| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N/A | N/A | The Raid | At sea (implied) | View |
| 2000-05-01 | N/A | Withdrawal of troops from Lebanon (Referenced as past event) | Lebanon | View |
A page from a memoir or narrative report describing a military blunder during a conflict involving Israel and Egypt (likely the Yom Kippur War). The narrator describes a commander named Eitan deciding to camp on a main road despite objections. The unit ignores warnings of approaching armor and is subsequently ambushed by Egyptian T-55 tanks, resulting in significant losses. The document bears a House Oversight Bates stamp.
This document appears to be a page from a memoir or book draft by Ehud Barak (indicated by the header), bearing a House Oversight Bates stamp. The text details Barak's perspective as Defense Minister during a military escalation with Hamas in November (historically 2012, Operation Pillar of Defense). It describes the decision to assassinate Hamas leader Ahmed Jabari, the subsequent rocket fire from Gaza (including Iranian and Russian missiles), the deployment of the Iron Dome defense system, and the strategic differences between this operation and previous ones under Prime Minister Olmert.
This document appears to be a page (265) from a memoir or historical account written by a high-ranking Israeli military official (likely Ehud Barak, former Ramatkal). It details diplomatic negotiations with Syria, specifically interactions with General Shihabi and Muallem, and discusses security threats posed by Iraq, Iran, Hizbollah, and Hamas, culminating in the mention of the kidnapping of soldier Nahshon Wachsman. While labeled with a House Oversight code often associated with Epstein document dumps, the text itself is purely geopolitical history regarding Israel.
This document appearing in House Oversight files is a diplomatic analysis regarding the fallout of an international report (likely the UN's Palmer Report) concerning an Israeli raid (the Gaza flotilla raid). The text outlines that the report found Israeli force to be disproportionate but legally justified the Gaza blockade, a stance that angered Turkey. Consequently, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu announced sanctions, the downgrading of diplomatic ties, and the suspension of military agreements with Israel.
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