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Biden says Sinwar’s death is ‘good day’ for world, ‘opportunity’ for hostage deal, end to Gaza war

Biden says Sinwar’s death is ‘good day’ for world, ‘opportunity’ for hostage deal, end to Gaza war
Hamas Gaza chief Yahya Sinwar gestures during an anti-Israel rally in Gaza City, in May, 2021. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 17 October 2024

Biden says Sinwar’s death is ‘good day’ for world, ‘opportunity’ for hostage deal, end to Gaza war

Biden says Sinwar’s death is ‘good day’ for world, ‘opportunity’ for hostage deal, end to Gaza war
  • Biden, in a statement, compared it to the feeling in the US after the killing of Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden
  • Biden said with Sinwar’s death “there is now the opportunity for a ‘day after’ in Gaza without Hamas in power”

ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE: President Joe Biden said Thursday that the killing of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar by Israeli troops is a “good day for Israel, for the United States, and for the world,” and called it an “opportunity” to free Israeli hostages held by Hamas and end the yearlong war in Gaza.
Biden, in a statement, compared it to the feeling in the US after the killing of Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, who was responsible for the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, saying the killing of the mastermind of the Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel “proves once again that no terrorists anywhere in the world can escape justice, no matter how long it takes.”
Biden said he would speak with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other Israeli leaders to congratulate them “and to discuss the pathway for bringing the hostages home to their families, and for ending this war once and for all.”
Biden said with Sinwar’s death “there is now the opportunity for a ‘day after’ in Gaza without Hamas in power, and for a political settlement that provides a better future for Israelis and Palestinians alike.”
He praised US special operations forces and intelligence operatives who helped advise Israeli allies on tracking and locating Sinwar and other Hamas leaders over the last year — though the US said the operation that killed Sinwar was an Israeli one.
National security adviser Jake Sullivan called Sinwar a “massive obstacle” to peace. He added, “his removal from the battlefield does present an opportunity to find a way forward that gets the hostages home.”


US envoy doubles down on support for Syria’s government and criticizes Israel’s intervention

US envoy doubles down on support for Syria’s government and criticizes Israel’s intervention
Updated 27 sec ago

US envoy doubles down on support for Syria’s government and criticizes Israel’s intervention

US envoy doubles down on support for Syria’s government and criticizes Israel’s intervention
  • The ceasefire announced Saturday between Syria and Israel is a limited agreement addressing only the conflict in Sweida

BEIRUT: A US envoy doubled down on Washington’s support for the new government in Syria, saying Monday there is “no Plan B” to working with the current authorities to unite the country still reeling from a nearly 14-year civil war and now wracked by a new outbreak of sectarian violence.
He took a critical tone toward Israel’s recent intervention in Syria, calling it poorly timed and saying that it complicated efforts to stabilize the region.
Tom Barrack, who is ambassador to Turkiye and special envoy to Syria and also has a short-term mandate in Lebanon, made the comments in an exclusive interview with The Associated Press during a visit to Beirut. He spoke following more than a week of clashes in the southern province of Sweida between militias of the Druze religious minority and local Sunni Muslim Bedouin tribes.
Syrian government forces intervened, ostensibly to restore order, but ended up siding with the Bedouins before withdrawing under a ceasefire agreement with Druze factions. Hundreds have been killed in the fighting, and some government fighters allegedly shot dead Druze civilians and burned and looted their houses.
In the meantime, Israel intervened last week on behalf of the Druze, who are seen as a loyal minority within Israel and often serve in its military. Israel launched dozens of strikes on convoys of government forces in Sweida and also struck the Syrian Ministry of Defense headquarters in central Damascus.
Over the weekend, Barrack announced a ceasefire between Syria and Israel, without giving details. Syrian government forces have redeployed in Sweida to halt renewed clashes between the Druze and Bedouins, and civilians from both sides were set to be evacuated Monday.
US envoy says Israeli intervention ‘came at a very bad time’
Barrack told the AP that “the killing, the revenge, the massacres on both sides” are “intolerable,” but that “the current government of Syria, in my opinion, has conducted themselves as best they can as a nascent government with very few resources to address the multiplicity of issues that arise in trying to bring a diverse society together.”
Regarding Israel’s strikes on Syria, Barrack said: “The United States was not asked, nor did they participate in that decision, nor was it the United States responsibility in matters that Israel feels is for its own self-defense.”
However, he said that Israel’s intervention “creates another very confusing chapter” and “came at a very bad time.”
Prior to the conflict in Sweida, Israel and Syria had been engaging in talks over security matters, while the Trump administration had been pushing them to move toward a full normalization of diplomatic relations.
When the latest fighting erupted, “Israel’s view was that south of Damascus was this questionable zone, so that whatever happened militarily in that zone needed to be agreed upon and discussed with them,” Barrack said. “The new government (in Syria) coming in was not exactly of that belief.”
The ceasefire announced Saturday between Syria and Israel is a limited agreement addressing only the conflict in Sweida, he said. It does not address the broader issues between the two countries, including Israel’s contention that the area south of Damascus should be a demilitarized zone.
In the discussions leading up to the ceasefire, Barrack said “both sides did the best they can” to came to an agreement on specific questions related to the movement of Syrian forces and equipment from Damascus to Sweida.
“Whether you accept that Israel can intervene in a sovereign state is a different question,” he said.
He suggested that Israel would prefer to see Syria fragmented and divided rather than a strong central state in control of the country.
“Strong nation states are a threat — especially Arab states are viewed as a threat to Israel,” he said. But in Syria, he said, “I think all of the the minority communities are smart enough to say, we’re better off together, centralized.”
A Damascus deal with Kurdish forces still in play
The violence in Sweida has deepened the distrust of minority religious and ethnic groups in Syria toward the new government in Damascus, led by Sunni Muslim former insurgents who unseated Syria’s longtime autocratic ruler, Bashar Assad, in a lightning offensive in December.
The attacks on Druze civilians followed the deaths of hundreds of civilians from the Alawite minority to which Assad belongs earlier this year in sectarian revenge attacks on the Syrian coast. While interim President Ahmad Al-Sharaa has promised to protect minorities and punish those who target civilians, many feel his government has not done enough to stop such attacks and hold perpetrators accountable.
At the same time, Damascus has been negotiating with the Kurdish forces that control much of northeast Syria to implement an agreement that would merge the US-backed Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces with the new national army.
Barrack, who spoke to SDF leader Mazloum Abdi over the weekend, said he does not believe the violence in Sweida will derail those talks and that there could be a breakthrough “in the coming weeks.”
Neighboring Turkiye, which wants to curtail the influence of Kurdish groups along its border and has tense relations with Israel, has offered to provide defense assistance to Syria.
Barrack said the US has “no position” on the prospect of a defense pact between Syria and Turkiye.
“It’s not in the US’s business or interest to tell any of the surrounding nations with each other what to do,” he said.


Israel says struck Yemen’s Houthi-held Hodeida port

Israel says struck Yemen’s Houthi-held Hodeida port
Updated 30 min 42 sec ago

Israel says struck Yemen’s Houthi-held Hodeida port

Israel says struck Yemen’s Houthi-held Hodeida port
  • Defense Minister Israel Katz said Israel’s military on Monday struck “terror targets” belonging to the Houthi rebels at the Yemeni port of Hodeida

Defense Minister Israel Katz said Israel’s military on Monday struck “terror targets” belonging to the Houthis at the Yemeni port of Hodeida.
The Israeli military “has just struck terror targets of the Houthi terror regime at the port of Hodeida and is forcefully enforcing the prevention of any attempt to restore the previously attacked terror infrastructure,” Katz said in a statement.
In a separate statement, the army said that “among the military infrastructure struck were engineering vehicles... fuel containers, naval vessels used for military activities and force against the State of Israel and vessels in the maritime zone adjacent to the port, and additional terror infrastructure used by the Houthi terrorist regime.”


Gaza teen who dreamed of becoming a doctor now just hopes to survive

Gaza teen who dreamed of becoming a doctor now just hopes to survive
Updated 21 July 2025

Gaza teen who dreamed of becoming a doctor now just hopes to survive

Gaza teen who dreamed of becoming a doctor now just hopes to survive
  • More than 650,000 students have had no access to education since the start of the war

KHAN YOUNIS: Two years ago, Sarah Qanan was a star high school student preparing for final exams and dreaming of becoming a doctor. Today, the 18-year-old lives in a sweltering tent in the Gaza Strip and says she is just trying to stay alive.
She’s part of a generation of Palestinians from grade school through university who have had virtually no access to education in the territory since the war began in October 2023. Classes were suspended that month and schools were transformed into crowded shelters as hundreds of thousands fled their homes at the start of Israel’s campaign of retaliation after Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack.
The closure of schools has removed a key social outlet for young people as they grapple with war, hunger and displacement. For younger children, it has meant missing out on basic skills like reading and simple arithmetic. For older students, advanced subjects, graduation exams and college applications have all been put on hold.
Even if negotiations lead to another ceasefire, it’s unclear when anything in Gaza will be rebuilt. Vast areas have been completely destroyed, and the UN children’s agency estimates that nearly 90 percent of schools will need substantial reconstruction before they can function again.
Like many in Gaza, Qanan’s family has been displaced multiple times and is now living in a tent. When an Israeli airstrike destroyed their home in early 2024, she dug through the rubble in search of her books, but “there was nothing left.”


“My sole dream was to study medicine,” Qanan said. “I stopped thinking about it. All my thoughts now are about how to survive.”
Hundreds of thousands out of school
More than 650,000 students have had no access to education since the start of the war, according to the UN children’s agency, UNICEF. That includes nearly 40,000 students who were unable to take university entry exams that largely determine their career prospects.
It’s the first time in decades that the exams were not administered in Gaza.
Israel’s bombardment and ground operations have killed tens of thousands of Palestinians and displaced 90 percent of Gaza’s population. School-age children in crowded shelters and tent camps are often forced to help their families find food, water and firewood. A complete Israeli blockade imposed in early March that was only slightly eased 2 ½ months later has driven the territory to the brink of famine.
Local education officials, working with UNICEF and other aid groups, set up hundreds of learning spaces to try and provide education during the war.
“We’re trying to salvage what we can of the educational process, so that the next generation doesn’t slip through our fingers,” said Mohamed Al-Asouli, head of the education department in the southern city of Khan Younis.
During a six-week ceasefire in January and February, some 600 learning spaces provided lessons for around 173,000 children, according to UNICEF. But since March, when Israel ended the truce with a surprise bombardment, nearly half have shut down.
“The impact goes beyond learning losses,” said Rosalia Bollen, a UNICEF spokeswoman. “Children in Gaza have been trapped in a cycle not just of exposure to unprecedented violence, but also a cycle of fear, of toxic stress, of anxiety.”
‘Two years of my life are gone’


Some have tried to continue their studies through online learning, but it’s not easy in Gaza, where there has been no central electricity since the start of the war. Palestinians must use solar panels or hard-to-find generators to charge their phones, and Internet is unreliable.
“The mobile phone is not always charged, and we only have one at home,” said Nesma Zouaroub, a mother of four school-age children. She said her youngest son should be in second grade but does not know how to read or write.
“The children’s future is ruined,” she said.
Ola Shaban tried to continue her civil engineering studies online through her university after the campus was destroyed by Israeli forces in April 2024. She had to walk long distances to get a signal in her hometown near Khan Younis, and she eventually gave up.
“I couldn’t continue because of lack of Internet, continuous displacement and the constant sense of fear,” she said. “Two years of my life are gone.”
Israel’s offensive has killed over 57,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry. The ministry, which is part of the Hamas-run government, does not differentiate between combatants and civilians but says over half the dead are women and children. Its figures are used by the UN and other international organizations as the most reliable statistics on war casualties.
Hamas-led militants killed some 1,200 people in the Oct. 7 attack and abducted 251. They are still holding 50 hostages, less than half believed to be alive, after most of the rest were released in ceasefire deals or other agreements.
Qanan’s father, Ibrahim, a local journalist, said his family did everything it could to support Sarah’s ambition to study medicine, only to see it go up in smoke when the war broke out.
“The war stunned us and turned our life upside down,” the father of six said. “Our dreams and hopes were buried in the rubble of our home.”


Libya commander Haftar seeks to force international engagement

Libya commander Haftar seeks to force international engagement
Updated 21 July 2025

Libya commander Haftar seeks to force international engagement

Libya commander Haftar seeks to force international engagement
  • Reported disagreement prompted eastern authorities to accuse a European delegation of a ‘flagrant breach of diplomatic norms’
  • Turning the delegation away showed that declining to engage with the eastern civilian administration was no longer an option

TUNIS: Libya’s eastern authorities recently expelled a senior European delegation in a move analysts say was meant to send a message: the unrecognized administration backed by military leader Khalifa Haftar cannot be ignored.

On July 8, an EU commissioner and ministers from Greece, Italy and Malta were in Libya to discuss irregular migration from the North African country.

Their visit was divided in two, as is Libya, which is still grappling with the aftermath of the armed conflict and political chaos that followed the 2011 NATO-backed uprising that toppled longtime dictator Muammar Qaddafi.

The delegation first visited the capital Tripoli, seat of the internationally recognized Libyan government of Prime Minister Abdelhamid Dbeibah.

They then traveled to Benghazi, in the east, where a rival administration backed by Haftar and his clan is based, and with whom the EU has generally avoided direct contact.

Almost immediately, a reported disagreement prompted the eastern authorities to accuse the European delegation of a “flagrant breach of diplomatic norms,” ordering the visiting dignitaries to leave.

In Brussels, the European Commission admitted a “protocol issue.”

Tarek Megerisi, a senior policy fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations think tank, said the scene at the airport “was a calculated move.”

Haftar was playing to EU fears of irregular migration in order “to generate de facto European recognition,” and thus “broaden relations with Europe away from just engagement with him as a local military leader.”

Turning the delegation away showed that declining to engage with the eastern civilian administration was no longer an option.

The complex situation in Libya has required unusual diplomacy.

European governments recognize and work with the Tripoli-based government and not the eastern administration, but still hold contact with Haftar’s military forces.

In their visit earlier this month, the European commissioner and ministers were meant to meet with eastern military officials.

But once at the Benghazi airport, they saw “there were people there that we had not agreed to meet,” a European official in Brussels told journalists on condition of anonymity.

“We had to fly back,” the official said, adding that “of course” it was linked to recognition of the eastern government.

Claudia Gazzini, a Libya expert at the International Crisis Group, said she did not believe “it was a premeditated incident.”

But “the question does present itself as to why” ministers from the eastern government were at the airport in the first place, and why Haftar would let it play out the way it did, she said.

“We can’t completely rule out that there was some particular issue or bilateral disagreement with one of the countries represented in the delegation,” Gazzini added.

Libya expert Jalel Harchaoui suggested Greece may have been the target.

On July 6, two days before the axed visit, “the Greek foreign minister had come to demand concessions on migration and maritime (issues) without offering any tangible incentives,” Harchaoui said.

Despite Haftar’s personal involvement, the July 6 visit “had yielded nothing,” added the expert.

Then, on July 8, “a Greek representative – this time as part of an EU delegation – wanted to negotiate on the same day with the rival Tripoli government, placing the two governments on an equal footing,” he said.

This was “an affront in Benghazi’s view,” Harchaoui said, and the administration wanted to “punish Athens.”

To Harchaoui, the diplomatic flap was a sign not to “underestimate” the Haftars’ foreign policy.

“The Haftar family is an absolutely essential actor” in tackling the influx of migrants or, for example, advancing energy projects, due to its key role in securing Libya’s eastern coast, said Harchaoui.

The message delivered at the Benghazi airport “is clear: take the eastern faction seriously,” he added.

Harchaoui said that the Haftars, already “rich in cash and strong” in terms of strategic assets, have recently increased efforts to “consolidate their legitimacy.”

Haftar himself was hosted in February by French President Emmanuel Macron, and in May by Russia’s Vladimir Putin.

And Haftar’s son, Saddam, recently visited the United States, Turkiye, Italy and Niger.

Even Ankara, which has provided support for the Tripoli-based government in repelling attacks from the east, “is now seeking to further profit off the Haftars through things like construction projects,” said Megerisi.

He added that Turkiye also has wider geopolitical ambitions, hoping to see the Haftars endorse a maritime border agreement in the eastern Mediterranean, which Tripoli had already signed but Athens regards as illegal.


Thousands in Morocco call for end to Gaza war

Thousands in Morocco call for end to Gaza war
Updated 21 July 2025

Thousands in Morocco call for end to Gaza war

Thousands in Morocco call for end to Gaza war
  • Morocco and Israel in 2020 signed a US-brokered normalization deal, which has increasingly come under attack in the North African kingdom as the war in Gaza rages into its 22nd month

RABAT: Tens of thousands of Moroccans demonstrated Sunday in the capital Rabat against the dire humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip, calling for the reversal of the kingdom’s normalization deal with Israel.
Protesters gathered in the city center, brandishing Palestinian flags and placards calling for the free flow of aid to the war-ravaged Palestinian territory.
“It’s a disgrace, Gaza is under fire,” “Lift the blockade,” “Morocco, Palestine, one people” and “no to normalization,” chanted the demonstrators.
They had gathered at the call of various organizations, including a coalition bringing together the Islamist movement Al-Adl Wal-Ihssane and left-wing parties.

Moroccans wave Palestinian flags during a march to express their solidarity with the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, in Rabat on July 19, 2025. (AFP)

The war in Gaza, sparked by militant group Hamas’s deadly attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, has created dire humanitarian conditions for the more than two million people who live in the coastal territory.
Most people have been displaced at least once by the fighting, and doctors and aid agencies say they were seeing the physical and mental health effects of 21 months of war, including more acute malnutrition.
“Palestinians are being starved and killed before the eyes of the whole world,” said Jamal Behar, one of the demonstrators in Rabat on Sunday.
“It is our duty to denounce this dramatic, unbearable situation.”
Morocco and Israel in 2020 signed a US-brokered normalization deal, which has increasingly come under attack in the North African kingdom as the war in Gaza rages into its 22nd month.