US Mapping Team For West Bank Annexation Arrivs In Tel Aviv

 Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu left, US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman, center, and Tourism Minister Yariv Levin during a meeting to discuss mapping extension of Israeli sovereignty to areas of the West Bank, held in the Ariel settlement, February 24, 2020. (David Azagury / US Embassy Jerusalem)
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu left, US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman, center, and Tourism Minister Yariv Levin during a meeting to discuss mapping extension of Israeli sovereignty to areas of the West Bank, held in the Ariel settlement, February 24, 2020. (David Azagury / US Embassy Jerusalem)
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US Mapping Team For West Bank Annexation Arrivs In Tel Aviv

 Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu left, US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman, center, and Tourism Minister Yariv Levin during a meeting to discuss mapping extension of Israeli sovereignty to areas of the West Bank, held in the Ariel settlement, February 24, 2020. (David Azagury / US Embassy Jerusalem)
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu left, US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman, center, and Tourism Minister Yariv Levin during a meeting to discuss mapping extension of Israeli sovereignty to areas of the West Bank, held in the Ariel settlement, February 24, 2020. (David Azagury / US Embassy Jerusalem)

The US members of a committee formed to map out areas of the West Bank that Israel plans to annex as part of US President Donald Trump administration’s peace plan has arrived in Tel Aviv on Monday. Meanwhile, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Naftali Bennett were seen racing to press ahead with the project.

Netanyahu had announced that 3,000 homes would be built for Jewish residents in Jerusalem while Bennett spoke about the establishment of around 2,000 residential units in the Bank settlements.

The Israeli PM had also ordered that 12 unauthorized settlement outposts in the occupied West Bank be connected to the state’s power grid while the Defense Minister spoke of a settlement development plan at the Ibrahimi Mosque in Hebron.

Under Trump’s peace deal, all West Bank settlements are to become part of sovereign Israel. However, the status of Jewish Hebron and the Tomb remains unclear.

Accordingly, a joint US-Israeli committee should complete a detailed map of the territory that could be annexed before Israel applies sovereignty to West Bank settlements.

The US mapping committee includes US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman, his adviser Aryeh Lightstone, and C. Scott Leith, senior adviser for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict of the National Security Council.
The committee already held preparatory talks over the issue in Washington before it arrived in Tel Aviv.

The US team should immediately begin talks with the Israeli mapping team, which includes Tourism and Immigration Minister Yariv Levin and Acting Director of the Prime Minister’s Office Ronen Peretz.

On Monday, Netanyahu toured the occupied East Jerusalem along with Levin and Peretz.

From the West Bank settlement of Ariel, where a meeting with the US mapping team was held, Netanyahu said: “The mapping is underway to prepare the way for extending sovereignty on these territories.”

Meanwhile, Palestinian presidential spokesman, Nabil Abu Rudeineh said the US-Israeli maps that Netanyahu said will be drawn soon according to the so-called "deal of the century" would not give legitimacy to anyone and that all settlements are going to demise.

"These maps that violate United Nations resolutions cannot be transformed into a fait accompli, and the only map that can be recognized and dealt with is the map of the state of Palestine on the 1967 borders with East Jerusalem as its capital," he stressed.

The Palestinian spokesman called on the international community to take immediate action to stop this dangerous Israeli-US escalation, which will lead to the elimination of any opportunity for a just and comprehensive peace based on United Nations resolutions.

On Sunday, European foreign policy chief Josep Borrell criticized Israel’s announced plans to build a new neighborhood in East Jerusalem and expand another, warning such action “would be deeply detrimental to a two-state-solution.”



Israeli Tanks Kill 59 People in Gaza Crowd Trying to Get Food Aid, Medics Say

Smoke billows amid reported building detonations by Israeli forces to the east and north of Jabalia city in the northern Gaza Strip at dawn on June 17, 2025. (AFP)
Smoke billows amid reported building detonations by Israeli forces to the east and north of Jabalia city in the northern Gaza Strip at dawn on June 17, 2025. (AFP)
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Israeli Tanks Kill 59 People in Gaza Crowd Trying to Get Food Aid, Medics Say

Smoke billows amid reported building detonations by Israeli forces to the east and north of Jabalia city in the northern Gaza Strip at dawn on June 17, 2025. (AFP)
Smoke billows amid reported building detonations by Israeli forces to the east and north of Jabalia city in the northern Gaza Strip at dawn on June 17, 2025. (AFP)

Israeli tanks fired into a crowd trying to get aid from trucks in Gaza on Tuesday, killing at least 59 people, according to medics, in one of the bloodiest incidents yet in mounting violence as desperate residents struggle for food.  

Video shared on social media showed around a dozen mangled bodies lying in a street in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip. The Israeli military, at war with Hamas-led Palestinian fighters in Gaza since October 2023, acknowledged firing in the area and said it was looking into the incident.  

Witnesses interviewed by Reuters said Israeli tanks had launched at least two shells at a crowd of thousands who had gathered on the main eastern road through Khan Younis in the hope of obtaining food from aid trucks that use the route.  

"All of a sudden, they let us move forward and made everyone gather, and then shells started falling, tank shells," said Alaa, an eyewitness, interviewed by Reuters at Nasser Hospital, where wounded victims lay sprawled on the floor and in corridors due to the lack of space.  

"No one is looking at these people with mercy. The people are dying, they are being torn apart, to get food for their children. Look at these people, all these people are torn to get flour to feed their children."  

Palestinian medics said at least 59 people were killed and 221 wounded in the incident, at least 20 of them in critical condition. Casualties were being rushed into the hospital in civilian cars, rickshaws and donkey carts. It was the worst death toll in a single day since aid resumed in Gaza in May.  

In a statement, the Israeli military said: "Earlier today, a gathering was identified adjacent to an aid distribution truck that got stuck in the area of Khan Younis, and in proximity to IDF troops operating in the area.  

"The army is aware of reports regarding a number of injured individuals from military fire following the crowd´s approach. The details of the incident are under review. The army regrets any harm to uninvolved individuals and operates to minimize harm as much as possible to them while maintaining the safety of our troops."  

Medics said at least 14 other people were also killed by Israeli gunfire and airstrikes elsewhere in the densely populated enclave, taking Tuesday's overall death toll to at least 73.  

The health ministry said 397 Palestinians, among those trying to get food aid, had been killed and more than 3,000 were wounded since late May.  

The incident was the latest in nearly daily large-scale killings of Palestinians seeking aid in the three weeks since Israel partially lifted a total blockade on the territory it had imposed for nearly three months.  

Israel has been channeling much of the aid it is now allowing into Gaza through a new US- and Israeli-backed group, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which operates a handful of distribution sites in areas guarded by Israeli forces.  

The United Nations rejects the system as inadequate, dangerous and a violation of humanitarian impartiality rules. Israel says it is needed to prevent Hamas fighters from diverting aid, which Hamas denies.  

Gaza authorities say hundreds of Palestinians have been killed trying to reach GHF sites.  

The GHF said in a press release late on Monday that it had distributed more than three million meals at its four distribution sites without incident.  

The Gaza war was triggered in October 2023, when Palestinian Hamas fighters attacked Israel, killing 1,200 people and taking 251 hostages, according to Israeli allies. Israel's subsequent military assault on Gaza has killed nearly 55,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza's health ministry, while displacing nearly the entire population of 2.3 million and causing a hunger crisis.  

Since last week, Gaza Palestinians have kept an eye on the new air war between Israel and Iran, which has long been a major supporter of Hamas.  

Gaza residents have circulated images of buildings in Israel wrecked by Iranian missiles, some saying they are happy to see Israelis experiencing a measure of the fear of airstrikes that they have endured for 20 months.