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Sunday, January 19, 2025

'Festival survivor among 3 hostages to be released as cease-fire goes into effect

 The long-awaited cease-fire between Israel and Hamas reportedly went into effect on Sunday morning after the Palestinian terror group delayed giving the list of hostages to be freed — but then finally revealed the names after some three hours.

The terror group announced early Sunday that Romi Gonen, Emily Damari and Doron Steinbrecher will be released from captivity today under the agreement reached with Israeli officials, the Times of Israel reported.

The paper said Israeli officials acknowledged getting the names — it was not clear when the women would be released.

Emily Damari, 28, was on the list oof hostages to be released Sunday.

The cease-fire deal between Israel and Hamas nearly crumbled Sunday after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accused the militant group of failing to fulfill their end of the pact when they didn’t release the names of the captives slated to be released before the deal was meant to begin.

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The delay led Israel to launch attacks in Gaza that reportedly led to several deaths.

The Israelis said the deal was in effect as of 11:15 a.m local time, which was after 4 a.m. ET.

The hostages will be the first of 33 women, children and men under 50 to be freed by Hamas during the first phase of the three-stage deal the Jewish state officially inked with the terror group Thursday night in Doha.

The three civilian women slated to be released were each taken hostage when the terror group attacked Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.

Romi Gonen, 23, was at the Supernova festival when she was taken by Hamas terrorist on Oct. 7, 2023.
Doron Steinbrecher was kidnapped from her home in Kibbutz Kfar Aza.

Gonen, 23, was shot in the arm and abducted by Hamas terrorists at the Nova music festival. Her family, who has advocated for her release, described her as “one of the funniest girls I know,” who is beloved by her friends and customers at the high-end Tel Aviv restaurant she waitresses at.

Damari, a dual UK citizen, and Steinbrecher, 30, were both kidnapped from their homes in Kibbutz Kfar Aza.

Damari, 28, is the only British hostage still in captivity.

Israeli hostages held captive by Hamas for over a year have been freed as the cease-fire deal between Israel and Hamas went into effect despite an 11th-hour snag threatening to upend the fragile accord.AP

The women’s release came despite Hamas threatening to derail the cease-fire deal owing to the terror group’s failure to share the names of the hostages it planned to release Sunday.

In exchange for their release, Israel is expected to release hundreds of Palestinians prisoners during this period, where a six-week pause on fighting in the war-torn Palestinian enclave is in effect, as well as all Palestinian women and children detained in Israeli jails since Oct. 7, 2023.

The Israeli cabinet approved the high-stakes deal early Saturday morning, following hours-long deliberations that stretched late into the night.

The greenlight came after Israeli officials resolved last-minute hurdles Thursday that nearly derailed the agreement, including government infighting and what Prime Minister Netanyahu called a “last-minute blackmail attempt” by Hamas, leading him to delay the cabinet security vote.

President-elect Donald Trump’s hard-nosed approach to foreign policy — with the incoming commander-in-chief promising “all hell will break loose” if a cease-fire deal wasn’t achieved by his inauguration Monday — motivated Netanyahu to get the tenuous deal back on track, sources previously told The Post.

33 women, children, and men under 50 to be freed by the terror group during the first phase of the three-stage deal the Jewish state officially inked with Hamas Thursday night in Doha.Shosh Bedrosian
Israel is expected to release hundreds of Palestinians prisoners during this period.Shosh Bedrosian

In addition to Israel releasing Palestinian prisoners for a third of the roughly 100 remaining hostages — only about 60 of which are thought to be alive — the first phase will see an influx of much-needed humanitarian aid into Gaza, including food and medical supplies.

Israeli soldiers, meanwhile, will withdraw to a buffer zone near the border with the Jewish state to allow displaced Palestinians to return to their homes in the territory.

The second phase of the agreement — which will begin 16 days after the ceasefire — is rife with details that are turning into sticking points for both sides in the negotiations. 

The deal was approved by the Israeli cabinet Saturday morning, following hours-long deliberations that stretched late into the night.REUTERS

Under the terms of the deal, Israel is to withdraw all of its forces from Gaza, which it has said it would not do until Hamas’ military and political forces are completely eradicated.

Hamas, meanwhile, is to return all remaining hostages, which the terror group has refused as Israeli forces remain in Gaza.  

On Saturday night, Netanyahu said in a 10-minute video address that the truce of first stage of the deal was a “temporary ceasefire” and that Israel had the United States’ backing to resume fighting in Gaza if the two sides couldn’t hammer out their sticking points over the accord’s second phase.

“If we do have to resume fighting, we will do so in new ways and with very great power,” he thundered.

The third and final phase, if would see each side returns the remains of any hostages or prisoners and for a major years-long reconstruction to begin in the ravaged Palestinian territory.

The devastating conflict in Gaza began on Oct. 7, 2023, when the terrorists and their allies slaughtered roughly 1,200 people in Israel in a surprise attack and took another roughly 250 hostage. 

The pause in fighting is the first in Gaza since November 2023, when a brief truce took place during a temporary cease-fire deal. 

Both President Biden and Trump took credit for this week’s seemingly impossible three-phase deal announced Wednesday night, which the current administration had been pushing for months to no avail. 

Trump’s special envoy to the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, has been credited as crucial in breakthrough. One senior Biden official previously told Reuters that when meeting with Netanyahu last week, Witkoff pressured the Israeli leader into accepting the deal and “shifted everything into motion.”

https://nypost.com/2025/01/19/world-news/hamas-reveals-names-of-hostages-they-will-release-as-ceasefire-deal-hangs-in-limbo/

Russian Media Alleges NATO F-16 Pilot Killed In Strike On Ukraine

 Russia is claiming that its military has killed a NATO flight instructor who was on the ground in Ukraine advising Ukrainian pilots after they received several rounds of F-16 fighter jets from European countries.

"Danish instructor Jepp Hansen, who was training Ukrainian pilots to fly F-16 fighter jets, has allegedly been killed in a Russian missile strike in Ukraine, TASS reported on Saturday," according to Russia's English-language media.

Illustrative image via X

Regional reports say that an Iskander missile was launched by Russia on a university building in the city of Krivoy Rog in Dnepropetrovsk Region which was being used by the Ukrainian military.

The Danish government has not commented on the claims, nor is it expected to:

According to Russian media reports, citing a post by Hansen’s friend on social media, the Dane had significant experience in flying F-16 jets and had trained “hundreds of Ukrainians” to operate the planes

Neither Denmark nor the Russian Defense Ministry has officially commented on the reports.

Denmark and the Netherlands have been leading European countries in the F-16 program, having also hosted Ukrainian pilots as they undergo training.

While speculation has abounded over whether or not NATO trainers are actually inside Ukraine, Russia has on several occasions warned that any such Western personnel present in Ukraine are fair game for attack.

In the recent past, Russia has claimed to have taken out French mercenaries in the north. These current Russian media reports mark the first claims of a NATO flight instructor having been killed, and the reports are surprisingly specific, mentioning the allegedly deceased Danish pilot by name.

Some media reports and pundits have gone so far as to suggest that NATO pilots are actually operating Ukraine's F-16s in Ukraine's skies in some cases. But this has never been confirmed nor is there evidence of this.

Russia's military has been searching for base locations in Ukraine where the F-16s are hosted on the ground. Kiev has kept this a carefully guarded secret since receiving the advanced fighters. It could be that some are based in neighboring Poland, and then fly missions in Ukraine.

The US has also been hosting a Ukrainian pilot training program, especially out of San Antonio and Arizona, but has allowed European partners to largely spearhead the bulk of the training, some reports indicate.

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/russian-media-alleges-nato-f-16-pilot-killed-strike-ukraine

'Putin Would Demand Ukraine Never Join NATO in Any Trump Talks'

 Russia will demand Ukraine drastically cut back military ties with the NATO alliance and become a neutral state with a limited army in any talks with incoming US President Donald Trump, according to people familiar with the matter.

Increasingly confident he has the advantage on the battlefield in Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin is determined to achieve his goal that Kyiv never join the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and that limits are placed on its military capacity, said the people with knowledge of Kremlin thinking who asked not to be identified discussing sensitive information.
The Kremlin’s position is that while individual NATO members may continue to send arms to Ukraine under bilateral security agreements, any such weapons should not be used against Russia or to recapture territory, said one of the people, who is familiar with Moscow’s preparations for possible negotiations.
The hard-line, opening demands are almost certain to be unpalatable to Ukrainian leaders as the war nears the three-year mark. The Russian leader’s stance also defies Trump’s stated wish to end the conflict as rapidly as possible, and could be designed to give Moscow leeway to negotiate. Russian gains in Ukraine’s east, meanwhile, have been slow and have come at a heavy cost.
Ukraine and Russia are holding limited talks in Qatar about rules to shield nuclear facilities from being targeted, the person familiar with the Kremlin’s preparations said.
Ukrainian officials familiar with the talks said the only negotiations between Kyiv and Moscow are currently limited to prisoner swaps and bringing back deported children.
The Russian conditions also include keeping at least de facto control of the nearly 20% Russia holds of Ukraine, including the Crimean peninsula annexed in 2014, though Moscow is open to some territory swaps, some of the people said.
The Kremlin didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
Trump said last week that a meeting with Putin is being set up, though Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Monday that no substantive preparation for talks has happened yet. No negotiations to end the fighting have started.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy in November appeared to soften his position on a possible ceasefire while Russia still occupies territory, saying Kyiv should rely on diplomacy to recover lands seized by Moscow.
“The issue of territories is not the main problem of the conflict,” said Tatiana Stanovaya, founder of the R.Politik consultancy and a senior fellow at the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center. “It has a much broader context which, apparently, is still not fully understood in the West,” pointing to Moscow’s position on Ukraine’s NATO bid, which she said was “unwavering,” and disarmament.
While the incoming US leader and top aides have shown little enthusiasm for binding security guarantees for Ukraine, especially through NATO membership, some in Trump’s camp have backed supporting Kyiv if it pursues diplomacy so it can negotiate from a position of strength.
The country has received tens of billions of dollars of US and European military aid since Russian poured troops across the border in February 2022.
Ukraine’s biggest concern is that a halt in fighting would allow Russia to re-group and strike again, which Kyiv says is why it needs western weapons and a sufficient army.
A Krab mobile howitzer, donated to the Ukrainian army by Poland, in Chasiv Yar, Ukraine on Jan. 9.Photographer: Wolfgang Schwan/Anadolu/Getty Images
Ukraine “should be neutral, harmless and under no circumstances an outpost for NATO or the US,” a nationalist Russian tycoon and Kremlin ally, Konstantin Malofeev, said in an interview last month. “It should have a tiny army, enough for Ukraine to protect its borders from refugees and carry out police functions — but not enough to fight with Russia.”
The neutral status should be enshrined in Ukraine’s constitution, said Malofeev and two of the people in Moscow.
Just over a year ago, Putin conveyed to senior US officials via indirect channels that he could potentially consider dropping an insistence on neutral status for Ukraine and even abandon opposition to eventual NATO membership, two people close to the Kremlin said at the time. Putin has continually used the threat of Ukraine joining NATO as a central justification for his invasion, and the report of a possible trial balloon was met with US skepticism.
Since then, Russia’s military situation has improved as it advances along the front in Ukraine’s east. That has emboldened Putin to take a firmer line, one of the people familiar with the current preparations said.
To be sure, Ukraine still holds territory in Russia’s Kursk region after a surprise incursion last year, a potential bargaining chip if Kyiv can keep it, and the US on Friday announced the most sweeping and aggressive sanctions yet on Russia’s oil trade.

Volodymyr Zelenskiy following a meeting with NATO Secretary General in Kyiv on Oct. 3.Photographer: Anatolii Stepanov/AFP/Getty Images
Russia’s minimum demands are for a neutral Ukraine, a halt to further NATO enlargement in post-Soviet states, and strict limits on the size of Ukraine’s military, according to Pavel Danilin, a political analyst who works with the Kremlin.
Putin has said any peace agreement should be based on the so-called Istanbul agreements. Under the document’s most recent draft from the spring of 2022, it would have banned foreign troops in Ukraine, joint exercises and Kyiv’s membership in any outside military alliances, the Russian leader said in June.
US media outlets last year reported details from the documents, which specified that foreign weapons shouldn’t enter Ukraine, including missiles. The two sides were still at odds over certain points, including limits on Kyiv’s armed forces, the publications said.
Russia insisted on capping Ukraine’s armed forces at 85,000 people and 342 tanks and limiting the range of Ukrainian missiles to 40 kilometers (about 25 miles), they said, while Ukraine wanted an army of 250,000 and 800 tanks, and a missile range of 280 kilometers.
The two countries also couldn’t agree on what security guarantees Ukraine would get — likely a key element of any future negotiations.

TikTok ban financial nightmare for Google, Apple, other tech firms with ties to China’s ByteDance

 The looming TikTok ban presents a multibillion-dollar headache for app store operators Apple and Google – as well as other Big Tech giants like Microsoft and Amazon that count its Chinese parent company ByteDance as a business partner.

The Biden administration effectively punted enforcement of the law, which is set to take effect on Sunday, to President-elect Donald Trump, who formally takes office the next day and has vowed to save the app.

On Friday, the Supreme Court rejected TikTok’s appeal and upheld the law, determining it does not violate the First Amendment.

Under the law, Google and Apple must stop allowing new downloads of TikTok – with potential fines of $5,000 per user if they don’t comply.

Sen. Tom Cotton – the outspoken Arkansas Republican who has supported the national ban – suggested that companies should be wary of ignoring the law even with assurances from key lawmakers that they won’t be on the hook for penalties.

“Penalties for companies like Apple and Google could run as high as $850 billion. Not sure I’d take a politician’s word if I ran those companies,” he wrote on X.

Aside from the immediate risks, Google and Apple will have to weigh the possibility that Trump or a future president could later decide to take action against them for failing to adhere to the law, experts told The Post.

Google declined to comment on its plans. Representatives for Apple did not respond to a request for comment.

The Supreme Court noted in its unanimous ruling that “Congress has determined that divestiture is necessary to address its well-supported national security concerns regarding TikTok’s data collection practices and relationship with a foreign adversary.”

Aside from the implications for Google and Apple, the Supreme Court’s decision adds fresh complications for Big Tech firms that have problematic “entanglements” with TikTok and ByteDance, according to Geoffrey Cain, policy director at the Tech Integrity Project and author of “The Perfect Police State.”

“Given the unanimous ruling that these Chinese firms are national security threats, it is time for Microsoft, Apple, Amazon and others to cut ties,” Cain told The Post.

In November, the House Select Committee on China blasted Amazon for entering a “dangerous and unwise” e-commerce partnership with TikTok.

TikTok
TikTok argued the divestment law was unconstitutional.AFP via Getty Images

TikTok is also one of the biggest customers for Microsoft’s cloud and AI services – and was paying nearly $20 million per month for access to OpenAI’s models through Microsoft as of last July, The Information reported. Microsoft previously faced heat for collaborating with ByteDance on an AI project called KubeRay.

Oracle provides cloud-computing support for TikTok and once partnered with the company on “Project Texas” – an ill-fated effort to convince lawmakers the app was safe from Chinese spying by storing all data for Americans on US soil.

Elsewhere, Reuters reported last month that Apple was in early talks with Chinese firms, including ByteDance, to roll out AI features in China.

Representatives for the House’s China select committee, TikTok, Amazon, Microsoft and Oracle did not immediately return requests for comment.

Should TikTok go dark, social media giants such as Facebook and Instagram parent Meta, Snap and Google-owned YouTube are in line to benefit from an influx of customers.

The law passed by Congress last April requires TikTok parent ByteDance to divest its stake entirely or face a ban on Jan. 19. The law allowed Biden to extend the deadline by 90 days if there were signs of progress toward a deal — but no such progress materialized.

Apple App Store
The law requires Apple and Google to stop allowing downloads of TikTok.NurPhoto via Getty Images

Cotton noted those terms in his warning to the TikTok enablers.

“The only grounds for a 90-day extension are (a) significant progress (b) in binding legal agreements (c) to close a sale in 90 days. None of that has happened,” he wrote.

Trump is said to be mulling an executive order that would further delay enforcement of the law for 60 to 90 days while he attempts to facilitate a sale to a US buyer.

It’s not currently clear if an executive order of that kind would stand up to legal scrutiny.

TikTok is reportedly planning to take its app offline as the clock turns to midnight Sunday and redirect users to a website with details of the ban.

That move would go beyond the scope of Congress’s law, which requires only that app store providers like Google and Apple halt downloads.

The app would remain usable for a period for people who already downloaded it, but service would gradually degrade due to a lack of product support and updates.

TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew is set to attend Trump’s inauguration on Monday and will be seated alongside other tech titans such as Elon Musk and Apple’s Tim Cook.

https://nypost.com/2025/01/17/business/looming-tiktok-ban-poses-financial-nightmare-for-google-apple/