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Conflict in the Middle East

Concerns about Israeli plans for Gaza and Palestinian displacement

338 replies

JadeHare · 28/05/2026 17:16

https://www.cnn.com/2026/05/28/middleeast/israel-netanyahu-military-70-percent-gaza-intl

Doesn’t look like there will be much land left for the Palestinians.

And in other news, from the Guardian:

“Israel’s defence minister has said he is committed to the ethnic cleansing of Gaza through large-scale migration of Palestinians as part of Israel’s long-term plans for the territory.
Israel Katz said the government would implement a plan for large numbers of Palestinians to leave Gaza “at the right time and in the right manner”, in a statement on Wednesday marking the targeted killing of Mohammed Odeh, Hamas’s most recent military commander.
Pushing for mass departures violates Donald Trump’s ceasefire plan for Gaza, which Israel signed last year. The second point of the plan states: “Gaza will be redeveloped for the benefit of the people of Gaza, who have suffered more than enough.”
Israel’s government has promoted the prospect of Gaza without Palestinians since Trump suggested early last year that hundreds of thousands of people should leave to “clean out” the strip for reconstruction.
Last year Israel set up a bureau for “voluntary emigration” and eased travel restrictions for Palestinians who wanted to make a one-way journey out of the strip.
The forced transfer of civilian populations is a war crime and a crime against humanity. Israeli officials, including Katz, use the term “voluntary migration” to describe their ”

Excerpt From
“Israel’s defence minister says large-scale Palestinian migration from Gaza will go ahead”
Emma Graham-Harrison
The Guardian
https://apple.news/AnnlpJqlOTdW5cUbA9NEe1Q
This material may be protected by copyright.

Israeli PM Netanyahu says he directed the military to take over 70% of Gaza | CNN

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Thursday that he had directed Israel’s military to take over 70% of Gaza’s territory.

https://www.cnn.com/2026/05/28/middleeast/israel-netanyahu-military-70-percent-gaza-intl

OP posts:
Thread gallery
9
BelleHathor · Today 10:51

They actually don't realise that, just like they don't realise that people dislike/avoid them not because they are on "the right", but because they are people who openly support demonic, evil actions.

The fact that they're still talking about political sides, speaks to their ignorance. We're united worldwide across the political spectrum and loudly stating that "it is wrong to kill children".

Bananarep · Today 11:18

Fake empathy.

Focus on domestic issues.

Bananarep · Today 11:26

In conclusion, it’s selective outrage: there are comparable or worse atrocities elsewhere (Sudan, Syria, Xinjiang, Yemen), yet they generate a fraction of the ‘anger’, which strongly suggests the driver isn't humanitarian consistency but the usefulness of this particular conflict against the right wing.

We see you.

Ellen2shoes · Today 11:32

I wonder if these posters who
trot out like clockwork the ‘what about the Uyghurs and Rohingya’ on every thread on Israel / Palestine would then argue that they are all ‘terrorists’ too and therefore deserve to be massacred?

Interesting also that while they deny the genocide in Gaza, they duly compare it to other genocides when suits.

Real scraping of the barrel to defend the indefensible.

Mantanora · Today 11:41

Bananarep · Today 11:26

In conclusion, it’s selective outrage: there are comparable or worse atrocities elsewhere (Sudan, Syria, Xinjiang, Yemen), yet they generate a fraction of the ‘anger’, which strongly suggests the driver isn't humanitarian consistency but the usefulness of this particular conflict against the right wing.

We see you.

Perhaps this will help. The UN Children and Armed Conflict (CAAC) reports show that the number of children killed in Gaza in the first year of the conflict alone was higher than the number of children killed in ALL global conflicts combined in any single year over the last two decades.

Martymcfly24 · Today 11:46

Bananarep · Today 11:26

In conclusion, it’s selective outrage: there are comparable or worse atrocities elsewhere (Sudan, Syria, Xinjiang, Yemen), yet they generate a fraction of the ‘anger’, which strongly suggests the driver isn't humanitarian consistency but the usefulness of this particular conflict against the right wing.

We see you.

And where are the the threads arguing in favour of all of these despot regimes. Because last I checked it's only Israel that people have unwavering support for and will always support every action. Doesn't tend to give pages and pages of discussion when everyone is on the same page against their actions.

Have China and Myanmar been sanctioned by the EU and US for their actions (clue they have)
Have Israel?

And we can see you too trying to dehumanize Palestinians to the point that no one could possibly care about them being murdered in their tens of thousands .

rainingsnoring · Today 11:50

Bananarep · Today 08:56

An odd post.

Do you feel as strongly about the Uyghurs and Rohingya?

If not, why not?

Sorry @Bananarep but no one's falling for it. Tribalism and racism is still dangerous.

JadeHare · Today 11:50

Bananarep · Today 11:26

In conclusion, it’s selective outrage: there are comparable or worse atrocities elsewhere (Sudan, Syria, Xinjiang, Yemen), yet they generate a fraction of the ‘anger’, which strongly suggests the driver isn't humanitarian consistency but the usefulness of this particular conflict against the right wing.

We see you.

You keep counting those boats crossing the channel.

It’s extremely dangerous to have such a narrow viewpoint. The middle east is a concern to the world:

Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard suggests Egypt and Turkey are next targets for war.

Turkey is a member of Nato. If that kicks off you’ll have some serious shit to deal with.

OP posts:
rainingsnoring · Today 11:57

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rainingsnoring · Today 12:00

JadeHare · Today 11:50

You keep counting those boats crossing the channel.

It’s extremely dangerous to have such a narrow viewpoint. The middle east is a concern to the world:

Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard suggests Egypt and Turkey are next targets for war.

Turkey is a member of Nato. If that kicks off you’ll have some serious shit to deal with.

Exactly. Anyone who supports this war needs their head examined imo. Who knows where it might lead. The Israelis are already openly making remarks about Turkey being a threat.

Bananarep · Today 12:26

JadeHare · Today 11:50

You keep counting those boats crossing the channel.

It’s extremely dangerous to have such a narrow viewpoint. The middle east is a concern to the world:

Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard suggests Egypt and Turkey are next targets for war.

Turkey is a member of Nato. If that kicks off you’ll have some serious shit to deal with.

What ‘shit’ will I have to deal with? Please expand.

I’m all ears.

JadeHare · Today 12:44

Bananarep · Today 12:26

What ‘shit’ will I have to deal with? Please expand.

I’m all ears.

Article 5 of the Nato agreement states that if one member of Nato is attacked then is classed as an attack on all NATO members, and all states are required to respond in defense. Israel is not a member of NATO, Turkey is.

As both Turkey and Israel are north of the tropic of cancer, as per article 6, and the fact thatTurkey is considered to be in Europe, then article 5 will need to be triggered.

Sounds like world war lll right? Looking forward to it?

OP posts:
Bananarep · Today 12:50

JadeHare · Today 12:44

Article 5 of the Nato agreement states that if one member of Nato is attacked then is classed as an attack on all NATO members, and all states are required to respond in defense. Israel is not a member of NATO, Turkey is.

As both Turkey and Israel are north of the tropic of cancer, as per article 6, and the fact thatTurkey is considered to be in Europe, then article 5 will need to be triggered.

Sounds like world war lll right? Looking forward to it?

A trifle hysterical, I think - premised as it is, on the remarks of one individual.

No, I do not foresee WW3, just as I didn’t when Moscow went over the border in Feb 22.

Sorry, if that does not fit your Israel-critical narrative.

JadeHare · Today 12:56

Is the frickin NATO agreement for god’s sake.

OP posts:
JadeHare · Today 12:57

I repeat:

Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard suggests Egypt and Turkey are next targets for war.

OP posts:
JadeHare · Today 12:59

But keep counting those boats……

OP posts:
Bananarep · Today 13:00

JadeHare · Today 12:56

Is the frickin NATO agreement for god’s sake.

FGS, Israel is not going to attack Turkey, so your entire argument is phoney.

But, let’s indulge you - if Israel did attack Turkey, there would no invocation of Article 5, simply because Washington would not countenance any reprisals on Tel Aviv.

Simples.

JadeHare · Today 13:09

Your very narrow viewpoint on the world is doing you a disservice here.

Although Ankara has not explicitly identified a specific adversary, growing evidence suggests that the Erdogan government may be steering Turkey toward a potential military confrontation with Israel, possibly in the Syrian theatre. This concern is reinforced by increasingly belligerent rhetoric from senior officials and a notable shift in Turkey’s strategic doctrine, in which the Jewish state is now framed as a fundamental national security threat.
Erdogan has previously attempted to push Turkey toward such a confrontation. In 2010, following the deadly Mavi Marmara incident in the eastern Mediterranean, he sought a military response against Israel but was ultimately blocked by resistance from senior generals. That institutional constraint, however, has since been dismantled.
Over the past decade, Erdogan has systematically consolidated power and reshaped the state apparatus. In 2014 he shut down a long-running counterterrorism investigation into a network linked to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Quds Force, paving the way for pro-Iranian figures to rise within the intelligence, police, military and diplomatic services.
Following the false flag coup attempt in 2016, Erdogan carried out mass purges that removed tens of thousands of officers, including much of the pro-NATO leadership within the armed forces. He appointed Adnan Tanrıverdi, founder of the paramilitary group SADAT, as his chief military advisor, and consolidated sweeping executive powers after a controversial 2018 referendum conducted under total government control of the media.
Under Erdogan’s leadership Turkey has expanded its military footprint abroad, arming Islamist groups in Syria and Libya and establishing overseas military outposts from Somalia to Qatar. Ankara has also deepened ties with Hamas — designated as a terrorist organization by its NATO allies — providing operatives with shelter, funding, logistics support and even Turkish citizenship.
At the same time Turkish intelligence and police have intensified crackdowns on Israeli networks, including alleged Mossad operatives tracking Hamas activities in Turkey, while largely overlooking the presence of jihadist groups and Iranian intelligence networks operating on Turkish soil.

If article 5 does not get triggered, then NATO will collapse. Then it becomes a free for all.

Take off the blinkers.

OP posts:
Bananarep · Today 13:50

JadeHare · Today 13:09

Your very narrow viewpoint on the world is doing you a disservice here.

Although Ankara has not explicitly identified a specific adversary, growing evidence suggests that the Erdogan government may be steering Turkey toward a potential military confrontation with Israel, possibly in the Syrian theatre. This concern is reinforced by increasingly belligerent rhetoric from senior officials and a notable shift in Turkey’s strategic doctrine, in which the Jewish state is now framed as a fundamental national security threat.
Erdogan has previously attempted to push Turkey toward such a confrontation. In 2010, following the deadly Mavi Marmara incident in the eastern Mediterranean, he sought a military response against Israel but was ultimately blocked by resistance from senior generals. That institutional constraint, however, has since been dismantled.
Over the past decade, Erdogan has systematically consolidated power and reshaped the state apparatus. In 2014 he shut down a long-running counterterrorism investigation into a network linked to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Quds Force, paving the way for pro-Iranian figures to rise within the intelligence, police, military and diplomatic services.
Following the false flag coup attempt in 2016, Erdogan carried out mass purges that removed tens of thousands of officers, including much of the pro-NATO leadership within the armed forces. He appointed Adnan Tanrıverdi, founder of the paramilitary group SADAT, as his chief military advisor, and consolidated sweeping executive powers after a controversial 2018 referendum conducted under total government control of the media.
Under Erdogan’s leadership Turkey has expanded its military footprint abroad, arming Islamist groups in Syria and Libya and establishing overseas military outposts from Somalia to Qatar. Ankara has also deepened ties with Hamas — designated as a terrorist organization by its NATO allies — providing operatives with shelter, funding, logistics support and even Turkish citizenship.
At the same time Turkish intelligence and police have intensified crackdowns on Israeli networks, including alleged Mossad operatives tracking Hamas activities in Turkey, while largely overlooking the presence of jihadist groups and Iranian intelligence networks operating on Turkish soil.

If article 5 does not get triggered, then NATO will collapse. Then it becomes a free for all.

Take off the blinkers.

Why are you cutting and pasting - without source, as if to pretend you are the author? You do yourself no favours, and remove any shred of credibility you have left.

If article 5 does not get triggered, then NATO will collapse. Then it becomes a free for all.

You also have a habit of making these sweeping and nebulous assertions, as if statements of fact.

I might respect you more if you simply admitted you despise Israel.

JadeHare · Today 14:11

Lol.Your respect is the last thing i’m looking for.

It came from the nordic monitor.

I have said 3 times on this thread alone, but I shall repeat it again for the hard of reading. That I agree with what the Spanish Foreign Minister said. That Israel deserve to live in peace, but so do Palestine and Lebanon.

Doesn’t sound like a hate fest to me, but you keep making stuff up that isn’t there.

OP posts:
MrsHeathcliff26 · Today 14:20

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JadeHare · Today 14:23

You also have a habit of making these sweeping and nebulous assertions, as if statements of fact.

Your post: FGS, Israel is not going to attack Turkey, so your entire argument is phoney.

How do you know? So far they have attacked Iran, Syria and Lebanon.

OP posts:
Mantanora · Today 14:28

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

Wow!! There is a test you can take called a PCL-R. I'd be interested to see how you score.

Martymcfly24 · Today 14:29

This reply has been deleted

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Hopefully this won't be deleted. Its better for when posters talk about being anti Israel that we can see the depth of hatred on the other side also .

Fair play to you for saying it out loud, there are many more that think like you.

Its still a vile opinion though.

MrsHeathcliff26 · Today 14:30

Mantanora · Today 14:28

Wow!! There is a test you can take called a PCL-R. I'd be interested to see how you score.

I don’t care. That’s the point. I don’t believe what they say I think it’s mostly propaganda and I don’t care anyway.