What are the Zionists looking for in the muddy waters of Ukraine?

The Zionists hope that the crisis that has arisen will once again change the immigration situation, slightly altering this disappointing trend with the emigration of Ukrainian Jews.

February 27, 2022

The crisis that has become the headline of the media in Ukraine is the muddy water that the Zionist regime has always been waiting for, using it to immigrate the Zionists to occupied Palestine.

According to Pak Sahafat News Agency International Group, the biggest problem of the Zionist regime is the crisis of population shortage.

The Zionists have been seeking the emigration of Zionist supporters to Palestine for decades before the occupation of Palestine and since the beginning of the twentieth century in order to gain the population needed to occupy Palestine.

But now, more than a century after the first wave of immigration to Palestine in the early twentieth century, the Zionists take the population crisis so seriously that they cling to any crisis to transfer the population.

Immigration status

According to statistics released by the Zionist regime every year, the number of Zionist supporters migrating to occupied Palestine has reached an average of less than 30,000 per year in recent years.

The Shameless US Intervention in Ukraine

This average has been around 21,000 in some years, most of them from the United States and the United States.

But immigration from the United States is declining, and European countries are struggling with it due to low population growth.

The highest wave of migration

Among the 74 years of occupation of Palestine, the highest rate of immigration of Zionist supporters to occupied Palestine was in the years after 1991, after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

According to the data claimed by the Zionist regime, in the post-dissolution period, 1 million people from the former Soviet Union migrated to occupied Palestine, and this unprecedented record was never repeated.

It is estimated that there are currently about 100 Jews living in Ukraine, and that Israeli officials hope to deport at least half of them to occupied Palestine.

Statements and actions of Zionist regime officials

Ever since the situation in Ukraine deteriorated and Russia moved its military forces closer to the Ukrainian borders, the Zionist regime has been working to relocate Ukrainian Zionists and Jews to the occupied territories.

Read more: The Zionist regime is terrified of the consequences of the Russia-Ukraine war: https://www.paksahafat.com/en/?p=20465

Since two weeks ago, Naftali Bennett has always expressed concern about Ukraine and the situation of its Jews in all his speeches and meetings, and has tried to call them to occupied Palestine.

He called on Ukrainian Jewish President Vladimir Zelinsky on Friday and expressed hope that the situation would return to normal as soon as possible.

A roof and air for the Zionists in the Ukraine crisis

By doing so, Bennett showed that he is more on the side of the pro-Western president of Ukraine, and with this situation, the Zionist regime’s relations with the Russians could be overshadowed.

Although Russia’s approach to the Zionist regime is not entirely hostile and has always changed in Russia’s interests, the continuation of Zelensky’s support measures could put relations with Russia in a bit of a crisis.

Naftali Bennett and Israeli officials have stepped in beyond that, and while communicating with Vladimir Zelensky, they have postponed sending humanitarian aid to where it is needed.

This means that the Zionists have left room for a time when the Russians may prevail over Ukraine.

But this is not the demand of the occupying regime, and they are more concerned with immigration than anything else.

The Zionists hope that the crisis that has arisen will once again change the immigration situation, slightly altering this disappointing trend with the emigration of Ukrainian Jews.

Israel helped evacuate fleeing Terrorists to the US

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Syrian Envoy to the UN Bashar Jaafari has claimed that Israel helped to transfer militants fleeing from Syrian territory to the United States and other countries.

Jaafari said that a “decisive offensive” from the Syrian Arab Army had forced militants to “flee from the Syrian territory through the occupied Golan Heights” and into Israeli territory. From there, he said, the militants were “transferred to Jordan” and then to other countries, including the US.

Israel previously evacuated hundreds of members of the Western-backed White Helmets group, who advertise themselves as first responders, but who have been linked to Al-Qaeda. The Syrian government has accused the group’s members of cooperating with terrorist groups and plotting false-flag attacks in the country.

Speaking after the Astana-10 international meeting in the Russian city of Sochi​​​, Jaafari also complained of Israeli attacks on Syrian soil, and congratulated the Syrian Army on the victory against militants in the southern Daraa province, which had been under Islamic State control.

Jaafari also criticized the Turkish occupation of territories in northern Syria, and said that Ankara was not meeting its obligations regarding so-called “de-escalation” zones in the region, including Idlib province.

“Turkish authorities sent heavily armed forces there – and we all witness the military actions of Turkey in this region, up to Afrin, which they occupied. And they occupied other settlements,” he said.

Jaafari said that Turkey was the only country that had violated its obligations under the Astana agreements, and noted that the Turkish lira had even been introduced in regions under Ankara’s control.

The Syrian envoy also insisted that the US and its allies should leave Syrian territory immediately, citing the fact that their presence in the war-torn country is illegal under international law. The US-led coalition in Syria has not been invited by the Damascus government, and has not been given authorization by the UN Security Council.

Jaafari said that he would like to see Idlib returned to Syria through “national reconciliation” but warned that the Syrian Army has “sufficient capacity” to do so by military means if necessary.