Archive for November 22, 2012

Israel Agreed to Give Up Gaza ‘Security Belt’

November 22, 2012

Israel Agreed to Give Up Gaza ‘Security Belt’ – Defense/Security – News – Israel National News.

Understandings with Hamas let Gazans approach border with Israel without being harmed.

By Arutz Sheva
First Publish: 11/22/2012, 9:14 PM

According to the memorandum of understandings between Israel and Hamas, the self-declared “security belt” that Israel established along the Gaza border is no longer in existence.

Until now, no Gazan who was identified approaching the border with Israel could do so without being harmed. Israel had defined a strip up to 300 meters in width into which no Gazan could enter, as part of its fight against terrorist-guerrilla attacks on its soldiers. Hamas terrorists often place explosive charges along the fence, which they detonate against IDF forces.

Arutz Sheva’s Haggai Huberman writes that the third paragraph in the first section of the agreement states that “the passages shall be opened and there will be an easing of the passage of people and goods. The movement of the residents [of Gaza] shall not be limited and there will be no attempt to harm them along the border.”

According to the agreement, Egypt will receive guarantees from both sides regarding their commitment to fulfill the agreement. If any side has complaints against the other, it is to turn to Egypt rather than acting unilaterally.

The US Press: Happy Turkey day!

November 22, 2012


Liberman: Israel will eventually need to overthrow Hamas

November 22, 2012

Liberman: Israel will eventually … JPost – Diplomacy & Politics.

By JPOST.COM STAFF
11/22/2012 20:37
FM tells Channel 2 that launching IDF ground operation to occupy Gaza and overthrow Hamas regime would take 4 months; says launching such an operation would have been the wrong move just two months before elections.

Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman

Photo: Yossi Zamir

Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman said Thursday that despite the government’s decision to agree to a cease-fire on Wednesday, Israel would “eventually need to overthrow the Hamas regime” in Gaza.

Liberman said in an interview with Channel 2 that a ground operation in Gaza would entail reoccupying the Gaza Strip, and partaking in such an effort only two months before elections was the wrong move.

“The occupation of Gaza and the overthrow of Hamas is a process that would take more than four months.”

Liberman stated that the government decided to agree to the cease-fire despite the fact that they knew “the public was against it.”

The foreign minster said that the cease-fire was the best agreement Israel could have made at this time. He said that Israel had met its three goals for the mission: stopping rocket fire on the South, regaining Israel’s power of deterrence and destroying Hamas’s stock of long-range Fajr 5 missiles.

Defense Minister Ehud Barak on Thursday rejected the notion that Israeli public opinion against a cease-fire agreement with Hamas should have any bearing on the Israeli leadership’s decision-making process.

“We don’t have to listen to the public on these issues – the leadership must make the decisions,” Barak said in an interview with Channel 2 when asked about the perceived unpopularity of the cease-fire among the public.

Barak expressed confidence that the cease-fire with Gaza factions would be “relatively long,” adding that “Hamas did not truly achieve anything – Israel has control of all the understandings with them.”

He rejected the idea that the conflict ended in a victory for Hamas, stating that Gazans were celebrating imaginary feats that did not actually occur, such as the alleged shooting down of an Israeli F-16 and rockets falling in Tel Aviv and causing damage.

Ahmadinejad: Israel desire to attack Iran ‘childish’

November 22, 2012

Ahmadinejad: Israel desire to attack Iran ‘childish’ – Israel News, Ynetnews.

In Islamabad, Iranian leader says Jewish state ‘waiting for chance to hurt our nation’

Reuters

Published: 11.22.12, 20:34 / Israel News

Israel has a “childish” desire to attack Iran and Tehran is capable of defending itself, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Thursday.

“They wish to hurt the Iranian nation. They are waiting for the chance. They know that Iran does not attack anybody and they know that Iran knows how to defend itself,” he told a news conference in the Pakistani capital Islamabad.

“We don’t accept the hegemony of Israel. They wish to attack Iran but it is like a childish desire.”

He was speaking after attending a summit of developing nations.

Six world powers agreed on Wednesday to seek renewed talks with Iran as fast as possible, reflecting a heightened sense of urgency to resolve a long rift over Tehran’s disputed nuclearactivity and avert the threat of war.

Their call coincided with growing evidence of Iran expanding nuclear capacity in an underground bunker virtually impervious to attack and follows the November 6 re-election of US President Barack Obama, which has cleared the way for new contacts.

Senior diplomats from the six countries – the United States, Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany – met in Brussels on Wednesday to consider new negotiating tactics despite abiding skepticism that a deal with Tehran can be reached.

Analysts warn that a window of opportunity for a negotiated solution is narrowing because of growing alarm over Tehran’s nuclear course in Israel, the Middle East’s only nuclear power which has threatened to bomb the atomic sites of its arch-enemy.

Cheese-eating surrender monkeys ride again…

November 22, 2012

France indicates support for Palestinian UN vote – Israel News, Ynetnews

(Forgive my French: FUCK the French !! – JW )

France on Thursday indicated it would support efforts by the Palestinians to secure a diplomatic upgrade at the United Nations, a decision likely to boost Palestinian efforts as it seeks greater international recognition.

Frustrated that their bid for full UN membership last year failed amid U.S. opposition in the U.N. Security Council, Palestinians have launched a watered-down bid for recognition as a non-member state, similar to the Vatican’s UN status.(Reuters)

Barak: It’s not Yet Time to Conquer Gaza

November 22, 2012

Barak: It’s not Yet Time to Conquer Gaza – Defense/Security – News – Israel National News.

Defense Minister hopes terrorists’ “experience” has lessened “their appetite to attack.”

By Gil Ronen

First Publish: 11/22/2012, 7:45 PM

 

Defense Minister Ehud Barak said Thursday that what he terms the “tail” of rocket fire by the terror groups after the ceasefire went into force was relatively short. “I hope that after the experience Hamas and Islamic Jihad in Gaza have undergone, they do not have the appetite to continue attacking.”

 

“Whenever the rounds of fighting get more frequent, as happened now, there is no choice but to mount an operation,” he explained to IDF Radio. “The idea is to postpone the next round as much as possible by hitting the other side hard.”

 

Asked by Channel 2 about the public’s disappointment with the way the operation ended, Barak said that it is the government and not the public that must make such decisions. “I remember situations in which 80% of the Israeli public supported a certain decision, and ten days later it turned out to be a very big failure,” he added.

 

Defending the decision to stop the operation, he said: “The leadership has the appropriate tools.  It is still not time to enter Gaza in a very wide operation and conquer it.”

 

Barak said no one expected Hamas to “go down on its knees,” and no one expected it to disappear in an operation that did not include the IDF entering Gaza. “Whoever dreams at night about the beach of Gaza and the alleys of Beit Lahiya has the right to do so,” he added. “I do not miss these places. Only bringing Israeli rule back to Gaza will topple Hamas rule, but I am not sure that this would be wise.”

Egypt’s President Morsi expands power, defies judiciary with new declaration – Politics – Egypt – Ahram Online

November 22, 2012

Egypt’s President Morsi expands power, defies judiciary with new declaration – Politics – Egypt – Ahram Online.

( Surprise, surprise… Say hello to the new dictator of Egypt… – JW )

President Morsi issues new constitutional declaration appointing new prosecutor-general; immunizing Constituent Assembly and Shura Council from threat of dissolution; and calling for retrial of ex-regime figures
Ahram Online, Thursday 22 Nov 2012

 All decrees passed by Egypt

FILE – In this Monday, April 30, 2012 file photo, President Mohammed Morsi (Photo: AP)

Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi issued a constitutional declaration on Thursday calling for the retrial of those accused of killing and injuring protesters during and after last year’s Tahrir Square uprising.

The retrials will also target ex-regime officials who have carried out “terrorism” against Egyptian protesters.

An article in the declaration also gives immunity to Egypt’s controversy-prone Constituent Assembly – tasked with drafting a new constitution – from a potential court verdict that may have otherwise led to its dissolution.

Another article protects the current Shura Council – the upper, consultative house of Egypt’s parliament – from dissolution, effectively pre-empting appeals against the council’s constitutionality.

The declaration also gives the president the power to appoint Egypt’s prosecutor-general for a four-year period.

The new declaration included the appointment of Judge Talaat Ibrahim Mohamed Abdullah, a former deputy head of Egypt’s Court of Cassation, to the post of prosecutor-general.

The decree also called for giving pensions to the families of the “martyrs of the 25 January Revolution” and increasing reparations to those injured.

The surprise decision came amid ongoing clashes between protesters and police on Cairo’s Mohamed Mahmoud Street.

Protests held to commemorate four days of street fighting between protesters and security forces in November of last year turned violent on Monday.

Hamas: We do not support Abbas’s statehood bid

November 22, 2012

Jerusalem Post – Breaking News.

( So surprising!  Every new state needs an organized gang of criminal terrorists… –  JW )

By KHALED ABU TOAMEH
11/22/2012 17:32
Hamas denied Thursday that its prime minister, Ismail Haniyeh, had expressed support for Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’s effort to upgrade the status of a Palestinian state to non-member.Supporting Abbas’s statehood bid would have meant that Hamas is willing to accept a Palestinian state “only” within the pre-1967 lines.

The denial came shortly after Abbas’s office announced that he had received a phone call from Haniyeh and top Hamas official Ahmed Bahr, who expressed their support for the statehood bid.

Abbas’s office said that Islamic Jihad leader Mohamed Hindi also phoned the PA president to voice his backing for the statehood bid.

Hamas PM : Option of invading Gaza is gone

November 22, 2012

Hamas PM : Option of invading Gaza is gone – Israel News, Ynetnews.

( That’s exactly what I’d want him to think  I hope he believes himself. – JW )

Day after ceasefire take effect, Haniyeh says ‘resistance fighters changed the rules of the game with the occupation,’ adding ‘option of invading Gaza after this victory is gone’; Hamas declares Nov. 22 public holiday

Yonatan Gonen, AP

Published: 11.22.12, 17:18 / Israel News

Hamas leaders in Gaza declared victory over Israel on Thursday, and thousands of flag-waving supporters rallied in celebration as the battered territory entered its first day of calm under an Egyptian-brokered truce that ended the worst cross-border fighting in four years.

Eight days of punishing Israeli airstrikes on Gaza and a barrage of Hamas rocket fire on Israeli ended inconclusively. While Israel said it inflicted heavy damage on the terrorists, Gaza’s Hamas rulers claimed that Israel’s decision not to send ground troops into the territory, as it had four years ago, was a sign of a new Hamas deterrent power.

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“Resistance fighters changed the rules of the game with the occupation (Israel), upset its calculations,” Gaza Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas, who had attended the rally, said later in a televised speech. “The option of invading Gaza after this victory is gone and will never return.”

Haniyeh said the Palestinian factions’ response to the targeted killing of top Hamas commander Ahmed Jabari caught Israel by surprise, which he called a “stupid act” which only strengthened the armed factions in Gaza.

Referring to the “shahids (martyrs)” who were killed in the operation, the Hamas leader said their “pure blood was not spilled in vain,” adding that Jabari’s “pure blood still flows in the nation’s veins.”

At the same time, Haniyeh urged Gaza fighters to respect the truce and to “guard this deal as long as Israel respects it.”

Hamas has declared has declared November 22, the day after its ceasefire was signed with Israel, as a public holiday in Gaza.

Meanwhile, Al-Arabiya network reported that Hamas and Islamic Jihad have decided to support Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ bid for nonmember status at the United Nations.

The mood in Israel was mixed. Some were grateful that quiet had been restored without a ground operation that could have cost the lives of soldiers. Others – particular those in southern Israel hit by rockets over the past 13 years – thought the operation was abandoned too quickly.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahusaid the offensive’s aims of halting Gaza rocket fire and weakening Hamas were achieved. “I know there are citizens who were expecting a harsher response,” he said, adding that Israel is prepared to act if the cease-fire is violated.

Despite the tough talk, the ceasefire raised hopes of a new era between Israel and Hamas. The two sides are now to negotiate a deal that would end years of Gaza rocket fire on Israel and open the borders of the blockaded Palestinian territory. Talks are supposed to begin sometime after a 24-hour period that began with the cease-fire late Wednesday.

However, the vague language in the agreement and deep hostility between the combatants made it far from certain that the bloodshed would end or that either side will get everything it wants. Israel seeks an end to weapons smuggling into Gaza, while Hamas wants a complete lifting of the border blockade imposed in 2007, after the Hamas takeover of Gaza.

Celebrations in Gaza after truce

 

Israel launched the offensive Nov. 14 to halt renewed rocket fire from Gaza, unleashing some 1,500 airstrikes on Hamas-linked targets, while Hamas and other Gaza terrorist groups showered Israel with just as many rockets.

The eight days of fighting killed 161 Palestinians and six Israelis. Israel also destroyed key symbols of Hamas power, such as the prime minister’s office, along with rocket launching sites and Gaza police stations.

In Gaza, the announcement of a truce late Wednesday set off frenzied street celebrations.
(צילום: רויטרס)

Haniyeh (L) celebrates with Gazans (Photo: Reuters)

“Today is different, the morning coffee tastes different and I feel we are off to a new start,” said Ashraf Diaa, a 38-year-old engineer from Gaza City.

Hundreds of masked Hamas fighters, who had slipped out of sight during the offensive, appeared in public for the first time Thursday during a funeral for five of their comrades. The armed men displayed grenade launchers and assault rifles mounted atop more than 100 brand-new pickup trucks.

The latest round of fighting brought the Islamists unprecedented political recognition. During the past week, Gaza became a magnet for visiting foreign ministers from Turkey and several Arab states – a sharp contrast to Hamas’ isolation in the past.

Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak defended his decision not to launch a ground offensive. Barak was also defense minister during Israel’s previous major military campaign against Hamas four years ago, which drew widespread international criticism and claims of war crimes.

“You don’t get into military adventures on a whim, and certainly not based on the mood of the public, which can turn the first time an armored personnel carrier rolls over or an explosive device is detonated against forces on the ground,” he told Israel Army Radio.
ילדים מסתובבים בין ההריסות. עזה (צילום: AFP)

Destruction in Gaza (Photo: AFP)

“The world’s mood also can turn,” he said, referring to warnings by the US and Israel’s other Western allies of the high cost of a ground offensive.

US President Barack Obama had personally lobbied Netanyahu to avoid a ground offensive and give the cease-fire a chance.

Egypt, meanwhile, emerged as the pivotal mediator, raising its stature as a regional power.

Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi will now have to assume a more direct role as a referee between Israel and Hamas, at a time when he faces many domestic challenges, including reviving a faltering economy.

Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal and the head of the smaller Islamic Jihad terrorist group Ramadan Shalah met with Egypt’s intelligence chief Thursday as the follow-up talks geared up.

Reaching a deal on a new border arrangement for Gaza would require major concessions from both sides.

Hamas wants both Israel and Egypt to lift all border restrictions.

In 2007, Israel and Morsi’s pro-Western predecessor, Hosni Mubarak, sealed the territory, banning virtually all travel and trade. Israel eased its restriction somewhat in 2010 in response to international pressure, allowing Gazans to import consumer goods, while barring virtually all exports and travel. Gaza’s battered economy recovered slightly, but the ban on exports prevented it from bouncing back fully.

After Mubarak’s fall last year, Egypt eased travel through its Rafah crossing with Gaza. However, Morsi has rebuffed Hamas demands to allow full trade ties with Gaza, in part because of fears this would give an opening to Israel to “dump” Gaza onto Egypt and deepen the split between Gaza and the West Bank.

Palestinians hope the West Bank and Gaza, which lie on opposite sides of Israel, will one day make up the bulk of a Palestinian state. Israel has barred most travel between them during the past decade and closer ties between Egypt and Gaza could exacerbate the division.

Egypt is unlikely to implement major changes at the Rafah crossing, said a senior member of a Palestinian Islamic faction involved in the truce talks in Cairo.

Both Morsi and Hamas belong to the region-wide Muslim Brotherhood, but during the truce talks, Morsi acted more like a mediator than a fellow Muslim Brother, said the Islamist, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the details of the closed-door meetings with reporters.

Israel, meanwhile, wants Egypt to halt weapons smuggling across its Sinai region into Gaza, through smuggling tunnels under the border.

Hamas has been able to significantly boost its arsenal in the past four years, largely with weapons from Iran, according to Mashaal, who thanked Tehran for its support late Wednesday.

The Palestinian negotiator said Iran sent Russian-made anti-tank missiles to Gaza after the last Israeli offensive, and claimed that these weapons helped deter Israel from launching a ground offensive.

As part of the ceasefire, Israel received US pledges to help curb arms shipments to Gaza.

The fighting gave a major boost to Hamas’ popularity, not only in Gaza, but also in the West Bank, where the Islamists’ internationally backed rival, Palestinian President Abbas, oversees a self-rule government.

Abbas, the leading Palestinian proponent of non-violence and negotiations with Israel, was forced to watch from the sidelines as his bitter rivals scored political points by using rocket fire on Israel as leverage.

A senior Abbas aide, Nabil Shaath, stood alongside Hamas leaders during Gaza City’s victory rally Thursday. Despite the symbolism, it was not clear whether the two sides would be able to mend their rift.

Within hours of the truce, life regained a degree of normality after fighting that pinned down hundreds of thousands of people in their homes on both sides of the Gaza-Israel border.

In Gaza, men swept streets and bulldozers removed debris and fallen trees, remnants of the airstrikes. Shoppers crowded outdoor markets to stock up on fresh fruits and vegetables. During the night, gunmen fired into the air in joy, and one man was killed and three wounded by the random celebratory fire, a health official said.

“We are back to business,” said Iyad Radwan, a 23-year-old employee in a Gaza City window repair shop that had received 60 orders by mid-morning to fix damage. “Now it’s time for rebuilding.”

In southern Israel, schools remained closed as the region slowly came back to life.

In the hard-hit border town of Sderot, which has suffered years of rocket fire, few people were outdoors and most businesses remained closed. The coastal city of Ashkelon was closer to normalcy. Businesses were reopening, but suffered from shortages of supplies and staffers who had fled.

Capt. Boris Yarmolnik ז”ל

November 22, 2012

IDF soldier dies from wounds suffered in Gaza rocket attack – Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper.

Reserve soldier Boris Yarmolnik, succumbed to his wounds Thursday, after suffering from a serious head injury in a rocket attack on Wednesday.

By Gili Cohen and | Nov.22, 2012 | 4:46 PM |

IDF reservists waiting near the Gaza border this week.

An IDF reserve soldier who was seriously wounded by rocket fire from Gaza on Wednesday has succumbed to his wounds on Thursday.

Boris Yarmolnik, 28, a resident of the Israeli city of Netanya, was wounded along with five other soldiers in Wednesday’s incident, and was suffering from a serious head wound when he was taken to Soroka Medical Center, Be’er Sheva. The remaining soldiers, who are still in hospital, are all lightly wounded.
Yarmolink is the second soldier who has been killed as part of the eight days of Israeli’s Gaza offensive, Operation Pillar of Defense, which ended on Wednesday with a cease-fire agreement between Israel and Hamas.
On Tuesday, Pvt. Yosef Nachman Partok, 18, of Immanuel was killed by a mortar shell while helping guard a community in the Eshkol region. Partok, who served in the armored corps, recently finished basic training and was waiting with his unit for an order on a possible ground offensive. In recent days he wrote on Facebook he believed the operation was just; he also criticized the delay in coming to a decision.
In a separate incident in Eshkol earlier on Tuesday, Eliyan Salem el-Nabari, a Defense Ministry worker of Bedouin descent who lived in the unrecognized village of Elarakib, was also killed in a mortar attack.
A total of six Israelis – two soldiers and four civilians – were killed throughout Israel’s Gaza offensive. In Gaza, at least 160 Palestinians were killed, both civilians and militants.