World
A Site Holy to Jews and Muslims Returns as the Nexus of Conflict

JERUSALEM — Clashes broke out Friday for the seventh time in eight days on the holiest web site in Jerusalem, foregrounding how the positioning — sacred to each Jews and Muslims — has grow to be the latest focus of a monthlong spasm in tensions throughout Israel and the occupied territories.
The skirmishes between Palestinians and Israeli police on the Aqsa Mosque compound, identified to Jews as Temple Mount, adopted a lethal wave of Arab assaults in Israel and an ensuing Israeli army crackdown within the West Financial institution.
The clashes have prompted the fiercest alternate of rockets and missiles between Gaza militants and the Israeli armed forces since an 11-day struggle final Could; militants fired two extra rockets on Friday evening.
The clashes have additionally examined Israel’s rising ties with elements of the Arab world, main three international locations that signed diplomatic agreements with Israel in 2020 to precise uncommon criticism of the Jewish state, and undermining efforts to enhance relations with neighboring Jordan. They usually have deepened a authorities disaster inside Israel, inflicting an Islamist get together to droop its participation within the governing coalition and rising the probabilities of the opposition successful a majority in Parliament.
Maybe most strikingly, the clashes illustrated how simply the Aqsa web site might be harnessed by extremists on each side of the Israeli-Palestinian battle, and why it stays among the many most intractable of the obstacles to the battle’s decision, in addition to the battle’s final Rorschach check.
To many Jews, the positioning is the holiest in Judaism, the placement of two historical temples the place custom holds that God’s presence was revealed. To Israelis, it’s an important a part of their sovereign territory and capital, and officers have exhibited appreciable prudence by limiting Jewish exercise there since capturing the positioning from Jordan in 1967.
To the federal government, the police interventions there over the previous week have been needed regulation enforcement operations to quell riots began by Muslim extremists led by Hamas, the Islamist militant group, and to safe entry for Jews, vacationers and 1000’s of peaceable Muslims.
To Muslims, the mosque compound is the third-holiest in Islam, a web site of Muslim prayer for greater than a millennium, and the place from which the Prophet Muhammad ascended to heaven. To Palestinians, it’s occupied territory, as confirmed by the United Nations Safety Council and most overseas governments, and a part of what ought to someday grow to be the capital of a Palestinian state. For a lot of Palestinians, confrontations on the compound are a authentic act of resistance in opposition to an occupying energy, no matter who threw the primary stone.
Neither perspective is solely truthful, mentioned Michael Koplow, an analyst on the Israel Coverage Discussion board, a New York-based analysis group. “All people wants to grasp that each side not solely have actual claims, however really feel an emotional and symbolic connection to the positioning,” he mentioned. “It’s not solely for anyone.”
Equally, each side have due trigger to doubt elements of the opposite’s narrative, not least this week.
Although Palestinians have introduced themselves because the victims of Israeli aggression on the compound this week, some helped stoke the violence, stockpiling stones, fireworks and gasoline bombs.
On Friday morning, video posted on-line by a Palestinian outlet confirmed that the clashes started after dozens of Palestinian youths threw stones at and set off fireworks within the course of a police outpost on the sting of the compound. Solely afterward did riot police enter the forecourt of the mosque.
Equally, on Sunday morning, riot police entered the positioning after Palestinian youths blocked the trail of a route by way of the positioning utilized by Jews and overseas vacationers, and stockpiled stones elsewhere on the route, elevating fears that they’d assault non-Muslims there.
Hamas, the militant Islamist group, praised the stone throwers a number of instances this week. Some Palestinians concerned within the clashes chanted pro-Hamas slogans and carried the inexperienced flags related to the group — elevating questions on whether or not Hamas operatives had performed a task in premeditating the unrest, figuring out that Israel would probably reply aggressively.
“The Palestinian organizations weren’t solely making ready for it, however advancing it,” mentioned Ehud Olmert, an Israeli former prime minister who as soon as proposed putting the compound and adjoining areas of Jerusalem underneath shared sovereignty. “They had been making ready Molotov cocktails, on Temple Mount, and stones.”
The Israeli authorities took steps to keep away from flagrant provocations, arresting a number of Jewish extremists who had been mentioned to be planning a Passover sacrifice on the compound, blocking a far-right Jewish march close to the compound this week and, as traditional, barring non-Muslims from the compound in the course of the remaining 10 days of Ramadan.
However these constructive gestures had been diluted by heavy-handed ways like utilizing rubber-tipped bullets in opposition to stone throwers and spraying tear gasoline by drone, and by breaking longstanding conventions barring Jewish worship on the web site.
For months, the Israeli police protected Jewish worshipers on the web site, breaking a decades-old understanding, geared toward stopping battle, that allowed Jews to go to however not worship there. That change has created the impression amongst Palestinians that Israel is attempting to unilaterally change the fragile establishment, and additional undermine Muslim entry to and oversight of one of the sacred locations in Islam.
Equally, in the course of the clashes on Sunday morning, the Israeli police went past securing parity of entry to Muslims, Jews and vacationers. As an alternative, the police allowed a whole lot of Jews to enter whereas, unusually, blocking Muslim entry to the positioning for a number of hours that morning.
Towards the backdrop of this sort of perceived provocation, it was unsurprising that younger Palestinians lashed out this week, mentioned Moayd Abu Mialeh, 22, a Palestinian who was arrested in the course of the clashes.
The Current Rise in Violence in Israel
“We’re people, we react,” mentioned Mr. Abu Mialeh, who denied private involvement within the clashes and mentioned they erupted spontaneously. “When the settlers declare they are going to sacrifice a lamb at Al Aqsa,” he added, younger Palestinians “can’t merely open their arms to the settlers and inform them ‘come on in’ to our mosque.”
Unsurprisingly, the complexity of the standoff forecloses any straightforward resolution.
To some Palestinians, the short-term reply is straightforward: Briefly shut the compound to non-Muslims whereas all sides talk about find out how to safe a long-term resolution. Within the meantime, the positioning may very well be positioned underneath the complete management of the Waqf — an Islamic belief, financed and overseen by neighboring Jordan, that at the moment runs civil issues on the mosque.
Within the interim interval, Jews may pray as traditional on the close by Western Wall, one of many final remaining sections of the traditional temple advanced, mentioned Aladdin Salhab, a member of the Waqf council and the proprietor of an Previous Metropolis lodge.
In any other case, Mr. Salhab mentioned, “we’re including oil to the hearth.”
To Israelis, that concept is far-fetched. For non secular Jews, such a transfer would tear at their religious id. And secular Israelis would additionally balk at ceding non permanent management of a web site so central to their nationwide id, in addition to to safety within the Previous Metropolis. From the excessive compound, Palestinians can throw stones down at Jewish worshipers on the Western Wall.
“For a lot of the Jewish world writ massive, definitely for observant individuals, you’re asking them to make an nearly unacceptable compromise,” mentioned Chuck Freilich, an Israeli former deputy nationwide safety adviser.
Even a lot smaller concessions, like restoring the ban on Jewish prayer on the web site, would show tough to enact for the Israeli prime minister, Naftali Bennett. He leads an immensely fragile coalition authorities that controls simply half the seats in Parliament. A number of of Mr. Bennett’s lawmakers are from the non secular proper. They already really feel he has compromised an excessive amount of on Israel’s Jewish id. Any additional compromises may immediate them to defect.
“I don’t envy Bennett — he’s caught in the course of two excessive factions,” mentioned Mr. Olmert, the previous prime minister.
However as prime minister, “you’ve bought to take exhausting choices generally,” Mr. Olmert added. “That’s why you’re there.”
Hiba Yazbek contributed reporting from Nazareth, Israel.

World
Gazans Once Escaped To Rafah. Now Israel Is Razing It.

Last year, a million Palestinians fled to Rafah, the southernmost city in the Gaza Strip, to escape the brunt of Israel’s bombardment in its war against Hamas. When Israeli forces later invaded Rafah itself, they flattened areas along the border with Egypt, but many neighborhoods were largely spared the worst of the war.
That is no longer the case.
The Israeli military has destroyed extensive parts of Rafah since it ended a cease-fire in March after talks with Hamas collapsed. In early May, after much of the destruction was already complete, Israel announced it would soon launch an “intensive” escalation of its campaign in Gaza. Over the previous two nights, strikes have killed dozens of Palestinians in Gaza, Palestinian officials said. On Tuesday, the Israeli military targeted Muhammad Sinwar, a top Hamas leader in Gaza, near a hospital in Khan Younis.
Satellite images analyzed by The New York Times show that the Israeli military has flattened large areas in and around the city of Rafah and built new military infrastructure in the last two months.
Israeli leaders say capturing more territory inside Gaza will pressure Hamas to surrender and release the remaining hostages that the group has held since it led a deadly attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. Israel’s defense minister vowed that Israeli forces would “clear out” the areas and “prevent any threat,” including in Rafah.
Israeli security officials have previously said that tunnels between Egypt and Gaza have allowed Hamas to stock up on weaponry and other supplies.
In response to a question from The Times about the Israeli military’s operations in Rafah, the military said that it was part of an effort to secure operational control and conduct counterterrorism operations.
“We will replicate the model implemented in Rafah in other areas of the Strip as well,” said Effie Defrin, the Israeli military spokesperson, in a press briefing last week.
Demolishing Block by Block
Here is what the operation looks like on the ground: Four excavators could be seen in a video verified by The Times tearing down a row of buildings in Rafah’s Shaboura neighborhood in April. The video, first shared on an Israeli Telegram channel, was taken from an armored vehicle.
Satellite imagery shows that hundreds of buildings were destroyed in this neighborhood during the month of April, including on the block where the video was filmed.
Earlier this month, the Israeli security cabinet approved a new plan to call up tens of thousands of additional soldiers, to seize and hold territory in the embattled enclave, and to forcibly displace Palestinians to the south. But the satellite imagery shows the areas of the south where buildings are still standing are getting smaller and smaller.
Another video shows four buildings destroyed in a controlled demolition. The video, uploaded on an Israeli soldier’s Instagram account and shared by the Palestinian journalist Younis Tirawi on his X account, was filmed in northern Rafah, where much of the destruction has taken place. Satellite image shows that the demolition took place sometime in April.
New Construction
Israeli forces are not just clearing land. They are building on it.
One new road already stretches more than three miles from the Israeli border across Rafah into agricultural areas. It is protected by berms, trenches and several military outposts.
And other construction is moving at a rapid clip, the satellite images show.
Several new military outposts, often graded, paved and surrounded by defensive walls, have been built across southern Gaza in the past month. Soldiers have also commandeered buildings to use as bases, such as an under-construction hospital.
Israel calls the road it has constructed from the Israeli border the “Morag Corridor,” which Mr. Netanyahu said last month was intended to cut Rafah off from the rest of the enclave. The name is a reference to a Jewish settlement that existed in the area until Israel withdrew its soldiers and civilians from Gaza two decades ago.
What the construction might mean for the long term is uncertain. Some Israeli officials have agitated for Israel to rebuild Jewish settlements in the enclave, but Mr. Netanyahu has rebuffed the prospect for now.
Mr. Netanyahu said last week, after much of the construction and razing in Rafah was already in progress, that Israel was “on the eve of a forceful entry to Gaza.”
World
Rubio doubts 'anything productive' will happen in Ukraine peace talks without Trump, Putin

Secretary of State Macro Rubio cast a pessimistic tone ahead of talks in Turkey now set for Friday after both Russian President Vladimir Putin and President Donald Trump said they would not be in attendance.
The peace talks, which were supposed to happen on Thursday, got thrown into disarray after both Russian and Ukrainian delegations, including Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, landed in various cities in Turkey as confirmation arrived that not only would Putin not be engaging in the discussions, but neither would senior members from the Kremlin.
According to reports, frustration grew as the delegations and mediators spent much of the day questioning when, and even whether, they would meet on Thursday before the meeting was ultimately pushed to Friday.
President Donald Trump speaks to reporters aboard Air Force One en route from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, to Doha, Qatar, Wednesday, May 14, 2025. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
TRUMP TO SKIP RUSSIA-UKRAINE PEACE TALKS, CALLS ZELENSKYY THE ‘GREATEST SALESMAN, MAYBE IN HISTORY’
“Frankly, at this point, I think it’s abundantly clear that the only way we’re going to have a breakthrough here is between President Trump and President Putin,” Rubio told reporters. “It’s going to require that level of engagement to have a breakthrough in this matter.
“I don’t think anything productive is actually going to happen from this point forward… until they engage in a very frank and direct conversation, which I know President Trump is willing to do,” he added.
The peace talks first came about after Putin suggested last week that Ukraine and Russia should engage in direct talks. Zelenskyy agreed and said those talks should be held by the leaders of the warring nations.
Trump sparked surprise earlier this week when he suggested he might travel to Turkey from the UAE if progress was made in the talks on Thursday, but it was never previously suggested that the U.S. president, who was set to be wrapping up a Middle East tour, would be present for the negotiations.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan welcomes Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at the Presidential Complex in Ankara, Turkey, on May 15, 2025. (Turkish Presidency/Murat Kula/Handout/Anadolu via Getty Images)
PUTIN PROPOSES DIRECT PEACE TALKS WITH UKRAINE TO END WAR
The Kremlin on Thursday confirmed Putin was not going to participate in the peace talks.
Aboard Air Force One on Thursday, Trump suggested Putin did not attend because of a scheduling miscommunication and told reporters that there was no hope on any real progress in negotiations until he and Putin speak.
“Look, nothing’s going to happen until Putin and I get together. OK?” Trump said. “He was going to go, but he thought I was going to go. He wasn’t going if I wasn’t there.
“I don’t believe anything’s going to happen, whether you like it or not, until he and I get together,” he added.
Any future plans for Trump and Putin to talk remain unknown.
“What I can say with certainty is that the president’s… willing to stick with [this] as long as it takes to achieve peace,” Rubio said. “What we cannot do, however, is continue to fly all over the world and engage in meetings that are not going to be productive.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio speaks to the media following a meeting of NATO foreign ministers in Antalya, on May 15, 2025, ahead of potential peace talks between Ukraine and Russia in Turkey. (Umit Bektas/Pool/AFP via Getty Images)
“The only way we’re going to have a breakthrough here is with President Trump sitting face to face with President Putin and determining once and for all whether there’s a path to peace,” he added.
Zelenskyy did not hold back in expressing his frustration over what he said is proof that Putin’s “attitude is unserious.”
“No time of the meeting, no agenda, no high-level of delegation – this is personal disrespect to Erdoğan, to Trump,” Zelenskyy reportedly said at a Thursday news conference after meeting with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
World
US judge dismisses case against migrants caught in new military zone

The magistrate ruled that apprehended migrants may not have been aware they were crossing into a military zone.
A United States judge in the southwestern state of New Mexico has dismissed trespassing charges against dozens of migrants apprehended in a military zone recently created under President Donald Trump.
The military zone is one of two so far that the Trump administration has created along the US-Mexico border, in order to deter undocumented migration into the country.
Entering a military zone can result in heightened criminal penalties. As many as 400 cases have since been filed in Las Cruces, New Mexico, alleging security violations and crimes like trespassing on restricted military property.
But starting late on Wednesday and continuing into Thursday, Chief US Magistrate Judge Gregory Wormuth began issuing dismissals at the request of the federal public defender’s office in Las Cruces.
Wormuth ruled that the government had failed to demonstrate that the migrants knew they were entering a military zone.
“The criminal complaint fails to establish probable cause to believe the defendant knew he/she was entering” the military zone, Wormuth wrote in his orders dismissing charges.
The ruling is the latest legal setback for the Trump administration, as it seeks to impose stricter restrictions and penalties for undocumented immigration. But the president’s broad use of executive power has drawn the ire of civil liberties groups, who argue that Trump is trampling constitutional safeguards.
Establishing new military zones has been part of Trump’s strategy to reduce the flow of migration into the US.
Normally, the crime of “improper entry by an alien” carries fines or a prison sentence of up to six months. But trespassing on a military zone comes with steeper penalties than a typical border crossing, and Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth has warned of a possible combined sentence of up to 10 years.
“You can be detained. You will be detained,” Hegseth warned migrants. “You will be interdicted by US troops and border patrol working together.”
On April 18, the first military zone was unveiled, called the “New Mexico National Defence Area”. It covered a stretch of about 274 kilometres — or 180 miles — along the border with Mexico, extending into land formerly held by the Department of the Interior.
Hegseth has said he would like to see more military zones set up along the border, and in early May, a second one was announced near El Paso, Texas. That strip was approximately 101km or 63 miles.
“Let me be clear: if you cross into the National Defense Area, you will be charged to the FULLEST extent of the law,” Hegseth wrote in a social media post.
Hegseth has previously stated that the military will continue to expand such zones until they have achieved “100 percent operational control” of the border.
Trump and his allies have frequently compared undocumented immigration to an “invasion”, and they have used that justification to invoke wartime laws like the Alien Enemies Act of 1798.
In a court brief on behalf of the Trump administration, US Attorney Ryan Ellison argued that the new military zones were a vital bulwark for national security. He also rejected the idea that innocent people might be caught in those areas.
“The New Mexico National Defense Area is a crucial installation necessary to strengthen the authority of servicemembers to help secure our borders and safeguard the country,” Ellison said.
He noted that the government had put up “restricted area” signs along the border. But the public defender’s office in New Mexico argued that the government had not done enough to make it sufficiently clear to migrants in the area that they were entering a military zone.
In the US, the public defenders noted that trespassing requires that the migrants were aware of the restriction and acted “in defiance of that regulation for some nefarious or bad purpose”.
Despite this week’s dismissals, the migrants involved still face less severe charges of crossing the border illegally.
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