Mossad reveals role in arrest of Hamas-linked cell in Germany said plotting to kill Jews
The Mossad was involved in Wednesday’s arrest of a Hamas-linked cell in Germany that planned to carry out attacks against Israeli and Jewish targets, the agency announced Friday.MSNBC Host Ayman Mohyeldin Attends Festival Featuring Former PLO Spokeswoman
The Israeli foreign intelligence service said the arrest was possible because of close coordination between the Mossad and Germany’s security and intelligence services.
German prosecutors said on Wednesday that they arrested three suspected foreign operatives of Hamas they believe were preparing a serious act of violence in Germany.
The three men are suspected by prosecutors of being involved in procuring firearms and ammunition for Hamas since at least the summer of this year, to be used for assassinations targeting Israeli or Jewish institutions in Germany.
“In the course of today’s arrests, various weapons, including an AK-47 assault rifle and several pistols, as well as a considerable amount of ammunition, were found,” said the federal prosecutors in a statement at the time.
The three, identified in line with German privacy laws only as German citizen Abed Al G., Wael F. M., born in Lebanon, and German citizen Ahmad I., were arrested in Berlin on Wednesday.
Anti-terrorism investigators had been surveilling the suspects for some time before operational forces nabbed them at a weapons handover in the German capital.
Police intervened in the exchange and discovered arms, including an AK-47 assault rifle, a Glock pistol and large amounts of ammunition, the prosecutor’s office said.
The Mossad said that the effort to stop the cell spanned several countries, and was “part of an extensive Mossad effort throughout Europe during which weapons caches were located and further arrests were made of operatives suspected of terrorist offenses.”
A longtime MSNBC host last month attended an anti-Israel gathering alongside a long list of Hamas cheerleaders, social media posts reviewed by the Washington Free Beacon show.Henry Hamra, a Syrian Jew living in US, running in elections for new Syrian parliament
Ayman Mohyeldin, an Egyptian-born MSNBC personality, appeared in an Instagram post at the London "Together for Palestine" music festival with British actor Khalid Abdalla. Also at the festival were a former spokeswoman for a designated terrorist organization, a United Nations official currently under U.S. sanctions, and disgraced former MSNBC host Mehdi Hasan.
Between musical numbers, the audience heard from people like Diana Buttu, a former Palestinian Liberation Organization spokeswoman, who has spent more than a decade defending Hamas. She described the Oct. 7, 2023, attack as the "natural consequence, unfortunately, of 56 years of military occupation and the denial of freedom."
On the day of the massacre, Buttu said, "When you punch your abuser in the face, it feels good. The first reaction was elation—we saw that both in Gaza and in the West Bank."
She has also praised Hamas as a "movement for freedom, for liberation," and lauded its former leader, Yahya Sinwar, who was killed in an IDF operation in October 2024.
"The Israelis will never understand what it means to die a hero," she said.
Francesca Albanese, the United Nations special rapporteur on the occupied Palestinian territories, who has been under U.S. sanctions since July, also spoke at the festival.
"For nearly a century, the Palestinian people have lived under the weight of a brutal settler colonial project, a perpetual occupation justified as security—security of whom?—and enforced through apartheid," Albanese said.
The Trump administration sanctioned Albanese over the series of letters "riddled with inflammatory rhetoric and false accusations" she sent to a long list of companies in an effort to pressure them against doing business in Israel. The State Department also noted that Albanese claims to be an "international lawyer" despite never having been licensed to practice law.
Former MSNBC anchor Mehdi Hasan delivered a fiery sermon on behalf of Palestinian "journalists," many of whom have collaborated with Hamas.
MSNBC canceled Hasan’s show in November 2023 after the former host spent the weeks after Oct. 7 defending terrorism. He notably pushed the discredited idea that Israel bombed al-Ahli Hospital in Gaza, an explosion that turned out to have been caused by a misfired Palestinian Islamic Jihad rocket. Hasan has compared non-Muslims to "cattle" and blamed Hamas’s attack on Israel as well, and has previously been accused of plagiarizing a column he wrote in defense of spanking children.
Henry Hamra, who fled Syria to the US in 1992, is running for a seat on Sunday in Syria’s first legislature since the December ousting of longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad.
If elected, Hamra, who is running for a seat representing the Damascus district, would be the first Jewish representative to enter parliament since 1947, according to Syrian historian Sami Moubayed.
In the Jewish Quarter of the Old City of Damascus on Friday, an AFP photographer saw posters on walls bearing Hamra’s image alongside the Syrian flag and reading: “Candidate for Damascus for the Syrian People’s Assembly.”
A flyer published on Hamra’s campaign account on X reads: “Towards a flourishing, tolerant and just Syria,” while his program sets out pledges including bringing together Syrian Jews, protecting Syria’s heritage and cultural identity, and working with US Syrians to abolish the US “Caesar Act,” which imposes economic sanctions on Syria without conditions.
Electoral commission spokesperson Nawar Najmeh told AFP that Hamra is an “official candidate for the elections and announced his election program like any other candidate.”
Two-thirds of Syria’s 210-seat legislature will be selected by local committees, while the rest will be nominated by Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa in a selection process that has been criticized as undemocratic.
Hamra fled the Syrian capital to the US with his father, Rabbi Yusuf Hamra, at the age of 15 in 1992, the year Assad’s father and predecessor, Hafez, removed restrictions on Jews’ travel abroad.
The elder Hamra is a leader of Brooklyn’s Syrian Jewish community and is the brother of the late Rabbi Avraham Hamra, the last Syrian chief rabbi, who fled to Israel in 1994 and settled in Holon.
In February, Henry Hamra and his father visited Damascus from the United States, participating in a group prayer for the first time in more than three decades in the Old City’s Faranj synagogue.
At its peak, Syria’s millennia-old Jewish community numbered some 100,000 people, but today, only a handful remain.











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