Politics
What are the most prominent prisoner exchange operations between the Palestinians and Israel?
The Palestinian Prisoners Authority and the Palestinian Prisoners Club discussed the most prominent prisoner exchange operations with Israel, as the exchange deal nears completion
The Palestinian Prisoners Authority and the Palestinian Prisoners Club spoke about the most prominent prisoner exchange operations with Israel, as the exchange deal and the ceasefire in Gaza, which begins on Sunday, are nearing completion.
She stated in her report that prisoner exchanges with Israel began after the Nakba of Palestine in 1948, and before Palestinian organizations and factions began to emerge, and many Egyptian, Syrian, Iraqi, Jordanian and Lebanese prisoner exchanges took place.
The release of Palestinian prisoners from Israeli prisons took place within the framework of negotiations and political agreements through which thousands of prisoners were released. The last of these was in 2013, when three batches of veteran prisoners who were arrested before the signing of the Oslo Accords were released, numbering 78 prisoners, out of four batches. Israel refused to release the fourth batch in 2014, which numbered 30 prisoners.
The last exchange took place within the framework of the truce agreement in November 2023, and 240 were released, including 71 female prisoners and 169 children and teenagers. The documented exchanges and deals historically amounted to about 40.
According to the report, the first exchange between the PLO and Israel took place after Palestinian fighters belonging to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine successfully hijacked an Israeli El Al plane. The deal was brokered through the International Red Cross, and the passengers were released in exchange for (37) Palestinian prisoners with high sentences, including Palestinian prisoners who had been captured before 1967.
28-1-1971
A new exchange took place between the Palestinian National Liberation Movement “Fatah” and the Israeli government, which was a prisoner-for-prisoner exchange, under which Israel released the Palestinian prisoner Mahmoud Bakr Hijazi, in exchange for the release of the Israeli soldier Shmuel Faiz, who was kidnapped by Fatah in late 1969.
The exchange took place in Ras al-Naqoura under the auspices of the Red Cross, after which Hijazi went to Lebanon and returned to Gaza with the Palestinian forces after the Oslo Accords in 1994. He died in Ramallah in 2021.
14-3-1979
The Litani exchange operation, or “Operation Seagull,” was carried out by which the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – General Command released an Israeli soldier they had captured in the Litani operation, and in return, Israel released 76 detainees from Palestinian revolutionary factions, including 12 female prisoners.
23-11-1983
An agreement was reached between Israel and Fatah, and Israel released all 4,700 Palestinian and Lebanese detainees from the Ansar detention camp in southern Lebanon, and 65 prisoners from Israeli prisons in exchange for the release of six Israeli soldiers.
20-5-1985
It was done with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – General Command and was called “Operation Galilee”, under which Israel released 1,155 prisoners, including 883 prisoners who were being held in prisons established on the occupied territories, 118 prisoners who had been kidnapped from the Ansar detention camp in southern Lebanon during the 1983 exchange with the Fatah movement, and 154 detainees who had been transferred from the Ansar detention camp to the Atlit detention camp during the Israeli withdrawal from southern Lebanon, in exchange for three soldiers who were in the hands of the Popular Front.
1-10-2009
Israel released 20 Palestinian female prisoners from the West Bank and Gaza Strip in exchange for information about the condition of soldier Gilad Shalit, who has been held captive by Palestinian factions since June 25, 2006, by obtaining a two-minute video tape. The "video tape" deal was considered part of negotiations to complete the larger deal.
18-10-2011
The “Wafa al-Ahrar” prisoner exchange deal, brokered by Egypt between the Palestinian factions holding soldier Shalit captive and the Israeli government, resulted in Shalit’s release in exchange for Israel releasing 994 male prisoners and 33 female prisoners. Under the deal, 205 prisoners were deported to Gaza and abroad, including 163 prisoners from the West Bank and Jerusalem who were deported to Gaza, and 42 to abroad.
22 -11 -2023
A humanitarian truce agreement was announced in Gaza, which included the release of 50 hostages held by resistance factions, in exchange for the release of 150 over four days. The truce was extended for three days, and the number of those released rose to 240, including 169 children and teenagers, and 71 female prisoners.
Politics
Iranian Assembly of Experts destroyed in Qom by Israeli airstrike
A video documents the destruction of the Assembly of Experts building in Qom by an Israeli airstrike during the selection of the Supreme Leader, amidst shelling that targeted the Presidential Palace and the National Security Council in Tehran.
In an unprecedented military and political development, a widely circulated video documented the moment the Israeli army destroyed the Assembly of Experts building in the holy city of Qom (south of the Iranian capital, Tehran). This violent airstrike came at a highly sensitive time, as the building was hosting a crucial meeting to choose a new Supreme Leader for the Islamic Republic, thus giving this attack serious strategic implications.
Details of the attack and expansion of the circle of fire
Footage showed a massive explosion that leveled the building, indicating the use of highly destructive bombs. The Israeli attack was not limited to Qom; the Israeli military intensified its strikes to include decision-making centers in the capital, Tehran, officially announcing the targeting of the Iranian presidential palace and the Supreme National Security Council building, a clear indication that the confrontation had escalated to a stage of directly targeting symbols of sovereignty and the regime.
What is a Leadership Experts Council?
To understand the gravity of this event, one must consider the paramount importance of the targeted building. The Assembly of Experts is one of the most important pillars of Iran's political and religious system. It comprises 88 members, all senior clerics and religious scholars, elected by direct popular vote for eight-year terms. The Assembly's primary constitutional function is to appoint the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution, oversee his performance, and even remove him if he loses the qualifications for leadership. Therefore, targeting the Assembly while it was in session to choose a successor to the Supreme Leader was an attempt to undermine the mechanism of power transfer at the highest levels of the Iranian regime.
Implications of targeting the city of Qom
The airstrikes on Qom carry profound symbolic significance that transcends mere material damage. Qom is considered the religious capital of Iran and a stronghold of the seminaries that have produced the regime's top leaders. Bringing the battle to the heart of this city and targeting the institution responsible for safeguarding the rule of the Supreme Leader signifies a radical shift in Israel's target bank, which has historically focused on nuclear facilities or Revolutionary Guard military bases.
Regional and international repercussions
This escalation places the entire region on the brink of a volcano, as this attack is expected to have far-reaching repercussions for regional security. Targeting sovereign institutions of this magnitude could push Tehran toward unconventional responses, increasing the risk of the Middle East sliding into an open and comprehensive confrontation that transcends the rules of engagement that have prevailed for many years.
Politics
Khamenei's succession crisis: Iran enters the unknown and its proxies flounder
Iran faces its most serious political crisis with the absence of a successor to the Supreme Leader. This report analyzes the implications of this leadership vacuum on the stability of the regime and the actions of its regional proxies amidst the escalating tensions.
Iran is entering the most dangerous political and security juncture in its history, at a critical moment where an internal leadership crisis intertwines with multiple regional conflicts. The situation is rapidly escalating, and the world is watching closely to see what unfolds in Tehran. The country appears to be operating with a fragmented structure lacking a clear center of power, foreshadowing serious geopolitical repercussions.
Succession crisis and constitutional ambiguity
Following reports of the assassination of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, the regime has yet to announce a formal successor, despite the passage of sufficient time that should have allowed for a resolution through established constitutional mechanisms. Historically, the Iranian regime relies on the Assembly of Experts to select the Supreme Leader, the body constitutionally empowered to appoint or dismiss him. However, the current complexities point to a deep power struggle within the corridors of power, a stark contrast to the smooth transition that occurred in 1989 after Khomeini's death and Khamenei's ascension to the throne.
Lack of centralization and its impact on the system
While it is true that a temporary council was formed to manage certain tasks, and several names were floated behind closed doors, the public absence of a clear leader reflects a confusion that goes beyond mere protocol to the very core of the power structure. Iran is not a state of traditional institutions; rather, it is a system fundamentally based on the central authority of the "Supreme Leader," who controls the levers of power within the Revolutionary Guard, the army, and the judiciary. The absence of this figurehead creates a vacuum that temporary councils cannot fill, thus opening the door for the Revolutionary Guard to consolidate its political influence to an unprecedented degree.
The regional arms are floundering and the risks of escalation
Regionally, the picture is even more complex. The Iranian-backed armed factions in Lebanon, Yemen, Iraq, and Syria (the so-called "axis of resistance") rely on strategic guidance and direct funding from Tehran. In the absence of a central command structure, these proxies have begun to operate without a central authority, increasing the likelihood of military miscalculations or being drawn into ill-conceived confrontations with Israel or the United States. The lack of a coordinating force to guide these fronts could transform the region into a scene of complete chaos, where each faction acts according to its own narrow, local interests, detached from a unified Iranian strategy.
Politics
Trump to Iran: It's too late to negotiate after your military capabilities have been destroyed
Donald Trump refuses to negotiate with Iran, vowing to destroy its air and naval defenses, amid a large-scale US-Israeli military escalation and fears of open war.
In an unprecedented escalation of the military and political situation, US President Donald Trump announced his categorical rejection of any attempts at negotiation from the Iranian side at the present time, stressing that these calls came too late after Tehran lost the pillars of its strategic military power.
In a fiery statement posted on his social media platform Truth Social, Trump asserted that the Iranian regime is now attempting to salvage its lifeline through diplomacy, but that it is too late. He wrote bluntly: "The Iranians have lost their air defenses, their air force, their navy, and their leaders... and then they wanted to negotiate. I said: It's too late." These remarks come as the United States, in close coordination with Israel, continues its intensive military operations, which appear to have achieved broad strategic objectives.
Context of the conflict and historical background
This dramatic development cannot be separated from a long history of tension between Washington and Tehran. Relations between the two countries have long been governed by the “maximum pressure” policy previously pursued by Trump, which focused on crippling the Iranian economy and isolating it diplomatically. Analysts suggest that the current strikes are the culmination of a long history of disputes over regional influence, the ballistic missile program, and the thorny issue of the nuclear program.
President Trump, who authorized the airstrikes in direct coordination with Israel on Saturday, had initially estimated the operations would last four to five weeks. However, developments on the ground and the administration's efforts to justify a full-scale war have shifted the focus toward an open-ended confrontation aimed at completely neutralizing the Iranian threat.
Military and nuclear dimensions
In justifying the massive attack, Trump focused on Iran's relentless pursuit of nuclear weapons, an accusation Tehran has consistently denied, maintaining that its program is peaceful. Nevertheless, Washington and Tel Aviv consider Iran's acquisition of a nuclear bomb a red line that cannot be crossed, which explains the ferocity of the attacks targeting military infrastructure.
Trump's talk of destroying Iran's navy and air defenses carries serious strategic implications. Iran relies heavily on its naval power in the Strait of Hormuz to threaten to close global oil shipping lanes, and on its air defenses to protect its nuclear facilities. According to Trump's statements, neutralizing these capabilities would deprive Iran of its most important bargaining chips, making its calls for negotiations now appear as an attempt at surrender rather than an attempt at equal dialogue.
Expected regional repercussions
This escalation is expected to cast a long shadow over the entire Middle East. The absence of Iranian defensive capabilities could fundamentally alter the balance of power in the region and reshape security and political alliances. Furthermore, a protracted war could lead to instability in global energy markets, presenting the international community with complex economic and security challenges in the coming period.
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