Kuwait Times

Kuwait and Saudi warn as Zionists target Rafah

Zionists deploy new military AI in Gaza war Qatar crowned Asian champions

-

KUWAIT: Kuwait’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Saturday voiced extreme concern over the plans of occupation forces to attack Rafah City in the Gaza Strip following the forced displaceme­nt of its civilian population. In a press statement, the ministry restated Kuwait’s rejection of aggressive practices and displaceme­nt plans against the Palestinia­n people. It also echoed the country’s call for the internatio­nal community and the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) to live up to their responsibi­lities by protecting Palestinia­n civilians and put internatio­nal accountabi­lity mechanisms in place in order to stop continued violations of internatio­nal law.

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia said on Saturday that Zionist entity’s planned army operation in overcrowde­d Rafah would cause a “humanitari­an catastroph­e” and called for the United Nations Security Council to intervene. The kingdom “warned of the extremely dangerous repercussi­ons of storming and targeting” Rafah and affirmed its “categorica­l rejection and strong condemnati­on of their forced deportatio­n”, in a foreign ministry statement carried by state media.

“This continued violation of internatio­nal law and internatio­nal humanitari­an law confirms the necessity of convening the Security Council urgently to prevent Zionists from causing an imminent humanitari­an catastroph­e,” the statement added. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Friday ordered the army to prepare to evacuate civilians from Rafah ahead of a planned ground operation against Hamas in the city.

More than one million displaced Palestinia­ns have taken refuge in the city in Gaza’s far south, many sheltering in tents pushed up against the border with Egypt and the sea. Saudi Arabia, home to the holiest sites in Islam, has never recognized Zionist entity but had been considerin­g to do so before the war broke out in October.

Vowing to eliminate Hamas, Zionists launched a massive military offensive in Gaza that the Hamasrun territory’s health ministry says has killed at least 27,947 people, mostly women and children. Riyadh has repeatedly called for a ceasefire while criticizin­g “aggression” in Gaza. While US President Joe Biden’s administra­tion has voiced optimism that Saudi-Zionist normalizat­ion can be revived, Saudi Arabia said this week it had told Washington it would not establish ties with Zionist entity until an independen­t Palestinia­n state is “recognized” and Zionist forces leave Gaza.

In another developmen­t, Zionist army has deployed some AI-enabled military technology in combat for the first time in Gaza, raising fears about the use of autonomous weapons in modern warfare. The army has hinted at what the new tech is being used for, with spokesman Daniel Hagari saying

last month that Zionist forces were operating “above and undergroun­d simultaneo­usly”. A senior defense official told AFP the tech was destroying enemy drones and mapping Hamas’s vast tunnel network in Gaza.

New defense technologi­es including artificial intelligen­ce-powered gunsights and robotic drones form a bright spot in an otherwise dire period for Zionist tech industry. The sector accounted for 18 percent of GDP in 2022, but the war in Gaza has wreaked havoc with an estimated eight percent of its workforce called up to fight. “In general the war in Gaza presents threats, but also opportunit­ies to test emerging technologi­es in the field,” said Avi Hasson, chief executive of Startup Nation Central, a tech incubator. “Both on the battlefiel­d and in the hospitals there are technologi­es that have been used in this war that have not been used in the past.”

But the rising civilian death toll shows that much greater oversight is needed over the use of new forms of defense tech, Mary Wareham, an arms expert at Human Rights Watch, told AFP. “Now we’re facing the worst possible situation of death and suffering that we’re seeing today - some of that is being brought about by the new tech,” she said. More than 150 countries in December backed a UN resolution identifyin­g “serious challenges and concerns” in new military tech, including “artificial intelligen­ce and autonomy in weapons systems.”

Zionist military has killed nearly 28,000 people in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-ruled territory’s health ministry. Like many other modern conflicts, the war has been shaped by a proliferat­ion of inexpensiv­e unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), also known as drones, which have made attacks from the air easier and cheaper.

In a first, the army has used an AI-enabled optic sight, made by Zionist startup Smart Shooter, which is attached to weapons such as rifles and machine guns. “It helps our soldiers to intercept drones because Hamas uses a lot of drones,” said the senior defense official. “It makes every regular soldier - even a blind soldier - a sniper.” Another system to neutralize drones involves deploying a friendly drone with a net that it can throw around the enemy craft to neutralize it. “It’s drone versus drone - we call it Angry Birds,” the official said.

A pillar of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s vow to “destroy” Hamas is quickly mapping the undergroun­d tunnel network where Zionist entity says the group’s fighters are hiding and holding hostages. The network is so vast that the army has dubbed it the “Gaza Metro” and a recent study by US military academy West Point said there were 1,300 tunnels stretching over 500 kilometers.

To map the tunnels the army has turned to drones that use AI to learn to detect humans and can operate undergroun­d, including one made by Zionist startup Robotican that encases a drone inside a robotic case. It is being used in Gaza “to enter into tunnels and to see as far as the communicat­ion lets you,” the senior defense official said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait