Israel Seen: This Week’s Daily Reports
Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs Israeli Security, Regional Diplomacy, and International Law
- Secretary of State Blinken: Anti-Semitism Is on the Rise and We’re Determined to Deal with It
Secretary of State Antony Blinken told Israel’s Channel 12 on Tuesday: “Anti-Semitism’s been on the rise in the United States and around the world for the last several years. And we know this from history. It’s the canary in the coal mine because it’s almost inevitable that when you see anti-Semitism erupt and emerge, hatred directed at other groups almost is sure to follow. And we’re seeing that in the United States now with hatred directed, for example, at Asian Americans.”
“Things are happening that we have to address. Because if it’s allowed to fester, if it’s allowed to grow, if it’s allowed to go even further with impunity, you wind up having a conflagration that affects a lot of people. So we’re taking this very, very seriously….We’re determined to deal with that and put it to an end.” (U.S. State Department)
- Gaza Reconstruction Plan Faces Major Roadblocks – Barak Ravid
The Biden administration wants to push ahead with humanitarian aid and rebuilding in Gaza. President Biden says he wants to coordinate those efforts with the Palestinian Authority, which has no influence in Gaza, and exclude Hamas, which controls the territory. Moreover, the international community may be reluctant to invest in an area that has been repeatedly bombed.
Israeli officials told Secretary of State Blinken that while they are ready to help in getting immediate humanitarian assistance into Gaza including water, food, and medical supplies, a monitoring system is needed that’s much stronger than previous ones that allowed Hamas to repurpose building materials for its own purposes. Moreover, Israeli officials are conditioning any meaningful reconstruction of Gaza on progress toward the recovery of the bodies of two Israeli soldiers and the release of Israeli citizens held by Hamas in Gaza. (Axios)
- World Health Organization Takes Time Out from Covid Pandemic to Condemn Israel
The UN’s World Health Organization held a session Wednesday to condemn Israel for allegedly violating the health rights of Palestinians. The session concluded with a vote of 82 to 14, with 40 abstentions, to adopt a Palestinian resolution to prepare another report on health conditions in the Palestinian territories, including eastern Jerusalem, and in the Golan Heights. Hillel Neuer, executive director of UN Watch, condemned the “cynical politicization of the world’s top health agency at the expense of focusing on the Covid-19 pandemic.”
“Out of 34 items on the current world health assembly’s agenda, only one, Item 25 targeting Israel, focused on a specific country. There was no agenda item or resolution on…Syria, where hospitals and other medical infrastructure are repeatedly and deliberately bombed by Syrian and Russian forces; not on war-torn Yemen, where 18 million are in dire need of health assistance; and not on Venezuela, where the health system is in a state of collapse and 7 million people are in need of humanitarian assistance.”
“Despite the fact that the Palestinians have their own health system, and under the Oslo II Peace Accord it is the Palestinian Authority which is responsible for vaccinating their population, Israel has vaccinated over 100,000 Palestinian workers since March as well as donating thousands of vaccine doses for Palestinian medical workers.”
“Anyone who has ever walked into an Israeli hospital or clinic knows that they provide world-class health care to thousands of Palestinian Arabs as well as to Syrians fleeing Assad.” (UN Watch)
- IAEA Chief Sounds Alarm over Iran’s Nuclear Program – Andrew England,
Rafael Grossi, director-general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, has warned that Iran is enriching uranium at purity levels that “only countries making bombs are reaching.” He told the Financial Times, “A country enriching at 60% is a very serious thing – only countries making bombs are reaching this level. 60% is almost weapons grade.” A purity level of 60%, announced last month by Tehran, far exceeds the 3.67% purity agreed in the 2015 nuclear agreement.
Iran told the IAEA that its increased enrichment of uranium was for medical purposes and research. But Grossi said, “We don’t seem to find much need for that at the current level of industrial, medical activity in Iran.” Iran’s stockpile of enriched uranium was now more than 10 times the 300-kg. limit agreed in the accord, he said.
“You cannot put the genie back into the bottle – once you know how to do stuff, you know, and the only way to check this is through verification. The Iranian program has grown, become more sophisticated, so the linear return to 2015 is no longer possible. What you can do is keep their activities below the parameters of 2015….It’s obvious that with a program with the degree of ambition, sophistication that Iran has, you need a very robust, very strong verification system.” (Financial Times-UK)
- U.S. Secretary of State Blinken Meets Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu in Jerusalem
Secretary of State Antony Blinken told Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday: “President Biden asked me to come here today, really, for four reasons: First, to demonstrate the commitment of the United States to Israel’s security, to start to work toward greater stability and reduce tensions in the West Bank and Jerusalem, to support urgent humanitarian and reconstruction assistance for Gaza, to benefit the Palestinian people, and to continue to rebuild our relationship with the Palestinian people and the Palestinian Authority.”
“We’ll continue to strengthen all aspects of our longstanding partnership. And that includes consulting closely with Israel, as we did today, on the ongoing negotiations in Vienna around a potential return to the Iran nuclear agreement, at the same time as we continue to work together to counter Iran’s destabilizing actions in the region.” (U.S. State Department)
- U.S. to Reopen Jerusalem Consulate, Upgrading Palestinian Ties – Joseph Krauss
Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced Tuesday that the U.S. would reopen its consulate in Jerusalem – a move that restores ties with Palestinians that had been downgraded by the Trump administration. The consulate long served as an autonomous office in charge of diplomatic relations with the Palestinians.
He later announced $40 million in aid to the Palestinians, including $5.5 million in emergency assistance for Gaza. That brings total U.S. assistance to the Palestinians under the Biden administration to over $360 million. (AP)
- See also Israel Opposed to Reopening Palestinian Consulate within Israel
Israel’s Ambassador to the U.S. Gilad Erdan said Wednesday that Israel is opposed to reopening a Palestinian Consulate within sovereign Israel. (Jerusalem Post)
- See also Palestinians Protest Against Blinken’s Visit to Ramallah – Khaled Abu Toameh
Scores of Palestinians demonstrated in Ramallah on Tuesday in protest at U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s visit, in a demonstration organized by the National and Islamic Forces, an alliance of Palestinian factions. The protesters chanted, “America is the head of the snake,” “Our people want the RPG (rocket-propelled grenade),” and “The Olso Accords are gone.” Some carried placards reading: “Blinken, you are not welcome!” (Jerusalem Post)
- President Biden Condemns “Despicable” Rise in Anti-Semitic Attacks in U.S.
President Joe Biden on Monday called for an end to anti-Semitic attacks in the U.S. that have been on the rise in the wake of the recent conflict between Israel and Hamas in Gaza. He tweeted: “The recent attacks on the Jewish community are despicable, and they must stop. I condemn this hateful behavior at home and abroad – it’s up to all of us to give hate no safe harbor.” (Twitter)
- Blinken Dispatched to Middle East amid Israel-Gaza Truce – Lara Jakes
Secretary of State Antony Blinken will travel to the Middle East this week to try to bolster the cease-fire between Israel and Hamas, but he intends to steer clear of longer-term peace talks that currently have almost zero chance of success. Landing in Israel on Tuesday, Blinken will also visit Ramallah, Cairo and Amman.
The U.S. considers Hamas a terrorist organization and does not deal directly with the group. In the past few weeks it has relied on Egypt and to a lesser extent Jordan, Qatar and Turkey to act as intermediaries. (New York Times)
- Federal Judge Says Georgia’s Anti-BDS Law Violates First Amendment – Harper Neidig
Federal District Court Judge Mark Cohen ruled Friday that a Georgia law banning the state from doing business with anyone promoting a boycott of Israel violates the First Amendment. (The Hill)
- Biden: Until the Region Acknowledges the Right of Israel to Exist as an Independent Jewish State, There Will Be No Peace
President Joe Biden told a press conference on Friday: “There is no shift in my commitment…to the security of Israel, period. No shift. Not at all….I’m going to attempt to put together a major package, with other nations who share our view, to rebuild [in Gaza]…without providing Hamas the opportunity to rebuild their weapon systems.”
“My party still supports Israel. Let’s get something straight here: Until the region says, unequivocally, they acknowledge the right of Israel to exist as an independent Jewish state, there will be no peace.” (White House)
- In Latest Israel-Hamas Conflict, White House Avoided Publicly Clashing with Israel – Vivian Salama
The Biden administration made “a very conscious decision not to cross the Israelis in public” during the latest fighting, a U.S. official said, in part because it was believed that an antagonistic U.S. approach aggravated tensions during the last conflict in 2014. Instead, the administration tried to keep the U.S. out of public international and domestic debates and to give Israel the space to carry out its military objectives, while quietly working with Egypt, Qatar and Israel to end the conflict. President Biden, an ally of Israel throughout his career, backed the country’s right to self-defense against Hamas rocket attacks. (Wall Street Journal)
- U.S.: Israeli-Palestinian Peace Process – Not on the Immediate Agenda; Vienna Talks – We Don’t Know If Iran Is Prepared to Return to the Nuclear Deal
Secretary of State Antony Blinken told CNN on Sunday: In Gaza, “We have to find a way to break the cycle, because if we don’t, it will repeat itself at great cost and at great human suffering on all sides…. Palestinians and Israelis alike have to know in their day-in and day-out lives equal measures of opportunity, of security, of dignity….We’ll be re-engaging with the Palestinians, of course, continuing our deep engagement with the Israelis, and trying to put in place conditions that allow us over time hopefully to advance a genuine peace process. But that is not the immediate order of business.”
Regarding Iran, “The outstanding question, the question that we don’t have an answer to yet, is whether Iran, at the end of the day, is willing to do what is necessary to come back into compliance with the [nuclear] agreement. That’s the proposition that we’re testing. But it’s getting, I think, through these rounds of discussions and talks, clearer and clearer what needs to happen. The question is: Is Iran prepared to do it?…We are fully prepared to go back to the original deal as it was….We don’t know if the Iranians are.” (U.S. State Department) - See also U.S. Will Continue to Give Israel “Means to Defend Itself”
Secretary of State Antony Blinken told ABC News on Sunday: “The fact of the matter is Hamas has brought nothing but ruin to the Palestinian people: its gross mismanagement of Gaza while it’s been in charge, and of course, these indiscriminate rocket attacks on Israeli civilians, which have elicited the response that they did because Israel has a right to defend itself.”
“When it comes to arms sales…we are committed to giving Israel the means to defend itself, especially when it comes to these indiscriminate rocket attacks against civilians. Any country would respond to that, and we’re committed to Israel’s defense.” (U.S. State Department)
- Gaza Building Used by Journalists Contained Vital Hamas Electronic Equipment – Ronen Bergman
Israel knew the Al Jala tower in Gaza City housed offices of the Associated Press and Al Jazeera, but the building also contained vital Hamas electronic equipment. The significance of that gear, and the knowledge that no one would be harmed, bolstered the argument in favor of the bombing, according to Israeli officials.
A top military official said that if Israel had not taken action, Hamas would have realized that it could shield its resources from attack by placing them near media facilities. A senior Israeli military official said Hamas maintained a military intelligence facility in the building, and used it as a base for equipment used to try to jam Israeli communications and satellite navigation systems. (New York Times)
- IDF: Iranian Intervention Is Behind Israel-Hamas Conflict – Talia Kaplan
Israel Defense Forces spokesman Lt.-Col. Jonathan Conricus said Sunday, “When the most important countries around the world are thinking about negotiating with Iran, people need to remember [that] the Iranians are the number one exporters of instability and terror and death and destruction in the Middle East and they should be addressed and held accountable as such.”
“Iranian specialists, engineers and people who deal in rocketry and explosives have been educating and telling Hamas engineers how to produce rockets, how to manufacture their own weapons. Had it not been for that very specific and detailed Iranian intervention, we wouldn’t have been in the situation now.”
“Do not reward Hamas with a prize. Do not get confused with what happened on the ground, who started this, and do not forget which country is a democracy, and which country is fighting against an evil jihadi terrorist organization. And don’t forget who is firing deliberately at civilians. All of those bad things are done by Hamas.” (Fox News)
- Spate of Anti-Jewish Attacks in the U.S. Draws Calls for More Forceful Response – Shane Harris
A series of attacks on Jews in the U.S. in recent days, linked to the conflict between Israel and Hamas, has increased pressure on law enforcement officials, lawmakers and the Biden administration to take more steps to quell anti-Semitic violence. Since May 10, at least 26 instances of anti-Semitism have been reported from Los Angeles to New York, according to the Anti-Defamation League. There have been at least four instances of vandalism at synagogues and Jewish community centers. Joseph Borgen, 29, who was on his way to a pro-Israel rally in New York on Thursday, was wearing a yarmulke when he was assaulted by a violent mob.
On Friday, several of the country’s most prominent Jewish organizations sent a letter to the White House urging President Biden “to speak out forcefully against this dangerous trend and stand alongside the Jewish community in the face of this wave of hate before it gets any worse.” (Washington Post)
- Netanyahu to Blinken: We Oppose Consulate for Palestinians in Jerusalem – Lahav Harkov
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu informed U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken that Israel opposes the reopening of a U.S. consulate for Palestinians in Israel, hours before the U.S. went public with its plan to do so in Jerusalem. Netanyahu said Israel would prefer that a consulate to another entity – the Palestinian Authority – not be on Israeli sovereign territory.
The Trump administration merged the U.S. consulate for Palestinians into the U.S. Embassy to Israel in Jerusalem in March 2019. The move was mostly symbolic, as most consulate workers continued doing the work they did before, but under the title of the “Palestinian Affairs Unit.” (Jerusalem Post)
See also U.S. Should Not Reopen the Jerusalem Consulate – Amb. David Friedman (The Hill)
- Lessons from the 2021 Gaza War for Iran and Hizbullah – Brig.-Gen. (ret.) Dr. Shimon Shapira, Lt.-Col. (ret.) Michael Segall, and Jerusalem Center-Iran Desk
It is likely that Iran and Hizbullah will draw a number of lessons from the 2021 Gaza War as they look toward the next confrontation with Israel:
1. In their view, rocket weaponry is a “tiebreaker,” targeting Israel’s home front as a major weak point. Thus, they will seek to strengthen the rocket forces and accelerate the deployment of precision missiles.
2. Explore ways to disrupt Israel’s missile defense systems.
3. Prepare for the occupation of Israeli territory in the Galilee, including the use of offensive invasion tunnels. In this context, it was recently reported that Hizbullah had established a network of hundreds of kilometers of tunnels, including command and control complexes, from Beirut to southern Lebanon, aimed at attacking IDF forces in the event of an IDF ground maneuver on Lebanese territory.
4. Damage strategic Israeli facilities and military infrastructure.
(Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs)
- Prime Minister Netanyahu Thanks U.S. for Supporting Israel’s Right of Self-Defense
Prime Minister Netanyahu told Secretary of State Blinken on Tuesday: “First, a vote of thanks to President Biden and to you for firmly supporting Israel’s right of self-defense….With replenishments of Iron Dome interceptors that save civilian lives on both sides, we’re grateful for that too.”
“We discussed many regional issues, but none is greater than Iran and I can tell you that I hope that the United States will not go back to the old JCPOA, because we believe that deal paves the way for Iran to have an arsenal of nuclear weapons with international legitimacy. Whatever happens, Israel will always reserve the right to defend itself against a regime committed to our destruction.”
“As for peace itself with the Palestinians, a formal peace, I think President Biden was absolutely correct when he said you’re not going to get peace until Israel is recognized as an independent Jewish state, and that is the key.” (Prime Minister’s Office)
- Israeli President Rivlin to U.S.: “The Real War Criminals Are Hiding in Gaza behind Civilian Populations” – Greer Fay Cashman
Israeli President Reuven Rivlin told U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Wednesday that he found it inconceivable that Hamas is not designated as a war criminal worldwide. It is vitally important to apply this designation, he insisted, when IDF soldiers are facing charges in the International Criminal Court. “The world should understand that the real war criminals are hiding in Gaza behind civilian populations,” Rivlin said. (Jerusalem Post)
- Israel Seizes Chemicals, Communications Equipment Headed to Gaza, and Gold for the West Bank
Shortly before the fighting in Gaza, the IDF seized shipments of chemicals and communications equipment likely to be used by Hamas. The IDF also blocked a clandestine shipment of gold worth $300,000 from Gaza to the West Bank, melted into the shape of nails, and hidden in wooden pallets. (i24News)
- Israel Seeks Assurances that Foreign Aid Won’t Reach Hamas – Lahav Harkov
Israeli Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi has told U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken that the international community must actively work to weaken Hamas while rebuilding Gaza. He delivered the same message to the foreign ministers of the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt. In addition, the rehabilitation of Gaza must be monitored closely by international supervisors. Moreover, the two Israeli civilians held by Hamas and the bodies of two Israeli soldiers killed in the 2014 war must be returned. (Jerusalem Post)
- Israeli Soldier, Civilian Wounded in Jerusalem Stabbing Attack – Nir Hasson
An Israeli soldier and a civilian were stabbed by a Palestinian assailant at a light rail train station in Jerusalem on Monday. The attacker was killed by Israeli security forces. (Ha’aretz)
- IDF Foiled Major Hamas Attack before Ceasefire
The Israel Defense Forces foiled a major attack by Hamas just before the ceasefire went into effect, Channel 12 reported Friday. A Hamas cell made its way through an underground tunnel, intent on emerging close to the Israeli border and attacking soldiers. The air force carried out a precision strike on the tunnel, killing the gunmen. With Israel’s newly completed underground barrier, the cell would not have been able to get into Israel, but would have emerged near the border fence.
Channel 12 also reported that the ceasefire had been delayed by up to 48 hours to allow the IDF to carry out a final mission. Prime Minister Netanyahu said at a press conference Friday that not everything regarding the outcome and impact of the Israeli strikes is yet known to the public, or even to Hamas. “We did daring and innovative things,” he said. He added that electronic sensors in Israel’s subterranean barrier detected terrorists and enabled the IDF to “destroy” them. (Times of Israel)
- Israel Navy Targets Hamas’ Naval Commando Forces – Noam Amir
After Hamas understood that Israel’s new border barrier weakened its ability to attack Israel using underground tunnels, it built a strong naval commando force. To neutralize these forces, in the first six days of the war, the Israeli navy attacked 100 Hamas targets in Gaza, based on prior intelligence. All of its bases and warehouses were attacked, as were many of its officers and fighters, destroying the military capabilities of the Hamas naval commando force that had been built up to surprise Israel. (Makor Rishon-Hebrew, 21May2021)
- Israel to Lift Most Covid Restrictions as Active Cases Fall to 500 – Rossella Tercatin
Israel will lift most remaining coronavirus restrictions on June 1, the Health Ministry announced Sunday, as the number of active cases in Israel dropped to 500, compared with 88,000 at the peak of the pandemic. As of Monday morning, 59 people were in serious condition. Restrictions regarding airports and traveling will remain. (Jerusalem Post)
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- A Military Assessment of the Israel-Hamas Conflict – Grant Rumley and Neri Zilber
In the 11-day conflict, Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) employed their forces in novel ways, with mixed results. They fired rockets at an unprecedented pace and range, often launching dozens at a time at the same target from different locations in Gaza in an attempt to saturate Israel’s Iron Dome defense system. In all, 4,300 rockets were launched, compared to 650 rockets fired over 22 days in 2008-2009, 1,500 over 8 days in 2012, and 4,500 over 50 days in 2014. Yet improvements to Iron Dome largely negated the heavier barrages, as the system maintained a 90% interception rate.
Efforts to target strategic infrastructure – offshore natural gas platforms, the Dimona nuclear facility, and airports – failed as well. The sole exception was an early strike that hit a gas storage tank near Ashkelon. Various drones were shot down. Unmanned bomb-laden submarines were destroyed prior to launch.
Israel brought mass firepower to bear through the coordination of joint forces, and did so faster and with more pinpoint intelligence than previously seen. The IDF showed an immediate willingness to target senior militant commanders in their homes and installations, including brigade commanders and rocket specialists.
Grant Rumley is a senior fellow at The Washington Institute, where Neri Zilber is an adjunct fellow. (Washington Institute for Near East Policy)
- A Military Assessment of the Israel-Hamas Conflict – Grant Rumley and Neri Zilber
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- Gaza Reconstruction? Welcome to La-La Land – David Rosenberg
Calls for beginning reconstruction efforts in Gaza began just hours after Hamas’ war with Israel came to an end last week. But if the history after Israel’s last big conflict with Hamas in 2014 is any guide, most of the aid pledges being made now will never materialize. Or, it will be misspent. Many of the homes destroyed in the previous war have yet to be rebuilt, although there seemed to be resources to build shopping malls, elaborate mosques and the “metro” network of tunnels.
Whatever reconstruction occurs now will probably be turned into rubble again in a few years because Israel and Hamas are locked into a pattern of recurrent wars. Gaza is a bad investment. Moreover, talk of any kind of serious Gaza reconstruction that could form the basis for a functioning economy is a joke. Gaza is far too small to ever function as a stand-alone economy.
If it hasn’t grown as fat, lazy and self-serving as the Palestinian Authority, Hamas isn’t in contention for any good-government awards. Just as importantly, armed struggle is much, much higher up than economic development on its to-do list. The only local industry Hamas has encouraged is rocket-building. (Ha’aretz)
- Gaza Reconstruction? Welcome to La-La Land – David Rosenberg
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- Rushing to Rebuild Gaza Will Reward Hamas – Jonathan S. Tobin
President Biden and Secretary of State Blinken think they can aid the people of Gaza without helping or even rewarding Hamas. They cannot. As the international community learned after it devoted billions of dollars to reconstruct Gaza after the 2014 war, it was virtually impossible to ensure that the money helped ordinary Palestinians rather than their Hamas tyrants. There has never been an example in history of cash pouring into a totalitarian regime that could be kept out of the clutches of the rulers.
Most of the building material that was let into Gaza after 2014 went into rebuilding the terrorist group’s military infrastructure. There is no reason to believe the next round of rebuilding will go any differently.
Every step towards normalizing Hamas, rather than isolating and defeating it, is a signal to a Palestinian people who have been sold such fantasies for the last 100 years that their long war to defeat Zionism is not yet lost. Rebuilding Gaza will enable Hamas to assert that there were no long-term consequences for their actions. It will also make peace even more impossible by indicating to the Palestinians that they don’t have to surrender to reality and accept Israel’s permanence and legitimacy.
It’s hard to resist arguments that appeal to our sympathy for those who are caught in the crossfire created by Hamas terrorism. Nevertheless, the best thing Biden can do to actually advance the cause of peace is to not spend a cent on rebuilding the terrorist state in Gaza. (JNS)
- Rushing to Rebuild Gaza Will Reward Hamas – Jonathan S. Tobin
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- Israel vs. Hamas: A “Just War” Analysis – Paul D. Miller
Pro-Palestinian protesters and mobs unleashed a wave of anti-Semitic violence against American Jews in recent days, apparently under the theory that American Jews are responsible for Israel’s actions and violent reprisal is justified. That amounts to a strange understanding of “just war” theory.
Hamas is a terrorist organization that deliberately murders civilians and says it wants to destroy Israel. On the other side, Israel has a right to defend itself, full stop. Israel was fighting to defend itself against indiscriminate rocket attacks on civilian populations.
As a scholar who recently wrote a book on just war theory, I have carefully weighed the evidence and believe Hamas to be unjust, appallingly wrong, and morally abhorrent. Hamas’ American apologists are making excuses for terrorism.
Hamas is in the wrong no matter what you think of the Palestinians’ cause. If you sympathize with the Palestinians, you should hate Hamas. Hamas is the greatest enemy of the Palestinians.
In 2021, Israel does not occupy the West Bank or Gaza, having withdrawn from those territories in 1995 and 2005, respectively. It recognized the Palestinian Authority as the governing authority of Palestinian territories and engaged in repeated negotiations to end the Israel-Palestine dispute. Israel did not initiate the recent round of violence. Under these conditions, the Palestinians are not fighting for self-defense, and political violence is not remotely a last resort for their cause.
The writer is a professor of international affairs at Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service. (Providence-Institute on Religion and Democracy)
- Israel vs. Hamas: A “Just War” Analysis – Paul D. Miller
- Who Won the Gaza War? – Maj.-Gen. (ret.) Yaakov Amidror interviewed by Eliezer Shulman
Former Israeli national security advisor Yaakov Amidror says talk of winning the war with Hamas in Gaza is misplaced. “The purpose of all the Gaza operations over the past 15 years has been to hurt Hamas and restore quiet to people living in the south – not to topple the terror groups or conquer the Strip. Israel didn’t embark on Operation Guardian of the Walls with the goal of winning. The goal was to inflict maximum damage on Hamas’ military capabilities in hopes of establishing deterrence.”
“The Six-Day War is considered Israel’s most successful war. But just a year later, there was the War of Attrition, and six years later, Israel found itself in the Yom Kippur War. So where was the deterrence? From a military perspective, the [2006] Second Lebanon War was a catastrophe, but the north has been quiet ever since.”
“In the current round…Hamas didn’t catch Israel unprepared in any area. It failed to inflict significant damage…and Hamas proved unable able to land any blows by sea, air, or through the terror tunnels….In summary, they notched zero successes and suffered a severe mauling.” (Mishpacha)
- Who’s Guilty of What in the Hamas-Israel Conflict? – Charles Lane
Shooting more than 4,000 unguided explosives toward civilian populations in Israel violates all the norms of warfare. That’s more than 4,000 war crimes. Hamas stored rockets, and launched them, in or near civilians or civilian structures, just as it did during the 2014 war with Israel. This, too, is a violation of the laws of armed conflict.
Israeli wrongdoing, if any, occurred in the context of a generally professional military operation that was carried out in response to Hamas rocket attacks. Hamas’ campaign against Israel and its civilian population, by contrast, consisted of nothing but war crimes, from beginning to end. (Washington Post)
- The U.S. Needs a Plan for Gaza – Jennifer Rubin
The Biden administration has not yet spelled out how it will rebuild Gaza without re-empowering Hamas. President Biden suggested the Palestinian Authority could oversee the effort. That’s an obvious nonstarter: The authority does not control Gaza, and it’s also more corrupt, less effective and less respected (by all sides) than ever before. Moreover, how can the international community invest billions in Gaza while it remains under the thumb of Hamas?
If Hamas is left in power with war-fighting capacity, in the not-so-distant future it certainly will build more rockets, fire them indiscriminately and prompt a furious Israeli response that will destroy whatever was built. Hamas is a brutal terrorist regime that desires an endless war. If Hamas were motivated by concern for the Palestinian people, would it have launched rockets into Jerusalem, where eastern Jerusalem Arabs were as likely to be killed as Jewish residents? (Washington Post)
- The Arab World Must Demand the Disarmament of Hamas – Qanta Ahmed
By painting itself as a plucky victim, Hamas is trying to convince the Arab world – and Muslims in the West, like me – that we should be on its side. But the reality is that the terror group’s ever escalating appetite for conflict does nothing to serve the Palestinian cause.
Hamas has evolved into a much more formidable and aggressive force. The enormous numbers and range of Hamas’ missiles confirm this. Funding from Iran has allowed Hamas’ structure and ranks to start resembling the Iranian Revolutionary Guards’ combat units.
It is time for the Arab world to stand in defense of human values by repudiating Hamas’ shameful use of Palestinian people as human shields. The moment Hamas, hiding in its tunnels, elected to bombard a civilian population in a sovereign state, they abandoned any semblance of ethics, any remnant of Geneva conventions, and any right to decry Israel’s actions. Hamas violates all of Islam’s codes of just war which expressly forbid the targeting of unarmed civilians, women, children, the elderly and the disabled.
If the conflict is ever to end, Hamas must not only be muzzled, but fully defanged. Israel deserves support from the Arab world in its legitimate efforts to safeguard all peoples in its sovereign territory. It is time the Arab world demanded the disarmament and neutering of Hamas.
The writer, a British-American physician, is Associate Professor of Medicine at NYU Langone Health. (Spectator-UK)
- For Israelis, One More Battle in a Forever War for Survival – Clifford D. May
Today, Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Hizbullah and the Islamic Republic of Iran declare: “The Jewish state does not deserve to live!”
Those who claim to care about Gazans ought to say to Hamas and Islamic Jihad: “Look, guys, there is no military solution to this conflict! So, you’ll just have to tolerate – among the more than 20 states that identify as Arab, and the more than 50 that identify as Muslim – one tiny state in which the Jewish people exercises self-determination on part of its ancient homeland.”
For Israelis, “Never again” means defending themselves in battle after battle in a “forever war,” ignoring those who insist that fairness requires more Jewish funerals. For the rest of us it should mean, at a minimum, not aligning with Jew-haters attempting to precipitate another Holocaust.
The writer is founder and president of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD). (Washington Times)
- Anti-Semitism in America – Gerard Baker
There’s something especially unsettling about the newest eruption of the oldest hatred – anti-Semitism. We live in an age of heightened awareness of ethnic and racial victimhood, but in the quarter-century the FBI has kept records, hate crimes against blacks have declined by more than a third between 1996 and 2019. By contrast, the number of anti-Semitic crimes – which are, proportionate to the share of Jews in the population, much more frequent than anti-black crime – has scarcely changed.
In the past, most of the anti-Semitic attacks in the U.S. have been the product of the usual depraved minds: white supremacists or sick individuals deciding to take out their pathologies on the group most often blamed for society’s flaws. But mostly they haven’t occurred as the kind of street-level response to geopolitical events that is too common among political activists in Europe. This latest outbreak, however, has come about in direct response to the recent conflict in Gaza.
The wider political and cultural environment is what makes this outbreak of anti-Semitism especially unsettling. The latest conflict in the Middle East has been made to fit the binary classification of the human race into oppressor and victim on the basis of identity. The wide penetration of this notion into the consciousness and discourse of prominent elected figures is new. (Wall Street Journal)
- Violent Attacks on American Jews Prove “Anti-Zionism” Is Anti-Semitism – David Harsanyi
Last week, a wave of Jew-hatred broke out in the U.S., with attacks by men waving Palestinian flags in Los Angeles and New York. If there were such attacks against Muslims, the media would rightly speak of nothing else right now. These weren’t clashes between pro-Israel demonstrators and pro-Palestinian demonstrators. These were attacks by the latter on whatever Jews they could find. And they should prove the falsehood of the narrative that “anti-Zionism” is distinct from anti-Semitism.
Israel is in the business of protecting Jews, in a world that has repeatedly and dramatically threatened the lives of Jews and/or failed to protect them. It’s an especially tough task when your neighbors are continually plotting to murder your people. (National Review) - See also Anti-Zionism Isn’t Anti-Semitism? Someone Didn’t Get the Memo – Bret Stephens (New York Times)
- Despite Gaza Bloodshed, Few See Abraham Accords Derailing – Sean Mathews
Plans are still quietly underway for the upcoming opening of the Israel-Gulf Cooperation Council Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Dubai, UAE. The chamber was established in February, after the Abraham Accords. While the voices condemning the Abraham Accords are loud, there are other voices.
“People call us from the Gulf, and also Morocco saying, ‘Be careful, it’s dangerous. Be safe and let’s hope it will be finished soon and we can go back to our activities and everything we want to do’,” Henrique Cymerman, president of the Israel-GCC Chamber of Commerce, told Al Jazeera. Eitan Na’eh, head of mission at Israel’s new embassy in Abu Dhabi, said 130,000 Israelis have visited the UAE since normalization.
Ibrahim Al-Assil, a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute, said, “Normalization was driven by national security needs and economic aspirations. They didn’t attempt to solve the Palestinian conflict, nor can they….The Abraham Accords will lose some momentum, but I do not expect them to change because the rational behind them and goals that drove them are still there.”
A controversial Emirati cleric and vocal supporter of normalization with Israel, Waseem Yousef, recently tweeted, “Hamas launches rockets from within civilian neighborhoods and when the response comes, Hamas cries, ‘Where are the Arabs and Muslims?’ You have made Gaza a graveyard for the innocent and children.” (Al Jazeera)
- Winning the Gaza Ceasefire: “Reconstruction or Rockets” – Robert Satloff
In the post-conflict period, the U.S. should frame the next phase as “reconstruction or rockets.” Given the swell of global sympathy for the people of Gaza, urgent humanitarian relief should proceed immediately. But reconstruction is a different story. This time, rebuilding Gaza should be conditioned on intrusive monitoring measures that deny the group the ability to rearm and reconstruct its tunnel network – lessons learned from the failed oversight efforts that followed the 2014 conflict.
Financial support for Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank should be paired so that the PA’s policy of restraint and cooperation is rewarded, not Hamas’ policy of violence and confrontation. For every dollar of reconstruction assistance to Gaza, a dollar of development aid (not PA budgetary support) should flow to the West Bank to help bolster Abbas.
The writer is executive director of The Washington Institute. (Washington Institute for Near East Policy)
- Hamas’ Forever War Against Israel – Haviv Rettig Gur
Hamas has spent a decade building major new warfighting capabilities meant to challenge Israel on new and unexpected fronts. All proved ineffective or outright useless. It just spent 11 days watching as Israel systematically demolished much of its military infrastructure. Its crack naval commando force failed to produce a single significant attack. Its anti-tank missile crews were identified and destroyed so quickly that Hamas ordered them withdrawn from the battlefield. Strike drones were intercepted with efficiency. Israel also targeted a long list of mid-level commanders.
In the mid-1990s, two IDF major generals, Meir Dagan and Yossi Ben Hanan, traveled together to Vietnam where they met Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap, who spent decades as his country’s defense minister. He told them: “The Palestinians are always coming here and saying to me, ‘You expelled the French and the Americans. How do we expel the Jews?’ I told them that the French went back to France and the Americans to America. But the Jews have nowhere to go. You will not expel them.”
Israeli Jews do not see themselves as an artificial colonialist entity. They believe they are a people with nowhere to go and facing an unappeasable foe. Israeli Jews are unified and mobilized by Palestinian pressure and believe they are defending their home. Hamas is constantly clarifying to Israelis the dire consequences of their acquiescence to international demands. (Times of Israel)
- The “Hamas Caucus” in Congress Supports a Designated Terrorist Group – Jonathan Schanzer and David May
If it was not for Israel’s Iron Dome missile defense system, Hamas rockets could have killed hundreds or even thousands of innocents. Yet, somehow, the group has found a small gaggle of congressional apologists in Washington, which is odd given how much terrorism is reviled by both Democrats and Republicans alike. Hamas, now a full-fledged proxy of Tehran, was designated as a terrorist group by the U.S. in 1997, as it has been in Europe, Canada, and elsewhere around the world.
It’s also odd for American lawmakers to ignore Hamas’ crimes against their own countrymen. Hamas has killed at least 25 Americans in Israel since 1993. Some were drive-by shootings on teenagers; others were suicide bombers who detonated their explosives in crowded buses and cafes. One was a car-ramming of a 3-month-old in Jerusalem in 2014.
President Biden understood the deadly nature of Hamas when he was a senator and helped spearhead the Palestinian Anti-Terrorism Act of 2006, which prohibits American assistance to the Palestinian Authority if it is “effectively controlled by Hamas.”
Jonathan Schanzer is senior vice president for research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, where David May is a research analyst. (Washington Examiner)
- Back to Iran’s Nuclear Future – Editorial
Israeli agents pilfered a massive collection of technical documents from an Iranian warehouse in 2018. The Institute for Science and International Security’s David Albright and Sarah Burkhard, who have received extensive access to this nuclear archive, provide new details about Iran’s covert nuclear weapons program in their book Iran’s Perilous Pursuit of Nuclear Weapons.
The authors say there are as many as two dozen sites in Iran “highly relevant to the IAEA in determining…whether nuclear weapons efforts have ended or in fact are ongoing.” Inspectors have visited only three of these sites and found traces of processed uranium.
Arms-control agreements are only as good as the verification allowed. If international inspectors don’t have instant and comprehensive access to declared or undeclared nuclear sites, there’s no way to know whether they are complying.
The Administration seems eager to accept even a flawed deal as a way to liberate the U.S. from its entanglements in the Middle East. But this will empower Iran and its proxies and make it more likely America is dragged back in. (Wall Street Journal)
- Hamas is no liberation movement in search of a Palestinian nation. Instead, it seeks the destruction of Israel and the establishment of an Islamic empire on its ruins.
- How do we know? Because senior Hamas leader Mahmoud al-Zahar has said so: “Islamic and traditional views reject the notion of establishing an independent Palestinian state….Our main goal is to establish a great Islamic state, be it pan-Arabic or pan-Islamic.”
- The most recent bout of fighting – in which thousands of rockets have been fired – is inspired by the idea of freeing the Holy Land from Israel.
- On 10 May, Hamas bombed the Holy City as Israelis were celebrating Jerusalem Day. This armed attack on the nation’s capital left Israel’s government little choice but to respond robustly. After all, what else can be done when terrorists try to kill your citizens?
- There is no difference between Hamas’ commitment to Israel’s destruction and the Islamists’ plans for the West. To imagine that Hamas can be appeased or deflected is to make a big mistake.
- What has made this latest conflagration particularly traumatic for Israeli Jews is the tidal wave of violence unleashed by some of Hamas’ Arab compatriots. Cities once considered showcases of Arab-Jewish co-existence have been rocked by mass violence and vandalism. Jewish residents were attacked in their homes by Arab neighbors with whom they had co-existed peacefully for decades.
- Some attribute this uptick in violence to supposed longstanding discrimination, but that idea couldn’t be further from the truth. Why? Because the riots came after a decade of unprecedented government investment in Arab neighborhoods and businesses, including a $4.6 billion socioeconomic aid program.The writer is emeritus professor of Middle East and Mediterranean Studies at King’s College London and director of the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies at Bar-Ilan University.
During the recent conflict, Israel’s Iron Dome defense system was tested by a battery of drones designed and supplied by Iran, experts told The National.
Israeli forces shot down at least six kamikaze drones launched from Gaza. At least one was shot down by an air-to-air missile from an F16, another intercepted by Iron Dome, while four were downed by “classified means.” Israel also shot down an Iranian drone near the border with Jordan on Tuesday.
It is understood that Iran will assess the attack methods to improve them for future conflict.
Operatives from the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps smuggled in components of their Ababil-2 unmanned aerial vehicle and taught Hamas to equip it with a 30 kg. warhead.
It is programmed with GPS coordinates and satellite imagery to find its target. Alternatively, it can be guided visually to the target with a ground operator and camera.
“With Iran’s help, Hamas has developed quite a large number of not terribly expensive munitions, which can be sent to hit fixed targets at long range,” said Justin Bronk of the Royal United Services Institute in London.
The Israelis are now “putting a lot of money” into developing lasers and other high-powered microwave weaponry to shoot down drones, said Douglas Barrie of the International Institute for Strategic Studies.
Barrie said it may be only a matter of time before a kamikaze drone gets through. “It’s a bit like the old IRA (Irish Republican Army) saying that ‘you’ve got to be lucky every day, we’ve only got to get lucky once’.”
A senior Western intelligence source said Sunday that Israeli Mossad operatives likely targeted rocket parts as they were smuggled from Iran to Gaza or inside Gaza itself.
Some 16% of the 4,360 Palestinian rockets misfired in Gaza or fell short of the Israeli border.
A source told the Mirror spies may have tampered with the guidance systems, motors, warheads or explosive material inside the missiles.
“It is very likely a number of those rockets were intercepted and altered,” the source claimed. The operation likely took place months ago.
Ismail Haniyeh, a chief figure in Hamas, on Friday thanked “the Islamic Republic of Iran, who did not hold back with money, weapons and technical support.”
Israel estimated it had killed at least 215 combatants in the recent fighting, but in the Hamas count they mysteriously become innocent civilians. Some 650 Hamas rockets fell inside Gaza and definitely caused civilian casualties.
1,440 rockets were successfully engaged by Israel’s Iron Dome batteries, while 160 fell inside Israeli residential areas, causing minimal casualties thanks to Israel’s system of bomb shelters.
Nearly a quarter of the rockets fired at Israel from Gaza landed on the city of Ashkelon, 15 km. from the border, the closest heavily populated area.
Sigal, whose house took a direct hit on Thursday, says they have 30 seconds to scramble to a shelter when the sirens go off. “That’s if you have a shelter,” she adds.
Two women were killed in Ashkelon during this round of violence and two more are seriously injured, Mayor Tomer Glam said.
“About a quarter of the 160,000 inhabitants of Ashkelon don’t have bomb shelters,” he adds.
Hundreds of masked Hamas fighters wearing military camouflage and brandishing assault rifles paraded in Gaza City on Saturday in a defiant show of strength after an 11-day war with Israel.
On Friday, hours after the cease-fire took effect, thousands of Palestinians in the Al-Aqsa compound in Jerusalem chanted against Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and his government.
“Dogs of the Palestinian Authority, out, out,” they shouted. “The people want the president to leave.”
Gazans are well aware of their situation. They are looking around and seeing what’s missing and who is gone. Which is why they are not really celebrating victory – it’s just for show.
They are happy about the ceasefire for which they desperately begged because they had their fill of Israeli airstrikes.
Now the world will shower them with money to start rebuilding, and yet again most of this money and materials will be stolen to reconstruct underground terror tunnels, rearm, and produce more rockets.
The writer is Israel’s ambassador to Italy.
See also Gaza Residents Report No Shortage of Food – Jack Khoury (Ha’aretz)
- The Gaza war spilled into America last week as some pro-Palestinian and pro-Hamas demonstrators crossed the line separating protest from mob violence in several U.S. cities. Mobs visited widespread violence on random Jews, or in some cases “Jewish-looking” non-Jews.
- The core insight that drove Theodor Herzl, architect of the Zionist movement, was that though the ideals of the liberal enlightenment were beautiful and appealing, European Jews would perish horribly if they entrusted their fate to them. Many Israelis believe from familial and personal experience that Herzl got it right.
- Rising violence against Jews in the UK, Germany and France has been winning Herzl new converts. Last week’s attacks likely caused some U.S. Jews to wonder, perhaps for the first time, if Herzl had a point.
- Those who challenge the place of Jews in America challenge the basis of America itself. Jew-hatred aims to destroy the beliefs that allow our diverse population to live in peace and that make our democracy work. Jew-hatred is the implacable enemy of the American way.
- Anti-Semitism did more than fill Israel with persecuted Jews. The constant threat of destruction by hostile neighbors welded Israeli immigrants into a single people. It forced Israel to build its military and intelligence capabilities.
- Anti-Semites also made Israel tough. Missiles from Gaza, missiles from Lebanon, and unceasing incitements to genocide from Iranian mullahs busily enriching uranium all promote the idea among Israelis that their enemies are implacable and irrational and can be deterred only through strength.The writer, a fellow at the Hudson Institute, is Professor of Foreign Affairs and Humanities at Bard College.
60% of Americans blame Hamas for the recent violence, according to a new Harvard CAPS-Harris Poll conducted on May 19-20 and released Monday. 40% blame Israel.
58% said they support President Biden’s stance on Israel, while 42% said they opposed it.
Search teams are still digging Hamas fighters out of the blown-up underground system of tunnels dubbed the “Gaza Metro.”
In Israel, a source said: “It is now believed around 80 were killed, many of whom are still buried deep underground.”
Hamas suffered a devastating blow in Gaza. Its military assets, administration, infrastructure and underground tunnels have been destroyed.
Israel had proved yet again its military superiority, mainly in anti-missile defense, intelligence, and in precise air strikes.
It is impossible to provide a normal life to the Gaza population under the banner of “resistance,” which means permanent military conflict with Israel.
Several Arab countries, those who struggle with the subversion of Hamas and other like-minded organizations, want to see the Hamas regime in Gaza cease to exist.
This is the time for these countries to take action, to offer Palestinians in Gaza an alternative.
When the people in Gaza realize once again the calamity brought on them by Hamas, they may welcome a reasonable alternative.
The external security of Gaza could be under the responsibility of Egypt.
The writer, a former deputy minister of defense, is chairman of the S. Daniel Abraham Center for Strategic Dialogue at Netanya Academic College.
Nigerian soccer star Ibezito Ogbonna, 38, says he is lucky to be alive after being injured when his apartment in the Israeli city of Ashdod was hit by a rocket fired from Gaza last week.
Ogbonna, who played with Hapoel Tel Aviv, was at home with his wife and two young daughters when the building suffered a direct hit.
“I heard the loud bang of the rocket and felt the immediate impact. I was thrown into the air and it took me from my dining room to my living room.”
With no home to return to, the Ogbonnas and 13 other families are now staying at a hotel as the Israeli government looks to resettle them.
“Hapoel Tel Aviv fans have been incredibly amazing. Without my knowledge, they had started fundraising to help support me.”
- In the past few weeks, thousands of Palestinians in Jerusalem and the West Bank have been demonstrating in support of Hamas. These Palestinians are telling U.S. Secretary of State Blinken that he is wasting his time if he thinks that they would accept “so-called peaceful solutions” or “renounce any part of Palestine.”
- They are also sending a warning to PA President Abbas that recognition of Israel’s right to exist and acceptance of the “two-state solution” is tantamount to treason, a crime punishable by death.
- It is not clear how the Biden administration expects Abbas to work toward establishing a Palestinian state alongside Israel when the Palestinian leader is being besieged by his people because of his supposed belief in peace with Israel.
- Hamas leaders have in the past warned that if Abbas sets foot in Gaza, he will be executed by hanging in a public square for betraying the Palestinian people and collaborating with Israel.
- It is only Israel’s presence in the West Bank that is keeping Abbas in power and preventing Hamas from extending its control beyond Gaza.
- A recent public opinion poll showed that 57% of Palestinians are opposed to the two-state solution. Another 57% said they support the “armed struggle” and “popular resistance” against Israel.
- These are the voices that Blinken needs to hear during his visit to Ramallah. Then he would get a good grasp of the Palestinians’ profound anti-Israel sentiments and their deep support for Iran’s proxies and others who wish to wipe Israel off the map.
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) will no longer try to force a Senate vote aimed at stopping a $735 million weapons sale to Israel.
An aide to Sanders said the senator found out Friday that the State Department had already finalized the sale.
Iran’s Guardian Council on Tuesday announced a list of seven mostly conservative or hard-line candidates vying to replace President Hassan Rouhani in the June 18 presidential election, after several moderate politicians were barred from running.
Ebrahim Raisi, a conservative cleric who heads Iran’s judiciary, is widely viewed as the front-runner.
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who served as president from 2005 to 2013, was excluded from the final list.
Hizbullah leader Hassan Nasrallah delivered a speech Tuesday on the anniversary of the IDF withdrawal from south Lebanon 21 years ago, during which he looked ill and weak, coughing throughout the 90-minute event.
His son Jawad tweeted that his father was suffering from allergies.
Matthias Schmale, director of UNRWA’s operations in Gaza, told Israel’s Channel 12 on Sunday:
“I also have the impression that there is a huge sophistication in the way that the Israeli army struck [Gaza] over the past 11 days….Yes, they did not hit, with some exceptions, civilian targets.”
On Tuesday he apologized for those remarks after being harshly criticized by Hamas and Palestinian groups.
Hamas displayed a marked improvement in the number of rockets and mortars fired into Israel, although the projectiles caused relatively few Israeli casualties.
200 rockets were long or medium range, of which 120 were fired at the Tel Aviv region. The rest were launched toward Jerusalem or other areas including the Arava, south of the Dead Sea, 250 km. from Gaza.
Hamas has 60% of its original 15,000 rockets left, including hundreds capable of hitting the center of the country.
Hamas attempted to flood the Iron Dome missile defense system by firing more than a hundred rockets at Ashkelon in less than half an hour, or barrages of dozens of rockets at the Tel Aviv region.
Yet Iron Dome was a great operational success, saving the lives of dozens of Israeli residents.
Like Hizbullah, Hamas seeks to improve the precision of its rockets. That’s why a substantial number of Israeli airstrikes were aimed at sites linked to the development of precision weapons.
More than 10 central figures in Hamas’ development team were killed, including the two project leaders, Jamal Zbeida and Jumaa Tahala.
Fadi Kasem, 28, a nurse at the Galilee Medical Center in Nahariya, went to a riot scene in Acre two weeks ago and saw a Jewish man, Mor Janashvili, 29, lying on the ground after he had been attacked by a mob wielding stones, sticks and knives.
Kasem administered first aid to the victim. He recalled, “I was scared he was going to die. There was lots of blood and a head injury.”
Janashvili told the Times of Israel on Tuesday, “I had lost consciousness when he got to me, but remember waking up and hearing him comforting me and caring for me.”
Just before he was discharged from the hospital, Janashvili told Kasem, “You saved my life,” to which Kasem replied, “I did what had to be done.”
Janashvili concluded, “In a place where people weren’t showing humanity, he showed such great humanity.”
- Mahmoud Abbas’ claim to be the real leader of the Palestinian people has never been weaker. Otherwise, he would not have vetoed the parliamentary elections scheduled for May 22. Mahmoud Abbas cannot lead Palestinians anywhere and cannot defeat Hamas.
- Israel and Americans who search for peace and stability face the problem of a profound breakdown of Palestinian politics. No peace negotiations can possibly succeed until Israel has a partner who can sign a peace agreement and enforce it.
- There can be no “peace negotiations” with Hamas, which is dedicated to eliminating the State of Israel through violence. But the alternative to Hamas is the discredited and increasingly unpopular Fatah.
- The coming outpouring of funds to rebuild damaged sites in Gaza presents an important opportunity. Donors should support projects that directly help the populace, without the political elites in the West Bank or Gaza skimming the cream or Hamas diverting supplies.
- Donors must use their funds to support people and NGOs that show some independence from Hamas. Otherwise, they will be helping rebuild Hamas rather than Gaza. It should be clear that empowering political elites who damaged the chances for peace has not worked and will not work.
- The two-state solution is further away than ever today. The recent days of war make the idea of removing the IDF from the West Bank look like madness to most Israelis. If Israel leaves, who exactly will prevent Hamas from taking over, seizing control of the West Bank as it did in Gaza in 2006, and as Hizbullah did in south Lebanon? Until that question can be answered, the two-state solution is a slogan rather than a serious destination.The writer is Senior Fellow for Middle Eastern Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations.
During the latest Hamas-Israel conflict, more than 4,360 rockets and mortar shells were fired at Israel, of which 3,573 penetrated Israeli airspace, 680 fell inside Gaza and 280 fell into the sea.
50 senior Hamas and PIJ terrorist operatives were killed including brigade commanders, 20 lower-ranking commanders, and 200 terrorist operatives.
Egypt has taken upon itself to lead the rebuilding of Gaza and coordinate donations and supplies.
Reconstruction projects will be carried out by companies belonging to the Egyptian army, limiting the influence of Turkish companies and strengthening cooperation with the Gulf States.
The 2021 Gaza War may have been the most targeted and accurate precision-bombing campaign ever facilitated by any military, anywhere, in the history of conflict and war.
In response to massive rocket fire, the IDF targeted more than 1,000 sites across Gaza with complex surgical strikes.
Targets included terrorist command centers or bases for Hamas and Islamic Jihad commandos, multi-barrel rocket launchers, underground steel bunkers, and tunnels in the heart of Gaza’s civilian districts.
In retaliation for the bombardment of its cities, Israel could have killed thousands of Gazans.
But because the IDF does so much to prevent the death of innocents, the number of civilian Palestinian casualties remained relatively low.
“From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free.” So goes the chant by anti-Israel demonstrators over the past 10 days.
Let there be no doubt about what these words mean. They do not represent an appeal for a Palestinian homeland to be established as part of a two-state settlement.
The slogan is an aspirational bid for Israel, which lies between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea, to be wiped off the map of the world.
Only this week, Hamas deputy political chief Mousa Abu Marzouk said his group’s war against Israel would end with “their [the Jews] leaving Palestine.”
How has it come to be that supporting the destruction of Israel and the creation of a Jew-free zone within its current borders has become something acceptable to express in public?
Unfortunately, for many critics of Israel, their rhetoric around the nation state is interchangeable with their attitude towards Jewish people in general.
The writer is NSW chairman of the Australia/Israel and Jewish Affairs Council.
While human rights organizations raise several billions of dollars annually, their agendas are increasingly being questioned.
Instead of focusing on horrific violations by dictatorships and terrorist regimes, these groups tend to devote major resources to investigating Western democracies.
Accusations of “war crimes” by the U.S., UK, Australia, and Israel, based on reports of accidental civilian deaths from strikes aimed at top terrorists hiding in densely populated areas, are standard fare.
The NGO employees who write these reports have no military experience and most often rely on “eyewitness testimonies” that cannot be verified.
Moreover, lawyers and judges who do not share the ideological views of these groups reach very different conclusions.
The writer, a fellow of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, is Emeritus Professor of Political Studies at Bar-Ilan University in Israel and heads the Institute for NGO Research in Jerusalem.
In 1942, Winston Churchill and his chief of staff set up a new commando unit made up of Jewish refugees who had escaped to Britain. Many had lost their families.
Trained in counterintelligence and advanced combat, this top secret unit became known as X Troop. Some simply call them a suicide squad.
Israeli neurovascular device developer Rapid Medical announced a $50 million financing round on Tuesday.
The company’s minimally invasive stroke products include the FDA-approved Tigertriever, a new class of clot retriever to better remove blood clots and restore blood flow to the brain following a blockage.
Tigertriever 13 is the only clot retriever in the world indicated for the removal of clots from more distant areas in the brain.