US pressures Israel on West Bank, Rubio voices confidence in Gaza truce

Update US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu shake hands, following their meeting at the Prime Minister’s office in Jerusalem, October 23, 2025. (Reuters)
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US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu shake hands, following their meeting at the Prime Minister’s office in Jerusalem, October 23, 2025. (Reuters)
Update US Vice President JD Vance waves as he boards Air Force Two en route to Washington, DC, at Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv on October 23, 2025. (AFP)
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US Vice President JD Vance waves as he boards Air Force Two en route to Washington, DC, at Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv on October 23, 2025. (AFP)
Update US pressures Israel on West Bank, Rubio voices confidence in Gaza truce
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Israeli settlers sing and dance as they wait for the return of freed hostage Avinatan Or in the Israeli settlement of Shiloh in the occupied West Bank on October 21, 2025. (AFP)
Update US pressures Israel on West Bank, Rubio voices confidence in Gaza truce
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The Israeli national flag flutters as apartments are seen in the background in the Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. (AFP)
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Updated 23 October 2025
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US pressures Israel on West Bank, Rubio voices confidence in Gaza truce

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu shake hands.
  • “It won’t happen,” Trump said when asked about calls in Israel to annex the Palestinian West Bank
  • “It won’t happen because I gave my word to the Arab countries,” US president said

JERUSALEM: US President Donald Trump issued a stark warning to Israel over annexing the West Bank in an interview published Thursday, as visiting Secretary of State Marco Rubio voiced confidence that a US-backed ceasefire in Gaza would hold.
Trump’s remarks were made to Time magazine by telephone on October 15 — just days after the Gaza truce plan he spearheaded took effect — but were only published on Thursday.
“It won’t happen,” Trump said when asked about calls in Israel to annex the Palestinian West Bank, which has been occupied by Israel since 1967. “It won’t happen because I gave my word to the Arab countries.”
He added: “Israel would lose all of its support from the United States if that happened.”
Israeli lawmakers on Wednesday advanced two bills paving the way for West Bank annexation, leading to condemnation Thursday from US Vice President JD Vance, who was in Israel at the time and who echoed Trump’s comments.
The United States remains Israel’s most important military and diplomatic supporter.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud party boycotted and criticized the vote, though members of his ruling coalition support annexation.
Arab and Muslim countries, which the US has been courting to provide troops and money for a stabilization force in Gaza — a key element of Trump’s ceasefire plan — have warned that annexation of the West Bank is a red line.
In a joint statement carried by Saudi state media on Thursday, more than a dozen such states including Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Turkiye condemned the Israeli parliament’s vote.
Rubio, one of a string of top US officials to visit Israel in recent days, had warned before his arrival that the annexation moves were “threatening” to the fragile ceasefire in Gaza.
But he expressed confidence in the truce after meeting with Netanyahu on Thursday.
“We feel confident and positive about the progress that’s being made. We’re clear-eyed about the challenges, too,” said Rubio, just hours after Vance wrapped up his own three-day visit.

- ‘Very stupid’ -

As he ended his trip, Vance hit out at the votes in Israel’s parliament in favor of examining two annexation bills, which mean they will be brought forward for further readings.
“If it was a political stunt it was a very stupid political stunt and I personally take some insult to it,” Vance said.
“The West Bank is not going to be annexed by Israel, the policy of the Trump administration is that the West Bank will not be annexed by Israel, that will continue to be our policy.”
Netanyahu, standing next to Rubio after their meeting Thursday, was quick to avoid any suggestion of tension with Washington, calling the secretary an “extraordinary friend of Israel” and saying that the back-to-back visits were part of a “circle of trust and partnership.”
Violence has surged in the West Bank since the war began in Gaza with Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack.
According to the Ramallah-based Palestinian health ministry, Israeli troops and settlers have killed nearly 1,000 Palestinians, including militants and civilians, since October 2023.
Over the same period, at least 43 Israelis, including members of the security forces, have died in Palestinian attacks or Israeli operations, official figures show.
The Palestinian Authority exercises limited self-rule in parts of the West Bank.

- ‘Tough task’ -

The Gaza truce faced its toughest test on Sunday, when Israeli forces launched strikes in Gaza after two soldiers were killed. The strikes killed at least 45 Palestinians, according to the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza.
Gaza’s Nasser Hospital said that one person was killed in an Israeli drone strike on Thursday in the Khan Yunis area.
During his visit, Vance warned that disarming Hamas and rebuilding Gaza would be a “very, very tough task.”
Under Trump’s 20-point peace plan, an international security force drawn from Arab and Muslim allies would oversee Gaza’s transition as Israeli troops withdraw.
Delegations from Hamas and its rival Fatah, meanwhile, met in Egypt to discuss post-war arrangements for Gaza, Egypt’s state-linked Al-Qahera News reported on Thursday.

- ‘Not enough food’ -

In Gaza, civilians displaced by two years of war continued to struggle.
“We were afraid of dying during the war, and now we’re afraid of living after it,” said Maher Abu Wafah, 42.
“Our lives and our children’s future are slipping away before our eyes. We just want a stable life.”
The World Health Organization said on Thursday there had been little improvement in the amount of aid going into Gaza since the ceasefire took hold — and no observable reduction in hunger.
“The situation still remains catastrophic because what’s entering is not enough,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told reporters, lamenting that “there is no dent in hunger because there is not enough food.”


How Israel’s expansion into Syria uprooted families and undermined regional stability

How Israel’s expansion into Syria uprooted families and undermined regional stability
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How Israel’s expansion into Syria uprooted families and undermined regional stability

How Israel’s expansion into Syria uprooted families and undermined regional stability
  • Israel has advanced deeper into Syria since Assad’s ouster, marking a shift from earlier low-intensity campaign
  • Rights monitors have documented home demolitions, abuses, and arrests, accusing Israel of possible war crimes

LONDON: Almost immediately after the collapse of Bashar Assad’s regime on Dec. 8 last year, Israeli troops entered southern Syria’s Quneitra province and began raiding properties.

Residents recall their homes shaking as armored vehicles rolled through their normally quiet villages and troops took control of areas close to the disputed border with Israel.

“It was clear from their behavior that they intended to stay,” one woman from Al-Hamidiyah village said, recalling the day Israeli soldiers raided her home.

She told researchers from the New York-based Human Rights Watch that soldiers pointed their guns at her and her two daughters. They also forced her husband and son into another room at gunpoint.

“My daughters and I were held like that from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. My husband and son weren’t released until 11 p.m.,” she said. “The soldiers sat in our living room, laughing and speaking a language we didn’t understand, as if it were their house.”

Following Assad’s ouster in a rapid rebel offensive, Israel moved quickly to exploit the power vacuum. Its forces advanced deep into the UN-monitored demilitarized zone separating the occupied Golan Heights from the rest of Syria.

Soon, Israeli troops established nine military posts stretching from Mount Hermon through Quneitra city to parts of western Daraa.

The HRW documented widespread abuses against civilians in a report published on Sept. 17.

In Al-Hamidiyah, a village in the countryside of Quneitra, Israeli troops reportedly demolished at least 12 buildings on June 16, displacing eight families, to establish a military installation. But residents said expulsions began the same day Assad’s government fell.

“Our house was closest to the military post, so it was first to be demolished,” one villager told the HRW. “The land surrounding it, which we had planted with trees, was completely bulldozed along with the house.”

“Nothing was left,” he added. “We’ve been living under extremely difficult conditions ever since we lost our home and land.”

As the months passed, tensions continued to escalate.

On Oct. 18, Israeli forces set up a checkpoint on the road linking Ofania and Jubata Al-Khashab, where they allegedly intimidated and assaulted civilians, according to the Syrian state-run Alikhbaria TV.

Nearly three days later, Israeli forces raided Al-Hamidiyah again to conduct excavation work, Syria’s state news agency SANA reported on Oct. 22. They were accompanied by heavy machinery, including drilling rigs and bulldozers.

Nearby, in the town of Jubata Al-Khashab, Israeli forces reportedly cleared further tracts of land — including a century-old forest reserve — to build another military installation.

The HRW also documented severe restrictions that cut residents off from their farmland and grazing areas. Locals said troops bulldozed or fenced off agricultural plots, groves, and pastures.

“We own agricultural land with a total area of 50 dunams (5 hectares),” one woman said. “Part of it was cultivated with wheat or barley, while the other part was used for grazing sheep.”

She told the HRW that Israeli forces built a high earthen berm that blocked access to the entire property and placed it under military control.

The HRW report detailed arbitrary arrests and the transfer of detainees into Israel, including a 17-year-old from Jubata Al-Khashab arrested in April and held without charge.

Shortly after midnight on June 12, Israeli forces, backed by armored vehicles, heavy equipment, and police dogs, raided the village of Beit Jinn in the Damascus countryside, 3 kilometers east of the disengagement line.

Residents told the HRW that soldiers arrested seven men and killed another who had cognitive disabilities.

The Israeli military told Reuters the detainees belonged to Hamas and were planning “multiple terror plots” against Israeli civilians and troops in Syria. It said the men were transferred into Israel for further interrogation.

Syria’s Interior Ministry rejected the claim, saying those arrested were local civilians, not Hamas members. The ministry condemned the raid, which lasted around 45 minutes, as a “blatant violation” of Syria’s sovereignty.

The HRW said Israel’s forced displacements, home demolitions and land seizures constitute war crimes under international law. “Israel’s documented actions in southern Syria violated the laws of war,” the monitor added.

The Israeli military, however, maintains that its operations comply with international law. It described the demolitions as “necessary operational measures,” claiming no civilians lived in the affected buildings.

The HRW said these actions were part of a broader strategy to entrench Israel’s military presence in southern Syria — a view seemingly confirmed by Israeli officials.

In August, Israel’s Defense Minister Israel Katz said Israeli troops “will remain on the summit of (Mount) Hermon and in the security zone that is vital to defending communities in the Golan and Galilee from threats emanating from the Syrian side.”

Israeli troops captured the Syrian peak of Mount Hermon — the highest point on the eastern Mediterranean coast — almost immediately after Assad’s fall.

In a post on X, Katz said maintaining control there was a “central lesson from the events of Oct. 7,” referring to the 2023 Hamas-led attack on southern Israel that killed 1,200 and saw 251 taken hostage.

Israel’s retaliatory offensive in Gaza has killed at least 68,280 people, according to the local health authority, displaced more than 90 percent of the population, and reduced much of the Palestinian enclave to rubble.

Katz made similar remarks in April, saying that Israeli troops would remain in Gaza, Lebanon, and Syria indefinitely, The Associated Press reported.

“Unlike in the past, the (Israeli military) is not evacuating areas that have been cleared and seized,” Katz said in a statement on April 17.

He added that the military “will remain in the security zones as a buffer between the enemy and (Israeli) communities in any temporary or permanent situation in Gaza — as in Lebanon and Syria.”

Israel’s posture marks a shift from its earlier low-intensity campaign against Hezbollah and Palestinian factions in Syria, which began around 2017.

During Assad’s rule, Israel frequently launched airstrikes, particularly targeting Iranian-backed forces and Hezbollah assets near Damascus and across southern Syria.

By 2018, Israeli officials said they had carried out more than 200 airstrikes on Iranian targets in Syria in about 18 months.

However, Hiba Zayadin, senior Syria researcher at the HRW, said that Israel’s recent actions in southern Syria “are not legitimate acts of military necessity, but pages out of the playbook used in the occupied Palestinian territory and other parts of the region, stripping residents of basic rights and freedoms.”

Analysts say these moves reflect a calculated effort by Israel to reshape the post-Assad landscape to its advantage.

“(The late American political scientist Henry) Kissinger famously warned that ‘the desire of one power for absolute security means absolute insecurity for all the others,’” Joshua Landis, director of the Center for Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma, told Arab News.

“This dictum expresses a core principle of realist international relations theory, which emphasizes the balance of power.

“A nation’s attempt to achieve complete and undeniable security will necessarily require it to amass so much power that it threatens all other nations, leading to a breakdown of stability and a heightened risk of war.

“Today, Israel has amassed so much power that it can threaten its neighbors with little or no risk to itself, and it is doing so.

“By seizing more Syrian territory, demolishing homes, and depriving farmers of their livelihoods, Israel is setting itself and the region up for another round of wars and regional conflict.”

He warned that “the international community has accepted this imbalance and fails to do anything about it despite the heavy future price that is obvious to all.”

Since Oct. 7, 2023, Israel has carried out strikes in Iran, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, and even Qatar, while continuing its war in Gaza and intensifying its occupation of the West Bank.

In Syria alone, Israel’s air force and navy carried out more than 350 strikes within the first two days of Assad’s fall, destroying roughly 80 percent of the country’s strategic military arsenal. The attacks continued for months afterward.

“Israel’s occupation of southern Syria is a deliberate strategy to prevent the consolidation of a unified Syrian state,” Nanar Hawach, a senior Syria analyst at the International Crisis Group, told Arab News.

“This policy of managed instability aims to create a permanent buffer zone and a controlled ‘border society,’ which secures Israel’s northern frontier on its own terms.

“Beyond the southern borders, Israeli actions create an unstable environment that effectively discourages regional investment needed for economic recovery, prolonging Syria’s fragility.

“This approach, while providing a security advantage for Israel, comes at the cost of Syrian sovereignty and regional stability, trapping the country in a cycle of poverty, political fragility, and instability.”

In February, Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar openly advocated a federal Syria composed of autonomous regions — a move analysts warn could deepen internal fragmentation and undermine efforts at national stabilization.

Syrian economists warn that without security and stability, the country risks losing crucial regional and international investment.

Landis said Israel and Syria have a rare opportunity to pursue peace.

“Unfortunately, this opportunity is being squandered because of the dramatic imbalance of power and because Israel seeks absolute security through the force of arms rather than diplomacy,” he said.

Israel has voiced growing distrust of Syria’s interim government, especially after attacks on Druze populations in the south in July.

To counter that, it has cultivated ties with local Druze communities, supporting their autonomy and influence as a buffer against Damascus’ central authority.

In February, Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israeli forces would remain on Mount Hermon “for an unlimited period of time.” He demanded “the full demilitarization of southern Syria from troops of the new Syrian regime.”

He also said Israel would not tolerate any threats to Druze communities in the region.

Syria’s interim president, Ahmed Al-Sharaa, has repeatedly stated that his government does not seek conflict with Israel and poses no threat to its neighbors.

“We are not the ones creating problems for Israel. We are scared of Israel, not the other way around,” Al-Sharaa said on Sept. 24, during an event hosted by the Middle East Institute in New York.

He warned that Israel’s continued airspace violations and territorial incursions risk derailing US-brokered peace talks, which remain stalled over issues of sovereignty, withdrawal schedules, and minority protections.

Landis said Israel’s policies reflect a long-standing pattern.

“Since the 1967 (Arab-Israeli war), Israel has discovered that it can win lopsided victories,” he said. “Despite international insistence that it trade land for peace, Israel has chosen land over peace.

“By expanding its borders in the name of absolute security, Israel has squandered efforts to find a negotiated peace. The result is that it has locked the region into perpetual war.

“Israel also forces its allies in the US and Europe to choose between Israel and its Arab neighbors. The West has always chosen Israel, and thus, the imbalance continues and so does war.”