Israeli ministry ‘concept paper’ proposes transferring Gaza’s Hamas Supporters to Egypt’s Sinai, with Canada as a possible final destination

Israeli ministry ‘concept paper’ proposes transferring Gaza civilians to Egypt’s Sinai, with Canada as a possible final destination

JERUSALEM – An Israeli government ministry has drafted a wartime proposal to transfer the Gaza Strip’s(opens in a new tab) 2.3 million people to Egypt’s Sinai peninsula, drawing condemnation from the Palestinians and worsening tensions with Cairo.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office played down the report compiled by the Intelligence Ministry as a hypothetical exercise — a “concept paper.” But its conclusions deepened long-standing Egyptian fears that Israel wants to make Gaza into Egypt’s problem, and revived for Palestinians memories of their greatest trauma — the uprooting of hundreds of thousands of people who fled or were forced from their homes during the fighting surrounding Israel’s creation in 1948.

… Egypt would not necessarily be the Palestinian refugees’ last stop. The document speaks about Egypt, Turkey, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates supporting the plan either financially, or by taking in uprooted residents of Gaza as refugees and in the long term as citizens. Canada’s “lenient” immigration practices also make it a potential resettlement target, the document adds.


No thanks. Stupid of Israel to suggest Canada be used as a doormat for Hamas supporters. There is precedent however as they did dump their unwanted Eritreans in Canada.

Share

‘A Time for War’: Netanyahu Rejects Calls for Ceasefire, Citing U.S. Response to 9/11, Pearl Harbor

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu definitively stated in a Monday speech that his nation will not stand down in its retributive assault against Hamas, more than three weeks after the terrorist group’s invasion of Israel.

“Israel will not agree to a cessation of hostilities after the horrific attacks of October 7,” Netanyahu told the foreign press on Monday. “Calls for a ceasefire are a call for Israel to surrender to Hamas, to surrender to terror, to surrender to barbarism. That will not happen. Ladies and gentlemen, the Bible says that there is a time for peace and a time for war. This is a time for war.”

Share

Terrorist-supporters in America are our enemy

America is probably the most diverse nation on earth in terms of race, ethnicity, and religion. There is a place here for everybody who shares our values and culture, including respect for the rights of those who do not look like us or pray like us (if at all). There is, however, no place here for “diverse” value systems that support violence, discrimination, misogyny, and similar things that belong in backward Dark Age societies.

Share

Hollywood and Silicon Valley’s Jews are silent on Israel

California’s captains of industry are turning a blind eye to the conflict

Back in the early days of California’s ascendancy, the state was described as “the Jews’ early paradise”, a place where the lack of social norms, and enormous opportunities, were ideal for enterprising people unmoored from conventional business ties. In the years ahead, Jews spearheaded much of California’s banking, garment and later entertainment businesses.

Share

Booby traps, hidden entrances and 130-feet deep: Israeli soldiers with experience of fighting Hamas’s ‘spider’s web’ tunnel system describe challenge facing IDF

They call it the ‘Hamas Metro’ and according to the terrorist group’s leader Yahya Sinwar, the network of tunnels under the tiny enclave extend for 310 miles – or 25 per cent longer than the entire London Underground.

If Israel is to succeed in its stated aim of ‘destroying’ Hamas, then finding and wiping out these tunnels with concealed entrances inside houses, schools and mosques, is a vital part of the mission, but one which carries inherent risks.

The network has been described as a ‘spider’s web’ by recently-released hostage Yocheved Lifshitz, an 85-year-old woman held for more than two weeks.

Share

We must defend the right to hate

Hamas apologists are entitled to free speech, too.

Virulently anti-Semitic speeches and demonstrations celebrating the massacre of Jews demand more from free-speech advocates than reflexive calls for ‘freedom for the speech you hate’. They demand empathy for the fearful targets of murderous hate, who cannot understand our defence of the right to indulge in it. But a commitment to free speech values everyone’s freedom of conscience, and it is threatened by extreme efforts to punish pro-Hamas protesters for their political advocacy, however inhumane. People have a right to hate.

Share

Dagestan’s anti-Semitic mob and the truth about Palestinian ‘solidarity’

So now we know what a ‘globalised intifada’ might look like. That’s what people chanted for on the streets of London on Saturday. ‘From London to Gaza, we’ll have an intifada’, they yelled. And now it’s happening, in Dagestan, where last night there was a violent hounding of Israelis arriving in the country by mobs shouting ‘Free Palestine’.

What took place at the airport in Makhachkala was truly chilling. Huge numbers of people, some waving the Palestinian flag and holding anti-Israel placards, stormed the airport after hearing that a flight from Tel Aviv was on its way. They were hunting for Jews. It was a pogrom under the auspices of ‘Palestine solidarity’.

Share

Israel’s Ground Operation Conundrum

Gaza’s dense urban environment and the need to abide by the laws of war will inevitably complicate its mission to extirpate Hamas.

Nearly three weeks after Hamas’s barbaric invasion and slaughter of innocent civilians and children, Israel has yet to launch a full-scale ground operation into Gaza’s dense urban environment. This week, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu formally announced that Israel is preparing for an invasion, and over the last two nights, Israeli troops launched ground raids into Gaza. The larger ground mission, however, was delayed to allow the U.S. to place additional missile-defense systems in the region and to try to secure the release of the more than 220 hostages taken by Hamas. Far from a sign of weakness, the pause shows that Israel’s government and armed forces are treating the situation with the responsibility and prudence that urban warfare warrants, in accordance with international law.

Share

The Harper law that would have stopped all these pro-Hamas rallies

Hamas support rally Toronto

It was an anti-terrorism bill that was derided as authoritarian, “dangerously vague” and borne of Conservative paranoia. And one of the first acts of the Trudeau government was to make do on a campaign promise to rewrite it.

But in hindsight, 2015’s Anti-Terrorism Act seems almost tailor-made to combat Canada’s sudden new reality of having explicitly pro-terror rallies regularly hitting the streets of its major cities.

Share

I’m Struggling to Find My Empathy

Human beings are instinctively tribal, and when we think in terms of “us” vs. “them” the temptation to dehumanize the other is hard to resist when the stakes are high.

You see this most often in war, but even in smaller things, the tendency pops up. I know plenty of people who instinctively cringe when they hear a certain accent, and of course, plenty of people assume evil of people on no basis other than skin color.

Share

Survived the Holocaust, killed by Hamas

HOLIT, Israel—The wall was blackened where a rocket-propelled grenade punched a hole into Moshe Ridler’s bungalow.

“Then they threw a hand grenade into the room, to make sure he was dead,” said Eli Hazen, a volunteer collecting bodies in Holit, a kibbutz two kilometres from Gaza.

Ridler was 91, he said, and a survivor of the Holocaust.

“That Holocaust,” Hazen clarified. “He did not survive this Holocaust.”

Share

Trudeau’s antisemitism envoy faces criticism for silence on rising attacks on Jews since start of Israel-Hamas war

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s newly appointed envoy on combating antisemitism is facing criticism for failing to speak out publicly about rising attacks and intimidation of Jews in Canada since the Hamas attacks on Israel.

Many Canadians, concerned about the upsurge in antisemitism, say they are baffled about why Deborah Lyons has so far not taken to social media to offer the Jewish community public support.

Share

Joel Kotkin: Jews are being abandoned by the left

For much of the past century, Jews across Britain, North America and Europe tilted decisively to the left. The recent atrocities committed by Hamas against Israel have challenged that trend, with Jewish sensitivities inflamed in light of the growing celebration of terrorism among progressive leftists in the West.

Historically, Jews have been wary of the right — and for good reason. Not only did they fear the fascists, but also the old-school conservative establishment, which generally disdained Jews. The British Home Office used to limit Jewish immigration to the United Kingdom, and the U.S. State Department tried to block reports of the Nazis’ mass murder of Jews from reaching the United States. In most countries, Jews consistently supported mainstream left-wing parties — namely, Labour in Britain, the Socialists in France, the Democrats in America and the Liberals in Canada. Jews even played critical roles in more radical movements on the left, including the communists.

They’ll still be voting Liberal/NDP or Democrat as the case may be.

Share