vrijdag 30 januari 2026

 

 



Settler-only IDF units functioning as ‘vigilante militias’ in West Bank

‘Regional defence’ settler units are escalating violent displacement of Palestinians, Israeli reservists and activists say

Palestinians cover their heads from a stun grenade as Israeli troops deny farmers access to harvest olives in Burqa, near Ramallah, in the West Bank. Photograph: Mohamad Torokman/Reuters





Israel’s army has become a vehicle for violent settlers to escalate their campaign against Palestinians across the occupied West Bank, with reserve units drawn from settlements functioning as vigilante militias, according to Israeli soldiers and activists, and the United Nations.

Hagmar, or regional defence units, were set up across the West Bank from October 2023, as conscripts and the standing army deployed there prepared to move to Gaza.

The system handed weapons and authority to thousands of settlers, who formed military units in their own communities, with few checks on how these powers would be used. The state pays hagmar salaries, but in effect they operate in parallel to regular battalions.

Yaakov*, who served as a reservist in the occupied West Bank in 2024, described the hagmar as “armed militias doing what they want”.

“Formally they are under the battalion commander and his deputy, but on the ground they are given a free hand,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity. “The senior command looks the other way when incidents happen. They don’t respond to any command.”

His unit was often called to incidents by Israeli activists supporting Palestinians. When they arrived, they usually found settler reservists already at the scene, sometimes joining attacks on Palestinians.

“Most of the time, when something happened the hagmar would arrive ahead of us … Sometimes we arrived together with them, it was very rare we preceded them,” Yaakov said. “When they do arrive, in the best case, the hagmar do not participate. In the worst case, they are together with the settlers.”

He said he witnessed daily violence including vandalism of houses, trees, fruit, and agricultural produce, theft of livestock, intimidation and careless weapons handling.

Israeli forces block Palestinian farmers harvesting olives in Sa’ir, near Hebron. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

In other areas hagmar forces have been implicated in more extreme violence, including last year killing an elderly Palestinian man, and running over another Palestinian with an all-terrain vehicle.

The hagmar system had led to “the establishment of what are effectively settler militias within the IDF’s own ranks”, said Nadav Weiman, the executive director of Breaking the Silence, an advocacy group for former Israeli soldiers. “These soldier-settlers are driven by a violent, zero-sum ideology, and have all the authority of regular IDF soldiers to put that ideology into action.”

The Israeli military said there had been “a few incidents in which regional defence unit reservists acted in ways that did not meet expected standards”, but they “do not represent the majority of regional defence unit reservists”.

Some reservists have been removed from duty, and in other cases criminal investigations have been opened, a spokesperson said.

Since October 2023, Israeli soldiers have been indicted in connection with three violent offences and three property offences in the occupied West Bank, rights group Yesh Din said. Israeli forces have killed over 1000 Palestinians in that period. The last attack that led to a homicide indictment was a 2019 shooting.

There is a long history of close collaboration between settlers and the Israeli military. Units in the West Bank regularly killed and injured civiliansincluding children, and failed to enforce laws protecting Palestinians from settler violence.

But the widespread deployment of settler units marked a profound structural change. “Post 7 October [2023] the military and settler are unified,” said Yehuda Shaul, co-director of the Ofek thinktank, which campaigns against Israel’s occupation, and a co-founder of Breaking the Silence.

“The settlers are the IDF, the IDF are settlers, there’s no pretence of a buffer,” he said. “It is not any more about a situation where the IDF are standing idly by while settlers attack, it’s not even just one or two soldiers joining settler attacks.

“It’s a level of complicity that goes beyond anything we have seen before. You can see the impact if you look at how many Palestinian communities were forcibly transferred by settler violence before 7 October, and how many after.”

Settler attacks have completely displaced 29 Palestinian communities since October 2023, more than one a month on average, UN data shows. In 2022 and the first nine months of 2023, four communities were displaced, or one every five months.

The UN warned this month that the “growing phenomenon of ‘settler-soldiers’ … is further blurring the line between state and settler violence”. Settlers had killed, destroyed property and livelihoods, forced Palestinians from their homes and ripped communities apart, a report from the office of the high commissioner for human rights found.

The creation of hagmar units enabled these attacks and “further cemented” impunity for perpetrators, the report noted. A shifting mix of military uniform and civilian clothes meant “there is no clarity on whether Israeli attackers are acting as part of the army or in their private capacity”.

A second Israeli soldier deployed to the occupied West Bank in 2025 described an irregular dress code that amplified the “vigilante feel” of hagmar units. Moshe* spoke to the Guardian in an interview arranged by Breaking the Silence and also asked to remain anonymous.

“When you see the hagmar with uniform, they’re quite identifiable because this is the only people out there that aren’t us.” But they did not always wear uniforms, even when going on military missions, he added. “In the West Bank [there] is a very confusing mix of people, some in full uniform, some in part uniform but with long-barrel weapons, or wearing something like cargo pants that are military-esque but not necessarily a proper uniform.”

In September last year, a hagmar member, Elyashiv Nahum, approached international activists in Masafer Yatta, demanding to see their passports. He was driving a civilian vehicle, and wearing civilian clothes so the activists asked what legal authority he had to demand documents, video of the incident showed. Nahum then changed into uniform and called a commander who told the women: “It doesn’t matter what he looks like. He’s a soldier and he has the authority.”

Even serving Israeli soldiers often struggle to identify the chain of command for armed settlers because of the irregular approach to uniforms and a proliferation of weapons in the West Bank since October 2023.


Assault rifles are issued to hagmar and members of “first defender” security groups at settlements, and the government has also loosened gun licensing laws.

In the first year of the war, about 120,000 weapons were handed out to “Israeli citizens”, the far-right security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, said in a post on X.

Yaakov described being called to an incident where a well-known settler wearing military trousers was waving a military-issue weapon with dangerous aggression and carelessness. He did not know whether the man was a fellow soldier from a hagmar unit, a first responder with an assault rifle, or a civilian with a borrowed gun.

The Israeli military said hagmar reservists “are required to operate in uniform and follow clear procedures under the supervision of regional units”. They are also required to follow all IDF orders and rules of engagement. “Any deviation from these rules is investigated and addressed,” a military spokesperson said.

Regular forces deployed to the West Bank were not briefed on the hagmar’s membership or division of military roles between units in the area, both reservists who spoke to the Guardian said. That was “very unusual when there are other forces in the same area as you”, Moshe said.

They came to recognise many serving settlers over months of deployment, however, as the two groups built relationships that Yaakov described as “transgressing the operational”.

All settlements keep a “warm corner” with coffee and biscuits for soldiers far from home. Hagmar soldiers often invite other reservists, who are often bored and lonely, to watch football or join Friday night dinner, creating close bonds.

The hagmar units are not new. The structure was created decades ago, envisaged as a backup line of defence in border kibbutzim and communities to be activated in wars or at times of heightened threat.

But after the 7 October 2023 Hamas-led attacks, as Israel prepared to send the conscripts and career officers of the standing army to fight in Gaza, hagmar reservists were activated at a scale and for a duration that was unprecedented in Israel’s history.

Thousands were called up to units in border communities, an Israeli military spokesperson said. The number of serving hagmar reservists has been cut by 85% since then but hundreds are still deployed, most of them in the occupied West Bank. The military declined to give exact figures, but Israeli media reported that 7,000 settlers were initially mobilised to the units, and in December 2025 at least 500 were still based at illegal farm outposts.

Conventional reservist units outnumbered the hagmar in the West Bank, but the settlers’ presence was felt much more strongly on the ground, both soldiers said.

Their familiarity with local terrain often means soldiers on temporary deployments seek their advice or defer to their decisions. “Even the senior officers don’t really know what’s going on, so they treat the hagmar as the people that know the area and know how to deal with stuff,” Moshe said.

A Palestinian farmer and foreign volunteers flee as the Israeli army throws teargas canisters as they harvest olive groves near Ramallah in the West Bank. Photograph: Zain Jaafar/AFP/Getty Images

At times this extends to hagmar having effective command authority over uniformed reservists on the ground. In August, Nahum, the settler filmed changing into a uniform, drove to a small Bedouin community with several regular reservists in his pickup, although travelling in a civilian vehicle while on duty would usually violate Israeli military regulations.

When the group arrived Nahum, who was in civilian clothes, began directing the reservists to search Palestinian property and look for international activists, according to an Israeli activist present at the time and a soldier serving in the area. “I wouldn’t say he was giving orders like an army commander, but he was in charge,” the activist said, speaking on condition of anonymity over fears of professional repercussions for work protecting Palestinians.

“You saw that he would talk with the soldiers, he would talk with the officers, and then in the end what he wanted, that would happen.”

Even when a higher-ranking officer, a lieutenant colonel, arrived on the scene, it was “obvious that this guy was telling the soldiers what to do and what to say. Even the lieutenant colonel.”

Yaakov, who had served in the West Bank before, said the presence of hagmar units caused an obvious escalation in attacks on Palestinians and their homes and property. “It was very clear that the friction is higher, and the friction between specifically those hagmar units which are new after 7 October and the Palestinians was much more intense,” he said. It was also clear the escalation was caused by Israelis.

“It’s not that Palestinians came to the settlement, the settlement came to them,” he said. “The settlers were bringing their sheep to graze at the area of the [Palestinian] village. It was very obvious that the Palestinians were the side that could not fight back.”

He did not know at the time that Israeli soldiers had the authority to arrest Israelis, and only witnessed the detention of Palestinians.

“The violent conduct came only from one side. Arresting them would have stopped the pogroms, the Palestinians were not armed or violent and the risk to life came from the settlers.”

Hagmar recruits include men with a criminal record for violence, who now conduct their campaigns backed by the authority of the Israeli state, Shaul said.

“Israel has taken some of the most extreme settlers, in some cases people who are even convicted of assault against Palestinians, and made them the IDF.

“They have been given the power to run the show in the area where they live, to carry out their plans, dreams, fantasies – depending on how far they went – through formal service in the IDF.”

* Names have been changed

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jan/30/settler-only-idf-units-functioning-as-vigilante-militias-in-west-bank

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My Comments :

Entirely conform the roadmap from Herzl (*) and his Aliyah zionist proponent predecessors and successors (the latter, like the End Time apostles from the Heritage Foundation, with their Project Esther, carefully composed in narrow consultation with the Tel Aviv genocidal government), the 100 plus year old project of the Umvolkung of Palestine by replacing the autochthonous Palestinians by allochthonous zionist Jews is still proceeding every day...

First there was the hyper colonial Balfour Declaration from the Imperial UK and subsequently the locking in of Palestine into an A-Mandate status of 25 years, (a move) especially designed to hand the Zionists enough time, to prepare for the first Nakba during 1947-1949 and lay the basic-structures for the expulsion of the indigenous Palestinians during the many other occasions, that would follow thereafter : A process continuing until this very day…

(*) Completely contrary to his propaganda novel Altneuland, Herzl wrote in his secret diaries at the time : "spirit all the penniless Arabs over the border and confiscate the land from the wealthy Arab landowners".

‘A very Italian problem’: inside the fight against the mafia and corruption at the Winter Olympics

 





 

‘A very Italian problem’: inside the fight against the mafia and corruption at the Winter Olympics

Construction works for Milano Cortina have been a lightning rod for suspected infiltration by organised crime, but anti-mafia groups have adopted an approach that will help future hosts

E

arly on the morning of 8 October, the Provincial Command of the Carabinieri in Belluno put out a press release announcing three arrests, in the culmination of a year-long investigation they called “Operation Reset”. Two of the three were brothers, were both known members of the notorious SS Lazio Ultras, the Irriducibili, it was stated in the release, and had boasted of having personal ties to former boss Fabrizio Piscitelli, who was murdered in 2019. The crimes the brothers had been arrested on suspicion of had not been committed in Rome, but 400 miles north, in the small alpine ski resort of Cortina d’Ampezzo, high in the Dolomites, and home, for the next three weeks, to the Winter Olympics.

The brothers are still awaiting trial, but the local public prosecutor’s office has alleged that they were running an operation in three phases. The first was taking control of the drug distribution network in Cortina, the second was to take control of three local nightclubs, and the third was to extort the local council into awarding the construction contracts for the works being done for the Games. Among the evidence the prosecutor says it possesses is a note on one of the brothers’ phones saying: “We want the cemetery area for the garages, the former pastry shop, the slip road and the new ring road, the construction of the tourist village.”

According to the Italian government’s Antimafia Investigative Directorate (DIA), 38% of all the anti-mafia measures taken in Italy in 2024 were related to the construction sector, when about 200 public works sites were investigated for suspected infiltration by organised crime. The last mega-event held in Milan, the World Exposition in 2015, was blighted by corruption around construction contracts. The Expo cost €2.6bn. The bill for the Winter Olympics is currently running at well over double that amount.

The DIA also reported to parliament that “the Winter Olympics represent a significant event … for criminal syndicates interested in gaining a foothold in the tender awarding procedures”. In 2024 “50 anti-mafia interdiction measures were adopted” in Lombardy alone. One was issued against a construction company working on the construction of an underground car park included in the “Plan of Works for the Milan-Cortina 2026 Olympics”, after the “company’s directors were found to have personal and professional relationships with members of several “Ndrangheta gangs.”

The two brothers were not members of the mafia, according to the prosecutor, but have been charged with using the “mafia method”: extortion, coercion and intimidation. The claims allege the men threatened and beat rival drug dealers, dragged a nightclub owner into the woods at gunpoint, and attempted to corrupt a councillor by offering to secure him votes in exchange for construction contracts, and then threatening him when he refused to cooperate with them. “This is Cortina, we’re in charge here,” the men are claimed to have said during their arrest, “I’m not a small-town criminal, I’m the boss and we’ll solve this thing with guns.”

If Italy has problems, it also has solutions. “It’s sort of circular,” says Leonardo Ferrante, who is on the national board of the anti-mafia organisation Libera. “Italy is known as the country of the mafia, but it should also be known as the country of the anti-mafia movement.” Libera was founded in 1994 by the streetwise priest Luigi Ciotti, with the initial aim of collecting a million signatures to petition for a new law permitting the reuse of goods confiscated from criminal organisations. They have joined together in a radical programme called Open Olympics 26, in an effort to make the public procurement procedures around the Games more transparent.

The Palazzo del Ghiaccio will host the curling competitions at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics. Photograph: Claudia Greco/Reuters

Open Olympics 26’s signature achievement has been to get the Games organisers to commit to publishing all their financial dealings on a single, public portal, which is updated every 45 days. Because of that, we know that only €1.6bn is being spent on the realisation of the Games, the remaining €4.12bn is on related works, including an astonishing €2.816bn on road projects, and that more than half of the projects won’t be completed until after the Games are over, with the latest scheduled for completion in 2033.

“The initiative originated in the autumn of 2023, emerging from a significant rift between Italian civil society and the institutional bodies. And well, after years of this attempted dialogue, we started to organise a community and a network of associations asking for transparency and accountability,” explains Ferrante. “Everything currently known about the Olympics in terms of data is the direct result of the action of the Italian civic groups.” It is thanks to their work, for instance, that we know 60% of the 98 Olympic projects listed on the portal have been done without any environmental impact assessment.

“In Italy, we have strong laws on transparency but we have a lot of exceptions, and one of these exceptions is the Olympics and Paralympics.” Ferrante’s colleague Elisa Orlando adds: “It is a very Italian problem. We have seen it in other mega events, like the Universal Exposition in Milan 10 years ago. We get into a position where it becomes an emergency. We have to deliver before the opening date of the event, and this provides for exemptions, not only to transparency, but sometimes also to procedures in the public procurement processes.”ip past newsletter promotion.

The more transparent the dealings are, the less inviting they become for organised crime. It has been only partly successful. Libera has pushed for more disclosure around subcontracting, and an entire tranche of the Olympic project exists off the portal, in the hands of private companies. “The Fondazione Milano Cortina is the black hole of transparency.”

Three of the last six Olympic Games, in Sochi, Rio and Tokyo, involved enormous corruption scandals. At a time when fewer and fewer cities are willing to follow through on mooted bid proposals because of public scepticism about costs (Krakow, Oslo, Stockholm, Innsbruck, Sion and Calgary all withdrew from the competitions to hold the 2022 and 2026 versions) the Open Olympics project represents a radical step towards addressing some of these longstanding problems. The team is already working with organisations in France to replicate this work before the 2030 Winter Olympics, which are being held on the other side of the Alps.

“The risk of criminal infiltration exists everywhere, not only in Italy. But here in Italy, we have lenses that allow us to recognise criminal infiltration when it occurs,” says Ferrante. “Our third aim is to build an international civic legacy. We want to create an international movement for the transparency of the Olympics.”

https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2026/jan/30/a-very-italian-problem-inside-the-fight-against-the-mafia-and-corruption-at-the-winter-olympics

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My Comments :

Since extortion, intimidation and wholesale theft are the main charactaristics of the Trump government, one can hardly miss the opportunity to discover the striking similarities between the Italian mafia and the trump clan.

He has even managed to set aside the UN - and by doing so, destroying its global authority - and create his own rules for the world : The Gaza initiative is only one of examples for this brazen corruption and blunt nepotism.

Another example of abusing state-authority to protect his own private interests is the decree to abolish all judicial procedures against his criminal behavioure as a project developer (among else, to artificially blow up the value of his supposed assets (as potential security) in order to enable BigBanking (Deutsche Bank etc) to give him lower interest rates.

Then there was the collective pardoning of his militia members, that had been trying to "stop the steal" by storming the Capitola, where his then vice-president was enrolled in the procedure to legitimise the the presidential election (in favour of Biden).

Meanwhile Trump has been brutally trampling on the legislative powers of Congress and the judiciary, by having for example his militias intimidating members of Congress via the social media and threatening to withhold his support for eventual members of congress, that might be ambitioning to continue their position.

However, for all those who might be tempted by the thought, that his corrosive attitude might disappear once he will have left the White House (due to the end of his term, faltering age-related illnesses or to impeachment), I have to disappoint you all.

After all, he is only an executive of the ultra-orthodox, hyper-theocratic Heritage Foundation that provided him – after the super PAC’s of the upper crust of Silicon Valley parachuted him into the White House – with the instant set of decrees, that would redesign the USA in their most favourite shape and constellation.

They did so, by handing him two policy Bibles – project 2025 and project Esther – that do contain all, the necessary tactics, to submit the USA into the brutal ruling of the Middle Ages, where the only place for progressive thought will be in eternal hell.

Project Esther has been designed to stigmatise “the pro-Palestinian left” as pro-Hamas, and “thus” as antisemitic terrorists, that have to be stopped at all cost and at all level, to have them achieve any significance in the USA society.

So capo di capi Trump and his ICE Gestapo will be easily replaced by his Mafia Masters of the Heritage Foundation, as soon as he is no longer of any use of them.