• Senior Hamas official Ali Barakeh says the group did not anticipate the scale of U.S. involvement in support of Israel.
  • The U.S. moved a carrier strike group closer to Israel and considered sending a second aircraft carrier, fighter jets, and munitions.
  • U.S. Lt.-Gen. James Glynn was sent to help Israel plan its ground offensive into Gaza.
  • Iran-backed militias have targeted U.S. forces in the region in response to U.S. support for Israel.

Media Bias Fact Check (Jerusalem Post):

Overall, we rate The Jerusalem Post Right-Center biased based on editorial positions that favor the right-leaning government. We also rate them Mostly Factual for reporting, rather than High due to two failed fact checks.

  • PugJesus
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    1031 year ago

    how

    how does one not expect this

    who the fuck is in charge of Hamas’s foreign affairs reports

    • burchalka
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      941 year ago

      Same guys who told Putin Ukraine will surrender in 3-5 days?

    • @agitatedpotato@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 year ago

      An Iranian informant who gets intel from Russia most likely. Not gonna make excuses for them, but they’re clearly being played by Iran, and Iran got the flare up it wanted. The US is already retaliating on Iran so I’d imagine there’s some credence that Iran was deeply involved.

      • @MajesticSloth@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        That is what my thought was right after the first attack. No one in Palestine could benefit from such an attack. Just Hamas leadership and most likely Iran benefits by sparking more problems in the region and getting Saudi Arabia to back track on having more ties with Israel.

        • FuglyDuck
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          1 year ago

          Well likud also benefits. They get to literally level Gaza now- and they’ve always wanted this conflict.

          Hammas also wanted this, even if they’re were idiots, for much the same reasons as Likud. They may not have fully considered the consequences, though. For its size, Israel has one of the best militaries in the world- even without US help/involvement… what’s happened so far has basically been inevitable.

          Iran benefits even more though, and russia-by-proxy. Seems like the only people really. Losing are… civilians caught in the middle. The Israeli victims of Hamas, and the thousands of palistinians with no where else to go, just getting caught in it.

          • Bigmouse
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            31 year ago

            I am not entirely certain this conflict helps Likud. I honestly think once the dust settles, they might get punished by the israeli public

            • FuglyDuck
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              21 year ago

              Perhaps they miscalculated, but they definitely wanted this.

      • PugJesus
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        151 year ago

        I would expected at least one person, somewhere down the line, who read international news once in a blue moon. Guess my standards were too high.

      • HobbitFoot
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        01 year ago

        I expect they saw themselves as resistance fighters and saw their attack as resisting.

        The problem is that they picked really bad targets that made it easy to portray them as a terrorist group intentionally. Hell, a lot of the protests against Israel is that the attack shouldn’t give Israel the freedom to do a genocide, not that Hamas is innocent.

        The discussion would be wildly different if Hamas was based in the West Bank and had kidnapped/killed Jewish settlers in the West Bank.

        • Uprise42
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          91 year ago

          The conversation would be entirely different if they had attacked military targets and not civilians. A
          Military base or political building and then suddenly they’re resistance fighters with a lot more backing.

          But they attacked civilians at a festival and kidnaps multinational civilians who have no impact on the regions politics. That turned just about everyone against them.

          I’ve yet to hear anyone defend hamas. I’ve heard people defending Palestine, which is where I am. But it’s more defending the innocents that aren’t involved than Hamas. I’ve heard people be anti Israel, but many of them don’t support Hamas either. And those who are ok with killing civilians because of their government are already pretty lost. I’ve also seen anti US since we’re involved and while I wish we just weren’t involved at all, or at least trying to negotiate a ceasefire, most of those people are just “USA bad, disagree without thinking” types. Overall though there has really been no defense of Hamas at all

          • HobbitFoot
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            41 year ago

            I don’t think it even needed to be military targets; it just happens to be that the Gaza Strip is far away from settlers taking land in the West Bank.

            It just happens to be that Hamas thought that Israel would negotiate for their hostages while Israel has been more interested in capitalizing on this attack as justification for military response.

            • FuglyDuck
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              -11 year ago

              “Far away”.

              It’s about 30 miles, 50 km. Or about ten minutes to a teenager on a booty call.

              I’m not sure how many check points they’d have to go through or how much security there is on those 30 miles….but physically, it’s not that far.

      • @Mrkawfee@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        They’re a terror organisation in the West. They’re a national liberation movement in the rest of the world.

        Edit: they are literally called the Islamic resistance movement.

          • @tocopherol@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            11 year ago

            Reminds me of all those babies thrown out of incubators by Iraqi forces. (in case anyone wonders about that it turned out to be false) Whether or not you agree with their actions the comment you are replying to is correct, Hamas is only designated a terror group by the minority of nations, although since it includes the US and the EU they have a lot of sway with their designation.

    • @Copernican@lemmy.world
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      61 year ago

      I wonder how Ukraine factored into the calculus. Normally yeah, you should expect this. But maybe there was doubt of funding and supporting both Ukraine and Israel concurrently.

      • @gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works
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        01 year ago

        It’s possible they also thought that half of our political system willfully shitting the bed was going to slow things down a bit, but they didn’t account for how much that same half of our political system absolutely loves killing brown people.

    • @jonne@infosec.pub
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      01 year ago

      Same mistake Bin Laden made. He thought 9/11 would open Americans eyes to its imperialism and rise up against their government or some stupid shit like that. They always underestimate how much Americans love solving issues by throwing bombs at them.

      • PugJesus
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        201 year ago

        No, Bin Laden believed the US was a fallen and sinful nation, and that our reaction would isolate us from our allies in the Arab World. He wasn’t an anti-imperialist, he was just a religious fanatic who was assmad that the Saudis cozied up with US infidels.

        He was only accidentally correct, for that matter. Our initial reaction against Afghanistan did not isolate us from our allies in the Arab World. The later, unrelated invasion of Iraq did.

      • Captain Aggravated
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        21 year ago

        Kickin’ Ass!

        Kickin’ Ass is what we do!

        Kickin’ Ass!

        The iron foot in the velvet shoe.

        We don’t care whose ass we kick;

        if we’re ever all alone

        we’ll just stand in front of the mirror

        and try and kick our own.