Liberman accuses Netanyahu of giving weapons to ISIS-linked clans in Gaza
While the Prime Minister's Office slammed his remarks, it also did not deny them • i24NEWS learned from a defense source that weapons were transferred to groups in Gaza – so that they can fight Hamas
Yisrael Beiteinu leader Avigdor Liberman dropped a bombshell accusation against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday night, claiming he had transferred weapons to Islamic State-linked clans in the Gaza Strip.
The claim, first made on Channel 12 news, immediately sparked a scandal in Israel over the conduct of the war against Hamas by the Netanyahu government. While the Prime Minister's Office slammed his remarks, it also did not deny them.
"Israel is working to defeat Hamas in various ways, on the recommendation of all heads of the security establishment," Netanyahu's office said in a statement.
Meanwhile, an Israeli security source told i24NEWS Hebrew that Israel is indeed transferring weapons to groups in Gaza – so that they can fight Hamas. Furthermore, this has been done in the past two years. According to the source, cabinet members were not informed of the transfer of weapons, which was done after the recommendation of security agencies.
"We were shocked to see Lieberman's dangerous leak," the source said. "It turns out that there are no limits to cynicism and populism for the sycophants and narrow political ambitions. These things must be a glaring red line for anyone who cares about the security of the country. They harm our soldiers first and foremost and endanger our hostages."
Liberman accuses Netanyahu of giving weapons to ISIS-linked clans in Gaza
While the Prime Minister's Office slammed his remarks, it also did not deny them • i24NEWS learned from a defense source that weapons were transferred to groups in Gaza – so that they can fight Hamasi24NEWS (i24news)


dengtav
in reply to Joël de Bruijn • • •pathIn the body of your post, or?
Joël de Bruijn
in reply to dengtav • • •Original command:
gonzo-rand19
in reply to Joël de Bruijn • • •./and./*/*/*are both within your home folder, you should just restore it from your backup. The command you ran takes everything up to 3 levels deep and moves it up to the working directory, and unraveling that will be a pain in the ass.Joël de Bruijn
in reply to gonzo-rand19 • • •mv /*/*/* ./would moving stuff out of /boot or /dev folders make more sense?gonzo-rand19
in reply to Joël de Bruijn • • •enkers
in reply to gonzo-rand19 • • •/*/*/*is not a relative path. The first/references the root directory.Joël de Bruijn
in reply to Joël de Bruijn • • •crater2150
in reply to Joël de Bruijn • • •The files you listed look like they are all subdirectories from /dev, which is (usually) a separate filesystem.
When you try to move a file or directory across filesystems, the OS can't just change the link, it has to actually copy the files and then remove the original. As a directory is a set of links to files, and the copies are different files, directories are just newly created with the same name in the new location instead of copying the directory filesystem entry. It looks like
mvcreates these target directories, before it checks if it actually has permission to remove the source, but checks file permissions, before it copies themmerthyr1831
in reply to Joël de Bruijn • • •I'd probably do a clean install (eventually) even if it looked like stuff works for now.
I know the pain, though. did rm -rf in the wrong directory and wiped half my drive in seconds. Good times.
phantomwise
in reply to merthyr1831 • • •Quazatron
in reply to Joël de Bruijn • • •Mark it as an achievement on your learning path and move on. We all did something silly like that at some point.
Great that you have backups, get a fresh install and restore it.
Lessons learned: don't work as root unless you absolutely positively have a good reason to do so.
FauxLiving
in reply to Quazatron • • •