3 terrorists killed, bomb lab destroyed in IDF raid

Local terror groups opened fire on troops, triggering a gun battle. No IDF soldiers were wounded in the exchange of fire.

By World Israel News Staff

Three operatives from the Al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigade terror group were killed and an explosives manufacturing site was destroyed in an IDF raid in Nablus (Shechem) that culminated in a firefight between Israeli soldiers and armed terrorists.

Security blogger Abu Ali Express reported that Palestinian media had named the killed terrorists as Al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigade Commander Fathi Rizk, 30, Abdullah Abu Hamdan, 24, and Muhammad Zaytoun, 32.

An additional five men affiliated with the terror group, all from the Awed family, were also detained by troops.

The raid took place in the early hours of Monday morning, with Israeli security forces entering the Balata neighborhood on the outskirts of Nablus with the intention of arresting several wanted men who had attacked IDF outposts in recent days.

Upon their arrival, local terror groups opened fire on troops, triggering a gun battle. No IDF soldiers were wounded in the exchange of fire.

An IDF spokesman said that in addition to capturing the wanted men, troops “confiscated three M-16 rifles, ammunition, military equipment and weapon parts.” They also discovered an “explosives-manufacturing site containing dozens of kilograms of explosives designated for carrying out attacks.”

The bomb laboratory was destroyed by the IDF, the spokesman added.

In a separate overnight operation, troops entered the terror hotbed of Jenin and arrested three terror suspects. During the arrest process, locals pelted soldiers with Molotov cocktails and other improvised explosive devices, as well as rocks.

The IDF responded by opening fire. The army said that “hits” among the rioters were detected, but did not specify whether any had been killed or seriously wounded.

Defense Minister Yoav Gallant praised security forces and the operation on his Twitter account on Monday morning.

“In two successful operations carried out by the security forces overnight in Jenin and Nablus, terrorists who opened fire on our forces were eliminated and those planning terror attacks against Israeli citizens were arrested,” tweeted Gallant.

“We will hunt down and reach our enemies.”

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Demented Policing: Tasering the Elderly

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Ben-Gvir promises ‘total war’ against Arab crime, protection rackets

14 arrested in anti-mafia raid in northern Bedouin town; Ben-Gvir says operation just the beginning, pledges to restore governance to crime-ridden region.

By World Israel News Staff

Public Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir pledged that his ministry would engage in “total war” to restore governance to Israel’s crime-ridden north, where Arab crime families have terrorized local business owners and residents.

Following a raid in the northern Bedouin town of Tuba-Zangariyye, which saw 14 suspects arrested for crimes including arson and extorting businesses by charging them “protection fees,” Ben-Gvir told Hebrew-language media that the operation was only the beginning of a widescale crackdown on crime in the region.

Residents of the Galilee “call me, and I hear their pain and despair, due to this phenomenon of ‘protection…’ criminals are waging a brutal war against law-abiding residents here, Jews and Arabs alike,” Ben-Gvir said in a media conference in the town.

“We’re [launching] a total war [against] the criminals,” he added. Crime in the area has “crossed all red lines, and it’s important that we continue to be intense [in] responding to it.”

As the head of the Otzma Yehudit party, Ben-Gvir made clamping down on organized crime in the peripheral Galilee and Negev regions a central focus of his campaign.

“We call on every citizen who has fallen victim to threats by criminals to avoid giving into extortion and instead to notify police immediately,” a police spokesman said in a follow-up statement.

“Obedience or payment to the criminal elements does not guarantee safety, and in fact it encourages them to expand their blackmail efforts and continue carrying out their plots against more victims,” he added.

In recent years, residents have suffered from a massive crime wave in the Galilee and Negev. Emboldened by a lack of serious consequences, mostly Arab crime families and mafias have demanded payments from merchants in exchange for them being able to operate their businesses unhindered. Business owners who refused to pay have seen their businesses torched in arson attacks or even shot at.

The phenomenon has expanded to include nearly all local industries, from restaurants and retail shops to transportation companies, including public bus operators.

On Sunday, dozens of Arab-Israelis protested what they referred to as a lack of police response to crimes in their community.

However, according to a leaked phone conversation between Ben-Gvir and Police Commissioner Kobi Shabtai, police find themselves in a challenging conundrum when it comes to battling crime in Arab municipalities.

The vast majority of serious crimes in the Arab community, such as murder, go unsolved, largely due to residents’ resistance to testifying in court and refusal to provide eyewitness testimony to police. Arab MKs often complain of racism and discrimination when police do engage in crackdown efforts in Arab towns and cities.

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Ancient Egyptian coffin lids undergo unusual CT examination in Jerusalem

“It is not every day that one witnesses the convergence of glorious history and technological advancements in the medical field.”

By Pesach Benson, TPS

In a meticulously planned operation that took five months to organize, a pair of 2,000-year-old coffin lids from ancient Egypt was transferred from the Israel Museum in Jerusalem to undergo a CT scan on Friday.

Part of the museum’s esteemed Egyptian collection, these intricate coffin lids carved from sycamore wood were subjected to an examination at Jerusalem’s Shaare Zedek Medical Center in order to unravel the techniques employed by craftsmen during their creation thousands of years ago.

The collaboration between the museum and the hospital could set a precedent for merging historical artifacts with cutting-edge medical technology to better understand the past.

CT (computerized tomography) uses a series of X-rays taken from different angles to create cross-sectional images of bones, organs and blood vessels. Usually, they are used to diagnose certain types of cancer, heart disease, blood clots, broken bones, bowel and spinal disorders, and broken bones, among other things.

“Through the scan, we were able to identify cavities in the wood that were filled with plaster as part of the preparation for the coffins’ decoration, as well as sections that were entirely cast from plaster instead of being directly carved from the wood,” said Nir Or Lev, the Israel Museum’s curator of Egyptian archeology.

“The examination has shed light on the craftsmanship of the ancient artisans responsible for creating these coffin lids, thereby significantly contributing to our ongoing research,” he said.

The first coffin lid, belonging to a ceremonial singer named Lal Amun-Ra, dates back to approximately 950 BCE. Inscribed on the lid are the words “Jed-Mot,” representing the name of the deceased, alongside a blessing. The second coffin lid, dating from the period between the 7th and 4th centuries BCE, once belonged to an Egyptian nobleman named Petah-Hotep.

“It is not every day that one witnesses the convergence of glorious history and technological advancements in the medical field,” said Shlomi Hazan, the chief radiologist of Shaare Zedek’s imaging department.

“The high-resolution scans enabled us to differentiate between various materials, such as wood, plaster, and air spaces. Moreover, the cross-sectional scans unveiled the tree rings, and three-dimensional reconstructions were generated to aid the research team in analyzing the composition of the different materials,” Hazan said.

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Just War 101 E8: Right Intent

Having taken a brief excursus to discuss retributive and distributive forms of justice that are operative when fighting just wars justly, I want to return to an overview of the jus ad bellum and, specifically, the jab’s final requirement guiding evaluation of when it is right to fight: namely, right intent.

In case a remedial refresher is helpful, recall that the jab’s primary aim is to assist a nation’s legitimate sovereign—the authority over which there is no one greater charged with the care of the political community—in determining when nothing else but proportionate military force has any realistic chance of rescuing the sufficiently threatened innocent, requiting gross injustices, or punishing grave evil with the aim of ending conflict and restoring or imposing order and justice and, thereby, peace. You might also remember that these requirements, being deontological in nature, are essential if war is to be just. Moreover, their presence does not merely provide permission for war, but signal obligation.

The proper intention of entering a just war can be cast in positive and negative ways. Negatively, the proper orientation of the just warrior must be to avoid evils. As Augustine puts it: “The real evils in war are love of violence, revengeful cruelty, fierce and implacable enmity, wild resistance, and the lust of power, and the like.” As we’ll see, the jus in bello framework—guiding how to rightly fight the fight that’s right to fight—helps prevent these evils by mandating necessity, proportionate force, and due care in targeting.

On the positive side, as we have already seen, war is waged with the intention of overturning the conditions that led to the just cause for fighting. That is, one fights in order to secure the protection of the innocent, to take back those things wrongly taken—thereby requiting injustice—and to sufficiently punish evil. But there is something more.

From Augustine to Luther to Calvin and onward, the purpose of war is always primarily to restore a disordered peace. This peace is desired first for the innocent victims under unjust assault. But in the second place, this desire for peace extends to the enemy—toward the restoration of the enemy into the fellowship of reconciliation. Naturally, you cannot reconcile with someone who has not seen the error of his ways, repented, and given you solid reasons to trust that he will not seek to harm you again. There is therefore more to say about this than can be said here. For now, let’s summarize the point this way: right intention casts warmaking as peacemaking. Just war is the initiation of the process of forgiveness.

In his letter to Boniface, the Roman military tribune in north Africa, Augustine insisted: “Peace should be the object of your desire; war should be waged only as a necessity…in order that peace may be obtained.” With the admonition there is a caution. It pays to remember, as Jean Bethke Elshtain reminded us, that Augustine is talking about the peace of the Pax Romana—a compelled or ordered peace. However unjust in the full light of eschatological shalom—that heavenly state of wholeness, harmony, and completeness—this imperfect peace was nevertheless very real and very significant. More than any competitor then in the market, the Roman Pax was capable of keeping neighbor from eating neighbor, and of preserving the interconnected web of culture, civilization, art, and tradition that, by Augustine’s day, was much in jeopardy. The imperfect good of ordered peace is much to be preferred to unadulterated anarchy.

But better still is what Augustine calls tranquilitas ordinis—“the tranquility [or peace] of order.” Such peace is not externally compelled but rather internally prompted by love of God and neighbor. This peace, Augustine writes in The City of God, is born of a commitment that “one will be at peace, as far as lies in him, with all men.” The basis of this commitment is “the observance of two rules: first, do no harm to anyone, and, secondly, to help everyone whenever possible.” This will not result, to invoke Elshtain again, in “the perfect peace promised to believers in the Kingdom of God, the one in which the lion lies down with the lamb.” Against this vain hope, Elshtain wryly observed: “On this earth, if the lion lies down with the lamb, the lamb must be replaced frequently.”

Nevertheless, Elshtain saw this pursuit of a tranquilitas ordinis as central to what good politics is all about. Peace is to be the product of order and justice, without which no other political goods can long perdure. What political goods did she have in mind? As she suggests in Augustine and the Limits of Politics, simply modest, quotidian ones:

Mothers and fathers raising their children; men and women going to work; citizens of a great city making their way on streets and subways; ordinary people flying to California to visit their grandchildren or to transact business with colleagues—all of these actions are simple but profound goods made possible by civic peace. They include the faithful attending their churches, synagogues, and mosques without fear, and citizens—men and women, young and old, black, brown, and white—lining up to vote on Election Day.

Here we come to a humility of purpose: there is only so much we can do. But “in this world of discontinuities and profound yearnings, of sometimes terrible necessities,” Elshtain mused, “a human being can yet strive to maintain or to create an order that approximates justice, to prevent the worst from happening, and to resist the seductive lure of grandiosity.”

An implication should be called out here. This “striving” after peace cannot be a half-measure. The final point of focus for a properly oriented intent embraces a truism: if it is right to fight a war, it is right to fight that war to win it. This is not for the sake of chest-thumping, patriotic bravado. Rather, first, remember as said above that the just cause requirement necessitates the offending wrong that started the war in the first place be corrected. To not try to do so, barring profoundly prudential excuses, is to hold the violated goods in contempt. Victory is, in most cases, the means to vindicate the innocent, to take back what’s been wrongly taken, or to appropriately punish evil. Moreover, it is most often only after an enemy has been sufficiently licked that they are in any mood to stand down and possibly be friends again. If nothing else has, the First World War taught us this.

Decisive victory, like much else in the wild contingencies of war, is sometimes a bridge too far. It must, therefore, remain a strong presumption based on prudent reasoning rather than a categorical imperative. But for both strategic as well as moral reasons, we should lean toward clean margins and err in the direction of thoroughness, just as we would in cancer surgery. It is because we desire the good of concord that we fight for a decisive end to conflict, one that secures and allows the enforcement of a durable peace.

Not incidental to the “right intent” requirement is a forward-looking expectation to what happens after the fighting stops. A durable peace does not simply emerge whole cloth simply because the smoke clears. Contemporary just war scholars often speak about jus post bellum—justice after war. I’ve made clear by now that victors—and victims—have responsibility for helping build—when possible—just conditions, including relations, following conflict. I also agree it’s necessary to articulate a criterion—such as order, justice, and conciliation—for what that might look like. I’m unsure whether the just war framework needs to be formally to include a third category as, properly understood and fleshed out, the just post bellum ambitions are all resident in the right intention requirement. But the articulations of a just post bellum ethic must, in any case, be made something more than merely tacit.

In summary, taken together, right authority, just cause, and right intent are the primary criteria regarding when it is justified to use force. Deontological in nature, they impose the burden of duty on those bearing ultimate responsibility for the good of the political community and for good relations among political communities. Otherwise put, the jus ad bellum requirements, if satisfied, do not point to when it is merely permissible to consider force but rather when it is obligatory. As we will see, secondary, prudential considerations regarding probability of success, last resort, and the like will serve as cautionary filters.

To flesh a little of this out now, it may be that simply because something is right to do, it might not be wise to actually do it. In such cases, when proper prudence dictates that we stand down despite the just cause arrayed before us, the decision not to fight should register as a tragedy. It can only mean that, for now, some innocents will not be protected, some injustice will remain unrequited, some great evil will go unpunished. And peace will thereby remain elusive.

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Mother Killed Her 6-Year-Old and Tried the Same to Her 8-Year-Old: Deputies

Jamie Michele Bradley-Brun, 37, is charged with murder and attempted murder after deputies out of Beaufort County, South Carolina responded to an address on Sam Doyle Driver in Saint Helena Island.

Upon their arrival, they discovered Mackaya Bradley-Brun, 6, dead. It is believed that Jamie Michele Bradley-Brun drowned her 6-year-old daughter and attempted to do the same to an 8-year-old child, but the survivor’s plea for help alerted others in the residence, allowing them to intervene and call 911.

An autopsy will be conducted by the Beaufort County Coroner’s Office to formally determine the cause of death.

The investigation is ongoing and the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division’s Special Victim’s Unit-Department of Child Fatalities is working alongside the Sheriff’s Office. Jamie Michele Bradley-Brun is currently detained without bond in the Beaufort County Detention Center.

Missing Woman Found Dead After 10 Days

The remains of a 20-year-old Texas woman named Madeline Pantoja were discovered in Midland City following her disappearance 10 days prior. It was reported that Pantoja was last seen on May 10, with witnesses claiming to have heard arguing coming from her apartment. Considering this, her ex-boyfriend, Mario Juan Chacon, 24, is being eyed as a possible suspect.

Midland Police arrested Chacon on Saturday, after Pantoja’s remains were found roughly 15 minutes away from her apartment. It is known that Chacon had the only key to her apartment, which was locked when investigators arrived. Pantoja’s keys, purse, phone and pet were still inside.

Pantoja was scheduled to meet with a friend on the 11th, but she never showed up. After many unanswered calls and texts, the friend got in touch with Pantoja’s family, and a maintenance worker unlocked the door for a welfare check. Her friend, Jasmine Hernandez, shared that it was unlike her to cancel plans or ignore communication.

On the 18th, Pantoja’s close friends and family held a protest outside the Midland Police Department, feeling that the investigation into her disappearance was not being taken seriously. It is currently unknown who found her remains or how they were discovered.

Chacon has been charged with murder, and is yet to make his first appearance before a judge. No bail or bond information has been made available. The cause of death is still unknown, but an autopsy will be conducted in Dallas County.

WATCH: Zelensky compares Bakhmut destruction to Hirishoma, but denies Russia claims of capture

Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky compared the destruction of Bakhmut to Hiroshima, saying “there was nothing left” and that “for today, Bakhmut is only in our hearts.” He later clarified that Russian claims that it had taken control of the city were untrue.

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WATCH: Celebrity seal clearly a Zionist: Yulia spotted again at an Israeli beach

The rare monk seal that has captured the hearts of Israelis and garnered media attention all around the world, has made the news once again after she was spotted at Hapalmachim beach days after she was reported to have left Israel’s shores for good.

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