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  • Israeli drones hit Lebanon soon after Trump, Iran sign peace deal

    Israeli drones hit Lebanon soon after Trump, Iran sign peace deal

    On Thursday, just hours after the United States and Iran signed a landmark memorandum of understanding to guide negotiations ending a regional war launched in late February, the Israeli military launched two targeted drone strikes across southern Lebanon, leaving one person dead and three others injured, according to local official media.

    Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency confirmed the details of the attacks: the first strike hit the town of Beit Yahoun, where an Israeli drone dropped an explosive device that wounded two local residents. A second attack targeted a vehicle at a roundabout connecting the villages of Kfartebnit and Arnoun, killing one passenger and leaving a second in critical condition.

    The unprovoked attacks have immediately raised urgent questions about the future of the new US-Iran peace deal, whose text explicitly includes provisions for Lebanese security and requires an immediate end to all military operations across the country. The MOU, signed by both leaders during a diplomatic gathering in France late Wednesday, formalizes a binding commitment to end all active hostilities on every front—including Lebanon—between the two nations and their respective allies. It also requires all signatory parties to abandon threats of force, respect each other’s territorial sovereignty, and guarantee the full territorial integrity and political independence of Lebanon.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has long faced accusations of actively working to derail diplomatic progress between Washington and Tehran, and he has openly defied the terms of the new framework, refusing to issue any commitment to withdraw Israeli military forces currently occupying large swathes of southern Lebanon. Since Israeli military operations against targets in Lebanon began on March 2, Lebanese official data records that nearly 3,800 people have been killed in these attacks, hundreds of whom are children.

    Reuters reported Thursday that Israeli officials are currently holding closed-door negotiations with the United States to push for permission to maintain a permanent military presence in southern Lebanon. An anonymous senior Israeli official close to Netanyahu told the outlet that the Israeli government would not back away from its demands, including keeping troops deployed in the strategic area south of Lebanon’s Litani River. A second senior Israeli official added that the final outcome of these negotiations will depend entirely on whether US President Donald Trump is willing to pressure Israel into compliance, by threatening concrete repercussions if Jerusalem refuses to adhere to the interim peace pact’s terms.

    During a press conference held Wednesday, one day after the MOU was signed, Trump struck a diplomatic tone when speaking about Netanyahu, calling the Israeli leader “a very good man” and an “amazing prime minister.” He did, however, acknowledge the ongoing rift over Lebanon, saying, “We have a little dispute over Lebanon. I say, ‘You can do a little softer touch, Bibi. You don’t have to knock down a building every time somebody walks into it that’s from Hezbollah.’”

    Iran has already issued a clear warning that the entire MOU will be invalidated if Israel refuses to fully withdraw all its forces from Lebanese territory and end all military attacks. Speaking Thursday, Esmaeil Baqaei, spokesperson for Iran’s Foreign Ministry, said that the United States bears full responsibility for forcing Israel to uphold the commitments Washington made to Tehran in the signed document, saying “It is the responsibility of the US to force Israel to respect the US commitments to Iran in this document.”

  • Israel ‘will be at war with Syria sooner or later’, says Likud minister

    Israel ‘will be at war with Syria sooner or later’, says Likud minister

    A senior far-right Israeli cabinet member from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s ruling Likud party has stoked regional tensions this week with explosive comments forecasting that Israel will ultimately go to war with Syria, and outlining a sweeping new anti-Israel alliance he claims is taking shape across the Muslim world.

    Amichai Chikli, Israel’s Minister of Diaspora Affairs, laid out his controversial assessment in a series of radio interviews conducted across Wednesday and Thursday, framing the emerging bloc as a far greater threat to Israeli national security than Iran and its recently finalized ceasefire agreement with the United States.

    Chikli centered his criticism on the new government led by Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa, claiming its jihadist ideological roots tied to the Islamic State and al-Qaeda, paired with its stated goal of securing the unification of Jerusalem, make peaceful coexistence with Israel impossible. From that foundation, he argued that a full military confrontation between Israel and Syria is inevitable. “There is no way that a jihadist regime rooted in Isis and al-Qaeda, whose aspiration is the unification of Jerusalem, can live in peace alongside the State of Israel,” Chikli stated.

    The minister went on to identify a three-country coalition he calls the “radical Sunni axis of evil”, made up of Pakistan, Turkey, and Qatar. In remarks to Israel’s Army Radio, he emphasized that this unreported new alliance poses a far more acute danger to Israel than Tehran, even as he acknowledged that Iran has secured major strategic gains through its U.S.-brokered ceasefire. “What is far more troubling is the new axis emerging in the Middle East,” Chikli explained.

    He argued Pakistan and Turkey earned their place in the bloc through their outsized influence during U.S.-Iran negotiations, while he dismissed Qatar as the global public relations mouthpiece for jihadist movements during an interview with Kol Barama Radio. Chikli reserved his sharpest criticism for Ankara, describing Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s regional ambitions as “an extremely dangerous combination” for Israel. He claimed Turkey has effectively installed a protectorate over much of Syria, and doubled down on his assessment by saying “Turkey and Syria are ten thousand times more concerning than Iran.”

    Chikli’s comments come amid a sharp upward trajectory in bilateral tensions between Ankara and Jerusalem. Erdogan earlier this month declared that Israel’s ongoing military strikes in Syria and Lebanon constitute a direct threat to Turkish national security, stating that “Israel must be stopped, this is the duty of humanity.” Just weeks prior, Turkish Interior Minister Mustafa Ciftci publicly called for the “liberation” of Jerusalem, further ramping up rhetorical hostility between the two countries.

    Chikli is not an outlier in his hardline stance toward Turkey among senior Israeli political figures. Last week, fellow Likud lawmaker Ariel Kellner officially labeled Turkey an “enemy state,” while Israeli Culture and Sports Minister Miki Zohar argued last month that Israel must reclassify Turkey as an enemy state, warning that Ankara would face devastating consequences in any future conflict with Israel. Even former Israeli Prime Minister and opposition figure Naftali Bennett backed that framing back in February, declaring that “Turkey is the new Iran.”

    Outside of his regional security assessments, Chikli used his recent media appearances to defend a high-profile far-right British political agitator. After UK police detained Tommy Robinson, whose legal name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, and seized his electronic devices upon his return from a trip to Russia, Chikla called the action an attack on free speech. “One of Britain’s clearest voices against real Islamic terrorism is now being hunted under anti-terrorism laws. At this rate Britain will become the second Islamic Republic in Europe,” he claimed.

    Chikli also pushed back against the idea that the region is set for a long period of peace after two and a half years of continuous conflict. When asked if Israelis could expect an extended period of calm, he said he hoped for that outcome but did not expect it to hold. He argued that Turkey has open regional ambitions that directly undermine Israeli interests, though he was careful to clarify that Israel has no intention of capturing the Turkish capital of Ankara, and would welcome lasting peace with both Syria and Turkey. He closed by referencing the October 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on Israel as a lesson: “When the enemy says something, I listen.”

    For years, Chikli has worked to build close working relationships with far-right political figures and governments across the globe, aligning with their anti-Islam and anti-immigration policy platforms.

  • Iran gets Trump concessions, empty promises in return for little

    Iran gets Trump concessions, empty promises in return for little

    In a recent diplomatic development that has sent ripples across global geopolitics, the leaders of the United States and Iran have signed a 14-point memorandum of understanding (MOU) designed to end active hostilities between the two nations, as well as halt Israel’s ongoing military campaign against Hezbollah in Lebanon. But according to analysis from Jessica Genauer, Academic Director of the Public Policy Institute at UNSW Sydney, the agreement is rife with critical structural flaws, unfulfillable promises, and one-sided concessions that leave the U.S. with few tangible gains while abandoning key regional allies and endangering long-term regional stability.

    Genauer frames the deal as a classic “emperor has no clothes” moment: despite the Trump administration’s loud claims of a historic diplomatic victory, the agreement delivers almost no new benefits to the U.S. that were not already in place before the outbreak of war. Even the limited nuclear concessions offered by Iran are nothing new, she argues, and the U.S. has given up significant leverage in exchange for almost no meaningful progress on core national security priorities. Beyond that, the MOU abandons long-standing U.S. partners, most notably Gulf Cooperation Council states, while sidelining core Israeli security interests and ignoring the democratic aspirations of the Iranian people. Worse, many of the core commitments laid out in the document are impossible for the U.S. to deliver on, particularly pledges around broad sanctions relief and the unfreezing of billions in Iranian assets held around the world.

    Breaking down the most problematic provisions of the MOU, Genauer first examines the clause calling for an immediate and permanent end to all military operations across all fronts, including Lebanon. A glaring oversight here is that the agreement never mentions the two primary parties to the Lebanese conflict — Israel and Hezbollah — and neither side was consulted before the clause was added to the MOU. The text also fails to clarify whether the ceasefire requires a full withdrawal of Israeli forces from southern Lebanon, a step that is all but politically impossible for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to implement. A solid majority of the Israeli public supports continued military pressure on Hezbollah and retaining control over southern Lebanon to eliminate the group’s cross-border threat. While a temporary ceasefire may hold in the short term, Genauer concludes the underlying conflict will almost certainly reignite in the near future.

    Next, the MOU includes a provision requiring Iran to allow unimpeded, fee-free safe passage for commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz for a 60-day period, a clause Genauer calls deeply problematic. In effect, the agreement explicitly concedes Iran’s right to begin charging shipping fees for passage through the strait once the 60-day window expires — a major win for the Iranian regime that upends decades of international consensus around free navigation through the critical global energy chokepoint. This provision places Gulf states and Oman in an extraordinarily difficult position: the agreement includes no binding security guarantees to protect these nations from Iranian aggression, leaving them with little choice but to accept Iran’s demand for fees to keep their energy and commodity exports flowing.

    The MOU also includes a commitment from the U.S. and unspecified regional partners to develop a $300 billion fund for Iranian post-conflict reconstruction and economic development. Genauer notes the U.S. is highly unlikely to contribute any of its own funding to the initiative, meaning the entire burden will fall on Gulf regional partners. For Iran, this provision creates a powerful new coercive tool: Tehran can pressure Gulf states to fund the reconstruction plan, threatening to block the Strait of Hormuz and resume cross-border attacks if they refuse. Faced with a choice between paying billions or enduring sustained economic and security damage, most Gulf states will likely concede to Iran’s demands. This dynamic also pushes Gulf nations into a delicate position with the U.S.: while they remain dependent on Washington for military security and will not openly break with the U.S., they are almost certain to pursue deeper diplomatic and economic partnerships with other global powers, particularly China, to hedge their bets.

    On the critical issues of sanctions relief and unfreezing Iranian assets, two core pledges laid out in points 7 and 11 of the MOU, Genauer highlights that the U.S. simply cannot deliver on most of its promises. Washington can only lift unilateral U.S. sanctions and unfreeze assets held directly on U.S. territory, which make up a tiny fraction of Iran’s total frozen assets globally. The agreement requires the U.S. to also cancel United Nations Security Council and International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) sanctions resolutions, a step that is completely outside Washington’s unilateral control. What’s more, the U.S. did not consult with its allies who hold the vast majority of Iran’s frozen assets before signing the MOU, leaving no clear path to pressure those allies to release the funds.

    Finally, on the nuclear issue that has been at the center of U.S.-Iran tensions for decades, the MOU delivers almost no new progress. The agreement only reaffirms Iran’s existing pre-war commitment not to develop nuclear weapons, and deliberately omits any ban on Iranian uranium enrichment — a core long-standing red line for U.S. negotiators. The only concrete nuclear provision requires Iran to dilute its existing stockpiles of enriched uranium under IAEA supervision in exchange for sanctions relief, and the text only commits both sides to “discuss the issue of enrichment” at some future date. Genauer notes it is extremely unlikely that a more detailed, binding agreement on enrichment will be reached within the 60-day window outlined in the MOU; any future negotiations would take months at a minimum, and a final deal is far from guaranteed. Despite this lack of progress, the U.S. has already agreed to offer sweeping sanctions relief, representing a major one-sided concession to Tehran.

    This analysis, originally published in *The Conversation* under a Creative Commons license, offers a critical, detailed breakdown of the gaps and risks of the new U.S.-Iran diplomatic agreement.

  • Why US presidents end up cursing Benjamin Netanyahu

    Why US presidents end up cursing Benjamin Netanyahu

    For nearly 30 years, Israel’s longest-serving prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has built a legacy of clashing with sitting U.S. presidents, leaving even the most powerful leaders in the world reaching for expletives to express their frustration. A candid new analysis traces this long-running pattern of tension, revealing how Netanyahu’s strategic choices and the unique structure of U.S.-Israel relations have repeatedly put the two allies at odds – with escalating consequences that now threaten Israel’s long-standing bipartisan support in America.

    The string of high-profile friction stretches back to 1996, when Netanyahu met newly elected U.S. president Bill Clinton for the first time. After Netanyahu delivered a lengthy, unsolicited lecture on the history of the Arab-Israeli conflict, an exasperated Clinton turned to his aides afterward asking, “Who the fuck does he think he is? Who’s the fucking superpower here?”

    Relations between Netanyahu and Barack Obama were hostile from the start, and deteriorated rapidly after Obama launched negotiations for a landmark nuclear deal with Iran. In a 2011 open-mic incident years before the deal was finalized, then-French president Nicolas Sarkozy described Netanyahu to Obama as “a liar,” to which Obama replied: “You may be sick of him, but me, I have to deal with him every day.” Journalist Jeffrey Goldberg later documented that Obama’s senior staffers privately referred to Netanyahu with the scathing insult “chickenshit.”

    Most recently, the pattern repeated with Donald Trump in June 2024, after Netanyahu ordered a military strike on Beirut, the capital of Lebanon. Concerned the attack would upend a fragile pending agreement to end escalating conflict with Iran, Trump lashed out publicly, saying Netanyahu has “no fucking judgment.” Even current president Joe Biden has joined the long list of frustrated leaders, with reports indicating Biden called Netanyahu a “fucking liar” over his management of the devastating post-October 2023 war in Gaza.

    While many observers attribute this repeated friction to Netanyahu’s stubborn, single-minded personality, the analysis argues there is a deeper structural explanation rooted in the unique nature of U.S.-Israel relations. Unlike other foreign leaders who clash with U.S. presidents, sitting American chief executives cannot simply dismiss Netanyahu or cut off U.S. military and diplomatic support for Israel, thanks to the powerful, well-organized pro-Israel constituencies that exert major influence over U.S. domestic politics.

    Netanyahu has actively leveraged this dynamic to advance his own policy goals, mobilizing U.S. domestic pro-Israel groups to pressure sitting presidents when their priorities diverge from his. In 1998, for example, when Clinton pressured Netanyahu to cede territory in the Israeli-occupied West Bank during a Washington visit, Netanyahu spoke the night before his meeting with Clinton to 1,000 members of the pro-Israel Christian right, a core constituency that openly opposed Clinton’s agenda, and held separate meetings with top Republican leaders. When Clinton met him the next day, he dryly noted, “I know where you were last night.”

    This strategy reached new heights during the Obama administration, when Netanyahu rallied broad opposition within U.S. political circles to derail Obama’s Iran nuclear deal. Whenever Obama pressured Netanyahu to curb settlement expansion in the West Bank, Netanyahu stoked domestic U.S. political backlash that ultimately forced Obama to back down rather than absorb the political cost of confrontation.

    In recent years, Netanyahu has doubled down on this approach by making a deliberate strategic choice to align himself closely with the U.S. Republican conservative right. This partisan alignment has amplified tensions with Democratic presidents, who have historically been more willing to challenge Israeli policy, and has turned U.S. support for Israel into an increasingly divisive partisan issue – a shift that critics warn has already eroded support for Israel among the American left.

    The 2024 clash with Trump marks a major turning point, however: it is the first time a sitting Republican president has openly and harshly criticized Netanyahu, undermining the core of his long-standing partisan strategy. The analysis argues that over the past year, Netanyahu overextended his influence, pushing aggressively to draw the U.S. into a direct military confrontation with Iran, a goal he has pursued for decades. From Trump’s perspective, Netanyahu maneuvered the U.S. into a costly, intractable conflict that damages U.S. economic and global interests, and Netanyahu refuses to prioritize a quick cease-fire that would ease global economic pressure.

    Today, the consequences of Netanyahu’s decades-long strategy are playing out against a dramatically shifted backdrop. Broad public support for Israel across the U.S. political spectrum has collapsed amid mounting casualties from the Gaza war, and even traditionally pro-Israel conservative voters are growing frustrated over the economic harm of the escalating regional conflict. Netanyahu now finds that his partisan alignment has left his country with no solid base of bipartisan support in the U.S. The article concludes that future Israeli leaders will likely look back at Netanyahu’s approach and share the frustrated assessment that led Trump to reach for a curse word – that the long-serving prime minister lacked the judgment to protect Israel’s most critical alliance.

  • US-Iran deal leaves Israel isolated and Netanyahu exposed

    US-Iran deal leaves Israel isolated and Netanyahu exposed

    For Israelis across the political and military spectrum, the newly announced US-Iran peace deal to end the ongoing conflict is far more than a simple diplomatic breakthrough between Washington and Tehran. To the country’s ruling elite, this agreement marks a defining strategic turning point—one that threatens to erode Israel’s regional standing, fray its most critical alliance with the United States, and hasten the end of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s decades-long political career.

    Though a deal had been broadly anticipated since April, Pakistan’s official confirmation of the agreement on Sunday sent immediate shockwaves through Israeli political and military circles. While key details of the deal’s terms remain undisclosed and open to speculation, one thing is clear: the end of the joint US-Israeli campaign against Iran was not supposed to unfold this way. When Netanyahu launched Israel’s military offensive against Iran on February 28, the stated goals were unambiguous: dismantle Iran’s nuclear and ballistic missile programs, and bring about the collapse of the Iranian government.

    Nearly four months later, none of these core objectives have been achieved. In fact, Iran leaves the conflict in a stronger geopolitical position than it held before February. It retains full control over its nuclear and missile development programs, and the Iranian leadership has emerged politically consolidated even after major Israeli strikes, including the reported assassination of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Iran is now increasingly recognized as an ascendant regional power, with Arab Gulf states shifting their alignment toward Tehran and away from Jerusalem.

    For Israel, this new landscape has left the country in a position of geopolitical isolation unseen for decades, a sentiment that has grown steadily among the Israeli public. This sense of estrangement began building over the past two and a half years, as Israel’s brutal military campaign in Gaza sparked widespread international boycotts. But the current situation marks a far more alarming shift: Israel now finds itself increasingly distanced even from its closest ally, the United States, with multiple reports documenting a deepening rift between Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump.

    To most Israelis, any fracture in the US-Israel alliance is viewed as an existential threat. For generations, Israel’s national security doctrine has been anchored to its strategic partnership with Washington. Today, both sitting government ministers and senior military commanders acknowledge they are uncertain of the deal’s long-term implications, scrambling to adjust to a rapidly shifting regional order that defies their past assumptions.

    Domestically, the agreement carries profound political consequences for Netanyahu, whose right-wing coalition already trails opposition blocs in pre-election polling ahead of upcoming national votes. Speaking at a televised press conference on Monday, Netanyahu doubled down on his narrative of Israeli victory, claiming the country had achieved major gains across all recent conflict zones: Gaza, Lebanon, Syria, and Iran. He argued that without Israel’s two major military strikes on Iran in 2025 and February 2026, Tehran would have already acquired a functional nuclear weapon. Addressing the Israeli public, he claimed he had “saved the State of Israel from annihilation” — rhetoric that has only widened the growing gap between the prime minister and an increasingly skeptical public. Rather than presenting himself as an accountable leader answerable to voters, Netanyahu positioned himself as a singular, legendary figure above the fray of day-to-day politics, a framing that has fallen flat for many Israelis.

    While polling currently puts Netanyahu’s coalition at between 50 and 53 seats in the 120-seat Knesset, the full impact of the US-Iran deal has not yet been reflected in public opinion. Even so, current trends suggest Netanyahu will fall far short of the 61-seat majority needed to form a new government if elections were held today. It remains unclear whether the deal includes explicit language requiring Israel to withdraw its military forces from southern Lebanon, or whether Trump will pressure Netanyahu to pull out even without a formal clause mandating the move. For Netanyahu, Lebanon is already a major political vulnerability, and opposition parties have seized on the deal to criticize his leadership — focusing less on the decision to go to war, and more on the chaotic mismanagement of the conflict that led to this outcome.

    An Israeli withdrawal from southern Lebanon could mark the beginning of the end for Netanyahu, the longest-serving prime minister in Israeli history. Former Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Gadi Eisenkot, a leading opposition figure, has seen his support surge in recent polling, and he is now widely viewed as the top contender to replace Netanyahu. This week could prove to be the defining turning point in the race for prime minister. Netanyahu is increasingly framed by voters and commentators alike as a leader mired in multiple open-ended conflicts with no clear strategic goals or exit plans, and his public rift with Trump has only reinforced the narrative of growing Israeli and Netanyahu-led isolation. By contrast, Eisenkot is increasingly seen as a measured, responsible leader capable of making clear, strategic choices about Israel’s conflicts. This contrast could well prove decisive in the upcoming election.

    Beyond the fate of Netanyahu’s political career, the US-Iran deal poses a fundamental challenge to Israel’s long-standing approach to regional security. For years under Netanyahu, Israel has prioritized overwhelming military force as the primary solution to regional challenges, sidelining diplomatic engagement. This trend accelerated dramatically after the October 2023 Hamas attack, when military force became the dominant tool for advancing Israeli policy, with the Israeli military — particularly under current Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir — abandoning the broader, more nuanced strategic outlook that guided its leadership in years past. Today, the army’s only answer to security challenges is total destruction, framed as a way to boost Israeli deterrence. Even as senior officers continue to push for expanded military operations across the region, strikes like the recent attack on Beirut’s Dahieh district have carried significant long-term strategic costs for Israel. If Israel is forced to withdraw from Lebanon, it would deal a major blow to the prestige of the Israeli military, which has grown into a powerful domestic political actor that has consistently pushed for expanded conflict. While Netanyahu and his far-right allies Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben Gvir are widely recognized as the driving force behind Israel’s shift toward prolonged conflict, the military’s outsized role in shaping these policies has received far less public scrutiny. The new deal calls into question not just the military’s approach to conflict, but Israel’s entire framework for managing its interests across the Middle East.

    Netanyahu appears to grasp the scale of the potential changes better than most of his political rivals. If the agreement ultimately forces Israel to withdraw from southern Lebanon under Iranian pressure, while a new regional alignment uniting Iran, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Turkey takes shape, the consequences will extend far beyond Lebanon’s borders. These shifts will almost certainly reshape the ongoing conflict in Gaza as well. As Israel grows weaker and more distanced from Washington, Iran and its regional allies will likely push for the same changes in Gaza that they are demanding in Lebanon. Regional powers including Qatar and Turkey may also extract concessions from the Trump administration in exchange for maintaining ties with Washington rather than shifting closer to Iran and China. Those concessions would almost certainly include changes to Israel’s current control over Gaza. This is not a new dynamic: in 1991, the US rewarded Arab and Muslim states for joining the Gulf War coalition by brokering the first formal Israeli-Palestinian peace talks at the Madrid Conference. A similar dynamic could emerge today, even in a different form, putting Gaza and the occupied West Bank at the center of regional negotiations in the near future.

    While opposition figures accuse Netanyahu of damaging the US-Israel special relationship, repairing that alliance may prove far more difficult than many assume. A single visit to the White House will not be enough to reverse the dramatic shifts in Israel’s strategic position.

    Standing alone in defiance of Washington could become the core theme of Netanyahu’s reelection campaign. For that reason, it is entirely possible that Israel will refuse to withdraw from Lebanon even if Trump formally demands a pullout, risking a far deeper rupture with the White House. Earlier this week, Yinon Magal, a prominent Channel 14 journalist widely seen as close to Netanyahu, floated a possible name for a future Israeli military operation against Iran: “A People Dwells Alone.” Echoing the myth of Masada, where Jewish rebels chose death over surrender to Roman forces, the phrase frames a vision of Israel fighting its own battles independently, even without the support of its most critical ally. Israel retains formidable military capabilities, including a powerful air force and an undocumented nuclear arsenal, and for the foreseeable future, it can sustain its regional isolation through military superiority.

    Netanyahu will almost certainly frame himself as the only leader willing to defy international pressure and protect Israeli citizens from external threats, leaning into this narrative of lonely defiance. But if Israel rejects the path of isolation that Netanyahu is currently charting, this week will go down in history as a watershed moment for the Middle East. Israel could be forced to accept foreign-led policy changes not just in Lebanon, but across the occupied Palestinian territories.

  • After a year of displacement, Tulkarm’s Palestinians allowed home for two hours

    After a year of displacement, Tulkarm’s Palestinians allowed home for two hours

    On a Wednesday morning in mid-June 2026, lines of displaced Palestinian families clutching only their identity documents gathered at the entrance of Tulkarm refugee camp in the northern occupied West Bank. For more than 16 months, since Israel launched its large-scale “Iron Wall” military operation across the region in January 2025, these families and thousands more have been barred from returning to the homes they fled, locked out of the communities they built over generations.

    Through a limited coordination arrangement mediated by the Palestinian Civil Affairs Committee, just 45 displaced households from Tulkarm camp were granted permission to enter for two hours on June 17. Their mission: collect only the most essential personal belongings left behind when they fled the offensive. This temporary access does not pave the way for a permanent return, leaving thousands of displaced camp residents stuck in limbo, with no clarity on if or when they will be able to resettle in their original homes.

    Faisal Salama, leader of the Tulkarm refugee camp Popular Committee, issued sharp condemnation of the restrictive, demeaning conditions imposed on the small group of residents allowed entry. In an interview with Middle East Eye, Salama noted that the entry terms included invasive body searches and the forced confiscation of all communications devices. “These measures are deeply humiliating and inconsistent with basic humanitarian principles and respect for civilians’ rights,” he said. He added that the two-hour time limit only allowed families to grab a handful of urgent items, with no path to moving back to their residences permanently.

    “The camp belongs to its residents, yet it has effectively been turned into a military zone while its people remain displaced,” Salama stated. “Thousands of families are still waiting for the opportunity to return and rebuild their normal lives.”

    As the permitted residents walked through the camp’s narrow, pockmarked streets, many carried empty canvas bags and wheeled carts, clinging to the small hope of salvaging whatever fragments of their former lives remained inside their homes. Some left with armfuls of personal documents, clothing and small mementos, while others found their properties so heavily damaged that almost nothing was salvageable. Widespread destruction is visible across every corner of the camp: damaged homes, crumbled roads, and crippled infrastructure stand as evidence of the months-long military operation. For many residents, the brief two-hour visit was as much about confronting the wreckage of their former communities as it was about collecting belongings.

    Abdelhalim Turkman, one of the displaced residents allowed entry, described the experience as overwhelmingly emotional. “This is the first time I’ve entered the camp in more than a year and a half,” he said. “It’s very emotional to see my home and neighbourhood again. We came to collect some of our belongings, but what we’ve been through cannot be compensated.” Turkman added that the short trip only reinforced the scale of what residents have lost, and the persistent uncertainty hanging over their futures. “I hope the day comes when we can return and live here again,” he said.

    Aisha Zeitoun, another displaced resident who entered the camp, called her return after 16 months of displacement a deeply painful experience. “Walking back into my home after more than a year and a half was heartbreaking,” she said. “Every room holds memories of the life we once had, and seeing it again brought back so much emotion.” When Zeitoun and her family stepped inside their property, they were met with widespread, catastrophic damage. “We only had a limited time to gather what we could, but the destruction was overwhelming,” she said. “We couldn’t even take many of our belongings because of the damage.”

    Like other residents, Zeitoun emphasized that temporary access to retrieve a small number of possessions is not enough. What the displaced population truly demands is the right to permanently return and rebuild. “Today we’re leaving with only a few belongings,” she added. “But what we really want is the chance to come back home for good and rebuild our lives.”

    The mass displacement of Tulkarm camp residents began on January 27, 2025, when the Israeli military launched its offensive across the northern West Bank. Local officials confirm that more than 10,000 Tulkarm residents were forced to abandon their homes during the operation. Over the 19-day campaign, approximately 40,000 refugees from Jenin, Tulkarm and Nur Shams camps were forcibly expelled by Israeli special forces, who deployed armored vehicles, drones and bulldozers to carry out the operation.

    The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) has labeled the Israeli offensive “the longest and most extensive displacement crisis since 1967.” The agency’s assessments estimate that 43 percent of Jenin camp, 35 percent of Nur Shams camp, and 14 percent of Tulkarm camp have been completely destroyed or suffered severe irreversible damage. Local officials confirm that across Tulkarm camp alone, more than 1,100 housing units have been fully leveled, while an additional 4,400 units have sustained partial damage.

    In the 16 months since the offensive ended, most displaced families have been living in overcrowded, inadequate conditions: in makeshift temporary shelters, overcrowded displacement centers, overpriced rented accommodation, or crammed with relatives in nearby towns and villages. This brief two-hour access marked the first time most of these residents have been allowed to step foot inside the camp since they fled.

    When the two-hour window expired, the permitted families once again exited Tulkarm camp, carrying whatever small belongings they had been able to recover. Behind them, they left damaged homes, broken communities, and neighborhoods that have remained almost entirely empty since their displacement. Along with their handful of salvaged possessions, they carried back out the same uncertainty that has defined their lives for 16 months: no official guarantees have been given about when, or if, they will be allowed to return for good. While the visit offered a fleeting, bittersweet reunion with the places they once called home, displaced residents remain waiting for the promise they have held since January 2025: the unconditional right to return and rebuild their lives.

  • Trump told Erdogan he is attending Nato’s Ankara summit ‘just for him’

    Trump told Erdogan he is attending Nato’s Ankara summit ‘just for him’

    New details have emerged from a recent phone call between US President Donald Trump and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, revealing that Trump committed to attending the upcoming Nato summit in Ankara specifically as a gesture to the Turkish leader, multiple sources familiar with the conversation told Middle East Eye.

    This development comes amid steadily escalating frictions between the United States and its European Nato allies, with the July gathering in Turkey widely framed as a critical turning point for the alliance. Leaders on both sides are expected to lay out their long-held positions and work toward a unified path forward after months of growing disagreement over alliance priorities and burden sharing.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan reinforced this framing during comments to reporters on Thursday, noting that many European capitals view Ankara’s hosting of the summit — and Erdogan’s personal role as host — as the single biggest factor securing Trump’s participation. Fidan argued that without Turkey in the hosting role and Erdogan at the event, Trump would have skipped the summit, sending a clear signal that he did not view the gathering as a priority. He added that productive talks require Trump’s presence, as the summit will address core disagreements between US and European perspectives that cannot be resolved without the American leader in attendance.

    The tensions over alliance burden sharing moved to the forefront this week as US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth delivered a sharp warning to Nato allies during the bloc’s defense minister meeting in Brussels. Hegseth announced that over the next six months, the US will conduct a full review of its military footprint across Europe, and will cut its contributions to the alliance’s collective budget if European member states fail to raise their national defense spending to 5 percent of gross domestic product. “Make no mistake about it, this will be a real review,” Hegseth told attendees.

    Unusually, Turkey has so far avoided the American anger directed at many allies over insufficient defense spending, thanks to a string of policy wins for the Trump administration from Erdogan’s government. Ankara has delivered on multiple key priorities for Trump, from brokering last year’s ceasefire in Gaza to playing a critical supportive role in the recent Iran memorandum of understanding, a deal Trump personally publicly praised.

    Turkey has already outpaced Nato’s original 2 percent defense spending target in 2024, hitting 2.3 percent of GDP. On Thursday, the Turkish defense ministry confirmed that Ankara’s long-term military budgeting is already aligned with the goal of reaching the new 5 percent target, which Nato has required all member states to hit by 2035.

    In a show of allied cooperation ahead of the July summit, Nato members have moved to bolster Turkey’s national air defense capabilities. The United States and Germany deployed Patriot air defense systems to southern Turkey in May. On Thursday, Turkey’s defense ministry announced that an Italian SAMP/T air defense system had also been deployed to the 3rd Main Jet Base Command in the central Turkish city of Konya, as part of Nato’s Standing Defence Plan to strengthen the alliance’s collective eastern air defenses.

  • Former senior Israeli officials issue ‘final warning’ over West Bank settler terror

    Former senior Israeli officials issue ‘final warning’ over West Bank settler terror

    A unprecedented coalition of dozens of high-ranking former Israeli national security and government leaders has launched a scathing rebuke of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s far-right government, issuing a urgent “final wake-up call” demanding immediate action to crack down on growing Jewish settler violence and terrorism targeting Palestinian communities in the occupied West Bank.

    Released publicly Thursday and first reported by Israeli newspaper Haaretz, the joint statement carries unprecedented weight, signed by former prime ministers Ehud Barak and Ehud Olmert, former Israel Defense Forces chiefs of staff Moshe Ya’alon and Dan Halutz, ex-Mossad director Tamir Pardo, former heads of the domestic Shin Bet security agency Carmi Gillon and Yaakov Peri, a former Israeli national security adviser, a retired Supreme Court justice, retired major generals, a former state prosecutor, prominent rabbis, leading academics, and six recipients of the Israel Prize, the country’s highest civilian honor. Drafted by Israeli attorney Shmuel Berkowitz, copies of the statement were also delivered to Defense Minister Israel Katz, National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, senior military commanders and other top government officials.

    The coalition accuses Netanyahu and his governing coalition of complete inaction to root out organized settler violence, and in many cases, of actively enabling the terror campaign. The statement charges that Netanyahu and his ministers “have done nothing to eliminate Jewish terrorism”, pointing out that sitting officials have provided material backing to the illegal West Bank outposts where extremist settler leaders are based. “They do not condemn it, do not require the Israel Defence Forces, the police, the Shin Bet and the Civil Administration to fight it, and some of them, at least, even support this terror by providing financial and equipment assistance, and building illegal farms and outposts that serve as residences for Jewish terror activists,” the statement reads.

    The group specifically pushes back against Netanyahu’s repeated framing of settler attackers, challenging the prime minister’s description of the perpetrators as just “about 70 kids” from broken homes who commit minor offenses like tree cutting, a claim Netanyahu made in a December 2023 interview. The coalition dismisses Netanyahu’s casual label of “hilltop youth” as intentionally misleading, arguing that the violence is not the work of a small group of unruly teens, but a coordinated, systematic movement that includes hundreds of adult organizers who incite minors to carry out attacks.

    “For some reason, these Jewish criminals are referred to by you with the naive term of ‘hilltop youth’, as if they were members of a youth movement, marginalised youth or outliers. These are also young people and adults who lead even minors on the path of terror, crime and deadly violence,” the statement notes.

    The open letter ties the violence directly to the expansion of illegal settlement outposts built near Palestinian villages under the goal of so-called “Judaisation” of the occupied West Bank. The document explains that these outposts are intentionally established to displace local Palestinian communities through force, advancing the extremist movement’s ideology of “land redemption” by expelling Palestinians from their ancestral land. The coalition details how the attacks are coordinated: armed settlers from outposts are regularly joined by adult extremists from other settlements, regional defense units, and local security squads from inside Israel during large-scale raids on Palestinian communities. Attacks have included fatal shootings of Palestinian villagers and shepherds, as well as widespread destruction and looting of Palestinian property.

    The statement comes after several of the signatories joined tours of recently attacked Palestinian villages in the West Bank earlier this year, where many reported being shocked by the scale of damage and shared accounts from survivors, with multiple former leaders stating publicly that they felt “ashamed” by what they witnessed.

    Settler violence against Palestinian communities in the occupied West Bank has spiked dramatically since the outbreak of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza in October 2023. Multiple on-the-ground reports have documented that these attacks frequently occur in full view of Israeli military forces, which rarely intervene to stop the violence. International bodies including the United Nations and Amnesty International have repeatedly warned that the campaign of settler expansion and violence amounts to systematic ethnic cleansing that has forced entire Palestinian communities to leave their land.

    If the Netanyahu government fails to enact immediate policy changes to crack down on settler terror, the coalition says it will petition the Israeli Supreme Court to force action, marking an extraordinary step by former top Israeli officials against a sitting Israeli government.

  • Iranian press review: Conflict revived Iran’s regional power, says anti-war analyst

    Iranian press review: Conflict revived Iran’s regional power, says anti-war analyst

    A compilation of recent Iranian press reporting, reviewed by Middle East Eye, reveals overlapping developments across Iran’s foreign policy landscape, domestic social progress, and economic stability in the wake of the 12-day US-Israeli war with the country in 2025.

    On the question of Iran’s long-running regional strategy of expanding strategic depth through allied militant and political movements, one prominent Iranian analyst argues that the war has actually renewed domestic support for the policy, reversing waves of criticism that followed the June 2025 Israeli strike that triggered the conflict. Since the 1988 end of the Iran-Iraq War, Tehran has cultivated alliances with ideologically aligned groups across the Middle East, a policy framed by Iranian leaders as a core deterrent against Israeli aggression. After the 2025 war broke out, however, critics pushed back against the strategy, arguing that Iran’s regional partners had failed to prevent the attack and called the approach into question.

    Writing for the reformist daily Shargh, Iranian analyst Mehrdad Ahmadi Sheikhani pushed back against this criticism, noting that Hezbollah, the Lebanese allied movement, offered Iran full backing from the opening of the war, while Yemen’s Houthi movement also aligned with Tehran. After Iran launched retaliatory strikes against Israel following an Israeli bombing of Beirut earlier this year, Sheikhani argued that the response effectively redefined Iran’s regional spheres of influence and strategic depth for the post-war era. This counters claims that the strategy had become obsolete after the fall of the Syrian government, he added.

    Sheikhani also framed the conflict in sweeping historical context, arguing it marks a return to a level of Iranian regional power not witnessed in more than 200 years. Following the 1797 assassination of Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar, founder of the Qajar dynasty, Iran experienced a steady erosion of territory and regional influence amid conflicts with the Russian, Ottoman, and British empires. Unlike those historical defeats, Sheikhani emphasized that Iran emerged from the 2025 war without ceding any territory despite facing coordinated attacks from major global and regional powers, a historic shift. He also highlighted that the conflict exposed previously unknown precision and operational planning in Iran’s defense capabilities, building a new level of deterrence that the country has not held in more than two centuries.

    Alongside debates over regional strategy, new details have emerged about the human toll of US strikes on Iranian territory following the ceasefire agreement between Tehran and Washington. Seyyed Moussa Mousavi, a member of the Iranian parliament from the southern city of Lamerd, told state news agency IRNA that the Precision Strike Missiles (PrSM) deployed by the US on the first day of the war were fitted with controversial tungsten-fragment warheads that had not been publicly detailed before. While earlier reporting confirmed that upgraded PrSM variants were used in attacks on Iran, no specific information about the warhead design had previously been released.

    Mousavi explained that these munitions detonate before reaching ground level, leaving no impact craters but shattering into as many as 180,000 tiny high-velocity tungsten projectiles per missile. On February 28, four of these missiles struck Lamerd, a small city of roughly 30,000 residents. In just 35 seconds, approximately 720,000 tungsten fragments rained across the city, leaving 21 civilians dead and 150 wounded in strikes that hit residential neighborhoods and a local sports hall. Mousavi drew a sharp rebuke of the attack, framing the munitions as a deliberate targeting of civilian populations, noting that per capita, every resident of Lamerd was effectively exposed to 24 tungsten projectiles in the strike.

    In a separate positive domestic development, Iranian officials confirmed that long-standing restrictions on women obtaining motorcycle licenses will be lifted within the next month. Zahra Behrouz Azar, Iran’s vice president for Women and Family Affairs, told Shargh that all administrative procedures for the policy change have been finalized. While no Iranian law explicitly bans women from riding motorcycles, national traffic police have for decades refused to issue licenses to female applicants, even though women have long held full legal rights to drive passenger cars in the country.

    Under the new policy, the minimum age for a female motorcycle license will be 18. Licenses will first be issued to female motorcycle instructors and women competing officially in motorcycle sports through Iran’s national motorcycle federation, before a broader rollout. The policy shift follows years of grassroots advocacy by Iranian women, who have openly defied the restriction by riding motorcycles on public roads, repeatedly clashing with police and having their vehicles seized in protests against the ban.

    Despite this social progress, prominent Iranian economist and former Central Bank governor Valiollah Seif has issued a stark warning that the country is at growing risk of hyperinflation, driven by ongoing international sanctions and the cumulative economic shock of two major wars over the past 12 months. Writing for Khabar online news outlet, Seif noted that while Iran has not yet hit the technical definition of classic hyperinflation, it is currently experiencing extremely high inflation that sits just below the threshold for chronic monetary instability, putting the country at severe risk.

    Seif identified five core factors that have left Iran’s economy increasingly vulnerable: sustained expansion of the national money supply, long-standing structural government budget deficits, extreme volatility in the value of the Iranian rial, repeated geopolitical shocks from war and international sanctions, and eroding public confidence in the national currency. He added that the current post-war political landscape amounts to a prolonged state of “no war, no peace,” with no permanent ceasefire in place to resolve ongoing tensions. This prolonged uncertainty, he argued, is uniquely damaging to Iran’s economic outlook: it does not allow for a return to full domestic stability, nor does it contain the damage of war to a short-term shock, instead keeping the economy in a sustained state of limbo. “Simply put, the economy does not die in this situation, but it is gradually eroded,” Seif concluded.

    This report is compiled from an Iranian press digest, and its claims have not been independently verified by Middle East Eye, which specializes in independent coverage of the Middle East and North Africa region.

  • Israel’s Ben Gvir set to attend UN policing conference in New York next month

    Israel’s Ben Gvir set to attend UN policing conference in New York next month

    Controversial Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir is scheduled to travel to New York next month to participate in the annual United Nations policing summit, Israeli daily newspaper Haaretz has reported. Ben Gvir will lead a delegation from Israel’s national security ministry to the two-day conference, which is set to run from July 7 to 8 under the official theme “Investing in Peace”. The high-profile gathering brings together security ministers and police leaders from across the globe to explore how national and cross-border law enforcement agencies can work together to advance shared goals of global peace, security and inclusive development.

    What makes Ben Gvir’s upcoming appearance notable is his years-long, public record of fierce criticism against the United Nations. As recently as June 2024, after Israel was added to the UN’s blacklist of state actors responsible for harming children in conflict zones, Ben Gvir launched a scathing attack, claiming the global body had aligned itself with Hamas and become an accomplice to terrorist activity. Earlier that same year, he publicly celebrated Israeli forces’ destruction of a facility belonging to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (UNRWA) in occupied East Jerusalem.

    Just one week before news of his planned UN trip broke, Ben Gvir sparked international outrage by calling for the abduction of Lebanese women and young people as a pressure tactic against the Hezbollah militant group. “Let’s start thinking outside the box about Hezbollah,” he stated in public comments. “Conquering territory and killing many terrorists, but also detaining their women and youth and taking them to terrorist prisons… That’s what hurts them the most.”

    The month prior to that call, a video showing Ben Gvir overseeing the mistreatment of activists from the Global Sumud Flotilla, which was seeking to break Israel’s blockade of Gaza, went viral online and drew widespread condemnation both inside Israel and across the international community. Footage captured Ben Gvir waving an Israeli flag and confronting the detained activists while Israeli Prison Service officers forced the detainees to kneel face-down on the ground and manhandled them. The incident prompted official criticism from multiple world leaders, including representatives from nations whose citizens were among those detained. While condemnation also emerged within Israel, much of the domestic criticism centered on concerns that the embarrassing incident had severely damaged Israel’s global reputation.

    Ben Gvir, who resides in the illegal Israeli settlement of Kiryat Arba in the occupied Palestinian city of Hebron, has long been the public face of efforts by Israeli settlers to storm Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, a flashpoint site sacred to both Muslims and Jews. His far-right ideological views are rooted in the legacy of Meir Kahane, an ultranationalist American-Israeli rabbi, former Israeli lawmaker and founder of the Kach Party, a movement that openly advocated for the creation of an ethnically pure Jewish state and the expulsion of all Palestinians from Israeli-controlled territory.

    Ben Gvir joined Kach as an activist at the age of 16, years before the party was designated a terrorist organization by the United States and banned by the Israeli government following the 1994 Ibrahimi Mosque massacre in Hebron. In that attack, Kach member Baruch Goldstein opened fire on unarmed Palestinian worshippers at the holy site, killing dozens of people. Despite the attack’s global notoriety, Ben Gvir has openly praised both Kahane and Goldstein. He has repeatedly referred to Kahane as a “holy man, a righteous man”, and for decades kept a portrait of Goldstein hanging on the wall of his personal residence. A previously unearthed video from a Jewish Purim celebration also shows Ben Gvir dressed in costume as Goldstein, declaring “He is my hero.”

    In 2007, Ben Gvir was convicted by an Israeli court on charges of inciting racism and supporting a banned terrorist organization, after he was found carrying a sign that read “Arabs out”. Police also discovered Kahanist posters in his vehicle that read “It’s us or them” and “There is a solution – expel the Arab enemy.” For many years prior to entering politics, Ben Gvir worked as a lawyer representing Israelis accused of anti-Palestinian incitement and violent attacks against Palestinians. His highest-profile client was one of two Israeli teenagers charged with carrying out a 2015 arson attack on a Palestinian family home in the West Bank village of Duma, an attack that killed an 18-month-old Palestinian baby and multiple other family members.

    Just days before news of his planned UN trip was confirmed, Ben Gvir was forced to scrap a separate trip to the United States to attend a friend’s wedding after he encountered unexpected difficulties securing a US travel visa. However, a source familiar with the plans told Haaretz that Ben Gvir is not expected to face similar barriers for his upcoming UN trip, thanks to his official status as a sitting Israeli cabinet minister.

    This independent reporting was originally published by Middle East Eye, which provides in-depth, independent coverage of the Middle East, North Africa and global affairs.