Relations (1)
related 2.81 — strongly supporting 6 facts
Israel and Palestine are geographically and politically linked through a history of cyber conflict [1], ongoing military and security operations [2], and their central roles in regional geopolitical tensions [3]. Their relationship is further defined by the use of Israeli surveillance technology in Palestinian territories [4], their shared inclusion in Middle Eastern economic and security corridors [5], and international diplomatic efforts aimed at resolving their long-standing conflict [6].
Facts (6)
Sources
Opportunities for Collective Regional Security in the Middle East carnegieendowment.org 2 facts
claimRecep Tayyip Erdoğan condemned Israeli war crimes, occupation policies, and settlement expansion, while emphasizing Türkiye’s readiness to play a stabilizing role in securing peace in Palestine and the broader Arab Levant after the conflict.
claimIran and Israel have played central roles in perpetuating violence across Palestine, Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, and Yemen.
Iran in crisis: the landscape after the Twelve-Day War - OSW osw.waw.pl 1 fact
accountSince 2023, Israel has been systematically dismantling the network of proxies maintained by Iran in Palestine and Lebanon.
Strategic analysis of cyber conflicts: A game-theoretic modelling of ... securityanddefence.pl 1 fact
accountIn 2012, Israel and Palestine engaged in a cyber conflict that primarily involved attacks on websites and social media platforms, characterized by both sides as cyber propaganda warfare, according to Matani and Yoffe (2016).
Series of Reports Ignored by Media Show Jeffrey Epstein's ... commondreams.org 1 fact
accountJeffrey Epstein and Ehud Barak architected a deal in 2014 for the government of Côte d’Ivoire, led by President Alassane Ouattara, to purchase Israeli surveillance technology previously used in occupied Palestine.
After the War: Rethinking Regional Security in the Middle ... arab-reform.net 1 fact
claimThe economic model for the Middle East prioritized corridors linking the Gulf, Israel, and Europe, benefiting Tel Aviv and Dubai while treating the Levant (Palestine, Lebanon, Syria, and Jordan) as a security problem to be bypassed or bombed rather than rebuilt.