‘The Night Guards’: Inside Grassroots Network Fighting Back Against Israeli Settler Attacks

Masked Palestinians on guard duty during the night to fend off attacks by Israeli settlers, south of Nablus March 1, 2023. (Photo: Nasser Ishtayeh/SOPA Images via ZUMA Press Wire/APA Images)

Meet the grassroots network of Palestinian volunteers who spend their nights defending their West Bank villages from escalating Israeli settler violence.

Under the midnight moon atop the mountain in the town of Sinjil, residents carry flashlights, signaling to the hills across the valley. The beams, along with the lights surrounding a small watch tent, usually used as decoration for Ramadan, serve as an early warning system. The signal that the village is awake and watching.

“Do you see that light?” one of the young men asks quietly, pointing toward a flicker across the opposite hill. I nod. For a moment, no one speaks. The wind is sharp at this height, and below us, the village is completely dark.

“That means they’re there,” he says. “Watching, like us.”

As the pace of settler attacks on Palestinian communities reaches unprecedented levels, and amid a weak official response to escalating risks across the occupied West Bank, community-based volunteer groups known locally as protection committees or “night guards” have emerged as a primary line of defense against near-daily violence. The group of youth organizing night patrols in Sinjil is one of them.

The tent itself is a modest, thin fabric stretched over metal poles, its edges weighed down by stones to resist the wind. Yet it has become the village’s front line.

Plastic chairs line its sides, and a shared phone charger hangs from a makeshift electricity connection, powering the devices that keep the village connected through the night. Like others who gather here, the men move between fatigue and alertness, balancing daytime work with the obligation to remain awake until dawn.

“Since the beginning of last year, and as a result of the escalating attacks on Sinjil, we found it necessary to form a committee primarily of volunteers,” says R.M., a regular participant from the village. “We needed to organize the guard duty more effectively and move from a faz’a model to a more organized system.”

What R.M. calls “faz’a” is a Palestinian colloquialism denoting when a collective of people rushes to the aid of other members of the community, representing the organic and spontaneous expression of mutual aid among Palestinians. In the context of escalating settler pogroms, fellow members of the community are about the only protection that Palestinians have from violent Jewish Israeli settlers, who continue to kill Palestinians across West Bank towns.

Since the start of the year, over 260 Palestinians have been injured in attacks by Israeli settlers, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), a threefold increase compared to the monthly average of 30 to 105 injuries per month during 2023.

R.M. says that in Sinjil, these attacks have become almost daily. “It was no longer logical to continue with the same old approach in defending our people and lands,” he explains.

In July 2025, a large-scale settler attack near the town left two Palestinians dead and at least 58 others injured. Since then, local accounts indicate a dramatic shift in the frequency of attacks from roughly one incident per month before October 7 to near-daily assaults on the village.

“How often does it happen now?” I ask.

R.M. lets out a short laugh. “You don’t count like that anymore,” he says. “You count the quiet nights.” He pauses. “And there aren’t many.”

Previously, volunteers relied on an individual faz’a whenever an attack occurred, informing neighbors and acquaintances. But as attacks grew more violent and frequent, it became essential to establish committees focused on early warning, monitoring, and observation, enabling the village to gather and defend its unarmed residents.

“As soon as we spot the attacking settlers, we notify the residents via WhatsApp or makhshir (walkie-talkies),” R.M. says, explaining that the protection mechanism was simply about safety in numbers. “The tent’s primary mission isn’t to attack; we do not possess tools or weapons comparable to what the settlers have. Instead, we ensure our bodies are always present in areas likely to be targeted, to deter an attack before it even begins.”

A sudden notification sound cuts through the silence. One of the men picks up the phone, reads quickly, then looks up.

“Movement,” he says.

No one panics, but the atmosphere shifts. Two of them grab flashlights and step outside into the darkness.

They return and talk at length about the difficulties and dangers surrounding them. “The attacks always come unexpectedly,” R.M. adds. “Palestinians are often asleep, usually after midnight or away at work, either outside the village or away farming. The attackers are usually heavily armed, and our reaction is entirely spontaneous.”

On the first night of Ramadan, the committee in Sinjil was blindsided by an attack of about 20 settlers, resulting in the injury of one member and the arrest of others for a week, during which they were severely beaten. At the same time, the army dismantled and confiscated the committee’s tent, according to R.M.’s account.

In the aftermath, the volunteers continued their work through nightly shifts in the open air for several months, exposed to the cold and darkness, until residents of the village collectively donated and helped rebuild another tent to resume their watch. Their work is still ongoing, and so are the settler attacks.

A tradition renewed

The emergence of grassroots protection committees in Palestinian villages reflects not merely a resemblance to past forms of collective action but a continuation of a deeply rooted tradition of community self-organization that dates back to the First Intifada, albeit under profoundly different political conditions.

“Despite the different political context, our historical experience in the First Intifada is similar to the experience of the committees today,”  R.S., a female member of a popular committee from Jenin refugee camp, told Mondoweiss. She now lives in the al-Jabriyat neighborhood in Jenin, after the refugee camp’s residents were forcibly expelled and have not been allowed back.

Between 1987 and 1993, the First Intifada was fought in everyday life. Under curfews, closures, and the constant threat of arrest, Palestinians built their own systems to survive. Local committees emerged in neighborhoods, villages, and refugee camps, organizing food distribution, running underground classes when schools were shut down, and providing basic medical support when access to care was blocked.

R.S expanded on the memory. “It provided many models of community work and steadfastness. No one was hungry then; anyone in need would find someone to help and lend a hand. Many residents offered their homes, mosques, and clubs to those displaced from the camp. No one slept in the open.”

“It’s different now,” she added quietly. “But also the same.”

According to the Colonization & Wall Resistance Commission, an official body aligned with the Palestinian Authority that documents Israeli settlement activity, the origins of the latest incarnation of the protection committees can be traced back to 2015, largely in the wake of the devastating Duma arson attack. Killed in the attack were members of the Dawabsheh family, including 18-month-old Ali and his two parents.

“The need for night guards became clear as a means to prevent settler attacks,” Amir Daoud, Director of Documentation at the Commission, told Mondoweiss. “At that stage, coordination took place with local and student forces, and a limited number of committees were formed in the villages most vulnerable to attack, with simple logistical support such as communication tools.”

One popular example was the “night confusion” units in places like the village of Beita and the battle over Jabal Sabih. The model, however, remained limited until October 7, when Daoud said settler violence escalated sharply across the West Bank, reshaping the role of these committees. What had been localized night-guard initiatives turned into a wider system of community protection, particularly against repeated nighttime arson attempts targeting homes. “This has contributed to the spread of the committee model across many communities,” he added.

But their role, Daoud stressed, extends beyond immediate protection. In a context where violence is often underreported or contested, these committees have become a form of ground-level documentation and public accountability. “These committees convey the situation as it is, moment by moment, from within villages and threatened areas, which gives us the ability to act legally and in the media with speed and effectiveness. Without this popular presence, many violations would remain invisible or difficult to prove. For us, they are an essential part of the system of steadfastness, not merely an organizational tool.”

Their structure, he noted, is deliberately uneven and locally adapted rather than centralized. Each village organizes itself according to geography and the specific threats it faces — whether from settler roads, proximity to outposts, or patterns of raiding. While some communities operate with external support and more advanced coordination tools, others rely on minimal resources, reflecting a fragmented but adaptive system of protection.

Yet while the ethos of collective care and “sumud” remains intact, the tools have fundamentally evolved. What was once organized through leaflets, strikes, and face-to-face mobilization has now shifted toward digital infrastructures that enable real-time coordination and immediate documentation. This transformation has introduced a critical new dimension: the ability to translate local experiences of violence into globally visible narratives.

“Social media has reshaped the nature of collective work within the protection committees,” R.S. from the Jenin committee said. “It relies heavily on applications like WhatsApp and Telegram for instant coordination, whether to report settler movements or organize night guards.”

[…]

Working with less and sharing the burden

Even though they leverage digital technologies, the local protection committees remain hamstrung by limited resources and an unpredictable terrain.

[…]

The groups have also faced harassment and attacks by settlers and the army, including incidents of direct gunfire targeting night patrol volunteers. In the village of Beit Lid, east of Tulkarem, which has faced repeated settler attacks, the committees faced an unexpected form of disruption. Young men in the village reported receiving sudden messages in their WhatsApp groups that appeared to come from the phone of a fellow volunteer who had been detained earlier that night by Israeli forces. The messages warned against gathering or attempting to mobilize in response to the attack.

[…]

“It later became evident to those involved that the phone had been used while he was in custody, turning a tool of coordination into a channel of intimidation.”

[…]

Mutual aid

Another way in which the committees operate is to engage in mutual aid efforts to deal with the aftermath of a settler attack.

[…]

One example of this is the town of Qaryut, which established a community compensation fund for those affected by settler attacks. “We established a committee of eight individuals and divided the tasks among them,” says S.A., a member of the committee. “Some members are responsible for monitoring and organization, others for assessing the damage caused by attacks to facilitate compensation, and others for the early warning system for the village residents.”

The compensation mechanism, he explains, was created to ensure that losses are not borne solely by victims. “The idea was that no one should feel that what happened concerns them alone,” he says, explaining that the entirely self-funded initiative is designed to provide financial support for damaged property, burned farmland, and affected families.

This system has been activated in response to repeated settler attacks in Qaryut, including a September 2024 raid in which two Palestinians were injured, and a March 2026 attack in nearby villages that left three people wounded and several vehicles and municipal property burned. Residents say settler violence has repeatedly combined physical assaults with large-scale agricultural and property damage. Alongside financial compensation, the fund also provides medical and basic health supplies for those injured in ongoing attacks, reinforcing a broader system of communal resilience in the face of repeated settler violence.

Across the West Bank, each community has improvised its own version of this system, using different tools, in different terrain, and carrying different risks.

[…]

Via https://libya360.wordpress.com/2026/04/30/the-night-guards-inside-the-grassroots-network-fighting-back-against-israeli-settler-attacks/

Google Partners with Pentagon to Sell Your Data

40+ Google Logos & Product Icons For Free Download - 365 Web Resources

Martin Armstrong

Apr 29, 2026

There has always been this convenient belief that Big Tech operates independently from government, as if the data you store, search, and upload exists in some neutral corporate space, but that illusion is breaking down rapidly as the lines between Silicon Valley and Washington disappear in real time.

Google has now entered into a classified agreement with the Pentagon allowing its artificial intelligence systems to be used for “any lawful government purpose,” which is a phrase that sounds benign until you understand what it actually means in practice.

This is not a narrow contract tied to a single project. It opens the door for integration into mission planning, intelligence analysis, and even weapons targeting systems operating on classified networks, and once those systems are embedded, the distinction between commercial technology and state infrastructure effectively disappears.

 

At the same time, Google does not retain control over how that technology is ultimately used, because under the terms being reported, the company has no ability to veto lawful government operations, meaning once access is granted, the downstream application is no longer in their hands.  Please be reminded that Google has been collecting data on everyone and everything for decades: Google Maps, Google Search, Google Photos, Google Drive, Gmail, etc.

This is where the narrative people have been told begins to collapse, because for years the assumption was that your data sat within a corporate ecosystem governed by terms of service and internal policies, yet what is now being constructed is something entirely different, a shared infrastructure where private data, artificial intelligence, and state power intersect.

Even inside Google, there is significant resistance to this shift, with more than 600 employees signing letters to CEO Sundar Pichai warning that these systems could be used for “lethal autonomous weapons and mass surveillance,” and expressing concern that once deployed in classified environments, there is no meaningful oversight or transparency. “We want to see AI benefit humanity; not to see it being used in inhumane or extremely harmful ways. This includes lethal autonomous weapons and mass surveillance but extends beyond,” the letter reads.

This is part of a broader shift in which every major AI company is now aligning with the defense sector, competing for contracts reportedly worth hundreds of millions of dollars, thereby transforming artificial intelligence from a commercial tool into a strategic asset within global power dynamics.

From my perspective, this follows the same pattern we see in every major cycle of power consolidation, where private innovation is gradually absorbed into state control during periods of rising geopolitical tension. Once that process reaches a certain threshold, the distinction between public and private effectively vanishes.

People focus on the wrong question, asking whether Google is “sharing your data” directly with the government, when the real issue is far more structural. Once the same systems that process your emails, photos, searches, and behavior are integrated into government operations, the architecture itself becomes unified, and access becomes a matter of policy, not possibility.

When artificial intelligence becomes the interface between data and decision-making, whoever controls that system controls the interpretation of reality itself, and that is where the real power lies. For the first time in history, we are witnessing the convergence of data, technology, and government authority into a single structure that has already become far too powerful to dismantle.

[…]

Via https://www.armstrongeconomics.com/government-surveillance/google-partners-with-the-pentagon-to-sell-your-data/

US blockade crumbles as Iran turns to overland routes

Pakistan and Iran have activated a transit corridor, forming a broad overland trade network linked to China.

Press TV

As the US intensifies its inhuman sanctions and seeks to stifle Iran’s economy through an illegal naval blockade, Tehran has made strategic adjustments.

Pakistan formally activated a new transit corridor through Iran on Friday, announcing that the inaugural shipment including frozen meat bound for Tashkent, Uzbekistan had been dispatched via the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) and Iranian overland routes.

The country designated six transit routes, including multiple key corridors connecting ports and border points inside Pakistan, forming a wide network for overland trade into Iran in a bid to bypass the maritime trade routes in the Persian Gulf.

The order, which took effect on April 25, aims to ease the logjam at Karachi Port and Port Qasim, where more than 3,000 Iran-bound containers have been stuck due to the ongoing US naval blockade of Iranian ports.

By using the new corridor, officials estimate travel time to the Iranian border will drop from 18 hours to just three hours, which in turn will lower logistics costs for regional traders.

The designated routes create a land bridge between Pakistan’s deep-sea ports and the Iranian border, offering a lifeline for third-country goods that that would otherwise be vulnerable to US naval piracy at sea.

For China, the world’s largest oil importer and the destination for an estimated 90 percent of Iran’s crude exports before the current war, the opening of overland alternatives carries acute strategic significance.

With the US Navy enforcing an illegal cordon at the mouth of the Gulf of Oman since April 13, the maritime route that once carried one-fifth of global petroleum has been hijacked by armed naval raid, subjected to systematic plunder.

The blockade’s primary target has always been as much about Beijing as Tehran. China purchases roughly 13 to 15 percent of its crude oil imports from Iran, volumes that before the war exceeded 1.38 million barrels per day.

Iranian crude, often trans-shipped through Malaysia and other intermediaries, feeds China’s independent “teapot” refineries and helps underpin Beijing’s energy security.

The Trump administration has made no secret of its intent to sever this flow. On April 23, Washington imposed sanctions on Hengli Petrochemical’s Dalian refinery, one of China’s largest independent processors, with 400,000 barrels per day capacity, alongside roughly 40 shipping companies and tankers involved in Iranian oil transport.

In a draconian announcement, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent warned that the US would constrict “the network of vessels, intermediaries and buyers Iran relies on to move its oil to global markets”.

Yet even as the American piracy tightens, the physical blockade is showing gaps. Satellite imagery and tracking data have revealed that several Iranian-flagged vessels under sanctions had sailed out of the Persian Gulf.

While tankers maneuver, Iran’s top diplomat has been building the political architecture for overland alternatives. Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi embarked on a high-stakes tour on April 23, travelling twice to Pakistan for consultations and to coordinate the corridor activation before heading to Oman and finally to Russia.

In Islamabad, the discussions reportedly focused on key issues, the details of which are not specified. But the tangible outcome was the corridor itself.

Pakistan’s new transit routes, connecting Gwadar, Karachi and Port Qasim to the border crossings of Gabd and Taftan, provide Iran with immediate access to CPEC’s road and rail infrastructure.

Gwadar was built with Chinese loans and Chinese labor precisely as a hedge against maritime chokepoints. Now, with the Sea of Oman effectively closed, goods moving overland from Iran to Gwadar can connect to Chinese markets via the CPEC network, bypassing the US Navy entirely.

On April 27, Araghchi met with President Vladimir Putin in St Petersburg for talks lasting more than 90 minutes. The Iranian foreign minister described the discussions as covering “all issues, both in bilateral relations and regional issues, as well as the issue of war and aggression by the US and Zionist regimes”.

According to media reports, the Russian president said Moscow “will do what it can to support the interests of Iran and other regional countries and help bring peace to West Asia as soon as possible”.

He added that “not only Russia, but now the whole world is admiring the Iranian people for their resistance against America”.

While Russia and Iran signed framework agreements on the International North-South Transport Corridor years ago, the current crisis has given those plans new urgency.

Araghchi used the St Petersburg meeting to reaffirm that Tehran views its relationship with Moscow as a “strategic partnership” that will continue “with greater strength and breadth”.

For China, Russia’s role is complementary. The INSTC offers a route from Mumbai to Moscow via Iranian rail links, a path that, if fully operationalized, would give Chinese goods another overland alternative to maritime shipping.

More immediately, Russia’s diplomatic cover complicates any US effort to pressure Pakistan or other neighbors into closing their borders to Iranian trade.

The central question for Washington is whether maritime piracy can achieve what missiles and airstrikes failed to deliver. After the US-Israeli strikes on Iran on February 28, it became clear that bombing alone would not bring down the country to its knees.

The blockade represents a shift to economic suffocation aiming to squeeze Iran’s oil revenues. But the strategy carries costs. Global oil prices remain elevated near $120 per barrel, stoking inflationary pressures across the US, Europe and beyond.

More fundamentally, the blockade’s success depends on land routes remaining closed. Pakistan’s activation of the transit corridor, Russia’s support, and China’s quiet integration of Gwadar into its supply chain collectively suggest that Tehran is building an overland escape hatch that the US Navy cannot interdict under any circumstance.

“Whenever there are sanctions or blockades, there will also be workarounds, whether informal channels or other flexible arrangements,” Wang Yiwei, director of Renmin University’s Institute of International Affairs, told The Straits Times. “The key question we should be asking is: can this blockade actually be sustained?”

For now, the answer appears uncertain but with each new overland corridor, Iran is proving impossible to seal and China unlikely to be starved.

[…]

Israeli army facing ‘continuous rise’ in soldier suicides

An Israeli soldier crying in the occupied territories. (File photo)

Press TV

A report says that the Israeli military is witnessing a continuous and alarming rise in soldier suicides, a trend linked to widespread post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) stemming from Israel’s prolonged and repeated aggressions on multiple fronts. 

‎The latest figures, published by Haaretz, come after nearly 10 soldiers took their own lives in recent weeks.

‎According to the newspaper, at least six active-duty soldiers and three non-active reservists died by suicide this month alone.

“At least 10 active-duty soldiers have died by suicide since the beginning of the year, including six in April. Three other soldiers who served in the reserves during the war died by suicide this month while no longer in active service. Two police officers, including a conscripted Border Police officer, also died by suicide this month,” Haaretz reported, noting a “continued rise.”

‎Earlier this year, the outlet recorded 22 soldier suicides in 2025, a 15-year high.

‎The trend accelerated after October 7, 2023, when Israel launched its genocidal assault on Palestinian civilians in the besieged Gaza Strip. Since then, Israel’s military aggression, from Gaza to Lebanon to Syria has deepened a growing mental-health crisis inside the ranks.

‎Despite the scale of the crisis, the report says the Israeli military has reduced mental-health support, contradicting its public claims. Mandatory psychological debriefings for reservists were cancelled in February.

“After the war with Iran and the increase in the military budget, the army decided to reinstate the debriefings, though not across the board,” the report noted.

‎Still, Haaretz documented several cases of Israeli soldiers along the Lebanese border and in the occupied West Bank being released in recent weeks without seeing any mental-health professional.

‎An army source told the outlet that officials are “struggling to take effective steps to reduce the phenomenon, especially in cases where distressed soldiers do not seek treatment.”

‎A senior Israeli military official admitted: “At the beginning of the war, we thought we had the situation under control and it blew up in our faces.”

‎Some soldiers described being abandoned by the system after returning from the battlefield.

“It’s simply irresponsible to send us home like this. They spend billions on munitions and interceptors, and they save money on this?” one soldier told Haaretz.

“It’s like putting a Band-Aid on a bleeding main artery,” another said.

‎Even though many Israeli troops publicly celebrated the destruction inflicted on the blockaded Gaza Strip, others have broken under the psychological toll.

“Everyone in the army who is not dead or injured is mentally damaged. There are very few who returned to fight. And they’re not quite right either,” a soldier’s parent previously told Hebrew media.

‎Throughout the aggression, Israeli forces failed to defeat the Hamas resistance movement and suffered heavy battlefield losses.

‎As Israel’s illegal invasion of Lebanon expands, its forces remain stretched across Gaza and Syria.

‎Since the start of March 2026, at least 16 Israeli soldiers have been killed by Hezbollah fighters in south Lebanon.

‎This week, a military contractor was killed by a Hezbollah drone while demolishing civilian homes in the area.

‎A new poll by Israel’s public broadcaster KAN shows that a majority of Israelis believe that the Zionist regime has failed to secure victory in any war since October 2023.

[…]

Major Fire Disables US Guided Missile Destroyer

CBS reports that a major fire aboard the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Higgins has disabled the ship, causing a full loss of power and propulsion in the Indo-Pacific region.

Via https://t.me/presstv/187827

Iran signals decisive response to end US maritime bullying, piracy

A senior Iranian security source has indicated that Tehran is preparing what it describes as a decisive and potentially unprecedented response to ongoing US maritime piracy in the strategic waters surrounding the Strait of Hormuz.

Speaking to Press TV on Wednesday, the source warned that continued US actions, described as a form of maritime blockade, would soon be met with a direct military response. “The continued US acts of piracy and maritime bullying will be met with a practical and unprecedented response,” the source stated, signaling a shift away from restraint toward escalation.

According to the official, Iran’s armed forces, operating under the central command structure of Khatam al-Anbiya Headquarters, now view continued patience as no longer strategically viable. The source emphasized that a “painful response” has become necessary if Washington maintains what Tehran considers an illegal siege around one of the world’s most critical energy corridors.

‘Maritime piracy’ framing and strategic messaging

Iranian officials are increasingly framing US naval actions as “maritime piracy,” an escalation that reflects both legal positioning and signaling. The source reiterated that Tehran no longer sees the United States as confronting a passive or predictable adversary.

He pointed to Iran’s historical experience in “imposed wars,” arguing that past confrontations have reshaped the balance of expectations. Iran, he said, has demonstrated the capacity to neutralize US strategies through resilience, asymmetric tactics, and strategic patience.

[…]

Via https://english.almayadeen.net/news/politics/iran-signals-decisive-response-to-end-us-maritime-bullying

Beijing accuses Washington of smear campaign over ownership of two Panama Canal ports

US squares up to China over Panama Canal

RT

The US has announced a six-nation coalition aimed at pressuring China to relinquish its interests in two ports in the Panama Canal, accusing Beijing of infringing on Panama’s sovereignty and politicizing global trade. China has called the claims “baseless.”

The development is part of a pattern of US efforts to push China out of Latin America. The US National Security Strategy calls for non-Western “competitors” to be prevented from owning or controlling key assets in the Western Hemisphere.

Last year, US President Donald Trump claimed that China is “operating the Panama Canal” and threatened to “take it back.”

The US State Department issued a joint statement on Tuesday with Bolivia, Costa Rica, Guyana, Paraguay, and Trinidad and Tobago, saying they support Panama against what they describe as external pressure from China.

”Any attempts to undermine Panama’s sovereignty are a threat to us all,” the statement read, adding that Panama “must remain free from any undue external pressure,” and that freedom in the region is “non-negotiable.”

China rejected the accusations, with the Foreign Ministry hitting back on Wednesday against what it called a smear campaign.

”It is the United States that is politicizing and over-securitizing the port issue… hypocritically posturing and spreading rumors and smears everywhere,” spokesman Lin Jian said, dismissing the claims as “baseless and a complete distortion of facts.”

Lin urged the countries involved not to “be deceived or used by forces with ulterior motives” regarding the port inspections, which he said were conducted lawfully.

The US-led campaign follows a ruling in January by Panama’s Supreme Court that annulled contracts held by a subsidiary of Hong Kong-based CK Hutchison Holdings for the Balboa and Cristobal, two key ports at the canal’s entrances – a move that the US has backed.

The Chinese company, which managed the terminals for nearly three decades, has contested the ruling, alleging unlawful expropriation, and has launched international arbitration, seeking over $2 billion in reparations.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/business/639260-us-led-coalition-panama-china/

Netanyahu uses aid flotilla as excuse to cut short corruption court session

Netanyahu shortens corruption hearing to rush to security meeting on Gaza aid flotilla.

Press TV

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has shortened a court hearing held to examine his corruption charges to attend an alleged security meeting dedicated to an aid flotilla heading toward the Gaza Strip.

Reports in the Israeli media on Wednesday said that Netanyahu had requested an early exit from the legal hearing into three cases of bribery, corruption and breach of public trust.

Judges initially refused but later allowed a one-hour break, the reports said, adding that Netanyahu then held urgent security talks about the vessel convoy expected to reach the besieged Gaza soon.

Netanyahu faces serious criminal allegations that could result in a prison sentence if he is convicted.

The charges were formally brought several years ago, but he has always escaped a proper and lengthy trial, citing security concerns that he and his supporters allege are threats to the Israeli regime.

The Gaza aid fleet of ships, named Freedom Flotilla, left the Spanish port of Barcelona on April 12 before anchoring near the Italian island of Sicily. The convoy seeks to deliver relief supplies to local residents of Gaza amid tight controls imposed by the Israeli regime on the Palestinian territory.

A similar mission was met with military action on open waters last year, leading to the capture and removal of hundreds of activists.

The flotilla carries activists and volunteers from multiple countries. Organizers say they are determined to break Israel’s maritime blockade on the Palestinians despite previous violent encounters.

Gaza has been under a strict ban on access to humanitarian supplies, including food, fuel and medicine, for nearly two decades. Those bans have been intensified in recent months following a two-year genocidal war by the Israeli regime on the territory which left more than 72,000 people dead and more than 172,000 injured.

Most of Gaza’s inhabitants have lost their homes due to widespread destruction caused by the war of aggression that began in October 2023.

International organizations continue to warn about worsening living conditions in Gaza as people are deprived of their basic necessities because of the Israeli siege, while medical facilities have suffered extensive damage.

[…]

Pentagon chief grilled in Congress over huge cost of war against Iran 

US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, testifies before a US House Armed Services Committee hearing on Capitol Hill on April 29, 2026.

Press TV

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth was grilled by members of Congress over the enormous cost of the joint American-Israeli military aggression against Iran.

The hearing on Wednesday came after the Pentagon revealed that the aggression against Iran has cost the United States some $25 billion so far.

Jules Hurst, a senior Pentagon official, disclosed the sum to members of the Armed Services Committee of the US House of Representatives as he insisted that most of the money had been spent on munitions.

However, while facing questions from US lawmakers, Hegseth said the cost of the war, which is equal to the entire budget of the US space agency NASA for this year, was justified, while repeating the administration’s false accusations about Iran’s nuclear program.

“What would you pay to ensure Iran does not get a nuclear bomb? What would you pay?” Hegseth asked members of Congress.

The controversial US war minister, who is quite known for his odd behavior, burst into anger when faced with questions about the failure of the US aggression on Iran and the fact that Washington has not been able to conclude the war.

Hegseth called lawmakers who criticize the war and call it a quagmire a group of “reckless, feckless, and defeatist” Congressional Democrats.

He also refused to answer a question whether he had recommended President Donald Trump to start a war with Iran, while also avoiding clearly stating what Washington’s plans were to prevent a closure by Iran of the Strait of Hormuz, which has caused global commodity and energy prices to skyrocket.

Asked about a February 28 attack on a school in southern Iran, which killed nearly 170 children and teachers and caused global uproar, the defense minister repeated previous statements that the attack is under investigation.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/04/29/767766/US-Hegseth-Congress-hearing-Iran-war-costs

The Myth of “Fossil Fuels” and the Myth US Transitioning Away from Oil to “Green” Energy

THE THEORY OF THE ABIOGENIC ORIGIN OF THE PETROLEUM, FORMED ...

by Brian Shilhavy
Editor, Health Impact News

April 24, 2023

The United States has been the world’s most dominant economic nation since World War 2, and the primary way they have maintained their empire has been by controlling the world’s oil and energy.

But the world is quickly changing as more and more people wake up to the fact that the Ukraine war has been a proxy war between the U.S. and Russia, and that the goal of the U.S. has been to cut off Europe, which does not produce near enough oil to meet the needs of its population, from the cheap energy they were importing from Russia.

The blowing up of the Nord Stream pipeline was part of that strategy, to force Europe to start buying more of their energy from the U.S. instead of Russia.

But the rest of the world is striking back now, and quickly abandoning the U.S. dollar as the world’s reserve currency, which has been called the “petrol dollar,” being the currency that the world has used to trade oil.

In order to convince the American public to support the endless wars the U.S. has engaged in since the end of WW II, which have primarily been wars to control the world’s oil, they have had to engage in decades of propaganda spreading lies and myths to justify their military actions.

So let’s dispel some of these myths regarding energy and oil, including the myth that petroleum is a “fossil fuel” and not “renewable.”

Myth #1: The U.S. is Switching to “Green” Energy to Reduce Carbon Emissions and Our Dependency on Oil

With legislation being passed at both the State and Federal levels to force Americans to consume less energy produced by “fossil fuels” and start using more “alternative energy” sources, such as electrical vehicles in place of gas-powered vehicles, it must be true that the U.S. is transitioning away from oil, correct?

Based on the evidence, this is not only false, but the opposite is true.

Within the past few weeks, the Biden Administration approved ConocoPhillips’ $7 billion oil and gas drilling Willow project in Alaska’s National Petroleum Reserve (source), and they also allowed 73.3 million acres of the Gulf of Mexico to be leased for oil drilling by 32 oil companies (source).

[…]

Myth #2: The U.S. Produces Enough Oil for Its Population, but Lacks Refineries to Refine it Because No Permits Have Been Issued Since 1977 to Build a New Refinery

This myth has been told so many times over the past few years, I actually thought it was true until I did some checking to verify it.

[…]

But at the U.S. Energy Information Administration website, they have a page titled When was the last refinery built in the United States?

On that page, they list 16 new refineries that have been built since 1977, including 2 in 2021. (See chart above.)

[…]

Yes, it is not surprising that the “hefty $2 billion price tag was no match for Exxon, who completed the expansion on time and on budget“, given that they had their most profitable year on record in 2022 and had plenty of money to spend!

To believe what the U.S. Government and their puppet corporate media is saying about the U.S. transitioning away from its dependence on “fossil fuels” is to completely ignore the actual facts that prove it is just the opposite.

Myth #3: Petroleum is a Fossil Fuel with Limited Supplies and is Not Renewable

This is the biggest myth of all, the myth that oil comes from decaying fossils of animals and plant life formed over billions of years.

This is the myth that allows the oil barons to control the world, by simply reducing output and controlling prices to create “energy shortages,” when in fact many scientists believe that petroleum is the second most plentiful liquid on the planet, second only to water.

The alternative “abiotic” view is that oil is continually being produced by the earth.

This information is hard to find in English, and much of the research on “abiotic oil” has been conducted by Russian scientists for many decades now.

[…]

There are a couple of videos I was able to find that give a short summary of “abiotic oil.” One of the main videos that is circulating in the Alternative Media video channels is a presentation given by someone who claims to be a geologist. It is a sloppy presentation, but the copy I found did list the sources, so I will include it here.

Sources:

[…]

But the best work on this topic of “abiotic oil”, in my opinion, is from Dr. John Kenney, the founder and Chairman of  JP Kenny Petroleum Ltd, and also a member of the Russian Academy of Sciences – Joint Institute of The Physics of the Earth.

[…]

Here is an interview he did with NPR (National Public Radio) back in 1994. He had just published a paper where he claimed to have created petroleum in a laboratory. Geological Petroleum: The True Origins of Hydrocarbons
Introduction
[…]
The following articles take up, from different perspectives, the modern Russian-Ukrainian theory of deep, abiotic petroleum origins. Because that subject is one of which most persons outside the former U.S.S.R. are not familiar, a short synopsis of it and of its provenance and history, are given now.

1. The essence of the modern Russian-Ukrainian theory of deep, abiotic petroleum origins.

The modern Russian-Ukrainian theory of deep, abiotic petroleum origins is an extensive body of scientific knowledge which covers the subjects of the chemical genesis of the hydrocarbon molecules which comprise natural petroleum, the physical processes which occasion their terrestrial concentration, the dynamical processes of the movement of that material into geological reservoirs of petroleum, and the location and economic production of petroleum.

The modern Russian-Ukrainian theory of deep, abiotic petroleum origins recognizes that petroleum is a primordial material of deep origin which has been erupted into the crust of the Earth. In short, and bluntly, petroleum is not a “fossil fuel” and has no intrinsic connection with dead dinosaurs (or any other biological detritus) “in the sediments” (or anywhere else).

The modern Russian-Ukrainian theory of petroleum is based upon rigorous scientific reasoning, consistent with the laws of physics and chemistry, as well as upon extensive geological observation, and rests squarely in the mainstream of modern physics and chemistry, from which it draws its provenance.

[…]

As will be shown explicitly in a following articles, petroleum has no intrinsic association with biological material. The only hydrocarbon molecules which are exceptions to this point are methane, the hydrocarbon alkane specie of lowest chemical potential of all hydrocarbons, and to a lesser extent, ethene, the alkene of the lowest chemical potential of its homologous molecular series.

Only methane is thermodynamically stable in the pressure and temperature regime of the near-surface crust of the Earth and accordingly can be generated there spontaneously, as is indeed observed for phenomena such as swamp gas or sewer gas.

However, methane is practically the sole hydrocarbon molecule possessing such thermodynamic characteristic in that thermodynamic regime; almost all other reduced hydrocarbon molecules excepting only the lightest ones, are high pressure polymorphs of the hydrogen-carbon system.

Spontaneous genesis of the heavier hydrocarbons which comprise natural petroleum occurs only in multi-kilobar regimes of high pressures, as is shown in a following article.

2. The historical beginnings of petroleum science, – with a touch of irony.

The history of petroleum science might be considered to have begun in the year 1757 when the great Russian scholar Mikhailo V. Lomonosov enunciated the hypothesis that oil might originate from biological detritus.

Applying the rudimentary powers of observation and the necessarily limited analytical skills available in his time, Lomonosov hypothesized that “… ‘rock oil’ [crude oil, or petroleum] originated as the minute bodies of dead marine and other animals which were buried in the sediments and which, over the passage of a great duration of time under the influence of heat and pressure, transformed into ‘rock oil’.”

[…]

The scientists who first rejected Lomonsov’s hypothesis, at the beginning of the nineteenth century, were the famous German naturalist and geologist Alexander von Humboldt and the French chemist and thermodynamicist Louis Joseph Gay-Lussac who together enunciated the proposition that oil is a primordial material erupted from great depth, and is unconnected with any biological matter near the surface of the Earth.

[…]

During the last quarter of the nineteenth century, the great Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleev also examined and rejected Lomonosov’s hypothesis of a biological origin for petroleum.

[…]

With extraordinary perception, Mendeleev hypothesized the existence of geological structures which he called “deep faults,” and correctly identified such as the locus of weakness in the crust of the Earth via which petroleum would travel from the depths.

3. The enunciation and development of modern petroleum science.

The impetus for development of modern petroleum science came shortly after the end of World War II, and was impelled by recognition by the government of the (then) U.S.S.R. of the crucial necessity of petroleum in modern warfare.

In 1947, the U.S.S.R. had (as its petroleum “experts” then estimated) very limited petroleum reserves, of which the largest were the oil fields in the region of the Abseron peninsula, near the Caspian city Baku in the present country of Azerbaijan.

At that time, the oil fields near Baku were considered to be “depleting” and “nearing exhaustion.”

During World War II, the Soviets had occupied the two northern provinces of Iran;  in 1946, the British government had forced them out.

By 1947, the Soviets realized that the American, British, and French were not going to allow them to operate in the middle east, nor in the petroleum producing areas of Africa, nor Indonesia, nor Burma, nor Malaysia, nor anywhere in the far east, nor in Latin America.

The government of the Soviet Union recognized then that new petroleum reserves would have to be discovered and developed within the U.S.S.R.

The government of the Soviet Union initiated a “Manhattan Project” type program, which was given the highest priority to study every aspect of petroleum, to determine its origins and how petroleum reserves are generated, and to ascertain what might be the most effective strategies for petroleum exploration.

At that time, Russia benefited from the excellent educational system which had been introduced after the 1917 revolution.  The Russian petroleum community had then almost two generations of highly educated, scientifically competent men and women, ready to take up the problem of petroleum origins.

[…]

In 1951, the modern Russian-Ukrainian theory of deep, abiotic petroleum origins was first enunciated by Nikolai A. Kudryavtsev at the All-Union petroleum geology congress.

[…]

Kudryavtsev was soon joined by numerous other Russian and Ukrainian geologists, among the first of whom were P. N. Kropotkin, K. A. Shakhvarstova, G. N. Dolenko, V. F. Linetskii, V. B. Porfir’yev, and K. A. Anikiev.

[…]

With the passing of the first decade of the modern theory, the failure of the previous, eighteenth century hypothesis of an origin of petroleum from biological detritus in the near-surface sediments had been thoroughly demonstrated, the hypothesis of Lomonosov discredited, and the modern theory firmly established.

[…]

Such predictive proof of the geologists assertions for the modern Russian-Ukrainian theory of deep, abiotic petroleum origins had to wait almost a half century, for such required the development not only of modern quantum statistical mechanics but also that of the techniques of many-body theory and the application of statistical geometry to the analysis of dense fluids, designated scaled particle theory.

Read the full Introduction and other articles at Gasresources.net.