Palestine's Abbas Hails Haniyeh’s Reconciliation Letter

Palestine's Abbas Hails Haniyeh’s Reconciliation Letter
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Palestine's Abbas Hails Haniyeh’s Reconciliation Letter

Palestine's Abbas Hails Haniyeh’s Reconciliation Letter

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has hailed a letter from Hamas’s Political Bureau Chief Ismail Haniyeh on the movement’s readiness to end internal division and achieve reconciliation.

According to a presidential statement on Saturday, Secretary-General of the Central Committee of Fatah Movement Jibril Rajoub conveyed the letter to Abbas who welcomed what came in it on ending division, building partnership, and attaining national unity.

He decided to invite the Chairman of the Palestinian Central Elections Commission (CEC), Hanna Nasser, to discuss procedures for issuing the decrees related to holding the elections.

He expressed appreciation to Egypt, which has been sponsoring the reconciliation file, as well as Qatar, Turkey, Russia, and Jordan, all of which contributed to converging points of view and reaching an agreement.

Hamas has earlier pointed to new efforts to resume the national dialogue and complete the reconciliation process.

“There are internal and external contacts to make these efforts and steps a success and complete what we have started in our dialogue with our brothers in Fatah movement and the national and Islamic factions to fulfill the unity requirements,” Haniyeh stated on Friday.

He affirmed that the requirements for building national unity are accomplished through rebuilding the Palestinian leadership institutions, whether the PLO or the Palestinian Authority, on the basis of partnership and national consensus and in accordance with people’s will through free and fair elections.

National unity “is the cornerstone in confronting the Zionist occupation and its schemes aimed at liquidating the Palestinian cause and suppressing our right to holy sites and of return.”

In Sep 2020, Fatah and Hamas agreed to hold free and fair elections gradually and according to proportional representation. They decided to first hold the general elections then presidential polls, followed by the election of the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) national council. All are supposed to be held within six months.

However, on October 17, the PA announced it will resume coordination with Israel suspended in May over an Israeli plan to annex parts of the occupied West Bank.

Hamas slammed the decision and considered it a blow to reconciliation efforts. Yet the PA refused this accusation and stressed that unity is necessary to bolster the Palestinian position.



Israeli Army is Setting Up Rapid Response Unit on Border with Syria

Anti-government fighters ride military vehicles in the eastern part of Aleppo province, in Syria, on Sunday. (Aref Tammawi/AFP)
Anti-government fighters ride military vehicles in the eastern part of Aleppo province, in Syria, on Sunday. (Aref Tammawi/AFP)
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Israeli Army is Setting Up Rapid Response Unit on Border with Syria

Anti-government fighters ride military vehicles in the eastern part of Aleppo province, in Syria, on Sunday. (Aref Tammawi/AFP)
Anti-government fighters ride military vehicles in the eastern part of Aleppo province, in Syria, on Sunday. (Aref Tammawi/AFP)

The Israeli military has announced the formation of a special rapid response unit in the occupied Syrian Golan Heights to fend off threats from Syria, when necessary.

Commander of the 210th Bashan Division Lieutenant Colonel Yair Palai said the unit would operate as an effective attack force capable to launch in seconds and prevent threats on Israel similar to the one Hamas launched on October 7, 2023.

“The Unit will be prepared 24 hours a day, seven days a week, regardless of events,” he said.

“In the case of any security incident, the Unit will strike the enemy mercilessly. There is no possibility of failure, because this unit depends on constant vigilance,” Palai said.

The unit, which is comprised of elite soldiers from reconnaissance units and special reserve units, will operate under the 210th Division.

Sources said the unit has fully mobilized and operated continuously over the past three months.

Its goal was initially to counter Iranian, Syrian, Yemeni, Iraqi or other militias that might operate from the Golan against Jewish settlements there.

But recent developments in Syria compelled the army to prepare for any additional threats.

Last week, Syrian army soldiers were killed in a major attack by opposition fighters led by Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham, who swept into the city of Aleppo in the northwest, forcing the military to redeploy in the biggest challenge to President Bashar Assad in years.

On Tuesday, Haaretz said the Israeli military fears that amid the Syrian opposition assault and their taking over of military sites belonging to the Assad regime in the country, chemical weapons could fall into the wrong hands.

If such weapons fall into the hands of the opposition fighters or Iranian militias, Israel would have to act in a way that “may affect Syria and the entire Middle East,” according to Haaretz.

The report said that after the country's civil war, Assad tried to rebuild his chemical weapons production facilities, with most having been removed from Syria under an international agreement. But a substantial part of the chemical weapons project, particularly the knowledge accumulated over the years, still remains in Assad's hands.

Haaretz wrote that Israel has relayed messages to the Syrian regime via the Russians insisting that Assad assert his sovereignty and bar Iran from operating from within Syria.

“The army is monitoring with concern the surprise Syrian rebel offensive on Assad strongholds in Syria that began last week,” it said.

Also, intelligence officials believe that while the Syrian president's standing has been weakened, Iran, with Russia's support, is exploiting the chaos in order to send in tens of thousands of fighters from the armed militias that support it.

According to Haaretz, the army's current estimate is that there are 40,000 Iranian militia fighters in Syria.

In tandem with the ceasefire with Hezbollah, the Israeli army has been carrying out strikes almost daily on the border between Syria and Lebanon in order to thwart attempts to smuggle weaponry destined for Hezbollah.

Although to date there is no firm evidence that the Iranian forces plan to station themselves in Damascus, the newspaper said one Israeli diplomatic official involved in the discussions referred to this on Sunday as a known fact. “Iran has begun to send an influx of forces into Syria in an attempt to aid Assad and suppress the revolt,” he said.