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Thundering On storms home to win Epsom Oaks
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Zverev eases past Mensik to reach second French Open final
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Yamal named La Liga player of the year
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England collapse gives New Zealand hope in first Test
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Lebanese leaders rebuke Iran as Israel, Hezbollah trade attacks
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Argentine rock legend Carlos 'Indio' Solari dies at 77
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FIFA ups payments to clubs who send players to World Cup
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Russian economy has not collapsed, Putin says at key forum
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Ukrainian sea drone explodes in Romanian port, no casualties
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Strong US job growth beats expectations in May, firming recent gains
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Nvidia's Huang arrives in South Korea with 'surprises', bets on robotics
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From Siberia to French Open final, Andreeva living 'dream'
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Chwalinska, the 'tennis freak' making Roland Garros history
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Israel strikes south Lebanon after warning to several areas
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Sea drone explodes in the Romanian port of Constanta, no casualties
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US Senate approves $70 billion for Trump immigration crackdown
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France questions judicial system after girl's suspected murder
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Israel strikes Lebanese village after warning to several areas
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UN doubles appeal for Lebanon aid to nearly $640 mn amid Israel war
Tanks in Gaza - Hopes dim?
Israeli armour pushed deep into Gaza City this month, marking a renewed ground phase of the war that began after the 7 October 2023 Hamas attacks. The advance, supported by sustained air and artillery strikes, has driven fresh displacement from the north of the enclave and re‑ignited a diplomatic clash over Palestinian statehood.
At the United Nations General Assembly on 26 September, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu used a high‑profile address to rebuff mounting international pressure for a two‑state outcome. He derided the latest wave of recognitions of Palestinian statehood by key Western capitals and repeated his long‑stated position that sovereignty west of the River Jordan must remain under Israeli control. In the same breath, he pledged to continue the campaign in Gaza until Hamas is dismantled and hostages are returned.
The duelling military and political tracks are tightly entwined. Israel’s ground manoeuvres, including tanks entering and encircling sectors of Gaza City, have coincided with a diplomatic realignment: the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia announced formal recognition of a Palestinian state during the week of 21–22 September, followed by France. Those moves, championed as an effort to salvage a two‑state horizon, were condemned by Israel as rewarding violence and dismissed by Mr Netanyahu as incompatible with Israel’s security imperatives. Washington, by contrast, has not joined the recognitions; the Trump administration has floated a new framework while urging progress on a hostage deal.
Inside Gaza, the humanitarian picture is stark. According to Gaza’s Ministry of Health, relayed through UN briefings, at least 65,419 people had been killed and 167,160 injured as of 24 September 2025, with casualty tallies rising during the latest Gaza City offensive. UN humanitarian officials report that only 14 hospitals remain even partially functional across the Strip—none at full capacity—after a series of closures and damage in September. Aid pipelines have been repeatedly disrupted by insecurity, route closures and fuel scarcity, compounding the risk of famine in the north.
The conflict’s spillover remains acute in the occupied West Bank, where hundreds of Palestinians have been killed or injured this year amid raids, settler violence and protests. Humanitarian monitors say the tempo of demolitions and displacement continues to rise, deepening the governance and security vacuum.
Israel argues that Gaza City is now the last significant bastion of organised Hamas resistance; military officials say the current operation is designed to break that cohesion while pressing for the release of remaining hostages. Palestinian civilians, many displaced multiple times, describe an impossible calculus as evacuation orders repeatedly shift across neighbourhoods without the guarantee of safe passage or shelter.
Diplomatically, recognition has symbolic punch but limited immediate effect on the ground. It hardens international expectations for a negotiated two‑state endgame even as Israel’s leadership rejects it; it also introduces new friction with allies over settlement expansion and the status of Jerusalem. For Palestinians, the cascade of recognitions confers legal and political standing, but cannot by itself halt fighting, deliver aid at scale or compel a ceasefire.
That gap—between the armour on the streets of Gaza and the speeches in New York—defines the present moment. Tanks and bulldozers are redrawing realities block by block; chancelleries are redrawing their maps of legitimacy. For now, the military logic and Mr Netanyahu’s rhetoric point in the same direction: a prolonged campaign with no near‑term pathway to an independent Palestinian state.
Turkey's President Erdogan shows supporters he is ready for a fight
Ukraine-War: Warfare's brave new world enters a military moral maze
Пригожин, тупая русская свинья, испугался в Бахмуте!
LIVE TRANSMISSION LONDON: Coronation King Charles III.
Три тупые свиньи: Пригожин, Шойгу и Путин!
Anti-social Russian gets a bashing as flag thief
Россия: Кто придет после военного преступника Путина?
Ukrainian army destroys Russian terror bastards
У российского террористического государства мало боеприпасов
Россия: путинские преступники заработали миллиард
Shrapnel pendant showing Russian "barbarism" - made by Ukrainian children!