Israeli Army Sinks in The Mud of Gaza – Maariv

Israeli army is on the verge of “sinking in the mud of Gaza,” the Israeli daily Maariv reported Thursday.

“In this black August, some 15 Israeli soldiers were killed in battles in Gaza and the north (with Lebanon), and this is the price of a war of attrition,” reported the daily.

“August will be remembered as one of the bloodiest months,” continued Maariv.

It further added that Israel “insists on maintaining the Philadelphi Corridor and the Netzarim Passage in the name of security, and this is currently the main point of contention in the negotiations.”

For months, the US, Qatar and Egypt have been trying to reach an agreement between Israel and Hamas to ensure a prisoner exchange and a cease-fire and allow humanitarian aid to enter Gaza. But mediation efforts have been stalled due to Netanyahu’s refusal to meet Hamas’ demands to stop the war.

“In a few weeks, the seasons will change, and the rain will come. Before we sink into the quagmire, let’s take a moment… and truly consider security alternatives to close negotiations, release the hostages, and cease the fire.”

According to the army’s figure, at least 703 Israeli soldiers have been killed since the beginning of the war on 7 October, 2023, including 339 in the ground battles in the Gaza Strip that began on 27 of that month.

Israel has continued its brutal offensive on the Gaza Strip following a Hamas attack on despite a UN Security Council resolution calling for an immediate ceasefire.

The onslaught has resulted in more than 40,500 Palestinian deaths, mostly women and children, and over 93,700 injuries, according to local health authorities.

An ongoing blockade of Gaza has led to severe shortages of food, clean water and medicine, leaving much of the region in ruins.

Israel faces accusations of genocide at the International Court of Justice, which has ordered a halt to military operations in the southern city of Rafah, where over one million Palestinians had sought refuge before the area was invaded on May 6 according to Anadolu, the Turkish news agency.

Continue reading
Israel Economy Dives as 46,000 Firms Close

About 46,000 Israeli companies closed down since the war began on 7 October, 2023, with expectations the number will rise to 60,000 firms by the end of 2024 according to the Israeli Hebrew daily Maariv.

It stated 46,000 companies closed down since the beginning of the war on Gaza according to Coface Bdi, a credit risk business information agency for Israeli companies.

“This is a very high number that includes many sectors,” Yoel Amir, CEO of Coface Bdi, was quoted as saying.

He explained 77% of the companies that closed down since the war beginning – that’s about 35000 companies, are small firms and are the most vulnerable in the Israeli economy.

The sectors suffering most are  the building and construction industry, and other related industries such as ceramics, air conditioning, aluminum, and building materials.

Amir added other sectors were also severely affected such as the trade sector, which includes the fashion, shoe, furniture, and household appliances industry, and the service sector, cafes, entertainment and entertainment services, and transportation.

He said this includes the tourism sector which is today non-existent, the tourist areas that have become combat zones, and the agricultural sector, most of which is located in the combat zones in the south and north, and suffers from a shortage in workforce.

Statistics show the abysmal state of the Israeli economy with the building and construction sector down by 27%, services sector by about 19%, while the industrial and agricultural sector by about 17%, and the trade sector by about 12%.

The high-tech and advanced technologies industry was affected by about 11%, and the food and beverage industry was affected by about 6%, according to official statistics.

“The damage in combat zones is more serious, but the damage to businesses is across the country, with almost no sector spared,” Amir noted.

“The damage is very great in all aspects of  the Israeli economy,” the Coface Bdi CEO noted, explaining “in the end, when companies close their doors and do not have the ability to repay debts, there is also peripheral damage to customers, suppliers and companies that are part of Its working system.

He added, “…there has been a sharp decline in corporate activity in various sectors since the beginning of the war.”

Amir confirmed that in a recent opinion poll made by his company, about 56 percent of commercial company managers in Israel said there was a significant decline in the scope of their activities since the beginning of the war.

“We estimate that by the end of 2024, it is expected that about 60,000 companies will close in Israel. For comparison, in 2020, the year of the Corona crisis, about 74,000 companies were closed,” he said.

Today Israeli companies face “very difficult challenges represented by a labor shortage, declining sales, a high interest rate environment and high financing costs, transportation and logistics problems, a shortage of raw materials, and inaccessibility to agricultural lands in combat zones,” as well as “the lack of Availability of customers involved in combat, flow difficulties, and increases in acquisition costs,” he added.

The war left more than 126,000 Palestinian martyrs and wounded, most of them children and women, and more than 10,000 missing amid massive destruction and famine that claimed the lives of dozens of children.

Tel Aviv continues the war, ignoring the UN Security Council resolutions to stop it immediately, and the orders of the International Court of Justice to take measures to prevent acts of genocide and improve the catastrophic humanitarian situation in Gaza.

Continue reading
Israeli Maariv: There is no Alternative to Hamas in Gaza

Any alternative to the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) is not realistic, as it has sovereignty and rule over the Gaza Strip, Israeli daily newspaper Maariv wrote about  Israel’s options for the so-call “day after” in the enclave.

The newspaper stated Gaza is not the West Bank, explaining years after the Israeli invasion of the West Bank in 2002, the Israeli army is still waging ongoing battles with the Palestinians there.

The big difference is according to Maariv the military cells in the Palestinian Authority areas are not the party that controls security and civil affairs there; nor is it the “lions’ den,” nor even any other organization responsible for the daily life of the population.

It added unlike the cities and villages in the West Bank, the synergy between the military and civilian sides of Hamas in Gaza not only did it not disappear, but was not even dented, neither during the air aggression attack phase nor even after in the ground operation Israel waged on the Strip.

The daily referred to the issue of distributing aid in Gaza, which the Israeli government has repeatedly discussed but with no results. Israel does not want Hamas to be responsible for such aid but at the same time, it has no alternatives Maariv stated.

Maariv  explained Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu does not have any answer or plan for a civilian alternative for the residents of the Gaza Strip, he never had! “Netanyahu only knows he does not want the Palestinian Authority to be in Gaza, because that mean embarking on the path that  would directly lead to a political process based on the two-state solution.”

The daily pointed out “no force, body or state will agree to set foot in Gaza, neither physically nor with a commitment on paper, as long as Hamas remains in the field, alive, sovereign and actively distributing food to the tents of the displaced.”

There is no alternative for Hamas,  the newspaper stated, adding Israel stands in confusion regarding the day after plan and “there is no better way to describe the current situation than to say it’s a ‘dead end’. Hamas controls Gaza, because there is no alternative.”

Maariv  quoted an anonymous senior Israeli officer as saying in one of the closed hearings of the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee in the Knesset that eElections will be held in Israel before Netanyahu present to the public an alternative plan to controlling Gaza.

The Hebrew daily called on him to admit  the truth, say it out loud that there is no realistic alternative, and Hamas will remain in Gaza.

It added even if Netanyahu loudly announces he is withdrawing his opposition to the Palestinian Authority as part of an alternative solution to Gaza, this would not change the reality.

The newspaper concluded Hamas leaders are pinning their hope on a prisoner exchange deal that will allow them to expel the Israeli army from the enclave, so that the movement will have sovereignty and rule, as it was before the war began.

Continue reading
Hamas Puts 500 Israeli Armored Vehicles Out

Over 500 Israel armored vehicles have been damaged in the war on Gaza ever since 7 October, 2023 according to a report in the Jewish daily Maariv.

It reports a “few dozen” of these have been destroyed. Depending which site you are following, one added most of these have been repaired, and no doubt put back into service.

As expected, the report is making headways on the social media with more comments likely in the following days.

According to Anadolu, the Israel military established two logistics centers in Gaza to repair vehicles damaged in its war with Hamas and the other Palestinian resistance movement.

It adds the Israeli report also says the troops responsible for transporting the vehicles are said to be physically and mentally fatigued,” adding: “If they are called upon to occupy southern Lebanon, they will be there, but not in their best condition.”

Border tensions between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon have increased over the past few weeks, with fears of an all-out war, the Turkish news agency adds, whilst maintaining that the Gaza war consumed far more weapons than the Israeli army expected, and usage remains high.

The supply of US weapons to Israel became a source of tension between the two allies after Netanyahu accused President Joe Biden of withholding weapons.

Continue reading