East Jerusalem Offensive (World War III)

The East Jerusalem Offensive (Arabic: القدس الشرقية) known to the Israelis as the Eastern Defensive Operation of Jerusalem (Hebrew: מזרח ירושלים) was a military offensive by combined forces of Syria, Persia, Hezbollah, Jordan and Palestine in a bid to take back East Jerusalem and put it under full Palestinian civilian and military control.

After the successful Palestine Offensive, Arab and Iranian leaders were given information by spies who inserted themselves into Israeli lines and ranks, about the next Israeli offensive, code-named Operation Mizrahi (Hebrew: מבצע מזרחי) and that was to make a thrust into the salient created in East Jerusalem by the Arab-Persian coalition. The coalition prepared a total of 567,420 personnel, along with 304,200 more Hezbollah fighters, along with 1,402 tanks and 1,004 self-propelled guns, and would be up against 14,313 personnel, 450 tanks and 200 self-propelled guns of the Israel Defense Forces.

The Arab-Iranian coalition dug deep trenches and built large obstacles. In addition, professional hackers from the German military, having salvaged the cyber warfare tactics of North Korea and Russia, hacked into Israeli military communication centers.

When the Israeli offensive began, they inflicated large-scale casualities on the Arab-Iranian defenders. Israeli tank forces knocked out as much as 100 Arab-Iranian tanks per day, at the loss of way less. After a week of heavy fighting, the Israeli Defense Forces finally retreated. Despite being considered the superior fighting force, the IDF had significantly failed to make anymore territorial gains into Arab-controlled territory. They also failed to make the Arab-Iranian coalition retreat.

Thanks to Trump's isolationist policy, that involved cutting military funds from Middle Eastern nations, with Israel included, and with the Egyptians amassing forces in the Sinai Peninsula, the Israeli Parliament ceded East Jerusalem to Palestine, and relinquished all control of Palestinian lands, including the Gaza Strip.

Despite being inherently anti-Islam, the also anti-Jewish government of Germany also decided to send military aid to the Arab-Iranian Coalition. with Chancellor Otto Flüsse explaining that his goal was not become a "ally of the Muslims" but a "nightmarish enemy to the Jews".

Afterwards, both Jews and Arabs suffered persecutions in both Israel and Palestine. Jewish militants and far-right Zionist extremists carried out attacks on Arab villages within Israel, that seemed to be justified by Israeli authorities. In Palestine, the Palestinian National Forces, the country's new military, carried out shootings and massacres of Israeli Jewish settler communities.