US announces sanctions against Iran-backed militia groups and its leaders

The United States has announced new sanctions against Kata’ib Sayyid al-Shuhada (KSS) and its Secretary General, Hashim Finyan Rahim al-Saraji, labeling them as ‘Specially Designated Global Terrorists’, The Times of Israel reported.

“KSS terrorist activity has threatened the lives of both U.S. and Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS personnel in Iraq and Syria,” U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement.

The US Treasury Department has also imposed sanctions on six individuals linked to the Iran-linked militia group Kata’ib Hezbollah (KH), according to The Times of Israel.

“Iran, through the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps and its external operations force known as the Qods Force, has supported the KSS, KH and other Iran-linked militias with training, funding and advanced weapons – including increasingly accurate and lethal unmanned aerial vehicles. systems,” Blinken said.

“KSS, in coordination with other US-designated organizations, including KH and Harakat al-Nujaba, planned and supported attacks on US personnel.”

“Iran is the world’s largest state sponsor of terrorism. “The United States remains committed to using all available tools to counter Iranian support for terrorism and to degrade and disrupt the ability of Iranian-backed groups to conduct terrorist attacks,” Blinken added.

According to the latest update of an ongoing police investigation, the death toll from the Hamas massacre at the Re’im music festival on October 7 has been revised to 364, representing almost a third of all deaths during the attack in Israel. Times of Israel reported this citing Channel 12.

Surprisingly, the research shows that forty festival goers were taken hostage in Gaza, providing new insights into the scale of the tragedy.

Initial counts put the death toll in Re’im at 270, indicating a significant increase in the revised figures.

The security establishment’s current assessment suggests that Hamas was reportedly unaware of the music festival that preceded the massacre, The Times of Israel reported, citing Channel 12 reports.

As the investigation continues, these developments shed new light on the scale and complexity of the tragic event, highlighting the need for a thorough investigation into the circumstances surrounding the Hamas attack on the Re’im music festival.

Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu indicated that the IDF has no intention of keeping soldiers in Gaza after the war, even if Israel retains security control over the Gaza Strip for the foreseeable future.

“I’m not sure I can keep the troops in. And in fact it is not particularly necessary because it is very small,” Netanyahu told NPR.

As for who will rule Gaza after the war: “We need a cultural change in every civilian administration in Gaza. It cannot commit itself to financing terrorism,” Netanyahu said in a swipe at the Palestinian Authority.

He said Israel will not be able to accept anyone who shares Hamas’s goals and the terror group’s inculcation to teach Palestinian children that Israel must be destroyed.

“In the near future, Israel will bear overall military responsibility. But there must also be a civilian government,” Netanyahu added, The Times of Israel reported.

(Only the headline and image of this report may have been reworked by Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is automatically generated from a syndicated feed.)

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