Image is from the January 2023 World Economic Forum meeting in Davos. Over 50 heads of state and 600 CEOs attended.
holding flashlight under face
Imagine a terrifying world where we are all ruled by monsters of every stripe. And not hot ones like werewolves, but instead decaying zombies and mummies who are both insensitive to, and actively benefit from the immense suffering they cause on a daily basis. The top echelon of society, filled with profit-seeking, bloodsucking vampires. And the worst of it is that they repeat on a daily basis that what they are doing is not only just, but there is no other possible way to do it.
Pretty spooky, right? What if I told you that this world... was our own?
Happy Halloween!
Friendly reminder: when commenting about a news event, especially something that just happened, please provide a source of some kind. While ideally this would be on nitter or archived, any source is preferable to none at all given.
Sources on the fighting in Palestine against Israel. In general, CW for footage of battles, explosions, dead people, and so on:
UNRWA daily-ish reports on Israel's destruction and siege of Gaza and the West Bank.
English-language Palestinian Marxist-Leninist twitter account. Alt here.
English-language twitter account that collates news (and has automated posting when the person running it goes to sleep).
Arab-language twitter account with videos and images of fighting.
English-language (with some Arab retweets) Twitter account based in Lebanon.
English-language Palestinian Twitter account which reports on news from the Resistance Axis.
English-language PalestineResist telegram channel.
More telegram channels here for those interested.
Various sources that are covering the Ukraine conflict are also covering the one in Palestine, like Rybar.
The Country of the Week is Lebanon! Feel free to chime in with books, essays, longform articles, even stories and anecdotes or rants. More detail here.
Here is the map of the Ukraine conflict, courtesy of Wikipedia.
This week's first update is here.
Links and Stuff
The bulletins site is down.
Examples of Ukrainian Nazis and fascists
Examples of racism/euro-centrism during the Russia-Ukraine conflict
Add to the above list if you can.
Resources For Understanding The War
Defense Politics Asia's youtube channel and their map. Their youtube channel has substantially diminished in quality but the map is still useful.
Moon of Alabama, which tends to have interesting analysis. Avoid the comment section.
Understanding War and the Saker: reactionary sources that have occasional insights on the war.
Alexander Mercouris, who does daily videos on the conflict. While he is a reactionary and surrounds himself with likeminded people, his daily update videos are relatively brainworm-free and good if you don't want to follow Russian telegram channels to get news. He also co-hosts The Duran, which is more explicitly conservative, racist, sexist, transphobic, anti-communist, etc when guests are invited on, but is just about tolerable when it's just the two of them if you want a little more analysis.
On the ground: Patrick Lancaster, an independent and very good journalist reporting in the warzone on the separatists' side.
Unedited videos of Russian/Ukrainian press conferences and speeches.
Telegram Channels
Again, CW for anti-LGBT and racist, sexist, etc speech, as well as combat footage.
Pro-Russian
https://t.me/aleksandr_skif ~ DPR's former Defense Minister and Colonel in the DPR's forces. Russian language.
https://t.me/Slavyangrad ~ A few different pro-Russian people gather frequent content for this channel (~100 posts per day), some socialist, but all socially reactionary. If you can only tolerate using one Russian telegram channel, I would recommend this one.
https://t.me/s/levigodman ~ Does daily update posts.
https://t.me/patricklancasternewstoday ~ Patrick Lancaster's telegram channel.
https://t.me/gonzowarr ~ A big Russian commentator.
https://t.me/rybar ~ One of, if not the, biggest Russian telegram channels focussing on the war out there. Actually quite balanced, maybe even pessimistic about Russia. Produces interesting and useful maps.
https://t.me/epoddubny ~ Russian language.
https://t.me/boris_rozhin ~ Russian language.
https://t.me/mod_russia_en ~ Russian Ministry of Defense. Does daily, if rather bland updates on the number of Ukrainians killed, etc. The figures appear to be approximately accurate; if you want, reduce all numbers by 25% as a 'propaganda tax', if you don't believe them. Does not cover everything, for obvious reasons, and virtually never details Russian losses.
https://t.me/UkraineHumanRightsAbuses ~ Pro-Russian, documents abuses that Ukraine commits.
Pro-Ukraine
Almost every Western media outlet.
https://discord.gg/projectowl ~ Pro-Ukrainian OSINT Discord.
https://t.me/ice_inii ~ Alleged Ukrainian account with a rather cynical take on the entire thing.
Last week's discussion post.
Financial Times - Military Breifing: How Hamas Fights
Fairly good reporting on the strategy, preparations and mindset of the resistance.
Are you able to copy/paste? I'm too tech-illiterate to get around the paywall
Military briefing: How Hamas fights (part 1)
Mehul Srivastava in Tel Aviv, John Paul Rathbone in London and Raya Jalabi in BeirutFor more than a decade, Israel’s military leadership grudgingly acknowledged one overriding trait in its Gaza enemy: Hamas knew how to bide its time.
“Let the beast sleep until you’re ready,” was the mantra of Mahmoud Ajrami, a veteran Palestinian fighter who has trained a generation of Gaza militants.
The examples were aplenty. In 2018, Hamas released images of Israeli soldiers in the crosshairs of its snipers — the shot never taken, even as the Israelis shot at protesters at the border fence. Another video showed militants destroying a military bus with a Kornet missile — but waiting for the soldiers to disembark and the driver to take a cigarette break.
The apparent restraint was interpreted by Israel as a sign that Hamas was deterred. But to Ajrami, the militant group was merely waiting to draw Israel into a battle at the time of its choosing.
“Bring the beast to me, and we will slay it together,” he vowed to fighters outside his palatial villa in 2021, after Hamas claimed victory over Israel in an 11-day war that involved a ferocious exchange of Palestinian rockets and Israeli air strikes — but no ground troops.
The trigger came on October 7, when Hamas fighters rampaged through Israeli towns and military posts, killing more than 1,400 people and taking 230 hostages, according to Israeli authorities — the biggest loss of life within the Jewish state since its creation. The scale and horrors of the attack have drawn Israel into its biggest ever military operation in Gaza, its air strikes and artillery flattening large parts of the territory with more than 8,000 people killed, according to Palestinian officials.
With technological superiority and massed weaponry on its side, Israel has now launched its first ground offensive in Gaza in almost a decade. Since late Friday a vanguard has moved with Merkava tanks into largely unpopulated areas to the north of the strip.
But within a few minutes’ drive lie the warrens of al-Shati and Jabalia refugee camps — and then, Gaza City, the heart of Hamas’s political and military machinery.
“As the IDF goes into Gaza, Hamas has the home advantage — and they’re ready,” cautioned Devorah Margolin, the Blumenstein-Rosenbloom senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East policy.
As recently as August, Major General Yitzhak Brik, a former military ombudsman, warned Israel was “not ready for war”. Its soldiers have not fought a major land battle since 2014 — the last time it deployed troops inside Gaza — and its top brass has been consumed by potential threats from Iran, rather than the territory right next door.
Meanwhile, Hamas had grown stronger militarily since 2008-09, when it first fought an Israeli ground assault, military officials and analysts said.
Even then, Hamas’s military wing, the al-Qassam Brigade, fielded 16,000 fighters alongside 2,000 dedicated combat troops. Now, according to the IDF, it has as many as 40,000 elite fighters, and an arsenal of drones and about 30,000 rockets. It has fired 8,500 since October 7, draining Israel’s Iron Dome interceptors to the point where the US had to fly in replacements.
Emile Hokayem, director of regional security at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London, said Hamas had been trained by “the best in the business”, referring to Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guard and its most powerful proxy, Hizbollah in Lebanon. “It is also a learning organisation that has fought Israeli forces several times,” Hokayem said. “Hamas knows its terrain extremely well and will defend it fiercely and with ingenuity.”
Its fighters already showed during their October 7 assault that they could pull off a tightly co-ordinated operation that involved at least 1,500 troops attacking Israel from land, air and sea, under cover of a barrage of 3,000 rockets that nearly overwhelmed Israel’s Iron Dome system.
In Gaza, Hamas has dug a giant network of deep, bombproof tunnels, and stocked them with provisions to resist a months-long Israeli siege.
“We have been prepared for an [Israeli] ground offensive since before we even launched our attack,” Ali Barakeh, a senior member of Hamas’s exiled political leadership, told the Financial Times last week. “We have some surprises for the enemy,” he added. “We are able to face an urban war more easily than an air war — there’s no comparison.” A map and diagram of the Gaza Metro. Hamas' extensive network of tunnels has often been a problem for the IDF and is likely to hinder any ground offensive. As well as providing storage, command centre and transportation, tunnels into Israel have been used to mount attacks in 2004, 2006 and July-August 2014. Each tunnel can cost up to $3mn to build. So far Israel's foreign ministry claims 1,370 tunnels have been built since 2007.
Military briefing: How Hamas fights (part 2)
Many of the military lessons that Hamas has learnt from Hizbollah stem from a fateful moment in 1992 when Israel deported about 400 Palestinians, including Hamas leaders, to Lebanon and abandoned them in midwinter on a mountainside in no-man’s land.Predominantly Shia Iran and Hizbollah saw that as an opportunity to co-opt the Sunni Hamas, after having cultivated the Palestinian Islamic Jihad in the Gaza Strip, a smaller militant group that is also in this battle. Israeli officials say Hizbollah has shared rocket technology, training and other techniques with Hamas.
Beirut has since become home to several Hamas chiefs and, in time, Hamas began to build a military presence in Lebanon — as demonstrated when a suspected Hamas weapons depot in Tyre exploded in late 2021.
Hamas has since steadily improved the quality of its armaments, smuggling in components to convert dumb rockets into guided precision weapons, and even building an underwater drone.
According to Hamas, the group now makes “Mutabar-1” shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles, which it says can take out Israeli helicopters, and “al-Yassin” anti-tank rockets, which it claims can penetrate the reactive armour of Israel’s Merkava tanks. Hamas fighters using the Mubar-1 air defence system Still from Hamas published footage showing the homemade ‘Mubar-1’ short-range air defence system © Eyepress via Reuters
Meanwhile, it has developed an urban style of warfare conditioned by its need to counter Israel’s technological and air superiority by forcing the battle down to gritty street fighting.
“Hamas is more Vietcong than Isis,” said Hokayem, referring to the communist fighters that ultimately beat US forces during the Vietnam war, and the jihadi group that Israel likens to Hamas.
Just as the Vietcong did in Vietnam, Hamas has turned Gaza into a fortress of barricades and mouse holes — including a 400km network of tunnels that Hamas fighters can shelter in during Israeli air strikes and use to attack Israeli forces from the rear.
As Israeli troops move deeper into Gaza, Hamas is likely to try to use above-ground ambushes, quick strikes and camouflaged bombs to wear down Israel’s largely civilian army of reservists and bog them down in street fighting.
Bilal Y Saab, an associate fellow at the Chatham House think-tank in London, said: “Hamas doesn’t have a codified doctrine. Its approach is mostly about damaging and hurting the Israelis as much as possible, using a mix of hybrid and conventional forces.”
“Operations are also highly decentralised. There is a sort of cellular military structure, where every company operates on its own,” he said. An Israeli Merkava tank close to the Israeli border with the northern Gaza Strip An Israeli Merkava tank close to the border with the northern Gaza Strip. Hamas says its ‘al-Yassin’ rockets can penetrate the tanks © Aris Messinis/AFP/Getty Images
Hamas’s propaganda operations are another important component. Downed Israeli helicopters, destroyed tanks or captured soldiers will help the militant group project an image of victory, military analysts said.
At the same time, rockets fired from hidden launchers seek to take the fight deep into Israeli territory and bolster Hamas’s support base — such as when the Ben Gurion international airport in Tel Aviv was shut down during the 50-day 2014 war.
Another lesson that Hamas copied from other militant groups is the importance of secure communications. While Hizbollah has built its own fibre optic network, Hamas has maintained operational security by going “stone age” and using hard-wired phone lines while eschewing devices that are hackable or emit an electronic signature.
One reason Israel was unable to predict the October 7 attack, said one Israeli official, was that it was listening to “the wrong lines”. Crucial military information was meanwhile shared either over that “analogue” system, or another encrypted system, maybe imported from Iran, that was unknown to Israel.
It is a technological sleight of hand that holds a powerful warning for the Israeli ground attack.
“What else were they hiding?” the Israeli official said. “You don’t think we are asking ourselves the same question?”
:hasan-ok-dude:
Yeah a couple things in there are like
Much appreciated