Pete Buttigieg tries once again to weigh in on Israel/Palestine. Within the first minute of a 10-minute discussion, he repeats the long-debunked hoax that Hamas put babies in ovens. Source: @npub1y8w5...qyc6
Breaking: UEFA has paused a vote on suspending Israel from competition. The Times reports that a large majority of members had favoured a ban, citing Israel’s war crimes and the precedent of Russia’s 2022 exclusion. But senior UEFA officials told the paper that after Trump’s meeting with Netanyahu and his new Gaza “peace plan,” they believe “this week’s developments… have changed the landscape.” The threat of suspension remains if Israel’s assault continues, with UN experts urging FIFA and UEFA to expel Israel over the genocide in Gaza. Additional details in 🧵below View quoted note →
⚡️Must watch: Netanyahu reveals to Hebrew audiences after the press event where Trump revealed the 20-point plan to end the war on Gaza, that he has no intention of withdrawing Israeli troops from Gaza – “No way, that’s not happening.” He said: “This is a historic visit. Instead of Hamas isolating us, we turned the tables and isolated Hamas. Now the entire world, including the Arab and Muslim world, is pressuring Hamas to accept the terms we set together with President Trump: to release all our hostages, both living and deceased, while the IDF remains in most of the Strip. Who would have believed this? After all, people constantly say, the IDF should withdraw… No way, that’s not happening.” Translations by @npub1ttd0...38l3. Video shared by PM of Israel’s official Hebrew account on X. View quoted note →
REPORT | Saudi outlet Asharq Al-Awsat reports that Israel has launched airstrikes against prominent families in Gaza City after their elders refused to collaborate with Shin Bet’s plan to establish clan-based governing bodies in place of Hamas. The Israeli intelligence agency approached elders from the Bakr and Doghmush families, proposing that they form local armed groups to manage aid, administer neighborhoods, fight Hamas, and pass intelligence to Israel. The goal, sources said, was to divide Gaza into “regions” run by clans or armed groups, preventing the emergence of a unified Palestinian government and blocking the foundations of any future Palestinian state. When both families rejected the offer, Israel launched retaliatory strikes. In Sabra, southern Gaza City, an airstrike on the Doghmush family killed 30 people, with at least 20 still buried under rubble. Hours later, Israeli warplanes bombed a Bakr family home near Al-Shati refugee camp, killing six, wounding 11, and later struck another multi-story Bakr residence and an empty building near Gaza’s port. A Bakr elder reportedly confirmed to Asharq Al-Awsat that Israeli intelligence had demanded they govern Al-Shati after Hamas was cleared out, but the family “categorically refused.” He said they knew reprisals would follow and immediately instructed relatives to evacuate, especially women and children. The Bakr clan, one of Gaza’s largest with deep roots in the fishing trade and members linked to Fatah and Islamic Jihad, stressed that their refusal was a patriotic stance against collaboration with Israel, not loyalty to Hamas. The report adds that Israel has increasingly relied on clan-based militias operating in east Rafah, east Khan Younis, east Gaza City, and the northern Strip. Many families have publicly disowned members who joined such groups, led by figures like Yasser Abu Shabab, Rami Helles, and Hossam Al-Astal. Hamas has repeatedly ambushed these militias, killing or wounding some fighters, and in some cases arresting and executing collaborators publicly. The attempt to split Gaza along clan lines is not new: after the first year of genocide, then–Defense Minister Yoav Gallant advanced a similar scheme, but Hamas thwarted it by threatening and killing two leading figures who considered cooperating. Israel’s broadcaster Kan reported the same. Linked below 👇 image View quoted note →
Dr. Mustafa, who treated children in Gaza, recalled: ➤ "Sometimes you feel like a butcher...when you're putting in chest drains into children and you're not sedating them...A chest drain is stabbing somebody in the chest and getting all the way into where the lung tissue is." View quoted note →
Palestinian-British ER doctor Dr. Muhammad Mustafa, who has treated patients in Gaza since October 7, warns of a catastrophic health crisis: “A million children are being starved to death… a quarter of the population is in stage 5 famine, where four of every 10,000 children die each day.” At this stage, food alone isn’t enough – without doctors, medicine, and infrastructure, people die from refeeding syndrome and untreated wounds, he tells Breaking Points. He’s been pressing politicians from Ireland, Australia, and the UK to confront this reality and support urgent medical relief. View quoted note →
Cassel: “You might go fight in Gaza.” Israeli Teen: “I’d love to.” Cassel: “You would love to?” Israeli Teen: “Yeah. People think that the children and the men and the women in Gaza, they’re innocent. Bullshit. Everyone has taken part in October 7. You can’t ignore this. No matter what you say, you can’t ignore this. No innocence. Even women and children are not innocent in Gaza. The mothers support terrorists. The children are going to grow up to be killers.” Journalist Matthew Cassel, for The Guardian, spent three days speaking to dozens of young Israelis in Tel Aviv – Israel’s most “liberal” city – and found little concern for Palestinians as famine and genocide rage just an hour’s drive away.
🇩🇪 On October 7, 2024, then-German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock told the Bundestag that Israel’s “right to self-defense” included striking civilian sites in Gaza. She said: “Self-defense means not only attacking terrorists but destroying them. When Hamas terrorists hide behind people, behind schools… civilian places lose their protected status.” Academics—more than 300 of them— demanded she retract the statement, warning it distorted international law and risked greenlighting civilian massacres. Protesters in Berlin condemned it as an invitation to violence. Under the Geneva Conventions and customary international humanitarian law, civilian objects (homes, schools, hospitals) remain protected. They only lose that protection if directly used for military purposes (e.g. as a firing position)—and even then, the attacker must apply distinction, proportionality, and precaution. Civilians inside remain protected at all times. Baerbock’s framing ignored these safeguards, giving the impression of a blanket license to bomb — as Israel has done with thousands of civilian sites over the course of the genocide. Baerbock, now in her first week as President of the UN General Assembly (80th session, September 2025) was asked whether she would distance herself from those remarks. Her response 👇
‼️The Voice of Hind Rajab wins Silver Lion in Venice — as Hind’s mother, surrounded by Israeli tanks in Gaza City, issues a “last cry for help” Tunisian director Kaouther Ben Hania’s docudrama on 5-year-old Hind Rajab — killed alongside her family after hours trapped in a car under Israeli fire — won the Grand Jury Prize (Silver Lion), the festival’s second-highest honor, after premiering to a 24-minute standing ovation. Meanwhile, Hind’s mother, Wissam Hamada, has issued an urgent plea from Gaza City, where Israeli tanks surround her neighborhood as the military moves to ethnically cleanse the city of its 1 million residents. Living there with her surviving 5-year-old son, she describes the siege as “a living hell” and says: “This could be my last cry for help. I am begging every influential person, every celebrity, every connection to save me… Tanks have surrounded our neighborhood. We must leave, but we have nowhere to go… I want to live. I want to protect my family. Please save us.” Hamada has also appealed for financial support to survive. Her desperate plea and the ongoing Israeli assault on Gaza City have gone unmentioned in the glowing international coverage of the film’s success.
✴️ NEW | Unofficial Trump envoy Dr. Bishara Bahbah says Hamas has accepted a new U.S. concept for a “comprehensive deal” that he personally conveyed to the resistance group. Palestinian-American businessman and unofficial Trump envoy Bahbah told Al Arabiya he delivered a U.S. proposal to Hamas: release all Israeli captives in exchange for ending the war. He says Washington has stepped up its involvement, but in the end it depends on how much pressure it’s willing to apply on Israel: “Without American pressure, nothing will happen.” Here are key excerpts from that interview, translated and edited for clarity by Drop Site News: Dr. Bahbah: A meeting was held in Washington that lasted, as I understand it, about six hours. It was decided that there would be one final offer on the table: the release of all prisoners in exchange for the end of the war. We indeed communicated this to Hamas, and at first they hesitated. They weren’t sure if this was official or unofficial, and so on. Then they saw the president’s tweet. Anchor: That was last Sunday (the meeting). Dr. Bahbah: Yes. Once they saw the president’s tweet, they were convinced it was official. Hamas’s reaction was almost immediate: they agreed to the deal. They wanted it to be comprehensive—hand over all the Israelis, receive a certain number of Palestinian prisoners, and at the same time, the war would end. Hamas also expected Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza. Anchor: “Some people, especially those who are frustrated, think Israel won’t end things that easily—get its prisoners back, end the war, and withdraw. I hope I’m wrong in that assessment. Dr. Bahbah: I often hear from Israelis themselves that Netanyahu needs American pressure to accept a deal. Without that pressure, it’s hard for him to face Smotrich and Ben-Gvir. Right now, the U.S. position is clear: they want the war ended and all hostages released at once—not in groups of two, five, or seven. So what are the chances Israel backs away from this? As of now, they’ve rejected it, saying Hamas is trying to deceive. But what I know is that the U.S. has stepped up its involvement. In the end, it all depends on the type and amount of pressure on Israel. Without American pressure, nothing will happen.” Anchor: Every time we get close to an agreement, it falls apart. This is deeply frustrating—not for us, but for the people of Gaza. So this time, is there real American pressure being applied? Or will Witkoff just turn against Hamas tomorrow like he has before? Dr. Bahbah: All I can speak to is what I see. What I see now is that there’s an American offer: end the war in exchange for the release of all prisoners. What will happen after four or five days, only God knows. Anchor: When you passed this message to Hamas, they announced publicly that they accepted a comprehensive deal. But people always ask: what about the details? How many prisoners will be released? Or the bigger question: what about the future of Hamas itself? Will Israel end the war and leave Gaza without achieving what it set out to do—removing Hamas from power and disarming them? Dr. Bahbah: This issue is not on the table. If it comes up, we will address it. But for now, it’s not on the table. All I’ve been told, and what I can convey, is that the hostages will be released in exchange for a certain number of prisoners, and at the same time, we (USA) will guarantee the end of the war and the withdrawal of Israel. Anchor: As a mediator, having been involved in these negotiations for months, can you say with a clear conscience that Hamas has offered everything it could? Because the general perception is that Israel hasn’t offered anything. But let’s stick to Hamas—have they given what they should? Dr. Bahbah: At this stage, especially in their response to the American offer, Hamas was positive and gave everything it could. [1/2] Continues below…