Saturday, 30 September 2017

WATCH: Head of PLO general delegation to US lashes out at Israeli PM



Ambassador Dr. Husam Zomlot took to lash back at the report in Israeli media that the prime minister of Israel can shut down the Palestinian diplomatic office in the US.


Zomlot claimed that the report is “absurd” and the diplomatic office exists at the will of the American government, as well as, the successes of the Palestinians.



Zomlot assured that he wants to strengthen the Palestinian relationship with the US.





According to a report by Israel’s Kan State TV, Prime Minister Netanyahu wants to punish the Palestinians for their recent admission to Interpol by creating a plan to shut down the Palestinian diplomatic office.


After Interpol admitted the “State of Palestine” as a member, Netanyahu met with US envoy Jason Greenblatt, US ambassador David Friedman and Israel’s ambassador to the US Ron Dermer to discuss a response. There is no indication what the response will be.


According to the Prime Minister’s Office, Netanyahu said at the meeting that the actions of the Palestinian leadership are violations of previous agreements with Israel and severely damages the chances of achieving peace.


Netanyahu directed Dermer to see whether the Palestinian moves at the International Criminal Court are a violation of US law, which could conceivably lead to a closure of the PLO offices in Washington.


The Interpol vote came just a week after Netanyahu told the UN General Assembly how Israel’s stature on the world stage was steadily improving.


The move passed in a secret ballot by a vote of 75 to 24, with 34 abstentions. The Palestinians needed more than two-thirds of the yes-or-no votes counted, and passed that threshold handily.




Article source: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.811374

Tension over Kurdistan


This past Monday close to 7 million Kurdish citizens of Iraq, cast their votes in a referendum consisting of one question only: Do you support a declaration of independence on the part of the Kurds in Iraq?  The voting was widespread, with 80% of eligible voters going to the polls. It is clear that the question is seen as vital to a large majority of Kurds, leading them to go out to vote.



From a practical point of view, the Kurds have been trying to advance their independence for 25 years, ever since the world forbade Saddam Hussein’s air force from flying over their territory. They have developed a legitimate, democratic, organized and fair government over the past two and a half decades, as well as a disciplined top level army that proved its mettle against ISIS in Mosul. They have responsible media which portray both sides of the controversy and in general are a tranquil society with  no internal violence, a  successful economy based on oil and related products.



The referendum is highly important for both sides, those for and those against.  Supporters want to live in a Kurdish national home with all their hearts, like the French, Dutch, Egyptians, Israelis and the rest of the nations of the world do. They intend to create independence de jure from de facto independence, including international recognition. Their main motivation is national pride and pride in their achievements during these last 25 years, but the memory of the wars waged against them by Iraq in the 20th century plays a part. Lurking in the background is the historic hostility between Kurds and Arabs.



Those opposed to a declaration of independence worry mainly about the price Iraqi Kurdistan may be forced to pay for doing so, because its neighbors – Iran to the east, Turkey to the north, Syria to the west and  Iraq to the south – have declared their total opposition to the holding of a referendum, let alone a declaration of independence.  Turkey threatens war and has concentrated forces on its border with Kurdish territory, despite years of economic cooperation with the Kurds. The Kurds export their oil by way of Turkey, paying enormous sums for that service. Declaring war against the Kurds may well end that cooperation, affecting the “wayward” Kurds’ economy for the worse.



Another painful price that might have to be paid is an air and sea blockade. Iraqi Kurdistan has no access to the sea, and all its relations with the outside world – people and goods – must take place by way of the air and sea space of Iran, Turkey or Syria. If those countries decide on a blockade and continue to stand by that decision for any length of time, it is hard to see how the Kurds could run a proper national life, certainly not economically.



The reason these countries oppose Kurdish independence is the fact that each one of them, especially Iran, harbors a  Kurdish minority as well as other ethnic groups.  If the Iraqi Kurds succeed in creating a viable state, other minorities will demand independence and the Kurds among them might even try to form a large Kurdish federation or a state that unites with the Iraqi Kurdistan.



The Turks see this demand as a strategic danger to their existence, as there are Kurds in every city in Turkey, living mostly in their own neighborhoods, in addition to the Kurdish region of southwestern Turkey. An internal war between the Turkish majority and the Kurdish minority has been going on for a century. It is sometimes extremely violent, with terror attacks in urban areas, and sometimes simmers on a low burner.  Erdogan tried to put an end to the warring several years ago, but his efforts only angered the nationalist Turks who endanger his throne, so he went back to limiting himself to negative rhetoric aimed at the Turkish Kurds



Erdogan fears that a declaration of war on his part against the Iraqi Kurds will lead to an outbreak of Turkish terror against his regime, while a non-declaration will lead the Turkish Kurds to demand independence. If he does – or doesn’t – give in to their demands they may start a new wave of  terror against the Turkish regime.  Erdogan feels he is trapped and this drives him crazy, so that he keeps coming out with pronouncements, some of them over the top, against the referendum.



The Kurds in Iran demand their country recognize a Kurdish state in Iraq after the referendum. They certainly know that Iran will never do that, because recognizing a Kurdish state will awaken, in addition to the Kurds in Iran, all the other minorities to the possibility. This includes the Balouchi, Azari, Arabs, and many more and might bring the artificial Iranian state to an end becauase only half the people in Iran are Persian. Unsurprisingly, this week Iran declared that its airspace is closed to plans to and from the Kurdish area of Iraq. It may be followed by others. 



Syria, embroiled for a long while in unending struggles and  war to keep its country unified under Assad’s illegitimate regime, is also opposed to a Kurdish state, viewing it as a negative move for Syria. Arab Iraq is opposed to independence for the Kurds in the country because most of the rich oil deposits are in that region.



The regional opposition and threats to wage war against Kurdish Iraq have led European nations, the USA and Russia to be concerned that an needless war may break out, while the entire world is trying to put an end to what is left of ISIS’s state and everyone wants the benefit of Pesh Merga’s military prowess and the experience it gained during the battle  for Mosul.



Israel, in contrast to all the nations in the world, seems to be the only country which supports a Kurdish state in Iraq and on the ruins of Iran. Israel will assuredly not be against adding the Kurds in Syria and  possibly those in Turkey to a new Kurdish state. The establishment of a Kurdish state is an act of historic justice to a  people divided into three by the European powers in order to serve their interests and not for the benefit of the indigenous people in each region where those powers established a state to run the affairs of its citizens



From this forum, I send the Iraqi Kurds my best wishes for success in gaining independence and for the wisdom to handle the relations with their neighbors in a way that benefits everyone. I send the  the Kurds in Syria, Turkey and Iran the same wishes. And wish everyone a happy new year.



Translation from Hebrew: Rochel Sylvetsky




Article source: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.811374

Israeli tennis star retires mid-match in China due to Yom Kippur



Dudi Sela was one set away from reaching his first ATP Tour semifinal in almost nine months on Friday, but with Yom Kippur about to commence he retired from his quarterfinal match against Alexandr Dolgopolov in Shenzhen, China.


The 32-year-old Israeli, ranked No. 77 in the world, was playing in his first ATP Tour quarterfinal since reaching the semifinals of the Chennai Open in India in the first week of January.



He asked for his match in Shenzhen to start as early as possible to reduce the chance of having to stop due to Yom Kippur. But his showdown with Dolgopolov (53) was scheduled as the second match on center court and he was always going to have trouble completing it after the first contest of the day lasted two hours and 16 minutes.


After losing the first set 6-3, Sela tied the match with a 6-4 win in the second set, but while trailing 1-0 in the decider, and with Yom Kippur about to begin in Shenzhen, he approached the chair umpire and told him that he needed to retire.


Reaching the semifinals would have earned Sela an additional $12,000 to the almost $30,000 he had already guaranteed himself by advancing to the last-eight. It also cost him at least 45 ranking points, and of course the chance to go even further in the tournament.


Dolgopolov progressed to the final on Saturday with a 6-4, 7-5 victory over Damir Dzumhur.


On Saturday, after the end of Yom Kippur, Sela was also knocked out of the doubles tournament in Shenzhen, losing in the semifinals with partner Andre Sa of Brazil 6-3, 7-6 to No. 1 seeds Nikola Mektic and Nicholas Monroe.


While Sela didn’t comment on his withdrawal from the singles in Shenzhen, his older brother Ofer provided a little insight on Dudi’s decision.


“Dudi isn’t a religious man and he doesn’t usually fast on Yom Kippur and for the first time in his career he was forced to make this excruciating decision which effects his ATP ranking and cost him tens of thousands of dollars,” wrote Ofer Sela. “No one forced him to retire. He didn’t do it because he was afraid of anyone, or because he was asked to. He did it only because he respects Yom Kippur and the country which he represents.”


Sela wasn’t the only Israeli athlete whose plans were affected by the holiest day on the Jewish calendar. Israel’s only NBA player Omri Casspi was set to make his preseason debut with the Golden State Warriors against the Denver Nuggets on Saturday, but he sat out the game due to Yom Kippur.


In other tennis news, Yoni Erlich aims to win his first title in almost two years on Sunday when he plays with Pakistani partner Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi in the final of the Chengdu Open in China. The Israeli/ Pakistani duo face Marcos Daniell and Marcelo Demoliner in the final.



Article source: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.811374

Maccabi Tel Aviv aims to get back to winning ways



Despite two straight goalless deadlocks, Maccabi Tel Aviv coach Jordi Cruyff is encouraged by his team’s recent form and is confident of returning to winning ways against Hapoel Ashkelon in Premier League action on Sunday night.


Maccabi picked up its first point of the Europa League group stage after holding La Liga side Villarreal to a 0-0 draw in Netanya on Thursday night. The yellowand- blue dominated Maccabi Haifa in local league action four days earlier, but couldn’t break down the Greens and was forced to settle for another 0-0 stalemate.



Nevertheless, Cruyff has been pleased by his team’s play and is optimistic goals will soon follow.


“We had a very good game against Maccabi Haifa and hit two posts but the ball didn’t go in,” said Cruyff. “The week before we scored three goals and didn’t play well. We have to continue to play well.”


Cruyff believes the team’s improved defensive play will soon lead to wins, but he is expecting a tricky match in Ashkelon, which has won two straight games.


“This will be a tough game and this is the most important game for us coming up. We have to be fresh and be ready to battle. Coach Yuval Naim gave us a tough time last season and he always makes it difficult,” added Cruyff. “The teams who win are the ones with the better defensive stats and you’ll see that in 90 percent of the cases.


“We have to play as a team, attack and defend as a team.”


There will be three more matches played on Sunday, which many players, including Maccabi captain Sheran Yeini, are unhappy about as it leaves them with little time to recover after fasting on Yom Kippur.


“I don’t think this was a very smart decision,” said Yeini, with Maccabi not training on Saturday and set to only hold a short tactical session on Sunday morning. “I don’t fast, but a lot of players do and I think it is irresponsible to play one day later.”


Maccabi Netanya coach Slobodan Drapic echoed a similar sentiment, even though his team will have an additional day of preparations as it hosts Maccabi Petah Tikva on Monday.


“It is very difficult to play one day after Yom Kippur. To play one day after not eating or drinking is awful. It would have been better had everyone played on Monday,” said Drapic.


Elsewhere Sunday, Hapoel Haifa looks to extend its unbeaten start when it visits Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Bnei Yehuda hosts Hapoel Ra’anana and Maccabi Haifa welcomes Ashdod SC.


Also Monday, leader Beitar Jerusalem visits Bnei Sakhnin. Beitar will be guided for the first time by new coach Benny Ben-Zaken. Beitar sacked Sharon Mimer four days before the start of the Premier League campaign and his assistant Gili Lavenda guided the team to three wins and two draws to begin the season.


Nevertheless, Lavenda wasn’t handed the reins on a full-time basis, with the inexperienced 34-year-old Ben-Zaken being put in charge in his place. Ben-Zaken’s only previous experience in the top flight is guiding Ironi Kiryat Shmona for three matches last season before clashing with owner Izzy Sheratzky and being fired. He went on to coach Hapoel Katamon in the National League before also beginning this season in the second division as the boss of Hapoel Afula. Lavenda will remain at the club as an assistant to Ben-Zaken.



Article source: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.811374

Body of missing hiker Hila Livne found in Kyrgyzstan before Yom Kippur



The body of missing Israeli trekker, Hila Livne, 22, was found in Kyrgyzstan on Friday, six days after she fell to her death while hiking.


Her friends and family had turned to Facebook to help raise money for the search and were posting updates. In one of the photographs, Livne is seen at the bottom of a mountain range holding up a sign wishing everyone a good new year.



According to the Facebook page “Bringing Hila Livne home,” the young woman had been released from the IDF half-a-year ago and was on her post army trek.


“Before her army service, Hila volunteered for a year of service with children in Jerusalem after two years as a scouts guide in the Israeli Scouts,” the Facebook page said.


It also said Hila loved nature and traveling, noting that she had visited Australia and New Zealand and hiked the Israeli Trail.


Her twin brother, Yuval, had gone to Kyrgyzstan to join the search, which also included a local and Israeli delegation.


On Friday afternoon, he had posted on Facebook that he was praying for her safe return.


He later posted a note from the family that said: “With pain and sorrow, we want to announce that our Hila is no longer among the living. We want to recognize the national effort to give us strength and hold our hands at a time that was difficult and terrifying for us. Now, we are parting. We will forever remember her smile. It was a smile that started with the eyes,” the family said.


According to Ynet, Livne had been with an Israeli and two French trekkers in the Sari-Chalak nature reserve on Saturday, but was separated from them when the Israeli hurt his foot and fell. The two French hikers stopped to tend to him. Livne fell off the cliff where they were, and her body was found in a gorge below.


A rescue crew from the Clal Insurance participated in the search, as did Kyrgyzstan rescue forces.


The Foreign Ministry thanked “the military, police and rescue forces in Kyrgyzstan, as well as representatives of the German and US embassies there, for their support and assistance in their extensive search to find Hila.”


It added that its consul in Kazakhstan, Ariel Braverman, and the Department for Israelis Abroad in the Foreign Ministry’s Consular Department are handling the transfer of Livne’s body to Israel.


The process could take several days, it said.



Article source: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.811374

US carrier navigates crowded waters as North Korea tensions mount


ABOARD THE USS RONALD REAGAN, South China Sea – As the commanders of the largest US warship in Asia seek to maintain operational readiness amid protracted tensions over North Korea, they find themselves keeping one eye on China, too.


On Saturday, as F-18 Super Hornet jet fighters roared from the decks of the USS Ronald Reagan aircraft carrier during routine drills deep in the South China Sea, two Chinese frigates maintained a constant line-of-sight vigil.


Officers on the Japanese-based Reagan described frequent close quarter surveillance from the ships of the People’s Liberation Army Navy in international waters.


Sometimes, they said, Chinese vessels steam in to check out the carrier en route to other destinations. Other times, Chinese frigates linger for days within the screen of US ships and planes that protect the Reagan – Washington’s only carrier based outside America.


At times, the carrier crew, to ensure safe passage, will alert their uninvited Chinese escorts, should the Reagan sharply alter course, officers said.


“We’ve had no issues. They’ve been very professional,” said Rear Admiral Marc Dalton, commander of the Reagan’s strike group, as well as the larger battle forces of the US Seventh Fleet. “We see them on a regular basis,” he said.



Article source: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.811374

US accuses Iran, Venezuela of human trafficking failings



The White House said on Saturday it had ordered that Iran, Venezuela and four African nations be added to a US list of countries accused of failing to crack down on human trafficking, a step that further isolates them from the United States.


The White House said it also was increasing restrictions on North Korea, Eritrea, Russia and Syria, which already were on the list, by constraining them from engaging in educational or cultural exchange programs with the United States.


In addition, President Donald Trump’s administration instructed the US executive director of the International Monetary Fund and US executive directors at other multilateral development banks to vote against extending loans or other funds to North Korea, Russia and Iran for fiscal year 2018, which begins on Sunday.


Under a 2000 US law called the Trafficking Victims Protection Act, the United States does not provide non-humanitarian, non-trade-related foreign assistance to any country that fails to comply with minimum standards for eliminating trafficking and is not making efforts to do so.


The White House said in a notice that Iran, Venezuela, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Equatorial Guinea, South Sudan and Sudan had been added to the list of countries subject to these restrictions for the new fiscal year.


The move came six days after Trump included Venezuela and Iran on a list of eight countries targeted for travel restrictions to the United States. The restrictions on Venezuela focused on government officials who the Trump administration blamed for the country’s slide into economic disarray. The travel ban on Iranians was broader.


That travel ban list lifted previous restrictions on citizens from Sudan.



Article source: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.811374

Catalans start to form queues to vote in independence referendum



Catalans started to form queues to vote in an independence referendum early on Sunday morning in defiance of the Spanish government’s attempts to prevent the vote, Reuters witnesses said.


Lines of voters were starting to form at several designated polling stations in Barcelona schools. The referendum has been declared illegal by Spain’s central government and it was unclear if voting stations would be allowed to open at 9 A.M.



Article source: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.811374

Trump says 'very important' NFL players stand for national anthem Sunday



On the eve of a host of National Football League games, President Donald Trump on Saturday tweeted that it was “very important” that players stand during the national anthem, following an ongoing controversy over athletes and others kneeling in protest.


“Very important that NFL players STAND tomorrow, and always, for the playing of our National Anthem,” Trump posted on Twitter, adding “Respect our Flag and our Country!”


Later Trump tweeted embedded video of fans and players standing at an NHL game, writing “19,000 RESPECTING our National Anthem!” Other Twitter users posted that the video Trump put up was nearly a year old.


The symbolic gesture of protest during the traditional playing of “The Star Spangled Banner” was adopted by some African-American players over the last year to protest against racial disparities in the criminal justice system.


On Tuesday Trump called on the league to ban players from kneeling in protest at games while the national anthem is played, tweeting “The NFL has all sorts of rules and regulations. The only way out for them is to set a rule that you can’t kneel during our National Anthem!” Trump wrote.


And on Thursday he continued the crusade, drawing a rebuke from the NFL after he said football team owners are afraid of their players.


The Republican president told “Fox Friends” in an interview that he is friends with many NFL team owners and they were “in a box” over how to handle the kneeling protests of racial disparities in the country.


“They say, ‘We are in a situation where we have to do something.’ I think they’re afraid of their players, you want to know the truth. And I think it’s disgraceful,” he said. Trump did not elaborate.


The NFL rejected the president’s remarks as not factual.


Trump also called, again via Twitter, for fans to boycott NFL games.


A week ago coaches, support staff and even some owners joined team members in silent support by kneeling, linking arms or staying off the field during the anthem.


The players’ protests go back to last year’s football season, when Colin Kaepernick, a San Francisco 49ers quarterback, protested police treatment of African-Americans by not standing during the anthem.


The protests culminated a week ago when scores of players, following calls by the president to fire protesting athletes, sat or knelt as the anthem was played.



Article source: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.811374

Israel preventing asylum seeker from meeting wife and daughter for 5 years


An Ivory Coast national has been imprisoned for five years because he refuses to return to his country but has been unable to find…


Article source: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.811374

Watch: Head of PLO general delegation to US lash out at Israeli PM



Ambassador Dr. Husam Zomlot took to lash back at the report in Israeli media that the prime minister of Israel can shut down the Palestinian diplomatic office in the US.


Zomlot claimed that the report is “absurd” and the diplomatic office exists at the will of the American government, as well as, the successes of the Palestinians.



Zomlot assured that he wants to strengthen the Palestinian relationship with the US.





According to a report by Israel’s Kan State TV, Prime Minister Netanyahu wants to punish the Palestinians for their recent admission to Interpol by creating a plan to shut down the Palestinian diplomatic office.


After Interpol admitted the “State of Palestine” as a member, Netanyahu met with US envoy Jason Greenblatt, US ambassador David Friedman and Israel’s ambassador to the US Ron Dermer to discuss a response. There is no indication what the response will be.


According to the Prime Minister’s Office, Netanyahu said at the meeting that the actions of the Palestinian leadership are violations of previous agreements with Israel and severely damages the chances of achieving peace.


Netanyahu directed Dermer to see whether the Palestinian moves at the International Criminal Court are a violation of US law, which could conceivably lead to a closure of the PLO offices in Washington.


The Interpol vote came just a week after Netanyahu told the UN General Assembly how Israel’s stature on the world stage was steadily improving.


The move passed in a secret ballot by a vote of 75 to 24, with 34 abstentions. The Palestinians needed more than two-thirds of the yes-or-no votes counted, and passed that threshold handily.





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Hamas Gaza chief: Palestinian reconciliation meant to stop Israeli siege of Strip



Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh released an official statement aimed at the Palestinian people on Saturday evening in which he explained that the attempts to forge a reconciliation between his party, which rules in the Gaza Strip, and Fatah, the party in control at the West Bank, comes as a reaction to Israel’s unfavorable actions in the region.


“The reconciliation is a will and a decision, to prevent Israel from swallowing up the West Bank and continuing its siege of the Gaza Strip,” Haniyea stated as Palestinian Prime Minister Rami Hamdahllah arrived at the Strip from Ramallah on a key visit.



Over the last day, security officials from the Palestinian Authority, including the presidential guard (which is expected to take on the responsibility of managing border checkpoints between Israel and Egypt according to the potential reconciliation accord), arrived in Gaza to continue coordinating several topics between the two parties as they attempt to solve the deep rift between them.


Haniyeh described Hamas’ decision to end the long and bitter conflict between the two parties as a “strategic” one, and acknowledged that he foresees that there will be setbacks along the way.


“We understand that the inner-Palestinian reconciliation process could be long because of the setbacks along the way, and the fact that there are many issues that require brave decisions, but we are certain that we have started tearing down the wall of separation. We are in a situation of national, regional and international changes in addition to the strong Egyptian backing which supports the end of the rift.”


The Hamas leader also stressed that his organization will continue the dialogue with Cairo in order to implement all the agreements, build a national joint government and prepare for elections for the parliament and the presidency.


“We are certain of the whole organization’s support for this move- seeing as Hamas made this decision out of a national will and with the support of its political and military power, as well as its steadfast stature facing the siege and the wars, while answering the will of our people for the sake of unity,” Haniyeh affirmed.


The end of the Palestinian rift would “renew everyone’s hope, and we hope that our brothers at the PLO will make an effort in this direction, to make the first move together successfully, as the government goes back to acting in the Gaza Strip and taking the responsibility upon itself,” his message to the Palestinian people concluded.




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Israeli nuclear whistle-blower Vanunu offered a move to Oslo



OSLO– Norway offered on Friday to let Israeli nuclear whistle-blower Mordechai Vanunu live in Oslo with his Norwegian wife, but she said it was unclear if Israel will allow him to travel.


Vanunu, 62, converted to Christianity in 1986 and married theology professor Kristin Joachimsen in Jerusalem in 2015 after first meeting her in Israel almost a decade earlier.



She applied for him to be allowed to come to Norway under rules for family reunification and a spokesman for the Norwegian Directorate of Immigration said permission had been granted.


Vanunu was jailed and served an 18-year sentence after discussing his work at the Dimona nuclear reactor with a British newspaper in 1986. The interview led experts to conclude the facility had produced fissile material for as many as 200 atomic warheads.


After his release from jail in 2004, defense authorities imposed strict conditions on Vanunu, including from traveling abroad, saying he was a security risk and might have more secrets to tell.


Joachimsen said the Israeli restrictions were up for review in November and expressed hopes they would be lifted.


“We have waited long enough for the case to be solved on Israel’s side,” she said.


The restrictions have been upheld by the Supreme Court.




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Likud MKs to Zionist Union chairman: Don’t let alleged fraud enter Knesset



Likud MKs called on Zionist Union chairman Avi Gabbay to prevent the next candidate on his party’s list, Druse activist Saleh Sa’ad, from entering the Knesset on Saturday night, due to reports of alleged corruption.


The financial daily Globes reported in 2007 that Sa’ad was forced to quit a senior post in the Histadrut labor federation because it was discovered that he received a salary boost he did not deserve due to a fictitious law degree.



“It is sad that someone who bought his way with corruption and was forced out in shame because of a forged diploma and received money fraudulently will find himself at the peak of public service,” Likud MK Oren Hazan said on Saturday night. “It is time for you, Gabbay, to prove to us that you are not a fictional party chairman and that you do not enable corruption. You must demand that the forger will not get to see the Knesset plenum from the inside.”


Another Likud MK, who knows Sa’ad personally, said he also hoped Gabbay would take action and prevent Sa’ad from entering the Knesset.


The Likud MK asked not to be named because of their relationship.


Likud social media groups circulated the story over the weekend after renowned economist Manuel Trajtenberg announced his intention to quit the Knesset to write a book. Sa’ad is due to replace Trajtenberg 48 hours after he formally submits his resignation letter to Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein.


Globes revealed that Sa’ad earned an extra NIS 1,000 per month because he had reported that he had a law degree.


The report said that Sa’ad had purchased a fictitious law degree from Lomonosov Moscow State University.


The university told Globes it had never heard of Sa’ad, and that he would not have been able to remotely earn a law degree because attending classes on campus was mandatory for doing so. Two weeks after the report, Sa’ad quit his job at the Histadrut, and received a hefty severance package.


A few months later, the same newspaper published another report on Sa’ad, accusing him of using a gas station his family owns to submit fictitious expense reports to the Histadrut. Sa’ad’s cousins, who co-owned the gas station, were the sources for the Globes report.


Sa’ad responded at the time that “the issue of the degree was checked where it needs to be checked and found to be proper and not faulty.” He said his resignation from the Histadrut had nothing to do with the diploma.


The next name on the Zionist Union list after Sa’ad is Lea Fadida, the deputy mayor of Yokne’am, followed by former Kadima MK Robert Tibayev.


Gabbay welcomed Sa’ad to the Knesset in his statement on Thursday, and expressed regret at the impending departure of Trajtenberg. He also expressed satisfaction that the Druse community would be represented in the Zionist Union faction.


Gabbay said Saturday night that he had no comment in response to the reports about Sa’ad.


Sa’ad’s addition would bring the number of Druse MKs back to four, joining Communications Minister Ayoub Kara (Likud), Hamed Amar (Yisrael Beytenu) and Akram Hasson (Kulanu).


Former Joint (Arab) List MK Abdullah Abu Marouf quit the Knesset on August 9, as part of a rotation agreement.




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New entrance for president’s house



Workers are hoping to complete the new enlarged entrance to the President’s Residence in time for Sukkot.


As he does every year, President Reuven Rivlin will hold an open house on one of the intermediate days of the holiday. This year that will be on Monday, October 9. The public will be invited to the president’s sukka for the opportunity to inspect high-quality Israeli fruits and vegetables, including new strains, and to see other examples of Israel’s achievements. There will also be entertainment.



Renovation work on the President’s Residence, including replacement of infrastructure, began more than a year ago. The work has proved to be somewhat of a safety hazard to pedestrians in the neighborhood, who have been forced to step into the road in the path of oncoming traffic. Fortunately, there have been no casualties.


The new entrance will enable faster processing of visitors to large-scale events at the residence, ensuring they spend less time in the grueling summer sun and can quickly gain protection from wind and rain in winter.




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Puerto Rico oversight board asks Washington for more aid for island



The oversight board in charge of resolving Puerto Rico’s debt crisis said on Saturday that its members met with Trump administration officials and members of the US Congress this week to ask for increased financial assistance for the hurricane-struck island.


Puerto Rico, a US territory, filed for the biggest-ever US local government bankruptcy in May. A panel, called the Financial Oversight and Management Board, was named in August to resolve the US territory’s debt and economic crisis. It consists of seven board members: four Republicans and three Democrats.




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Germany's first same-sex "I do"'s as marriage equality dawns



Same-sex couples will marry in Germany for the first time on Sunday, when some civil registry offices will open specially to celebrate the coming into force of a marriage law that parliament passed in June.


Around a dozen same-sex couples are expected to marry in Berlin on Sunday, with a similar number due in Hamburg, gay rights organizations said, taking advantage of the decision of some registries to open on a day when they are normally closed.


Among them are Karl Kreile, 59, and Bodo Mende, 60, who will at 9.30 local time (0730 GMT) become Germany’s first married gay couple when they say “yes” in the town hall of the Berlin borough of Schoeneberg after 38 years together.


“We have finally achieved legal equality,” Mende told a news conference on Friday. “It’s been 25 years’ of hard struggle to secure this.”


Germany’s parliament approved marriage equality in June after Chancellor Angela Merkel chose to make the vote a matter of conscience, freeing many of her Social Democrat coalition partners and many of her conservative lawmakers to vote for it.


Rights organizations say more needs to be done to achieve full equality. It is still impossible for children born into a lesbian couple to have both parents as a legal mother.


Kreile and Mende, who registered their civil partnership 15 years ago, shortly after it became legal to do so in Germany, first tried to marry a quarter of a century ago.


“I remember how it felt when we went to the registry office in Berlin Charlottenburg to request marriage,” said Kreile, describing a publicity-raising campaign he and his partner had participated in.


“The official was nice, and so were the couples before and after us in the line, telling us: ‘We understand what you want.’ But afterwards I still had to feel a sense of shame. I felt discriminated against, being sent out again,” he added.


Some technical problems remain. The government’s registry software recognizes only opposite-sex marriages and will only be updated next year. Until then, even same-sex couples will be recorded as “husband” and “wife.”




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US Secretary of State Tillerson: US directly communicating with N. Korea, seeks dialogue



The United States said on Saturday it was directly communicating with North Korea on its nuclear and missile programs but Pyongyang had shown no interest in dialog.


The disclosure by US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson during a trip to China represented the first time he has spoken to such an extent about US outreach to North Korea over its pursuit of a nuclear-tipped intercontinental ballistic missile.


“We are probing so stay tuned,” Tillerson told a group of reporters in Beijing.


“We ask: ‘Would you like to talk?’ We have lines of communications to Pyongyang. We’re not in a dark situation, a blackout.”


He said that communication was happening directly and cited two or three US channels open to Pyongyang.


“We can talk to them. We do talk to them,” he said, without elaborating about which Americans were involved in those contacts or how frequent or substantive they were.


The goal of any initial dialog would be simple: finding out directly from North Korea what it wants to discuss.


“We haven’t even gotten that far yet,” he said.


Trying to tamp down expectations, the State Department said later there were no signs Pyongyang was interested in talks.


“North Korean officials have shown no indication that they are interested in or are ready for talks regarding denuclearization,” department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said in a statement.




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Paramedics treat over 1,600 people throughout Israel on Yom Kippur


The Magen David Adom ambulance service treated 1,659 people over Yom Kippur.



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Germany not prosecuting 8 members of SS death squad, despite knowing their names


Eight elderly Germans who served in a unit that participated in the mass murder of Jews in the




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Israel's Military Intelligence’s amnesia


Forty-four years after the Yom Kippur War, Military Intelligence is clearly suffering from amnesia. A crucial portion of its…



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Tel Aviv's architectural Brutalism: ugly, hated, but glad to be gray


“If you want me to show you the city in gray,” sang Naomi Shemer in 1966, referring to the Paris where she then lived. But her…



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Refusing deportation, Ivorian man jailed for five years


An Ivory Coast national has been imprisoned for five years because he refuses to return to his country but has been unable to find…



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NGO demands Interpol arrest Hamas leader who masterminded terror attacks against Israel



An Israeli NGO demanded that Interpol take “all necessary steps to arrest Hamas leader and terrorist Saleh al-Arouri for his role in two infamous crimes against Israelis.”


The two terrorist attacks were the kidnapping and murder of three teenagers near Hebron in 2014, and the shooting murder of a rabbi and his wife near Nablus in 2015.



Shurat Hadin – Israel Law Center sent the demand letter to Interpol on Thursday, one day after the international organization’s decision to accept the “State of Palestine” as a member. Israel had fought a hard diplomatic fight to block the Palestinians getting membership.


Arouri is a member of Hamas’s politburo and, according to Shurat Hadin, is known to direct terrorist attacks carried out by Hamas’s Izzadin Kassam Brigades in Israel from abroad.


Shurat Hadin president Nitsana Darshan-Leitner represents the family of Naftali Fraenkel, a dual-US/Israeli citizen who, along with two other boys, Eyal Yifrah and Gil-Ad Shaer, was kidnapped and murdered in a terrorist attack carried out on June 12, 2014.


The attack was orchestrated by Arouri when he was residing in Turkey.


In addition, Shurat Hadin said that Arouri planned the murder of Rabbi Eitam and Na’ama Henkin when they were driving their car home with their children on October 1, 2015.


The NGO pointed out that in September 2015, the US designated Arouri as a “Specially Designated Global Terrorist” (“SDGT”), specifically identifying him as “a key financier and financial facilitator for Hamas military cells planning attacks,” and noting that he “directed and financed Hamas military cells in the West Bank.”


Arouri was given sanctuary by Turkey for many years, and it was from Turkey that Arouri directed the terrorist attacks that killed Fraenkel, Yifrah, Sha’ar and the Henkin couple. Shurat Hadin said that Arouri reportedly later left Turkey for Qatar, and is currently thought to be residing in Lebanon.


Darshan-Leitner explained: “Due to the international nature of this matter and Arouri’s movement between various jurisdictions with varying levels of relations with Israel, Interpol’s assistance in obtaining the arrest and trial of Arouri for his involvement in these murders is essential.”



Article source: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.811374

Nasrallah threatens to 'take care of Israeli violations' should Hezbollah not be backed



Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of Shi’ite terror organization Hezbollah, threatened on Saturday night that should “Israel’s violations [of UN resolutions] in Lebanon” not be handled in political ways, his Lebanon-based terror organization would have to “take care of those violations” on its own, without elaborating how.


The leader of the Lebanese terror group said in a speech that “the booby-trapped surveillance cameras and eavesdropping facilities on Lebanon grounds are violations of UN Resolution 1701. It is impossible to treat Israeli violations on Lebanese ground lightheadedly.”



Nasrallah also retorted that “Israel is worried because Daesh [Islamic State] is defeated in Syria.”


After claiming that Israel regularly violates the UN resolution which was forged at the end of the Second Lebanon War between the Jewish State and its northern neighbor and making the ominous, if vague, threat, Nasrallah went on to accuse other participants in the region of putting his country in harm’s way.


He accused Saudi Arabia of trying to push Lebanon into an inner conflict, emphasizing that “it’s a failed adventure [of Saudi Arabia].”


“I tell the rulers of Saudi Arabia that the separation between the Kurds and Iraq will reach Saudi Arabia later on, and it shall be divided. The Kurdish referendum is the beginning of a project to divide the region into countries, after the failure of the Daesh project.”


Nassrallah continued to address the issue which has sparked controversy in the region and outside of it in recent weeks, saying that “the issue doesn’t derive from the referendum but from [the fact] that the region is being split up according to ethnic backgrounds. After the failure of the ISIS project, it’s now back to the project of dividing up the region, first from the area of Kurdish Iraq.”


He lamented that “we still aren’t done with the ISIS plot which was created by Israel and backed by regional powers, and now we’re witnessing a different plot.”


Hezbollah chief Nasrallah: Israelis hiding like rats along border, Kuntar revenge will come


The Hezbollah leader also used the opportunity to bash the United States for its stance concerning the Kurdish quest for independence. “You can’t trust the American stance on the issue of Kurdistan and Iraq,” he said of the world power, that has not been supportive of the Kurds’ bid for an autonomous state of their own. “There are American voices that started popping up that call for support of the independence of Kurdish Iraq.”


But Israel, he continued, returning to slam the Jewish state, “is the sole supporter of the Kurds in Iraq, and that poses a danger to the whole region.”



Article source: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.811374

The Nishma Research Profile of US Modern Orthodox Jews


The just-released Nishma Research Profile of American Modern Orthodox Jews has generated much discussion, including detractors who are discounting the project’s results due to the fact that many of those involved in conducting and guiding the survey are decidedly pluralistic/very liberal – as well as others who are pointing to some quite left-leaning outcomes of the survey, in an effort on their part to drive home the (unfounded) point that the Orthodox establishment should take note and comply with these outcomes in a formal capacity.


There is no need to rehash the data, as it is all public and has been given broad coverage in Jewish media. Nonetheless, some of the data should be given particular attention. For example:


  • Only 51% of total respondents believe that “Hashem is involved with all day-to-day activities and guides the events of my life”. The same percentage believes that the Oral Torah was fully given to Moshe at Sinai.

  • Over one third of the children of Liberal Modern Orthodox Jews, and nearly half of the children of Open Orthodox Jews, are less religiously observant than their parents.

  • Only 53% of Liberal Modern Orthodox and Open Orthodox respondents feel that Orthodox Judaism is extremely important in their lives.

  • Nearly half of all respondents from the total spectrum of Modern Orthodoxy maintain that Orthodox observance is satisfying because of the “community/sense of belonging” factor; only 19% of total respondents maintain that “connection/service of Hashem” is the main factor for satisfaction.

  • Only 58% of Open Orthodox Jews believe that the written Torah was given to Moshe at Sinai.

  • Fewer than half (45%) of Open Orthodox (male) Jews lay tefillin daily, and only slightly more than half (53%) of Liberal Modern Orthodox Jews do the same.

  • 61% of Modern Orthodox men attend shul on Friday night, 33% of Modern Orthodox men attend shul on weekday mornings, and 21% of Modern Orthodox men attend shul during the week for Mincha and Maariv. Among Modern Orthodox men below age 35, 25% attend shul on weekday mornings, and 18% attend shul for weekday Mincha and Maariv.

  • Fewer than one third of Liberal Modern Orthodox and Open Orthodox Jews feel that tefillah is meaningful to them (even though they are for the most part comfortable in shul and they feel welcomed there).

  • Most Modern Orthodox respondents support expanded women’s communal roles; however, 60% of Open Orthodox respondents strongly support women holding titles of rabbinic authority, while only 14% of respondents from the rest of Modern Orthodoxy strongly support women holding titles of rabbinic authority.

  • 35% of Modern Orthodox men learn Torah daily.

These statistics are startling, but not totally surprising, as they confirm what many of us observe anecdotally. The bottom line is that Modern Orthodoxy – especially its left-end components – is in deep trouble. (Although I do not believe that Open Orthodoxy is part of Orthodoxy, I am working within the assumptions of the survey.)


Some have called for the survey to be taken with a grain of salt, due to the pluralistic orientation of many of those who authored and oversaw it. I humbly disagree, as the data was collected in large measure through access channels provided by RCA pulpit rabbis. But more importantly, the survey’s results constitute a blistering indictment of Open Orthodoxy and Liberal Modern Orthodoxy, whose commitment to core Orthodox beliefs and observance, as well as their success at passing Orthodox Judaism on to the next generation, receive notably low marks, as it were; why would the survey’s authors and advisers, several of whom are leaders in these same groups, portray their own groups in this light, if not for the objective findings of their survey?


JOFA (Jewish Orthodox Feminist Alliance) points to the fact that 53% of survey respondents agree fully or agree somewhat to the (vague) question of “Should women have expanded roles in the clergy?” This question does not define what those roles are or what qualifies as “clergy”. However, JOFA omits the fact that only 14% of respondents support women holding titles of rabbinic authority.


JOFA’s Facebook post on this topic tagged “Orthodox Union”, in a charge that the OU should take note of the 53% figure. Aside from the fact that the OU should take note of the far more important 14% figure, which is the response to the precise issue of “women rabbis”, and aside from the fact that the OU already convened a panel of poskim on the matter (sorry, JOFA – Halacha is not decided by popular poll), JOFA and its Open Orthodox allies continue to allege that rejection of congregations that have “women rabbis” is divisive, all the while JOFA and its Open Orthodox allies fail to mention that it is they themselves who are the source of the division, having broken with long-established Orthodox practice and having knowingly and continuously violated the unanimous ruling of the generation’s most preeminent halachic authorities. How one who breaks with the norm can then have the audacity to condemn the norm for being divisive is beyond me.


The Nishma Reserach Profile of American Modern Orthodox Jews should serve as a thundering wake-up call. We are in a period of intense introspection; let us all revisit our core commitments and priorities and take corrective action. (I must again cite this excellent article on our topic as regards Modern Orthodox youth and education.)


G’mar chasima tova and wishes for a good and sweet new year.




Article source: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.811374

INTO THE FRAY: Oslo at twenty-four


We have come to try and put an end to the hostilities, so that our children, our children’s children, will no longer experience the painful cost of war, violence and terror. We have come to secure their lives and to ease the sorrow and the painful memories of the past to hope and pray for peace.  – Yitzhak Rabin at the signing ceremony of the Oslo I Accords, Washington, D.C. September 13, 1993.


This September marked the passing of 24 years since the signing of the Oslo Accords. Although little is left of the heady—the less charitable might say, “irresponsible”—optimism that accompanied the signing ceremony on the White House lawns on that fateful day in September 1993, the “two-states-for-two-peoples” format it forged, still – inexplicably—dominates the discourse as the sole principle upon which a resolution of the Israel-Palestinian conflict can be based.


Puzzling and Perturbing 


Future historians will doubtless find this both puzzling and perturbing—for although the two-state formula has been regularly disproven, for some unfathomable reason, it has never been discredited—and certainly never discarded.


In many ways, the continued “durability” of the Oslowian “recipe” is astonishing.


Indeed, it is difficult to imagine what else should happen, what further disaster should befall both Jew and Arab, for it to be abandoned as the abject failure it has incontrovertibly proved to be.  


After all, when the Oslo process was first instituted there were proponents and opponents –with the former promising sweeping benefits (such as peace, prosperity and a thriving harmonious Mid-East stretching from Casablanca to Kuwait), while the latter warned of dire dangers (such as spiraling terror and pervasive turmoil). 


Now, almost a quarter-century later, one might have been forgiven for thinking that “the jury was no longer out”.  For one thing is indisputable.  None of the benefits promised by proponents have materialized, while virtually all the dangers warned of by the opponents have befallen the strife-torn region and its unfortunate inhabitants. 


Yet stubbornly—indeed, obsessively—two-staters cling to the tenets of their political dogma—no matter what the human cost; no matter how much evidence of their tragic error continues to inexorably accumulate…


Hardly a revolutionary revelation


Sadly, this is hardly a revolutionary revelation. To the contrary, it has long been starkly apparent to anyone with a smidgeon of intellectual integrity. 


Indeed, seventeen years ago, just weeks after the Palestinian-Arabs launched their gory wave of violence (a.k.a. the Second Intifada), an article of mine appeared on Israel’s most trafficked Hebrew-language site, YNet.  It was entitled “The Crystal Ball”. The sub-headline read:   “The Oslo process and its basic assumptions have failed the test of reality”. 


In it, I wrote: “Up until a few weeks ago, there might have been room for a debate on whether the Oslo process was a success or a failure. Up until a few weeks ago it might have been possible—albeit with great difficulty—to understand those whose faith in the “process” had not yet faded. But now [i.e. November, 2000], the debate is over! Now it is quite clear that the “political process: has totally failed. 
 
“When,” I asked “should one conclude that one’s chosen path is mistaken?”; and in response, suggested that:  “As a general rule, one should admit that one’s chosen policy has failed if one would not have chosen it, had the consequences of that choice been known beforehand”.


Failing the test of reality


I then proposed: “… let us imagine that on that fateful day in September 1993, on which the Oslo agreements were signed, the people of Israel and their leaders had at their disposal a crystal ball by means of which they could foresee the future consequences of those agreements. Let us imagine that the architects of those accords, who…promised the nation the dawn of a new era…of ‘days without worry and nights without fear’, could foretell the fate of the country almost eight years after the pomp and ceremony of the occasion of their signature”. 


I continued: “Let’s suppose that they would have known that almost a decade after the sweeping concessions that Israel was called on to make…the country would be plagued by fire, hatred and death, and that the guns, handed to the Palestinians, despite repeated warnings not to do so, would be turned against our soldiers, our women and our children. Let’s suppose that they would have known that despite our far-reaching willingness to accommodate our adversaries, our political situation in the world would be at its lowest ebb…”


I therefore, ventured to postulate: “I have no doubt that had the architects of these accords known that events would turn out as they have, they would not have signed them.  I have no doubt that had the public foreseen what has come about it would not have given its support to the process or to its initiators. Accordingly, we can categorically declare that the Oslo process, and the world view on which it was based, have utterly failed the ‘crystal ball test’ i.e. failed the test of reality.”


Despite expectations…


In light of all this, I expressed what appeared to be a reasonable expectation: “…that, given the appalling consequences the political processes had precipitated, there would have been a wholesale abandonment of it by its [hitherto] supporters.


“However,” I lamented, “this was not the case. Despite the fact that not even a miniscule trace of any residual success could be found, a significant number of people…still refuse to acknowledge failure or error.  ‘There is still no other alternative’ they recite with dogmatic obstinacy.” 


Of course, as I pointed out “, there is in fact no claim more baseless than the claim that there is ‘No alterative’”  Indeed,  as I underscored–“the burden of proof is now on the proponents of the Oslo process rather than on its opponents  to prove that they have a viable alternative…”


Moreover, had the imaginary 1993 crystal ball been able to look further into the future, what it would have revealed to the prospective signatories  of the ill-fated accords would have hardly been more encouraging.  Indeed, if anything quite the opposite is true!


Thus, for the five years after the publication of  the “Crystal Ball” article,  the carnage of the “Second Intifada” raged across the country,  with thousands of Israeli civilians being murdered and maimed—in shopping malls, on buses,  in street cafes and crowded restaurants. 


What the crystal ball would have revealed


Indeed, it was the bloody Passover massacre in March 2002 at the Park Hotel in the seaside resort of Netanya that led to Operation “Defensive Shield”, the first of a series of punitive military campaigns launched by the IDF when  Palestinian-Arab terror reached unacceptably murderous levels, which the Israeli military was compelled to quell.


The ensuing decade was replete with recurring bloodshed. Thus, as the savage violence of the Second Intifada petered out in 2005, the very next year, 2006, heralded the outbreak of the Second Lebanon War.


Admittedly, the Second Lebanon War was not directly connected to the conflict with the Palestinian-Arabs. However, its roots can definitely be traced to the Oslowian land-for-peace mindset, when in June 2000,  Ehud Barak, capitulated to pressures from left-wing activists and surrendered South Lebanon to the Hezbollah by ordering an ignominious unilateral evacuation of the IDF. 


Indeed, this unbecoming retreat has been widely identified as one of the major causes for the Second Intifada three months later (see for example here and here).  Thus, in the words of one pundit “the message of weakness transmitted by the retreat from Lebanon encouraged the Palestinians to return to using violent methods.”


Barak’s abandonment of South Lebanon led to Hezbollah’s massive military buildup in the vacated territory, eventually culminating in the costly 2006 Second Lebanon War, whose mismanagement by the Olmert government allowed South Lebanon to become a fearsome arsenal—with over a 100,000 rockets and missiles, trained on Israel’s major civilian population centers and vital infrastructure installations, as well as the additional threat of trans-border attack tunnels.  


From “Cast Lead” to “Protective Edge”


It is of course an open question whether the Second Lebanon War in 2006 was due, at least in part, to another  unilateral  withdrawal—the  so-called “Disengagement” from Gaza in 2005.  There can however be little doubt that the Disengagement did lead to the Islamist takeover of Gaza in 2007, when in the wake of the power vacuum created by the IDF’s departure, the fundamentalist Hamas seized control of the coastal enclave, violently ejecting Mahmoud Abbas’s ruling Fatah faction.


In the wake of Hamas’s ascendance, there was a massive increase in attacks against Israel, with thousands of rockets, missiles and mortar shells being fired at civilian targets.  As a result, Israel was compelled to take action to restore stability and security for its citizens—which resulted in the first of three (and counting) post-Oslo IDF campaigns against Gaza, Operation Cast Lead in December 2008.  As a result of its military response to the ongoing terror attacks Israel was vilified in the international arena, particularly by the notorious Goldstone report , manufactured by a UN “fact finding” mission, which accused Israel of deliberately targeting Palestinian-Arab civilians, used by Hamas as human shields.


Continual escalation of terror attacks drew Israel in to two further military campaigns.  


Less than four years after the end of Operation “Cast Lead”, Israel was forced undertake Operation “Pillar of Defense” in November 2012, following an intensification of rocket fire aimed at Israeli population centers.  Then, barely eighteen months later, with the brutal kidnapping and murder of three Israeli youths, and indiscriminate rocket fire from Gaza on Israeli civilian targets, Israel was again obliged to use the military to restore calm – this time in Operation “Protective Edge” during which the alarming extent of the terror attack tunnels, excavated by Hamas, was exposed… 


On the Palestinian side…


On the Palestinian side, our crystal ball would have swiftly dispelled the rosy predictions of a peaceful, prosperous EU-like Middle East stretching from the Sahara Desert to the Persian Gulf, that the Oslo Accords were supposed usher in.


Setting aside the rape, arson, slaughter and misery that raged across the post-Oslo Middle East as the chill winds of the Arab Spring swept through country after country, the Oslo accords brought scant benefits to the Palestinian-Arabs.


Indeed for the average man in the Palestinian street, Oslo wrought penury, not prosperity; despotism not democracy. After almost a quarter century since the ceremony and fanfare on the White House lawns, all the Palestinian-Arabs have to show is a an untenable    and strife-riven entity, with a dysfunctional polity and a collapsing economy – with a minuscule private sector and a bloated public one, wracked by corruption, and crippled by cronyism, manifestly unsustainable without massive infusions of foreign funds and the largesse of its alleged “oppressor”, Israel. 


In Gaza, where the experiment of Palestinian self-government was first instituted, the situation is particularly dire, with the specter of “humanitarian disaster” hovering over the general population. Awash in untreated sewage flows, with well over 90% of the water supply unfit for drinking, electrical power available for only a few hours a day and unemployment rates soaring to anything between 40-60%, Gazans, too, have good reason to rue the day the Oslo agreements were signed.


If Rabin had a crystal ball… 


So if Yitzhak Rabin had had a crystal ball in September 1993,the depressing chain of events that would have unfolded before his eyes as he peered into the milky surface of the glass orb would be this: 


A quarter century of spiraling terror  in city streets, buses, and cafes;  thousands of his countrymen maimed or murdered, four (arguably, five) military campaigns with hundreds of casualties, the dramatic enhancement of the quality and quantity of the weaponry of the terror organizations ranged against Israel; the huge cost of the barrier being constructed, high above and deep below, ground, to secure Israeli civilians from terrorist infiltration and tunnels…


 So if indeed, Rabin could have foreseen that all this would be Israel’s lot in exchange for the gut-wrenching and perilous concessions the agreements called on it to make, who could doubt that he would never have affixed his signature to them…


Surely then, this—the Crystal Ball Test—is the ultimate indictment of the Oslo Agreements. Surely, it is time, after a quarter-century,  for them—and all that they stand for—to be branded what they indisputably turned out to be –a colossal and tragic blunder  of historic proportions—and to be treated as such. 


Martin Sherman is the founder and executive director of the Israel Institute for Strategic Studies.


 




Article source: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.811374

Jewish comedian Elon Gold prepares to crack jokes in Israel



Elon Gold sees himself as a little bit like Radiohead. The actor and stand-up comedian may have some fame and recognition in the US, where he lives, but in Israel he’s a rock star.


“I performed last year in Ra’anana for Kids Kicking Cancer and I remember being shocked we sold out this big theater in two days,” Gold recalled. “Oh my goodness, I’m a star in Israel… I’m not a star anywhere else but Israel. Radiohead used to say that they were stars in Israel before anywhere else in the world.” The band’s first-ever international gig was in Tel Aviv in 1993.



Now Gold is coming to perform again in Israel for the third time, playing three benefit shows for StandWithUs: two in Jerusalem and one in Herzliya over Sukkot.


While he doesn’t do many shows in the Holy Land, the clips Gold posts on social media garner hundreds of thousands of views, gaining him a cult status among a certain type of Israeli.


“My videos are going crazy viral over there, my shows are selling out there,” said Gold in a recent phone interview from Los Angeles. “Sure, I have a Netflix special and some people in the US know me; but for me, Israel is really the first place to fully and wholly embrace me as a comedian.”


It’s Gold’s uniquely, deeply Jewish jokes that get him shared across Facebook in the thousands – plus “a couple million on Whatsapp which you can’t even count,” he jokes. “I know that every single Israeli citizen shared [his Christmas tree video] on Whatsapp. So there’s a couple mil right there at least.”


Gold specializes in poking fun at the intricacies of observant Jewish life. His riff on what would happen if Jews had Christmas trees is one of his most popular to date.


If Jews had Christmas trees, Gold jokes, there would be “a thousand rules and regulations regarding the trees.” How to shecht it (ritual slaughter according to Jewish law, when to say the blessing, what type of tree – there’d be a whole tractate of Talmud devoted to the issue, he said.


“You must string the lights right to left, but light them left to right,” he said. “And if – God forbid – one of the bulbs is out, the whole string’s no good!” The comedian recently posted a new video about the Jewish calendar and its obsession with time.


“The Jewish calendar is the only calendar with minutes on it,” he riffs. “You don’t open up an American calendar, see an American holiday: Oh, Martin Luther King Day.


Starts 5:48, ends the next day, 6:52.” You know, he said, “no one in history has ever asked, ‘Hey, what time is Christmas this year?’ Tree lighting is at 4:31.”


But Gold also does shows and gigs with a slightly wider appeal. He had roles in the canceled sitcoms Stacked and In-Laws, and also has a Netflix stand-up special, Elon Gold: Chosen And Taken.


While Gold always jokes about his life as a Jew, he said he really has “two acts.


If you watch my Netflix special, that’s an act where I identify as a Jew, and certainly the opposite of shying away from it; I talk about it a lot,” he said. “But it’s not the central focus on my act.”


When he performs in Israel or at Jewish benefits and events, that’s a show where “if I could put out a warning label I’d say ‘Some material may not be suitable for gentiles.’” I mean, where else will you hear jokes about tefillin, building a sukka or blowing the shofar? “How many lulav jokes are out there on Netflix?” he jokes. “I’m experiencing things that are unique to us and to our experiences as Jews.” But while he loves to poke fun, “I think the message of my comedy is more important than any of the jokes,” he said.


“The message is that I love being Jewish and I love our customs and observing them and they’re just funny to me.”


Gold also loves performing benefit shows, and has headlined the Chabad telethon, done stand-up at cancer benefits and appeared at galas and dinners for Jewish nonprofits around the US. He has a special place in his heart for StandWithUs, which he has been working with for more than a decade.


“They’re my favorite organization,” he said of the educational Israel advocacy group, which operates mostly on college campuses in North America. “As someone who has almost college-age bound kids and someone who cares about Israel as much as I do… StandWithUs is out there fighting the good fight. They’re just the biggest and the best at it.”


Elon Gold will perform two shows on October 10 at Beit Shmuel in Jerusalem at 6:30 p.m.and 8:30 p.m. and on October 14 at the Herzliya Performing Arts Center at 8:30 p.m. Tickets are NIS 150 or 250. Visit standwithus.co.il/ comedy for more information.



Article source: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.811374