| The Israel Project
Amid sectarian bombings, Hezbollah chief renews commitment to battling for Syrian regime
Reports: Reconciliation meeting between Hamas and Fatah "failed to make progress"
U.S. Ambassador to the U.N.: Pro-Hezbollah Swiss official "unfit for continued service" at U.N.
What we’re watching today:
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At least 25 Egyptian police officers were murdered this morning in what the Associated Press describes as "execution-style"
killings, with suspected Islamists ambushing two police minibuses
traveling near border between Sinai Peninsula and the Hamas-controlled
Gaza Strip. The attackers forced the officers to kneel on the ground before shooting them in the backs of their heads, raising to more than 70 the number of security officials killed in recent clashes across Egypt. The Telegraph notes that the
killings occurred "after 36 Islamist prisoners were killed in an
attempted jailbreak," and comments that the two incidents are likely to
"deepen the turmoil roiling the country, where nearly 1,000 people have
been killed in clashes between security forces and supporters of ousted
President Mohammed Morsi since last Wednesday." Meanwhile regional
actors are aligning themselves for and against the Egyptian army and the
Muslim Brotherhood. Jordanian Prime Minister Abdullah Nsur today urged the Egyptian army to
"remain firm and strong" in seeking to quell Egyptian unrest, echoing
the stance of Saudi King Abdullah, who according to the Wall Street Journal pledged support over the weekend "for what he called Egypt's fight against 'terrorism and extremism.'"
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Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah last Friday literally doubled down on
his organization's commitment to battle on behalf of the Bashar
al-Assad regime in Syria, declaring that "if we have a thousand fighters
in Syria, they will become 2,000, and if we have 5,000 fighters in
Syria, they will become 10,000." The boasts and threats came a day after a car bomb ripped through Hezbollah's
stronghold in the southern Beirut district of Dahiyeh. The attack was
claimed by a previously unknown jihadist group, which described the car
bombing as retaliation for Hezbollah's critical role in helping the
Assad regime erode nearly two years of gains by the largely Sunni
rebels. Hezbollah has been under increasingly vocal criticism by
Lebanese officials for entangling the country in the Syrian war, and
the leader of one of the country’s largest Christian political parties declared that the Iran-backed terror group was "plung[ing] Lebanon into fire." A top Hezbollah commander was reportedly killed last week during a battle in Syria outside of Damascus.
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Palestinian media sources
describe a meeting held late Sunday between Hamas and Fatah as having
"failed to make progress" in achieving reconciliation between the two
Palestinian factions, with Hamas rejecting calls to hold general elections in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip and in Fatah-controlled West Bank territories. Efforts to bring the territories under a single Palestinian government have repeatedly failed despite pledges from both sides to make progress. A reconciliation deal inked in 2011 had the two sides agreeing to cease politically motivated arrests, but Fatah officials accused Hamas of targeting the group's members as recently as
this weekend. Hamas accused Fatah of arresting six Hamas members in the
West Bank, while Fatah slammed Hamas for detaining Fatah affiliates in
the Gaza Strip. Establishing a single government capable of overseeing
currently divided Palestinian territories is often considered a
prerequisite to establishing a viable Palestinian state. A single state
whose territories are ruled by competing governments is almost by
definition a failed state.
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U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power slammed the Swiss government last
week for nominating Jean Ziegler - who has defended Hezbollah,
Holocaust deniers, and the Gaddafi regime - for a position on the U.N.
Human Rights Council (UNHRC). Power tweeted that Ziegler was “unfit for continued service” at the UNHRC, a body that has come under repeated and consistent criticism
as one that allows illiberal regimes and their supporters to target the
Jewish state. Ziegler generated controversy in 2006 by telling an interviewer that
he "refuse[d] to describe Hezbollah as a terrorist group." The European
Union later unanimously blacklisted Hezbollah's "military wing" as a
terrorist group.
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