@m4xim1l1an@danameisjames11@KulakMAGAMan@havivrettiggur@Wikipedia Israel has claim on the territory as per ICJ Julie Sebutinde, other layers. The screenshot does not tell entire story...
https://t.co/3W9hq4FGJF
Palestinian Arabs were offered territory (in exchange to peace), they refused.
@m4xim1l1an@danameisjames11@KulakMAGAMan@havivrettiggur@Wikipedia The Supreme Court’s application of belligerent occupation law is a narrow, functional/administrative framework for judicial review of military actions not a determination of ultimate sovereignty or a blanket prohibition on civilian settlements. // Oslo agreement were to create
.@Wikipedia has been transformed into a blunt instrument of propaganda in the deliberate effort to erase a nation and its history.
Read this thread before shouting at me that it ain't so.
Kudüs’ü yönetmeyi hayal eden ve tehditler savuran Türkiye İçişleri Bakanı’na şunu söylüyorum:
Kudüs, Konstantinopolis değildir ve İsrail Devleti de çökmekte olan bir Haçlı İmparatorluğu değildir. İsrail, her türlü tehdide karşı kendini savunma kapasitesini kanıtlamış güçlü ve kararlı bir devlettir.
Kudüs, 3.000 yıldır Yahudi halkının başkentidir ve sonsuza dek İsrail’in başkenti olmaya devam edecektir. Siz ve Erdoğan’ın hayalini kurduğu Osmanlı İmparatorluğu ise çökmüştür ve bir daha asla geri dönmeyecektir.
Ne yazık ki, Türkiye’yi modern bir devlete dönüştürmek için çalışan Atatürk’ün mirasından hiçbir ders çıkarmadınız; aksine, Türkiye’yi yeniden karanlık ve geri kalmış bir döneme sürüklemek için çalışıyorsunuz.
@RTErdogan@mustafaciftcitr@kilicdarogluk@ekrem_imamoglu@mansuryavas06
On This Day — June 7, 1981
43 years ago today, Israel pulled off what many experts called an impossible suicide mission: a 1,000-mile surprise airstrike deep into enemy territory to blow up Saddam Hussein’s Osirak nuclear reactor — just weeks before it was to go live with enriched uranium fuel.
In Operation Opera, eight Israeli F-16s escorted by F-15s flew low across hostile airspace over Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Iraq — without aerial refueling.
In 1981, this was considered borderline insane. The distance, the risk of detection by multiple Arab air forces, and no backup plan made it look like a one-way mission. Most believed the planes would never return.
Yet they all completed their mission and returned home safely.
Israel had every reason to fear a nuclear Saddam:
- Saddam had sworn to destroy Israel and “burn half of it with chemical weapons.”
- Iraq had never signed a ceasefire and remained technically at war with Israel.
- Saddam was already gassing his own Kurdish citizens and building one of the most brutal regimes on earth.
Prime Minister Menachem Begin, whose parents and brother were murdered in the Holocaust, carried a deep personal mission: “I will not be the man in whose time there will be a second Holocaust.”
Diplomacy had completely failed. France and Italy sold the reactor for oil. The U.S. knew the danger but wouldn’t act. Israel stood alone.
Despite fierce internal opposition and enormous risks — international isolation, retaliation, and danger to its fragile peace with Egypt — Begin gave the order.
At 6:35 PM local time, the jets struck with surgical precision. In just 80 seconds, the reactor was reduced to rubble. Iraqi defenses were caught completely off guard.
The world erupted in outrage. The UN Security Council condemned Israel. The U.S. suspended fighter jet deliveries. Begin shot back: “What we have done is the ultimate act of self-defense.”
Even President Reagan later acknowledged:
“I do think that one has to recognize that Israel had reason for concern, viewing the past history of Iraq that has never signed a ceasefire or recognized Israel as a nation.”
Ten years later, after the Gulf War, U.S. Defense Secretary Dick Cheney handed Israeli General David Ivry a satellite photo of the destroyed reactor with the handwritten note:
“For the outstanding job you did on the Iraqi Nuclear Program in 1981, which made our job much easier in Desert Storm.”
History proved Begin right.
One small nation, acting alone against the world, pulled off the unthinkable — and stopped a nuclear-armed Saddam before he could begin.
Even Arab leaders admit it.
Everyone is sharing the Bill Clinton clip where he describes how Yasser Arafat rejected a generous peace offer at Camp David that would have given the Palestinians a state on 96 percent of the West Bank, land swaps, and a capital in East Jerusalem. Clinton says Arafat lied to him and that the Palestinian leadership never actually wanted a two-state solution. They wanted to destroy Israel. It’s a video often shared by people like @VividProwess, and it’s an important one for people to see.
Of course, critics immediately dismiss it. They claim Clinton is biased or he’s pro-Israel. They’ll tell you that you cannot trust the American perspective.
Ok, so let us set that aside.
Now watch this.
In this powerful interview, former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, a major Arab leader who was directly involved in negotiations, says exactly the same thing from the Arab side. He talks about the Mena House Conference in Cairo as well as the Camp David negotiations of 1978. All failed because of the Palestinians repeatedly rejecting any offer. The Oslo accords were signed but because Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad were not involved, they derailed the accords and any chance for peace by initiating 4 years of terrorist suicide attacks in Israel. Then came the second Camp David negotiations in 2000 which Arafat agreed to, then rejected and instead initiated the Second Intifada.
Mubarak explains how the Palestinians refused to even participate in the Mena House conference of 1977. He describes repeated opportunities they were given, including a detailed document that called for Israeli withdrawal from the Samaria, Judea and Gaza, security arrangements during a transitional period, and other major concessions. The Israelis were willing to negotiate on difficult issues like who would control security. The Palestinians, according to Mubarak, kept saying no and wasting chance after chance.
He speaks with clear frustration about how for decades the Palestinian side has rejected peace initiatives and realistic compromises.
The video further shows footage from the PLO representative in 1977, as well as old footage of Egyptian president Sadat who was involved in the Mena House and first Camp David negotiations of 1978.
This perhaps is far more impactful than Clinton’s account because it is not a Western or Israeli voice. It is prominent Arab leaders who lived the negotiations, who represented the broader Arab world, and who had zero incentive to defend Israel.
When leaders from both sides of the table describe the same pattern of Palestinian rejectionism and violence, it becomes much harder to dismiss as bias.
The pattern is clear across decades and across different voices… generous offers, repeated refusals, and continued demands for everything while giving nothing in return.
This is not ancient history. It is the core reason the conflict continues today.
If you value the truth, please share.
58 years ago today, Robert F. Kennedy's assassination was the first act of Palestinian terrorism on American soil.
Sirhan Sirhan’s diary made his motive crystal clear: ‘RFK must die' due to his support for israel. Sirhan chose the 1st anniversary of the Six Day War to kill RFK.
On This Day — June 7, 1967
While today large parts of American academia treat Israel as the villain, in 1967 they overwhelmingly stood with the Jewish state.
Just one day after the Six Day War began, this full-page ad ran in The New York Times.
Titled “To Uphold Our Own Honor ...”, it was signed by hundreds of leading American professors, intellectuals, writers, and artists from elite universities across the country.
They saw tiny Israel fighting for survival against Arab states that openly vowed to destroy it — and they spoke out clearly in its defense.
A second major ad followed the next day, signed by over 4,000 American academics.
This wave of intellectual support helped launch American Professors for Peace in the Middle East, one of the first major academic groups explicitly defending Israel’s right to exist and defend itself.
In June 1967, thousands of professors — many of them liberals — looked at Israel facing existential annihilation and said: “We stand with the Jews.”
That moral clarity was once the norm on American campuses.
Today, it is the exception.
@CptAllenHistory European taxpayers must know amount of aid delivered to corrupt PA, to Hamas and Gaza from their pockets. And projections of aid needed to reconstruct terror base in Gaza ( as Hamas and others do not plan stopping attacks on Israel)
On This Day — June 7, 2002
As billions in international aid — including your taxpayer dollars — continued pouring into the Palestinian Authority, a Kuwaiti newspaper dropped a bombshell.
On this day in 2002, Al-Watan reported that Yasser Arafat had siphoned $5.1 million in Arab donor money, explicitly earmarked for the Palestinian people, and deposited it directly into his personal bank account.
This was Arafat’s standard operating procedure:
- Arafat’s personal fortune was estimated between $1 billion and $3 billion (some intelligence assessments reached $6.5 billion), stashed in secret accounts in Switzerland, France, and offshore havens.
- A leaked 1997 Palestinian Legislative Council investigation found that 40% of the entire annual budget — $326 million that year alone — had disappeared into corruption and mismanagement. Arafat suppressed the report.
- His economic advisor Mohammed Rashid took stolen funds and invested them in the Jordan Cement Company to personally profit from the reconstruction boom caused by the Intifada.
- Arafat and his inner circle ran monopolies on cement, fuel, cigarettes, flour, gravel, and cars — squeezing huge profits from ordinary goods.
While his wife Suha Arafat (pictured below) lived lavishly in Paris (spending over $100,000 per month on designer clothes, shoes, and luxury living), Arafat treated EU, US, Arab, and UNRWA aid as his personal ATM.
Billions flowed in after Oslo. Very little went to building real institutions or prosperity.
Arafat died one of the richest men in the world — having turned a "national liberation movement" into a criminal empire.
The man who posed as the humble revolutionary in a keffiyeh was, in reality, one of the most successful kleptocrats of the modern era.
This was betrayal on an industrial scale; theft to a degree that would make Daniel Ocean blush.
Hillel Neuer Named to ORA Magazine’s List of 18 Trailblazers: “A leading voice for accountability on the global stage, Hillel Neuer is the executive director of UN Watch, challenging bias and exposing human rights abuses within international institutions. Based in Geneva, Neuer is known for his direct, unsparing speeches at the United Nations, confronting authoritarian regimes and calling out double standards. Trained in law at McGill University, he shifted from corporate practice to advocacy, becoming a prominent defender of democratic values and Jewish rights on the world stage. Neuer brings moral clarity into rooms built on diplomacy, refusing to let silence stand in for truth.”
Accountability is key. As @MarkGoldfeder says on the @JNS_org Basic Law Podcast: Everyone should be able to show their work and defend their actions under the law.
https://t.co/1HTH7bylDV
Auch zu Besuch in der Schweiz: Salah Hamouri, wahlweise Menschenrechtsanwalt oder palästinensischer Terrorist https://t.co/el80NL8xy5 via @audiatur_online
The government approved a budget of over one billion new shekels on Tuesday to carry out military tribunals for terrorists who participated in the October 7 Hamas massacre in 2023.
Reporting by: @keshet_neev
https://t.co/Fconb4vcuC
“14,000 babies will die in 48 hours.”
That claim didn’t come from a random account online. It came from the United Nations, and major media outlets ran with it.
The problem? It wasn't true.
Presenter: @Erin_Molan
This is not an easy read but I think it's an important one, including for Israelis and allies, who may have forgotten about the terrible massacres launched from Lebanon against Israeli civilians in the 70s and 80s.