Thursday 31 May 2018

Gazan tells ‘Post’ about latest round of violence



Bahjat al-Helou, a resident of Gaza City, describes a sense of cautious relief over Wednesday’s cease-fire between Gaza and Israel, a feeling familiar to residents on both sides of the border, in a telephone conversation with The Jerusalem Post on Thursday.


Helou is the training coordinator at the Gaza office of the Independent Commission for Human Rights and he lives in Gaza City.



“The Palestinians are living in panic,” he told the Post. “The artillery shelling and the military escalation that occurred brought back the trauma of the Gazans that they have been suffering from the last few wars – especially children.”


His 12-year-old daughter, he says, was too frightened to sleep in her own bed on Tuesday night. “She came to her mum and dad’s bed because she was very afraid,” Helou said.


According to Helou, Gaza residents had feared that the escalation, the sounds of explosions, artillery bombardments and drones, signaled the outbreak of a new war.


This, he pointed out, only aggravated the problems many Gazans already face on a daily basis: poverty, unemployment and the blockade, as well as the many people wounded in the recent protests along the border unable to receive proper medical attention from Gazan hospitals and unable to leave the enclave to get it elsewhere.


“When the escalation happened it put people in a very bad situation,” Helou said.


There was less movement in the streets of Gaza, he said, during the hours of the escalation, though people still went to work. But on Wednesday, he said, employees at his offices left work early, exhausted from a sleepless night on Tuesday night when the violence on both sides of the border was at a peak, hours before the cease-fire began.


“Israel is used to bombarding empty security places,” Helou said. “People were afraid that this time Israel would shell places where civilians live or security or civil facilities affiliated with Hamas and thankfully that didn’t happen and we appreciate that the mediation from the Egyptian side was very helpful.”


“We, all the people, seek a truce. It’s only the affiliates of the Hamas and Jihad movement who encourage escalation just to export their internal challenges and inability to provide citizens with their basic needs, and I think Israel is a place they can make their battle with… And Israel itself always provided this opportunity to the Jihad movement and Hamas by the bombardments, the escalation, the raids and the tough siege. This must be ended,” he said.


While the Palestinian leaders feel triumphant over the way this last short conflict with Israel played out, the “people are very cautious and think that war might come back,” he said.


“People were very, very happy about the cease-fire because the structure of society is very fragile. We want a long-term truce. We feel that even the extreme factions are not going to make war – they are not ready – but they use it for political motives,” he added. “The mood of the society is not ready for a war and as a human-rights defender I can assure you people do not seek war.”


“I think it’s time for Israel to decrease the amount of punishment and sanctions against Gaza, for humanitarian reasons and not for political reasons,” Helou asserted. He listed an increase in electricity, medication, and permits for medical treatment and for students who want to attend universities elsewhere as “basic things that people seek.”


“But we do not seek war with Israel, we want a long truce. People want to live a normal life.”





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S.Korean official says North suggests joint celebration of 2000 summit



SEOUL – North Korea suggested during high-level talks on Friday that the two Koreas hold a joint celebration of the anniversary of a historic 2000 inter-Korean summit this month in the South, an official in Seoul said.


Officials, politicians and private sector members from both sides should take part in the event, South Korea’s unification ministry official quoted North Korean delegates as saying during the meeting.





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After violent week ends in cease-fire, Israel braces for new wave of protests on Gaza border



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Netanyahu denies asking head of Shin Bet to listen to phones of then-IDF chief of staff, Mossad chief



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Abbas refused to meet Democratic delegation, led by Pelosi, that visited Israel



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Iran, Hezbollah 'prepping to withdraw' from southern Syria near Israel border


A Syrian war monitor says Iranian troops and fighters of Lebanon’s Hezbollah group are getting ready to withdraw from southern Syria.


The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Thursday Iranian advisers and Hezbollah fighters will be withdrawing from the southern regions of Daraa and Quneitra near the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.


 In Syria, Putin and Netanyahu Were on the Same Side All Along | Analysis


A Syria-based official with the Iran-led axis of resistance denied the report saying it is “untrue.” The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media, gave no further details.


Later, the Kremlin said President Vladimir Putin had a call with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to discuss the situation in Syria.



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The Kremlin said the conversation focused on “some aspects of the Syrian settlement,” which it didn’t specify, following up on the two leaders’ talks in Moscow earlier this month.


Russian news outlets had recently reported that Moscow wants to cut a deal that would see Russian military police deployed to areas near Israel. The agreement would envisage the pullout of all Iranian forces from the area and require Syrian rebels to surrender heavy weapons.


Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman met with his Russian counterpart, Sergei Shoigu, in Moscow on Thursday to discuss the tensions between Israel and the Iranian forces in Syria.


“The state of Israel appreciates Russia‘s understanding of our security concerns, particularly regarding the situation at our northern border,” Lieberman wrote on Twitter after the meeting. “We’ll continue our dialogue with Russia on every matter at hand.”


According to the Defense Ministry, the meeting with Shoigu took place in Moscow and lasted over an hour and a half. The meeting dealt with matters of security between the two countries, particularly regarding the situation in Syria and Israel’s attempt to prevent Iranian consolidation there.


Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Monday that only Syrian government troops should have a presence on the country’s southern border. This was perceived as a hint that Russia was inclined to accept Israel’s demand – distancing the Iranian forces and allied Shi’ite militias from the Israel-Syria border.


Netanyahu told the Knesset Monday that “there is no room for any Iranian military presence in any part of Syria.”


Last November, Russia and the United States, in coordination with Jordan, forged an agreement to decrease the possibility of friction in southern Syria, after the Assad regime defeated rebel groups in the center of the country. Israel sought to keep the Iranians and Shi’ite militias at least 60 kilometers (37 miles) from the Israeli border in the Golan Heights.


The superpowers, however, did not comply with the demand; the agreement stipulated that the Iranians and militias would remain about five kilometers from the lines of contact between the regime and the rebels, around five to 20 kilometers from the Israeli border.


On Sunday, Haaretz reported that Israeli political and military officials believe Russia is willing to discuss a significant distancing of Iranian forces and allied Shi’ite militias from the Israel-Syria border, according to Israeli officials.


The change in Russia’s position has become clearer since Israel’s May 10 military clash with Iran in Syria and amid Moscow’s concerns that further Israeli moves would threaten the stability of Syrian President Bashar Assad’s regime.



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Iran, Hezbollah 'prepping to withdraw' from southern Syria near Israel border


A Syrian war monitor says Iranian troops and fighters of Lebanon’s Hezbollah group are getting ready to withdraw from southern Syria.


The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Thursday Iranian advisers and Hezbollah fighters will be withdrawing from the southern regions of Daraa and Quneitra near the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.


 In Syria, Putin and Netanyahu Were on the Same Side All Along | Analysis


A Syria-based official with the Iran-led axis of resistance denied the report saying it is “untrue.” The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media, gave no further details.


Later, the Kremlin said President Vladimir Putin had a call with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to discuss the situation in Syria.



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The Kremlin said the conversation focused on “some aspects of the Syrian settlement,” which it didn’t specify, following up on the two leaders’ talks in Moscow earlier this month.


Russian news outlets had recently reported that Moscow wants to cut a deal that would see Russian military police deployed to areas near Israel. The agreement would envisage the pullout of all Iranian forces from the area and require Syrian rebels to surrender heavy weapons.


Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman met with his Russian counterpart, Sergei Shoigu, in Moscow on Thursday to discuss the tensions between Israel and the Iranian forces in Syria.


“The state of Israel appreciates Russia‘s understanding of our security concerns, particularly regarding the situation at our northern border,” Lieberman wrote on Twitter after the meeting. “We’ll continue our dialogue with Russia on every matter at hand.”


According to the Defense Ministry, the meeting with Shoigu took place in Moscow and lasted over an hour and a half. The meeting dealt with matters of security between the two countries, particularly regarding the situation in Syria and Israel’s attempt to prevent Iranian consolidation there.


Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Monday that only Syrian government troops should have a presence on the country’s southern border. This was perceived as a hint that Russia was inclined to accept Israel’s demand – distancing the Iranian forces and allied Shi’ite militias from the Israel-Syria border.


Netanyahu told the Knesset Monday that “there is no room for any Iranian military presence in any part of Syria.”


Last November, Russia and the United States, in coordination with Jordan, forged an agreement to decrease the possibility of friction in southern Syria, after the Assad regime defeated rebel groups in the center of the country. Israel sought to keep the Iranians and Shi’ite militias at least 60 kilometers (37 miles) from the Israeli border in the Golan Heights.


The superpowers, however, did not comply with the demand; the agreement stipulated that the Iranians and militias would remain about five kilometers from the lines of contact between the regime and the rebels, around five to 20 kilometers from the Israeli border.


On Sunday, Haaretz reported that Israeli political and military officials believe Russia is willing to discuss a significant distancing of Iranian forces and allied Shi’ite militias from the Israel-Syria border, according to Israeli officials.


The change in Russia’s position has become clearer since Israel’s May 10 military clash with Iran in Syria and amid Moscow’s concerns that further Israeli moves would threaten the stability of Syrian President Bashar Assad’s regime.



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U.N. Security Council extends South Sudan sanctions through mid-July



UNITED NATIONS – The UN Security Council voted on Thursday to renew some sanctions on South Sudan through mid-July and to consider imposing travel bans and asset freezes on six South Sudanese leaders if the country’s conflict does not stop by June 30.


The resolution, approved by a 9-0 vote with six abstentions, was a watered-down version of a draft measure proposed by the United States, whose ambassador, Nikki Haley, wrote in The Washington Post on Wednesday that the administration had “lost patience with the status quo” in South Sudan.


“What we need now is concrete action by the full international community to hold these warring parties accountable,” Haley said in impassioned remarks before the vote.


She called the resolution a “modest step” that would extend sanctions for 45 days and demand a cessation of hostilities.


Critics of the resolution argued that the measure came at a sensitive time in peace talks led by the Intergovernmental Authority on Development, or IGAD, and was rushed through the council with little consultation with the region.


The resolution said absent a cessation of hostilities by June 30, the council would consider freezing the assets and banning travel for six officials, including Defense Minister Kuol Manyang Juuk, former army chief Paul Malong, Minister of Information Michael Lueth, and deputy chief of defense for logistics in the South Sudan Army Malek Reuben Riak Rengu.


It also targeted Koang Rambang, governor of Bieh State, who the United States accused of leading military attacks and obstructing aid to civilians; and cabinet affairs minister Martin Elia Lomuro.


South Sudan, which split off from its northern neighbor Sudan in 2011, has been gripped by a civil war sparked by political rivalry between President Salva Kiir and his former deputy Riek Machar.





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Putin's pet oligarch Roman Abramovich is now Israel's richest man. But is he worthy of citizenship?



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Rank and File: Volunteering is good for your health, says ESRA


HONORING THE VOLUNTEERS: ESRA, the English Speaking Residents Association, honored over a dozen people at its biannual Volunteer Award event in Ra’anana last Sunday. “The main reason they volunteer is to help others, but they also benefit from doing it,” ESRA national chairman Baruch Tanaman told Haaretz. “There’s nothing like volunteering to keep you young.”


To wit, he noted that the winners of the Chairman’s Award, Betty and Ed Wolfe, have their 70th wedding anniversary coming up. They were honored for “their exceptional volunteering in the development and maintenance of the ESRA shops.” The President’s Award, meanwhile, went to Mike and Adele Rubin for their “ongoing commitment to ensuring the financial well-being of ESRA.”


The other honorees were Naomi Aharoni, Joseph Beenstock, Fonda Dubb, Marise Gordon, Shuka Harel, Ilana Harf, Carole Kaye, Susan Kurnedz, Nancy Milgram, Mike Porter, Sally Sher and Frank Taylor.


For more information on the honorees, visit ESRA’s new website at http://www.esra.org.il


A MUSICAL FOX: When Daniel Fox was age 4, his parents noticed that he really enjoyed music so they started giving him violin lessons. “I’ve had at least one every week since then,” says the Jerusalem resident, who turns 18 in July. Now, ahead of being drafted into the Army Rabbinate Choir, J-Town Playhouse will present Fox in “My Musical Journey..?” at AACI’s Dr. Max and Gianna Family Center next Wednesday.



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“The show has something for everybody, not just confined to musical theater,” said Fox, whose mother, Louise Fox, hails from Sunderland, northern England, and his father, Joshua Fox, is from Cincinnati, Ohio.


Fox, who has picked up other instruments along the way, will perform some of his favorite musical pieces from Billy Joel, Rodgers Hammerstein, Elton John and Bock Harnick, to name a few. For more information, call (02) 566-1181.


A CATHOLIC EDUCATION: What does the story of a teaching nun at an American Catholic school have to do with religious issues in Israel? For the answer to that, you’ll have to ask the scholars hosting post-performance talks at Theater and Theology’s “Off the Derech Dolorosa,” next Wednesday and Thursday, and June 12-14, in Jerusalem’s Khan Theater.


“This is a fun comedy that stands on its own regardless of the discussion afterward,” director Yael Valier said of Tom Dudzick’s play. “It’s about the struggles within religion between our inner sense of morals and the rigidity of rules, and between the love of God and fear of God,” she added. The show stars former New Yorker Artie Fischer; Bakol Gellar (from Toronto); Shlomit Kovalski; Devorah Levine (from California) and Howard Metz (from Brooklyn). Each performance features a different scholar: Rabbi Dr. Natan Cardozo, Rabbi Aaron Leibowitz, Rabbanit Dr. Jennie Rosenfeld, Dr. Elana Sztokman and Rabbanit Shani Taragin. For more information, call (050) 873-3347.


Rank and File was compiled by Steven Klein.


Have an idea about an item for Rank and File? Email us at: column@haaretz.co.il



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U.S. will 'unquestionably' veto U.N. Security Council resolution on Gaza



United States Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley will “unquestionably” veto a draft resolution proposed by Kuwait, the US Mission to the UN said in a statement Thursday released on Twitter.


Calling the resolution “grossly one-sided” and “morally bankrupt,” the statement says those who favor the resolution “clarify their own lack of fitness to take part in any credible negotiations between the two parties.”


Israeli ambassador to the UN Danny Danon previously called the draft resolution “shameful.”


The draft resolution calls for an international force to be deployed to Gaza in order to protect Palestinian civilians from Israel.


Daniel J. Roth contributed to this report.





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Business in Brief: Partner mulls credit cards, development of Leviathan gas field half done


Partner Communications mulling branching out into credit card business


Partner Communications, the country’s second-largest mobile carrier, said Thursday it is considering a foray into the credit card business as a source of future growth. It is thought that Partner is eyeing Leumi Card, which is owned 80% by Bank Leumi and 20% by the Azrieli Group. Partner disclosed its new direction in its first-quarter earnings report. It recorded an 86% drop in quarterly profits as it continued to invest heavily in the deployment of a fiber-optics network and its TV service. The company also said it planned to buy back up to 200 million shekels ($56 million) of its own shares between June 4 and May 30, 2019. Partner said it earned 9 million shekels in the first quarter, down from 64 million a year earlier. Revenue rose 3% to 826 million shekels, with its mobile subscriber base falling by 7,000 in the first quarter to 2.67 million. The company’s shares closed 6.8% higher at 14.16 shekels Thursday. (Michael Rochvarger and Reuters)


Ormat Technology’s substation, warehouse near Kilauea volcano burned by lava


Lava from the Kilauea volcano in Hawaii has burned a substation at Ormat Technology’s Puna geothermal plant near the volcano as well as a warehouse where drilling equipment was being stored, the Israeli geothermal firm reported Thursday. The lava also covered the main highway leading to the plant, closing the road. The eruption began May 3 and three days later required the total shutdown of the plant, which is located on Hawaii Island, the largest of the state’s islands. The damage to the Ormat substation and warehouse are covered by a $100 million insurance policy against volcanic eruptions and earthquakes. In light of the damage caused to the transmission network maintained by the local electrical utility, Hawaii Electric Light, Ormat, which has a 63% stake in the plant, said it would be a considerable period of time until a new substation is up and running, adding that it is impossible to predict when the Puna facility, which provides a quarter of the island’s power, will again be generating electricity. (Yoram Gabison)


Delek says half the work on development of Leviathan gas field completed in Q1



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The Delek Group has announced that, as of the end of March, about half of the work in developing its Leviathan offshore natural gas field in the Mediterranean was completed and that gas should begin flowing from the field, Israel’s largest, next year. The work performed included the laying of underwater pipes connecting the gas wells to a main pipeline and the construction of a substantial portion of the production rig, the company said. These details came Thursday as Delek released its first quarter financial results, reporting a decline in revenue from energy operations in Israel after selling off 9.25% of its stake in another gas field, Tamar, in which it retained a 22% share. Delek said all told, it earned 243 million shekels ($68 million) in the first quarter, up from 220 million a year earlier. Revenue rose to 1.78 billion shekels from 1.54 billion. (Eran Azran and Reuters)


Leading TASE indexes nearly unchanged


Shares were mixed on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange Thursday after a strong opening. The blue chip TA-35 index  ended the day off 0.03% at 1,512.01 points, while the TA-125 finished up 0.05% at 1,365.05. The Banks-5 index rose 0.7% to 2,032.63. Trading volume was 1.88 billion shekels ($527 million). Phoenix Holdings shares rose 2.7% to 20.10 shekels, despite reporting a 34% decline in first-quarter profits. Harel Insurance shares edged down 0.4% to 27.11 following its report Thursday of first-quarter profits of 80 million shekels, down from 253 million a year earlier. (Jasmin Gueta)



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U.S. tariff move breaks international law, German finance minister says



VANCOUVER, British Columbia – The US decision to impose tariffs on Canadian, EU and Mexican steel and aluminum flies in the face of international law, German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz said on Thursday.


The U.S. administration said earlier it would move ahead with import tariffs on some of its closest allies, ending months of uncertainty about potential exemptions.


“This is not a good day for trans-Atlantic relations,” Scholz said on his way to a meeting with his G7 counterparts in the Canadian ski resort town of Whistler, British Columbia.


“This one-sided decision is wrong and in my view against international law,” Scholz said, stressing the importance of supporting a rules-based system for free trade.


He said that the European Union would react “strongly and wisely,” coordinating among EU countries and the bloc’s partners.


Scholz said that the EU was prepared to talk about tariffs in general with the United States, but only once Washington had granted permanent exemptions from the steel and aluminum tariffs.





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After Gaza cease-fire, Israel prepares for more border protests



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200 disabled protesters block Tel Aviv's Ayalon Highway demanding livable allowance


About 200 disabled people gathered Thursday evening near Tel Aviv’s Azrieli Towers, blocking entry to and exit from the Ayalon Highway at the major Hashalom interchange, resuming the demonstrations demanding that the government give them allotments equal to the minimum wage. The protest caused heavy traffic jams.


The demonstrators are protesting their allotment of less than 3,000 shekels ($840) a month, and that they can expect a maximum of 4,000 shekels only in another three and half years.


One demonstrator said she is paralyzed on her left side due to two strokes. “I love Israel and I think that I and millions of other elderly and disabled people should live in minimal dignity and not think about which of the drugs we need can we afford to buy. I receive food from charities and collect bottles [for deposits].”


By 2021 the basic allowance for the disabled will increase from 2,342 shekels to 3,700 shekels. The allowance had not been updated since 2000, and was only changed in March. A study by the National Insurance Institute indicated that within a decade the poverty rate among the disabled in Israel increased fourfold compared to the general population.



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Israel, Russia discuss pushing Iran back from Syria's border and Assad's return to area



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Time is now for deal with Hamas, senior Israeli military officer says



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Israel's ultimatum to a revered Palestinian principal and agent of change


NABLUS – When the now-grown children of Manal Cohen, a member of the Samaritan community of Nablus, were in high school, she joined them in studying the assigned material. She would wake them early in the…



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Shin Bet detains Israeli peace activist at Ben-Gurion Airport in unusual incident


In an unusual incident, the Shin Bet security service held Israeli peace activist Tanya Rubinstein at Ben-Gurion International Airport for half an hour in early May, Rubinstein told Haaretz on Thursday. She is general coordinator of the Coalition of Women for Peace and was returning from a conference sponsored by the Swedish foreign ministry.


The Shin Bet said she was held because of information received, but declined to elaborate. She was freed after 30 minutes without being questioned.


Rubinstein said she was detained in an attempt to restrict the activity of the Coalition of Women for Peace. “We act to expose the effects of the Gaza siege and the occupation on the residents, especially on women. That’s exactly what Israel doesn’t want the public to hear,” she said.


Several leading activists told Haaretz they were not aware of similar incidents involving Israelis and that they knew only of foreign citizens who have been detained at the airport for political reasons.


“The conference was held by Sweden’s Foreign Ministry and a world research institute, which deals with peace and development issues,” Rubinstein said. “It was attended by diplomats, civilians and academics. It did not deal with the Israeli-Palestinian dispute. There were Palestinians there, but not Palestinian Authority officials. It was about civilian society and authorities and I was there to speak about the restriction of civilian space. It wasn’t open to the public,” she said.



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Another Israeli woman who attended the conference entered Israel without a hitch.


“I returned on May 10. In Sweden there was a security check, a check of Norwegian Airlines, and when I asked why they were inspecting me they said they were acting on instructions from Tel Aviv. They opened my case,” Rubinstein said.


“On landing in Tel Aviv, at the passport control scanner, not the biometric one, a red X appeared on the screen and the official there asked me to come to the counter. There they took my passport and led me to a cubicle off to the side. They told me to sit and wait and that someone would come to talk to me,” she said.


When she asked why she was being detained, she was told it was for security reasons. “After that they came with my passport and said I was free to go. They didn’t tell me why I was held up, and didn’t question me or contact me since,” she said.


“We keep running into attempts by Israel’s government to restrict our activity and silence us,” she said.


The Shin Bet said “due to information received, it was necessary to hold some inquiries and when they were completed, 30 minutes later, she entered Israel.”



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U.N. warns of 'critical gap' in Syrian refugee aid this year



AMMAN – A “critical gap” in funding for Syrian refugees and host communities this year could lead to cuts in vital services, threatening social stability in host countries and refugees’ futures, United Nations and aid agencies warned on Thursday.


Humanitarian organizations had asked international donors for $5.6 billion this year to support 5.5 million Syrian refugees living in Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey, Iraq and Egypt, and 4 million nationals from those host countries.


But almost half way through 2018, only 18 to 22 percent of required funds have been given, the heads of several U.N. agencies said at a conference in Amman to ask for more aid.


“We are already falling behind in providing cash assistance, in making sure we are picking up health bills, in supporting governments and municipalities to continue to give services to refugees,” Amin Awad, director of UNHCR’s Middle East and North Africa bureau, said. UNHCR is the UN’s refugee agency.





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U.S.-led protectionism is threat to global economic recovery, Turkish deputy PM says



ISTANBUL – Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Mehmet Simsek said on Thursday that US-led protectionism is the biggest threat to global economic recovery, as Washington decided to move ahead with tariffs on aluminum and steel imports from Canada, Mexico and the European Union.


On Twitter, Simsek said that there are no winners to the protectionism game and chaos is the alternative to the existing rules-based system.


The United States said it was ending a two-month exemption from the tariffs for the two neighboring countries and the EU, potentially setting the stage for a trade war with some of America’s top allies.





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N.Korea's Kim Jong Un says North's will for denuclearization 'unchanged'



SEOUL – North Korea’s will for the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula remains “unchanged, consistent and fixed,” said leader Kim Jong Un, according to the North’s state news agency on Friday.


Making the remarks in a meeting with visiting Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, Kim added he hoped North Korea-US relations and denuclearization of the Korean peninsula would both be solved on a “stage-by-stage” basis, KCNA said.


The report also said Kim and Lavrov agreed to boost exchanges and cooperation between North Korea and Russia, with the two agreeing on a bilateral summit this year.





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Bill letting Israeli towns transfer industrial tax revenue to settlements moves forward


The Interior Committee approved for final votes on Tuesday a bill enabling to local governments in Israel to transfer certain tax revenues to nearby West Bank settlements.


The bill, which passed its first initial Knesset vote, does not enable the passage of funds from West Bank settlements to local authorities within Israel.


The bill is based on an existing law that enables the movement of funds from wealthy communities to poorer ones nearby to balance their budgets. However, it was made clear in the committee discussion, that money from wealthy West Bank settlements will not be given to poor communities located within the Green Line.


The bill, sponsored by Shas MK Michael Malkieli, refers to taxes from industrial, not residential areas. Likud MK Yoav Kish, chairman of the committee, said he may delay the bill’s legislative process if the Justice Ministry doesn’t set an expedited time frame for issuing a military commander’s order to transfer money from settlements to poor communities in Israel.


Joint List MK Yousef Jabareen criticized the bill, saying “its goal is to legitimize funneling municipal taxes and other taxes collected in Israel to settlements in the occupied territories.”



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“In practice this is another in a series of annexation bills the rightist government is advancing to apply Israeli law beyond the Green Line,” he said.


MK Akram Hasoon (Kulanu) commended the bill and said that in 2004, when he was head of Daliyat al-Karmel’s council, he received financial assistance from the wealthy Jewish local councils around him.



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Netanyahu should thank Amir Peretz, Barack Obama and God for enabling his Gaza restraint



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'Netanyahu asked head of Shin Bet to listen to phones of then-IDF chief of staff, Mossad chief'



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Gaza flare-up: How one Israeli tank shell almost started an all-out war



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Israeli minister slams EU funding of 'BDS groups,' ignoring that the U.S. funds the same groups



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MKs outraged at planned Knesset panel meeting on Gazan women



The Knesset Committee for the Advancement of the Status of Women is ignoring Israeli women in favor of Palestinians, MKs from the coalition and the opposition lamented on Thursday, accusing chairwoman Aida Touma-Sliman (Joint List) of abusing her position.


A meeting on the blockade on Gaza’s impact on women, which Touma-Sliman scheduled for Monday, sparked outrage.



“The chairwoman of the committee always promotes the rights of Arab women, but she’s a little confused,” Kulanu MK Merav Ben-Ari said told Reshet Bet radio. “These aren’t women in Israel. They’re in Gaza. Next she’ll want to talk about women in Ramallah and Nablus. I think we need to stop this, immediately.”


Ben-Ari planned to ask Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein to intervene.


“The decision to hold a discussion that is only about Gazan women is a problematic, one-sided decision. We can’t talk about Gazan women without mentioning the situation of women in the ‘Gaza envelope’ and Sderot,” she added.


Similarly, Zionist Union MK Nachman Shai asked: “Why not discuss the distress of the women in the ‘Gaza envelope,’ who showed resilience and great courage? They were the ones under attack, they were the ones who ran to safe rooms and sent their children to school in fear.”


Shai accused Touma-Sliman of seeking to create a provocation.


Many of the Committee for the Advancement of the Status of Women’s members have long resented Touma-Sliman for ignoring issues important to Israeli women. She refuses to hold meetings pertaining to female soldiers or members of other security forces and agencies. Touma-Sliman often skips meetings relating to women’s rights and Jewish religious matters, allowing a different MK to preside over them.


Touma-Sliman responded to the criticism, saying that recent events showed that there is a connection between the situation of women in Israel and in the Gaza Strip.


“My political views are known, but I believe that there is broad agreement about the importance of involving women in the conversation and in politics,” she said. “Therefore, I find it especially unfortunate that members of the committee oppose an important and necessary political discussion in our committee. The discussion will, as usual, be professional and allow all opinions to be heard.”


According to Touma-Sliman, “the struggle for peace is a feminist struggle that will ensure the security of the residents of Israel and the rights of the Palestinian people. The Committee for the Advancement of Women under my leadership will continue to deal with all issues related to women, especially weak women.”


Touma-Sliman, the first Arab chairperson of a permanent Knesset committee, is an adherent of the concept of intersectionality, which means that the different elements of a woman’s identity – female and black, underprivileged, lesbian, etc. – cannot be separated.


The Joint List told The Jerusalem Post in 2015 that Palestinian women suffer doubly: “In situations of armed conflict, the status of women is low on the list of priorities of the society, and that is additional harm. [Conflict] could even cause increased tension within the nation, making women even more oppressed. And there’s a gender element in national harm, such as women giving birth at checkpoints, [and] women who can’t be in touch with their children after divorce because one side lives under the occupation.”


When asked about the relatively advanced status of women and gender equality in Israel, Touma-Sliman said she did not understand the relevance.


“Supporting women’s rights is not always feminist,” she said.




Article source: https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Senior-officer-IDF-was-prepared-for-latest-attack-by-Islamic-Jihad-558845


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Senior IDF official: Israel at closest point to war since 2014



Despite relative calm returning to southern Israel after over 100 mortars and rockets were fired towards Israeli communities from the Gaza Strip, Israel is at its closest point to war since Operation Protective Edge four years ago, a senior IDF officer in the Southern Command said Thursday.


According to the senior officer, the Iranian-funded Islamic Jihad did not show all of its strength and, under the guidance of Tehran, might still be able to act against Israel from the Hamas-run Gaza Strip.



“This week, Islamic Jihad operated with Iranian consent and Iran has an interest in escalating the situation in Gaza in light of what is happening in Syria and other areas,” he told reporters.


The Southern Command, he said, operated with a “very clear” directive on Tuesday to make sure the latest round of violence didn’t escalate into a full-blown war so that Israel “could focus” on confronting larger threats like Iran and Syria.


The senior officer said that the Israeli army had anticipated an attack by Islamic Jihad and while the military was not certain when the attack by the Gaza terror group would happen, the IDF spoke to regional council heads and deployed Iron Dome batteries. The warning system was also improved for residents within seven kilometers of the Gaza Strip, giving them 23 seconds to run for shelter up from 15, he said.


According to the senior officer, Israel struck dozens of high-value Hamas and Islamic Jihad targets in the Hamas-run coastal enclave but admitted that the IDF did not succeed in targeting the cells who had fired the projectiles.


“We were instructed to locate and attack the cells who carried out the launches, but the enemy has improved and learnt lessons since the last round of fighting, and much of the shooting was carried out with timers and from underground,” he said.


The officer nevertheless stressed that “the terrorist organizations limited themselves in the range of rocket fire this week,” but “if it continued, we were ready for something a lot broader and meaningful and Hamas knew it. It could have ended very differently.”


The senior officer stated that the 65 targets struck by the IDF “were targets that have been on our ‘waiting list,’” adding that Hamas planned to use the sites in the next war with Israel.


Among the high value targets was a offensive tunnel built in the last year that infiltrated both into Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula as well as into Israeli territory. The officer stated that the intelligence on the tunnel was shared with Egypt, who neutralized it in their territory as well.


While rocket fire towards communities remains a major concern for Israel, the threat posed by offensive tunnels infiltrating into Israeli territory is one which the IDF has invested millions of shekels into thwarting, building an underground barrier with the Strip that acts as a “guillotine.”


According to the senior officer, 12 Hamas tunnels have been destroyed in the past two years, including six which infiltrated into Israeli territory.


While the underground barrier, which also stretches into the Mediterranean Sea in the form of a breakwater, is set to be completed by the end of 2019, “whoever gives the number of tunnels which remain is irresponsible,” the officer said.


“We don’t know everything yet and the threat [posed by the tunnels] remains until the barrier is completed.”


On Wednesday, UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process Nickolay Mladenov told the UN Security Council that the escalation was a “warning to all of us of how close we are to the brink of war every day.”


According to the senior officer, Israel should allow for additional measures in order to stabilize the humanitarian situation, “otherwise, we will be in a slippery slope,” pointing out that even the Palestinian Authority has disengaged itself from the Strip.


Hamas, the senior officer said, is trying to save itself from collapse and has no solution.


“No one wants the problem of Gaza, not even us,” he said. “Small steps can be taken that will give a year and a half of quiet, and allow for a long arrangement to be reached. We do not need to help Hamas, nor lift it up, but as large as Hamas’ concessions will be, so will be the size of the arrangement,” he said.


Beyond the ongoing operations of the Erez and Kerem Shalom Crossings, as well as the limited opening of the Rafiah Crossing with Egypt, additional “arrangements” are being examined the senior officer said.




Article source: https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Senior-officer-IDF-was-prepared-for-latest-attack-by-Islamic-Jihad-558845


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Trump puts the Korean horse ahead of the Iranian cart


The pundits don’t stop yammering and carping on every step President Trump takes to solve the greatest threats the world has ever seen: The joint North Korean/Iranian development of nuclear weapons and long-range missiles systems to deliver them. 


But, despite 24 years of what any objective observer would see as the abject systemic failure of 3 different US administrations to solve the Korean/Iranian nuclear file, the media does nothing but act like 24 years of failures have been successful. Their experts appear to fatuously opine Trump should continue with the same appeasement idiocy three different US administrations have applied to the Iran/North Nuclear nuclear problem.



Instead, Trump has hewed to a 2-step common sense approach. First, divide and conquer. Second, isolate the real nuclear emergency priority: North Korea. In effect, Trump is ingeniously putting the North Korean nuclear “horse” in front of the Iranian nuclear “cart,” and thus Trump stands to use common sense to successfully solve both the North Korea and Iranian nuclear problems.




North Korea is the “horse” or the first to be focused on because North Korea actually already has the nuclear bomb, and Iran relies on North Korea’s technical nuclear expertise to develop its own. 
Why is the North Korean nuclear file the “horse,” and not the “cart”?  North Korea is the “horse” or the first to be focused on because North Korea actually already has the nuclear bomb, and Iran relies on North Korea’s technical nuclear expertise to develop its own.  So, if President Trump can turn North Korea, he has at best, paralyzed, and at worst, dramatically slowed Iran’s progress and pathway to an actual functional nuclear weapon.



Obama did the exact opposite and put the Iranian nuclear “cart” before the North Korean nuclear “horse.”  So, instead of stopping the nuclear technology at its source, Obama infused Iran with hundreds of billions of dollars for Iran to actually pay North Korea for a nuclear bomb. Instead of stopping both Iran and North Korea from attaining Nuclear weapons, Obama appears to have done everything to enable both rogue terrorist nations to attain nuclear weapons.  What’s worse, Obama set the catastrophically bad example of bombing Mummar Qaddafi out of power where even though the Libyan dictator had volunteered to give up his nuclear weapons.



Not only did Obama set a horrible example in Libya,  he also inflated North Korea’s conventional expectations of a nuclear windfall by appeasing Iran with complete conventional hegemony over Syria and the entire Arab world as a “carrot” for agreeing to Obama nuclear “deal” (never signed by Iran to begin with.)



Trump, in contrast, applied the “stick” to North Korea’s greatest weakness –  its economy – with incredibly effective sanctions. And, at the same time, he offered a “carrot” to North Korea’s leader with an economic deal he couldn’t refuse that vastly outstripped Iran’s ability to pay North Korea for its nuclear bomb.



In short, Trump has dramatically outbid Iran for North Korea’s nuclear tech by many, many billions of dollars. How?  Well, you have to look at the real organic numbers. North Korea has 25 million people who are starving.  South Korea has 50 million people who are the Asian success story. But the real numbers are that North Korea has a 2016 Gross Domestic Product of about 14 Billion dollars, and South Korea has a 2016 GDP of about 1.4 Trillion dollars..



Even adjusting for the size population, South Korea’s GDP is 50 times the size of North Korea. These are two places where the people are the same and the resources are roughly the same. In fact, North Korea might even have better natural resources and water resources.



Trump’s offering North Korea economic integration with the free world, means that Kim Jun-Un stands to become one of the world’s richest man who can actually spend his money and go to a LA Laker basketball game with Dennis Rodman in Los Angeles in a chauffeured Rolls. The keys will be guaranteeing Kim and his family rights to land and resources in North Korea that can’t be taken away, and amnesty for Kim past crimes.  Given he was the North’s leader for a relatively short time, the amnesty will likely not be a real barrier.  And, given the immense wealth Kim would possess and possible sovereign immunity, any lawsuits against will likely be few in number, and settled rather quickly.



Therefore, in effect, when Trump decides on solving the North Korean nuclear file first, he kills two nuclear problems with one deal.  Without North Korea, Iran will face impossible hurdles to build a safe nuclear bomb.  And, Trump will have likely “flipped” North Korea against Iran, and will likely reap a huge intelligence windfall from North Korean Intelligence detailing all of Iran’s nuclear skeletons and JCPOA violations.



President Trump is possibly on his way to solving the world’s greatest nuclear threat – the very same one that bevies of Washington “experts”  appeased into a terrible nuclear crisis.


Article source: https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Senior-officer-IDF-was-prepared-for-latest-attack-by-Islamic-Jihad-558845


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What drove a record number of Israelis to suicide in the '60s?


Toward the end of the 1950s, quiet descended on Israel. As the state entered its second decade of existence, the economic and social situation stabilized, and for a time, the security threats seemed to vanish….


Article source: https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Senior-officer-IDF-was-prepared-for-latest-attack-by-Islamic-Jihad-558845


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The mango sauce connecting Indians, Israelis and Palestinians - and taking high


A seemingly innocent, tangy condiment – one popular in Israeli, Indian and Iraqi cuisines, among others – encapsulates the story of how ethnic, class, cultural and physical boundaries are crossed in the Middle…


Article source: https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Senior-officer-IDF-was-prepared-for-latest-attack-by-Islamic-Jihad-558845


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Why Israel isn't a preferred destination for millennials


Winning the 2018 Eurovision was a heady moment for Israelis. They know perfectly well that Israel’s image in the world is a problem, but on the other hand, Israel also hosted the three-day 2018 European judo championship in April, and the Giro d’Italia international cycling race in May. In June, Argentina’s soccer team – shortlisted for World Cup champion – will be visiting for a friendly match, and next year Eurovision will be held right here in Jerusalem.


Israelis may fondly think that the world is looking at Israel in a more positive way, but a vast study indicates that at least among millennials, that isn’t so.


The Best Countries index ranks Israel 30th out of 80 countries, unchanged from 2017. The index is a ranking and analysis project by U.S. News World Report, BAV – a division of YR (formerly known as Young Rubicam), and the Wharton School of business. It is based on polling of 21,000 people in four regions: the Americas, Asia, Europe, the Middle East and Africa.


The problem is when the opinion of millennials is measured separately, Israel’s ranking falls, a lot.


The Israeli nonprofit association Vibe Israel (which seeks to improve Israel’s image in the world) commissioned BAV and Prof. David Reibstein of Wharton to isolate the millennial’s outlook from that massive study. Among millennials in 2018, Israel ranked 49th out of 80 countries. (In 2017, millennials ranked Israel in 50th place.)



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Rank in the Best Countries index is based on 65 characteristics divided into nine categories, one being adventure – which U.S. News defines as meaning to what degree the respondent finds a given country “friendly, fun, pleasant climate, scenic, sexy.” Cultural influence, another criterion, means “culturally significant in terms of entertainment, fashionable, happy, has an influential culture, modern, prestigious, trendy”; and there’s “Movers” – “different, distinctive, dynamic, unique.”


In the criterion of “entrepreneurship,” Israel ranked 25th among the general public and 31st among the millennials.


When it comes to “open for business” (“bureaucratic, cheap manufacturing costs, [not] corrupt, favorable tax environment, transparent government practices”), Israel ranked 64th among the general public and last among the millennials.


In the heritage category, (culturally accessible, rich history, great food, many cultural attractions), Israel ranked 29th among the general public and 43rd among millennials. One might think that given Israel’s cultural, religious and historical assets, it would rank higher. Joanna Landau, founder of Vibe Israel, thinks the low figures stem from utter ignorance of Israel, which in turn is the fault of the Israeli government and the Jewish community for focusing too much on the Palestinian issue and not focusing enough on promoting business, culture and Israel’s strong points as an attractive, relevant destination.


Militancy is not an attraction


What are Israel’s strong points and weak points in millennial eyes? Strong points include militancy (it ranked 3rd of the 80 countries), having religious influence (5), unique (9) and having economic influence (15). But Israel scored very poorly in the very characteristics that might attract people: friendliness (80), cultural accessibility (79), economic convenience (78) and easy mobility (78).


In the “power” category (leader, economically influential, politically influential, strong international alliances, strong military), Israel ranked 8th of the 80 countries among the general public and 9th among millennials, unchanged from last year.


Landau points out that the characteristics attributed to a powerful country aren’t necessarily things millennials appreciate: A strong army, a strong economy and a strong government are not their favorite qualities. In the wake of the global economic crisis of 2008, global warming, international terrorism and the disintegration of entire states in the Middle East, along with the power of the banks vis-à-vis the small citizen in many countries around the world, are among the factors that have become a feature of military and economic power.


Article source: https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Senior-officer-IDF-was-prepared-for-latest-attack-by-Islamic-Jihad-558845


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Israel rules not to recognize Ugandan Jewish community


Article source: https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Senior-officer-IDF-was-prepared-for-latest-attack-by-Islamic-Jihad-558845


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Israel lacrosse: In Rhode Island, Israel makes perfect run at Heritage Cup


As the days count down to the 2018 World Lacrosse Championships on home soil, Team Israel continued to build momentum toward its July 12 opener at Netanya Stadium by winning back-to-back Heritage Cups, notching a perfect 6-0 record at the third-annual Heritage Cup at Johnson Wales University in Providence, Rhode Island last weekend.


The blue-and-white clinched the Cup win with a 6-2 win over a shorthanded Puerto Rican squad Monday morning. The newcomers to the international lacrosse federation were strong on the weekend despite short numbers, competing with only a handful of substitutes due to NCAA conflicts and injuries. Israel jumped out to a 3-0 first-half lead before slowing down the game against tired Puerto Rico (5-1) side, cruising to victory.


Jean-Luc Chetner led Israel with two goals, while Bryan Rotatori (one goal, one assist), Nick Lipsher (one goal), Isaac Paparo and Ethan Shacket added singles. Kyle Bergman and Ian Kadish chipped in one assist each. David Metzger had two saves and Max Silberlicht had one as they split time in goal, with Metzger earning the win.


Israel qualified for the final by topping the Ireland, 7-4, in the semifinals Sunday afternoon. Team Eire, the Irish development squad which represented the country in the Cup, had a strong showing, owning 2-0 and 3-2 leads over the Israelis in the first half. The blue-and-white owned the game from there, scoring four straight goals to take a 6-3 advantage. Rotatori (three goals, two assists), Bergman (one goal, one assist), Lipsher (one goal), Chetner (one goal) and Matthew Cherry (one assist) contributed on offense for Israel. Metzger yielded three goals but also recorded three saves. Silberlicht gave up one goal and was credited the win.


The Israelis blanked federation newcomer Peru in the quarterfinals, 8-0 on Sunday morning. The blue-and-white won both the first and second halves by 4-0 scores over Peru (0-6). Rotatori (two goals and Cherry (one goal, one assist) led Israel, while Tyler Brown-Ortiz, Chetner, Kadish, Lipsher and Shacket added singles. Bergman, Harrison Freid, Paparo and Jacob Silberlicht each chipped in an assist. Metzger, who had one save, earned the win in the shutout, splitting goal time with Silberlicht.



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Earlier Sunday morning, Israel defeated Jamaica, another new addition to the federation, in a highly-anticipated partial preview of the July 12 opening match at Netanya Stadium. While both teams are in preparation mode, training and making final roster evaluations, the blue-and-white has to be happy with the 7-2 win to wrap up pool play over its speedy rival. Israel led 2-0 early and 5-1 at halftime, commanding most of the game over Jamaica (3-3). Rotatori and Chetner each scored two goals and one assist for Israel, while Cherry added one goal and one assist. Bergman (one goal), Jonah Biblowitz (one goal) and Jacob Silberlicht (one assist) also contributed on offense. Metzger (one save, one GA) earned the win this time, with Silberlicht (four saves, one GA) also taking goalie time.


Israel rolled past Lithuania (2-4) and Hungary (1-5) to open the Cup Friday. Against Hungary, Israel cruised to a 5-1 win as Rotatori led the Israelis with one goal and one assist, while Chetner, Cherry, Joey Kraft, Lipsher and Jacob Silberlicht added one goal apiece. Metzger (two saves, no GA) and Silberlicht (three saves, one GA) split time in goal, with Metzger earning the win.


The blue-and-white shook off a slow start against the upstart Lithuanian squad, scoring eight straight goals to cruise to an opening game win, 10-3. Bergman, Kraft and Jack Tucker each scored two goals, while Jacob Silberlicht (one goal, one assist) and Cherry (two assists) also had big openers. Chetner, Rotatori and Jake Suesserman added singles. Metzger (two saves, two GA), who earned the win, split time in goal with Silberlicht (two saves, one GA).


Article source: https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Senior-officer-IDF-was-prepared-for-latest-attack-by-Islamic-Jihad-558845


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U.S.-backed SDF says military solution will not work in Syria



BEIRUT – A spokesman for the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), responding to earlier comments by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, said on Thursday that a military solution “is not a solution that can lead to any result.”


“Any military solution, as far as the SDF is concerned, will lead to more losses and destruction and difficulties for the Syrian people,” spokesman Kino Gabriel added in a voice message to Reuters.


Assad said in an interview broadcast on Thursday that the state would recover the swathe of northern and eastern Syria controlled by the SDF, either through negotiations or force.




Article source: https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Senior-officer-IDF-was-prepared-for-latest-attack-by-Islamic-Jihad-558845


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Report: Iranian forces, Hezbollah prepare to leave southern Syria



Iran-backed forces, including Hezbollah, are preparing to withdraw from southern Syria against the backdrop of regional and international negotiations currently underway between the United States, Russia and Jordan over the war-torn country’s future, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported Thursday.


Specifically, the London-based organization reported, Iran and Hezbollah are planning to withdraw forces from the Dara and Kuneitra areas near Israel’s northern border.



The report comes after Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov announced Monday that the Syrian army should be the only force on the southern border of the country.


“All the forces that are not Syrian should withdraw, and there must be a situation in which only the forces of the Syrian army will be stationed on the Syrian side of the border with Israel,” Lavrov said.


Earlier Thursday, the Syrian opposition newspaper Zaman al-Wassul reported that a Syrian army commander had decided in recent days to prevent the use of aircraft hangars, which until now had been used to store ammunition by Iranian militias. According to the report, “the decision followed the recent Israeli attacks.”


The Syrian commander’s decision indicates the regime’s decision to demand that Iran close shop on the southern border is a first step in a broader policy of booting Iranian forces completely from Syria, according to the source in the Syrian army.


Translated by Eric Sumner.





Article source: https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Senior-officer-IDF-was-prepared-for-latest-attack-by-Islamic-Jihad-558845


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U.S., N.Korea officials concluded New York meetings -U.S. State Dept



NEW YORK – US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and high-ranking North Korean official Kim Yong Chol have concluded their meetings in New York aimed at clearing the way for a historic summit between US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, US State Department said on Thursday.




Article source: https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Senior-officer-IDF-was-prepared-for-latest-attack-by-Islamic-Jihad-558845


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Netanyahu speaks with Russia's Putin by phone



Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu discussed the Iranian presence in Syria Thursday with Russian President Vladimir Putin by phone, according to a statement from the Prime Minister’s Office.





Article source: https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Senior-officer-IDF-was-prepared-for-latest-attack-by-Islamic-Jihad-558845


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France's Macron says U.S. tariffs are illegal and a mistake



PARIS – French President Emmanuel Macron said the United States’ decision to impose tariffs on European metals exports is illegal and a mistake.


The French leader said he would talk to President Donald Trump on the subject later on Thursday.




Article source: https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Senior-officer-IDF-was-prepared-for-latest-attack-by-Islamic-Jihad-558845


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Detained Arab rights activist was cuffed to hospital bed, despite over-the-knee cast


Article source: https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Senior-officer-IDF-was-prepared-for-latest-attack-by-Islamic-Jihad-558845


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Some 8,000 Israelis die every year from smoking-related illnesses, report says


Article source: https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Senior-officer-IDF-was-prepared-for-latest-attack-by-Islamic-Jihad-558845


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Sara Netanyahu tried to physically attack Prime Minister’s Office director general, sources say


Article source: https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Senior-officer-IDF-was-prepared-for-latest-attack-by-Islamic-Jihad-558845


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Israel declared the 51st State of the United States


Blog editor: Daniel Tchetchik. From Exposure: Haaretz Photo Blog. Follow on Facebook


Israel at 51


On the face of it, Israel is an independent state, but in practice, there is no decision that does not pass through the U.S. The economic/cultural/military dependence that Israel has developed in the United States in the last four decades, together with the flourishing of globalization and the free market in Israel in the 1980s made us a kind of US beneficiary.



With the election of the sympathetic Donald Trump, we returned to the glory days of the “Uncle Sam” Israel celebrated in its early decades. She was careful to cultivate a unique cultural character of her own with kibbutzim, Hora dances and the revival of the Hebrew language. The fine European delicacies were swallowed up by McDonald’s. It seems like today, Israel is another one of the states of the U.S., with billboards advertising with slang–all in English. Add to that a decade with a prime minister who is more American than anything else, and you have basically become the 51st star on the U.S. flag.



Tel Aviv’s burgeoning baseball league practicing at the Sportek, a sports and recreation area in Park Hayarkon

A clothing store in Jerusalem

The Harley Davidson motorcycle club in Holon

The ‘Mordei Yehuda’ Israeli American football team in Ma’ale Adumim

American tourists learn at an Israeli shooting range

The Midburn festival in the Negev, the Israeli answer to the ‘Burning Man’ festival

The Dead Sea

The Elvis Cafe, Neve Illan

Article source: https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Senior-officer-IDF-was-prepared-for-latest-attack-by-Islamic-Jihad-558845


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Contractor, site manager arrested after worker falls to his death in Israel


Article source: https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Senior-officer-IDF-was-prepared-for-latest-attack-by-Islamic-Jihad-558845


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Senior officer: IDF was prepared for latest attack by Islamic Jihad



The Israeli army had prepared itself for an attack by Islamic Jihad earlier this week after three of their operatives were killed by IDF fire, a senior IDF officer in the Southern Command said Thursday.


On Sunday, three of the terror group’s members were killed when IDF tanks struck an observation post in the southern Gaza Strip in response to an explosive device hidden in bolt cutters that was placed on Israel’s security fence.



While the military was not certain when the attack by the Iranian-funded Gaza terror group would take place, the IDF spoke to regional council heads and deployed Iron Dome batteries in anticipation of an attack, according to the senior officer.


On Tuesday, over 100 mortars and rockets were fired towards communities and military posts along the Gaza Strip, injuring 3 soldiers and several civilians. The attacks began with three rounds of 28 mortar shells fired towards southern Israeli communities at 7 in the morning, with at least several exploding inside communities in the Eshkol Regional Council.


According to the senior officer, Israel struck dozens of high-value Hamas and Islamic Jihad targets in the Hamas-run coastal enclave in response to a mortar which fell in the yard of a kindergarten shortly before students were set to arrive for the school day.


The senior officer stated that the 65 targets struck by the IDF included a drone facility, rocket manufacturing plant, advanced naval weaponry, military compounds, training camps and weapons factories.


“These were targets that have been on our ‘waiting list,’” he said, adding that Hamas invested a significant amount in these sites in the anticipation of using them in the next war with Israel.


Among the high value targets was an offensive tunnel built in the last year that infiltrated both Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula as well as Israeli territory one kilometer away from an Israeli community.


According to the officer, bags of UNRWA cement were found inside the tunnel. The cement was intended for civilian infrastructure projects in the Strip.



The officer stated that the intelligence on the tunnel has been shared with Egypt who have neutralized it on their territory as well.


While rocket fire towards communities remains a major concern for Israel, the threat posed by offensive tunnels infiltrating Israeli territory is one which the IDF has invested millions of shekels into thwarting, building an underground barrier with the Strip which acts as a “guillotine.”


According to the senior officer, 12 Hamas tunnels have been destroyed in the past two years, including six that infiltrated into Israeli territory.


While the underground barrier, which also stretches into the Mediterranean Sea in the form of a breakwater, is set to be completed by the end of 2019, “whoever gives the number of tunnels which remain is irresponsible,” the officer said.


“We don’t know everything yet and the threat [posed by the tunnels] remains until the barrier is completed.”


The Southern Command, he said, was operating with a “very clear” directive and acted in a “very responsible manner” to make sure the latest round of violence didn’t escalate into a full-blown war.


“If it continued, we were ready for something a lot bigger and Hamas knew it,” he said, stressing that “it could have ended very differently.”




Article source: https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Palestinians-say-500-prisoners-in-Israeli-jails-to-start-hunger-strike-558836


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