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Hamas says it released mother and daughter held in Gaza; no Israeli confirmation



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US sanctions three China-based companies over supplying missile parts to Pakistan


2023-10-20T15:42:21Z

The United States issued sanctions on Friday on three China-based companies that have worked to supply missile‐applicable items to Pakistan’s ballistic missile program, the State Department said.

(This story has been corrected to add the missing word ‘parts’ in the headline)

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Republican opposition to Jim Jordan grows in third US House leadership vote


2023-10-20T15:50:08Z

Republican opposition to hardline conservative Republican Jim Jorda’s bid to become speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives was growing in a third vote on this candidacy, as lawmakers struggle to fill the vacant speaker’s chair.

With voting under way, Jordan was faring worse than he had in two previous rounds of balloting earlier in the week. At least 25 of his fellow Republicans cast ballots for other candidates, more than the 22 who had voted against him on Wednesday.

That would likely leave Jordan short of the 214 votes he would need to win the speaker’s job, as all Democrats are expected to vote against him.

Republicans control the chamber by a narrow 221-212 majority.

Republicans appear no closer to resolving a leadership battle that has paralyzed the House for more than two weeks. Their infighting has left Congress unable to act on President Joe Biden’s request for aid to Ukraine and Israel.

At a news conference ahead of the vote, Jordan said the House needed to install a speaker so it could take up aid for Israel and other matters, but he did not predict victory.

“Our plan this weekend is to get a speaker elected to the House of Representatives as soon as possible,” he said.

A close ally of Donald Trump, Jordan was a “significant player” in the former president’s attempts to overturn Biden’s 2020 election win, according to a congressional investigation.

“I think there were all kinds of problems with the 2020 election, and I’ve been clear about that,” he said.

The narrow and fractious Republican majority has failed to unite behind Jordan or any other candidate to replace Speaker Kevin McCarthy, who was ousted by a handful of party members on Oct. 3. They also have been unable to agree on a fallback plan that would let the chamber take up legislation.

McCarthy said Jordan would be an effective leader.

“He is straightforward, honest and reliable. That is who Jim Jordan is. That’s what being a speaker is all about,” he said as he nominated Jordan on the House floor.

Jordan has failed to win the votes needed to claim the speaker’s gavel in votes on Tuesday and Wednesday. He has made little headway with the 22 Republicans who voted against him, some of whom say they have received death threats.

Jordan’s allies say that should not matter. “All of us in Congress receive death threats. I don’t know if that’s a newsflash for anybody here,” Republican Representative Scott Perry said.

Democrats describe Jordan as a dangerous extremist and have unanimously voted against him.

“Their nominee’s vision is a direct attack on the freedom and the rights of the American people, and he’s got the record to prove it,” Democratic Representative Katherine Clark said on the House floor.

Jordan has not gotten more than 200 votes so far.

A third failed vote might prompt Jordan to drop out, which would clear the way for other candidates. But it is unclear whether Republicans will be able to unite behind any of them.

Republican Representative Jodey Arrington, who has been floated as an alternative, said he was backing Jordan for now. “As long as he’s in the race, we’re going to get him there,” he told reporters.

Republicans also are divided on a backup option that could allow the chamber to address pressing matters, like spending legislation that would allow the U.S. government to keep functioning beyond a Nov. 17 deadline, and a foreign aid package that could amount to $100 billion.

That plan would give more authority to Republican Representative Patrick McHenry, who is filling the speaker’s chair on a temporary basis. House Democrats and the White House have said they are open to the idea, but Republicans rejected that approach in a closed-door meeting on Thursday.

Biden urged Republicans to resolve their differences in a televised speech on Thursday. “You can’t let petty, partisan, angry politics get in the way of our responsibilities as a great nation,” he said.

Jordan said the House needed to elect him speaker so it could approve aid to Israel. “The sooner we can get this accomplished, the better for the American people, who expect us to work for them, and for our friends and allies like the great state of Israel,” he said.

Investors say the turmoil on Capitol Hill is also contributing to market volatility.

Jordan has built his reputation as a leader of that uncompromising right flank. His backers say that would make him an effective fighter for conservative policies in a town where Democrats control the Senate and the White House.

He helped to engineer government shutdowns in 2013 and 2018 and helped to push Republican Speaker John Boehner into retirement in 2015.

Related Galleries:

U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) speaks to reporters during an early morning press conference about his continuing bid to become the next Speaker of the House of Representatives at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S., October 20, 2023. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) pauses as he speaks in front of a portrait of the first U.S. President George Washington during an early morning press conference about his continuing bid to become the next Speaker of the House of Representatives at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S., October 20, 2023. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) pauses as he speaks in front of a portrait of the first U.S. President George Washington during an early morning press conference about his continuing bid to become the next Speaker of the House of Representatives at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S., October 20, 2023. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) departs a House Republican Conference meeting about choosing a new Speaker of the House after it was reported that Jordan vowed to continue his floundering bid for the speakership at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S., October 19, 2023. REUTERS/Leah Millis

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Wall Street dips as benchmark US bond yields breach 5%


2023-10-20T15:32:01Z

Wall Street dipped on Friday as investors neared the finish line of a week marked with mixed earnings, warnings of possible further rate hikes from the Federal Reserve, and worries of escalation of the Middle East conflict.

The yield on 10-year U.S. Treasury notes briefly crossed the 5% barrier late Thursday for the first time since July 2007, and is on course for its largest weekly surge since April 2022, powered by solid economic data.

All three major U.S. stock indexes were lower in early trading, with interest-rate-sensitive tech and tech-related megacaps pulling the Nasdaq down most.

All three indexes appeared set to notch week-on-week losses.

“(Investors are) digesting comments from (Federal Reserve) Chairman Powell and putting them into context with remarks of other Fed speakers who have suggested that the move upward in Treasury yields is helping the Fed tighten conditions,” said Tom Hainlin, national investment strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth Management in Minneapolis. “And perhaps there’s lower probability that the Fed will have to raise interest rates further.”

Strong U.S. retail sales in September reinforced ideas that the Fed may need to keep interest rates high for longer, Hainlin said.

Third-quarter earnings season has hit full stride, with 86 companies in the S&P 500 having reported. Of those, 78% have delivered results above expectations, according to LSEG.

Geopolitical tensions dampened investor risk appetite as Israel leveled a northern Gaza district.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) fell 175.13 points, or 0.52%, to 33,239.04, the S&P 500 (.SPX) lost 42.15 points, or 0.99%, to 4,235.85 and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) dropped 183.29 points, or 1.39%, to 13,002.89.

European shares extended their sell-off, and were on a path to their largest weekly percentage drop in three months as mounting tensions in the Middle East, climbing interest rates and disappointing earnings dampened investor risk appetite.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index (.STOXX) lost 1.16% and MSCI’s gauge of stocks across the globe (.MIWD00000PUS) shed 0.89%.

Emerging market stocks lost 0.52%. MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (.MIAPJ0000PUS) closed 0.58% lower, while Japan’s Nikkei (.N225) lost 0.54%.

The yield on U.S. 10-year Treasury notes, the bedrock of the global financial system, appeared to take a pause at but remained on track to nab its biggest weekly gain in over a year as robust economic data continues to defy the Fed’s restrictive policy rates.

Benchmark 10-year notes last rose 17/32 in price to yield 4.9179%, from 4.988% late on Thursday.

The 30-year bond last rose 8/32 in price to yield 5.0836%, from 5.102% late on Thursday.

The dollar briefly touched the closely-watched 150 level against the Japanese yen on Friday, boosted by rising Treasury yields and Federal Reserve Chairman Powell hinted at the possibility of additional policy rate hikes.

The greenback was essentially flat against a basket of world currencies.

The dollar index (.DXY) fell 0.09%, with the euro up 0.09% to $1.0589.

The Japanese yen weakened 0.06% versus the greenback at 149.89 per dollar, while Sterling was last trading at $1.2147, up 0.03% on the day.

Oil continued to climb, setting course for its second straight weekly gain as the potential escalation of Israel-Hamas war stoked supply worries.

U.S. crude rose 1% to $89.25 per barrel and Brent was last at $93.25, up 0.94% on the day.

Gold extended its advance, nearing the key $2,000 per ounce level as geopolitical tensions enhanced the metal’s safe-haven appeal.

Spot gold added 0.9% to $1,990.81 an ounce.

Related Galleries:

A street sign for Wall Street hangs in front of the New York Stock Exchange May 8, 2013. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File Photo

FILE PHOTO: The London Stock Exchange Group offices are seen in the City of London, Britain, December 29, 2017. REUTERS/Toby Melville/File Photo

A monitor displays stock market information on the trading floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., May 18, 2022. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo

A woman walks past a man examining an electronic board showing Japan’s Nikkei average and stock quotations outside a brokerage, in Tokyo, Japan, March 20, 2023. REUTERS/Androniki Christodoulou/File Photo

The post Wall Street dips as benchmark US bond yields breach 5% first appeared on The News And Times – thenewsandtimes.com.


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Kidnapped 80-year-old Israeli-American, granddaughter dead: Family


(NewsNation) — An 80-year-old Israeli-American and her 13-year-old granddaughter, who were being held hostage by Hamas, have been found dead, CNN reported Thursday.

The Israel Defense Forces confirmed the deaths of Carmela Dan and Noya Dan to family Wednesday, relative Jason Greenberg told CNN.

“Their bodies are being returned to their families for burial at this moment,” he said.

According to CNN, Carmela Dan had Israeli, U.S. and French citizenship, and her granddaughter, Noya Dan, was an Israeli citizen. The State of Israel also confirmed the news on X.

Another family member told CNN’s Dana Bash that Carmela had heart problems and that Noya was on the autism spectrum.

Abbey Onn, an American living in Israel, spoke with “On Balance” host Leland Vittert early last week about five of her family members, which included Carmela and Noya, who were all being held hostage and that they were “scared for their lives.”

Onn said she lost contact with the family members Saturday after messaging with them.

“We woke up Saturday, like everyone else in Israel, to sirens, and we thought that it was the regular, you know, run of the mill war. We have family in the center and the north and the south, and so we all started speaking on WhatsApp. We quickly understood that our family … in a kibbutz close to Gaza, had been infiltrated by Hamas,” Onn said. “And we were getting text messages that they were in the house and that they could hear gunfire, and that they were scared for their lives.”

Onn says she then watched footage posted online that shows her 12-year-old cousin being abducted.

“We have video of Erez, who is 12, in the hands of Hamas,” Onn told Vittert, later adding: “I have three children the same age as these children who were kidnapped, and it’s a parent’s worst nightmare.”

Onn identified her other missing family members as Ofer Kalderon, Sahar Kladeron and Erez Kalderon.

“(To) my family. I want them to know that we love them, and we’re doing anything we can to get them safely returned,” Onn said. “And to the kidnappers and anyone else who can understand this, I want them to think of their own family, of their mother and their father and their sister and their brother and their grandmother, and think what that would be (like) if they were in the hands of terrorists. It’s horrifying.”

President Joe Biden told the nation Thursday night it is “vital for America’s national security” to provide aid to Israel and Ukraine for their wars to stand up to dictators and promote stability across the world.

Drawing parallels between the two conflicts, Biden said if international aggression goes unchecked, “the risk of conflict and chaos could spread in other parts of the world.”

“Hamas and Putin represent different threats,” Biden said in an Oval Office address. “But they share this in common: They both want to completely annihilate a neighboring democracy.”

NewsNation has reached out to Jason Greenberg for more information.

NewsNation’s Caitlyn Shelton and Sean Noone contributed to this report.

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To Get Into an MBA Program, Learn Storytelling From Fiction Writers


Part of competitive collegiate admissions is crafting a compelling narrative about yourself, and part of sales is telling a story about your product and why it matters.

Businesses and graduate schools are turning to professional storytellers to help.

Marlena Corcoran has some of their insights in Forbes. (October 2023)

The post To Get Into an MBA Program, Learn Storytelling From Fiction Writers first appeared on The News And Times – thenewsandtimes.com.


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“Figa vam!” – Putin’s defiant gesture to the “Collective West”, the next day after the President Biden’s speech


 
“Figa vam!” – to the “Collective West” – Совещание с постоянными членами Совета Безопасности • Президент России http://kremlin.ru/events/preside
NT-News-and-Times.png
Selected Articles – The News And Times

 “Figa vam!” – to the “Collective West” – Совещание с постоянными членами Совета Безопасности • Президент России http://kremlin.ru/events/preside nt/news/72565/photos/73320https://twitter.com/mikenov/status/1715390003436478512-The News And Times Information Network – Blogs By Michael Novakhov – thenewsandtimes.blogspot.com
posted 5m ago by Michael Novakhov (Mike Nova) via The News And Times
 

As much of the world’s attention shifted to the Middle East this week, Russian president Vladimir Putin and Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky staked out contrasting positions on the war between Israel and Hamas. The Russian president has reportedly not called Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu since the weekend, and did not release a message of support…
posted 29m ago via responsiblestatecraft.org
 

SaveYou’re reading an excerpt from the Today’s WorldView newsletter. Sign up to get the rest free, including news from around the globe and interesting ideas and opinions to know, sent to your inbox every weekday.For over a year and a half, the war in Ukraine has dominated global attention due to the bloody scenes after Russia’s invasion. But Saturday’s…
posted 30m ago via washingtonpost.com
 

Death toll in Gaza hospital blast greatly exaggerated – foreign intelposted at 12:29:36 UTC via jpost.comThe number of deaths at the Al-Ahli Arab hospital caused by the misfired Palestinian Islamic Jihad missile on Wednesday night may have been grossly misrepresented by local sources, according to Thursday reports from a number of independent intelligence…
posted 2h ago by Michael Novakhov (Mike Nova) via The News And Times
 

1,200 × 749Search inside imageΗ Ρωσία και ο Πούτιν θα πληρώσουν την υποστήριξή τους στη Χαμάς, «υπόσχεται» ηγετικό στέλεχος του κυβερνώντος κόμματος Λικούντ [vid] | OnAlertVisitAmir Weitmann: “Russia will pay the price for supporting Hamas attack on Israel. Israel will now ensure Ukraine wins against Russia.” – 🇮🇱💪🇺🇦 FAFO time is nigh for Putin and…
posted 3h ago by Michael Novakhov (Mike Nova) via The News And Times
 

Moscow KGB – the Alma Mater of the modern Global TerrorismSearch inside imageRed Jihad: Moscow’s Final Solution for America and Israel: Kincaid, Cliff, Nyquist, J.R.: 9781523956098: The Global Jihadism and the KGB – GSMichael Novakhov’s favorite articles on InoreaderHow the Soviet Union helped terrorism go globalposted at 15:25:45 UTC via jpost.comBy SEAN…
posted 1d ago by Michael Novakhov (Mike Nova) via The News And Times
 
The cover of today’s @nypost pic.twitter.com/s1qRR4ovUi— Jewish News Syndicate (@JNS_org) October 19, 2023 – #DOJ DOJ #FBI FBI #CIA CIA #DIA DIA #ODNI ODNI #GRU GRU https://t.co/PH3LtsdUTH #News #Times #NewsAndTimes #NT #TNT Putin Russia #Putin #Russia #Israel IsraelPoroshenko: Wagner signature behind Hamas attack … https://t.co/LK57hOpePTWhat…
posted 1d ago by Michael Novakhov (Mike Nova) via The News And Times
 

Michael Novakhov’s favorite articles Post linkPoroshenko: Wagner signature behind Hamas attackposted at 12:26:18 UTC via euractiv.comThe former Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko told Euractiv he was “absolutely sure” that instructors from the Russian mercenary group Wagner were transferred from Syria to Gaza to help prepare the terrorist attacks…
posted 1d ago by Michael Novakhov (Mike Nova) via The News And Times
 

Leaders respond differently in moments of crisis. Some buckle, cringe or stay aloof and unconcerned, others abandon ship and run away while some rise up to the challenge and forge a new nation or organisation from the experience. The ongoing wars in Europe and the Middle East offer us a chance to examine the role of effective leadership in a moment…
posted 49m ago via guardian.ng
 

U.S. President Joe Biden’s comparison between the actions of Russian leader Vladimir Putin and those of Hamas is “unacceptable,” Kremlin spokesperson said Friday, in Google-translated comments reported by Russia’s state agency Tass on Telegram.Divided between loyalties with Israel and Hamas-backing Iran, Putin has fallen short of condemning the Palestinian…
posted 55m ago via cnbc.com
 

Kyiv says Russia is looking to leverage the Israel-Hamas war to dampen support for Ukraine, while Moscow is calling it a failure of the West.
posted 57m ago via nytimes.com
 

Zelensky Speaks With Netanyahu, Says Ukraine Stands In Solidarity With Israel | English News | N18V Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky says that in his phone call with Benjamin Netanyahu earlier today, “the prime minister spoke about the situation in Israel and the actions of the armed forces and law enforcement agencies to repel the attack.”…
posted 1h ago via youtube.com
 

According to reports, Israel closed its doors for the Ukrainian President amid ongoing conflict with Hamas. Volodymyr Zelensky had asked to make a solidarity visit in the wake of the Hamas onslaught but was told “the time is not right,” according to Hebrew-language media reports. Zelensky reportedly wanted to come to Israel with U.S. State Secretary…
posted 1h ago via youtube.com
 

Zelensky is waging a campaign to kick the crooks out of government. Netanyahu is waging a campaign to keep the crooks in.
posted 1h ago via nytimes.com
 

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly in New York on Tuesday. Israel has delivered much humanitarian aid to Ukraine but it has rejected pleas to provide arms or impose sanctions against Russia or its oligarchs, some of whom have strong ties…
posted 1h ago via youtube.com
 

Israel appeared to be readying its expected ground invasion of the Gaza Strip early Friday, with a large border town evacuated and fleets of tanks lining up on the border where hundreds of thousands of soldiers are already camped out. Israeli officials have been warning for days that it will soon launch its…
posted 1h ago via nypost.com
 

October 18, 2023 “Based on what I’ve seen, it appears as though it was done by the other team, not you,” President Biden told Israeli…
posted 2h ago via c-span.org
 

Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has long portrayed himself as a friend of Vladimir Putin. In a memoir published during Russia’s war on Ukraine, Netanyahu repeatedly lauded the Russian leader for his intellect and his “particularly friendly attitude” toward the Jewish people.Putin, too, has over the years cast himself as a loyal ally of…
posted 2h ago via theguardian.com
 

The brutal Hamas attack on Israel once again shows that the world is a very dangerous place. We need strong American leadership to protect our freedom. And we need smart American leadership to recognize who our enemies really are — and how they’re working together. Everyone knows who’s behind Hamas….
posted 3h ago via nypost.com
 
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“Figa vam!” – Putin’s defiant gesture to the “Collective West”, the next day after the President Biden’s speech


 
“Figa vam!” – to the “Collective West” – Совещание с постоянными членами Совета Безопасности • Президент России kremlin.ru/events/preside
Selected Articles – The News And Times

“Figa vam!” – Putin’s defiant gesture to the “Collective West”, the next day after the President Biden speech
 “Figa vam!” – to the “Collective West” – Совещание с постоянными членами Совета Безопасности • Президент России http://kremlin.ru/events/preside nt/news/72565/photos/73320https://twitter.com/mikenov/status/1715390003436478512-The News And Times Information Network – Blogs By Michael Novakhov – thenewsandtimes.blogspot.com
 

Diplomacy Watch: Putin and Zelensky don’t agree on Gaza war
As much of the world’s attention shifted to the Middle East this week, Russian president Vladimir Putin and Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky staked out contrasting positions on the war between Israel and Hamas. The Russian president has reportedly not called Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu since the weekend, and did not release a message of support…
 

War in Gaza complicates Ukraine battle for both Zelensky and Putin
SaveYou’re reading an excerpt from the Today’s WorldView newsletter. Sign up to get the rest free, including news from around the globe and interesting ideas and opinions to know, sent to your inbox every weekday.For over a year and a half, the war in Ukraine has dominated global attention due to the bloody scenes after Russia’s invasion. But Saturday’s…
 

Death toll in Gaza hospital blast greatly exaggerated – foreign intel: “Local Hamas-run Gazan sources allege that 471 people were killed at the hospital; foreign independent intelligence sources claimed instead that the number was closer to 10-50. “
Death toll in Gaza hospital blast greatly exaggerated – foreign intelposted at 12:29:36 UTC via jpost.comThe number of deaths at the Al-Ahli Arab hospital caused by the misfired Palestinian Islamic Jihad missile on Wednesday night may have been grossly misrepresented by local sources, according to Thursday reports from a number of independent intelligence…
 

Amir Weitmann: “Russia will pay the price for supporting Hamas attack on Israel. Israel will now ensure Ukraine wins against Russia.” … Goldberg: Israel and Ukraine? It’s the same war on two fronts … This is the powerful Second front in Ukraine War: Israel against Russia
1,200 × 749Search inside imageΗ Ρωσία και ο Πούτιν θα πληρώσουν την υποστήριξή τους στη Χαμάς, «υπόσχεται» ηγετικό στέλεχος του κυβερνώντος κόμματος Λικούντ [vid] | OnAlertVisitAmir Weitmann: “Russia will pay the price for supporting Hamas attack on Israel. Israel will now ensure Ukraine wins against Russia.” – 🇮🇱💪🇺🇦 FAFO time is nigh for Putin and…
 

How the Soviet Union helped terrorism go global – The Global Jihadism and the KGB – GS
Moscow KGB – the Alma Mater of the modern Global TerrorismSearch inside imageRed Jihad: Moscow’s Final Solution for America and Israel: Kincaid, Cliff, Nyquist, J.R.: 9781523956098: The Global Jihadism and the KGB – GSMichael Novakhov’s favorite articles on InoreaderHow the Soviet Union helped terrorism go globalposted at 15:25:45 UTC via jpost.comBy SEAN…
 
Recent Tweets – 10.19.23
The cover of today’s @nypost pic.twitter.com/s1qRR4ovUi— Jewish News Syndicate (@JNS_org) October 19, 2023 – #DOJ DOJ #FBI FBI #CIA CIA #DIA DIA #ODNI ODNI #GRU GRU https://t.co/PH3LtsdUTH #News #Times #NewsAndTimes #NT #TNT Putin Russia #Putin #Russia #Israel IsraelPoroshenko: Wagner signature behind Hamas attack … https://t.co/LK57hOpePTWhat…
 

Poroshenko: Wagner signature behind Hamas attack … What is Israel’s endgame in Gaza invasion? … 400 Russians Seek Evacuation From Besieged Gaza Strip … Moscow Seeks to Benefit From Fighting in Gaza … Everything we know about the Gaza hospital strike
Michael Novakhov’s favorite articles Post linkPoroshenko: Wagner signature behind Hamas attackposted at 12:26:18 UTC via euractiv.comThe former Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko told Euractiv he was “absolutely sure” that instructors from the Russian mercenary group Wagner were transferred from Syria to Gaza to help prepare the terrorist attacks…
 

Zelensky and Netanyahu: Effective leadership in times of crisis
Leaders respond differently in moments of crisis. Some buckle, cringe or stay aloof and unconcerned, others abandon ship and run away while some rise up to the challenge and forge a new nation or organisation from the experience. The ongoing wars in Europe and the Middle East offer us a chance to examine the role of effective leadership in a moment…
 

Biden makes case for ‘urgent’ military aid to Ukraine; North Korea’s Kim says Russia agreements will be ‘faithfully’ fulfilled
U.S. President Joe Biden’s comparison between the actions of Russian leader Vladimir Putin and those of Hamas is “unacceptable,” Kremlin spokesperson said Friday, in Google-translated comments reported by Russia’s state agency Tass on Telegram.Divided between loyalties with Israel and Hamas-backing Iran, Putin has fallen short of condemning the Palestinian…
 

As World’s Eyes Shift, Ukraine and Russia Look to Sway Opinions
Kyiv says Russia is looking to leverage the Israel-Hamas war to dampen support for Ukraine, while Moscow is calling it a failure of the West.
 

Zelensky Speaks With Netanyahu, Says Ukraine Stands In Solidarity With Israel | English News | N18V
Zelensky Speaks With Netanyahu, Says Ukraine Stands In Solidarity With Israel | English News | N18V Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky says that in his phone call with Benjamin Netanyahu earlier today, “the prime minister spoke about the situation in Israel and the actions of the armed forces and law enforcement agencies to repel the attack.”…
 

Israel ‘Humiliates’ Zelensky; Rejects Solidarity Visit Request | ‘Not The Right Time’ | Watch
According to reports, Israel closed its doors for the Ukrainian President amid ongoing conflict with Hamas. Volodymyr Zelensky had asked to make a solidarity visit in the wake of the Hamas onslaught but was told “the time is not right,” according to Hebrew-language media reports. Zelensky reportedly wanted to come to Israel with U.S. State Secretary…
 

Opinion | A Tale of Two Jewish Leaders
Zelensky is waging a campaign to kick the crooks out of government. Netanyahu is waging a campaign to keep the crooks in.
 

Ukraine’s Zelenskiy Meets Israel’s Netanyahu on Sidelines of UNGA
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly in New York on Tuesday. Israel has delivered much humanitarian aid to Ukraine but it has rejected pleas to provide arms or impose sanctions against Russia or its oligarchs, some of whom have strong ties…
 

Tanks line up at Gaza border as ground invasion appears imminent
Israel appeared to be readying its expected ground invasion of the Gaza Strip early Friday, with a large border town evacuated and fleets of tanks lining up on the border where hundreds of thousands of soldiers are already camped out. Israeli officials have been warning for days that it will soon launch its…
 

President Biden Delivers Oval Office Address on Israel-Hamas and Russia-Ukraine Wars
October 18, 2023 “Based on what I’ve seen, it appears as though it was done by the other team, not you,” President Biden told Israeli…
 
 

Hamas attack exposes deteriorating ties between Russia and Israel
Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has long portrayed himself as a friend of Vladimir Putin. In a memoir published during Russia’s war on Ukraine, Netanyahu repeatedly lauded the Russian leader for his intellect and his “particularly friendly attitude” toward the Jewish people.Putin, too, has over the years cast himself as a loyal ally of…
 

Wake up, America: Our enemies are an evil alliance taking advantage of our weakness around the world
The brutal Hamas attack on Israel once again shows that the world is a very dangerous place. We need strong American leadership to protect our freedom. And we need smart American leadership to recognize who our enemies really are — and how they’re working together. Everyone knows who’s behind Hamas….
 

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Diplomacy Watch: Putin and Zelensky don’t agree on Gaza war


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As much of the world’s attention shifted to the Middle East this week, Russian president Vladimir Putin and Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky staked out contrasting positions on the war between Israel and Hamas.

The Russian president has reportedly not called Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu since the weekend, and did not release a message of support or condolences following the attacks on Saturday.

Instead, Putin took the opportunity to blame U.S. policy for the latest outbreak of violence. “I think that many people will agree with me that this is a vivid example of the failure of United States policy in the Middle East,” Putin said. “[Washington] tried to monopolize regulating [the conflict], but was unfortunately unconcerned with finding compromises acceptable for both sides. It put forward ideas on how it should be done and pressured both sides. Each time, however, without taking into account the fundamental interests of the Palestinian people,” he added, according to the Moscow Times.

On Thursday, Russia’s foreign ministry called on Israel to agree to a ceasefire and allow goods to come into Gaza. “The unacceptability of the indiscriminate bombardment leading to numerous civilian casualties was emphasized,” a Russian statement said.

Putin and Netanyahu have reportedly shared a friendly relationship in the past, but it has deteriorated over the course of Russia’s war in Ukraine. Israel has refused to join the Western sanctions regime, abstained from providing weapons to Kyiv, and largely maintained neutrality on the war, but tensions between Moscow and Tel Aviv have grown due to other factors.

For one, the war in Ukraine has brought Russia closer with Iran, who some have been quick to blame for the attacks in Israel over the weekend.

Second, as Moscow’s former chief rabbi explained to reporter Pjotr Sauer, many Jewish people are uncomfortable with Putin’s framing of the war as a fight against a “neo-Nazi” government.

Sauer elaborates in the Guardian: “Last summer, these tensions first spilled over into the public, when Russian officials accused Israel of supporting the ‘neo-Nazi regime’ in Kyiv. The spat was ignited after Russia’s foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, recycled an antisemitic conspiracy theory claiming that Adolf Hitler ‘had Jewish blood’ – comments that Israel described as ‘unforgivable and outrageous.’”

Zelensky, meanwhile, has repeatedly affirmed his country’s support for Israel, comparing Hamas’s attacks over the weekend to Russia’s conduct during the war. “The only difference is that there is a terrorist organization that attacked Israel, and here is a terrorist state that attacked Ukraine,” Zelensky said during a speech to NATO on Monday. He later told a French television station that he was confident that Moscow was supporting Hamas “in one way or another.”

During his visit to Brussels, the Ukrainian president also acknowledged that “everybody’s afraid” that Western attention and support for Kyiv could diminish as focus shifted toward the Middle East.

Zelensky earlier said Moscow stood to gain from tumult around the world. “We have data very clearly proving that Russia is interested in inciting war in the Middle East. So that a new source of pain and suffering would erode global unity and exacerbate cleavages and controversies, helping Russia in destroying freedom in Europe,” he wrote on X. “We can see Russian propagandists gloating. We can see Moscow’s Iranian friends openly extending a helping hand to those who attacked Israel.”

In Responsible Statecraft this week, Mark Katz, professor of government and politics at the George Mason University Schar School of Policy and Government, explored these dynamics and analyzed why, contrary to some opinions, a larger war in the Middle East could run counter to Moscow interests.

“While many in the West seem to think that Russia somehow benefits whenever conflict erupts in the Middle East, this might be an occasion when it does not. Moscow may be calling for a ceasefire, then, because it sees this as the best way to protect its interests,” he concluded. “The problem for Moscow, however, is that it is not in a strong position to either persuade or coerce Israel or Hamas to agree to one. Perhaps this is why Foreign Minister Lavrov indicated that President Putin would not be making calls to any other leaders about this.”

In other diplomatic news related to the war in Ukraine:

—A recent poll conducted by Gallup found that “After 18 months of grinding conflict, Ukrainians remain deeply committed to winning the war with Russia — although slightly less so than they were in the early months of the war.” The number of Ukrainians who would want to keep fighting until “it wins the war” dropped to 60% from 70% in September 2022. The number of respondents who wanted to seek a negotiated settlement “as soon as possible” increased slightly during the same time period, from 26% to 31%.

The poll also found that “In the South (45%) and East (52%) regions closest to the front line, support for continuing the fight is still lower than the rest of the country. As a result, the proportion who favor a negotiated end to the war as quickly as possible is also highest in the South (41%) and East (39%).” Just over 70% of residents of the north of Ukraine, which includes Kyiv, and the West were in favor of continuing to fight.

—Another poll — from the Eurasia Group Foundation — found that a majority of Americans (58%) think the United States should push for a negotiated settlement in the war in Ukraine. As Daniel Larison notes in RS today, “Support for diplomatic solutions [in Ukraine and elsewhere] has majority backing of Americans from across the political spectrum, so it is remarkable how little support for those same solutions can be found among our elected representatives and policymakers in Washington.”

The poll also found that a plurality of respondents named “avoiding a direct war between the U.S. and nuclear-armed Russia” as the top goal for the future of U.S. support of the war effort. More respondents believed that the “U.S. responded well to Russia’s war in Ukraine than did not,” though there was a strong partisan divide on that question.

— A New Yorker profile of national security adviser Jake Sullivan examines the administration’s approach to the war in Ukraine, explores some of the internal debates over which weapons to send to Kyiv, and looks into how Sullivan thinks about the question of diplomacy. The piece reports that the White House was “fully briefed” on the Track Two talks that took place between former and prominent Russians in the spring.

“There is little doubt that the Biden Administration has actively considered ways to get Russia to the negotiating table,” writes Susan Glasser. “Privately, Sullivan has had extensive discussions about what a peace deal might look like. ‘My conversations with him all the way through have been about what can you do to eventually bring this war to an end,’ an informal adviser of Sullivan’s told me. (…) ‘they want to find a way to eventually get to a freeze, to eventually get to a negotiated settlement. But it has to be something that keeps nato together. It has to be something that doesn’t isolate the Ukrainians or have them go off and undermine everything that’s been done. That’s a hard square to circle.’”

—National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said that funding for Ukraine would not be endless. “On the Ukraine funding, we’re coming near to the end of the rope. Today we announced $200 million, and we’ll keep that aid going as long we can, but it’s not going to be indefinite,” he said. The White House is reportedly planning to try to get its languishing aid request for Ukraine through Congress by combining it with funding for Israel, Taiwan, and border security, though some Congressional Republicans have balked at the proposal.

U.S. State Department news:

During a press briefing on Tuesday focused almost exclusively on the war in Gaza, State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said that he didn’t have any evidence suggesting that Russia was involved in Hamas’s attacks.

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War in Gaza complicates Ukraine battle for both Zelensky and Putin


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For over a year and a half, the war in Ukraine has dominated global attention due to the bloody scenes after Russia’s invasion. But Saturday’s shocking attacks in Israel, led by the Palestinian group Hamas, and an impending war in the Gaza Strip in retaliation, look set to change the battlefield for both Kyiv and Moscow.

For Ukraine, there is a real risk that a conflict in the Middle East diverts Western attention — and with that, the military and economic support needed to continue its fight against Russia. And while Russia may welcome that diversion, a broader conflict in the Middle East could sever its already frosty relations with Israel, a former economic partner and a potential high-tech military supplier for Ukraine.

Already, the two nations are picking sides. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was one of the first world leaders to reach out to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu after Saturday’s attack. In public statements, he has directly compared Russian President Vladimir Putin to Hamas. “The terrorists will not change. They just must lose — and that means we must win,” Zelensky said Wednesday during a surprise visit to NATO headquarters in Brussels.

Meanwhile, Putin stayed quiet about the attack until Tuesday and, even then, described the situation primarily as a failure of Washington. “I think many will agree with me that this is a clear example of the failure of U.S. policy in the Middle East,” Putin said at a Kremlin meeting with Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, adding that it had never taken into account “the fundamental interests of the Palestinian people.”

Putin, who formerly had a close relationship with Netanyahu, has not reached out to the Israeli leader to offer his condolences after Hamas killed over 1,200 Israelis. The war in Ukraine has drawn Russia closer to Iran, Israel’s most powerful regional rival and a key backer of Hamas, according to Western intelligence.

In Brussels, there was no ignoring that the war in Gaza came at a crucial moment. For Ukraine, its allies’ patience is being tested as the conflict drags on into another winter and domestic political concerns shift.

My colleagues at the NATO headquarters there reported that Zelensky read the room and sought to portray himself “less as a competitor for attention and resources than as an empathetic ally of Israel.” However, later at a news conference with Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo, he admitted that the situation in the Middle East worried him. “Of course, everybody’s afraid,” Zelensky said.

In Washington, there are hopes that linking U.S. aid to Israel and aid to Ukraine could overcome the persistent Republican opposition to the latter. U.S. officials have said that there is no contradiction between supplying both Ukraine and Israel. “We can do both and we will do both,” Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin told reporters in Brussels.

“Israel’s most urgent needs are air-launched precision-guided munitions and interceptor replenishments for its Iron Dome system — and there is no competition between Israel and Ukraine worth mentioning for those capabilities,” Bradley Bowman of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies wrote in a statement this week.

There could be knock-on implications, however. Ukraine would clearly like more Patriot systems, for example, as these have proven effective against even Russia’s most advanced missiles. If the war in Gaza spirals into a regional conflict, however, those systems will be in high demand. Many of the Biden administration’s strategies for getting around the logjam on Ukraine funding in Washington have reportedly revolved around Israeli weapons transfers, which would also be in doubt.

At least one Republican candidate for president has already claimed that the transfer of U.S. artillery shells to Ukraine had harmed Israel, which could use the artillery to defend its northern border. Russian officials have attempted to stir the debate, with former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev publicly claiming, without evidence, that Western weapons given to Ukraine were used by Hamas in the attacks on Israel.

But for Moscow too, Gaza complicates things. For years, Putin and Netanyahu were close, with the Israeli prime minister touting his friendship with the Russian strongman in giant election billboards in 2019. Israel has a large population of relocated Russian Jews, some have significant links to the Kremlin — including influential interlocutors like oligarch Roman Abramovich.

Perhaps because of this relationship, Israel had taken a cautiously neutral stance on the war in Ukraine. Mostly, that has benefited Russia, with Netanyahu’s government steadfast in its refusal to supply Ukraine with weapons or to join the international sanctions on Russia. The position angered both Washington and Kyiv, with Zelensky last year suggesting the “personal relationship” between Netanyahu and Putin was harming Ukraine.

But the war in Ukraine has also seen Russia become reliant on Israel’s most serious rival in the Middle East. Iranian unmanned aerial vehicles have become vital to Moscow’s war efforts due to their effectiveness and relatively humble costs. U.S. officials have said that Tehran was seeking “billions” of dollars of Russian military goods in exchange for its support, which includes allowing Moscow to create its own versions of Iranian self-detonating attack drones.

Complicating matters further have been accusations of antisemitism made against senior Russian officials for their remarks about Zelensky, who is Jewish. Last month, Putin himself said “Western masters” had “put a person at the head of modern Ukraine an ethnic Jew, with Jewish roots, with Jewish origins” to help glorify “Nazism.”

Russia’s relations with Israel are a relatively recent concept. During the Cold War, Moscow armed the Arab states that antagonized Israel, leading the Soviet Union to break off diplomatic relations after the 1967 Arab-Israeli war. Ukraine may well hope they can be fully broken again: Axios reported Wednesday that Zelensky had officially requested a visit to Israel, a potential show of solidarity that could cement a closer relationship.

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