40 wounded in Hezbollah drone attack in northern Israel

No sirens were sounded during the attack, and the IDF is currently investigating it.

By JNS and World Israel News

Over 20 people were wounded, three critically, 5 severely wounded, and 14 others are in moderate condition, when a drone struck the Binyamina area in northern Israel on Sunday night, according to medics.

No sirens were sounded during the attack, and the IDF is currently investigating it. The wounded were evacuated by helicopter to Tel Hashomer, Rambam and other hospitals around the country.

  The only deal Hamas wants: Israel’s surrender

United Hatzalah said its volunteers were “providing initial treatment to a large number of injured (over 20) at the scene of an incident in the Binyamina region. Some are in serious condition.”

This is a developing story.

 


A document found the plan to destroy a skyscraper in Tel Aviv, the 70-story Moshe Aviv Tower and the Azrieli Mall complex.

JERUSALEM POST STAFF

OCTOBER 13, 2024 05:12
Updated: OCTOBER 13, 2024 13:06
 THE TWIN Towers burn (photo credit: Brad Rickerby/File/Reuters)
THE TWIN Towers burn
(photo credit: Brad Rickerby/File/Reuters)

Hamas had planned to conduct a 9/11-style attack on Israel that was intended to be far deadlier than the October 7 massacre that took place in 2023, according to a Washington Post exclusive report allegedly based on records found by Israeli officials.

The plans reportedly dated many years before the October 7 attacks and involved knocking down a Tel Aviv skyscraper, along with the use of trains, boats, and chariots, to conduct a devastating attack against Israel.

According to the report, electronic records and papers were recovered by Israeli officials from Hamas command centers and showed the advanced planning that was done. Several of the plans made by the terror group appeared to be “ill-formed and highly impractical,” terrorism experts noted to the Post.

Additionally, letters from the terror group to Iranian leaders were also found, and they showed that Hamas had requested their help initiating the attacks, the report said.

Furthermore, the Post said a letter written by Hamas Head Yahya Sinwar in 2021 was found within the documents that appealed to several senior Iranian officials, asking for financial and military support while promising that, with Iran’s help, the terror group would be able to destroy Israel within two years.

 Yahya Sinwar, former leader of the Palestinian Hamas Islamist movement at a meeting with members of Palestinian factions at Hamas President's office in Gaza City, on April 13, 2022 (credit: ATTIA MUHAMMED/FLASH90)

Yahya Sinwar, former leader of the Palestinian Hamas Islamist movement at a meeting with members of Palestinian factions at Hamas President’s office in Gaza City, on April 13, 2022 (credit: ATTIA MUHAMMED/FLASH90)

“We promise you that we will not waste a minute or a penny unless it takes us toward achieving this sacred goal,” a June 2021 letter allegedly signed by Sinwar and other Hamas officials said, according to the Post.

While the report noted that the documents’ authenticity could “not be definitively established,” it also stated that the content appeared to be consistent with US and allied intelligence assessments following October 7 regarding Hamas’s plans and relations with Iran.

The Post also spoke to Israeli officials who were not involved in collecting the comments and said they “independently assessed that they were genuine.”

Satellite images of Israel 

The reported findings of the Israeli officials also “included more than 17,000 photographs — from satellite images to photos of Israeli cities and landscapes taken by drone cameras or gleaned from social media postings,” the Post said.

Photos were reportedly found of Israeli air base diagrams and images depicting the flight patterns of commercial aircraft that had used the Ben-Gurion Airport outside Tel Aviv.

A document was found with a plan to destroy three skyscrapers in Tel Aviv: the 70-story Moshe Aviv Tower and the Azrieli Mall complex, which are near a large shopping complex and train station.

Along with the pictures of the plan, the text said, “If this tower is destroyed in one way or another, an unprecedented crisis will occur for the enemy, similar to the crisis of the World Trade Center towers in New York.” The text was written in Arabic, according to the Post.

Yet, according to the report, the document noted that the plan to attack the Tel Aviv skyscrapers was not fully formed, and Hamas remained unsure of how to conduct such a strike.

Additional Hamas attack plans

In additional plans found in the documents, Hamas also allegedly aimed to target Israel’s railway system and came up with variations of transporting terrorists who held explosives.

“The railway line is designated for transporting fuel, which is a weak point in the event of a train explosion after moving inside one of the cities [a moving bomb],” a document reportedly stated.

The plans also showed a particularly unconventional form of attack that involved using a three-man chariot drawn


Turkish president says Israel ‘most concrete threat to regional, global peace’ after airstrike targeted top Hezbollah official from unit tasked with delivering weapons from Iran

 

Turkish President Recep Teyyip Erdogan speaks at a human rights-themed event hosted by his Islamist AKP political party in the Turkish capital of Ankara, August 5, 2024. (Screen capture: X/Türkiye Canlı, used in accordance with Clause 27a of the Copyright Law)

Turkish President Recep Teyyip Erdogan speaks at a human rights-themed event hosted by his Islamist AKP political party in the Turkish capital of Ankara, August 5, 2024. (Screen capture: X/Türkiye Canlı, used in accordance with Clause 27a of the Copyright Law)

Russia, Syria and Iran should take more effective measures to protect Syria’s territorial integrity, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Saturday, when asked about Israel’s recent alleged strike on Damascus.

“We will defend an urgent and permanent peace in Syria… Israel is the most concrete threat to regional and global peace,” Erdogan said in an interview with Turkish media.

“It is essential that Russia, Iran and Syria take more effective measures against this situation, which poses the greatest threat to Syria’s territorial integrity,” according to a readout of the interview from the Turkish presidency.

An alleged Israeli airstrike on Damascus on Tuesday targeted a top Hezbollah official who is part of a unit tasked with delivering weapons from Iran and its proxies to the terror group in Lebanon, according to a Saudi report.

Syria’s state-run SANA news agency claimed seven civilians were killed and 11 others were wounded in the strike, which hit a residential and commercial building in the Mezzeh district of the capital a few hundred meters from the Iranian embassy. Multiple reports said the targeted building was linked to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

Erdogan has been heavily critical of Israel ever since its war with Hamas broke out on October 7 last year with the terrorist organization’s massive attack in which terrorists murdered some 1,200 people and took 251 hostages.

A residential building hit by an alleged Israeli airstrike in the Mezzeh suburb on the western outskirts of Syria’s capital Damascus on October 8, 2024. (Louai Beshara/AFP)

Throughout the war, Erdogan has accused Israel of genocide and of seeking war with other countries in the region.

He has also repeatedly compared Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to Adolf Hitler and recently called Israel a “Zionist terrorist organization,” urging the United Nations to endorse the use of force against Israel.

In July, Erdogan even issued an open threat to invade Israel in solidarity with the Palestinians in Gaza.

Israeli-Turkish relations have been shaky over the years, but the two countries agreed on normalization in 2022, reappointing ambassadors after years of tensions.

Since the beginning of the war, however, tensions have once again dipped with Turkey recalling its ambassador to Israel in November and halting all trade with Israel in May.