Ansarollah Website Official Report
Published: Safar 27, 1447 AH
The actions currently undertaken by the Israeli enemy can be described as a multi-front aggression under a single strategy. The rapidly unfolding events across the region—from the genocide war waged against the Gaza Strip since October 7 2023, to the expansion of battlefronts into Lebanon and Syria, and even strikes deep inside Iran—cannot be seen as isolated military maneuvers. Rather, they are interconnected chapters within a broader expansionist and settler-colonial project, rooted in the doctrine of "Greater Israel."
At the heart of this aggression lies "religious Zionism," a driving force within the entity, pushing toward a comprehensive war. Its agenda openly calls for the displacement of Palestinians, the annexation of the entire West Bank, the rebuilding of settlements in Gaza and southern Lebanon, and the revival of an ideological project that redraws the entity’s borders far beyond historic Palestine.
Criminal Netanyahu has himself given these intentions a clear dimension, describing his role as a "historic and spiritual mission," tied directly to the vision of "Greater Israel"—a vision that extends beyond Palestinian lands to parts of Jordan and Egypt. Such declarations are not slips of the tongue, but expressions of a deeply rooted doctrine, awaiting the right moment to be translated into reality.
Ideological Roots: From the Claimed "Divine Promise" to the Policy of Facts on the Ground
The thesis of "Greater Israel" is built upon Talmudic interpretations that claim a so-called "divine promise" granting Jews land from the Nile to the Euphrates. This narrative has long served as the ideological basis of Zionism to justify the occupation of Palestine, and it continues to be embraced today by the most extremist currents within the Israeli government.
David Ben-Gurion, the first criminal "prime minister" of the Zionist entity, embodied this ideology when he declared: "The Jewish people have another map which Jewish youth must achieve, the map of the Torah." This rhetoric has never disappeared from Israeli policy; it resurfaces forcefully at each stage of aggression—from the 1967 war that opened the doors to settlement in the West Bank, Gaza, the Golan, and Sinai, to the 1982 invasion of Lebanon, and now to the current genocidal war on Gaza.
The Palestinian Front: Swallowing the West Bank and Plans to Reoccupy Gaza
Netanyahu’s expansionist declarations coincide with tangible actions on the ground. Less than a month after the Knesset passed a draft law paving the way for annexing the West Bank, his government is preparing for the full reoccupation of Gaza.
Gaza
On August 8, 2025, the Zionist enemy’s security cabinet approved Netanyahu’s plan to occupy Gaza City and central camps, effectively aiming for total control over the Strip. This reflects the persistence of the right-wing Zionist political establishment in pursuing ideological goals, including the reinstatement of settlements in Gaza.
Zionist "Chief of Staff" Herzi Halevi’s successor, Eyal Zamir, on Tuesday presented to Zionist so-called "Defense Minister" Yisrael Katz the stages of this Gaza occupation plan, according to the Zionist news outlet Walla. The plan includes operational conclusions and principles intended to make the occupation of Gaza City "more effective," alongside reinforcements in northern Gaza to tighten pressure on Hamas and wrest control of additional areas.
West Bank
In parallel, Zionist "Finance Minister" Bezalel Smotrich is leading a plan to devour the West Bank. He openly called for Palestinians to suffer a "new Nakba," while authorizing the implementation of the "E1 settlement plan," which envisions building around 3,400 settlement units to isolate al-Quds from its Palestinian surroundings and split the West Bank in two—effectively eliminating any possibility of a Palestinian state.
According to the Palestinian Anti-Wall and Settlement Resistance Commission, since October 7, 2023, the Zionist entity has confiscated over 52,000 dunams of West Bank land, accompanied by the killing of around 1,000 Palestinians and the wounding of nearly 7,000 by Zionist soldiers and settlers.
Boaz Bismuth, head of the so-called "Foreign Affairs and Security Committee" in the Knesset and a member of the Likud party, affirmed during a tour in the West Bank on Monday that the imposition of sovereignty over the territory is more important than normalization. He declared, “This war must end in victory,” stressing that enforcing occupation is the true triumph for “Israel.” Bismuth added that the decision to impose what he called “Israeli sovereignty” on the West Bank will be carried out soon.
Meanwhile, Smotrich has revived a long-delayed project to link the settlement of Ma’ale Adumim with occupied al-Quds, a plan supported by Netanyahu. He argued that a Palestinian state poses a "danger to Israel, the only Jewish state in the world," reiterating his claim that the West Bank is part of "Israel" by "divine promise." He vowed that the government would confiscate thousands of dunams and invest billions to bring one million settlers into the West Bank.
The Lebanese Front: Consolidating Occupation as a Prelude to Settlement
Despite the ceasefire agreement signed on November 27, 2024, repeatedly violated by the Israeli entity, its forces have not fully withdrawn from southern Lebanon. Instead, they entrenched control over five strategic hills overlooking northern settlements: al-Hammams, al-Oweidah, al-Aziyah, Jabal Blat, and al-Labouneh.
This military presence serves more than mere security purposes—it reflects deeper expansionist ambitions. Jewish settler movements such as Ori Tzafon ("Go North") have revealed maps of 300 planned settlements in southern Lebanon, replacing Arabic names with biblical Hebrew ones, echoing the Zionist methods of erasing Palestinian identity after the 1948 Nakba. These groups, backed by figures like the so-called "Defense Minister" Yisrael Katz, promote falsified historical narratives of supposed "Jewish heritage" in southern Lebanon to justify its occupation and colonization.
The Syrian Front: Exploiting Chaos to Impose a New Reality
Following the fall of Bashar al-Assad on December 8, 2024, Zionist forces exploited the security vacuum to expand their occupation in Syria. In violation of the 1974 disengagement agreement, they advanced into the buffer zone, adding 235 square kilometers to the occupied Golan Heights.
Since then, the Zionist enemy has established at least nine military bases—seven within the buffer zone and two beyond—signaling intentions of long-term presence and the imposition of a so-called "security zone" in southern Syria.
Simultaneously, the Zionist enemy has fueled internal Syrian conflicts. In July 2025, Suwayda witnessed violent clashes between Druze groups and armed tribes, as reports surfaced of Israeli-American efforts to create a "humanitarian corridor" to Israel exclusively for the Druze.
According to the Jusoor Center for Studies, this policy aims to:
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Consolidate Israeli influence through the creation of local loyalist wings.
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Incite Syrian communities against one another to perpetuate internal conflict.
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Internationalize minority protection as a pretext for intervention, paving the way for Syria’s partition.
A Renewed Colonial Project
What is unfolding today in Gaza, Lebanon, and Syria is not merely reactive policy—it is the practical execution of a renewed colonial project. From Ben-Gurion’s "Torah map" to Netanyahu’s "historic mission," the expansionist dream is being realized through field policies designed to alter geography, dominate resources, fragment neighboring societies, and entrench Israeli hegemony over the region.
It is a project that sanctifies the enemy’s complete disregard for nations, peoples, and resources, enforcing a sweeping occupationist vision that extends far beyond Palestine.