Gaza slaughter a message to young Palestinians, ex-head of Israel’s military intelligence says

Gaza slaughter a message to young Palestinians, ex-head of Israel’s military intelligence says
Aharon Haliva, left, in Gaza in December 2023, before his resignation over intelligence failings ahead of the October 7 attack. (Israel Defense Forces)
Short Url
Updated 18 August 2025

Gaza slaughter a message to young Palestinians, ex-head of Israel’s military intelligence says

Gaza slaughter a message to young Palestinians, ex-head of Israel’s military intelligence says
  • Aharon Haliva heard justifying deaths of tens of thousands of people
  • It ‘does not matter now if they are children,’ disgraced official says

LONDON: Israel’s former military intelligence chief has claimed that the deaths of tens of thousands of Palestinians in Gaza were necessary “as a message for future generations.”

Aharon Haliva can be heard in an audio broadcast by Israel’s Channel 12 saying that 50 Palestinians should die for every one Israeli killed in the Hamas-led attack on Oct. 7, 2023, Israeli media reported.

“It does not matter now if they are children,” he said. “There’s no choice, they need a Nakba every now and then to feel the consequences.”

Nakba refers to the “catastrophe” of 1948 when hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were forced to flee their homes and land during the foundation of the Israeli state.

Haliva, who resigned last year over intelligence failings surrounding the Oct. 7 attacks, can be heard justifying the devastating death toll in Gaza, which he put at 50,000.

The slaughter by Israel’s forces reached that figure in March, suggesting his comments are several months old, with the number of people killed now more than 62,000, Gaza health officials said on Monday.

Haliva’s comments are a rare acknowledgement from a senior Israeli figure of the true scale of the bloodshed in Gaza. Even if Israel’s claim earlier this year that it had killed 20,000 militants in the territory was accurate, that would still suggest Haliva accepts the vast majority of victims are civilians.

He is even considered a moderate within the Israeli political spectrum that is now dominated by hardline figures like Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben-Gvir in senior ministerial positions.

The extensive recordings sparked anger among Palestinians and Israeli human rights groups.

“The remarks by former head of military intelligence Aharon Haliva are part of a long line of official statements that expose a deliberate policy of genocide,” B’Tselem said on X.

In a statement to Channel 12, Haliva said the recordings came from a “forum setting.”

In the recording, he also discussed the intelligence failings leading up to Oct. 7, when Hamas and other militants attacked southern Israel killing 1,200 people and seizing 250 hostages.

He said no one could have imagined what happened on the morning of the attack after years of strategic assumptions that Hamas had been deterred from carrying out such an action.

The Shin Bet internal security service also should take the blame along with the military, Haliva said.


Several blasts heard in Qatar’s Doha, Axios says assassination attempt against Hamas officials

Updated 11 sec ago

Several blasts heard in Qatar’s Doha, Axios says assassination attempt against Hamas officials

Several blasts heard in Qatar’s Doha, Axios says assassination attempt against Hamas officials
DOHA: Several blasts were heard in Qatar’s Doha on Tuesday, Reuters witnesses said.
Axios reporter Barak Ravid citing Israeli officials said the explosion in Doha is an assassination attempt against Hamas officials.
Smoke was seen rising over the Katara District in the capital, an eyewitness said.

Lebanon to disarm Hezbollah near Israel border within 3 months: minister

Lebanon to disarm Hezbollah near Israel border within 3 months: minister
Updated 53 min 5 sec ago

Lebanon to disarm Hezbollah near Israel border within 3 months: minister

Lebanon to disarm Hezbollah near Israel border within 3 months: minister
  • Raggi said army chief Rodolphe Haykal had presented the government with a five-stage plan
  • The first stage should take “three months... during which the removal of weapons will be completed south of the Litani River“

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s army is set to fully disarm Hezbollah near the border with Israel within three months, Foreign Minister Youssef Raggi told AFP on Tuesday.
In August, the Lebanese government ordered the military to draw up plans to disarm the once-dominant militant group by the end of the year, having come under pressure from the United States and Israeli strikes.
The cabinet said last week that the army would begin implementing the plan, without disclosing details.
Raggi said army chief Rodolphe Haykal had presented the government with a five-stage plan last week to ensure all weapons are held by the Lebanese state.
The first stage should take “three months... during which the removal of weapons will be completed south of the Litani River,” around 30 kilometers (20 miles) from Israel, by the end of November.
“There will be no warehouses, no weapons, no weapons transfers, no fighters, and no display of arms” in the area, Raggi said, describing the army’s plan.
In parallel with the first phase, the army’s plan stipulates that “security measures” will be implemented across the country.
The army will “tighten and increase the number of checkpoints, prevent the movement and carrying of weapons... but without conducting raids, arresting individuals, or confiscating weapons from warehouses,” Raggi added.
“At the very least, the movement of weapons from one area to another will be prohibited.”
Raggi said the next four phases of the plan will see disarmament in other regions, including Beirut and the eastern Bekaa, “but without timelines.”
Hezbollah has been severely weakened by a year-long conflict with Israel, including two months of open war, that destroyed part of its arsenal and decimated its leadership.
Beirut has characterised the disarmament push, which Hezbollah opposes, as part of the implementation of the ceasefire deal that ended the war in November last year.
The agreement also called for the withdrawal of Israeli troops from Lebanon and an end to strikes on the country, but Israel has repeatedly bombed its neighbor since then and kept soldiers deployed in five border points it deemed strategic.


Paramilitary launches drone strikes on Sudan capital

Paramilitary launches drone strikes on Sudan capital
Updated 47 min 10 sec ago

Paramilitary launches drone strikes on Sudan capital

Paramilitary launches drone strikes on Sudan capital
  • RSF’s Tasis administration later said the paramilitaries had launched “precise and successful air strikes” in Khartoum and other areas
  • The assault came months after the military recaptured the capital in March

PORT SUDAN: A wave of paramilitary drone strikes hit key infrastructure and military targets in and around Sudan’s army-held capital Tuesday, bringing to an abrupt end a period of relative calm in the area.
The strikes hit a power station, a weapons factory and an oil refinery near Khartoum, witnesses at the sites said on condition of anonymity, while a military source said an air base had also been targeted.
The Rapid Support Forces’ (RSF) Tasis administration later said the paramilitaries had launched “precise and successful air strikes” in Khartoum and other areas.
The Tasis administration has declared itself the government in territory held by the RSF, at war with Sudan’s regular army since April 2023.
The assault came months after the military recaptured the capital in March, and as the army-backed government pressed a major reconstruction bid.
The attacks occurred at around 5:00 am (0300 GMT), with witnesses telling AFP by phone, on condition of anonymity, that they had seen strikes hit the Al-Jaili oil refinery, the Al-Markhiyat substation in Omdurman and the Yarmuk weapons factory.
Four drones targeted the power station and sparked a fire, the witnesses said, with images posted on social media appearing to show the site in flames.
A source at the national electricity company told AFP that the damage had been minor, but witnesses reported a blackout in some parts of the capital following the attack.
The military source, also speaking on condition of anonymity, said a strike on Wadi Seidna air base had been intercepted.
“Our air defense intercepted and shot down the drones that were targeting the base,” the source told AFP.
Another drone strike hit an army building in Kafuri, wounding several troops, another military source said.

- No peace in sight -

The RSF has in recent months been accused of widespread drone attacks in several army-controlled areas of Sudan, striking critical infrastructure and causing blackouts for millions.
Efforts to mediate between Sudan’s de facto leader, army chief Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, and his deputy-turned-rival, RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, have failed to yield a sustained ceasefire, with the military vowing to fight until victory.
The army-backed government has launched a vast reconstruction program in Khartoum, with around 600,000 people returning to their homes in recent months, according to the United Nations.
The war has devastated the capital, forcing around half of its nine million residents to flee.
The conflict has killed tens of thousands of people and created the world’s largest hunger and displacement crises.
Some 10 million people are currently displaced inside the country, with most facing dire hunger, while another four million have sought refuge beyond its borders.
In recent months, Khartoum has seen a return of relative calm, with fighting concentrated in the country’s southern Kordofan and western Darfur regions, where the warring sides have wrestled for territory.
North Darfur state capital El-Fasher, the last major city in Darfur still under army control, has seen some of the fiercest battles, with the RSF pressing an offensive to claim the city, which it has besieged since May 2024.
Hundreds of people are believed to have been killed in the area in recent months, where the UN said this month that the RSF has committed “myriad crimes against humanity” during its siege.


Israeli drone strike south of Beirut wounds Hezbollah member amid rising tensions

Israeli drone strike south of Beirut wounds Hezbollah member amid rising tensions
Updated 09 September 2025

Israeli drone strike south of Beirut wounds Hezbollah member amid rising tensions

Israeli drone strike south of Beirut wounds Hezbollah member amid rising tensions
  • Israeli drone strike hit a car near Jiyeh, 30 km south of Beirut, wounding a Hezbollah member
  • Strike followed Israeli raids in the Bekaa Valley that killed five people, according to Lebanon’s health ministry

BEIRUT: An Israeli drone strike targeted a car south of Beirut on Tuesday, wounding a Hezbollah member, according to a Lebanese security source.

Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency reported that “an enemy drone targeted a car near the mosque of Zarout between the towns of Jiyeh and Barja in Iqlim el-Kharrub,” around 30 kilometers (18 miles) south of the capital.

A security source told AFP the strike hit a Hezbollah member, who was injured but not killed. An AFP photographer saw a burnt-out vehicle near a mosque, as soldiers secured the scene.

The strike comes a day after the Israeli military said it had carried out raids on Hezbollah positions in the eastern Bekaa Valley, targeting what it described as training compounds used by the group’s elite Radwan force. Lebanon’s health ministry said those strikes killed five people.

Israel has continued to launch air raids in Lebanon despite a November truce aimed at ending more than a year of hostilities, including two months of open war with the Iran-backed group. The agreement stipulated Hezbollah would withdraw its fighters north of the Litani River, while Israel would pull its forces from Lebanese territory — though Israeli troops remain in five areas it considers strategic.

In August, Lebanon’s government instructed the army to draft plans to disarm Hezbollah by the end of the year, amid US pressure and fears of an expanded Israeli campaign.


Israel military urges full evacuation of Gaza City ahead of expanded military operation

Israel military urges full evacuation of Gaza City ahead of expanded military operation
Updated 09 September 2025

Israel military urges full evacuation of Gaza City ahead of expanded military operation

Israel military urges full evacuation of Gaza City ahead of expanded military operation
  • The announcement on Tuesday morning was the first warning for a full evacuation of the city in the current round of fighting
  • Defense Minister Israel Katz says Israel has demolished 30 hi-rise buildings in Gaza, which it accused Hamas of using for military infrastructure

TEL AVIV: The Israeli military urged a full evacuation of Gaza City on Tuesday morning, ahead of its planned expanded military operation in the city in northern Gaza.
This is the first warning for a full evacuation of the city in the current round of fighting.
Also on Tuesday, Defense Minister Israel Katz said Israel had demolished 30 hi-rise buildings in Gaza, which it accused Hamas of using for military infrastructure.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Monday that Israel plans to destroy at least 50 “towers of terror” that he said are used by Hamas.