking with seven camels. Children balanced cartons of supplies on their heads, taking them from the market to the shelters.
    In areas closer to the border with Israel, like Beit Lahiya and Beit Hanoun, the streets were almost deserted. In Beit Lahiya, half of the two dozen tall apartment buildings of the huge Al Nada complex had been destroyed by nearly a month of Israeli airstrikes, artillery and tank fire.
    In Beit Hanoun, now a ghost town of toppled homes and rubble-strewn streets, Anas Kaferna, 25, and his brother and sister were tying mattresses to the top of a silver sedan and heading south. “I don’t want to be the last one in town,” Mr. Kaferna said.
    Since their home was destroyed at the start of the ground invasion, the siblings had been sleeping at a maternity hospital where Mr. Kaferna worked as a security guard. But with the news that the cease-fire was over, they headed to Gaza City, although they did not know where.
    Continue reading the main story


    Graphic: The Toll in Gaza and Israel, Day by Day

    “Now it seems the situation will get harder,” he said. “Maybe yes and maybe no. I don’t understand politics.”
    Hamas radio reported an Israeli airstrike in agricultural land north of Gaza City, which caused no injuries, as well as an airstrike in Jabaliya. It said artillery shells had hit the Nada complex in Beit Hanoun, as well as the cities of Rafah and Khan Younis.
    The 72-hour truce came after 29 days of fierce fighting that left more than 1,800 Palestinians dead, many of them civilians. On the Israeli side, 64 soldiers and three civilians were killed. Israel said its military campaign, which began July 8 with an aerial assault and led to a ground invasion, was aimed at quelling rocket fire and destroying Hamas’s network of tunnels leading into Israeli territory. Israel withdrew its ground troops from the Gaza Strip but left them on alert along the border and kept its air force on standby.
    Hamas is demanding a lifting of the blockade on Gaza imposed by Israel and Egypt and an opening of all the border crossings to allow the free movement of people and goods in and out of the Palestinian coastal territory. Israel is demanding measures to prevent Hamas from rearming and, eventually, the demilitarization of Gaza.
    A spokesman for Hamas’s armed wing, the Qassam Brigades, said in a speech aired Thursday night on Hamas’s television channel, Al Aqsa, that the Israeli forces had left in defeat.
    “We gave a space for negotiations in order to agree on the demands of the Palestinian resistance and bring our people a better life of dignity,” he said, warning, “We are ready to resume the gun battle again.”
    “We will not accept to end this battle without stopping the aggression, lifting the siege and the most important demand of building a seaport for Gaza, and we will never accept less than that,” he said.

    Libertatem Prius!


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  8. #1648
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    Al Qaeda on Israel’s Doorstep as Syrian Rebels Take Golan Crossing

    Al Qaeda on Israel’s Doorstep as Syrian Rebels Take Golan CrossingWednesday, August 27, 2014 | Israel Today Staff
    via Al Qaeda on Israel’s Doorstep as Syrian Rebels Take Golan Crossing – Israel Today | Israel News.



    An Al Qaeda-linked Syrian rebel group seized control of the Quneitra Crossing between Israel and Syria on Wednesday.
    Israeli authorities ordered farmers and other civilians in the northeastern part of the Golan Heights to evacuate earlier in the day, as Syrian government forces battled the Al-Nusra Front near the border region.
    As the fighting raged, a number of mortar shells landed in Israel, and wayward gunfire from Syria wounded an Israeli army officer. The IDF responded with targeted artillery fire.
    The Al-Nusra Front has repeatedly acknowledged its allegiance to Al Qaeda. At one point, al-Nusra was working together with the Islamic State (formerly ISIS), but the two groups later began fighting one another when Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi tried to force a merger.
    PHOTO: Mortar shells from Syria land in Israel’s Golan Heights, as Syrian government forces battle Al Qaeda-linked jihadists just across the border.
    Libertatem Prius!


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  9. #1649
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    Rebels Release Purported Footage Of Syrian Warplane Shot Down By IAF Missile

    Jet was 800 meters into Israeli air space when the IAF took the decision to shoot it down, a senior air force official says.

    September 23, 2014

    A Syrian warplane intruded into Israel on Tuesday morning; the air force hit it with a Patriot missile, in the first downing of a Syrian combat aircraft since 1985.

    At 8:57 a.m., the Israel Air Force detected a Syrian Sukhoi- 24 attack aircraft crossing into Israel’s air space. The jet was 800 meters into Israeli territory when the IAF took the decision to shoot it down, a senior IAF official said.

    “This decision is in line with our policy of intercepting all intrusions into our air space,” he said.

    Eighty seconds after the decision was taken, a Patriot surface-to-air missile struck the enemy craft.

    When the missile was fired, the plane was flying into Israel, but when it struck, the jet had already turned around and was flying back into Syria.

    The pilot and navigator parachuted into Syrian territory.

    Their descent was captured on video by Syrian rebels, who released the footage on You- Tube. The fate of the air crew is unknown.

    The aircraft was flying at an altitude of between 10,000 and 14,000 feet, the Israeli air force source said.

    “This jet could have reached the center of the country within a short time. In under a minute, it would have been over Lake Kinneret [the Sea of Galilee], and within 5 minutes, it could have gotten to any place,” the air force officer said.

    The jet took off from the Saikal Air Base, northeast of Damascus, and likely sought to bomb rebel targets in Quneitra, on the Syrian part of the Golan Heights, just over the Line of Separation from Israel.

    “We don’t have any interest in supporting the rebels. This is a border; any aircraft that crosses it will be shot down,” the IAF official said. “Just as an intruder on the ground will be intercepted.”

    Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon said that the Syrian warplane had “approached Israeli territory on the Golan Heights in a threatening manner, and even crossed the border.”

    Israel “has made it clear in the past, and is reiterating now: We will not allow anyone, neither a state nor terrorist organization, to threaten our security and to violate our sovereignty,” he said.

    Ya’alon vowed to “respond aggressively to any attempt of this kind, whether it’s intentional or an accident.”

    Syria confirmed that Israel had shot down one of its warplanes, describing the incident as an “act of aggression.”

    Syrian state TV quoted a military source saying the downing of the plane, which coincided with US-led air strikes against Islamic State in Syria, came “in the framework of [Israel’s] support for the terrorist [Islamic State] and the Nusra Front.”

    Quneitra has been a hotbed of the civil war in recent weeks as battles have raged just over the Israeli border between the Syrian army and al-Qaida- linked Nusra Front rebels.

    On August 31, the IAF used a Patriot missile to shoot down a drone that entered Israeli airspace from Syria. It said the drone had been fired from the Quneitra region.

    “The IDF will not tolerate a breach of the State of Israel’s sovereignty,” the army said then.

    Army sources said the drone likely belonged to the Syrian military and strayed into Israeli airspace by accident.

    Commenting on the interception, Ya’alon said Israeli air defense personnel had “once again proven their high alertness and professionalism.”

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    Default Re: Israeli-Arab War

    BREAKING Code red sirens sounding in Eilat in southern Israel


    Israel News Feed ‏@IsraelHatzolah
    BREAKING NEWS ALERT: Code red sirens sounding in Eilat in southern Israel, seek shelter immediately.

    Israel News Feed ‏@IsraelHatzolah
    BREAKING UPDATE: At least 4 explosions blast following red siren alarm in Eilat in southern Israel, IDF scanning area.

    Israel News Feed@IsraelHatzolah
    BREAKING VIDEO: At least 1 rocket fired from Sinai successfully intercepted over Eilat following red siren alarm.


    Israel News Feed ‏@IsraelHatzolah 25s25 seconds ago


    EILAT ROCKET ATTACK - U/D:
    - 7 missiles fired from Sinai
    - at least 3 rockets intercepted
    - explosions blasted
    - multiple treated for shock.
    More video
    https://twitter.com/IsraelHatzolah/s...37986207051779


    Terror Events ‏@TerrorEvents 47s47 seconds ago

    #Israel #Eilat - 1 of the rockets being intercepted by the Iron Dome. People are being treated for shock, acc to Hatzolah.



    Terror Events ‏@TerrorEvents 4m4 minutes ago

    #Israel #Eilat - Fragment of 1 of the rockets was found in a pool. No damage.





    Elite Hamas fighters defecting to Islamic State

    Despite losing a number of its top commandos, the Gaza-based terror organization continues to work with IS on smuggling, other fields

    A member of Hamas’s naval commando unit defected from the Gaza-based terror organization nearly a year ago to join the Sinai Province — the Islamic State group’s branch in the Sinai Peninsula, Palestinian sources told The Times of Israel.

    Abed al-Wahad Abu Aadara, 20, from the city of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, was arrested approximately two months ago by Hamas while visiting Gaza due to his affiliation with IS. He has since been freed.

    Although Abu Aadara is not the first Hamas operative to defect to IS, he is the first known member of the group’s naval commando unit to join its ranks.

    The weeks following Abu Aadara’s arrest were marked by a dramatic increase in tensions between Hamas and IS, due in large part to the arrest of Gaza-based operatives identified with the group, as well as the reduction in the volume of goods being smuggled to the Gaza Strip from Sinai, which IS used as a means of pressuring Hamas in response to the arrests.

    However, due to the recent rapprochement between the two groups, in particular relating to smuggling from the Sinai Peninsula to the Gaza Strip, Abu Aadara has now been released from one of Hamas’s prisons in Gaza.

    Abu Aadara began his career with Hamas as a member of the group’s elite Nukhba unit and was later selected as a naval commando.

    Abu Aadara’s brother, Mufleh, also joined IS after leaving the Gaza Strip for the Sinai Peninsula over a year and a half ago. He was later killed in Sinai, likely while fighting against the Egyptian army.

    Following his brother’s death, Abu Aadara decided to follow in his footsteps by joining IS, crossing the border into Sinai last March.

    In recent years Hamas has lost dozens of members of its military wing — the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades — to IS’s Sinai Province, including a number of its fighters from the elite Nukhba unit. Many of these operatives left for Sinai with their families and relatives and now serve as the Sinai Province’s main points of contact with Hamas. These defectors include a number of Hamas’s experts on operating anti-tank missiles and assembling roadside bombs, who have provided substantial assistance to IS in its war against the Egyptian army.

    Abed al-Hila al-Qishta, a former senior member of the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades before joining IS, was killed in December in an airstrike carried out against IS targets in Sinai, while Abu Malek Abu Shwiesh, who was a top assistant to the commander of Hamas’s military wing in the Rafah area, also reportedly defected to the Sinai Province.

    Despite the apparent trend of Hamas operatives leaving the group in favor of IS, the terror organization continues to cooperate with the Sinai Province, in particular in relation to smuggling from Sinai into Gaza. The leadership of Hamas’s military wing in the Rafah area is responsible for coordinating cooperation between Hamas and the Sinai Province in a number of areas, including on weapons smuggling and bringing injured IS operatives into Gaza for medical care.

    Although the Egyptian regime is fervently opposed to the cooperation between the two groups, it has taken steps towards reconciliation with Hamas. Just last week, a delegation of Hamas security officials visited Cairo for a series of meetings. The Hamas contingent was led by the deputy commander of the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades Marwan Issa, considered the de facto chief of staff of Hamas’s military wing in light of the health troubles of current military head Muhammed Deif.

    http://www.timesofisrael.com/elite-h...islamic-state/

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    Nikita Khrushchev: "We will bury you"
    "Your grandchildren will live under communism."
    “You Americans are so gullible.
    No, you won’t accept
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    outright, but we’ll keep feeding you small doses of
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    until you’ll finally wake up and find you already have communism.

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    ."
    We’ll so weaken your
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    until you’ll
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    like overripe fruit into our hands."



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