Secretary of State Marco Rubio – Remarks in Israel

Headlines from the remarks of U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio during a visit to the International Coordination Center in Kiryat Gat:

Although there are difficulties in implementing the ceasefire, there are reasons for optimism.

We are working to create a better life for the residents of Gaza without Hamas.

If Hamas refuses to disarm, this will be a violation of the ceasefire agreement.

We expect the complete disarmament of Hamas.

All parties have agreed that Hamas will have no future role in the Gaza Strip.

The international force to be deployed in Gaza should be composed of soldiers from countries with which Israel feels comfortable (this is in response to the question regarding the deployment of Turkish soldiers – West Bank).

Applying Israeli sovereignty in the West Bank threatens the peace process; I believe this will not happen.

UNRWA will not be able to play any role in Gaza – it belongs to Hamas.

Judea & Samaria

Right now there are two different bills being pushed forward in the Israeli Knesset. Both dealing with Israeli sovereignty over the West Bank. Trump is once again dictating to Israel. This should be their decision. Covenant matters more than investments. Rh

Trump on applying Israeli sovereignty in Judea and Samaria: It won’t happen because I gave my word to the Arab states. Israel will lose all support from the US if it happens.

Judea and Samaria are the heartland of the Jewish ancestral homeland.
It is here that the stories of the patriarchs unfolded – the very foundation of our faith and history.

Now ask yourself: what matters more – appeasing Arab states that opposed even the move of the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, or standing firm for what is right according to biblical truth?

I’ll let you be the judge. Amir Tsarfati

Mamdani vows to ‘exhaust every legal option’ to arrest Netanyahu

We see what has happened to London and the entire European continent, reformation seems to be coming to Europe with a devastation that is soon to be on the shores of America.  The once great European capitals are now filled with the sound of the Muslim call to prayer.  Just as surely as the first reformation was brought to America, so too will this last reforming of Europe be here soon.

The effects of a Mandani victory will have lasting consequences on the once great city of New York.  Jews have continually supported far left wing Democrats, who have just as easily condemned the state of Israel as making a comment about the weather.  I hate to say it, but they are reaping what has been sown over the last 40 years.

What of the financial district of New York?  What of the stock market, (full blown socialism in a city with the world’s premier capitalist symbol) I think not.  Would a move outside of NY be a result. What of Mandani control of the police and the court systems.  The courts are already a joke,  And NO Mandani, you have no authority to arrest Prime Minister Netanyahu. 

If you think it’s bad now, just wait, “you ain’t seen nothing yet.”  The streets will be ablaze with Jew hatred that could make NY uninhabitable for Jews.  Amir Tsafati once said on a radio program, “there is no place safe for the Jews, but Israel.”  I totally agree.

How could this once great city allow a radical Islamist to govern NY.  How could the Democratic part allow this to happen? The only conclusion is they truly are the new Socialist Party of America.  

I see tears streaming down the face of Lady Liberty.  Rh

Source: All Israel News

Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic Socialist frontrunner in the New York City mayoral race, reiterated his vow to arrest Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu if Netanyahu enters New York City and stated that he would “exhaust every legal option” to put Israel’s leader in handcuffs.

Speaking with Martha MacCallum on Fox News yesterday (Wednesday), Mandani claimed that carrying out the International Criminal Court (ICC) arrest warrants against Netanyahu would uphold international law.

“I’ve said that this is a city that believes [in] international law, and this is a city that wants to uplift and uphold those beliefs,” he said.

For full article: All Israel News

The Land of Possibilities by Amit Segal on Israel Hayom

Here might be a different perspective on the Gaza ceasefire and the confusing and troubling issues of the Middle East. Peace is elusive and wrought with many dangers. Thought provoking, hope you enjoy the read. I certainly don’t agree with all that is written, but again a Jewish newspaper’s perspective. Rh

If Israelis had heard how the President of the United States spoke about the hostages, it’s doubtful that he would have received such thunderous cheers at Hostages’ Square last Saturday night. To say they were a secondary concern for him would be an understatement, and even that understates it. Donald Trump favored eliminating Hamas the American way, and 20 living hostages (he was always confused about their number and minimized it — I wonder what Sigmund Freud would have said) seemed to him a marginal matter, collateral damage

Only belatedly did he perceive how strategic the issue was for the Israelis, and therefore for their government as well. In the United States, presidents have usually not been criticized for meeting hostages’ families too little, but for doing so too often (for details, search “Ronald Reagan” on Google).

In one of the discussions before Operation Gideon’s Chariots B began, Netanyahu spoke about the scar that would remain in Israeli society if Israeli forces conquered Gaza City at the cost of the hostages’ lives. Allow me to guess that he never really believed the moment would come.

Indeed, in recent months, Netanyahu and Ron Dermer’s perception was that an operation to conquer Gaza City, if it happens, might begin, but certainly would not reach completion. Here is the inside story.

Following the successful war in Iran, Israel tried to use the momentum to reach a partial deal. The idea was to release half the hostages and, during a 60-day ceasefire, arrive more or less at the conditions achieved this week. But Hamas, inspired by a Gaza starvation campaign that was gaining international traction, refused. President Trump, still in the shadow of Israel’s victory in Iran, thought the IDF could eliminate the remnants of Hamas as quickly as it smashed Tehran’s nuclear program. The combination of Hamas’ refusal and the president’s ambition led Israel to decide to enter Gaza City.

The idea was proposed by Minister Avi Dichter: conquering the city is the end of Hamas, he said at one meeting. The magic happened almost immediately: “Even before our forces entered the city,” Dermer recounted, “three days of talk about the operation did what three months of negotiations failed to do. Hamas suddenly agreed to a partial deal. But by then time had already run out.”

Israel faced two options: one, to conquer the remainder of the strip and establish a military government with American support. Dermer and Netanyahu believed that would require national unity and backing from Trump. The first component did not exist, and the second was highly unlikely.

The second option was a plan manufactured by Israel, led by the Americans, and supported by Arab states. President Reagan once told his people: you’ll write the plans, and I’ll be the presenter who markets them. This plan was no different, with Dermer filling the role of the writer. It was clear that any plan presented as purely Israeli would be pronounced dead before it was even born. That doesn’t mean every tweet was coordinated, the minister said at the cabinet meeting this week, but on the big matters, Jerusalem and Washington moved together.

Thus began arduous negotiations with Middle Eastern countries. During a round of talks in New York, it seemed impossible to get all those elephants into the same private room. Nevertheless, Israel’s representatives returned from there with 17 substantive comments from the Sunni states and even an agreement in the offing.

Then came September 9. Early in the morning, a three-person telephone consultation was held about the strike: Prime Minister Netanyahu, Defense Minister Katz, and Minister Dermer. All three supported the attack. Many issues came up in the consultation, but one particular issue did not: none of them believed there was an Israeli commitment to the Qataris not to strike Hamas personnel on their soil. Netanyahu called President Trump minutes earlier, but the president was groggy after a late night of discussions. It took time to reach him. The strike went ahead.

So far, it’s unclear how senior Hamas figures escaped the attack, but it’s obvious that it brought the deal closer. I recently wrote that it was the most successful failed assassination in history, in the sense that it signaled to the Qataris that the war would come to them if they did not stop their double game.

Dermer sees it differently. He links the strike to the agreement, but in a completely different way. The Qataris, it turns out, were convinced that by agreeing to host the negotiations, they had obtained immunity from Israeli strikes on their soil. From their perspective, the strike was a blatant, offense breach of the commitment.

Qatar had been unable to bring a deal for a long time, but it’s not half bad at thwarting deals. “The spoiler state,” they called it in Jerusalem — one that can easily ruin any agreement, as it did to the Egyptian hostage deal that was forming last spring behind its back.

Qatar is a complicated nation, Netanyahu said recently. What is it made of? In Jerusalem they describe two trains running behind the same engine. One, led by the ruler’s mother and brother, supports the Muslim Brotherhood and is an unmistakable hater of Israel. The other, led by the prime minister and several other senior figures, seeks rapprochement with the West.

Around April, a turning point was identified in Doha. Relations with the United States tightened significantly, and Hamas, an oddly patronized child, became a burden and a stain. All the Arab states rushed to assemble at the emir’s conference, both in anger at Israel and fear of a blue-and-white domination of the Middle East.

The Americans’ genius was to convert that negative energy into fuel to propel negotiations to their goal. “You want Israel to stop? Then let’s end the war,” they told the Sunni countries, and thus enlisted them in a framework that seemed impossible: a pan-Arab, almost pan-Muslim commitment to the elimination of Hamas. Dermer drafted the apology for the death of the Qatari security official; in Doha they reciprocated with a goodwill gesture by dramatically toning down Al Jazeera’s hostile tone.

More than enlisting them against Hamas, which had annoyed the entire Arab world, the achievement was to enlist them for a framework that does not include the Palestinian Authority in the foreseeable future. That is, for example, what held the Emiratis back from entering Gaza a year and a half ago. In one sense, that is the great innovation: before the plan, Gaza belonged to the Palestinian Authority; now it is Arab-international until further notice. The PA, meanwhile, hates Hamas so much that it agreed.

Yes, there will be a two-state solution, Dermer said this week. But not between the river and the sea — within the Gaza Strip itself. The plan is that as long as Hamas does not disarm, reconstruction will begin — but only in the half of the strip under Israeli control. What two years of war did not accomplish will be done by market forces: where will the population feel it is better to live — amid the ruins under Hamas boots, or in a rehabilitated area with an Emirati-funded school and a trailer home for each family?

The Americans believe this is a temporary situation, and are convinced that Hamas will be disarmed soon. Israel, of course, is much more skeptical. In a recent meeting, IDF Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir made a request of the Americans: Explain to me please. Your multinational force, with a few battalions, enters a tunnel. Hamas operatives are armed there. How exactly does this disarm Hamas? Who exactly will hand over the weapons? And what if they don’t?

You didn’t believe the first phase would happen, the Americans said, believe that the second will happen too. Have a little faith, the Jews with an American flag on their lapel told the Jews with an Israeli flag. 

Hamas Reportedly Executes Over 30 Gazans As Terror Group Moves To Reassert Its Grip on the Strip

Article below from the “Times of Israel.” I guess this is in response to the report of yesterday that said many Gazans are finally speaking out on the horrible treatment and fear of Hamas.

A greatly weakened Hamas has sought to reassert itself in the Gaza Strip since a ceasefire took hold, killing at least 33 people in a crackdown on groups that have tested its grip and appearing to get a US nod to temporarily police the shattered enclave.

Pummeled by Israel during the war ignited by the October 7, 2023, attack that it led, Hamas has gradually sent its operatives back into the streets of Gaza since the ceasefire began on Friday, moving cautiously in case it suddenly collapses, according to two security sources in the territory.

On Monday, Hamas deployed members of its Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades military wing as it freed the last living hostages seized from Israel two years ago. It was a reminder of one of the major challenges facing US President Donald Trump’s effort to secure a lasting deal for Gaza, as the US, Israel and many other nations demand Hamas disarm.

Reuters footage shows dozens of Hamas fighters lined up at a hospital in southern Gaza, one wearing a shoulder patch identifying him as a member of the elite “Shadow Unit” that Hamas sources say was tasked with holding hostages.

One of the Gaza sources, a security official, says that since the ceasefire, Hamas forces have killed 32 members of “a gang affiliated with a family in Gaza City,” while six of its personnel had also been killed.

Later on Monday, a video circulating on social media appears to show several masked gunmen, some of them wearing green headbands resembling ones worn by Hamas, shooting with machine guns at least seven men after forcing them to kneel in the street. Posts identify the video as filmed in Gaza on Monday. Civilian spectators cheer “Allah Akbar,” and call those killed “collaborators.”

TIMES OF ISRAEL

Prophetic News – Hostage Release

Copied from Amir Tsafati

President’s 20 point plan, which Israel has accepted permits the resumption of war if Hamas refuses to disarm. This two year bloody war was not just :one more round” with Hamas

Israel will NOT agree to let Hamas remain armed or in power – which is precisely why it continues to control more that 50% of the Gaza Strip.

Once our hostages are no longer in Gaza, the task of disarming Hamas and demilitarizing the Strip – if it must be carried out by Israel – will become much easier.

IMO – Hamas can’t help themselves, reports are that they have already started to make plans to continue the fight! Rh

Trump wants this peace treaty to expand across the Middle East. “Stop the war, stop the fighting. the whole region wants peace.” Trump. Hope he is right, but as Reagan said “trust, but verify.” Rh

Interesting thought on Daniel 9:27. We know Trump wants peace throughout the Middle East, probably unattainable, but possible. God is in control.

Daniel 9:27 describes a figure who will “confirm a covenant with many.” The wording is striking — not “create,” but “confirm.” The Hebrew implies strengthening or enforcing an existing agreement.

We are Living in Prophetic Times.

Trump: “The choice of the Palestinians is clear, whether they continue with terror and hatred or with construction and rehabilitation.

Trump: “The whole region supports disarming Hamas and demilitarizing the Gaza Strip.”

It appears that Netanyahu will fly to Egypt with President Trump on Air Force One.” That my friends is a big deal. All the antagonist and despot who hate Israel will be there. Oh to be a fly on the wall of that meeting! Rh

Diggin Our Own Grave – Jim Fletcher

I have taken the liberty to once again share a wonderful article that makes perfect sense.  Please read and consider prayerfully.  I am in agreement 100%. Especially the part of Hamas should have surrender unconditionally.  Israel should have been left alone to finish the job.  And would have without Trump meddling! article below Rh

Diggin Our Own Grave by Jim Fletcher

October 8,2025

As we all suffer through another round of Hamas calling the shots in

“negotiations,” we also continue to see many of the ways in which Hamas built a power base globally.  That includes Western Media, including (and especially) Christian Media.  I follow these things closely, and the most outspoken leaders I’ve seen are

Dinesh D’Souza and Dumisani Washington. The former of course has gained fame as a political prisoner of the Obama Regime, and the latter—who used to work for Christians United for Israel—is heavily networked with black organizations that identify as Zionist.

Washington has been warning of problems pushed under the rug for a long time.  D’Souza in the last two weeks has almost come out of nowhere to fully support Israel.  Others, such as Pastor Jack Hibbs, also are outspoken.

That leaves the vast American Christian network sitting on its hands. Celebrity pastors and the largest ministries are too afraid of offending anyone, especially the Left.  Added to that is an indifferent, or covert hostility, to all things Jewish and Israel. I’ve written about this many times. But now that President Trump’s “21-Point Peace Plan” for ending the Hamas War has been announced, immediately we saw Hamas dictating terms. For example, the American and Israeli demand is that the hostages be released within 72 hours. We are now days past that deadline (another one set by Trump and ignored by Hamas) and Hamas has stated that Israel must fully withdraw before any hostages are released.  How can this be? How is it that the West is so weak as to be led by the nose by bloodthirsty terrorists? Yes, Hamas has some advantages on-the-ground, but it is a fact that global weakness and/or help has allowed Hamas to negotiate to infinity. They have no intention of complying but feel that Israelis and the wider world are so weary of the two-year battle that they will just submit. Again, moral weakness in the West has led

directly to this tragic set of circumstances. 

Take our old friends at Christianity Today, the “flagship” evangelical periodical, based in Chicago. I know that CT has been liberal at least for the last 30 years. From lauding former Iraqi foreign minister Tariq Aziz (under Saddam Hussein) as a brother in Christ, to finding subtle ways to criticize Israel, CT always takes the center-left perspective. Now fully stocked with Woke millennial staff, headed by Replacement-Theology editor-in-chief Russell Moore, CT this week published yet another aggravating article on the Hamas War.

In “Two Years After October 7, Christians See Fruit amid the Suffering,” Jill Nelson (who writes about her travels to Israel and a place called “Palestine”) spends the first five paragraphs mentioning the Oct. 7 attacks and aftermath, followed by 16 paragraphs on the suffering of the Arabs of Gaza.

And notice Nelson’s last paragraph:

“If the Jewish become Christians and the Muslims become Christians, then the peace of God will reign,” Khalil said. “I want the leader of Hamas to live in peace and to know Christ. And the most radical right Jewish leader, I want him to know Christ and

to live in peace.” To these people, Hamas is not radical; Israel is radical. This in large measure is why thousands of violent protests in support of Hamas have erupted all over the world. Including the U.S. (By the way, I don’t see a robust effort by the Administration to meet the Islam-threat head-on in our own country.  Cozying up to Qatar/Hamas seems bizarre and counter-productive.) The latest word is that there is a deal to be signed and from all indications…Hamas will survive. Now, of course, we don’t know what’s going on behind

the scenes. Hamas claims they are gathering all the living hostages. Israel will withdraw but remain in 57 percent of the Gaza Strip. If this version of the deal is accurate, Hamas was able to set terms, which is mind-boggling given the barbarism of Oct. 7. Again, all

this was made possible by a compliant West, and immoral people—individuals and groups—that identify with the satanic terrorist mindset. Hamas will declare victory.  If we lived in a sane world, the end of the story would have been unconditional

surrender.

Protesters in London are chanting “Israel is a Terrorist state!” while graffiti in Melbourne demands a sequel to Oct. 7. How can whole societies fall into such barbarism? They are far from God. That’s the short answer.  People that aren’t lashed to Scripture are vulnerable to drifting on an ocean of. hate and lies. That is where the present *cough “civilization” is at. Watching whole countries fall prey to obvious lies, satanic lies, is disconcerting.  For us as individuals, the best and only thing we can do is pray. Pray for the soon coming of the Messiah.  Until then, we are still privileged to live in such an era, one that past believers hoped to see.

Never Forget 10/7/23 They Will Survive

Today marks the anniversary of the horrible attack on the state of Israel.  A demonic attack against non-combatants who were peacefully enjoying life.  Hamas and its terror sponsors Iran and Qatar were responsible.  Both rouge nations have given millions, if not billions over the past decade to fund terror against Israel.  

The carnage was horrific, and sadistic.  Babies were burned, women were raped and tortured, older people in their homes were tortured and killed.  The entire Gaza Strip celebrated this action taken from the pit of Hell.  Hostages were taken and are still being held. Some have died in captivity.  

What was the world’s reaction?  First shock and then as the months wore on a call for peace requiring Israel to stop the fighting as they always have been ordered to do by some far away non authoritative body.  Pressure mounts today.  Even sadly from our own White House calls to stop the fight are growing.  Peace?  How can Israel have peace when the terrorists have vowed to destroy you?  You can’t, the only solution is to take over the land and run out the terror groups.

You see Israel, in their mind should not exist.  They should be pushed into the sea.  But God!  They will survive!  God has his hand on this small nation and according to His promise to Abraham, Issac, and Jacob they will flourish. They have been dispersed, killed, gassed and left for dead, but because of God’s eternal covenant, they will survive!

If Hamas laid down their weapons, there would be peace.  If Israel laid down their weapons, a mouse would attempt to annihilate them. That my friends is the difference between the two groups, Hamas is a terror group that is filled with hate and wants to kill, steal, and destroy.  On the other hand, Israel is a democratic nation that wants peace, and to live peacefully in their land.

And that is the rest of the story. Sorry for being a day late, but I was traveling yesterday. Rh

Tony Blair:

One of the Bottlenecks in an Impossible Deal

By Tania Curado Koenig

Washington, D.C. — Oct. 1, 2025

This deal seems to be an establishment scheme to pour $ into Gaza rather than a true peace effort. Billions are at stake! Once again Tania has knocked it out of the park. Rh

Among the many bottlenecks in the Trump framework for Gaza, one is glaring: the sudden return of Tony Blair. His name was written into the plan as co-chair of the ‘Board of Peace.’ But the world’s reaction shows why this appointment is a liability, not a solution.

Credibility questions immediately surface. The Guardian called his proposed role ‘laced with fatal flaws,’ noting the failures of his tenure as Quartet envoy. AP reminded readers that Blair carries heavy baggage from Iraq and previous Middle East ventures that achieved little.

Perceived bias further erodes legitimacy. Palestinians and Arab commentators see him as aligned with Israel and Western interests. The Financial Times reports Arab and European officials fear the Gaza plan is already skewed toward Israeli priorities, lacking Palestinian legitimacy.

Economic focus over politics is also Blair’s hallmark. His style is development, investment, and oversight. But economic fixes without true sovereignty or political empowerment have never brought peace. They usually collapse.

Palestinian rejection is fierce. Hamas officials explicitly say, ‘Blair has no role here.’ A Gazan displaced by war told AP, ‘This man has the blood of Iraqis on his hands.’ Mustafa Barghouti compared his reappearance to returning British colonialism. Mahmoud Habbash, adviser to Mahmoud Abbas, insisted: ‘The only side that can administer Gaza is a Palestinian government.’ Even West Bank PA officials said no plan can be imposed externally.

At home, Blair is divisive. In the UK, his name still triggers controversy. Labour MPs and activists condemn his Iraq legacy. His reappearance in the Middle East stirs opposition in his own country.

This is more than an irritant — it is a structural bottleneck. A plan that inserts figures already rejected by Palestinians, mistrusted by Arabs, and controversial at home reveals its own fragility. It risks being seen not as peace, but as foreign guardianship dressed up as governance.

1. Why Blair, despite all the baggage?

• Gravitas to outsiders: For Washington and Europe, Blair still carries a former-PM aura. Even if he is toxic to Palestinians, his name signals ‘serious statesmanship’ to Western publics.

• Economic entry point: Blair’s strength is not political reconciliation, but economic reconstruction and private capital mobilization. If Trump wants Gulf billions to flow into Gaza, Blair’s networks with banks, development funds, and corporations are useful.

• Cover for Trump: By putting Blair as ‘chair’ beside himself, Trump shifts optics — he is not alone, but backed by an ‘international statesman.’ This cushions accusations of unilateralism.

• Foil for rejection: If the plan collapses, Blair can be the fall guy. Trump walks away saying, ‘We tried, even Blair was there, but Hamas/Palestinians refused.’

2. The deeper Trump method

• Every clause is leverage. He doesn’t expect Hamas to fully comply (72-hour hostages, disarmament). These are traps designed to force Hamas and Qatar into an impossible corner.

• Every figure is a signal. Blair isn’t about Gaza legitimacy; he is about signaling to Gulf/European donors: ‘Your man is at the table, so you should pay.’

• Every failure is still a win. If Hamas refuses → Israel gets legitimacy, Arab bloc blames Hamas, Trump gets credit for ‘trying.’ If Hamas accepts partially → Trump claims history, Blair can take operational heat, and Trump drives normalization.

3. What this could mean later

• Blair as bridge to Saudi funds: Riyadh has long liked ‘technocratic committees’ and international faces to mask normalization. Blair’s presence could make Saudi/UAE more comfortable committing billions while keeping PA language alive.

• Blair as disposable pawn: If Palestinian rejection becomes loud, Blair can be dropped without the plan collapsing — Trump stays central, Blair vanishes.

• Blair as buffer for Trump: Any failure or unpopular measure gets blamed on Blair’s ‘management,’ preserving Trump’s stature.

4. What we must hold 

• Trump doesn’t waste moves. Blair is not there to solve Gaza politically — he is there to give Trump cover, Gulf comfort, and donor access. In the covenant reality, it will not ‘divide the land,’ but politically it allows Trump to say: ‘I built the widest coalition ever — even Blair, even the Gulf, even Europe stood with me.’

One more bottleneck, one more reason this deal cannot stand. ‘They shall not divide the land’ (Joel 3:2).

Prophetic Journalism / Deal is Flawed

I was extremely concerned about the proposed “peace plan,” but never fear now we are hearing that according to Qatar and others it is just a “good starting point.” Same old song and dance, delay and try to negotiate. Stand firm, it’ either agree or face the consequences. Trump said they had 48 hours and then Israel was going to do what they had to do. By the way there is a path to a two state solution in the deal. That would be the worst mistake Trump would ever make. Joel 3:2 gives a warning for nations who divide the land of Israel.

I hope this falls through, we can do better. If Mexico was doing to us what Hamas has done to Israel, invading our cities and raping and killing woman and children, and killing our citizens they would be a distant memory. But somehow Israel is supposed to make peace? I think not.

This deal is flawed and never will work, it’s nothing more than a lame attempt to put lipstick on a pig. It’s time to end this without Qatar who happens to be the main sponsor of terror in the region. Trump’s negotiators are too close to Qatar. Witkoff and Kushner have made $ millions and in some cases $ billions by managing their investments or in Witkoff’s case Qatar paid off an overdue loan on a hotel to the tune of over $600 million. That my friends I did not vote for!!

Stay tuned, it should get interesting. Look up the world is falling apart. But for the Christian it’s falling into place. We are in Prophetic times.