The U.S has broken the Arab move by firing a diamond weapon for Israel

Fire will rain from Gaza’s skies and fierce fighting will continue on the ground. The United States vetoed the UN Security Council resolution for a ceasefire. America’s position is that why should we stop firing and fighting with Hamas terrorists who do not even release hostages. Breaking report.

The United States on Tuesday vetoed an Arab-backed UN resolution calling for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip, in a major blow to Arab countries. Because Arab countries were behind the resolution. With this, it is certain that the war will extend to Rafah, the last city of Hamas in Gaza. It is also known that Israel may warn the people to leave Rafah immediately. Israel’s plan is to eliminate 60% of the terrorists of Hamas who are hiding in Rafah.

13 members of the 15-member Security Council voted in favor. From leaving Britain. The United States has vetoed. Israeli countries are clamoring for an end to the war following Hamas’s surprise attack in southern Israel, which killed about 1,200 people. This was the third US veto of the Security Council resolution demanding a cease-fire in Gaza. The United States vetoed it twice before.

With this, it is certain that the war will extend to Rafah, the last city of Hamas in Gaza. It is also known that Israel may warn the people to leave Rafah immediately. Israel’s plan is to eliminate 60% of the terrorists of Hamas who are hiding in Rafah.

The Biden administration has previously said that the United States is negotiating for at least a six-week cessation of hostilities and the release of all hostages, and that there is no need for a resolution that concerns it. The hostages are in the hands of the terrorists. The United States said that in this situation, it is not time for a complete ceasefire. Therefore, the United States has said that it opposes the UN Security Council resolution for a ceasefire.

White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said after the vote. The vetoed resolution included a call for the “immediate and unconditional release of the hostages.” Days before the vote, the United States released a UN Security Council resolution supporting a temporary ceasefire in Gaza tied to the release of all hostages and calling for the lifting of all restrictions on humanitarian aid. Negotiations were going on. Now that resolution has been defeated by the United States

Arab countries are behind the ceasefire resolution. US Deputy Ambassador Robert Wood said why the United States vetoed the Arab-backed resolution and allowed Israel to continue the war. Three things we want to see are missing from this resolution. There is no plan to deliver hostages to Israel. There is no strategy to eliminate future conflict. Arab states, backed by many of the 193 UN member states, have been calling for a ceasefire for months as Palestinian casualties mount.

The Hamas-controlled Gaza Health Ministry said more than 29,000 people had been killed. Figures provided by the Ministry of Health cannot be independently verified, and include civilians and Hamas members killed in Gaza, including as a result of the militant group’s own rocket misfire. The IDF says it killed 1,000 terrorists inside Israel as well as 12,000 activists in Gaza on October 7.
Tunisia’s UN Ambassador Tarek Ladeb, who is this month’s chairman of the 22-nation Arab Group, called for a ceasefire last Wednesday.

Meanwhile, the world is waiting for Israel’s war in Rafah. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu faces a “catastrophic situation” if he goes ahead with his announced plan to evacuate civilians from the city and shift Israel’s military offensive to Egypt’s border region. , a city in Gaza that Israel says is home to Hamas’s last stronghold.