Hamas says it will respond ‘soon’ to Trump’s proposal to end Gaza war

Hamas’ official says the Palestinian organization will “soon” respond to President Donald Trump’s call to end Israel’s nearly two-year occupation of Gaza.

Mohammed Nazzal, a member of the Hamas political bureau, informed Al Jazeera Arabic on Thursday that the organization was discussing Trump’s plan to end Israel’s occupation of Gaza and would soon make an announcement about its position.

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Nazzal claimed that Hamas has a right to express its opinions “in a way that serves the interests” of the Palestinian people as representatives of the Palestinian resistance.

According to Nazzal, “We are not dealing]with the plan” when it is believed that time is a sword pointing our way.

A 20-point document was unveiled earlier this week by the White House calling for an immediate ceasefire, the exchange of Hamas prisoners for Palestinian political prisoners held by Israel, the staged Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, Hamas disarmament, and a transitional government led by an international body.

Trump gave Hamas three to four days to approve the plan on Tuesday.

Many Palestinians believe the plan favors Israel, but many Palestinians long for an end to the conflict.

In previous negotiations, Hamas has urged Israel to completely leave the devastated region and requests a permanent ceasefire, as well as guarantees that displaced families will be able to return to their homes, particularly in the north of Gaza, where Israeli forces are mounting attacks.

Egypt working to persuade Hamas

Egypt’s foreign minister earlier on Thursday stated that his nation was working with Qatar and Turkiye to persuade Hamas to accept Trump’s proposal.

Badr Abdelatty, who spoke on Thursday at the French Institute of International Relations in Paris, made the clear point that Hamas needed to disarm and that Israel should not be given a justification for its continued assault on Gaza.

“Let’s not give a single party any justification for using Hamas as a pretext for these outrageous daily killings of civilians.” According to Israeli records, what is happening has already been done well past the seventh of October, he said, referring to the Palestinians’ 2023 rocket attack against Israel, which resulted in 1, 129 fatalities.

More than 66, 000 people have died as a result of Israel’s offensive against Gaza, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry, most of whom are women and children. However, according to experts, the death toll could be up to three times higher.

Beyond retaliation, it is. This is a genocide in action, along with ethnic cleansing. Thus, Abdelatty concluded, “Enough is enough.”

Many “holes need to be filled”

Important mediators Qatar and Egypt claimed that more discussions of Trump’s plan are necessary.

Abdelatty claimed Cairo was working with Qatar and Turkiye to persuade Hamas to support the plan, but he remained cautious.

“It would be very difficult if Hamas refuses, you know.” And of course, there will be more escalation. So that’s why we are making great efforts to get Hamas’ approval and make this plan work,” he said.

Abdelatty claimed that more discussions of the issue were necessary despite his general support for Trump’s proposal for Gaza.

He said, “We need more discussions on how to implement it, especially on two crucial issues: governance and security arrangements, because there are many gaps that need to be filled.” We support the Trump strategy, the end to war, and the need to advance.

When questioned about the potential for Palestinian displacement caused by the Trump plan, he said Egypt would not accept that.

He claimed that displacement would mean the Palestinian cause would never be resolved. Under no circumstances, “We will not allow this to occur.”

Trump, in contrast, warned that if Hamas refused to accept his proposal for Gaza, and that the US president could impose sanctions on Hamas.

The US has frequently pushed Israel’s proposals for getting Palestinian support since the start of the Israeli occupation of Gaza, and then placed Hamas as the main factor in the end.

The president of the United States will have to draw a red line, according to White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt in an interview with Fox News.

Hamas was subsequently requested by Kaja Kallas, the head of foreign policy at the European Union, to accept the proposal.

We demand that Hamas follow the instructions, release all hostages who are still alive, and detain its weapons. The EU pleads with those who have influence to “transmit these messages to Hamas,” according to a statement.

Vladimir Putin, president, stated that only if the plan results in a two-state solution, Russia would be willing to back it.

Hamas “has lost,” according to France’s Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot.

The plan provides safe passage to receiving nations for Hamas members who pledge to peaceful coexistence and surrender their weapons, and for those who want to leave Gaza.

Masa “rejects a very large responsibility for the Palestinians’ devastation,” Barrot told the AFP news agency. It must accept its own surrender, the saying goes.

According to experts, the strategy echoes earlier Western attempts to reshape the Middle East without local support.

Political analyst Xavier Abu Eid told Al Jazeera, “With this agreement, it’s clear that what they’re presenting is a formula that they tried to use before in Iraq, and I think they completely failed.”

Abu Eid noted that many in the region are concerned about Tony Blair’s involvement in Trump’s proposal, which he was referring to as the US war in Iraq in 2003.

Israeli settler who killed Awdah Hathaleen still harassing Palestinians

NewsFeed

Jinon committed the murder of a dearly beloved person. Within hours of the murder of Palestinian activist and father Awdah Hathaleen, Israeli settler Yinon Levi returned to disrupt Umm al-Kheir, an occupied West Bank village. Tariq, Awdah’s closest friend, has first-hand knowledge of it.

Trump memo says US in ‘non-international armed conflict’ with cartels

According to US media, President Donald Trump has informed Congress that his administration has determined that members of drug cartels are “unlawful combatants” with which the United States is engaged in “non-international armed conflict.”

The US military struck three alleged drug smuggling boats in the Caribbean last month, killing 17 people, according to the memo, which was released on Thursday by The Associated Press and The New York Times. According to rights experts and scholars from other world powers, the attacks appear to be unlawful under US and international law, and they are comparable to extrajudicial killings.

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The administration’s strategy for justifying such attacks and what its strategy might entail are presented in the memo, which is the administration’s most explicit picture yet.

The memo stated that “despite friendly foreign countries making significant efforts to combat these organizations and suffering significant losses of life,” that these organizations are now transnational and carry out attacks throughout the Western Hemisphere as organized cartels.

The President, therefore, determined that these cartels are not state-armed organizations, designated them as terrorist organizations, and declared that their conduct amounts to an armed assault on the US, according to the statement.

The argument expands on the Trump administration’s portrayal of cartels as “narco-terrorists” who aim to destabilize the US by promoting illegal drugs across its borders rather than profit-driven criminal organizations.

Although the Trump administration has labeled a number of Latin American cartels “foreign terrorist organizations,” and has specifically focused on Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua, the memo did not specify the organizations in question.

Only Congress has the authority to declare war or use of force under the US Constitution; however, presidents may unilaterally act in some circumstances, particularly in matters involving the nation’s immediate self-defense.

There is currently no congressional authorization to use military force that would even apply to the Caribbean strikes.

Due to this, Congress members have been under more pressure to assert Trump’s legislative branch’s war powers. The attacks have been welcomed by a number of Republicans in Trump’s party, which controls both the Senate and House of Representatives.

Other lawmakers have warned against allowing Trump’s actions to go unchecked.

Senator Jack Reed, the top Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee, wrote in a post on X following Thursday’s reports on Trump’s memo, “Every American should be alarmed that Pres Trump has decided to wage secret wars against anyone he labels an enemy.”

“Drug cartels must be stopped, but it is unacceptable to declare war and amp; to impose lethal military force without the consent of Congress or the general public,” he wrote.

There is “so much wrong” with the Trump administration’s legal justification for the Caribbean strikes, according to Brian Finucane, a senior adviser at the International Crisis Group and former US Department of State attorney.

He cited the claim that Trump “determined” that the US was an “armed attack” on drug smugglers, which supports the administration’s claim that the strikes did not lead to an unlawful conflict.

Shock and disbelief as Manchester community reels from synagogue attack

Manchester, England –  As people gathered near a synagogue in Manchester hours after an attack that left two people dead, many had trouble understanding the assault. Locals claim that attacks don’t occur in such locations, especially on Yom Kippur.

A man attacked others with a knife about 9.30am (08:30 GMT) on Thursday in Crumpsall, north of Manchester, after driving his car into people near the Heaton Park Hebrew Congregation Synagogue.

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Prior to police’s arrival, the synagogue’s security staff and members of the public prevented him from entering the building, killing the assailant, who appeared to be wearing an “explosive device,” according to police. Four seriously ill people were taken to a hospital by four injured people.

Assistant Commissioner Laurence Taylor, the Metropolitan Police’s head of counterterrorism policing, said that two people have been detained since the attack. The attacker’s identity and potential motives have not been revealed.

A police helicopter hovering overhead, Zaki said, “I still can’t believe what happened,” while he and some of his family were standing at the corner of a nearby road.

He told Al Jazeera, “I heard the shots this morning.” It didn’t seem plausible, the author claimed. I believed there were fireworks.

Zaki’s comments were shared by many people who gathered nearby the synagogue. Onlookers claimed that these things don’t occur here. Crumpsall has a rich history of diversity. According to Zaki, “Everyone in our community gets along well.” Our Jewish neighbors are close by.

Sam Martin, a 41-year-old resident, also described being unable to comprehend the attack.

He continued, “Muslims, Jews, everyone here,” adding, “There is everyone here.” Our Jewish community has taught me nothing but love and kindness. This could happen, I’m just shocked.

Even Israel’s occupation of Gaza hasn’t caused a lot of community division, according to many residents in the neighborhood. Many people expressed concern that far-right organizations would use the attack to spread unrest because of their confidence, which was fueled by an August campaign to hang English flags across the nation and a large rally in London a month later.

Despite the identity and possible motives of the attacker remaining uncertain, far-right activist Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, who uses the pseudonym Tommy Robinson, quickly took issue with the attack and blamed organizations affiliated with the UK’s ruling Labour Party.

Gideon Saar, the foreign minister of Israel, blasted the British government and claimed they failed to stop anti-Semitism.

He wrote on X: “Blatant and rampant antisemitic and anti-Israeli incitement, as well as calls for support for terror, have recently become a common phenomenon in the streets of London, in cities across Britain, and on its campuses.”

The attacker, according to British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, was a “vile” person who was “motivated to attack Jews because they are Jews.”

In order to honor the holiday, one of the young men gathered near the police cordon, 23-year-old Akiva, requested that no notes be taken during his interview. He was certain that the English far right would react to the attack. He claimed that the attack, which has affected Jewish residents, will likely cause divisions in the otherwise quiet and well-integrated community.

Akiva’s brother typically travels past the synagogue on his way to worship, but Akiva had arrived at the synagogue to check on him. He claimed that his mother fell to her in Manchester when she first learned of the attack.

Are Europe and Russia moving closer to conflict over Ukraine?

tensions rise after airspace incursions, and there are war-strengths.

Following a rash of attacks by both sides in September, European leaders met to discuss Russia and the Ukraine war.

New defenses against Russian drones are being considered, as are additional sanctions.

What will the peace efforts accomplish next? Or are the armed conflicts between Russia and Europe looming more likely?

Presenter:

Dareen Abughaida

Guests:

The German-Ukrainian Bureau, a think tank that promotes stronger support for Ukraine, is led by Mattia Nelles, CEO and cofounder.

Eldar Mamedov, a former diplomat from Latvia and former European Parliament foreign policy adviser, is a nonresident fellow at the Quincy Institute.