Thursday, May 1, 2025

IDF preparing to deliver a 'decisive blow' against Hamas, IDF chief Zamir says at soldiers ceremony - Jerusalem Post Staff

 

by Jerusalem Post Staff

The purpose of the ceremony is to honor outstanding soldiers in the IDF.

 

IDF expanded their military acticity in the area of Daraj Tuffah in Gaza City to expand the security zone in the area on April 12, 2025. (photo credit: IDF SPOKESPERSON'S UNIT)
IDF expanded their military acticity in the area of Daraj Tuffah in Gaza City to expand the security zone in the area on April 12, 2025.
(photo credit: IDF SPOKESPERSON'S UNIT)

At the annual Outstanding Soldiers Ceremony at the President's Residence on Thursday, IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Eyal Zamir said that the IDF is preparing to deliver a "decisive blow" against Hamas and that the military will increase the pace and intensity of the operations in Gaza soon, if necessary.

“The Hamas terrorists still hold fifty-nine of our brothers and sisters. But they, too, know their safety is not forever,” Zamir said. 

“Our sovereignty and independence were not given to us as a gift. They were bought with blood and struggle, and they require us to defend them at all costs.”

The purpose of the ceremony is to honor outstanding soldiers in the IDF. At the beginning of Zamir’s speech, he defined what it means to be outstanding. “Excellence is not measured by who is the most talented or the most brilliant. It is granted to the one who perseveres. It is a quiet, daily choice to act with responsibility, commitment, and integrity — even when no one is watching,” Zamir said.

Zamir noted that this year, the ceremony has “special significance. You are receiving recognition during a time of war,” he said, “A long and complex war, in multiple arenas, against numerous threats, which is still ongoing.”

IDF Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir speaks during an event for outstanding soldiers as part of Israel's 77th Independence Day celebrations, at the President's Residence in Jerusalem on May 1, 2025. (credit: YONATAN SINDEL/FLASH90)Enlrage image
IDF Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir speaks during an event for outstanding soldiers as part of Israel's 77th Independence Day celebrations, at the President's Residence in Jerusalem on May 1, 2025. (credit: YONATAN SINDEL/FLASH90)

Zamir also highlighted the responsibility Israeli citizens have for one another. 

"For the State of Israel, this idea is essential to its existence and resilience, and no one is exempt—not individuals, not groups, and not tribes," Zamir said.

"We all enlist, we all fight together, and we all sacrifice together—for the sake of the state and for a better future. Because one shared destiny placed us here, in this land,” he said.

Zamir highlights notable awardees 

Zamir noted particular awardees, including Avigdor, an officer from a haredi family, “who chose to enlist in the IDF despite social challenges,” and Dorian, “who made aliyah alone just two years ago, and despite the language barriers, excelled in his service in the Intelligence Directorate.”

He also spotlighted Oria, an observer from the Re'im base, who survived Hamas’s October 7 attack and continued to serve in the IDF, “demonstrating extraordinary inner strength,” Zamir said.

“Lea, a soldier whose grandfather was kidnapped to Gaza and murdered there, and from that great pain, she found the strength to persevere, rise, and excel,” Zamir continued.

He concluded with Daria, the sister of a civilian hostage, “who enlisted in the IDF and, even during the fierce struggle for her sister’s return, managed to stand out and become a role model for strength and determination,” he said.

“We, too, together with you, are adding a new verse to the long and glorious song of the life of the people of Israel. From this place, in the heart of Jerusalem, our eternal capital, we send a clear message: The Israeli hope is alive and beating, and our actions will speak.

Happy and safe Independence Day," Zamir said at the end of his speech. 


Jerusalem Post Staff

Source: https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/article-852253

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Firefighters gain control over Judean Plains wildfire - Israel National News

 

by Israel National News

After over a day of battling the flames, the wildfire in the Judean Plane is under control. Forests and fields in the area were severely damaged.

 

השריפה בהרי ירושלים
The fire in the Judean Hills                                                             Yonatan Sindel/Flash90

Israel Fire and Rescue Services Commissioner Eyal Caspi announced that the large wildfire in the Judean Plains is under control.

The fire, which broke out on Wednesday near Tarom and quickly spread due to the weather conditions, severely damaged forests and fields in the area.

100 crews operated during the firefighting efforts, with the assistance of firefighting planes and helicopters. The efforts were concentrated on preventing the fire from spreading to nearby communities. During the operations to fight the flames, several firefighters suffered from smoke inhalation.

A special investigation team, which was created at the order of the Fire Commissioner, has begun investigating the cause of the blaze.

The commissioner thanked all forces and authorities that assisted in the national effort to battle the fire and ordered the gradual dismissal of forces. Firefighters will continue operating at a lower intensity, but will maintain a strong presence on the ground to prevent the flames from reigniting.

21 firefighters were lightly wounded in the fire, and one fire engine was damaged. No civilians were hurt.

The main epicenters of the blaze included the Latrun area, Burma Road, Eshtaol, Mesilat Zion, Taoz, Park Canada, Sha'ar Hagay, Kedoshim Forest, and Shoresh.

IDF forces and the Home Front Command also joined the national efforts, which all worked to create buffer lines using heavy engineering tools to protect nearby communities.

Significant preparations have been made for international aid to assist, with a firefighting plane from Cyprus already operating in Israel.

According to sources on the ground, the fire consumed about 20,000 dunams of open space.

All traffic arteries have been reopened and residents of the evacuated communities have been allowed to return to their homes.

The Fire Commissioner thanked all the forces and entities that assisted in the efforts to extinguish the fire and has instructed that forces be released gradually.


Israel National News

Source: https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/407704

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Iran had imperial ambitions in Syria, secret embassy documents show why it failed - Reuters

 

by Reuters

Huge projects were stymied early by corruption, sanctions and money problems, and the plans went spectacularly wrong with the fall of Assad.

 

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad (L) and his Iranian counterpart Mahmoud Ahmadinejad walk past the guard of honour in Damascus January 19, 2006. Syria said on Thursday Iran had a right to acquire nuclear technology for peaceful means and demanded Israel be stripped of its suspected nuclear arsenal. (photo credit: REUTERS/KHALED AL-HARIRI)
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad (L) and his Iranian counterpart Mahmoud Ahmadinejad walk past the guard of honour in Damascus January 19, 2006. Syria said on Thursday Iran had a right to acquire nuclear technology for peaceful means and demanded Israel be stripped of its suspected nuclear arsenal.
(photo credit: REUTERS/KHALED AL-HARIRI)

DAMASCUS - Iran had a grand plan for Syria – taken right from the playbook of a country it considers its arch-enemy.

Just as the United States solidified its global dominance by investing billions in rebuilding Europe after the Second World War, Iran would do the same in the Middle East by reconstructing a war-ravaged Syria.

The ambitious program, outlined in a 33-page official Iranian study, makes several references to “The Marshall Plan,” America’s blueprint for resurrecting post-War Europe. The US strategy succeeded: It made Europe “reliant on America,” a presentation accompanying the study says, by “creating economic, political and socio-cultural dependence.”

The document, dated May 2022 and authored by an Iranian economic-policy unit stationed in Syria, was found by Reuters reporters in Iran’s looted Damascus embassy when they visited the building in December. It was among hundreds of other papers they uncovered there and at other locations around the capital – letters, contracts and infrastructure plans – that reveal how Iran planned to recoup the billions it spent saving President Bashar al-Assad during the country’s long-running civil war . The Syria-strategy document envisions building an economic empire, while also deepening influence over Iran’s ally.

 IRANIAN President Masoud Pezeshkian; Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Commander-in-Chief, Maj. Gen. Hossein Salami; and the head of the Revolutionary Guards’ Quds Force, Brig. Gen. Esmail Qaani: Tehran still maintains ways in which it can negatively influence the region, says the writer.  (credit: WEST ASIA NEWS AGENCY/REUTERS)Enlrage image
IRANIAN President Masoud Pezeshkian; Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Commander-in-Chief, Maj. Gen. Hossein Salami; and the head of the Revolutionary Guards’ Quds Force, Brig. Gen. Esmail Qaani: Tehran still maintains ways in which it can negatively influence the region, says the writer. (credit: WEST ASIA NEWS AGENCY/REUTERS)

“A $400 billion opportunity,” reads one bullet point in the study.

These imperial hopes were crushed when rebels hostile to Iran toppled Assad in December. The deposed dictator fled for Russia . Iran’s paramilitaries, diplomats and companies beat their own hasty exit. Its embassy in Damascus was ransacked by Syrians celebrating Assad’s demise.

The building was littered with documents highlighting the challenges facing Iranian investors. The documents and months of reporting reveal new insight into the doomed effort to turn Syria into a lucrative satellite state.

Reuters interviewed a dozen Iranian and Syrian businessmen, investigated the web of Iranian companies navigating the gray zones of sanctions , and visited some of Iran’s abandoned investments, which included religious sites , factories, military installations and more. Those investments were stymied by militant attacks, local corruption, and Western sanctions and bombing runs.

Among the investments was a €411 million power plant in coastal Latakia being built by an Iranian engineering firm. It stands idle. An oil extraction project is abandoned in Syria’s eastern desert. A $26 million Euphrates River rail bridge built by an Iranian charity linked to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei collapsed under a US coalition airstrike years ago, and was neither repaired nor fully paid for.

The roughly 40 projects in the abandoned embassy files represent a fraction of Iran’s overall investment. But in this assortment alone, Reuters found that Syria’s outstanding debts to Iranian companies toward the end of the war amounted to at least $178 million. Former Iranian lawmakers have publicly estimated the total debt of Assad’s government to Iran at more than $30 billion.

Hassan Shakhesi, a private Iranian trader, lost €16 million in vehicle parts he shipped to Syria’s Latakia port just before Assad fled. “I’d set up an office and home in Syria. That’s gone,” said Shakhesi. He said he was never paid for the goods, which disappeared. “I hope Iran’s long history with Syria isn’t just wiped out. I’m now having to look at business elsewhere.”

Ultimately, Iran’s hopes to emulate the Marshall Plan and build an economic empire encompassing Syria went more the way of America’s debacles in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Early intervention in Syria’s civil war on the side of Assad deepened Iran’s influence over this gateway to the Mediterranean Sea. The story of the squandered investments reveals the financial risk that brought, and how the mutual reliance of the pariah governments of Syria and Iran hurt both.

 Assad poster burns in Syria (credit: SCREENSHOT/X)Enlrage image
Assad poster burns in Syria (credit: SCREENSHOT/X)

For Iran’s rulers, Assad’s fall and the collapse of their Syria plans come at a precarious time. They have been weakened by Israel’s decimation of the Islamic Republic’s key proxies, Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza. They are under pressure from US President Donald Trump to negotiate a deal that could neuter Iran’s nuclear program , or face possible military action if they balk. Iran’s regional rivals, including Turkey and Israel , are rushing to fill the vacuum left by its departure. The nascent Syrian government, for its part, has to contend with multiple frozen infrastructure projects as it tries to rebuild the war-ravaged country .

Reuters reporters discovered an array of documents as they visited Iran’s centers of soft power in Syria after Assad’s fall – diplomatic, economic and cultural offices. They photographed nearly 2,000 of the records, including trade contracts, economic plans and official cables, and left them where found. Reporters then used artificial intelligence, including the AI legal assistant CoCounsel owned by Thomson Reuters, to summarize and analyze the texts.

Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei said in December he expected the new Syrian leadership to honor the country’s obligations. But it’s not a priority for the new government, led by a former rebel group, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, that fought Assad and his Iranian backers.

Iranian government officials did not respond to requests for comment about the findings by Reuters.

“The Syrian people have a wound caused by Iran, and we need a lot of time to heal,” the new president, Ahmed al-Sharaa, said in an interview in December. Neither al-Sharaa nor other officials from Syria’s new government responded to requests for comment from Reuters about Iran’s role in the fallen regime. Sharaa’s HTS, initially an offshoot of Al Qaeda, severed those ties years ago and says it wants to build an inclusive and democratic Syria. Some Syrians, especially non-Sunni minorities, fear it retains the jihadist goal of establishing an Islamic government.

For most Syrians, the departure of Assad and the Iran-backed militias was cause to celebrate. Those Syrians who worked with Iranians have mixed feelings, however, about the exodus of Iranian business, which has left many of them without an income.

“Iran was here, that was just the reality, and I made a living from it for a while,” said a Syrian engineer who worked on the idled Latakia power plant.

The engineer asked not to be named for fear of reprisals for working for an Iranian company, after a spate of revenge killings last month against Syrians associated with the old regime. He said the Latakia project was hobbled by financial problems, Syrian corruption and underqualified workers from Iran, but that once completed would have boosted Syria’s struggling grid.

“The power plant was something for the future of Syria,” he said.

Iran's man in Syria

The man tasked with executing Iran’s economic plans in Syria was a bearded construction manager from the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps named Abbas Akbari. He was promoted with fanfare in March 2022 to lead a unit called the Headquarters for Developing Economic Relations of Iran and Syria. Its task was to boost trade and recoup Iran’s investment. His team produced the study that held up the Marshall Plan as a model.

Akbari enlisted comrades in the Revolutionary Guards, an elite branch of Iran’s military, to help with logistics on civilian projects.

Reuters found letters signed by Akbari in Iran’s looted embassy. The documents include details of projects he supported and the money spent. Near the scattered papers was a vault and a pack of C4 explosives discovered by fighters who were guarding the building. Akbari did not respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Iran’s foray into Syria began long before Akbari’s arrival. Mapna Group, an Iranian infrastructure conglomerate that hired the Syrian engineer who worked on the Latakia project, won its first major contract in 2008 to expand a power plant near Damascus. That was soon followed by a second contract to build another plant near the city of Homs.

The deals were part of a growing Iranian investment in Syria in the years ahead of the 2011 uprising against Assad, as US sanctions shut off both countries to the West. They were the fruit of a relationship dating back to the Iranian revolution of 1979, which led to the overthrow of the Shah and the establishment of the Islamic Republic.

Assad’s father, President Hafez al-Assad, was the first Arab leader to recognize the republic and helped arm Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini’s fledgling Shi’ite Muslim theocracy in its 1980s war with Iraq. They fought Israel during the Lebanese civil war – Iran via its Hezbollah proxy – and later sent fighters and weapons to resist the American occupation of Iraq after 2003.

Iran’s political investments in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon paid off for years. Like Iran, Iraq and Lebanon have significant populations of Shi’ite Muslims, and Shi’ite paramilitaries nurtured by the Revolutionary Guards dominated successive governments in Baghdad and Beirut. Syria became the key transit route for weapons and personnel across the “Axis of Resistance,” the name Iran gives to the armed groups and states it supports against Israel and the West.

Syria also held religious importance for Iran, which sent hundreds of thousands of pilgrims each year to visit the Sayyeda Zeinab shrine, the mausoleum of the Prophet Mohammed’s granddaughter, situated just south of Damascus.

Economic ties took off in the mid-2000s, around the time Mapna got its first contracts.

But then came the Syrian uprising against Assad in 2011, part of the wave of Arab Spring uprisings. The rebellion threatened a range of Iranian military, political, religious and, increasingly, economic interests.

Hundreds of thousands of Syrians rose up against the Assad government, which he ruled through an elite of the Alawite minority, an offshoot of Shi’ite Islam.

His crackdown turned the rebellion into an armed insurgency dominated by Sunni Islamist groups. The civil war caused ethno-religious rifts, bringing chaos to a country home to Sunnis, Muslims, Christians, Alawites, Kurds and others, with minorities increasingly fearful of a sectarian rebellion.

Shi’ite Iran – along with Assad’s other main backer, Russia – came to Assad’s aid, sending arms and manpower. Iran also sent engineers and entrepreneurs.

‘Never left its brothers alone’

In late December 2011, the reality of operating in wartime Syria hit Mapna. Syrian rebels kidnapped seven Iranians working on the Jandar power plant near Homs, Iranian state news reported. Two were killed, according to a 2018 letter from the company to Syria’s electricity minister seen by Reuters.

But the strife deepened Mapna’s investment, bringing it new contracts to repair Syria’s battle-damaged power grid, which by 2015 was producing less than half of pre-war output. The most ambitious deal was to build the Latakia plant.

The projects were troubled and costly from the outset, according to letters from the company seen by Reuters, and the Syrian engineer who worked at Latakia.

“Latakia was supposed to take 20 months, starting around 2018,” he said. “Now it’s frozen.”

Mapna announced in November 2024, a month before Assad’s ouster, that it was about halfway through construction.

The engineer said Syria insisted on using a subcontractor with links to the Assad family that hired largely unqualified builders and engineers. He said Mapna’s own staff included capable workers, and some who appeared to have got their jobs through Iranian connections.

“There were always financial issues: delayed payments between the governments, plus currency fluctuations,” he said.

The engineer’s account of payment issues and Syrian bureaucracy was corroborated by letters in the embassy, which also show how Mapna's own capital was at risk.

A 2017 letter from the company to the Iranian ambassador said that Syria was changing the terms of finalized deals, leaving Mapna to finance the Latakia power plant entirely, as well as another project initially agreed with 60% Mapna financing. A year later, the company president complained in a letter to Syria’s electricity minister that the government had ignored an offer to ship parts for an Aleppo plant and dragged its feet on approving other contracts with Mapna, which had incurred tens of millions of euros in costs.

“Mapna Group has never left its brothers alone in the Ministry of Electricity of Syria … during seven years of civil wars while all foreign companies left,” is how Mapna President Abbas Aliabadi, now Iran’s energy minister, ended his frustrated 2018 letter. The Energy Ministry, Aliabadi and Mapna employees and managers contacted by Reuters did not respond to requests for comment.

The company has not publicly announced how much it spent in Syria or whether payments were settled.

The company sometimes received logistical help from Akbari, the Revolutionary Guards construction manager, internal letters show. This included asking IRGC units to allocate fuel for Mapna.

Mapna had partially repaired the Aleppo thermal plant by the summer of 2022. Assad triumphantly toured the plant in a photo op. Other projects were still in the works. The Jandar plant, damaged during fighting, operates at reduced capacity.

The Syrian engineer left the Latakia project in 2021 because he refused to work for the Assad-linked Syrian subcontractor because of the corruption, and viewed the project as doomed. “I’ve struggled to find permanent work since then,” he said. A member of the minority Alawite sect, he sheltered at home while the country plunged into new sectarian violence last month.

Sanctions and debt

Mapna’s security and financial troubles were replicated across a host of other Iranian companies in Syria.

Copper World, a private Tehran-based electrical wiring firm, won a tender to supply a Syrian cable company just before the war. When fighting began, the investment looked shaky.

Rebels stole a cargo worth millions of dollars in Syria in 2012, a person with knowledge of the contracts told Reuters. Copper World pushed ahead in Syria because sanctions closed off other markets, the source said. Copper World claimed damages through Syrian courts and recovered some of the lost exports. The rest, due from the Syrian national insurance company, was never paid.

The source said the Syrian cable company demanded $50,000 as a condition for awarding Copper World a new contract – while doing the same deal with a rival Egyptian company. The two companies compared notes and discovered what was happening. Reuters could not determine how the deal was finalized.

On another occasion, a Syrian money-transfer company tasked with transmitting funds to Copper World used old rates for payments as the Syrian pound plummeted, leaving Copper World short.

“Bank transfers and currency fluctuations killed that business,” the source said.

A Copper World letter at the Iranian embassy sought Akbari’s help with its financial difficulties in Syria. The letter asked him to lobby the Syrian Central Bank and money-transfer company to pay $2.4 million due to Copper World.

A separate table of projects, outstanding payments and extra costs, annotated by Iranian officials, listed dozens of delays and payment issues for other firms.

Yet throughout the ordeals of Mapna, Copper World and others, Iran doubled down on its Syrian investment.

Iran signed a 2011 free trade deal with Syria, days before the Mapna kidnappings, focusing on industry, mining and agriculture. The government in Tehran issued Damascus a credit line worth $3.6 billion in 2013, and a second worth $1 billion in 2015, the first of a series of major loans to help the Syrian state pay for imports, including oil.

The United Nations most recently estimated Iran to be spending $6 billion a year in Syria by 2015. Iran has called estimates of its spending in Syria exaggerated, but not provided an official figure.

Iran and Syria signed a series of agreements between 2015 and 2020 aimed at Tehran recovering its debts. They included giving Iran land for farming, a license to become a mobile phone operator, housing projects, phosphate mining rights and oil exploration contracts.

Reuters reporting found that several of those projects ran into similar difficulties related to sanctions, manpower and security with little income to show for their troubles. None of the companies involved responded to requests for comment.

Iran was meanwhile losing deals to other countries. Akbari’s Headquarters for Economic Development reported in its study that Syria’s other big ally, Russia, had focused on “profitable sectors” in the country such as oil and gas. And seven months after agreeing that Iran could manage the port of Latakia, Syria renewed the lease of a French company instead.

‘Identify the Syrian mafias’

Akbari and his bosses in Tehran were acutely aware of how little their Syria investment had yielded by the time the Iranian government announced his new post leading the development agency in 2022.

The study that references the Marshall Plan was produced on Akbari’s watch. It lists a litany of troubles Iran endured in Syria – banking and transport problems, “lack of security” and red tape.

It also mentions USAID, the American aid agency that Trump has been defunding . Like the Marshall Plan, the Iranians viewed USAID as a highly effective vehicle for establishing American economic and soft power – a “nation building” model they wanted to adopt in Syria. It would help Iran “achieve goals such as increasing regional security,” as well as “neutralize” US sanctions, the study said.

Without mentioning other countries in detail, it said Syria was on the “front line” of Iran’s battle with Israel, and a key link with Hezbollah in Lebanon. Iran’s regional soft power projects include charity and construction work in Iraq and funding for seminaries in Lebanon. This spending is an increasing source of criticism at home by Iranians reeling from its ailing economy.

By the time Akbari started his job, Assad had largely beaten back the uprising with Iranian and Russian help.

Iran had reaped some strategic rewards, deepening its influence in the Syrian military, developing local militias alongside those it imported into Syria, and deploying paramilitaries in key centers like Damascus, Sayyeda Zeinab and Aleppo.

But Iranian businesses were losing interest. After fighting subsided, just 11 Iran-linked companies registered annually in Syria in 2022 and 2023, barely more than during the worst years of the civil war, according to an analysis by the Syrian political economist Karam Shaar shared with Reuters.

“Syrian banks’ failure to pay Iranian companies is discouraging investment,” a letter from Akbari’s agency to Iran’s Syria ambassador read, listing a litany of complaints.

The agency blamed “complicated Syrian bureaucracy.” A Powerpoint presentation that lay next to the agency’s study at Iran’s embassy suggested a workaround: “becoming familiar with the key stakeholders and economic and business mafias” of Syria.

The agency assessed that sanctions would still stop Syria from doing business with the West, making Iran one of its few options. Others were Arab states and Turkey, which had rekindled relations with Assad after years backing his opposition.

Akbari pressed on. In a photo accompanying a printout of internal meeting minutes, he sits smiling opposite Syria’s industry minister at an Aleppo hotel. “Mr. Akbari asked the Syrian side to identify incomplete factories” for Iranian companies to build, the minutes read.

Iran signed new agreements with Syria in 2023 and 2024 that included establishing a joint bank, zero tariff trade, and a second attempt at setting up transactions using local currencies – a move that would avoid sanctions by cutting use of US dollars.

But time would soon run out on Akbari and his mission.

Root and branch reversal

The scattered papers, belongings and military hardware left around the Iranian embassy in Damascus, a hotel for Iranian engineers and workers adjoining the Sayyeda Zeinab shrine, and a nearby cultural center, are a mix of contracts, plans, proselytizing and military-industrial logistics.

Next to tomes on Islamic jurisprudence and a “knowing Shi’ism” book at the cultural center are applications by Iranian women for membership of Iran’s Basij paramilitary organization. Among abandoned plans for shrine decorations, an Iranian worker at the nearby hotel was teaching himself Arabic in his personal notebook.

Despite the many problems, Iran was still pouring money into the upkeep of the Sayyeda Zeinab shrine. It was providing stipends for Iranian families who had moved to the area – according to Iranian documents seen at Sayyeda Zeinab – and maintaining militias nearby.

The fall of Assad last year brought down the curtain on Akbari’s Syria plan. By then, Israel had all but crushed Iran’s Axis of Resistance, killing the leadership of Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon, and key IRGC commanders in Syria.

An Israeli strike in April 2024 flattened the consulate building attached to the Damascus embassy, leaving one less site for Syrians to pillage when Iranian embassy staff fled.

Abu Ghassan, a fighter for the new Syrian government, guarded the embassy in the days after Assad fell. He said he and his comrades found a pack of explosives hidden in a corridor and some empty ammunition boxes.

“Locals keep coming in looking for money or gold,” he said. “There’s nothing of value left.”


Reuters

Source: https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/article-852245

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Israel must 'act immediately to prevent a massacre' of Syrian Druze, leader says during ceremony - Yoav Etiel, Jerusalem Post Staff

 

by Yoav Etiel, Jerusalem Post Staff

Sheikh Mowafaq Tarif called on Israel to act: "Israel must not stand idly by while this is happening in Syria."

 

Druze community military ceremony in Usfiya (photo credit: YOAV ETIEL)
Druze community military ceremony in Usfiya
(photo credit: YOAV ETIEL)

"The eyes and hearts of the Israeli Druze community are turned toward the suffering in Druze villages around Damascus,” the spiritual leader of the Druze community in Israel, Sheikh Mowafaq Tarif, said at the Druze military ceremony in Usfiya on Wednesday.

Sheikh Mowafaq Tarif called on Israel to act, stating, “I urge the State of Israel, the international community, and the Jewish people to act immediately to prevent a massacre. Israel must not stand idly by while this is happening in Syria. The responsibility to act lies with the nation’s leaders: you must act. The time for action is now.”

The military cemetery in Usfiya is the first of its kind established in a Druze town and currently commemorates 435 fallen Druze soldiers from the community, including 13 who died in the Swords of Iron War. Another 20 Circassians were also memorialized there.

For many years, fallen Druze soldiers and security personnel have also been buried in other Druze towns with military cemeteries. The ceremony in Usfiya differs slightly from those held in Jewish military cemeteries: Sheikh Mowafaq Tarif reads verses from Surah Al-Fatiha, the opening chapter of the Quran, which is sacred to the Druze as well.

 Druze community military ceremony in Usfiya (credit: YOAV ETIEL)Enlrage image
Druze community military ceremony in Usfiya (credit: YOAV ETIEL)

“I want the country’s leaders and representatives to look into the eyes of the bereaved families gathered here around the graves on this mountain, which symbolizes the Druze-Jewish bond, and ask themselves, have you done enough for the sons and grandsons of the hundreds of fallen from the Druze community?” Sheikh Mowafaq Tarif declared in his speech.

Official representatives at the ceremony

Two former prime ministers, Ehud Olmert and Naftali Bennett, attended the ceremony, as well as Education Minister Yoav Kisch, who represented the government. Former Minister Ayoub Kara was also present. Representing the Israel Police was Deputy Border Police Commissioner Brig. Gen. Ami Nidam, and the IDF was represented by Maj.-Gen. Ghassan Alian, head of the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT).

Prior to the ceremony, Kisch held a meeting with Sheikh Tarif, former minister Kara, and other Druze dignitaries to assure them that the IDF would not remain passive in the face of attacks on the Druze community in Syria.

Later on Wednesday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz announced in a joint statement that the IDF struck a gathering of an extremist group in Syria that was reportedly preparing to continue attacks against the Druze population in the town of As-Suweida in Syria’s Damascus Governorate.

"Israel will not allow harm to come to the Druze community in Syria, out of a deep commitment to our Druze brothers in Israel, who are tied by family and historical bonds to their Druze brothers in Syria," the statement read.

Kisch also addressed the situation of the Druze in Syria in his opening remarks at the ceremony, saying, “The State of Israel does not forget its moral and ethical duty to stand by the Druze there, our blood brothers, and will do everything in its power to ensure their safety and well-being.”

Criticism of the state

In addition to concern for hostages, the IDF, and security forces, speakers also raised criticism over issues such as the Nation-State Law and the Kaminitz Law.

“We must repeal the Kaminitz Law,” said Rafiq Sharuf, who stood beside his uncle’s grave at the cemetery. “It cannot be that a Druze soldier gets a draft order and also receives an order to demolish his home at the same time.”

 Israeli Druze demonstrating against Islamist violence in Syria, April 30, 2025. (credit: ISRAEL POLICE)Enlrage image
Israeli Druze demonstrating against Islamist violence in Syria, April 30, 2025. (credit: ISRAEL POLICE)

This came just as dozens of members of Israel's Druze community protested at the Kafr Yasif junction in the Western Galilee, near Acre, in response to the sectarian clashes that took place over the past 24 hours in the city of Jaramana, near Damascus, Syria. During the protest, tires were set on fire and major traffic routes, including access to military cemeteries in the area, were blocked, causing heavy traffic congestion. 

More than a dozen people were killed in the predominantly Druze town near the Syrian capital on Tuesday in clashes sparked by a purported recording of a Druze man cursing the Prophet Mohammad, which angered Sunni gunmen, rescuers and security sources said.

Half of those killed were members of the Druze community, and the rest were Syrian security personnel who were trying to break up the violence.


Yoav Etiel, Jerusalem Post Staff

Source: https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/article-852241

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Full text: Netanyahu’s Independence Day message to Israel - JNS

 

by JNS

"On our 77th Day of Independence, the wonder of Israel's revival continues to thrill us," said the premier.

 

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, April 9, 2025. Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, April 9, 2025. Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90.

Remarks by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in celebration of the 77th Independence Day of the State of Israel:

“My brothers and sisters, the citizens of Israel,

On our 77th Independence Day, the wonder of Israel’s revival continues to thrill us. That wonder exists by virtue of our dear ones—our sons and daughters—who have fallen for our sake, and today we have embraced their families. It exists by virtue of our wounded heroes, who implore the dedicated medical teams to allow them to return to the battlefield.

On Independence Day one year ago, there were still some who had doubts about the power of the State of Israel. But this year, nobody has such doubts, because we have achieved a dramatic turnabout: We have changed the face of the Middle East.

Our marvelous fighters, men and women, are dealing powerful blows to our mortal enemies on the seven fronts of the War of Redemption.

We are determined to complete the total victory—for the sake of our children and our future.

Our hostage brothers and sisters stand before our eyes at all times. We have already returned nearly 200 of them from Hamas captivity. We are obligated to return all of them, until the very last one.

Through generations, the nation of Israel has always risen above crisis situations and has grown anew. Unlike the generations that predated our independence, today we have a state, we have an army, we have security services.

We have brave fighters who command respect the world over. When I get to meet them in the field—from Rafah to the top of Mount Hermon—I am filled with immense pride.

This is the enduring spirit—the real spirit of our nation. This is a generation of lions—the generation of victory!

While our soldiers fight on the front, you, dear citizens of Israel, you embrace them with tremendous love. Even when there are disagreements among us, at the moment of truth we all stand together: We stand together in mutual solidarity, in giving, in unparalleled inner strength.

In our national anthem, we sing about the fulfillment of the hope to be a free nation in our own land, the Land of Zion and Jerusalem. Therefore, we will continue to do battle and ensure our freedom. We will continue to fight and protect our homeland. We will continue building the land—because we only have one home.

A home for the Jews and for our brothers the Druze, the Christians, the Muslims, the Bedouin, the Circassians—all of the citizens of Israel.

This, our 77th Independence Day, is dedicated to oz [‘strength’], two Hebrew letters that comprise ’77’.

And as it is said in the Bible [Job 12:16]: ‘With him is strength and wisdom.’

With strength, with wisdom, and with great spirit, God willing, we will complete our victory.

A joyous Independence Day to you all, citizens of the State of Israel.”


JNS

Source: https://www.jns.org/full-text-netanyahus-independence-day-message-to-israel/

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Hints of Israel’s long-term Gaza strategy emerge - Yaakov Lappin

 

by Yaakov Lappin

To ensure Hamas never rules again, Israel aims to separate the terror regime from Gaza's population, Israeli observers tell JNS.

 

Palestinian trucks parked near the Kerem Shalom Crossing in the southern Gaza Strip after Israel stopped aid deliveries on March 2, 2025. Photo by Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90.
Palestinian trucks parked near the Kerem Shalom Crossing in the southern Gaza Strip after Israel stopped aid deliveries on March 2, 2025. Photo by Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90.

Indicators of Israel’s longer-term strategy for the Gaza Strip, aimed at dismantling Hamas’s terror regime and military capabilities and making sure it never again rules the Strip, have been emerging in recent days.

An initial pillar of the approach involves fundamentally altering the flow of humanitarian assistance to bypass Hamas. 

Hamas has been systematically stealing the aid and using it to maintain its political regime, exploiting resources meant for civilians, while feeding and fueling its terror operatives. 

Diverting the aid away from Hamas is only the first step, according to Brig. Gen. (res.) Hanan Gefen, former commander of signals intelligence Unit 8200 in the Israel Defense Forces’ Intelligence Directorate.

Gefen told JNS that a new approach had been under consideration in Israel for months. He explained that while Hamas anticipates a ceasefire that would allow it to regroup, Israel envisions a drastically different future for Gaza. 

“Israel sees a completely different picture. Israel does not see Hamas in power. Hamas still doesn’t understand what this means from Israel’s perspective. It means something very similar to the situation in southern Lebanon, where Hamas will not be able to carry out any action without an Israeli response,” said Gefen.

To help achieve this, Israel is focusing on the separation of Hamas from the Gazan populace, beginning with aid, and moving on to the entire economic situation, which Hamas will not be allowed to be a part of, said Gefen.  

“The Israeli government, together with regional partners headed by  Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, as well as the United States, want to cause all of these issues—the construction, and humanitarian aid, and medical aid, and then continuous fuel and water assistance, to be carried out using different mechanisms—away from Hamas. And importantly, to do this for years. This is not a three to four-month operation,” he added. 

This vision also includes the possibility of facilitating the departure of Gazans who wish to leave, said Gefen, though he expressed doubt that it would happen at the scale envisioned by US President Donald Trump. 

“One of the things Israel is doing, and will increasingly do, is to open its borders via Ramon Airport. Another way is to enable Gazans to leave. Those who want to leave can leave. This is part of the pressure [on Hamas],” he stated. 

A key component of this revised approach involves utilizing international private companies to distribute aid. Gefen described a process where Israel would securely deliver aid to a certain point, from which a civilian company, equipped for self-defense, would manage distribution to local Gazans. 

Prof. Uzi Rabi, senior researcher and the head of the program for Regional Cooperation at the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African Studies at Tel Aviv University, told JNS that the idea of involving private companies “is a solution that removes direct responsibility for distribution from the IDF—something that reduces direct friction with the Palestinian population, and indicates that Israel allows the flow of aid while avoiding direct involvement.” 

However, this specific tactic was a point of disagreement between the IDF General Staff and the Security Cabinet.  According to a report by Mako News on April 23, 2025, IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir expressed concerns in cabinet discussions about the IDF directly handling aid distribution, a position also held by his predecessor, Lt. Gen. (res.) Herzi Halevi. 

The Mako report indicated that defense officials, including the Defense Minister,  Israel Katz, preferred alternatives like international companies for aid distribution. Zamir is reportedly concerned about avoiding making soldiers targets “as they carry sacks of rice for the residents of Gaza.” 

Regarding the chief of staff’s stance, Rabi said his “public opposition stems from the concern that IDF soldiers will become a ‘stationary target’ during aid distribution. This is a tactical disagreement, not one of principle.” 

Rabi added, “Hopefully this is a [passing] episode because if not, it could indicate a rift. The future will tell.”

Beyond the aid, Israel’s fundamental security doctrine is undergoing a dramatic shift, said Gefen. He highlighted a move away under Zamir from the approach championed by his predecessor, Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi, of defensive combat. 

“The Israeli policy along all the borders is changing completely,” Gefen said on April 30. 

“The Minister of Defense said yesterday that the army will be a buffer between the threats and the Israeli population so that a similar situation [to Oct. 7, 2023] does not happen, and therefore we will see an offensive campaign, not a defensive one,” Gefen stated. 

 “It’s not about standing with fortifications and waiting to be attacked. Rather, every threat—in the Strip, in Judea, in Judea and Samaria, in Lebanon and in Syria is attacked all the time.” 

Gefen argued that Gaza’s longer-term possibilities include massive reconstruction efforts after Hamas is removed from power, which could be led by regional powers such as Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE, with American involvement.


Yaakov Lappin is an Israel-based military affairs correspondent and analyst. He is the in-house analyst at the Miryam Institute; a research associate at the Alma Research and Education Center; and a research associate at the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies at Bar-Ilan University. He is a frequent guest commentator on international television news networks, including Sky News and i24 News. Lappin is the author of Virtual Caliphate: Exposing the Islamist State on the Internet. Follow him at: www.patreon.com/yaakovlappin.

Source: https://www.jns.org/hints-of-israels-long-term-gaza-strategy-emerge/

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The Trump Counterrevolution and the Moral Ledger - Victor Davis Hanson

 

by Victor Davis Hanson

Trump’s counterrevolution presses on—quietly, methodically, and morally—while a flailing opposition offers only chaos, debt, and deflection in response.

 

Despite the media hysteria, Trump’s counterrevolution remains on course.

Its ultimate fate will probably rest with the state of the economy by the November 2026 midterm elections. But its success also hinges on accomplishing what is right and long overdue—and then making such reforms quietly, compassionately, and methodically.

No country can long endure without sovereignty and security—or with 10 to 12 million illegal immigrants crossing the border and half a million criminal foreign nationals roaming freely.

The prior administration found that it was easy to destroy the border and welcome the influx. But it is far harder for its successor to restore security, find those who broke the law, and insist on legal-only immigration. Trump is on the right side of all these issues and making substantial progress.

Everyone knew that a $2 trillion budget deficit, a $37 trillion national debt, and a $1.2 trillion trade deficit in goods were ultimately unsustainable.

Yet all prior politicians of the 21st century winced at the mere thought of reducing debts and deficits, given that it proved much easier just to print and spread around federal money. As long as the Trump administration dutifully cuts the budget, sends its regrets to displaced federal employees, seeks to expand private sector reemployment, and quietly presses ahead, it retains the moral high ground.

The elite universities have long hidden things from the American people that otherwise would have lost them all public support.

They deliberately sought to neuter Supreme Court rulings banning race-based preferences by stealthily continuing their often-segregated policies on campuses, from admissions and hiring to dorms and graduations.

They have taken billions of dollars from autocracies, such as communist China and Qatar. And they have partnered abroad with their foreign illiberal institutions and then disguised their quid pro quo subservience.

These supposedly prestigious universities have previously made no real effort either to stop or even hide their own campus epidemics of anti-Semitism.

They have spiked their tuition and costs higher than the annual rate of inflation, assured that the tottering $1.7 trillion guaranteed student loan portfolio would always send them guaranteed cash flows.

They have gouged taxpayers by charging exorbitant surcharges on federal grants from 40 to 60 percent. And they make no effort to offer students intellectual, ideological, or political diversity.

So, even our most prestigious universities seem to have no real moral compass. Accordingly, as long as Trump retains the high ground, the public, too, will demand either reform in higher education or a cessation of federal support to it.

The economy remains strong, but its ultimate health depends on reaching a trade deal with a handful of nations that account for our $1.2 trillion trade deficit in goods: China, the EU, Canada, Mexico, the Southeast Asian trade bloc, and Taiwan, Japan, and South Korea.

These nations all know that their tariffs are not symmetrical. But our trade partners will not willingly change. They apparently, but wrongly, believe that the U.S. either welcomes its trade deficits, naively thinks they’re irrelevant, or is too wedded to libertarian trade ideology to demand accountability.

So, too, on trade, the Trump administration is in the right.

Its only challenge is to avoid envisioning tariffs as a new, get-rich source of massive revenue. Data does not support the idea of such large tariff incomes.

The American people signed on for symmetry, fairness, and reciprocity in trade, not tariffing those who run deficits with us or seeing high tariffs as a cash cow to fund our out-of-control government.

Enraged Democrats still offer no substantial alternatives to the Trump agenda.

There are no shadow-government Democratic leaders with new policy initiatives. They flee from the Biden record on the border, the prior massive deficits and inflation, the disaster in Afghanistan, two theater-wide wars that broke out on Biden’s watch, and the shameless conspiracy to hide the prior president’s increasing dementia.

Instead, the Left has descended into thinly veiled threats of organized disruption in the streets. It embraces potty-mouth public profanity, profane and unhinged videos, nihilistic filibusters, congressional outbursts, and increasingly dangerous threats to the persons of Elon Musk and Donald Trump.

All that frenzy is not a sign that the Trump counterrevolution is failing. It is good evidence that it is advancing forward, and its ethically bankrupt opposition has no idea how, or whether even, to stop it.

 
Victor Davis Hanson is a distinguished fellow of the Center for American Greatness and the Martin and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution. He is an American military historian, columnist, a former classics professor, and scholar of ancient warfare. He has been a visiting professor at Hillsdale College since 2004, and is the 2023 Giles O'Malley Distinguished Visiting Professor at the School of Public Policy, Pepperdine University. Hanson was awarded the National Humanities Medal in 2007 by President George W. Bush, and the Bradley Prize in 2008. Hanson is also a farmer (growing almonds on a family farm in Selma, California) and a critic of social trends related to farming and agrarianism. He is the author of the just released New York Times best seller, The End of Everything: How Wars Descend into Annihilation, published by Basic Books on May 7, 2024, as well as the recent  The Second World Wars: How the First Global Conflict Was Fought and Won, The Case for Trump, and The Dying Citizen.

Source: https://amgreatness.com/2025/05/01/the-trump-counterrevolution-and-the-moral-ledger/

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Israeli police arrest 18 arson suspects after wildfires spread near Jerusalem - Natalie Mittelstadt

 

by Natalie Mittelstadt

"We’re doing everything we can to thwart the fire and rehabilitate what was destroyed,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said.

 

Israeli police arrested 18 arson suspects following the spread of wildfires near Jerusalem, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Thursday.

The wildfires, which started on Wednesday, destroyed 5,000 acres of land near Jerusalem, causing several communities to be evacuated and the main highway between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv closed. Some areas were still ablaze on Thursday, The Times of Israel reported.

The fire “is not a simple thing, there is harm to nature and also harm to people, and we’re holding 18 people at the moment who are suspected of arson, one of whom was caught in the act,” Netanyahu said at the annual Bible Contest in Jerusalem on Thursday.

He also said he is “sure that we will succeeded [sic] in dealing with this challenge as well. We’re doing everything we can to thwart the fire and rehabilitate what was destroyed.”

The Fire and Rescue Services has said thus far that the cause of the fires, which began on Israel's annual independence day, remains unclear.


Natalie Mittelstadt

Source: https://justthenews.com/world/middle-east/israeli-police-arrest-18-arson-suspects-after-wildfires-spread-near-jerusalem

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Turkey: Sweeping Arrests, Torture, Censorship - Uzay Bulut

 

by Uzay Bulut

It seems that Turkey is not abiding by the most fundamental tenets of the Rule of Law.

 

  • On March 19, just days before the March 23 primaries of Turkey's main opposition party, the Republican People's Party (CHP), Istanbul's Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu -- the CHP's leading candidate who was thought by many possibly to win the next presidential election against President Recep Tayyip Erdogan -- was arrested on contested charges of "corruption and terrorism."

  • A day earlier, on March 18, Imamoglu's university degree was revoked, "citing 'nullity' and 'clear error' as grounds for cancellation... The decision affects Imamoglu and 27 other individuals whose academic credentials have now been invalidated...."

  • "All of the detainees, absolutely all of them, were tortured terribly while being detained. They were tortured terribly in the detention vehicle, while being taken to Gayrettepe [police station]. There are young people among them who are in really bad shape. What is terrible is that there is nothing [as evidence against them] in their investigation files, not even a photo against them. ..... [T]hese are revenge trials. The prosecutors who took testimonies of detainees yesterday, today do not talk with the lawyers, in any way... This is not a [proper] judiciary." — Sezgin Tanrıkulu, MP from the CHP opposition party, March 27, 2025.

  • Meanwhile, Erdogan's regime has arrested many dissident journalists and continues to apply financial and judicial pressure on media outlets that refuse to operate as mouthpieces for the regime.

  • "There was no chance for a defense.... The decision appears prepared beforehand." — Elif Taşdöğen, attorney, medyanews.net, January 22, 2025.

  • Meanwhile, the government continues to pardon and release imprisoned Turkish Hizbullah terrorists.

  • The Erdogan regime's support for Islamic terror groups such as Hamas and ISIS (Islamic State) is also well-documented.....

  • Meanwhile, do Europeans really want the possibility of up to 87 million more Turkish citizens flooding Europe?

On March 19, the regime of Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan arrested Istanbul's Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu, Erdogan's main rival in the next presidential election, on contested charges of "corruption and terrorism." Meanwhile, Erdogan's regime has arrested many dissident journalists and continues to apply financial and judicial pressure on media outlets that refuse to operate as mouthpieces for the regime. Pictured: Erdogan addresses a meeting of his party in Ankara, on February 23, 2025. (Photo by Adem Altan/AFP via Getty Images)

On March 19, just days before the March 23 primaries of Turkey's main opposition party, the Republican People's Party (CHP), Istanbul's Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu -- the CHP's leading candidate who was thought by many possibly to win the next presidential election against President Recep Tayyip Erdogan -- was arrested on contested charges of "corruption and terrorism."

A day earlier, on March 18, Imamoglu's university degree was revoked, "citing 'nullity' and 'clear error' as grounds for cancellation... The decision affects Imamoglu and 27 other individuals whose academic credentials have now been invalidated...." according to Turkiye Today.

Imamoglu's detention sparked one of the biggest street demonstrations against Erdogan since he was first elected as national leader in 2002.

On March 29, hundreds of thousands of protesters gathered in Istanbul for a mass rally called by the CHP to oppose the jailing of Imamoglu.

On March 23, Beylikdüzü Mayor Mehmet Murat Çalık and Şişli Mayor Resul Emrah Şahan were also jailed. The same day, both Imamoglu and Çalık were suspended from office.

Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya announced on March 27 that 1,879 people had been detained, 260 arrested, and judicial control decisions were issued for 468 of those detained and arrested, while 489 were released. The legal procedures for 662 people are currently under review.

Sezgin Tanrıkulu, a CHP Member of Parliament reported on March 27:

"We spoke with lawyers... All of the detainees, absolutely all of them, were tortured terribly while being detained. They were tortured terribly in the detention vehicle, while being taken to Gayrettepe [police station]. There are young people among them who are in really bad shape. What is terrible is that there is nothing [as evidence against them] in their investigation files, not even a photo against them.... these are revenge trials. The prosecutors who took testimonies of detainees yesterday, today do not talk with the lawyers, in any way."

Tanrıkulu told Sözcü TV:

"We were at Çağlayan Courthouse for the last two days, with lawyers and our MP friends. We witnessed it in person, not just heard from lawyers. We spoke to those who were brought from police custody and taken to the judgeship, we listened to their statements....

They [the police] kicked young girls between the legs and made them bleed. I have never heard anything like this before.... The prosecutor decided to arrest them without taking their testimonies."

The lawyers, Tanrıkulu added, wanted to explain the situation of the detainees with a petition to the prosecutors, but an investigating prosecutor said he would not take petitions from lawyers and a judge told the lawyers in the courtroom to "Get out, I have arrested them all."

"This is not a [proper] judiciary," Tanrıkulu said.

Turkish authorities have, in the meantime, continued to crack down on media coverage of the protest movement. On March 29, Swedish journalist Joakim Medin was arrested on charges of "membership of an armed terrorist organisation" and "insulting the president." Andreas Gustavsson, editor-in-chief of Dagens ETC newspaper, disclosed that Medin, who was in Turkey to cover the ongoing protests against the arrest of Imamoglu, had not been heard from for two days.

Thirteen Turkish journalists covering the protests were also arrested, although 11 were freed on March 27, including AFP photographer Yasin Akgul.

Turkish authorities also deported BBC correspondent Mark Lowen after holding him for 17 hours on the grounds that he posed "a threat to public order." Erdogan's regime has additionally incarcerated many opposition mayors, members of parliament, politicians, and party members.

In past decade alone, Erdogan's regime has arrested hundreds of Kurdish mayors, politicians and political activists over "terrorism" charges -- a standard accusation against anyone critical of the Turkish government or members of the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP). Several HDP members of parliament, including the party's co-heads Selahattin Demirtaş and Figen Yüksekdağ, were jailed after finding their immunity lifted.

Democratically elected Kurdish mayors, deputy mayors, municipal council- and staff-members of the HDP and its sister party, DBP (Democratic Regions Party), have also been suspended, dismissed or arrested for alleged terrorism-related offenses, later replaced by government-appointed trustees. Turkey's Constitutional Court is currently in the process of deciding whether to close the HDP party.[1]

The extremely broad, vague terrorism-related articles in the Turkish Anti-Terror Law and the Turkish Penal Code have long been criticized by international human rights organizations, The World Organization Against Torture stated in a briefing on June 13, 2022:

"Turkey has been employing counter-terrorism and national security legislation to restrict rights and freedoms and silence the voices of human rights defenders... In the last three months of 2021 alone, no less than 1,220 human rights defenders suffered judicial harassment or reprisals..."

In 2024, Erdogan's regime continued arbitrarily to arrest opposition mayors. Turkey's Foundation of Human Rights (TIHV) reported:

"In 2024, many members and executives of political parties, mayors, and municipal council members were detained and arrested, and pressure was exerted on them through lawsuits filed against them. Trustees were appointed to the municipalities. Summaries of proceedings against members of parliament were sent to the Turkish parliament and there were attacks on members of political parties and their buildings."

According to the findings of the TIHV, in just the first 11 months of 2024:

"8 people elected to municipalities, including 3 mayors or co-mayors and 5 municipal council members, were detained by police, and 3 people were arrested.

"43 journalists were detained. 11 journalists were jailed. 1 journalist was prevented from entering the country. At least 3 journalists were attacked, because of which at least 1 journalist was injured. 14 journalists were threatened. Investigations were launched against 42 journalists. 253 cases opened against 534 press workers continued to be heard."

On October 30, 2024, the Mayor of Esenyurt Municipality in Istanbul, Ahmet Özer, a CHP member, was detained "within the scope of the investigations carried out to identify the members and activities of the PKK/KCK [Kurdistan Workers' Party] terrorist organization", was removed from office, and a trustee was appointed in his place.

On November 4, 2024, Mardin Metropolitan Municipality Mayor Ahmet Türk, Batman Mayor Gülistan Sönük and Mayor Mehmet Karayılan of Halfeti (in Kurdish-majority southeast Turkey) were dismissed from office over "terrorism" charges. Türk's dismissal was based on his 10-year prison sentence in the Kobani case and the ongoing cases and investigations against him.[2]

Meanwhile, Erdogan's regime has arrested many dissident journalists and continues to apply financial and judicial pressure on media outlets that refuse to operate as mouthpieces for the regime.

On January 29, Halk TV's editor-in-chief Suat Toktaş, program coordinator Kürşad Oğuz, and journalist Barış Pehlivan were detained for broadcasting a recorded phone conversation with an expert witness. While Pehlivan and Oğuz were released under judicial control measures, Toktaş was arrested. Pehlivan and Oğuz have been banned from leaving the country. Halk TV is one of Turkey's largest private TV channels that is critical of Erdogan's government.

According to the International Press Institute (IPI), in January 2025 alone, at least nine journalists were arrested, six sentenced to prison, five detained, 23 faced investigations and one encountered police obstruction.

On February 5, a coalition of international press freedom organizations, led by the IPI, called on Turkish authorities to halt what they describe as an escalating crackdown on independent journalism.

"The frequent use of arbitrary arrests, detentions, judicial control measures, and convictions poses an existential threat to independent media, democratic discourse, and fundamental human rights in the country.

"Turkey must ensure that its practices align with international standards for the protection of freedom of expression and press freedom."

Among the most alarming cases cited by IPI and its partners is the January 17 detention of six Kurdish journalists — Reyhan Hacıoğlu, Necla Demir, Rahime Karvar, Vedat Örüç, Velat Ekin and Ahmet Güneş, who, after a series of coordinated police raids in Istanbul, Diyarbakır, Van and Mersin, were held without access to legal representation. Five journalists were jailed; Güneş was released on February 4. The journalists are accused of "terror organization membership" over their professional activities.

Their lawyer, Elif Taşdöğen, criticized the judicial process as "a predetermined ruling that disregarded fundamental rights," adding:

"There was no chance for a defense. The court's approach, dismissing the need for proper questioning and forwarding the case directly to a ruling, exposes the state of our legal system. The decision appears prepared beforehand."

IPI and its partners presented in their statement a timeline documenting an acceleration of violations of press freedoms over just the last month:

  • On January 2, authorities launched an investigation against journalist Aslıhan Gençay for her reporting on corruption in Hatay. They blocked access to her article and charged her with multiple offenses, including violations of the "disinformation law" -- an apparent attempt to suppress investigative journalism.
  • On January 7, the Ankara Chief Public Prosecutor's Office launched an investigation against 21 journalists who covered the Kobani trial's final hearing. The journalists face potential fines for alleged unauthorized photography -- a move that effectively criminalizes routine court reporting.
  • On January 21, Rudaw TV correspondent Rawin Sterk Yıldız faced police interference while documenting a detention in Istanbul's Beyoğlu district. Despite clearly identifying himself as a journalist, he was prevented from documenting the public incident.
  • On January 23, a troubling verdict resulted in five journalists – Yakup Çetin, Ahmet Memiş, Cemal Azmi Kalyoncu, Ünal Tanık, Yetkin Yıldız, Gökçe Fırat Çulhaoğlu – receiving harsh sentences—ranging from 25 months to over six years in prison -- in a "terrorism"-related case, despite the absence of credible evidence.
  • On January 24, the arrest of journalist Eylem Babayiğit once again demonstrated the arbitrary use of "membership of an organization" charges.
  • On January 28, the launch of an investigation into T24 columnist Şirin Payzın for alleged "terror propaganda" over social media posts indicates a concerning expansion of surveillance and criminalization of online expression.
  • On January 28, the conviction of journalist Safiye Alagaş, former news editor for the pro-Kurdish JINNEWS, resulted in a six years and three months prison sentence. Alagaş has already spent a year in pretrial detention and is currently free while awaiting appeal.

The IPI statement also highlights how Turkey's broadcast regulator's decisions threaten press freedom:

"Turkey's broadcast regulator RTÜK has demonstrated a concerning pattern of targeting critical media outlets. Just before the journalists' detention over broadcasting a recorded phone conversation, the RTÜK Chair Ebubekir Şahin, signaling the impending crackdown, warned of potential consequences for media outlets and journalists regarding the broadcast. signaling the impending crackdown. In his statement, he criticized Halk TV for recording and broadcasting a phone conversation with an expert witness without permission and allegedly attempting to influence ongoing legal proceedings.

"This incident reflects a broader pattern of regulatory pressure on critical media. In 2024, RTÜK imposed 24 broadcast bans resulting in fines totaling 81.5 million Turkish lira (approximately €2.2 million or $2.3 million), with the majority targeting media critical of the government....

"In a recent example, following the devastating hotel fire in Bolu that erupted in the early morning hours of January 20, 2025, claiming 78 lives, the RTÜK Chair directed media outlets to report solely on information from official sources. Shortly after this directive, the Bolu 2nd Criminal Court of Peace imposed a broadcasting ban on coverage of the disaster at the request of the Bolu Chief Public Prosecutor's Office."

The statement called Turkey's judicial control measures against journalists "a new tool for censorship".

"While there appears to be a decrease in the number of journalists in prison, this masks a troubling shift toward using judicial control measures—such as travel bans, regular check-ins at police stations, and house arrest—as alternative means of restricting press freedom. This trend represents an equally antidemocratic practice aimed at controlling journalists' freedom of movement and expression. The systematic implementation of these measures, combined with increasing online censorship, appears to be replacing traditional detention as a method of silencing independent journalism....

'[T]he arbitrary imposition of travel bans, house arrests and other restrictions continues to impede their ability to perform their professional duties effectively. These measures, originally intended as exceptional remedies to ensure judicial proceedings, are increasingly being weaponized to create a chilling effect on press freedom."

Meanwhile, Turkey also appears to be targeting journalists outside its borders. Kurdish journalists Nazım Daştan, 32, and Cihan Bilgin, 29, who had Turkish citizenship, were murdered in a Turkish drone strike on December 19, 2024 in northern Syria, while covering clashes between Turkey-backed jihadist forces and US-allied Kurdish forces.

After the murders of the two journalists, the Istanbul Bar Association, on its official X account, called on Turkey to "adhere to international humanitarian law."

The president of the Istanbul Bar Association, Ibrahim Kaboglu, and 10 board members now face criminal charges carrying prison sentences of up to 12 years, for their statements regarding those murders: for allegedly "disseminating the propaganda of a terrorist organization" and "publicly disseminating misleading information through the press."

Journalists' organizations in Turkey -- including the Dicle Fırat Journalists Association, the Mezopotamya Women Journalists Association and the Press Workers Union -- organized a protest in Istanbul to condemn the murder of the two journalists. Fourteen people, including seven journalists, are now facing "terrorism"-related charges for participating in the protest.

Turkey has been in the top ten list of the worst jailers of journalists, prepared by the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) and has taken first place five times in recent years (2012, 2013, 2016, 2017, and 2018).

Although dozens of journalists have been freed since 2022, most are still under investigation or awaiting trial, placing a stranglehold on the country's critical media, CPJ's research shows.

"Even if there were zero journalists in prison today, 200 journalists may be arrested tomorrow," said Barış Altıntaş, co-director of the Media and Law Studies Association. "The government determines the number of arrested journalists, even when it is low."

As Özgür Öğret, CPJ's Turkey representative, asks:

"Why is Turkey—a NATO member with close ties to the West—frequently ranked alongside authoritarian states like Iran and Egypt in CPJ's prison census?"

On March 27, Turkey's Radio and Television Supreme Council (TRUK) imposed penalties on TV channels -- such as Sozcu TV, Halk TV, Tele 1 and NOW TV -- that refused to toe the line for Erdogan's regime in their broadcasts of the nationwide protests, starting with the detention of Imamoglu. Sozcu TV, TRUK announced, would be taken off the air for 10 days.

Fines and program-suspension penalties were imposed on Halk TV, Tele 1 and NOW TV on the grounds that they were "inciting the public to hatred and hostility" during their coverage of the protests, including a speech delivered by the head of the CHP party.

Meanwhile, the government continues to pardon and release imprisoned Turkish Hizbullah terrorists. On March 29, Erdogan pardoned the sentences of Şehmus Alpsoy and Hamit Çöklü, who were sentenced to aggravated life imprisonment in a Hizbullah case, on the grounds that "they have chronic illnesses". Turkish Hizbullah is also responsible for the torture and murders of hundreds of civilians in the 1990s.

The Erdogan regime's support for Islamic terror groups such as Hamas and ISIS (Islamic State) is also well-documented. His regime reportedly participated in the oil business with ISIS, dispatched arms to jihadists, and allowed ISIS members to pass through Turkey on their way to fight in Syria and Iraq. In August 2014, an ISIS commander told the Washington Post: "Most of the fighters who joined us at the beginning of the war came via Turkey, as did our equipment and supplies."

Erdogan's regime also allowed Hamas to engage in money laundering, granted Hamas terrorists Turkish passports, let them open bank accounts and run offices in Turkey.

According to the website Double Cheque:

"It seems that Hamas has chosen to manage its secret investment portfolio in Turkey because of the weak financial system in Turkey, which enables Hamas to hide its money laundering activity and tax violations from the regulatory bodies."

The late journalist Burak Bekdil reported in 2014:

"Erdogan has never hidden that he is ideologically a next of kin to the Muslim Brotherhood and Hamas. Hamas's overseas command center happens to be based in Turkey. Erdogan has been Hamas's staunchest (non-Hamas) cheerleader in the last decade, and the Brotherhood's key regional ally. Press reports say that Turkey has recently welcomed in the Brotherhood's top brass, who were expelled on Sept. 13 from their five-million-star hotels in Qatar. Ankara has not denied that it is offering a safe haven to the leaders of the Islamist organization."

Israel's police and the Shin Bet internal security service announced on April 10 that they had uncovered a terror financing network linked to Hamas members in Turkey.

Meanwhile, in a ten-day offensive in Syria in December 2024, the al-Qaeda-affiliated terrorist group, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), conquered Damascus and toppled the Assad regime in Syria.

Ties between Turkey and HTS run deep: Turkey and HTS both been have been occupying and exploiting parts of northwest Syria since at least 2017.

Erdogan reportedly provided assistance to the HTS during its December advance to Damascus, in the form of arms and by allowing the terror group to run a key border crossing in northwest Syria. Since HTS took over Syria, jihadist massacres against the members of the Alawite minority, and the persecution of Syrian Christians, have skyrocketed.

In 1999, Turkey was granted "candidate status" by the European Union and in 2005, began negotiations for EU accession. Will the EU executive take action to help secure the release of detained and abused mayors, politicians, dissenters and journalists in Turkey, so they can carry out their professional work without unwarranted governmental pressure, violations and censorship? How, otherwise, can the EU seriously consider Turkey's candidacy? Meanwhile, do Europeans really want the possibility of up to 87 million more Turkish citizens flooding Europe?

Uzay Bulut, a Turkish journalist, is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at Gatestone Institute.

[1] The names of the democratically elected HDP mayors imprisoned in Turkey, as released by the press office of HDP, include Hakkari Municipality Co-Mayor, Mehmet Sıddık Akış, Co-Mayors of Akdeniz Municipality, Hoşyar Sarıyıldız and Nuriye Arslan, Former Diyarbakir Metropolitan Municipality Co-Mayor, Adnan Selçuk Mızraklı, Former Hakkari Municipality Co-Mayor, Cihan Karaman, Former Karayazi Municipality Co-Mayor of Erzurum, Melike Goksu, Former Co-Mayor of Yüksekova, Remziye Yasar, Former Co-Mayor of Iğdır, Yasar Akkus, Former Halfeli Municipality Co-Mayor of Iğdır, Hasan Safa, Former Van Metropolitan Municipality Co-Mayor, Bekir Kaya, Former Co-Mayor of Siirt Eruh Municipality, Huseyin Kilic, Former Co-Mayor of Bitlis Yolalan Municipality, Felemez Aydın, Former Bozova Municipality Co-Mayor of Urfa, Zeynel Taş, Former Co-Mayor of Muş Malazgirt Municipality, Halis Coskun and Former Co-Mayor of Adıyaman Coal Municipality, Hüseyin Yuka.

Officials who have been imprisoned due to trumped-up, terrorism related charges include, Leyla Güven, HDP Members of Parliament for Hakkari, Semra Güzel, an MP from Diyarbakir, Dilek Yağlı, HDP Women's Assembly member, Pervin Oduncu, member of the HDP Central Executive Board, Ali Ürküt, a member of pro-Kurdish Peoples' Equality and Democracy Party (DEM), Nazmi Gür, former HDP MP from Van, Alp Altınörs, the Deputy Co-Chairman of the HDP and a member of the Central Executive Board, and Günay Kubilay, HDP's Deputy Co-Chair for Economy, Agriculture and Social Policies and Party Spokesperson, among others.

[2] According to a 2017 public statement by the HDP party, since July 2016, 1,478 Kurdish politicians -- including 78 democratically-elected mayors – have been arrested.

According to a 2019 report prepared by the HDP, since 2015, 530 people have been detained in police operations targeting the party and its components, and 6,000 people, including 750 members and executives of the party, jailed. In addition, 89 provincial co-chairs, 193 district co-chairs and a town's co-chair of the HDP were arrested since. The report noted:

"Following the March 31 [2019] elections, 17 of our co-mayors were arrested and trustees were appointed to 28 of our municipalities. Since July 2015, 16 of our MPs, 7 Central Executive Board members, 21 Party Assembly members, and over 750 provincial and district administrators have been arrested, along with our Co-Chairs. Currently, 7 of our MPs are under arrest. In addition, 11 MPs have had their MP status revoked. 93 municipality co-mayors, including deputy mayors, have been arrested and trustees have been appointed to 84 municipalities. As a result of the political genocide operations conducted since February 2017, a total of 5,098 people have been detained. 14 natural, 62 elected, and a total of 76 of our delegates have been arrested. Currently, 26th Term Deputies Figen Yüksekdağ, Selahattin Demirtaş, Çağlar Demirel, İdris Baluken, Gülser Yıldırım, Selma Irmak, Abdullah Zeydan are being held hostage [as prisoners]."

 
Uzay Bulut

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/21582/turkey-arrests-torture-censorship

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