Mosses’ Staff: Latest Battle For Gaza

A leading source in the Hamas Qassam Brigades, military wing, announced the launch of a series of military operations called “Staff of Moses,” in response to the Israeli “Gideon’s Chariots 2” operation aimed at occupying Gaza City.

The source told Al Jazeera the first resistance operations took place in the Zeitoun and Jabalia neighborhoods in north Gaza, after the Israeli occupation launch its military operation. He added: “The enemy witnessed firsthand the extent of the preparedness and readiness of the Qassam fighters, and this is only the tip of the iceberg of what awaits them in Gaza.”

He emphasized “just as the ‘Stones of David’ foiled the Gideon Chariots, as acknowledged by the occupation leaders, the ‘Moses’ Staff’ will perform miracles and repel the plots of the aggressors.”

Qassam Operations

The Qassam Brigades announced, Wednesday its forces targeted Israeli occupation forces and vehicles in Gaza City with various weapons and a gathering of Israeli soldiers and vehicles at the Haj Fadl site south of the Zeitoun neighborhood in Gaza City.

It also announced it targeted a D-9 military bulldozer with a 105-mm Al-Yassin missile, Tuesday, near the Salah al-Din Mosque in Zeitoun neighborhood.

Palestinian resistance factions in the Gaza Strip continue to confront the Israeli occupation forces advancing into various areas of the Gaza Strip after the Israeli occupation army resumed its aggression and tightened blockade of the Gaza Strip. This followed a two-month hiatus under a ceasefire agreement that went into effect on January 19. However, the occupation forces violated the terms of the agreement throughout the truce period.

Last month, the Israeli occupation army launched a large-scale attack on the Zeitoun neighborhood, which included the destruction of homes using booby-trapped robots, artillery shelling, indiscriminate gunfire, and forced displacement.

Since October 7, 2023, the Israeli occupation forces, with direct support from the United States and Western countries, have continued to wage a devastating war in Gaza, resulting in the death and injury of approximately 225,000 Palestinians, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health in the Gaza Strip.

Analysis

The Israeli war on the Gaza Strip took on a clear religious dimension after the Palestinian resistance launched a series of “The Staff of Moses” operations to counter the “Gideon’s Chariots 2” operation of the Israeli army to occupy Gaza City.

Military expert Major-General Fayez al-Duwairi said that the name of the latest operation clearly shows what awaits the enemy in Gaza City and the central Gaza Strip. The combat performance must be in line with the code name of the operation, meaning that the resistance promises to achieve a miracle.

Israel is expected to face a violent confrontation in Gaza City, which contains far more tunnels than those in the areas occupied by the occupation forces over the past 22 months, according to al-Duwairi.

With the tunnels, the large number of houses and the nature of the streets will impede the movement of vehicles and will confront the occupation forces in a street battle, which the military expert believes will incur far greater losses than expected.

The resistance has completely changed its warfare approach in the recent months. Previously relying on direct clashes and open confrontations, it has now, according to al-Duwairi, relied on ambushes, raids, and the execution of operations with the fewest possible fighters. This is to conserve its strength, which has been depleted by Israeli strikes, length of war, and the lack of supplies.

Thus the recent ambushes in Zeitoun, Jabalia, and Khan Yunis are a warning of what is waiting for Israel in Operation Gideon 2.

Al-Duwairi believes that the Israeli army attempted entry into Gaza City “will likely not be a walk in the park” and believes that they will lose far greater than the number of soldiers they estimate would be killed, which they put at 100 during the battle for Gaza City.

Continue reading
Is The West Turning Against Israel?

By Dr Ramzi Baroud

Is it finally happening? Is the West turning against Israel? Or are we, whether motivated by hope or driven by despair, simply engaging in wishful thinking? The matter is not so simple.

Last July, a significant number of countries and organizations signed the ‘New York Declaration,’ a strong statement that followed a high-level meeting titled, “Conference on the Peaceful Settlement of the Question of Palestine.”

The conference itself and its bold conclusion warrant a deeper conversation. What matters for now, however, is the identity of the countries involved. Aside from states that have traditionally advocated for international justice and law in Palestine, many of the signatories were countries that had previously supported Israel regardless of context or circumstance.

These mostly Western countries included Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom, among others. Some of these nations are also expected to formally recognize the state of Palestine in September.

Of course, one has no illusions about the hypocrisy of supporting peace in Palestine while still arming the Israeli war machine that is carrying out a genocide in Gaza. That notwithstanding, the political change is too significant to ignore.

In the case of Ireland, Norway, Spain, Luxembourg, Malta, and Portugal, among others, one can explain the growing rift with Israel and the championing of Palestinian rights based on historical evidence. Indeed, most of these countries have historically teetered on the edge between the Western common denominator and a more humanistic approach to the Palestinian struggle. This shift had already begun years prior to the ongoing Israeli genocide.

But what is one to make of the positions of Australia and the Netherlands, two of the most adamantly pro-Israel governments anywhere?

In Australia’s case, media accounts argue that the friction began when the federal government denied an Israeli extremist lawmaker, Simcha Rothman, a visa for a speaking tour.

Israel quickly retaliated by ending visas for three Australian diplomats in occupied Palestine. This Israeli step was not just a mere tit-for-tat response but the start of a virulent campaign by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to wage a diplomatic war against Australia.

“History will remember Albanese for what he is: a weak politician who betrayed Israel and abandoned Australia’s Jews,” Netanyahu said, again infusing the same logic of lies and manipulation tactics.

Israel’s anger was not directly related to Rothman’s visa. The latter was a mere opportunity for Netanyahu to respond to Australia’s signature on the New York Declaration, its decision to recognize Palestine, and its growing criticism of Israel’s genocide in Gaza.

Though Albanese did not engage Netanyahu directly, his Home Affairs Minister, Tony Burke, did. He answered the accusations of weakness by boldly arguing that “strength is not measured by how many people you can blow up.”

This statement is both true and self-indicting, not only for Australia but for other Western governments. For years, and numerous times during the genocide, Australian leaders have argued that “Israel has the right to defend itself.” Since blowing people up hardly qualifies as self-defense, it follows that Canberra had known all along that Israel’s war is but an ongoing episode of war crimes. So, why the sudden, though still unconvincing, shift in position?

The answer to this question is directly related to the mass mobilization in Australia. On a single Sunday in August, hundreds of thousands of Australians took to the streets in what organizers described as the largest pro-Palestinian demonstrations in the country’s history. Marches were held in more than 40 cities and towns, including a massive rally in Sydney that drew a crowd of up to 300,000 people and brought the city’s Harbour Bridge to a standstill. These protests, which called for sanctions and an end to Australia’s arms trade with Israel, demonstrated the immense public pressure on the government.

In other words, it is the Australian people who have truly spoken, courageously standing up to Netanyahu and to their own government’s refusal to take any meaningful step to hold Israel accountable. If anyone should be congratulated on their strength and resolve, it would be the millions of Australians who relentlessly continue to rally for peace, justice, and an end to the genocide in Gaza.

Similarly, the political crisis in the Netherlands, starting with the resignation of Foreign Minister Caspar Veldkamp on August 22, 2025, is indicative of the unusually significant change in European politics toward Israel and Palestine.

“The Israeli government’s actions violate international treaties. A line must be drawn,” said Eddy van Hijum, the leader of the country’s New Social Contract Party and deputy prime minister.

The “line” was indeed drawn, and quickly so when Veldkamp resigned, ushering in mass resignations by other key ministers in the government. The idea of a major political crisis in the Netherlands sparked by Israeli war crimes in Palestine would have been unthinkable in the past.

The political shift in the Netherlands, much like in Australia, would not have happened without the massive public mobilization around the Gaza genocide that continues to grow worldwide. While pro-Palestine protests have occurred in the past, they have never before achieved the critical mass needed to compel governments to act.

Though these governmental actions remain timid and reluctant, the momentum is undeniable. People’s power is proving more than capable of swaying some governments to impose sanctions and sever diplomatic ties with Israel, not only through pressure in the streets but also through pressure at the ballot box.

While the West has not yet fully turned against Israel, it may only be a matter of time. The precious blood of hundreds of thousands of innocent Palestinians in Gaza deserves for history to be finally altered. The children of Palestine deserve this global awakening of conscience.

Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author and the Editor of The Palestine Chronicle. He is the author of six books. His forthcoming book, ‘Before the Flood,’ will be published by Seven Stories Press. His other books include ‘Our Vision for Liberation’, ‘My Father was a Freedom Fighter’ and ‘The Last Earth’. Baroud is a Non-resident Senior Research Fellow at the Center for Islam and Global Affairs (CIGA). He contributed this article to the Jordan Times.

Continue reading
Houthi Missile Paralyzes Ben Gurion Airport

Israel’s Ben Gurion Airport was briefly shut down after a missile strike was launched from Yemen, local media said.

According to the Israeli daily Yedioth Ahronoth, the operations were temporarily suspended in Ben Gurion Airport after a missile was detected.

The Israeli army said in a statement through the US social media company X that the missile was intercepted.

The Ben Gurion Airport reopened after the interception, Yedioth Ahronoth added.

Israeli Channel 12 said that air raid sirens were sounded in Tel Aviv, central Israel, and West Jerusalem for the first time since the assassination of Yemeni Prime Minister Ahmed Ghalib Al-Rahawi.

The Yemeni Houthi group intensified assaults in recent days after an Israeli airstrike in Yemen’s capital Sanaa killed 12 top officials, including the premier and nine other ministers.

The Houthis vowed to continue their missile and drone strikes against Israeli targets in support of Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

Since November 2023, the Houthis have launched missile and drone strikes on Israeli targets and targeted commercial shipping in the Red Sea, Gulf of Aden, and Arabian Sea in support of Palestinians in Gaza, where more than 63,600 people have been killed in an Israeli genocidal war.

Continue reading
Israel Kills Pregnant Woman, Unborn Child

At least 13 people were killed as the Israeli army continued attacks in the Gaza Strip, medics said on Wednesday.

Medical sources told Anadolu that five people, including a pregnant woman and her unborn child, were killed when an Israeli helicopter struck a residential building in western Gaza City.

Another home was hit by an army helicopter in central Gaza City, resulting in the death of three people, they added according to Anadolu.

Israeli forces also targeted tents sheltering displaced civilians in the vicinity of Ranteesi Specialist Hospital in the Nasr neighborhood of the same city. A number of injuries, including severe wounds, were reported.

Israeli warplanes hit a residential building in the Nasr neighborhood, injuring several others.

Meanwhile, the Israeli army continued to detonate homes by blowing up booby-trapped robots in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood, Gaza City, under an occupation plan.

On Aug. 8, Israel’s security cabinet approved a plan by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to gradually reoccupy the Gaza Strip beginning with Gaza City.

Israeli quadcopter helicopters dropped incendiary bombs on tents sheltering displaced people and stalls in the Sheikh Radwan marketplace, sparking fires that damaged the tents and citizens’ properties. An Israeli artillery shelled the Zeitoun and Sabra neighborhoods in the same city, witnesses said.

In the central Gaza Strip, five Palestinians were killed and five others injured in drone strikes on the Nuseirat refugee camp.

The Israeli army has since launched a brutal military offensive on the Gaza Strip, killing more than 63,600 Palestinians in Gaza. The military campaign has devastated the enclave, which is facing famine.

Last November, the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.

Israel also faces a genocide case at the International Court of Justice for its war on the enclave.

Continue reading
Spanish Teachers Demand Arms Embargo of Israel

Dozens of teachers locked themselves inside a cultural center in Madrid on Tuesday, demanding that the Spanish government impose an arms embargo on Israel, local media reported.

The protest at the Circulo de Bellas Artes center, organized by the collective Greater Palestine: Education against Genocide, began with a teachers’ assembly and turned into a sit-in, according to El Diario.

“We’re not going to move from here,” said Carlos Diez, a 63-year-old secondary school teacher and member of the initiative, which brings together around 60 educators as well as figures from the cultural sector according to Anadolu.

The group called on Spain’s Cabinet to approve a long-announced decree halting arms sales to Israel.

The initiative seeks to mobilize the education community in support of Palestine amid Israel’s ongoing assault on Gaza.

The movement also plans to push teaching councils across Spain to adopt declarations in favor of an arms embargo and to demand the cutting of diplomatic and commercial relations with Israel.

The group announced further sit-ins in other cities and said it will hold a public reading of the names of the more than 18,500 children killed in Gaza.

Israel has killed more than 63,600 Palestinians in Gaza since October 2023. The military campaign has devastated the enclave, which is facing famine.

Last November, the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu and his former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.

Israel also faces a genocide case at the International Court of Justice for its war on the enclave.

Continue reading