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Reasons Supporting Netanyahu Is the US’s Big Middle Eastern Mistake

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At least one thing is now obvious in the Middle East: The Biden administration has failed abjectly in its objectives there, leaving the region in dangerous disarray. Its primary foreign policy goal has been to rally its regional partners to cooperate with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s extremist government. Simultaneously, it would uphold a “rules-based” international order and block Iran and its allies in their policies. Clearly, such goals have had all the coherence of a chimera and have failed for one obvious reason.

US President Joe Biden’s Achilles’ heel has been his “bear hug” of Netanyahu, who allied himself with the Israeli equivalent of neo-Nazis and launched a ruinous total war on the people of Gaza. He did this in the wake of the horrific October 7 Hamas terrorist attack Israel suffered in 2023.

Biden also signed on to the Abraham Accords, a project initiated in 2020 by Jared Kushner, the son-in-law and special Middle East envoy of then-President Donald Trump. Through them the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Morocco all agreed to recognize Israel’s statehood. In return, Israel granted them investment and trade opportunities, as well as access to American weaponry and a US security umbrella.

Washington, however, failed to incorporate Saudi Arabia into that framework. It has also faced increasing difficulty keeping the accords themselves in place, given the region’s increasing anger and revulsion over the ongoing civilian death toll in Gaza. Typically, just the docking of an Israeli ship at the Moroccan port of Tangier this summer set off popular protests that spread to dozens of cities in that country. And that was just a taste of what could be coming.

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Breathtaking hypocrisy

Washington’s efforts in the Middle East have been profoundly undermined by its breathtaking hypocrisy. After all, the Biden team has gone blue in the face decrying the Russian occupation of parts of Ukraine and its violations of international humanitarian law in killing so many innocent civilians there. In contrast, the administration let Netanyahu’s government completely disregard international law when it comes to its treatment of the Palestinians.

This summer, the International Court of Justice ruled that the entire Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories is illegal in international law. In response, the US and Israel both thumbed their noses at the finding. In part as a response to Washington’s Israeli policy, no country in the Middle East and very few nations in the global South have joined its attempt to ostracize President Vladimir Putin’s Russia.

Worse yet for the Biden administration, the most significant divide in the Arab world between secular nationalist governments and those that favor political Islam has begun to heal in the face of the perceived Israeli threat. Turkey and Egypt have long had their daggers drawn over their differing views of the Muslim Brotherhood, the fundamentalist movement that briefly came to power in Cairo in 2012–2013. Now they have begun repairing their relationship, specifically citing the menace posed by Israeli expansionism.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has been persistently pressing Saudi Arabia, a key US security partner, to recognize Israel’s statehood at a moment when the Arab public is boiling over what they see as a genocide campaign in Gaza. This is the closest thing since the Trump administration to pure idiocracy. Washington’s pressure on Riyadh elicited the pitiful plea from Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman that he fears being assassinated were he to normalize relations with Tel Aviv now. And consider that ironic given his own past role in ordering the assassination of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

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In short, the ongoing inside-the-Beltway ambition to secure further Arab recognition of Israel amid the annihilation of Gaza has the US’s security partners wondering if Washington is trying to get them killed. This is anything but a promising basis for a long-term alliance.

Global delegitimization

The science-fiction-style nature of US policy in the Middle East is starkly revealed when you consider the position of Jordan, which has a peace treaty with Israel. In early September, its foreign minister, Ayman Safadi, issued a warning: Any attempt by the Israeli military or its squatter-settlers to expel indigenous West Bank Palestinians to Jordan would be considered an “act of war.” Such anxieties might once have seemed overblown, but the recent stunning (and stunningly destructive) Israeli military campaign on the Palestinian West Bank, including bombings of populated areas by fighter jets, has tactically begun to resemble the campaign in Gaza. And keep in mind that, as August ended, Foreign Minister Israel Katz even urged the Israeli army to compel Palestinians to engage in a “voluntary evacuation” of the northern West Bank.

Not only is the expulsion of Palestinians now the stated policy of cabinet members like Jewish Power extremist Itamar Ben-Gvir; it’s the preference of 65% of Israelis polled. When Israel and Jordan begin talking about war, you know something serious is going on — the last time those two countries actively fought was in the 1973 October War, during the administration of US President Richard Nixon.

In short, Netanyahu and his extremist companions are in the process of undoing all the diplomatic progress their country achieved in the past half-century. Ronen Bar, head of Israel’s domestic Shin Bet intelligence agency, warned in August that the brutal policies the extremists in the government were pursuing are “a stain on Judaism” and will lead to “global delegitimization, even among our greatest allies.”

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Turkey, a NATO ally with which the US has mutual defense obligations, has become vociferous in its discontent with Biden’s Middle Eastern policy. Although Turkey recognized Israel in 1949, under Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of the pro-Islam Justice and Development Party, interactions had grown rocky even before the Gaza nightmare. Until then, their trade and military ties had survived occasional shouting matches between their politicians. The Gaza genocide, however, has changed all that. Erdogan even compared Netanyahu to Adolf Hitler and then went further still, claiming that, in the Rafah offensive in southern Gaza in May, “Netanyahu has reached a level with his genocidal methods that would make Hitler jealous.”

Worse yet, the Turkish president, referred to by friend and foe as the “sultan” because of his vast power, has now gone beyond angry words. Since last October, he’s used Turkey’s position in NATO to prohibit that organization from cooperating in any way with Israel. This is on the grounds that it’s violating the NATO principle that harm to civilians in war must be carefully minimized. The Justice and Development Party leader also imposed an economic boycott on Israel. It has interrupted bilateral trade that previously reached $7 billion a year and sent the price of produce in Israel soaring, while leading to a shortage of automobiles on the Israeli market.

Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party represents the country’s small towns, rural areas, Muslim businesses and entrepreneurs, constituencies that care deeply about the fate of Muslim Palestinians in Gaza. And while Erdogan’s high dudgeon has undoubtedly been sincere, he’s also pleasing his party’s stalwarts in the face of an increasing domestic challenge from the secular Republican People’s Party. Additionally, he’s long played to a larger Arab public, which is apoplectic over the unending carnage in Gaza.

The alliance of Muslim countries

Although it was undoubtedly mere bluster, Erdogan even threatened a direct intervention on behalf of the beleaguered Palestinians. In early August, he said, “Just as we intervened in Karabakh [disputed territory between Azerbaijan and Armenia], just as we intervened in Libya, we will do the same to them.” In early September, the Turkish president called for an Islamic alliance in the region to counter what he characterized as Israeli expansionism:

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“Yesterday, one of our own children, [Turkish-American human rights advocate] Ayşenur Ezgi Eygi, was vilely slaughtered [on the West Bank]. Israel will not stop in Gaza. After occupying Ramallah [the de facto capital of that territory], they will look around elsewhere. They’ll fix their eyes on our homeland. They openly proclaim it with a map. We say Hamas is resisting for the Muslims. Standing against Israel’s state terror is an issue of importance to the nation and the country. Islamic countries must wake up as soon as possible and increase their cooperation. The only step that can be taken against Israel’s genocide is the alliance of Muslim countries.”

In fact, the present nightmare in Gaza and the West Bank may indeed be changing political relationships in the region. After all, the Turkish president pointed to his rapprochement with Egypt as a building block in a new security edifice he envisions. Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi made his first visit to Ankara on September 4, following an Erdogan trip to Cairo in February. And those visits represented the end of a more than decade-long cold war in the Sunni Muslim world over al-Sisi’s 2013 coup against elected Muslim Brotherhood Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi, whom Erdogan had backed.

Despite its apparent embrace of democratic norms in 2012–2013, some Middle Eastern rulers charged the Brotherhood with having covert autocratic ambitions throughout the region and sought to crush it. For the moment, the Muslim Brotherhood and other forms of Sunni political Islam have been roundly defeated in Egypt, Syria, Tunisia and the Persian Gulf region. Erdogan, a pragmatist despite his support for the Brotherhood and its offshoot Hamas, had been in the process of getting his country the best possible deal, given such a regional defeat, even before the Israelis struck Gaza.

Netanyahu’s forever war in Gaza

For his part, Egypt’s al-Sisi is eager for greater leverage against Netanyahu’s apparent plan for a forever war in Gaza. The Gaza campaign has already inflicted substantial damage on Egypt’s economy, since Yemen’s Houthis have supported the Gazans with attacks on container ships and oil tankers in the Red Sea. In turn, that has diverted traffic away from it and from the Suez Canal, whose tolls normally earn significant foreign exchange for Egypt. In the first half of 2024, however, it took in only half the canal receipts of the previous year. Although tourism has held up reasonably well, any widening of the war could devastate that industry, too.

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Egyptians are also reportedly furious over Netanyahu’s occupation of the Philadelphi Corridor south of the city of Rafah in Gaza. They also despise his blithe disregard of Cairo’s prerogatives to patrol that corridor, granted under the Camp David agreement. The al-Sisi government, along with Qatar’s rulers and the Biden administration, has been heavily involved in hosting (so far fruitless) peace negotiations between Hamas and Israel. The Egyptian government seems to be at the end of its tether, increasingly angered at the way the Israeli prime minister has constantly tacked new conditions onto any agreements being discussed, which have caused the talks to fail.

For months, Cairo has also been seething over Netanyahu’s charge that Egypt allowed tunnels to be built under that corridor to supply Hamas with weaponry. Cairo insists that the Egyptian army had diligently destroyed 1,500 such tunnels over the past decade. Egypt’s position was recently supported by Nadav Argaman, a former head of the Israeli Shin Bet intelligence agency, who said, “There is no connection between the weaponry found in Gaza and the Philadelphi Corridor.” Of Netanyahu, he added, “He knows very well that no smuggling takes place over the Philadelphi Corridor. So, we are now relegated to living with this imaginary figment.”

In the Turkish capital of Ankara, al-Sisi insisted that he wanted to work with Erdogan to address “the humanitarian tragedy that our Palestinian brothers in Gaza are facing in an unprecedented disaster that has been going on for nearly a year.” He underscored that there was no daylight between Egypt and Turkey “regarding the demand for an immediate ceasefire, the rejection of the current Israeli escalation in the West Bank, and the call to start down a path that achieves the aspirations of the Palestinian people to establish their independent state on the borders of June 4, 1967, with East Jerusalem as its capital.” He also pointed out that such positions are in accord with United Nations Security Council resolutions. Al-Sisi pledged to work with Turkey to ensure that humanitarian aid was delivered to Gaza despite “the ongoing obstacles imposed by Israel.”

To sum up, the ligaments of US influence in the Middle East are now dissolving before our very eyes. Washington’s closest allies, like the Jordanian and Saudi royal families, are terrified that Biden’s bear hug of Netanyahu’s war crimes, coupled with the fury of their own people, could destabilize their rule. Countries that not so long ago had correct, if not warm, relations with Israel like Egypt and Turkey are increasingly denouncing that country and its policies.

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The alliance of US partners in the region with Israel against Iran that Washington has long worked for seems to be coming apart at the seams. Countries like Egypt and Turkey are instead exploring the possibility of forming a regional Sunni Muslim alliance against Netanyahu’s geopolitics of Jewish power that might, in the end, actually reduce tensions with Tehran.

That things have come to such a pass in the Middle East is distinctly the fault of the Biden administration and its position — or lack thereof — on Israel’s nightmare in Gaza (and now the West Bank). Today, sadly, that administration is wearing the same kind of blinkers regarding the war in Gaza that US President Lyndon B. Johnson and his top officials once sported when it came to the Vietnam War.

[TomDispatch first published this piece.]

[Lee Thompson-Kolar edited this piece.]

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The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Fair Observer’s editorial policy.

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TPG nears deal to buy German metering company for up to €7bn

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US private equity group TPG is nearing a €7bn deal to acquire the German metering company Techem, in a takeover that would rank among the largest such transactions between buyout groups in Europe this year.

TPG may reach an agreement to acquire Techem from Switzerland’s Partners Group for up to €7bn as soon as Monday, according to people familiar with the matter. The timeline might yet slip and no final decision had been taken, they cautioned.

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Founded in 1952, Techem now has roughly 60mn devices around the world that offer homeowners and tenants data on their energy and water usage. It has nearly 4,300 employees and generates more than €1bn of total sales, according to its website.

The company is part of a sector that has experienced rising investor appetite as it benefits from the energy transition and consumer shifts towards more sustainable power usage. In the past year, the private equity group KKR acquired the UK’s Smart Metering Systems in a £1.4bn deal.

Private equity groups are also under growing pressure to distribute cash to their backers to compensate for a broader slowdown in initial public offerings and takeovers.

The Singaporean sovereign wealth fund GIC will invest alongside TPG in the deal, according to people familiar with the matter. TPG will make the investment through its TPG Rise Climate fund, which is directed at sustainability-focused investments.

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A sale by Partners Group of Techem to TPG would rank among the largest deals between PE firms in Europe this year. The number of transactions has been depressed by uncertainty caused by market turbulence and current high interest rates.

The group is also is in talks to buy a stake in Europe’s largest second-hand fashion site Vinted at a €5bn valuation, the Financial Times has previously reported.

Partners Group led a consortium to acquire Techem in 2018 in a €4.6bn deal. Techem had previously been delisted by Macquarie immediately before the financial crisis.

Partners Group had $149bn in assets under management at the end of June. TPG has $229bn of assets under management.

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Representatives for Partners Group, TPG and GIC declined to comment.

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Iceland reveals exact dates you can book Christmas delivery slots ahead of festive period

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Iceland reveals exact dates you can book Christmas delivery slots ahead of festive period

ICELAND has revealed the exact date shoppers can book their Christmas delivery slots.

Securing a delivery slot during the festive period can be challenging for shoppers, so the popular supermarket chain has announced key dates for customers to watch out for to avoid disappointment.

Iceland have revealed their Christmas delivery slots

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Iceland have revealed their Christmas delivery slotsCredit: Alamy

The major retailer’s service enables shoppers to pre-book and pay for their Christmas dinner and other festive treats in advance, which will then be delivered to their door five days later.

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An Iceland spokesperson said: “At Iceland, we are committed to ensuring that our customers have access to convenient delivery options during the upcoming busy Christmas period.

“Delivery slots for Christmas will be made available to customers six days prior to the delivery date.”

Here are the key dates Iceland shoppers need to remember.

  • Slots available from 11/12/2024: Delivery on 16/12/2024
  • Slots available from 12/12/2024: Delivery on 17/12/2024
  • Slots available from 13/12/2024: Delivery on 18/12/2024
  • Slots available from 14/12/2024: Delivery on 19/12/2024
  • Slots available from 15/12/2024: Delivery on 20/12/2024
  • Slots available from 16/12/2024: Delivery on 21/12/2024
  • Slots available from 17/12/2024: Delivery on 22/12/2024
  • Slots available from 18/12/2024: Delivery on 23/12/2024
  • Slots available from 19/12/2024: Delivery on 24/12/2024

Iceland’s spokesperson said: “Please note that slot availability is specific to each store, and whilst we are still finalising details for our pre-book campaign, the table outlines when slots will be open for all customers.”

Unfortunately for shoppers, the budget supermarket chain will not be offering its click-and-collect service for Christmas bookings.

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The retailer’s spokesperson added: “For stores providing home delivery, slots will be made available daily up to and including the 24th of December 2024.

“We plan to also offer a final delivery slot on Christmas Eve between 2.30pm and 4.30pm, depending on the store.

“We’ll ensure that delivery availability across all stores is prioritized in order to ensure our customers can receive their groceries in time for Christmas.”

Iceland is not the only store to confirm their Christmas delivery slot dates.

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Ocado has told Smart Pass holders to look out for a text or email which will alert them the day before they go live this week.

Smart Pass Holders pay a set fee either monthly or annually to get free delivery slots, seven days a week.

We have asked Tesco, Sainsbury’s, and Asda when they are releasing their delivery slots this year and will update this story when we have heard back.

Morrisons will start taking bookings next month.

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Delivery Pass customers will be able to book their slots from October 2.

SUPERMARKETS MAKING CHRISTMAS MOVES

Plenty of supermarkets are already in full Christmas mode, launching toy sales and their festive menus.

Morrisons has unveiled its Christmas menu which comes with 30-day Matured Shorthorn Cote de Boeuf for £25 per kilo and Free Range Turkey Crown with Red Onion and Sage Stuffing for £8.50 a kilo.

Meanwhile, Tesco revealed its Christmas range this month, and it includes everything from pigs in blankets to decadent puddings.

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Asda has also released its festive menu, which includes a melt-in-the-middle pork pie and toffee apple mince pies.

Asda‘s Christmas range will be available at 1,000-plus stores across the UK.

And Iceland has unveiled its Christmas 2024 range which comes with a pigs in blankets Yorkshire pudding.

Tesco shoppers can also snap up toys for Christmas until November 3 across 270 stores, with up to 50% off and prices from £3.

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Money-Saving Tips from Gemma Bird: Save £2k Before Christmas

IF youre’ looking to save cash, you’ve come to the right place, as here, Gemma Bird has shared her top tips that’ll save you £2k before Christmas.

  • Set a budget: Track your spending and create a realistic budget.
  • Cut unnecessary costs: Cancel unused subscriptions and avoid impulse buys.
  • Meal planning: Plan meals to reduce grocery bills and avoid takeaways.
  • Sell unwanted items: Declutter and sell items online for extra cash.
  • Cashback and discounts: Use cashback sites and hunt for discount codes.
  • DIY gifts: Make personalised gifts to save money and add a personal touch.
  • Pick up a seasonal shift: A really easy way to pick up a bit of extra cash in the winter is to find yourself some seasonal work.

Follow these practical tips from Gemma Bird to boost your savings before the festive season!

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Time to act: Hublot’s special edition for rhino conservation

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Time to act: Hublot’s special edition for rhino conservation

With Indian rhino populations growing to 4,000 and black rhinos doubling in number over two decades, SORAI’s conservation work, backed by Hublot, makes a tangible impact.

Continue reading Time to act: Hublot’s special edition for rhino conservation at Business Traveller.

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Photos of Hurricane Helene’s Devastation in North Carolina

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Photos of Hurricane Helene’s Devastation in North Carolina

North Carolina has been devastated by flooding and mudslides after the remnants of Hurricane Helene tore through the state.

At least 42 people have died in North Carolina, per CNN, making it the state with the highest death toll after the storm. More than 100 people have died across six states, including Florida and Georgia.

North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper said Helene was “one of the worst storms in modern history for parts of western North Carolina,” calling the devastation an “unprecedented tragedy.” The storm damaged roads and downed power lines, leaving many without power.

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Helene started as a tropical storm last week, but escalated to a Category 4 hurricane before it hit the U.S. on Sept. 26. While it was downgraded on its path through the U.S., it unleashed torrential rains and catastrophic flooding on many communities.

There’s a long road to recovery ahead. President Joe Biden said that he would visit areas affected by Helene later this week if it wouldn’t disrupt the rescue and recovery efforts.

Hurricane Helene Causes Massive Flooding Across Swath Of Western North Carolina
Flooding in Asheville, N.C. on Sept. 28.Melissa Sue Gerrits—Getty Images
A resident helps free a stranded car as Tropical Storm Helene strikes Boone, North Carolina
A local resident helps free a car that became stranded in a stretch of flooding road on the outskirts of Boone, N.C., on Sept. 27.Jonathan Drake—Reuters
Tropical Weather
A stop sign can be barely seen above a flooded parking lot in Morganton, N.C., on Sept. 28.Kathy Kmonicek—AP
Storm Helene Causes Massive Flooding Across Swath Of Western North Carolina
Residents inspect the damage from flooding in the Biltmore Village in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene in Asheville, N.C. on Sept. 28.Sean Rayford—Getty Images
Hurricane Helene Causes Massive Flooding Across Swath Of Western North Carolina
Damage and debris from flooding that came from the Rocky Broad River into Lake Lure on Sept. 28.Melissa Sue Gerrits—Getty Images
Storm Helene Causes Massive Flooding Across Swath Of Western North Carolina
Mud fills the entrance to resident Terry Wilson’s home in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene in Old Fort, N.C. on Sept. 29.Melissa Sue Gerrits—Getty Images
Storm Helene Causes Massive Flooding Across Swath Of Western North Carolina
A vehicle backed up onto a tree outside of the Old Fort Elementary School in Old Fort, N.C. on Sept. 29.Melissa Sue Gerrits—Getty Images
Bridge over creek destroyed by flood waters from Tropical Storm Helene in Vilas, North Carolina
The Laurel Fork Road bridge sits destroyed from flood waters raging in the Upper Laurel Fork creek in Vilas, N.C., on Sept. 27.Jonathan Drake—Reuters
Storm Helene Causes Massive Flooding Across Swath Of Western North Carolina
Men on a four wheeler pass a storm damaged house along Mill Creek in Old Fort, N.C., on Sept. 30.Sean Rayford—Getty Images
Hurricane Helene Causes Massive Flooding Across Swath Of Western North Carolina
Piled up debris in Lake Lure in Lake Lure, N.C. on Sept. 28.Melissa Sue Gerrits—Getty Images
*** BESTPIX *** Storm Helene Causes Massive Flooding Across Swath Of Western North Carolina
A couple gathers water for their toilets in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene in Fairview, N.C. on Sept. 29.Sean Rayford—Getty Images
Workers survey large section of highway washed away by Tropical Storm Helene in Boone, North Carolina
Workers survey a large section of Highway 105 that washed away because of flood waters, on the outskirts of Boone, N.C., on Sept. 27.Jonathan Drake—Reuters
Storm Helene Causes Massive Flooding Across Swath Of Western North Carolina
A flooded parking lot in Asheville, N.C., on Sept. 28.Melissa Sue Gerrits—Getty Images

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Israel’s hammer blow to Hizbollah

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By assassinating Hizbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, Israel has dealt a grievous blow to one of its most powerful foes. Over three decades, Nasrallah transformed the group, with Iranian backing, into the Middle East’s most heavily armed non-state actor and the dominant political force in Lebanon. His killing has severely wounded the movement, while underlining Israel’s military superiority over Iran’s so-called axis of resistance.

Many other senior Hizbollah figures have been killed in Israeli air strikes. But the relentless bombardment has wrought devastation on Lebanon, spreading fear and panic across the nation. More than 1,000 people have been killed in the past two weeks, and up to 1mn forced from their homes. As the bombs rain down, they fear what comes next. Many in Lebanon opposed Nasrallah and blamed Hizbollah for the crisis-ridden country’s ills. But Hizbollah also represents a large swath of Shia society in a fragile nation where Muslim and Christian sects coexist uneasily. Under Nasrallah, the movement was cohesive and disciplined. In his absence, many worry it might fragment or become more extreme.

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Israelis, too, should be wary. They celebrated the death of their foe, but having a failed state on their northern border, or a more extremist enemy bent on revenge, will not serve their security interests. Hizbollah has been battered, but it will not disappear. History has shown that when one militant leader is killed, another steps into the breach, often more radical than the former.

As Israel prepares to mark the grim anniversary of Hamas’s horrific October 7 attack, which killed 1,200 people and ignited the year of conflict, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should take his wins and chart a new course. He should embrace the diplomatic off-ramps that have been available for months to end the war in Gaza, secure the release of hostages, and halt the conflict with Hizbollah.

After pummelling Gaza for 12 months, Israel has killed many of Hamas’s senior leaders and severely depleted its military capacity. The offensive has left Gaza in ruins, and more than 41,000 Gazans have been killed, according to Palestinian officials. Hamas will not be able to control Gaza or repeat the atrocities of a year ago. On the northern front, Netanyahu’s stated aim is to ensure the safe return of 60,000 Israelis displaced by Hizbollah’s rocket fire, which began a day after the October 7 attack. But that will not happen as long as the conflict continues.

Worryingly, however, the chances of Netanyahu and his far-right government banking their military gains and choosing the path of diplomacy over yet more war appear as remote as ever. Since killing Nasrallah on Friday, Israel has continued to pound Lebanon, launched limited ground incursions across the border in a potential prelude to a land invasion, and struck Houthi rebels in Yemen. Netanyahu has also stepped up his belligerent rhetoric against Iran.

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The US and Israel’s other allies preach de-escalation but are unable or unwilling to rein in Netanyahu, whose political interests are served by keeping Israel locked in conflict. The Biden administration looks ever more impotent as the US election nears, despite the risk that Netanyahu could seek to drag Washington into a war with Iran.

Israel’s desire to restore its deterrent is one thing. But careering headlong into forever wars, giddy on its tactical success, with no clear strategy or end game, is not a recipe for long-term security and stability, for Israel or the region. The Middle East has witnessed its darkest year in decades. The killing and destruction must stop.

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Six ways to bag an incredible deal on your next trip to the theatre

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Six ways to bag an incredible deal on your next trip to the theatre

DO you need to stage a saving this week?

Now is the perfect time to book your next theatre trip, with new West End show tickets released for the winter season.

Now is the perfect time to book your next theatre trip, with new West End show tickets released for the winter season

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Now is the perfect time to book your next theatre trip, with new West End show tickets released for the winter seasonCredit: Getty

Use these tricks to plan your visit.

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EARLY BIRD: Many new shows offer discounted rates for early performances.

For instance, Titanique, a musical based on the Titanic film, starts in December with tickets from £16 for initial performances, rising to around £31 in January.

GO OFF-PEAK: Booking Monday or Tuesday shows often means cheaper tickets since most tourists visit on weekends.

READ MORE MONEY SAVING TIPS

Matinees outside school holidays also offer lower prices — check if your chosen production has this option.

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DISCOUNT DEALS: NHS staff can get 25 per cent off ATG tickets or 10 per cent off via LoveTheatre.co.uk.

Check healthservicediscounts.com for more offers.

If you have a railcard, you can claim discounts for theatre trips booked with train travel — check availability at DaysOutGuide.tixculture.com.

MORE THE MERRIER: Round up a few friends and book as a group to get money off your next theatre trip.

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For instance, booking ten-plus tickets for Mrs Doubtfire in the West End drops the price to £49.50 per ticket, down from around £57.50.

Girl power wows audience at West End Show

Many theatres offer group rates for 6 to 12-plus people if you check with the theatre directly.

LOTTERY WIN: Some major productions offer daily lotteries for discounted or even free tickets. Hamilton holds a regular lottery via the TodayTix app, where you can win tickets for £10.

Also, follow your favourite shows on social media, where competitions for free tickets are often posted.

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ACCESS FOR ALL: If you’re on low income or universal credit, many theatres offer heavily discounted rates.

National Theatre of Scotland’s Theatre for a Fiver programme gives access to £5 tickets, just check local theatre websites for more options.

  • All prices on page correct at time of going to press. Deals and offers subject to availability.

Deal of the day

Save £9 on a 1L bottle of Bailey’s when you use your Tesco Clubcard

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Save £9 on a 1L bottle of Bailey’s when you use your Tesco Clubcard

PLAN ahead for the festive season at Tesco, where a 1L bottle of Bailey’s, usually £22, is now £13 when you use your Tesco Clubcard.

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SAVE: £9

Cheap treat

Save £2.96 on a pair of Eyelash Emporium strip lashes

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Save £2.96 on a pair of Eyelash Emporium strip lashesCredit: Eyelash Emporium

TURN up the glamour in a pair of Eyelash Emporium strip lashes, usually £8.95, now £5.99 at Superdrug.

SAVE: £2.96

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DRINK pink this Breast Cancer Awareness month.

Get three cartons of Ocean Spray Pink Cranberry juice drink for £4 at Sainsburys (usually £1.85 each) and 5p from every carton will go to the Pink Ribbon Foundation.

Top swap

Keep your holiday glow when you use the Fenty Beauty Match Stix Shimmer for £25 from Boots

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Keep your holiday glow when you use the Fenty Beauty Match Stix Shimmer for £25 from BootsCredit: Fenty Beauty
Or pick up a Gorgeous Glow Stick for just £3.99 also at Boots

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Or pick up a Gorgeous Glow Stick for just £3.99 also at BootsCredit: Boots

KEEP your holiday glow when you use the Fenty Beauty Match Stix Shimmer, £25, or pick up a Gorgeous Glow Stick, £3.99.

Both at Boots.

SAVE: £21.01

Little helper

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GET five freezer favourites for £6, including McCain Wedges, Birds Eye Crispy Chicken and more, at Coop.co.uk. If you become a Co-op member for £1, it’s just £5, with access to more discounts.

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Save £50 on this cream statement accent chair at Homebase

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ADD a statement accent chair to your bedroom now – this cream one was £99, but is now £49, at Homebase.

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PICK up a new Lego City set at Smyths Toys and get up to 20 per cent off.

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Join thousands of readers taking part in The Sun Raffle

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JOIN thousands of readers taking part in The Sun Raffle.

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