Gaza Hostage Deaths Weaken Netanyahu’s Grip on Power

In the face of increasing pressure from the United States, Britain and Germany, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has doubled down on his opposition to what these allies see as the future of Gaza: an interim government overseen by the Palestinian Authority and an eventual Palestinian state existing alongside Israel.

Speaking only hours after the army admitted to shooting three Israeli hostages as they held up a white flag in Gaza, fueling consternation and anger among Israelis, Mr. Netanyahu appeared to be trying to change the subject, boasting that he had prevented the creation of a Palestinian state in the past and would continue to do so.

“I’m proud that I prevented the establishment of a Palestinian state because today everybody understands what that Palestine state could have been,” he said at a news conference Saturday night. “Now that we’ve seen the little Palestinian state in Gaza, everyone understands what would have happened if we had capitulated to international pressures and enabled a state like that” on the West Bank.

Mr. Netanyahu is hoping to hold on to power after the war, despite popular fury that Hamas built itself into a military power and invaded Israel on his watch. To do that, he is trying to appeal to Israelis, including his Likud party and its far-right coalition partners, who mistrust the Palestinians now more than ever and argue that a two-state solution is a dangerous fantasy.

But as the war continues without resolution, the deaths mount, many of the hostages remain in custody in Gaza and Israel’s main Western allies are sharpening their criticism of him — and even looking beyond him — Mr. Netanyahu’s grip on power seems shakier than ever.

Now, the actions of the Israeli soldiers who killed hostages, rather than rescue them, may give even more impetus to those who argue that the intense military campaign, with its bombing and street fighting, is endangering those still held captive, as well as bringing Israel into disrepute.

“I begged the cabinet, and we all warned that the fighting would likely harm the hostages,” Raz Ben-Ami, a former Israeli hostage released by Hamas during a recent truce between the two sides, told demonstrators in Tel Aviv Saturday night.

“Unfortunately, I was right,” said Ms. Ben-Ami, whose husband, Ohad, is still being held in Gaza.

Mr. Netanyahu has tried to push back against growing calls from the families of hostages for another effort at a cease-fire in Gaza to allow negotiations for the release of the 130 or so people still held by Hamas and its allies.

“The military pressure is essential to bringing home the hostages but also to achieving a victory,” Mr. Netanyahu insisted at his news conference. “Without military pressure, we wouldn’t have been able to create a framework that led to the release of 110 hostages, and only via continued military pressure will we get the release of all our hostages.”

But despite his speech, he is being widely criticized in Israel for waiting to express regret for the deaths of the three Israeli hostages. The army chief of staff and the defense minister were quick to apologize and take responsibility, but even they are not thought to have gone far enough.

Nahum Barnea, one of Israel’s most respected commentators, wrote that the deaths were not just a tragedy, but “a war crime,” since “international law is very clear on the issue.” Israelis must be harder on themselves, he said. “We’re at war now, and our hearts — all of ours, including mine — are with the soldiers. But nothing good can come of blind love.”

Mr. Barnea praised the army for its quick transparency, a contrast to its usual response, which is to say only that allegations of crimes are under investigation. And he called for the soldiers and commander responsible to be disciplined.

Since Hamas invaded Israel on Oct. 7, killing roughly 1,200 people and taking some 240 hostages, Israeli forces have killed nearly 20,000 Palestinians in Gaza, according to Gaza health officials.

Akram Attaallah, a columnist for Al-Ayyam, a Palestinian newspaper in the West Bank, said that he was not surprised Israeli forces had shot the three men and that Israel would not have had to disclose what happened to them had they been unarmed Palestinians.

“Israel kills even those who surrender and raise the white flag,” said Mr. Attaallah, who is from Gaza. “The narrative is a condemnation of the Israeli army.”

Yagil Levy, an Israeli military expert at the Open University of Israel, spoke of “a real gap between the formal rules of engagement and the practice on the battlefield.” Given fear and fatigue, he said, “I’m almost sure these rules of engagement are not honored or implemented by the forces on the ground.”

Mr. Levy said he also saw parallels between the deaths of the three hostages and Israel’s operations in Gaza in general. He believes that the disregard for the formal rules of engagement revealed by the army’s investigation into the deaths will become still more evident after the war, when further investigations are done.

Already President Biden has criticized Israel’s “indiscriminate bombing” of Gaza, which the Israelis deny. John Kirby, a White House spokesman, attempted to downplay those comments as simply reflecting Mr. Biden’s thinking “about the need for reducing civilian harm and being as precise and careful and deliberate as possible.”

Those concerns were echoed on Sunday in a joint opinion article written by the foreign ministers of Britain and Germany, David Cameron and Annalena Baerbock, in which they combined support for Israel’s right to battle Hamas with pleas for the Israelis to “do more to discriminate sufficiently between terrorists and civilians, ensuring its campaign targets Hamas leaders and operatives.” The French foreign minister, visiting Israel on Sunday, called for a truce.

Mr. Cameron and Ms. Baerbock urged Israel to negotiate with the Palestinians toward a two-state solution, lining up two more of Israel’s closest allies in the world with the American plan for a postwar Gaza — precisely what Mr. Netanyahu is trying to forestall. He will have more opportunity to try in the next few days, when Lloyd J. Austin III, the U.S. secretary of defense, arrives in Israel for talks.

Mr. Netanyahu also faces criticism for playing politics so openly in the midst of a war, said Natan Sachs, director of the Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution, who just returned from Israel.

“Netanyahu has some real substantive differences with Biden, but he’s playing rampant politics in the midst of intensive fighting, and it’s shameless,” Mr. Sachs said. Mr. Netanyahu, he said, is already campaigning against his main rival, Benny Gantz, whom he brought into the emergency war cabinet as a show of national unity, and who is regarded as being more open to talks with the Palestinians about postwar Gaza.

Even Mr. Netanyahu knows that some sort of future must include the secular strand of Palestinian politics, which the Palestinian Authority, however flawed, still represents, Mr. Sachs said.

The killings of the hostages adds pressure on the Israeli government for fresh negotiations to free others, he said. The demonstrations by the families are increasing, and there is a general sense that time is running out for the hostages, with more reports of them having died or been killed in captivity.

Yonatan Hadari, who attended the demonstration in Tel Aviv, said he had lost faith not in the army but in Mr. Netanyahu. The army, he said, “is doing a good job, but the leadership is terrible, and you can see it is having a huge negative impact. You see a prime minister who isn’t taking responsibility, who isn’t visiting the hostage families or the bereaved families.”

While Hamas insists publicly that there will be no more negotiations about hostages until Israel stops its war in Gaza, talks are continuing with the aid of Qatar and Egypt, with hopes for a larger deal that would free many more hostages in return for Israel releasing more high-profile Palestinian prisoners, including some who have been convicted of murdering Israelis.

The killings made the risks to the remaining hostages “very concrete,” said Mr. Levy, the military expert. This, he said, “gave a boost to the prisoner exchange movement, and could bring Netanyahu and other ministers to consider paying a higher price for prisoner exchange.”

Adam Sella contributed reporting from Tel Aviv, and Patrick Kingsley from Jerusalem.

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Will Israel reach a deal on captives with Hamas? | Israel-Palestine conflict

Netanyahu insists the war on Gaza will continue – despite growing anger over the Israeli army’s killing of three captives.

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has again declared its military campaign in Gaza will not stop until Hamas is defeated.

But with more than 100 Israeli captives being held in Gaza, he is facing growing public anger – and pressure to do more to secure their release.

To make matters worse, Israel’s army says it mistakenly killed three of them – one was holding a white flag – during a military offensive in the strip.

That has led to thousands of Israelis protesting in Tel Aviv.

The head of Israel’s intelligence agency Mossad has now met senior Qataris in Europe in another attempt to secure a prisoner swap.

So, can Netanyahu agree on a deal after failing to secure the release of all the captives? And how is he dealing with their families’ anger?

Presenter: Folly Bah Thibault

Guests

Alon Liel – Former Director General of Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and adviser to the families of the Israeli captives

Yossi Mekelberg – Associate fellow of the MENA Programme at Chatham House

Sultan Barakat – Professor of Public Policy at Hamad bin Khalifa University

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Jennifer Aniston Planning Get-Together to Celebrate Matthew Perry – Hollywood Life

Image Credit: Alex Berliner/BEI/Shutterstock

Jennifer Aniston, 54, is reportedly planning her own special private get-together to celebrate the life of her late friend Matthew Perry. The actress is gathering the Friends cast to honor the actor, who passed away of “acute effects of ketamine” at the age of 54, at her Bel-Air, CA home, according to OK! Magazine. Although the cast, which includes Jennifer, Matt LeBlanc, Courteney Cox, and Lisa Kudrow, all attended Matthew’s funeral, a source said Jennifer wanted to do something special just for them around the holidays.

“It was always their plan to get-together just the five of them, so they could feel comfortable about saying whatever’s on their minds,” the souce told the outlet.

“They’ll reminisce about some of their favorite times with Matt and share stories and laugh and cry,” they added. “The funeral was such a sad occasion, but it was mainly for Matt’s family, and they held back out of respect for them.”

“There will undoubtedly be tears,” the source also said about the upcoming emotional event. “They wonder what more they could have done. But they don’t want to make their get-together a downer. This is about honoring their friend.”

The Los Angeles County Medical Examiner’s Office confirmed that Matthew’s official cause of death was “acute effects of ketamine” earlier this week. The beloved star had been open about his struggles with alcohol and pain pills in the past and even wrote about ketamine in his 2022 memoir, Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing.

“Ketamine was a very popular street drug in the 1980s. There is a synthetic form of it now,” he wrote. “Has my name written all over it — they might as well have called it ‘Matty.’” He also referred to the drug as a “giant exhale,” and revealed he would “disassociate” while receiving the treatment.

As family, friends, and fans cope with the cause of Matthew’s death, Jennifer’s gathering should help in the healing process since her home is known to have a “Zen feel” to it.

“She has an amazing house and the Zen feel of her place is exactly what the occasion calls for,” the source shared. “She’s planning a really nice evening with good food, some wine and lots of candles and soft music. She’ll break out the photo albums and candid videos and maybe even have a slide show.”



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Raphael Varane shows his class against Liverpool – Man United News And Transfer News

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Manchester United produced a gutsy away display at Anfield on Sunday in the Premier League as they held Liverpool to a goalless draw.

Fans were fearing a repeat of last season’s performance considering the mounting injury list and the kind of form both teams were in going into the contest.

The result meant United became the first team to not lose at Anfield this season and the first to stop the hosts from scoring.

Varane remains United’s best defender

This was possible thanks to the manager’s decision to go back to basics, like playing a compact midfield where everyone is allotted their position and by starting Raphael Varane at the back.

Erik ten Hag had not started the Frenchman for close to two months before his chance against Bayern Munich and on Sunday, he showed why the team is better off with him at the back.

Harry Maguire, Jonny Evans, and Victor Lindelof have taken turns playing in his stead and while they have done a steady job, the World Cup winner remains in a class of his own when fit.

Against Jurgen Klopp’s side, the former Real Madrid superstar made 15 clearances, the second-most in a single Premier League game this season.

He was an absolute rock at the back, winning all the duels he competed in while making three interceptions and blocking two goalbound efforts (stats via Sofascore).

ETH needs to back Varane

Despite intense pressure from the hosts, he managed 57 touches of the ball, while completing 27 out of 34 passes as well as a long ball.

Even when playing on the left-hand side of the defence, Varane remained resolute and this shows how much of a folly it will be if the defender is allowed to leave in January.

Ten Hag needs to play the former French international more often if fit even if the other centre-backs return from injury.

United have missed the combination of Varane and Lisandro Martinez this season, a partnership that served the club well in the manager’s debut season.



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South Korea says North fired short-range ballistic missile into sea | Conflict News

The launch came as Pyongyang marks the anniversary of the death of leader Kim Jong Un’s father and predecessor Kim Jong Il.

South Korea has accused the North of firing a short-range ballistic missile amid tensions in the peninsula.

Sunday’s launch came as North Korea condemned the United States-led military’s shows of force, including the arrival of a submarine in South Korea as tantamount to “a preview of a nuclear war”.

The missile was launched from the Pyongyang area towards the East Sea at around 10:38pm (13:38 GMT) on Sunday and flew about 570km (354 miles) before falling into the ocean, the South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said, referring to the body of water also known as the Sea of Japan.

The launch followed warnings from officials in Seoul and Tokyo that nuclear-armed North Korea was preparing to test-fire a missile, including one of its longest-range intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) this month.

Japan’s Ministry of Defence also said North Korea launched “what appears to be a ballistic missile”, with its coastguard adding that it seemed to have already fallen.

South Korean and Japanese naval ships conduct missile defence drills with the US Navy in the Sea of Japan [File: Samantha Oblander/US Navy/Handout via Reuters]

JCS said Seoul, Washington and Tokyo have “closely shared information regarding North Korea’s ballistic missile”, which was launched two days after the US and South Korea held their second session of the Nuclear Consultative Group in Washington on Friday, where they discussed nuclear deterrence in the event of conflict with the North.

A spokesperson for the North’s Defence Ministry on Sunday slammed the allies’ plans to expand a key annual joint military drill next year to include a nuclear operation drill and warned of “a preemptive and deadly counteraction”.

“This is an open declaration on nuclear confrontation to make the use of nuclear weapons against the DPRK a fait accompli,” the statement carried by the KCNA news agency said, using the official acronym for North Korea.

“Any attempt to use armed forces against the DPRK will face a preemptive and deadly counteraction.”

All of North Korea’s ballistic missile activities are banned by United Nations Security Council resolutions, though Pyongyang defends them as its sovereign right to self-defence.

The missile launch also came as Pyongyang marks the anniversary of the death of leader Kim Jong Un’s father and predecessor Kim Jong Il, who died on December 17, 2011.

North Korea last year declared itself an “irreversible” nuclear power and has repeatedly said it will never give up its nuclear programme, which the regime views as essential for its survival.

Last month, Pyongyang successfully put a military spy satellite into orbit. It has since claimed its eye in the sky was already providing images of major US and South Korean military sites.

The UN Security Council has adopted many resolutions calling on North Korea to halt its nuclear and ballistic missile programmes since it first conducted a nuclear test in 2006.

Washington and its allies have also expressed concerns about a potential arms alignment between North Korea and Russia.

They worry that Kim is providing badly needed munitions to help Russian President Vladimir Putin wage the war in Ukraine in exchange for Russian technology assistance to upgrade his nuclear-armed military.

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Erik Spoelstra: Jaime Jaquez & Jimmy Butler complement each other/view the game similarly

Miami Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra recently discussed the strong connection between Jaime Jaquez & Jimmy Butler.

(via Brendan Tobin):

“Sometimes you can’t really quantify it or explain it. Sometimes there’s synergy and connectivity. That happens, and we noticed that early on. They’re both similar, but they are different. I think that’s key that they complement each other and they view the game similarly. That always helps if you have high IQ players that understand spacing, understand coverages, understand how to attack, how to get out of the way, how to complement the other guy.

Continue reading Erik Spoelstra: Jaime Jaquez & Jimmy Butler complement each other/view the game similarly at TalkBasket.net.

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Florida Republicans Strip Chairman of Powers Amid Criminal Investigation

The embattled chairman of the Republican Party of Florida was censured and stripped of his duties and salary on Sunday, decisions that all but ousted him from the party’s top post as he faces a criminal investigation into an accusation that he sexually assaulted a woman.

In an emergency meeting in Orlando, the party’s executive committee stopped short of immediately forcing out Christian Ziegler, the chairman. But the votes to declare him unfit for office, remove almost all of his authority and reduce his salary to $1 were seen among many party members as the final steps before his potential removal from office.

Mr. Ziegler, 40, has been under criminal investigation in Sarasota, Fla., where he lives, since October, when a woman told the police that he had sexually assaulted her. He has not been charged and has denied any wrongdoing. He has also refused to resign since the investigation became public last month, despite sustained pressure from Republicans, ranging from the governor to county-level chairs, for him to step down.

Republicans have said that they consider the criminal investigation against Mr. Ziegler serious, and a distraction that would make it untenable for him to raise funds and rally the party going into an important presidential election year.

“The chair of the Republican Party of Florida has to do three things: represent the values of the Republican Party, be able to fund-raise and be able to support candidates running for office,” Adam McGill Ross, the chairman of the Republican Party in Pinellas County, who is not on the executive committee, said before the meeting. “He can’t do those three things.”

He added, “I don’t understand why he’s making us go through this spectacle.”

Mr. Ziegler told the police that he had consensual sex on Oct. 2 with the woman who accused him of sexual assault, according to a search warrant affidavit. Her name has been redacted from public records. The woman told the police that she had a sexual encounter with Mr. Ziegler and his wife, Bridget Ziegler, more than a year ago, but that she declined to have sex with Mr. Ziegler on Oct. 2 after realizing that his wife would not be joining them. Mr. Ziegler then went to the woman’s apartment uninvited and sexually assaulted her, she told the police.

Ms. Ziegler is a Sarasota County School Board member and co-founder of the right-wing activist group Moms for Liberty, which has pushed for anti-L.G.B.T.Q. policies in schools. She has faced calls for her own resignation, with critics seizing on the fact that she confirmed to the police that she had taken part in the previous sexual encounter with the woman as an example of hypocrisy.

Ms. Ziegler has also refused to resign, even after the school board voted 4-to-1 last week urging her to do so. (She cast the lone no vote.)

Mr. Ziegler told members of Moms for Liberty in a media training session during its national conference in Philadelphia this summer to resist asking for forgiveness, after the group faced public outrage over a local chapter in Indiana quoting Hitler in a newsletter.

“Never apologize. Ever,” Mr. Ziegler said, according to NBC News. “This is my view. Other people have different views on this. I think apologizing makes you weak.” (The chapter eventually apologized.)

The Zieglers’ political stars had been rising in Florida before the scandal, especially in Sarasota, a hotbed of right-wing activism in the state. Ms. Ziegler campaigned last year with Gov. Ron DeSantis, who later appointed her to a state board overseeing Disney World.

Mr. Ziegler, a political consultant and former Sarasota County commissioner, was elected to lead the state Republican Party in February. He was seen as the candidate aligned with former President Donald J. Trump, rather than Mr. DeSantis. Mr. DeSantis has called on Mr. Ziegler to resign.

Alain Delaquérière contributed research.

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The Best Co-Op Games Of 2023 According To Metacritic

The products discussed here were independently chosen by our editors.
GameSpot may get a share of the revenue if you buy anything featured on our site.

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Look Back at Their Road to Romance

After giving her heart a break, Demi Lovato finally found her happily ever after.

The “Skyscraper” singer and fellow musician Jordan “Jutes” Lutes have gotten engaged, more than a year after they went public with their romance. According to People, Demi’s now-fiancé proposed to her Dec. 16 with a bespoke pear-shape diamond solitaire engagement ring created by New York luxury jewelry boutique Material Good, and after the two got engaged, they celebrated with family members at a restaurant in the city.

“I’m still speechless,” Demi wrote on Instagram the following day. “Last night was the best night of my life and I can’t believe I get to marry the love of my life @jutesmusic.”

The singer continued, “My love, I’m beyond excited to marry you.. every day I’ve spent with you has been a dream come true and I can’t wait to love and cherish you forever. Here’s to the rest of our lives. I love you baby.”

In January 2022, more than a year after Demi and Max Ehrich split and ended their two-month engagement, the singer met Jutes when they co-wrote her song “Substance” and a few more of her tracks. The two made their romance public the following August when they were photographed walking hand-in-hand in New York City.

“It’s amazing to find someone that you just laugh with and that you get to make music with,” the Disney alum explained on the Dec. 7 episode of The Jennifer Hudson Show. “It’s just so special.”



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Lofton Jr. waived as Morant’s suspension ends

Ja Morant’s return from suspension puts the Memphis Grizzlies in a roster bind. To accommodate Morant, they plan to waive Kenneth Lofton Jr., resulting in $1.7 million in dead money.

Lofton’s departure opens up a spot for Morant, who was temporarily replaced by Bismack Biyombo during his suspension. Despite Lofton’s brief stint, he played in 39 NBA games and 32 G League games for the Memphis Hustle over two seasons.

Grizzlies To Waive Kenneth Lofton Jr When Ja Morant Finishes Suspension https://t.co/DhW84TeuUs

— RealGM (@RealGM) December 17, 2023

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