ReportWire

Tag: Israeli

  • Opinion | Israel Proves the Danger of an ‘Independent’ Justice System

    [ad_1]

    The Supreme Court could be enabling a criminal conspiracy to prosecute IDF reservists unjustly.

    [ad_2]

    Avi Bell

    Source link

  • Family of hostage Omer Neutra hosts community basketball game to honor their son’s 23rd birthday

    Family of hostage Omer Neutra hosts community basketball game to honor their son’s 23rd birthday

    [ad_1]

    UPPER WEST SIDE, Manhattan (WABC) — More than a year after the October 7 attacks on Israel, the family of one hostage is reminding community members about their son, who is having his second birthday in captivity.

    Friends and family members came to show their support for Long Island native Omer Neutra at a community basketball game on Sunday.

    “We’re exhausted, absolutely. This has been a roller coaster of a year between hope and despair, and right now, negotiations are at a standstill,” said Omer’s mother, Orna Neutra.

    The family last spoke to their son, who is in the Israeli military, just a day before Hamas attacked, claiming 1,200 lives and taking 240 hostages, including Omer.

    “We’re hoping he’s okay, and I mean, there’s a good chance he doesn’t even know what day it is. He doesn’t know that it’s his birthday or if it is his birthday,” said Daniel Neutra, Omer’s brother.

    Omer’s family refuses to give up hope and continues to cling to their belief in miracles.

    They have been working tirelessly to get their son released, talking to officials in Washington and Israel, and also leaders in the Middle East.

    “He was 21 when he was taken captive. Right, it’s heartbreaking, it’s devastating. And it’s unfathomable that a 22-year-old is spending his time in the tunnels underneath Gaza for such a long time,” Orna said.

    According to his family, Omer loves basketball and wore the number “24” because he idolized Kobe Bryant and was a big Knicks fan. Despite living in Israel, Omer rarely missed watching a Knicks game.

    “And we were four years ago and we watched the NBA Finals always together. Whether we were together physically or apart across the ocean, we always watched NBA finals together,” said Ronen Nuetra, Omer’s father.

    Omer’s basketball teammates here at home say they are in disbelief as they wait for updates about him. One teammate, Ari Kantorowitz, says Omer was always the joyous spirit of their group, even when they were bad.

    “He was our heart. He was the guy that was fighting for all of us that maybe weren’t as tough. He always brought like the hope that we could win,” Kantorowitz said.

    ALSO READ | Community calls for postpartum care changes after mother dies weeks after giving birth

    Sonia Rincon has more on the urgent call by family members and advocates for changes to postpartum care.

    ———-

    * Get Eyewitness News Delivered

    * More Manhattan news

    * Send us a news tip

    * Download the abc7NY app for breaking news alerts

    * Follow us on YouTube

    Submit a tip or story idea to Eyewitness News

    Have a breaking news tip or an idea for a story we should cover? Send it to Eyewitness News using the form below. If attaching a video or photo, terms of use apply.

    Copyright © 2024 WABC-TV. All Rights Reserved.

    [ad_2]

    WABC

    Source link

  • Biden Warns Israel Against Being “Consumed” By Rage—But Declines to Call For Ceasefire

    Biden Warns Israel Against Being “Consumed” By Rage—But Declines to Call For Ceasefire

    [ad_1]

    President Joe Biden wrapped his visit to Israel on Wednesday with a show of support for the United States ally—along with a measured warning for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to de-escalate as his government forces lay siege to Gaza. “Justice must be done,” the president said, calling the October 7 Hamas sneak attack “Israel’s 9/11.” “But I caution this: While you feel that rage, don’t be consumed by it.”

    “You are a Jewish state, but you’re also a democracy,” Biden added. “And like the United States, you don’t live by the rules of terrorists. You live by the rule of law.”

    The remarks came as Israeli forces bombard Gaza ahead of a possible ground invasion—and a day after a deadly blast at a Gaza hospital that has been point of dispute. Israel has denied responsibility, and Biden, during his visit, said that “it appears the result of an errant rocket fired by a terrorist group in Gaza.” Hamas officials, for their part, have insisted that the Israeli military was responsible for the attack.

    The president has tried to walk a fine line between his steadfast support for Israel in the wake of tragedy and concerns about Netanyahu’s military response, which has now resulted in 3,500 deaths in Gaza, according to Palestinian health officials. “I think it’d be a big mistake” for Israeli forces to occupy Gaza, Biden said on 60 Minutes Sunday, as his administration pressed Netanyahu to allow aid into the embattled strip. His remarks in solidarity with Palestinian civilians Wednesday went a touch further—and came with a promise of $100 million in American aid to Gaza. “Hamas does not represent the Palestinian people,” he said Wednesday.

    But while the president explicitly warned Israel against repeating the US “mistakes” after 9/11, his tempered remarks didn’t go far enough: Not only did he decline to call for a ceasefire, as a growing number in his party are demanding; the US also rejected a United Nations Security Council resolution seeking a “humanitarian pause” in Gaza. Biden came to Israel with “tough questions” for his counterparts, the National Security Council’s John Kirby told reporters on Air Force One Wednesday. But this crisis, which the World Health Organization said Wednesday is “spiraling out of control” in Gaza, calls for a lot less contemplation and a lot more action.

    [ad_2]

    Eric Lutz

    Source link

  • “It’s 100% Personal”: Trump Insiders Fear His Netanyahu Vendetta Could Be a Gift to Biden

    “It’s 100% Personal”: Trump Insiders Fear His Netanyahu Vendetta Could Be a Gift to Biden

    [ad_1]

    Joe Biden’s decision to make a wartime trip to Israel this week is the biggest diplomatic gamble of his presidency. The visit also carries high political stakes closer to home. By steadfastly backing Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the wake of Hamas’s October 7 attack across the Gaza border, Biden has outflanked his most likely Republican challenger: Donald Trump.

    Last week, Trump launched personal and at times bizarre attacks on the Israeli prime minister. “[Netanyahu] has been hurt very badly because of what’s happened here. He was not prepared,” Trump told Fox News host Brian Kilmeade. At a campaign rally in West Palm Beach, Trump told his supporters that Netanyahu backed out of participating in the American drone attack in 2020 that killed Iranian general Qassim Suleimani. “I’ll never forget that Bibi Netanyahu let us down. That was a very terrible thing,” Trump said, divulging highly sensitive intelligence. Trump also lavished praise on the Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah, keeping with his habit of complimenting authoritarian regimes. “You know, Hezbollah is very smart,” Trump said. “They’re all very smart.”

    Trump’s comments ignited a firestorm of bipartisan criticism. According to sources, Trump advisers are worried that Trump could alienate hawkish American Jews, who have been voting increasingly Republican in recent elections. “His Israel comments were a disaster,” a former Trump White House official told me. Like virtually every political position Trump takes, his attack on Netanyahu was driven by grievance. “Trump definitely has an axe to grind with Bibi. It’s 100% personal,” a prominent Jewish Republican close to Trump told me. Sources say Trump turned against Netanyahu because Netanyahu didn’t give Trump enough credit for his pro-Israel foreign policy. But what angered Trump the most, sources said, was that Netanyahu refused to endorse Trump’s 2020 stolen election lies. During an April 2021 interview with Israeli journalist Barak Ravid, Trump unloaded on Netanyahu. “The first person that congratulated [Biden] was Bibi Netanyahu, the man that I did more for than any other person I dealt with… I haven’t spoken to [Bibi] since. F**k him.”

    Trump has also angered Jews by exploiting the hostage crisis for political gain. “This never would have happened if I were President,” Trump told a Jewish leader on the phone, according to a person briefed on the call.

    “President Trump was clearly pointing out how incompetent Biden and his administration were by telegraphing to the terrorists an area that is susceptible to an attack,” a Trump spokesperson said in a statement. “Smart does not equal good. It just proves Biden is stupid.” The campaign also pointed to a moment in the speech in which Trump promises, if elected, that the US “will fully support Israel, defeating, dismantling, and permanently destroying the terrorist group, Hamas.”

    The Biden White House, meanwhile, has seized on Trump’s “very smart” comment to portray him unfit for office. “Statements like this are dangerous and unhinged,” Andrew Bates, the deputy White House press secretary, said in a statement. “It’s completely lost on us why any American would ever praise an Iran-backed terrorist organization as ‘smart.’ Or have any objection to the United States warning terrorists not to attack Israel.” A prominent Jewish Democrat told me Biden even has an opportunity to win Evangelical support. “Evangelicals love Israel. They love Bibi,” he said.

    Trump’s GOP rivals are also seeking to capitalize on the controversy by openly criticizing Trump, something they’ve been reluctant to do. “You’re not going to find me throwing verbal grenades at Israeli leadership,” Ron DeSantis said last Thursday in New Hampshire. Also campaigning in the Granite State, Nikki Haley told supporters: “Who cares what [Trump] thinks about Netanyahu? This is not about that. This is about the people of Israel.” On Monday, a Chris Christie–aligned Super PAC released a new ad blasting Trump for denigrating Netanyahu. “Only a fool would make those kinds of comments,” Christie says in the ad. “Only a fool would give comments that could give aid and comfort to Israel’s adversary.”

    [ad_2]

    Gabriel Sherman

    Source link

  • Israeli aircraft hit Gaza after rocket fire

    Israeli aircraft hit Gaza after rocket fire

    [ad_1]

    GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — Israeli aircraft struck several military sites in the Gaza Strip early Sunday, hours after Palestinian militants fired a missile into southern Israel in a move apparently linked to rising tension in the occupied West Bank, Israel said.

    The Israeli military said the airstrikes targeted a weapons manufacturing facility and an underground tunnel belonging to Hamas, the militant group that has controlled Gaza since 2007. The military said more projectiles were fired over the border while warplanes were hitting the Gaza sites.

    No Palestinian group claimed responsibility for the Saturday evening rocket, which landed in an open area near the Gaza-Israel fence. The border has been quiet since August’s three-day blitz between Israel and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, a powerful Gaza group that is smaller than the dominant Hamas.

    Hamas and other factions have largely honored the unofficial understandings that have kept the situation in the impoverished territory calm in exchange for thousands of Israeli work permits. Israel and Egypt maintain a blockade on Gaza to prevent Hamas from stocking up weapons.

    “The strike overnight continues the progress to impede the force build-up” of Hamas, the Israeli army said.

    Critics of the blockade say it is a form of collective punishment that harms Gaza’s 2.3 million people.

    While Gaza remained quiet, tension has been boiling for months in the West Bank, where the Palestinian Authority exerts limited self-rule in parts of the territory.

    Israel carried out near daily raids that it says targets wanted Palestinians involved in planning or taking part in attacks, prompted by a spate of Palestinian attacks on Israelis in the spring that killed 19 people.

    The military says the raids are meant to dismantle militant networks and thwart future attacks, but the Palestinians say they entrench Israel’s open-ended occupation, now in its 56th year. A recent wave of Palestinian attacks on Israeli targets killed an additional nine people.

    More than 140 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli-Palestinian fighting this year. The Israeli army says most of the Palestinians killed have been militants. But stone-throwing youths protesting Israeli army incursions and others not involved in confrontations have also been killed.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Israel’s Autonomous Urban Quadcopter Brings ‘Search & Attack In One’

    Israel’s Autonomous Urban Quadcopter Brings ‘Search & Attack In One’

    [ad_1]

    Trapped by enemy fire from all directions in urban combat, an infantry unit calls for Lanius – and a swarm of drones appears, entering the surrounding building to find and eliminate the enemy firing positions. This is the scenario Israeli contractor Elbit Systems use to illustrate the power of their new swarming drones in a new video.

    Last month we revealed details Elbit’s Legion-X system, an intelligent software framework allowing various types of robotic ground vehicles and drones to operate together in close conjunction with foot soldiers. At the time the company teased the existence of a multicopter ‘mothership’ able to release several small quadcopters, and details are revealed in the new video.

    Lanius is described as a ‘drone-based loitering munition’ and carrying lethal or nonlethal payloads. While we have already seen first-person viewpoint racing drones carrying explosives to attack targets inside buildings in Ukraine, what distinguishes Lanius is just how smart it is. The drones use a technique of simultaneous location and mapping (SLAM) in which they construct a 3D map of their surrounding as they pass through, giving a detailed layout of a building or underground complex. This is enabled by an NVDIA Jetson TX2 processor, part of a new generation of supercomputer-on-a-module hardware optimized for mobile artificial intelligence.

    This capability means multiple Lanius drones can be deployed without taking operators out of the fight to control them. The drones navigate and find their way autonomously, building up a map as they go.

    According to the makers, not only can Lanius find entry and exit points such as windows and doorways using video analytics it can also identify combatant and non-combatant personnel among the occupants, and is capable of ‘threat classification’ as well as identifying other features of interest such as weapons. (Clearly, this raises a lot of questions about how reliable it is). The drone requires operator approval before detonating its payload, seen several times in the video as a big green button; the makers are keen to note that this is an operator-in-the-loop weapon rather than an autonomous ‘killer robot.’ An upgrade to full autonomous mode would just be a small software change though.

    Lanius is based on a racing model, as these provide maximum agility and maneuverability in tight indoor spaces. It has a top speed of 45 mph. The big limitation, is, as expected, the flight time, which is given as seven minutes. This is why the loitering munitions are brought into action by the larger ‘mothership’, No details are given of this, but judging from the video it is similar to large commercial models (or Ukraine’s R18 bomber) which typically have a payload of several kilos and a flight time of 45 minutes or more.

    The mothership in the video appears to carry three Lanius loitering munitions. These weigh 1.5 kilos each, and carry a payload of 150 grams or around five ounces. This is less than the Vog-17 grenade widely used for drone-bombing by Ukraine, but the Lanius appears to be intended for much close-range use. The shape of the drone also suggests that the warhead may be highly directional, effectively a miniature claymore mine.

    Lanius is also shown being launched by hand; a lightweight weapon able to carry out precision indirect attacks from several hundred meters away, and which can also be controlled directly like a normal loitering munition, is well worth the weight for most foot soldiers.

    The video shows Lanius using ‘ambush mode’ : it can land on the ground in front of a closed door or other ambush point, conserving battery while waiting for a target to appear. If adversaries barricade themselves in a building, they are likely to find loitering munitions still waiting for them when they come out.

    As with the rest of the Legion-X suite, the most impressive feature of Lanius is that is exists here and now, and may already be in use with Israeli forces. The IDF has always been a leader in drone technology, and was the first to use swarming drones in action. They may also be the first to use this type of attack quadcopter.

    Lanius promised ‘search and attack in one.’ Clearly it has limitations, and drones are not about to replace infantry. But in terms of locating, identifying and engaging an enemy behind cover in urban terrain, Lanius looks like a huge step forward. As well as being a step towards the day that human soldiers are all in the second line behind an wall or armed robots of different shapes and sizes.

    [ad_2]

    David Hambling, Contributor

    Source link