Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,357

Here is how things stand on Wednesday, November 12:

Fighting

  • Ukraine’s top military commander, Oleksandr Syrskii, said the army’s situation has “significantly worsened” in parts of the southeastern Zaporizhia region amid fierce fighting with Russian forces.
  • Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in a post on X that he had received an update from Syrskii, which conveyed that the situation” remains difficult” in the Zaporizhia region, as well as in the direction of the embattled city of Pokrovsk.
  • Zaporizhia Governor Ivan Fedorov said that a Russian drone attack killed a 56-year-old man in the Polohivskyi district.
  • Also in Zaporizhia, the Kushuhum Village Council announced in a post on the Telegram messaging app that families with children must begin mandatory evacuations from the area.
  • Ukraine’s Southern Defence Forces said in a post on Facebook that they had to withdraw from positions near the settlements of Novouspenivske, Nove, Okhotnyche, Uspenivka, and Novomykolaivka in the Zaporizhia region.
  • Ukraine’s General Staff claimed that explosions and fire were recorded after Ukrainian forces hit the Orsknefteorgsintez oil refinery in Russia’s Orenburg region.
  • A Ukrainian mine explosion killed one person in the village of Bahatyr in the Russian-occupied Ukrainian region of Donetsk, Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs Ambassador-at-Large Rodion Miroshnik said, while persistent Ukrainian drone attacks have forced people to flee the area, Russia’s state TASS news agency reports.
  • Russia’s Ministry of Defence claimed that its forces seized the eastern part of Kupiansk in Ukraine’s Kharkiv region, according to TASS.

Diplomacy

  • Rustem Umerov, the secretary of Ukraine’s National Security and Defence Council, has arrived in Turkiye’s Istanbul, where he said in a post on Facebook that he is working “to unblock” the process of exchanging captives with Moscow and ensuring the implementation of the agreement that has already been reached with Russia.
  • The state environmental inspectorate in Ukraine’s Sumy region announced in a post on Telegram that it has launched a lawsuit over environmental damages, including the destruction of forest areas, against Russian forces that spearheaded the invasion of the region in 2022.
  • Russia’s Foreign Ministry said that 30 Japanese people, including a foreign ministry official, were now barred from entering Russia in response to sanctions introduced by Tokyo against Moscow.

Regional security

  • The FSB, Russia’s domestic intelligence agency, claimed that Russia thwarted a Ukrainian-United Kingdom plan to hijack a MiG-31 jet equipped with a hypersonic missile and to use it to carry out a false flag attack on a major NATO airbase.

Energy

  • Romanian Minister of Energy Bogdan Ivan said his country must take control of the local Romanian company of Russia’s Lukoil, as Western sanctions have prompted a wave of similar moves across Europe.
  • Ukrainian authorities have charged seven people in relation to an alleged $100m kickback scheme involving senior energy officials, a day after launching a probe into Ukraine’s state nuclear agency Energoatom.
  • Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said the government had dismissed Energoatom’s supervisory board and that an urgent audit of the agency would be conducted, “including its procurement activities”.

Military aid

  • Denmark’s Ministry of Defence announced 1.4 billion kroner ($217m) worth of military aid to Ukraine, including for the purchase of US weapons.

Makhachev vs Della Maddalena: UFC 322 fight card, start, odds, how to watch

Mixed martial arts (MMA) superstar Islam Makhachev will take a shot at winning his first title in the welterweight division when he takes on reigning champion Jack Della Maddalena at UFC 322.

Makhachev’s last UFC fight was in January when he defeated Renato Moicano by submission to successfully defend his lightweight title belt, which he first won in 2022.

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Four months later, the Russian fighter vacated the lightweight title and boldly announced his decision to move up a weight class and challenge Australia’s Della Maddalena in one of the most eagerly awaited UFC fights on the 2025 calendar.

Here’s what you need to know about UFC 322:

When does the UFC 322 fight start?

  • The Della Maddalena-Makhachev main event will be held on Saturday at Madison Square Garden in New York City.
  • The five-fight main card is scheduled to begin at 10pm (03:00 GMT on Sunday) with the ring walk for the Della Maddalena-Makhachev bout not expected before 11:30pm (04:30 GMT on Sunday).
  • The four-fight preliminary card begins at 8pm (01:00 GMT on Sunday).

Why did Makhachev switch from lightweight to welterweight?

Makhachev, a four-time defending lightweight champion, vacated the belt in May to move up to the welterweight classification.

The Russian told ESPN that it was difficult to cut weight for the 155lb (70kg) lightweight class and it affected his performance and recovery.

“My life changed when I changed the weight division. All my life, I had to think about what I eat. … Now I can eat whatever I want and smile.”

“At 155lb, it is so difficult. … Now, I am very excited to see how I feel in the cage,” he said.

Della Maddalena vs Makhachev – a contrast in fighting styles

Della Maddalena is a disciple of Brazilian jujitsu and trains under the renowned Australian coach Ben Vickers. Not surprisingly, Della Maddalena excels at powerful yet accurate punching and kicking to the body and face. He is a lethal striker on the counterattack.

Vickers, in a recent interview with Fox Sports, insisted his charger will silence the many doubters who believe Makhachev and his trademark grappling-wrestling background will prove too much for the Australian.

“He’ll just keep on turning up to beat whoever you put in front of him,” Vickers said.

“He’s just taken Belal Muhammad’s streak. Next, he’ll take Islam’s streak. Then it will be [fellow welterweight contender] Shavkat Rakhmonov’s streak. He’ll take them all.”

Makhachev’s trademark style – which has been honed under the tutelage of legendary ex-UFC competitor Khabib Nurmagomedov – is built on a world class wrestling and grappling foundation. He is also an underrated striker of opponents.

His superb ground-and-pound attack, which he asserts after gaining top control, wears down his opponents and frequently results in submissions.

Islam Makhachev asserts control over Dustin Poirier on the canvas during UFC 302 in Newark, New Jersey, on June 2, 2024 [Joe Camporeale/USA Today Sports via Reuters]

Della Maddalena-Makhachev: What are the betting odds?

Della Maddalena will start as a heavy underdog against Makhachev with the bookmakers.

The odds have Makhachev marked as the -275 favourite at Bet MGM in the United States with Della Maddalena at +225.

Similarly, bookmakers outside the US have the Russian priced at $1.36 for the victory with Della Maddalena a long shot for the win at $3.25, according to Bet365.

Will Donald Trump attend the fight?

At this stage, it is unknown whether US President Donald Trump will attend UFC 322 in the city where he was born and spent most of his life.

Trump attended the last major UFC event in the area – UFC 316 – on June 7 in Newark, New Jersey, just across the Hudson River from New York.

The 79-year-old’s association with the UFC dates back to 2001 when he hosted two events in New Jersey.

If Makhachev beats Della Maddalena, will he fight Topuria?

Ilia Topuria and Makhachev, ranked number 1 and number 2 on ESPN’s pound-for-pound rankings, are widely considered the top MMA fighters in the world, and Topuria has already said he would move up another weight class to face Makhachev at the 170lb (77kg) welterweight limit if the Russian beats Della Maddalena.

Both fighters have agreed that if the bout occurs, then the much-hyped UFC event at the White House in June would be the ideal venue for staging what would be considered the biggest box office UFC contest since the memorable Nurmagomedov-Conor McGregor confrontation in 2018.

“I saw the [Charles Oliveira] fight; [Topuria,] he’s good,” Makhachev told ESPN. “I have a good fight now, and I know [Topuria] is going to fight soon, and we’ll see what’s gonna happen. He wants to fight at the White House, and I also want to be there. I know the UFC wants to do some big fight in the White House. Which fight is going to be bigger than this?”

The UFC has not announced any fights for the White House event although Trump has said it would take place on June 14.

IIia Topuria reacts.
UFC lightweight title holder Ilia Topuria might be the next challenger for Makhachev if he can take the welterweight title from Della Maddalena at Madison Square Garden [File: Aldara Zarraoa/WireImage via Getty Images]

Who is Islam Makhachev?

  • The 34-year-old fighter from the Dagestan region of Russia is one of the biggest names in MMA thanks to his three-year undefeated streak as the UFC lightweight champion.
  • A protege and close friend of UFC legend Nurmagomedov, whose father, Abdulmanap, trained both Dagestani men, Makhachev made his MMA debut in 2011 and signed his first contract with the UFC three years later.
  • The southpaw is renowned for his strong grappling skills and an impressive striking accuracy (59 percent) with a reach of 70 inches (178cm). During his more than decade-long career in the UFC, Makhachev has established himself as a legend in the lightweight division, having successfully defended his belt on four occasions.
  • Makhachev, who recently vacated the UFC lightweight title to move up, is on an incredible run of 15 straight UFC wins dating back to October 3, 2015, when he lost the only professional fight of his MMA career against Adriano Martins of Brazil.
Islam Makhachev reacts.
Islam Makhachev will be the favourite heading into Saturday’s blockbuster clash against Della Maddalena [File: Per Haljestam-USA Today Sports via Reuters]

Who is Jack Della Maddalena?

  • Maddalena, also known by his initials JDM, is from Perth, Australia, and is a black belt in Brazilian jujitsu.
  • He stands 5ft, 11 inches tall (1.8 metres) and his current fighting weight is listed at 77kg (170lb).
  • He is undefeated in 18 straight MMA fights dating back to May 28, 2016.
  • The 29-year-old became the new UFC welterweight champion at UFC 315 on May 10 when he upset Muhammad at Bell Centre in Montreal, Canada.
  • He will be making his first UFC title defence on Saturday against Makhachev.
Della Maddalena and Belal Muhammad in action.
Jack Della Maddalena, right, strikes Belal Muhammad during their welterweight title bout at the UFC 315 event at Bell Centre in Montreal on May 10, 2025 [Alexis Aubin/AFP]

What has Makhachev said about the fight?

Saturday’s fight will be Makhachev’s sixth title fight in a row but first as a challenger. In an ESPN interview on October 27, the Russian broke down the Australian’s strengths and weaknesses.

“I watched all his fights. He is good. His striking is good. His boxing is very good, you know. His wrestling not so good but he is good on the ground. He know how to defend, how to escape, how to get up, you know. He has good skills on the ground also. … His striking is really good. That’s why he is one of the best in the world right now.”

On moving up a weight class to fight Della Maddalena:

“He is not like some guy who has crazy power. … I don’t think Jack has more than me.”

On Nurmagomedov’s pre-fight message to him:

“It’s not a secret. He told me: ‘Take him down.’”

“I think I can finish him on the ground – choke him, do an arm bar or something. I saw his skills are good on the ground. They are good – but I have something more.”

What has Della Maddalena said about the fight?

The welterweight champ claims his grappling proficiency in the octagon will surprise Makhachev:

“Probably in his mind, he thinks he’ll take me down, immobilise me or even finish me. But I have enough level to surprise him on the ground: strength, technique and defences that we’ve been working on constantly. When he plays at his highest level, I’ll be able to destabilise him. The key is to stay calm. People underestimate how disconcerting it can be for someone to be serene and focused. I think a large part of the fight will be standing, and that’s where I can surprise him,” said Della Maddalena on Mainevent TV.

Della Maddalena on Makhachev moving up a weight class to fight him:

“I think it’s good for him to move up. It was obviously a big wake-up for him. He is obviously getting bigger, growing. I think it’s a good move for him. I just think it’s bad timing,” he said on the New York Post Sports podcast.

Jack Della Maddalena in action.
Della Maddalena will defend his welterweight title for the first time on November 15 [File: Minas Panagiotakis/Getty Images via AFP]

What’s Makhachev’s fight record?

  • Fights: 28
  • Wins: 27
  • Loss: 1
  • Knockouts: 5 wins, 1 loss
  • Submission: 13 wins
  • Decision: 9 wins

What’s Della Maddalena’s fight record?

  • Fights: 20
  • Wins: 18
  • Losses: 2
  • Knockouts: 12 wins, 1 loss
  • Submission: 2 wins, 1 loss
  • Decision: 4 wins

Stat Attack

  • Makhachev – number of days since his last defeat: 3,697 (October 3, 2015, to November 15)
  • Della Maddalena – number of days since his last defeat: 3,461 (May 28, 2016, to November 15)
Valentina Shevchenko in action.
Valentina Shevchenko, right, will defend her flyweight title at UFC 322 [File: Minas Panagiotakis/Getty Images via AFP]

Who is fighting in the co-main event at UFC 322?

In Saturday’s penultimate bout at UFC 322, women’s flyweight champion Valentina Shevchenko of Kyrgyzstan will defend her title against China’s Zhang Weili in the co-main event.

Zhang, a former strawweight titleholder, vacated her belt and moved up a division to fight Shevchenko in what promises to be a fascinating contest between two of the biggest female stars in the UFC.

What’s the full fight card for UFC 322?

Main card (10pm start | 03:00 GMT on Sunday):

  • Della Maddalena (Australia) vs Makhachev (Russia) – title bout
  • Shevchenko (Kyrgyzstan) vs Zhang (China) – title bout
  • Sean Brady (US) vs Michael Morales (Ecuador) – welterweight
  • Leon Edwards (United Kingdom) vs Carlos Prates (Brazil) – welterweight
  • Beneil Dariush (US) vs Benoit Saint Denis (France) – lightweight

Preliminary card (8pm start | 01:00 GMT on Sunday):

  • Bo Nickal (US) vs Rodolfo Vieira (Brazil) – middleweight
  • Roman Kopylov (Russia) vs Gregory Rodrigues (Brazil) – middleweight
  • Erin Blanchfield (US) vs Tracy Cortez (US) – women’s flyweight
  • Malcolm Wellmaker (US) vs Cody Haddon (Australia) – bantamweight

How to watch UFC 322

Al Jazeera Sport will have a live build-up and text commentary stream for the fight from 01:00 GMT on Sunday.

Dozens of athletes call on UEFA to ban Israel over rights abuses

Dozens of athletes have joined rights groups in calling for the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) to suspend Israel due to rights abuses against Palestinians.

In a letter delivered to UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin on Tuesday, Athletes for Peace, a group that includes more than 70 sports professionals, backed a call for the governing body to sever ties with the Israel Football Association (IFA).

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“No shared venue, stage, or arena in international civil society should welcome a regime that commits genocide, apartheid, and other crimes against humanity,” the letter, penned by Game Over Israel, read.

“Israel’s continued impunity for such crimes will only be ended by the weight of collective conscientious action, including measures to block their entry to sporting or cultural events and activities.”

The athletes who endorsed the call include French World Cup winner Paul Pogba, Dutch forward Anwar El Ghazi, Moroccan player Hakim Ziyech and Spanish winger Adama Traore.

Human rights advocacy groups, including the Hind Rajab Foundation and the Gaza Tribunal, also signed the letter.

The petition marks a continuation of a campaign demanding that UEFA ban Israel from its events, citing atrocities committed during its war on Gaza.

In September, Turkish Football Federation president Ibrahim Haciosmanoglu also backed the call for suspending Israel from European football. The Football Association of Ireland (FAI) passed a similar resolution earlier this month.

Although a United States-brokered ceasefire nominally ended the Israeli assault on Gaza last month, Israel has continued to restrict aid and kill Palestinians in the territory.

Leading rights groups and United Nations investigators have described Israel’s war on Gaza as a genocide. As many as 69,182 Palestinians have been killed in the Israeli assault, including 421 footballers.

The war destroyed the sport’s infrastructure in Gaza, including stadiums and training facilities.

Moreover, Israel continues to entrench its occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem, imposing a regime that the International Court of Justice says is “tantamount to the crime of apartheid”.

The rights groups’ letter argued that Israel has used football to legitimise its occupation in those areas.

The country, for example, allows clubs from illegal settlements in the occupied West Bank to participate in its professional leagues, in an apparent violation of FIFA rules.

“The participation of teams from illegal settlements in Israeli football leagues is a breach of fundamental principles of international law,” Tuesday’s letter read.

“UEFA’s relationship with the IFA – providing funding and allowing Israeli teams to play in international tournaments – means that UEFA may also be facilitating these violations and may themselves be accountable.”

Israeli clubs’ participation in European football competitions has been a source of debate and controversy over the past two years.

Last year, clashes between Ajax and Maccabi Tel Aviv FC fans broke out in Amsterdam after Israeli hooligans were heard chanting “death to the Arabs”, attacking taxi drivers and removing Palestinian flags from the walls of private homes.

In October, a ban on visiting Maccabi Tel Aviv fans in a Europa League game against Aston Villa sparked a political crisis in the United Kingdom, as well as accusations of anti-Semitism.

“This decision is based on current intelligence and previous incidents, including violent clashes and hate crime offences that occurred during the 2024 UEFA Europa League match between Ajax and Maccabi Tel-Aviv in Amsterdam,” the West Midlands Police said in a statement earlier this month.

But the government of UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer was quick to oppose the police’s decision and dismiss the security considerations behind it, sparking criticism from Palestinian rights advocates.

“We will not tolerate anti-Semitism on our streets,” Starmer said in a social media post in response to the ban.

“The role of the police is to ensure all football fans can enjoy the game, without fear of violence or intimidation.”

Maccabi Tel-Aviv, which sits in 34th place in the Europa League standings with one point from four games, ended up losing the match 2-0 to Aston Villa last week.

Tuesday’s letter to UEFA stressed that banning a country that violates international law would not be unprecedented; it is, in fact, the norm.

“It is well-known that football governance bodies, such as UEFA, have historically suspended states from football for egregious violations of international law – apartheid South Africa, post-war Germany, the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, and more recently, Russia,” it said.

Lawsuit challenges US ban on transgender TSA officers conducting pat-downs

A Virginia transportation security officer has accused the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS) of sex discrimination over a policy that bars transgender officers from performing security screening pat-downs, according to a federal lawsuit.

The Transportation Security Administration (TSA), which operates under the DHS, enacted the policy in February to comply with President Donald Trump’s executive order declaring two unchangeable sexes: male and female.

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The Associated Press (AP) news agency obtained internal documents explaining the policy change from four independent sources, including one current and two former TSA workers.

Those documents explain that “transgender officers will no longer engage in pat-down duties, which are conducted based on both the traveller’s and officer’s biological sex. In addition, transgender officers will no longer serve as a TSA-required witness when a traveller elects to have a pat-down conducted in a private screening area”.

Until February, the TSA assigned officers work consistent with their gender identity, based on a 2021 management directive. The agency told the AP that it rescinded this directive to comply with Trump’s January 20 executive order.

Although transgender officers “shall continue to be eligible to perform all other security screening functions consistent with their certifications” and must attend all required training, they will not be allowed to demonstrate how to conduct pat-downs as part of their training or while training others, according to the internal documents.

A transgender officer at Dulles international airport, Danielle Mittereder, alleged in her lawsuit filed on Friday that the new policy, which also bars her from using TSA facility restrooms that align with her gender identity, violates civil rights law.

“Solely because she is transgender, TSA now prohibits Plaintiff from conducting core functions of her job, impedes her advancement to higher-level positions and specialised certifications, excludes her from TSA-controlled facilities, and subjects her identity to unwanted and undue scrutiny each workday,” the complaint says.

Mittereder declined to speak with the AP, but her lawyer, Jonathan Puth, called the TSA policy “terribly demeaning and 100 percent illegal”.

TSA spokesperson Russell Read declined to comment, citing pending litigation. But he said the new policy directs that “male Transportation Security Officers will conduct pat-down procedures on male passengers, and female Transportation Security Officers will conduct pat-down procedures on female passengers, based on operational needs”.

The legal battle comes amid mounting reports of workplace discrimination against transgender federal employees during Trump’s second administration. It is also happening at a time when the TSA’s ranks are already stretched thin due to the ongoing government shutdown that has left thousands of agents working without pay.

Other transgender officers describe similar challenges to Mittereder.

Kai Regan worked for six years at Harry Reid international airport in Las Vegas before leaving in July, in large part because of the new policy.

Worried that he would be fired for his gender identity, he retired earlier than planned rather than “waiting for the bomb to drop”.

Regan, who is not involved in the Virginia case, transitioned from female to male in 2021. He said he had conducted pat-downs on men without issue until the policy change.

“It made me feel inadequate at my job, not because I can’t physically do it but because they put that on me,” said the 61-year-old.

Skye Perryman, president and CEO of Democracy Forward, a legal organisation that has repeatedly challenged the second Trump administration in court, called the TSA policy “arbitrary and discriminatory”.

“There’s no evidence or data we’re aware of to suggest that a person can’t perform their duties satisfactorily as a TSA agent based on their gender identity,” Perryman said.

The DHS pushed back on assertions by some legal experts that its policy is discriminatory.

“Does the AP want female travellers to be subjected to pat-downs by male TSA officers?” Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin asked in a written response to questions by the AP. “What a useless and fundamentally dangerous idea, to prioritise mental delusion over the comfort and safety of American travellers.”

Airport security expert and University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign professor Sheldon H Jacobson, whose research contributed to the design of TSA PreCheck, said that the practice of matching the officer’s sex to the passenger’s is aimed at minimising passenger discomfort during screening.

Travellers can generally request another officer if they prefer, he added.

Deciding where transgender officers fit into this practice “creates a little bit of uncertainty”, Jacobson said. But because transgender officers likely make up a small percent of the TSA’s workforce, he said the new policy is unlikely to cause major delays.

“It could be a bit of an inconvenience, but it would not inhibit the operation of the airport security checkpoint,” Jacobson said.

The TSA’s policy for passengers is that they be screened based on physical appearance as judged by an officer, according to internal documents. If a passenger corrects an officer’s assumption, “the traveller should be patted down based on his/her declared sex”.

For passengers who tell an officer “that they are neither a male nor female”, the policy says officers must advise “that pat-down screening must be conducted by an officer of the same sex” and contact a supervisor if concerns persist.

The documents also say that transgender officers “will not be adversely affected” in pay, promotions or awards, and that the TSA “is committed to providing a work environment free from unlawful discrimination and retaliation”.

But the lawsuit argues otherwise, saying the policy impedes Mittereder’s career prospects because “all paths toward advancement require that she be able to perform pat-downs and train others to do so”, Puth said.

According to the lawsuit, Mittereder started in her role in June 2024 and never received complaints related to her job performance, including pat-down responsibilities. Supervisors awarded her the highest-available performance rating, and “have praised her professionalism, skills, knowledge, and rapport with fellow officers and the public”, the lawsuit said.

“This is somebody who is really dedicated to her job and wants to make a career at TSA,” Puth said. “And while her gender identity was never an issue for her in the past, all of a sudden, it’s something that has to be confronted every single day.”

Being unable to perform her full job duties has caused Mittereder to suffer fear, anxiety and depression, as well as embarrassment and humiliation by forcing her to disclose her gender identity to co-workers, the complaint says.

It adds that the ban places an additional burden on already-outnumbered female officers who have to pick up Mittereder’s pat-down duties.

American Federation of Government Employees national president Everett Kelley urged the TSA leadership to reconsider the policy “for the good of its workforce and the flying public”.

“This policy does nothing to improve airport security,” Kelley said, “and in fact could lead to delays in the screening of airline passengers since it means there will be fewer officers available to perform pat-down searches”.

Venezuela prepares ‘massive deployment’ of forces in case of US attack

The Venezuelan government has said it is preparing its armed forces in the event of an invasion or military attack by the United States.

A statement shared by Minister of People’s Power for Defence Vladimir Padrino on Tuesday said that the preparations include the “massive deployment of ground, aerial, naval, riverine and missile forces”, as well as the participation of police, militias and citizens’ units.

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The announcement comes as the arrival of a US aircraft carrier in the region fuels speculation of possible military action aimed at collapsing the government of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, a longtime US rival.

Tensions between the two countries have escalated since the return of US President Donald Trump for a second term in January.

On Tuesday, the Pentagon confirmed that the Gerald R Ford Carrier Strike Group — which includes the world’s largest aircraft carrier — had arrived in the Caribbean Sea, bearing at least 4,000 sailors as well as “tactical aircraft”.

In recent weeks, the US government has also surged troops to areas near the Caribbean, including Puerto Rico, El Salvador, Panama and Trinidad and Tobago, for training exercises and other operations.

The Trump administration has framed such deployments as necessary “to disrupt illicit drug trafficking and protect the homeland”. Trump officials have also accused Maduro of masterminding the activities of Tren de Aragua, a Venezuelan gang with a relatively modest presence in the US.

But Maduro and his allies have accused the US of “imperialistic” aims.

Questions remain, however, about whether Venezuela is equipped to fend off any US military advances.

Experts say the Maduro government has sought to project an image of military preparedness in the face of a large buildup of US forces in the Caribbean, but it could face difficulties from a lack of personnel and up-to-date equipment.

While the government has used possible US intervention to rally support, Maduro is also struggling with widespread discontent at home and growing diplomatic isolation following a contested election in 2024, marred by allegations of widespread fraud and a crackdown on protesters.

The military buildup in the Caribbean region began after the start of a series of US military strikes on September 2.

The US has carried out at least 19 air strikes against alleged drug-trafficking vessels in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific Ocean, killing approximately 75 people.

Trump has suggested that land strikes “are going to be next”. But when asked in late October whether he was considering attacks within Venezuela, Trump replied, “No”.

Legal experts say that a military attack on Venezuela would likely violate international law, and recent polling from the research firm YouGov suggests that about 47 percent of people in the US would oppose land attacks on Venezuelan territory. About 19 percent, meanwhile, say they would support such attacks.

While Venezuela’s armed forces have expressed support for Maduro and said they would resist a US attack, the Reuters news agency has reported that the government has struggled to provide members of the armed forces with adequate food and supplies.

Israeli forces kill three in Gaza as settlers attack in occupied West Bank

Israeli forces have killed at least three people in Gaza in the last 24 hours, according to Palestinian officials, as Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank ramped up attacks on Palestinian villages.

As Gaza’s Ministry of Health confirmed on Tuesday the killings in the last 24 hours, the enclave’s Civil Defence agency said in a statement on Telegram that it had transferred the bodies of 35 unidentified Palestinians to al-Shifa Hospital, where efforts will be made to confirm their identities.

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The death toll of Israel’s war on Gaza has officially topped 69,000, with at least 69,182 Palestinians killed and 170,694 wounded since October 2023. Israeli forces have killed at least 245 Palestinians since the US-brokered ceasefire went into effect on October 10.

A total of 1,139 people were killed in Israel during the October 7, 2023, Hamas-led attacks, and about 200 were taken captive.

It is estimated that thousands of missing people’s bodies are still buried under rubble across Gaza after two years of Israel’s genocidal war.

“Getting closure remains a distant prospect for families in Gaza, who have been visiting Nasser Hospital, morgues and identification rooms in search of their loved ones, trying to recognise their remains through fragments, personal belongings, scars, pieces of clothing or injuries,” Al Jazeera’s Tareq Abu Azzoum reported from central Gaza.

“Forensic experts are facing severe challenges, including the decomposition of bodies and a shortage of DNA testing equipment. This has left families in a state of deep uncertainty, especially mothers who continue to return to Gaza’s hospitals hoping to find their loved ones, only to go back to their shelters each time with broken hearts.”

Israel has violated the ceasefire agreement at least 282 times from October 10 to November 10, through the continuation of attacks by air, artillery and direct shootings, the Government Media Office in Gaza reports.

According to an analysis by Al Jazeera, Israel has attacked Gaza on 25 out of the past 31 days of the ceasefire, meaning there were only six days during which no violent attacks, deaths or injuries were reported.

Despite continuing attacks, the US insists that the ceasefire is still holding.

(Al Jazeera)

Gaza waits on aid

The ceasefire agreement stipulated that “full aid will be immediately sent into the Gaza Strip”. However, the United Nations children’s agency accused Israel on Tuesday of denying essential aid from entering Gaza, including 1.6 million syringes to vaccinate children and nearly one million bottles of baby formula.

“Both the syringes and the… refrigerators are considered dual-use by Israel, and these items we’re finding very hard to get… through clearances and inspections; yet, they are urgent,” UNICEF spokesperson Ricardo Pires said.

“Dual-use” refers to items Israel deems to have possible military as well as civilian applications.

On Tuesday, UNICEF said the blockage was preventing efforts to immunise more than 40,000 children who missed routine vaccines during the war.

The syringes have been waiting on customs clearance since August.

Aid organisations have repeatedly said that not enough supplies are entering the enclave to feed and care for a largely displaced and malnourished population of two million.

From October 10 to November 9, only 3,451 trucks have reached their intended destinations in Gaza, according to the UN2720 Monitoring and Tracking Dashboard, which monitors humanitarian aid in Gaza.

As they wait on aid, Palestinians in Gaza are forced to live without electricity, with many relying on flashlights and spending nights in complete darkness.

The war has destroyed more than 80 percent of Gaza’s electricity networks.

“For the past two years, no electricity has reached the Gaza Strip,” said Mohammed Thabet, an official with Gaza’s electricity company.

“The amount of electricity reaching Gaza is zero,” he said.

Attacks in occupied West Bank

Separately, in the occupied West Bank, dozens of masked Israeli settlers attacked a pair of Palestinian villages on Tuesday, setting fire to vehicles and other property, leaving four Palestinians wounded.

In Tuesday’s incidents, settlers attacked the villages of Beit Lid and Deir Sharaf, setting fire to four dairy trucks, farmland, tin shacks and tents belonging to a Bedouin community.

Palestinian official Muayyad Shaaban said the attacks were part of a campaign to drive Palestinians from their land and accused Israel of giving the settlers protection and immunity.

Israeli police said that four Israelis were arrested in what it described as “extremist violence”.

A video verified by Al Jazeera’s fact-checking unit, Sanad, shows several vehicles on fire as Palestinians try to extinguish the flames.

Israeli President Isaac Herzog described the attacks as “shocking and serious”, adding, “Such violence toward civilians and toward [Israeli army] soldiers crosses a red line, and I condemn it severely.”

Israeli soldiers were also attacked today by a group of settlers, and a military vehicle was damaged.

Israeli forces and settlers have carried out 2,350 attacks across the occupied West Bank last month in an “ongoing cycle of terror”, the Palestinian Authority’s Colonization and Wall Resistance Commission (CRRC) reported last week.

CRRC head Mu’ayyad Sha’ban said last week that Israeli forces carried out 1,584 attacks – including direct physical attacks, the demolition of homes and the uprooting of olive trees – with most of the violence focused on the governorates of Ramallah (542), Nablus (412) and Hebron (401).

On Monday, B’Tselem, the Israeli human rights group, said that settlers were attacking Palestinians “daily”, including “shooting, beating and threatening residents, throwing stones, torching fields, destroying trees and crops, stealing produce, blocking roads, invading homes, and burning cars”.