Archive for July 2014

Palestinian society is the problem

July 7, 2014

Palestinian society is the problem, Israel Hayom, MK Yariv Levin, July 7, 2014

[N]othing unites Palestinians more than their shared hatred of Jews and Israel and their desire to establish a Palestinian state in the entire land of Israel, which runs contrary to the self-delusions of many Israelis who are trying to resuscitate the fallacious peace process.

On one hand, before cameras and in international forums, Palestinian leaders condemn violence against Israelis. On the other hand, internally, they continue to promote violence, as exhibited by the monthly salaries Abbas gives to families of terrorists imprisoned in Israel, with the salary scale based on how severe the attack was.

 

Let’s not delude ourselves that only Hamas was to blame for the recent kidnapping and murder of three Israeli teens. Palestinian society as a whole was responsible, even if the attack was carried out by Hamas.

The news of the attack was received by the Palestinian public, both in the Gaza Strip and Judea and Samaria, with great joy and celebration. This was not shocking, given the fact that nothing unites Palestinians more than their shared hatred of Jews and Israel and their desire to establish a Palestinian state in the entire land of Israel, which runs contrary to the self-delusions of many Israelis who are trying to resuscitate the fallacious peace process.

While Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas may have belatedly appeared before the cameras and condemned the kidnapping, the Fatah organization, which is led by Abbas, has continued to show support for the murderers of the teens. Over the past several weeks, official Fatah Facebook pages have been filled with messages of support for the kidnappers. One cartoon uploaded to the pages shows three mice, with Stars of David on their backs, biting at the end of a fishing line. The title of the cartoon is “Masterstroke.”

This pattern of behavior by Palestinian leaders is nothing new. On one hand, before cameras and in international forums, Palestinian leaders condemn violence against Israelis. On the other hand, internally, they continue to promote violence, as exhibited by the monthly salaries Abbas gives to families of terrorists imprisoned in Israel, with the salary scale based on how severe the attack was.

It is not hard to discern that Fatah and Hamas have nearly identical identities. Anyone examining the positions of these groups would immediately find that there is no fundamental difference in their attitudes toward Israel. They are divided on only two points: the nature of the state to be established in place of Israel, and the tactics of how to take over all of Israel.

On the question of tactics, Fatah has abided for years by the strategy of stages, under which diplomatic agreements are used as a means to achieve the ultimate defeat of Israel. Fatah’s final goal remains the “liberation” of the entire land of Israel and the elimination of the State of Israel. Fatah avoids making any basic ideological concessions, as manifested by its refusal to recognize Israel as a Jewish state.

Hamas, meanwhile, refuses to make any agreements with Israel. It rejects the strategy of stages, believing that only armed struggle will lead to the “liberation” of the entire land of Israel.

Given this, it is no wonder that there is widespread cross-societal support among Palestinians for terrorist attacks, as well as support for harboring terrorists and turning them into cultural heroes. The Palestinian Authority is the entity which demands the release of terrorists, greets them with celebrations and names city squares and streets after them.

Moreover, the PA education system teaches the next generation of Palestinians to hate Israel, using anti-Semitic motifs. The PA educates children to continue the armed struggle, until Israel is completely destroyed. This is the clear reality that many still refuse to see. We all want peace and we all hope there is someone to make peace with. But the desire for peace must not blind us from reality and prevent us from acting to protect the interests of Israel and the security of its citizens.

Hamas is our enemy, and it must pay. But this will not be enough the solve the problem posed by a Palestinian society that supports and encourages terrorism.

Israeli society must stand firm. We should strengthen the settlement enterprise in a way that will prove to the Palestinians that we are here to stay and that terrorism will not achieve anything.

MK Yariv Levin (Likud) is coalition chairman and a member of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee.

Strategic Affairs Ministry head blames PA education for kidnapping

July 7, 2014

Strategic Affairs Ministry head blames PA education for kidnapping, Jerusalem Post,  Sam Sokol, July 7, 2014

(Some of the blame can reasonably be directed at the Palestinian indoctrination education system. Much blame is also properly directed at other elements within the Palestinian society of hate. — DM)

Hamas sumer campPalestinian children attend a Hamas-run summer camp in Gaza. Photo: FACEBOOK

“The Palestinians have a full system of indoctrination” including government-sponsored television programs, PA youth magazines and summer camps, Kuperwasser told the press during a briefing last year.

At that briefing he showed reporters an image culled from the Facebook page of the Palestinian Authority Education Ministry in which a snake with a star of David on its forehead could be seen strangling a young Palestinian. On another such page, a Palestinian teacher had posted a picture of a suicide bomber and challenged students to identify her in exchange for chocolate.

 

The blame for the recent kidnapping and murder of three Israeli teenagers can be placed at the feet of the Palestinian Authority’s education system, Strategic Affairs Ministry Director-General Yossi Kuperwasser said on Monday.

Speaking to Jewish educators from around the world at the a conference on Israel education organized by the government, the World Zionist Organization and iCenter, Kuperwasser differentiated between the Israeli educational system and that of the PA, asserting that each promoted a radically different worldview.

“When we see the kidnapping of three Israeli children, youngsters, and they are murdered, we can easily attribute this act to the messages delivered to the Palestinian State in the education system,” he said.

Israelis, he continued, “teach our children to look for peace, to seek peace” and to “respect the right of the other.”

Given that Israeli education is “totally different” from that of the Palestinians, he continued, last week’s murder of Israeli-Arab teenager Mohammed Abu Khdeir was “a strategic surprise for anybody living in Israel.”

Abu Khdeir was kidnapped and burned alive in what police believe to be a revenge attack in response to the murder of Israeli teenagers Naftali Fraenkel, Gil-Ad Shaer and Eyal Yifrah by Palestinians.

“Not only to condemn it, we are totally shocked,” Kuperwasser said. “We have to say what went wrong here and repair it.

However, he continued, condemnations are insufficient and must be accompanied by strong efforts to educate against such behavior.

“What is most important in our education is to educate to think,” he asserted.

Kuperwasser is outspoken in his critiques of what many see as incitement in the Palestinian media and educational curricula, having previously stated that it creates an “ethos of conflict and encourages” continued hostility to Israel.

“The Palestinians have a full system of indoctrination” including government-sponsored television programs, PA youth magazines and summer camps, Kuperwasser told the press during a briefing last year.

At that briefing he showed reporters an image culled from the Facebook page of the Palestinian Authority Education Ministry in which a snake with a star of David on its forehead could be seen strangling a young Palestinian. On another such page, a Palestinian teacher had posted a picture of a suicide bomber and challenged students to identify her in exchange for chocolate.

Speaking to the educators, who represented a number of Jewish denominations and ideological groupings, Kuperwasser added that the issue Jewish education is of more long-term strategic concern to Israel than either Iran or the Palestinians.

“We have to educate ourselves here in Israel and in the Diaspora to understand this issue of legitimacy, this issue of why we should have and why we are eligible to have a nation state for the Jewish people here in the ancestral home of the Jewish people,” he said.

“Now, one may say that for Jews this is obvious. Well let me tell you something it is not.”

More than 60 rockets in steady stream from Gaza to expanded targets. Sirens in Modiin, Rehovot, Abu Ghosh

July 7, 2014

More than 60 rockets in steady stream from Gaza to expanded targets. Sirens in Modiin, Rehovot, Abu Ghosh.

Hamas broadened its massive rocket blitz Monday night, July 7 – edging further north and east to locales hitherto unscathed, after warning that its response to the deaths of seven operatives in Israeli air strikes would be “unprecedented.”

Iron Dome intercepted at least 10 of the scores of rockets aimed at new urban areas – Lachish, Gan Yavneh, Kiryat Malachi, Beer Tuvia and Ashdod. Eleven rockets hit Gan Yavneh alone. The last rocket targeted Rehovot. Sirens sounded in the towns of Modiin, Ness Ziona, Gedera, Beit Shemes and Abu Ghosh indicating the approach of rockets. There was one casualty – a man in Ashdod injured by shrapnel.

The IDF Homeland Command has ordered towns and villages up to 40-km from Gaza to open public shelters, including Beersheba and Ashkelon. Closer to the border, dozens of events have been cancelled and summer schools shut down for the emergency.

The IDF mobilized another 1,500 reservists Monday, July 7, in readiness for a broad operation to curb the escalating rocket fire. A troop buildup at the Gaza border is about to be backed by intensified air strikes against Palestinian rocket launchers. The Palestinians have also redoubled their missile blitz against Israel from day to day these last three weeks. By Monday sundown, 40 rockets had been slammed into Israel, causing damage in several locales – both near the Gaza border and further away up to the outskirts of Beersheba. The IDF is getting set to counter Hamas’ plans to bring its rocket offensive as far north as central Israel. Israel’s military planners have to take into consideration that, while the IDF is fighting in Gaza to knock out Hamas’ missile capability, the country’s heartland may well be beset by an upsurge of violent Palestinian and Israeli disturbances.

debkafile reported Monday morning:

There is not the slightest chance of the Palestinian Islamist Hamas halting its three-week barrage of rockets against Israel in the foreseeable future,  high-placed sources in Cairo, Washington and the IDF told debkafile’s military sources Sunday night, July 6. They all agreed that Israeli-Gaza border tensions would continue to escalate in the absence of serious Israeli military punishment for cutting Hamas down
Following this assessment, the Israeli Air Force went into its first serious action against terrorist targets in the Gaza Strip during Sunday night – not just bombing empty buildings, but hitting Hamas operatives. Seven were killed in Rafah and another two in Al Bureij.

The Hamas spokesman said that this was the biggest single Israeli hit against the Islamist group since the 2012 Pillar of Defense operation and “The enemy would pay dearly.”

A senior US intelligence official familiar with the sector offered the view that, so long as Israel did not show it was serious about a military reprisal – like for instance positioning two whole IDF armored divisions right up to the Gaza border – Hamas would not feel pressured enough to stop firing rockets and accept a truce. Every passing day without real punishment for kidnapping and murdering the Israeli teenagers, Gil-Ad Shear, Naftali Fraenkel and Eyal Yifrach, leaves the Islamists certain they have got away with it and in no mood to talk terms.

The source reported that, as far as he knew, Cairo had given up on its earlier effort at brokering a Gaza ceasefire. Cairo sources confirmed that Hamas had made unacceptable demands of the Egyptian government as its price for halting rocket attacks on Israel. The list was presented to Gen. Mohammed Farid el-Tohamy, head of Egyptian intelligence, who had been acting as the intermediary between Hamas and Israel in the truce effort.
One of those demands was for Egypt to reverse its six-month crackdown for reducing Hamas’ aggressive capabilities for terror in and from Sinai, including the reopening of the smuggling tunnels Sinai which long furnished the Hamas regime with arms, smuggled goods and revenue.

Cairo lashed out against Hamas as a terrorist group harmful to Egyptian security and a helpful offshoot of the proscribed Muslim Brotherhood.

There is no sign that President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi has any intention of meeting Hamas demands.

Indeed, all the parties following the conflict agree that the ball is now in Israel’s court and not, as it is presented by Israeli officials, up to Hamas to take the initiative. The Islamist group has already made its decision, which is to continue shooting rockets, in line with its unswerving commitment to fight Israel.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon and Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz must decide if and how to fight back.

Contrary to Israeli media reports, the chief of staff and the high IDF command have clearly informed the government that they are fully prepared to undertake any military operation without delay if so ordered. The elimination of seven Hamas members of its fighting army Sunday night may be the first step.

Officials: Rocket Fire Could Reach Tel Aviv

July 7, 2014

Officials: Rocket Fire Could Reach Tel Aviv

Residents of Beersheva and Ashdod have been asked to limit public gatherings and prepare bomb shelters.

By Yaakov LeviFirst Publish: 7/7/2014, 8:36 PM

via Officials: Rocket Fire Could Reach Tel Aviv – Defense/Security – News – Arutz Sheva.

 

Rocket trails streaking out of Gaza Flash 90
 

As Israel prepares for a possible military action in Gaza, residents of Ashdod and Beersheva have been told to not to conduct public gatherings of more than 500 people, while residents of Gaza border communities have been told to remain within 15 seconds of protected areas, in order to take cover in the event the Red Alert missile warning system goes off.

In addition, the Homefront Command ordered that bomb shelters in towns and cities within 40 kilometers of the Gaza border be cleaned out and prepared for use. This is the first time such orders have been given since 2011’s Pillar of Defense operation against Hamas terrorists in Gaza.

Dozens of rockets fell in Israel throughout the day Monday, and the Red Alert missile warning system sounded throughout the day in southern Israel. One building was reported damaged in the barrages.

On Monday, the security cabinet authorized the IDF to increase its military pressure on Hamas. The IDF intends to add more troops to the brigades it already has poised on the borders of Gaza, officials said. So far an additional 1,500 reserve troops have been called up, to free up regular soldiers in case of need.

Sources at the meeting said that regardless of Israel’s actions, it was possible that Hamas would expand the range of attacks against Israel. Officials at the meeting were said to discuss the possibility that Tel Aviv and other cities in central Israel could come under attack as well.

In a statement Monday, a Hamas spokesperson said that “we have made it clear that we do not seek to increase tensions. But if Israel wants a cease fire, it must release the terrorists it jailed that had previously been released in the Shalit deal, and stop its criminal activities in the West Bank.”

On Monday, the IDF said that it targeted several terror smuggling tunnels in southern Gaza. The action, the army said, prevented “a steady stream of terrorists into Israel. We recently found a significant terror tunnel leading out of Gaza, which we are gathering intelligence about to prevent further terror attacks and to prevent [the tunnel] from being used [again],” an IDF official said. “We are also investing significantly in gathering our security forces,” he added. “Until now we have had two full staffs working on the situation and we are readying ourselves for escalation [with Hamas].”

Overnight Sunday, the IAF launched airstrikes against nine terror targets in Gaza.According to the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit, the targets included concealed rocket launchers and terrorist centers in central Gaza. “The IDF is prepared to defend the citizens of Israel from any threat and will continue to act decisively and as long as necessary until quiet is restored,” the statement said, placing the responsibility for the constant rocket fire on the Hamas terrorist group.

The airstrikes come several hours after an Israeli airstrike on Gaza killed two terrorists from the Islamic Jihad group.

Thirty Rockets Fired into Israel in Ten Minutes

July 7, 2014

Thirty Rockets Fired into Israel in Ten Minutes – Defense/Security – News – Arutz Sheva.

Barrage fired into Israel shortly after IDF announcement to prepare for escalation on the Gaza border.

By Tova Dvorin

First Publish: 7/7/2014, 8:17 PM / Last Update: 7/7/2014, 8:47 PM

 

Hamas terrorists fire rockets at Israel

Hamas terrorists fire rockets at Israel
Flash 90

Hamas fired over 30 rockets in a ten-minute period into Israel on Monday, with hits reported in Sha’ar HaNegev, the Eshkol Region, Netivot, Sderot, and Be’er Sheva between 8:00 – 8:10 pm IST.

No buildings were reportedly damaged. One Ashkelon resident is being treated for shrapnel injuries.

“Code red” sirens have reportedly been sounded as of 8:30 pm as far as Tel Aviv and in Gush Etzion; rockets could be seen from as far away as Beit Shemesh, just West of Jerusalem, eyewitnesses told Arutz Sheva.

The barrage follows the Security Cabinet decision to prepare for escalation in the South, including a possible military campaign.

At least 1,500 reserve soldiers had been called up for preparatory training for a possible operation, security officials stated earlier Monday. Hours earlier, photos surfaced showing tanks and IDF forces gathering close to the Gaza border.

“We are also investing significantly in gathering our security forces,” the official stated to Arutz Sheva Monday afternoon. “Until now we have had two full staffs working on the situation and we are readying ourselves for escalation [with Hamas].”

The Israeli Air Force (IAF) struck multiple terror targets earlier Monday, including a “significant” terror tunnel.

IDF Gets Green Light for Harsher Gaza Action

July 7, 2014

Cabinet Gives IDF Green Light for Harsher Gaza Action

The cabinet on Monday authorized the IDF to increase its military pressure on Hamas – but to avoid escalation of tensions, if possible

By Yaakov LeviFirst Publish: 7/7/2014, 7:06 PM

Harsher Gaza Action and avoid escalation of tensions !!!

via IDF Gets Green Light for Harsher Gaza Action – Defense/Security – News – Arutz Sheva.

 

Israeli airstrike in Gaza (archive) Reuter
 

As rocket fire from Gaza shows no sign of letting up, the cabinet on Monday authorized the IDF to increase its military pressure on Hamas. The IDF intends to add more troops to the brigades it already has poised on the borders of Gaza, officials said. So far an additional 1,500 reserve troops have been called up, to free up regular soldiers in case of need. Meanwhile, the Israel Air Force will increase its targeting of terrorist facilities in Gaza, the army said.

With that, the government decision said that the aim of the IDF operation was not to enter into a wide-ranging military action against Gaza Arab terrorists, but to ensure quiet in the south. In addition, the IDF is to ensure that rocket fire does not spread to cities other than the ones that Hamas and terror groups have been targeting, mostly in the Gaza border area. In addition, extra batteries of the Iron Dome system will be set up throughout southern Israel, officials said.

“Quiet will be answered with quiet,” the government said, adding that it demanded “a cease-fire with no preconditions.”

On Monday, the IDF said that it targeted several terror smuggling tunnels in southern Gaza. The action, the army said, prevented “a steady stream of terrorists into Israel. We recently found a significant terror tunnel leading out of Gaza, which we are gathering intelligence about to prevent further terror attacks and to prevent [the tunnel] from being used [again],” an IDF official said. “We are also investing significantly in gathering our security forces,” he added. “Until now we have had two full staffs working on the situation and we are readying ourselves for escalation [with Hamas].”

Overnight Sunday, the IAF launched airstrikes against nine terror targets in Gaza.According to the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit, the targets included concealed rocket launchers and terrorist centers in central Gaza. “The IDF is prepared to defend the citizens of Israel from any threat and will continue to act decisively and as long as necessary until quiet is restored,” the statement said, placing the responsibility for the constant rocket fire on the Hamas terrorist group.

The airstrikes come several hours after an Israeli airstrike on Gaza killed two terrorists from the Islamic Jihad group.

Despite the total collapse of security in the south and the constant threat of rockets on a large civilian population, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu on Sunday indicated he would not order a wide-scale operation in Gaza for the time being.

“Experience has proved that at moments like this, we have to act responsibly and with a cool head and not with harsh words and impetuousness,” Netanyahu said. “We will do everything in our power to restore peace and security to the south.”

Israel mobilizes more reserves, as Gaza rocket fire gains tempo. Hamas is preparing to hit Tel Aviv

July 7, 2014

Israel mobilizes more reserves, as Gaza rocket fire gains tempo. Hamas is preparing to hit Tel Aviv.

The IDF mobilized another 1,500 reservists Monday, July 7, in readiness for a broad operation to curb the escalating rocket fire. A troop buildup at the Gaza border is about to be backed by intensified air strikes against Palestinian rocket launchers.

The Palestinians have also redoubled their missile blitz against Israel from day to day these last three weeks. By Monday sundown, 40 rockets had been slammed into Israel, causing damage in several locales – both near the Gaza border and further away up to the outskirts of Beersheba.

The IDF is getting set to counter Hamas’ plans to bring its rocket offensive as far north as central Israel. Israel’s military planners have to take into consideration that, while the IDF is fighting in Gaza to knock out Hamas’ missile capability, the country’s heartland may well be beset by an upsurge of violent Palestinian and Israeli disturbances.

debkafile reported Monday morning:

There is not the slightest chance of the Palestinian Islamist Hamas halting its three-week barrage of rockets against Israel in the foreseeable future,  high-placed sources in Cairo, Washington and the IDF told debkafile’s military sources Sunday night, July 6. They all agreed that Israeli-Gaza border tensions would continue to escalate in the absence of serious Israeli military punishment for cutting Hamas down
Following this assessment, the Israeli Air Force went into its first serious action against terrorist targets in the Gaza Strip during Sunday night – not just bombing empty buildings, but hitting Hamas operatives. Seven were killed in Rafah and another two in Al Bureij.

The Hamas spokesman said that this was the biggest single Israeli hit against the Islamist group since the 2012 Pillar of Defense operation and “The enemy would pay dearly.”

A senior US intelligence official familiar with the sector offered the view that, so long as Israel did not show it was serious about a military reprisal – like for instance positioning two whole IDF armored divisions right up to the Gaza border – Hamas would not feel pressured enough to stop firing rockets and accept a truce. Every passing day without real punishment for kidnapping and murdering the Israeli teenagers, Gil-Ad Shear, Naftali Fraenkel and Eyal Yifrach, leaves the Islamists certain they have got away with it and in no mood to talk terms.

The source reported that, as far as he knew, Cairo had given up on its earlier effort at brokering a Gaza ceasefire. Cairo sources confirmed that Hamas had made unacceptable demands of the Egyptian government as its price for halting rocket attacks on Israel. The list was presented to Gen. Mohammed Farid el-Tohamy, head of Egyptian intelligence, who had been acting as the intermediary between Hamas and Israel in the truce effort.
One of those demands was for Egypt to reverse its six-month crackdown for reducing Hamas’ aggressive capabilities for terror in and from Sinai, including the reopening of the smuggling tunnels Sinai which long furnished the Hamas regime with arms, smuggled goods and revenue.

Cairo lashed out against Hamas as a terrorist group harmful to Egyptian security and a helpful offshoot of the proscribed Muslim Brotherhood.

There is no sign that President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi has any intention of meeting Hamas demands.

Indeed, all the parties following the conflict agree that the ball is now in Israel’s court and not, as it is presented by Israeli officials, up to Hamas to take the initiative. The Islamist group has already made its decision, which is to continue shooting rockets, in line with its unswerving commitment to fight Israel.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon and Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz must decide if and how to fight back.

Contrary to Israeli media reports, the chief of staff and the high IDF command have clearly informed the government that they are fully prepared to undertake any military operation without delay if so ordered. The elimination of seven Hamas members of its fighting army Sunday night may be the first step.

Families of Suspects in Arab Teen’s Murder Fear for Their Safety

July 7, 2014

Families of Suspects in Arab Teen’s Murder Fear for Their Safety, Israel National News, Tova Dvorin, July 7, 2014

Arab riotersArab rioters in Jerusalem Flash 90

The families of the six suspects arrested Monday over allegations of murdering 16 year-old Mohammed Abu Khder fear for their lives, according to Walla! News, and have requested a security detail to guard them against ‘revenge’ attacks. 

Attorneys from the Honenu rights organization, which is handling the boys’ case, passed on the request to the IDF.

“Given the repeated requests from the families of suspects, as well as threats made ​​by senior officials and others who want revenge, we see Israel Police as responsible for the safety and security of these families,” Attorney Adi Keidar wrote in the official request.

“We demand that the Israeli police provide them the proper protection and not abandon them, to avoid causing another disaster.”

Earlier Monday, police reported that three out of the six suspects arrested on Sunday confessed to the murder of the Arab teen, and even re-enacted the crime for investigators.

The suspects have allegedly not been permitted to meet with their lawyers since the arrest until the investigation is complete.

Meanwhile, little is objectively known about Abu-Khder’s murder, five days after his body was found in the Jerusalem Forest.

Police suspect that the crime was nationalistically motivated, allegedly as a “revenge crime” for the murders of Israeli teens Naftali Frenkel (16), Gilad Sha’ar (16), and Eyal Yifrah (19).

An initial pathologist’s report, issued from Palestinian sources, stated that Abu-Khder was burned alive, with the teen suffering from severe burns on 90% of his body.

The suspects arrested for the murder are Jewish; some are minors. They are residents of Jerusalem, the community of Adam north of Jerusalem, and Beit Shemesh.

Assumptions about the motivation for the crime have caused widespread rioting and ongoing incitement against Israeli Jews, with unrest centered in Arab neighborhoods of Jerusalem and in the northern “Triangle” area, which is home to some 300,000 Israeli Arabs.

Military source: 1,500 reservists called up by IDF

July 7, 2014

http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4539058,00.html

( At this point, why should Hamas pay any attention to this hollow saber rattling? – JW )

Military source: 1,500 reservists called up by IDF Defense officials believe Hamas is seeking in escalation, say Hamas may be taking part in rocket fire on Israel.

Ron Ben YishaiLatest Update: 07.07.14, 18:40

A senior military source has said that Hamas hasn’t been stopping rocket fire into Israel and has even been taking part in the fire itself. According to the source, “Quiet won’t be answered by quiet and therefore we’re expecting escalation.”

Also on Monday a senior military source said that the IDF had called up “some 1,500 reservists who will arrive in waves. Most of them are commanders and part of the home front command.”

With rocket fire from Gaza continuing unabated, Israeli defense officials now believe Hamas is seeking an escalation in the south, and that the Egyptian mediation efforts were not bearing fruit.

Israel was therefore preparing for a possible escalation that could result in a large-scale IDF operation in Gaza, with cabinet ministers meeting in Jerusalem for three hours on Monday afternoon to assess the situation.

 

IDF tanks on the Gaza border (Photo: AP)
 

Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon and IDF Chief of Staff Benny Gantz were also expected to hold a situation assessment at the IDF’s Kiriya headquarters in Tel Aviv on Monday. The two were to discuss future moves to combat the escalation in the south, in the West Bank, in Jerusalem and in Arab towns inside Israel.

 

IDF tanks on the Gaza border (Photo: Reuters)
 

Defense officials have noted a discrepancy between statements by Hamas’ political bureau and the operations of its military wing. Nonetheless, a cabinet decision is in place to increase IDF operations in accordance with attacks by Hamas and other terror organizations.

 

IDF APC on the Gaza border (Photo: AP)
 

The IDF already stepped up its activity in the Strip overnight, attacking 14 terror targets and killing two terrorists. Seven other Hamas member were killed in a “work accident” inside a tunnel under the southern Gaza border town of Rafah.
Former Shin Bet head Avi Dichter told Ynet on Monday that Israel must accept that it has to wipe out the Hamas threat from Gaza.

“We must focus on how we’re going to destroy Hamas’ military capabilities in Gaza,” he said. “This is not a three-week operation like Cast Lead and not an eight-day one like Pillar of Defense. This will take over a year. This is a move we can’t avoid. While we can’t destroy ideology, we can destroy a terror organization.”

First Published: 07.07.14, 15:12

No moral symmetry

July 7, 2014

No moral symmetry, Israel Hayom, David M. Weinberg, July 7, 2014

[A] central ideological and moral distinction between Israel and the Palestinians is this: Israel seeks conflict resolution, not jihad. Israel wants to resolve the conflict through compromise, not end the conflict by annihilation of the enemy. Israel wishes to live at peace and cooperate with its Arab neighbors, not to conquer the Arabic and Islamic nations from Tunisia to Indonesia.

Needless to say, these modest Israelis goals are not shared by too many Arab or Islamic partners.

 

Muhammad Abu Khdeir’s murder is well on its way to becoming a core building block in the pantheon of anti-Israel propaganda, a central plank in the false argument that Israelis are just as murderous as the Palestinians. That Israelis are no more moral than the Palestinians.

Without being too defensive, or in any way forgiving of the inexcusable kidnapping and gruesome murder of the young Arab boy from east Jerusalem, let it be said loud and clear: Comparisons that place Israeli and Palestinian societies on the same moral plane are evilly intended and utterly untruthful. No parallels can be drawn between Israel and the Palestinians when it comes to ethical standards. This is an asymmetrical conflict in every way: moral, political and ideological.

Israeli terrorists are few and far between. Over 100 years of conflict, they comprise a mere handful: Ami Popper, Jack Teitel, Yehuda Etzion, Baruch Goldstein, Yona Avrushmi and several others. This list of Palestinian terrorists fills fat ledger books across the globe, and the list of their victims fills even more.

Israeli terrorists are denounced roundly and emphatically by Israeli society, caught quickly, and jailed fast. Nor are they released five minutes later. They are skunks, not heroes, of the Zionist movement and the Jewish people.

By contrast, Palestinian terrorists are celebrated widely by Palestinian society and feted by Palestinian leadership, sheltered methodically from justice, and rewarded generously.

And if they’re taken into custody, Palestinian terrorists are released just as quickly as international attentions turn elsewhere — the infamous “revolving door” record of the Palestinian Authority. And if Palestinian terrorists are held in Israeli jails, the Palestinians extort their release via kidnappings of Israelis, which again are celebrated. A perfect circle of perfidy.

Note that Abu Khdeir’s murderers are already under arrest in Israel. They have nowhere to hide in Jewish-Israeli society. Whereas the murderers of Naftali Frenkel, Gil-ad Shaer and Eyal Yifrach are still at large, hiding among their sympathetic and admiring brethren in the West Bank or Gaza.

When it became clear that Jews had murdered Abu Khdeir, for reasons of revenge or just ugly thugishness, the president, the prime minister, the chief rabbis, and all the political and cultural icons of Israelis society expressed deep shame at the killing, and spoke out immediately and without reservation in fierce denunciation of the crime. This killing does not represent the values or path of the Israeli people.

When it became clear that Palestinians had kidnapped the three teenage Israeli boys, there was no shame in the streets of Ramallah, Hebron or Gaza City, only triumphant jubilation and defiance. A new three-finger stick-it-to-the-Israelis salute became the rave, and the pleased mother of one of the suspected kidnappers was lavished with hours of Palestinian television screen time. She told viewers that (“if he did it”) she was proud of her son. Hamas and some Fatah leaders congratulated the kidnappers and promised them safe refuge and rewards, while promising Israel more kidnappings and murders.

The IDF arrested and jailed 10 soldiers last week who posted Facebook messages with calls for revenge. Contrast this with PA television, which broadcast a dozen sermons by local clerics, who get salaries from the Palestinian Authority, glorifying terrorism against Israelis and praising the kidnappers. All the while, the PA continued to pay salaries to the families of Palestinian terrorists in Israeli jails and large reward stipends to terrorists released from Israeli jails.

My point is that you judge a society not the by crimes of a few, but on the basis of the way that society deals with its criminals and who it celebrates as its heroes. In such a tally, there is no moral symmetry whatsoever between Israeli and Palestinian societies.

Ironically, Palestinian propagandist MK Ahmed Tibi essentially affirmed the basic moral distinction between the two societies when speaking to Israel Radio this week before the killers in Jerusalem were identified.

“Every Jew in this country,” Tibi declared, “is praying that the murderer of Abu Khdeir is not a Jew. But I’m telling you for sure that he was a Jew.”

Tibi meant to curse and spit on Israeli society, yet didn’t realize he was praising it. Indeed, every Jew in this country was praying that the murderer of Abu Khdeir would turn out not to be a Jew, because the very thought was reprehensible.

By stark and very telling contrast, not every Palestinian, not even a few of them, were praying that the kidnappers of Naftali Frenkel, Gil-ad Shaer and Eyal Yifrach would turn out not be Palestinian.

When one widens the lens to consider the political-ideological conflict in this region, the difference between Israel and the Palestinians becomes even clearer.

Despite five wars launched by the Arabs against Israel, thousands of Palestinians terrorist attacks against Israel, and tens of thousands of rockets and missiles fired on Israeli towns and cities by Palestinian and Arab terrorist armies, across seven decades — Israeli society has behaved overall with incredible restraint and responsibility.

It’s actually quite amazing, even miraculous, that calls for revenge and actual vigilante action are so infrequent and considered so downright unacceptable.

Again by contrast, Palestinian society has no such inhibitions. Rioting, destruction and mayhem is considered a “legitimate” and “understandable” form of protest and political expression. Cars can be stoned. Israelis can be dragged out of their cars and nearly lynched. Molotov cocktails can be thrown at will. Everything in sight can be destroyed, including the rail lines and bus shelters placed in Arab neighborhoods by local municipalities to serve the local Arab population. That’s natural and acceptable.

Imagine the world reaction if masses of Israelis were to regularly act this way after each frequent Arab terrorist attack.

And finally, a central ideological and moral distinction between Israel and the Palestinians is this: Israel seeks conflict resolution, not jihad. Israel wants to resolve the conflict through compromise, not end the conflict by annihilation of the enemy. Israel wishes to live at peace and cooperate with its Arab neighbors, not to conquer the Arabic and Islamic nations from Tunisia to Indonesia.

Needless to say, these modest Israelis goals are not shared by too many Arab or Islamic partners.

So spare me please all the high-minded moralizing about the supposed “brutalization” (not) of Israeli society and the sad symmetry (again not) of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. We Israelis have every reason (still) to claim the high moral ground. (And yes, we also have room to improve).