Archive for August 2014

Foreign Ministry pooh-poohs Lapid plan for regional Gaza conference

August 12, 2014

Foreign Ministry pooh-poohs Lapid plan for regional Gaza conference

Senior official says even latest ‘Transformers’ movie is more realistic than finance minister’s planned powwow with Saudi Arabia

By Raphael Ahren August 12, 2014, 4:45 pm

via Foreign Ministry pooh-poohs Lapid plan for regional Gaza conference | The Times of Israel.

 

Finance Minister Yair Lapid, November 5, 2013 (photo credit: Roni Schutzer/Flash90)
 

inance Minister Yair Lapid’s plan to hold a regional conference with Saudi Arabia and other Arab states to discuss the future of Gaza is utterly unrealistic, a senior Foreign Ministry official said Tuesday.

In an unusually harsh response to Lapid’s latest diplomatic initiative, announced Monday, the senior official said that Saudi or Tunisian officials would never agree to participate in such a conference, despite some Arab countries’ unspoken approval of Operation Protective Edge.

“It’s pure science fiction. No, there’s no science in it. It’s pure fantasy,” the senior official told The Times of Israel, speaking on the condition of anonymity. “Not just that it’s not going to happen, it cannot possibly happen in any real-world scenario. It’s not even remotely reminiscent of reality.

“Even the latest ‘Transformers’ movie is more rooted in real life than this proposition,” he added, referring to the popular toy-cum-Hollywood franchise about robots from outer space that turn into cars.

Saudi officials “would rather die” than be seen in public with their Israeli counterparts, the official said.

Mocking Lapid’s ostensible naivete, he added: “I suggest that he starts picking up the phone and calling his colleagues in the aforementioned countries and starts making the arrangements.”

A source close to Lapid said he had no intention of responding to an anonymous official.

“As a member of the security cabinet and head of one of the largest parties in Knesset, Yair Lapid’s role is to create a framework which will provide security to the citizens of Israel, particularly in the South,” the source said.

On Monday, Lapid announced plans for a “diplomatic initiative” aimed to boost efforts to “demilitarize Gaza and the transfer of authority in the Gaza Strip to the Palestinian Authority while maintaining Israel’s strategic security interest.” According to the plan, Egypt would host a conference attended by the United States, the European Union, Russia, Jordan, the PA, Israel, “moderate Arab states including Saudi Arabia” and the Gulf states.

“The initiative also calls for the involvement of states which will provide economic support for the rehabilitation of the Gaza Strip and the creation of projects which will lead to long term economic cooperation in the region,” according to a press release Lapid’s media adviser issued Monday.

One part of the conference will deal with the “creation of economic ties between Israel, the Palestinian Authority and the Arab world,” the statement reads. It would include several Western countries, the UN, the World Bank, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Tunisia.

The senior Foreign Ministry official scoffed about the prospect of Riyadh and Tunis sending delegates to a conference attended by representatives from Jerusalem. “Doesn’t anyone know that Tunisia is not a moderate country anymore? Doesn’t anyone know that the Saudis would rather die in battle 120 times than be seen in public with Israel? The Saudis will never, ever be seen in public with any Israeli official.”

 

Saudi Prince Turki bin Faisal Al Saud (center) and Amos Yadlin (left) speak May 26 in Brussels, with journalist David Ignatius at right (photo credit: JTA)
 

The fact that Israel, Saudi Arabia and other so-called moderate countries in the region have common interests and clandestinely cooperate on intelligence and security issues is one of the Middle East’s worst-kept secrets. Sunni governments in particular are widely believed to support Operation Protective Edge, tacitly encouraging Israel to deal a harsh blow to Hamas, a terrorist organization they see as a threat to their own rule.

Last week, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hailed “the unique link which has been forged with the states of the region” as a “very important asset” for Israel that “will open new possibilities” as soon as the fighting ceases.

In May, Saudi Prince Turki bin Faisal al-Saud, the country’s former director of General Intelligence, publicly discussed regional issues with Maj. Gen. (res) Amos Yadlin, a former commander of the IDF’s Military Intelligence Directorate. During the unusual meeting, the prince politely turned down Yadlin’s invitation to visit Israel.

In April, Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman said Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and other Arab countries had quiet contacts with Israel and that they would be publicized within a year and a half. Saudi and Kuwaiti officials swiftly denied Liberman’s claim.

The Prime Minister’s Office declined to comment on Lapid’s initiative, which is set to be discussed at the upcoming cabinet meeting.

There Is No Longer an Arab-Israeli Conflict

August 12, 2014

Saudi Arabian Newspaper: There Is No Longer an Arab-Israeli Conflict
Aug 12, 2014, 05:35 PM | Rachel Avraham via Jerusalem Online

 

Saudi King Abdullah Photo Credit: Reuters/Channel 2
 

(A wolf in sheep’s clothing, perhaps? – LS)

A fascinating article was uncovered that improved the image of the Saudi royal family. It claims that the Arab-Israeli conflict has ended and now there is a conflict between Israel and Turkey and Iran, who support terrorist organizations fighting against Israel. The weakness of the Arab states and the isolation of Qatar make the present time better to achieve a comprehensive peace agreement with the Arab world.

An international Saudi newspaper, which is the mouthpiece of the royal family based in Riyadh, declared that there is no longer an Israeli-Arab conflict, but an Israeli-Turkish-Iranian conflict. The paper declares that if Israel wants to do a big deal with the Arabs, now is the time.

Under the headline “there is no more Israeli-Arab conflict,” the article indicates that the attacks on Israel come from Gaza, who carries out the mission of Iran with the assistance of the Muslim Brotherhood and their patrons, Turkey and Qatar.

“Even the nature of the conflict changed,” the author of the article explained. “Conventional warfare, where armies of countries face enemies in the combat zone, has been replaced by asymmetrical warfare, where the army fights against guerilla movements in the cities. The conflicts between Israel and the Arab states, led by the 1948, 1967 and 1973 wars, are no longer the reality. Israel is now fighting political movements such as Hamas and Hezbollah, not the Arab countries, and the patronage of these movements come from Iran and Turkey. Of course, they are not Arab countries.”

“The disconnection of the Arab states and the rhetoric against Hamas in the Arab world, especially in Egypt, indicates a profound change in the perception of the conflict across the Arab world,” the article stressed. “The rhetoric of the current round turned Israel against Hamas, Turkey, Iran and Qatar. The support in the Arab world for Hamas is voiced only on twitter and other social media forums.”

The article stressed that Qatar, the only Arab country that supports Hamas, is isolated from the rest of the Gulf countries, after Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Bahrain withdrew their ambassadors from Doha: “So, what was once the Arab-Israeli conflict no longer exists.”

“The good news is that if Israel wants to achieve a great deal with the Arabs, now is the time to do it,” the Saudi newspaper declared. “Arab countries are now in the worst political situation they have been in for some time. Given the current political upheavals, they are now ready to sign a comprehensive deal with Israel.”

Government May Have to Decide if Money Buys Peace or War with Hamas

August 12, 2014

Money can’t buy love from Hamas. It can by a short cease-fire. It can buy war. It can’t buy peace.

By: Tzvi Ben-Gedalyahu Published: August 12th, 2014

via The Jewish Press » » Government May Have to Decide if Money Buys Peace or War with Hamas.

 

Naftali Bennett does not buy “money for calm.” Photo Credit: Flash 90

An idea on the negotiating table in Cairo that tax money collected by Israel for the Palestinian Authority would end up in the pockets of Hamas in exchange in exchange for a supposed truce was debunked Tuesday by key coalition government partner Naftali Bennett, who said the scheme is nothing short of extortion.

The Minister of the Economy and chairman of the Jewish Home Party, the third largest in the coalition, said the idea is one of “Pay us – we’ll shoot at your later; don’t pay us – we’ll shoot at you now.”

Israel previously has insisted that all money it transfers to the Palestinian Authority cannot reach Hamas, which is a fiction because the Palestinian Authority ends up paying for salaries of Hamas government “workers,” which includes “civil servants” with machine guns.

The government in the past also has used the tax money to pay off a huge debt owed to Israel Electric Corp.(IEC) by the electric company in the Palestinian Authority.

Most of the “news” on negotiations in Cairo between Hamas and Israel, mediated by Egypt in order to maintain the illusion that Israel and Hamas do not recognize each other, is based on the usual Hamas hyperbole and threats, and on more substantiated reports.

The guts of a proposed agreement reportedly would extend the 72-hour ceasefire due to expire on midnight Wednesday.

Israel would perform a very poor trick of magic by handing over the money to Hamas through a third party to fool itself that it is not paying Hamas directly.

That idea sent Bennett through the ceiling. “Extortion” and “dangerous” were only two of the unflattering adjectives he expressed. He warned that the money will be used by terrorists “who are digging under our feet… It’s a ‘calm for money to terrorists formula.’ You don’t pay Hamas, you defeat them.”

Bennett said he will fight the proposal if it comes to the Cabinet for a vote.

Israel reportedly is willing to ease the blockade without removing it completely, and Egypt would do the same at the border in the divided city of Rafah. Israel also is seriously considering extending the permitted fishing zone to six nautical miles and to allow, once again, construction materials to move into Gaza under supervision.

As with previous ceasefire agreements and concessions on the blockade, supervisory measures are questionable.

Hamas exploited Israel’s previous agreement to allow cement and other “dual-use” materials into Gaza and used them to build tunnels for terrorists, among other activities that were at the expense of building houses and schools. Even then, Hamas has used schools and homes, as well as mosques and hospitals, as rocket launching pads, so all “dual purpose” materials ultimately had only one purpose – terror.

Officially, “no progress” has been made in the talks. This is expected because Hamas always likes to keep everyone in suspense until the last minute, or even after the last minute.

For good measure, it has publicly threatened that any extended ceasefire would simply be a temporary measure until the next war. That can be dismissed as rhetoric in the short-term, but in the long-term, Hamas means what it says. Its existence depends on attacking Israel. If it does not, it risks losing its power to rival terrorist groups who would be happy to take over the task.

One of the most dangerous elements of a possible longer-term agreement for a truce is allowing security forces from the Palestinian Authority, headed by Mahmoud Abbas, to supervise the “Philadlphi” smuggling route at and near Rafah.

Abbas and Hamas have accepted each other as peace partners in a new unity government, which has carefully placed “technocrats” in the government, a camouflage for the grip over Gaza by Hamas and its full-fledged army.

Allowing the Palestinian Authority to supervise the border is the opening to giving Hamas the keys to the slaughterhouse.

Of rocks and a hard place

August 12, 2014

Of rocks and a hard place, Israel Hayom, Ruthie Blum, August 12,2014

Pressure from the international community and the Israeli Left will make it difficult for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to reject Abbas, a perceived moderate, as a guarantor for and upholder of Hamas commitments. But woe is us if Netanyahu does not withstand it.

On Sunday, my friends and I were spared rockets and survived a rock. But there is a much larger bullet to dodge — having the Boston Strangler keep Jack the Ripper from obtaining the tools of his craft.

 

The sound of the boom was so startling that we yelped in unison. Luckily, our taxi driver swerved only slightly. Had he lost control of the wheel, we would have crashed into oncoming traffic or flipped over onto the embankment to our right.

Had he stopped to regain composure, we would have been at the mercy of our attackers. Not the ones Israelis had spent the last month guarding against, while our husbands, brothers and sons were busy eliminating as much of their technical capability as possible. Not those launching rockets and firing mortars into Israel from Gaza — those whose genocidal aggression was continuing to send us into safe rooms with each wail of an air raid siren.

No, these were not the terrorists across the southern border. This particular onslaught was coming from their brethren in Judea and Samaria, governed by the Palestinian Authority: a group of Arab teenagers positioned on a hill above the road, hurling large rocks at cars below.

As our driver sped ahead, we could see the determined young men pitching their deadly weapons at the vehicles behind us. If not for their hate-filled upbringing, their energy and focus would have been channeled into trying out for a baseball team. But their leader, PA President Mahmoud Abbas prefers that they hone their skills as assassins.

We called the police.

“Yes,” the dispatcher said. “We already know about it.” A lot of good that seemed to do.

The crack of the rock on the side of the vehicle (which, had it landed a few inches higher, would have smashed the window and hit the driver in the head) was not the kind of boom we had been expecting when my two friends and I set out on Sunday morning.

The purpose of our day trip from Tel Aviv to Sderot and other places had been to visit the “front lines” of the current war, Operation Protective Edge. A 72-hour cease-fire that went into effect last Tuesday was slated to end at 8 a.m. on Friday, yet the residents of the south were encouraged to resume their prewar routines. All of the terror tunnels with shafts into Israel had been destroyed — they were told — and negotiations for a lasting truce were taking place in Cairo. It’s all winding down, they were assured.

But, of course, it wasn’t winding down. Except for people in the center of the country, that is, who began flooding the beaches and restaurants which they had been avoiding up until that point.

In spite of Israel’s tiny size — or perhaps because of it — there is a great geographical divide between towns and cities separated by a two-hour drive. It is thus that when we mentioned we were going “to the south,” everyone responded with the raise of an eyebrow and an admonishment to “be careful.”

If anything, this constituted incentive, not deterrence. Hamas, Islamic Jihad and Fatah aim to rid the region of its Jews. It appeared both silly and short-sighted of Tel Avivians and others to forget that this war is still raging, just because it is only the children in the communities close to Gaza who are wetting their beds in bomb shelters.

“Be careful,” we were warned, as though we were embarking on a journey to a far-away foreign land. This sounded funny to the New Yorker with us, a first-timer in the Holy Land, who has had longer commutes to New Jersey during rush-hour.

Though interesting and enlightening, our “fact-finding” mission was uneventful where rockets were concerned. As providence would have it, red alerts went off in each location only after we left.

It was not until the last leg of our tour (after visiting the ancient ruins of the Jewish town of Susya‎ in the southeast of Mount Hebron and making our way to Jerusalem) that we were jolted back to the war. Not specifically the one in Gaza, mind you, but the more comprehensive battle against Israel that has been waged since before the state’s inception.

We were reminded, too, that Abbas’ response to U.S.-brokered peace talks between Israel and the PA — during which only Israel made concessions (chief among them the release of bloodthirsty Palestinian terrorists) — was to form a unity government with Hamas in June.

As we returned late Sunday night from Jerusalem, a rocket salvo flew over Tel Aviv, just before a new 72-hour cease-fire went into effect, to enable “progress” in Cairo. On Monday morning, an Israeli delegation arrived in Egypt to negotiate indirectly with Hamas, via PA representative Saeb Erekat and Arab League officials.

Among Hamas’ many demands is the opening of its borders for the free flow of people and goods in and out of Gaza. Translated from Arabic into English, this means enabling Hamas to rebuild its tunnels and receive fresh supplies of missiles, rockets and mortars from its benefactors in Iran.

One ostensible way to ensure that only “humanitarian” materials for rebuilding civil society in Gaza are able to enter the terrorist enclave is through a third party appointed as a monitor. Hamas has “consented” to have Abbas handle this task.

The PA president is not merely weak, however, and shaking at the knees at the prospect of having to take on any actual responsibilities; he also happens to side with Hamas in relation to Israel.

Pressure from the international community and the Israeli Left will make it difficult for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to reject Abbas, a perceived moderate, as a guarantor for and upholder of Hamas commitments. But woe is us if Netanyahu does not withstand it.

On Sunday, my friends and I were spared rockets and survived a rock. But there is a much larger bullet to dodge — having the Boston Strangler keep Jack the Ripper from obtaining the tools of his craft.

It is from obscenities like this, not visits to Sderot, that we all need to “be careful.”

Iraq crisis: ‘It is death valley. Up to 70 per cent of them are dead’

August 12, 2014

Iraq crisis: ‘It is death valley. Up to 70 per cent of them are dead’On board Iraqi army helicopter delivering aid to the trapped Yazidis, Jonathan Krohn sees a hellish sight

via Iraq crisis: ‘It is death valley. Up to 70 per cent of them are dead’ – Telegraph.

 

Mount Sinjar stinks of death. The few Yazidis who have managed to escape its clutches can tell you why. “Dogs were eating the bodies of the dead,” said Haji Khedev Haydev, 65, who ran through the lines of Islamic State jihadists surrounding it.

On Sunday night, I became the first western journalist to reach the mountains where tens of thousands of Yazidis, a previously obscure Middle Eastern sect, have been taking refuge from the Islamic State forces that seized their largest town, Sinjar.

I was on board an Iraqi Army helicopter, and watched as hundreds of refugees ran towards it to receive one of the few deliveries of aid to make it to the mountain. The helicopter dropped water and food from its open gun bays to them as they waited below. General Ahmed Ithwany, who led the mission, told me: “It is death valley. Up to 70 per cent of them are dead.”

Two American aid flights have also made it to the mountain, where they have dropped off more than 36,000 meals and 7,000 gallons of drinking water to help the refugees, and last night two RAF C-130 transport planes were also on the way.

However, Iraqi officials said that much of the US aid had been “useless” because it was dropped from 15,000ft without parachutes and exploded on impact.

Handfuls of refugees have managed to escape on the helicopters but many are being left behind because the craft are unable to land on the rocky mountainside. There, they face thirst and starvation, as well as the crippling heat of midsummer.

Hundreds, if not more, have already died, including scores of children. A Yazidi Iraqi MP, Vian Dakhil, told reporters in Baghdad:

“We have one or two days left to help these people. After that they will start dying en masse.”

The Iraqi Army is running several aid missions every day, bringing supplies including water, flour, bread and shoes.

The helicopter flights aim to airlift out refugees on each flight, but the mountains are sometimes too rocky to land on, meaning they return empty.

Even when it can land, the single helicopter can take just over a dozen refugees at a time, and then only from the highest point of the mountain where it is out of range of jihadist missiles. Barely 100 have been rescued in this way.

 

Displaced Yazidi people rush towards an aid helicopter (RUDAW)
 

The flights have also dropped off at least 50 armed Peshmerga, Kurdish forces, on the mountain, according to Captain Ahmed Jabar.

Other refugees have made their way through Islamic State lines, evading the jihadists to reach safety, or travelling through

Kurdish-controlled sections of Syria to reach the town of Dohuk. So far the Yazidi refugees left behind have survived by hiding in old cave dwellings, drinking from natural springs and hunting small animals, but with families scattered across Mount Sinjar, a barren range stretching for around 35 miles near the border with Syria, there are fears aid will not reach them all unless the humanitarian relief operation is significantly stepped up .

Hundreds can now be seen making their way slowly across its expanse, carrying what few possessions they managed to flee with on their backs. Exhausted children lie listlessly in the arms of their parents, older ones trudging disconsolately alongside while the sun beats down overhead.

The small amount of relief the peshmerga militia can bring up into the mountain is not simply enough.

One pershmerga fighter, Faisal Elas Hasso, 40, said: “To be honest, there’s not enough for everyone,” he said. “It’s five people to one bottle.”

The refugees who made it out described desperate scenes as they awaited help from the outside world.

“There were about 200 of us, and about 20 of that number have died,” said Saydo Haji, 28. “We can live for two days, not more.”

Emad Edo, 27, who was rescued in an airlift on Friday at the mountain’s highest point explains how he had to leave his niece, who barely had enough strength to keep her eyes open, to her fate.

“She was about to die, so we left her there and she died,” he said.

Others shared similar stories. “Even the caves smell very bad,” Mr Edo added. According to several of the airlifted refugees, the Geliaji cave alone has become home to 50 dead bodies.

Saydo Kuti Naner, 35, who was one of 13 Yazidis who snuck through Islamic State lines on Thursday morning, said he travelled through Kurdish-controlled Syria to get to Kurdistan.

He left behind his mother and father, too old to make the rough trip, as well as 200 sheep. “We got lucky,” he said. “A girl was running [with us] and she got shot.” He added that this gave enough cover for the rest of them to get away.

Mikey Hassan said he, his two brothers and their families fled up into Mount Sinjar and then managed to escape to the Kurdish city of Dohuk after two days, by shooting their way past the jihadists. Mr Hassan said he and his family went for 17 hours with no food before getting their hands on some bread.

The Yazidis, an ethnically Kurdish community that has kept its religion alive for centuries in the face of persecution, are at particular threat from the Islamists, who regard them as ‘devil worshippers’, and drove them from their homes as the peshmerga fighters withdrew.

There have been repeated stories that the jihadists have seized hundreds of Yazidi women and are holding them in Mosul, either in schools or the prison. These cannot be confirmed, though they are widely believed and several Yazidi refugees said they had been unable to contact Yazidi women relatives who were living behind Islamic State lines.

Kamil Amin, of the Iraqi human rights ministry, said: “We think that the terrorists by now consider them slaves and they have vicious plans for them.”

Tens of thousands of Christians have also been forced to flee in the face of the advancing IS fighters, many cramming the roads east and north to Erbil and Dohuk. On Thursday alone, up to 100,000 Iraqi Christians fled their homes in the Plain of Ninevah around Mosul.

 

Refugees said the American air strikes on IS positions outside Erbil were too little, too late. They said they felt abandoned by everyone – the central government in Baghdad, the Americans and British, who invaded in 2003, and now the Kurds, who had promised to protect them.

“When the Americans withdrew from Iraq they didn’t protect the Christians,” said Jenan Yousef, an Assyrian Catholic who fled Qaraqosh, Iraq’s largest Christian town, in the early hours of

Thursday. “The Christians became the scapegoats. Everyone has been killing us.”

The situation in Sinjar has irreparably damaged the notion of home for the Yazidis. For a large portion of them, the unique culture of the area will never return, and they will therefore have nothing to go back for.

“We can’t go back to Sinjar mountain because Sinjar is surrounded by Arabs,” said Aydo Khudida Qasim, 34, who said that Sunni Arab villagers around Sinjar helped Islamic State take the area. Now he as well as many of his friends and relatives want to get out of Iraq

altogether. “We want to be refugees in other countries, not our own,” he said.

*Additional reporting by Richard Spencer, Erbil

Bennett: Salary transfer to Hamas is calm for money to terrorism

August 12, 2014

Bennett: Salary transfer to Hamas is calm for money to terrorism

Senior minister slams agreement taking shape in Cairo, calling it a ‘dangerous euphemism’; ‘It’s a diplomatic protection: Pay us – we’ll shoot at your later, don’t pay us – we’ll shoot at you now,’ Bennett says.

Roi KaisLatest Update: 08.12.14, 16:10 / Israel News

via Bennett: Salary transfer to Hamas is calm for money to terrorism – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Economy Minister and member of the Security Cabinet, Naftali Bennett, has gone on the offensive on Tuesday against an agreement taking shape in Cairo with the Palestinian factions, the details of which were published for the first time on Ynet on Monday night.

Details of an agreement obtained by Ynet show Israel has agreed to ease the blockade on Gaza, but not lift it entirely. In contrast, there is no agreement to demilitarize Gaza, as demanded by Israel.

Ynet has learned that Israel will agree to transfer the Hamas government salaries through a third party – facilitating the payment of Hamas officials’ salaries. It was further agreed that Israel would gradually expand the fishing area off the Gaza coast, initially expected to be six nautical miles. It was also decided that construction materials will enter Gaza under close supervision.

Bennett called the expected salary transfer “a dangerous euphemism. It’s a diplomatic protection: Pay us – we’ll shoot at your later, don’t pay us – we’ll shoot at you now.”

Bennett said that if this proposal goes to a vote in the cabinet, he will work with all of the tools at his disposal to convince the other ministers to reject it.

“The money will be transferred to the terrorists who are digging under our feet, to the rocket manufacturers, and to those who shoot at us. It’s very simple. It’s a ‘calm for money to terrorism’ formula,” he said.

The economy minister claimed this would “both leave the state of Israel with the continuation of Hamas’ strengthening, and harm our deterrence.”

“You can’t fight Hamas with one hand, and fund it with the other. The claim the money won’t go to terrorism when you give it to Hamas is false, to say the least, and this is exactly why Hamas is insisting on getting this funding,” he added.

Another issue close to agreement is that Israel will double the number of trucks entering Gaza through the Kerem Shalom crossing to approximately 600 trucks per day. Similarly, a decision by Israel to increase the monthly quota of permits for entry into the Gaza Strip through the Erez crossing is also close to being finalized. At the same time, criteria for entry into Israel from the Gaza Strip and the West Bank will be broadened.

A member of the Palestinian delegation told a Islamic-Jihad affiliated news site on Tuesday that a long-term ceasefire agreement could be reached by Wednesday.

The source claimed the agreement would include the lifting of the Gaza blockade, but failed to provide any details on that.

Islamic Jihad spokesman Yusef al-Hasayina told the site the Palestinian delegation is halfway through discussions on the major issues on the table.

“The Egyptian side has agreed to significant easing on the Rafah border crossing. There’s great determination among the Palestinian delegation to reach a real agreement that will bring to the end of the aggression and removal of the siege. Things in the Cairo talks will become clearer during the next 24 hours,” al-Hasayina said.

An Israeli official, on the other hand, was quoted by the media on Tuesday morning as saying no progress has been made in the talks.

“The gaps between the sides are big and there is no progress in the negotiations,” said an Israeli official, who declined to be named. There was no immediate comment from Hamas, the Islamist group that dominates Gaza.

A Palestinian official with knowledge of the Cairo talks told Reuters, on condition of anonymity: “So far we can’t say a breakthrough has been achieved … Twenty-four hours and we shall see whether we have an agreement.”

In the negotiations held Monday, the parties did not reach an understanding regarding the Gaza ports. Hamas sources in the Gaza Strip said Monday evening that it would be possible to delay in dealing with the airport and seaport if Israel agrees to the rest of their requirements. The sources noted that such a situation would still require an agreement in principle for the establishment of the ports.

Attila Somfalvi and Reuters contributed to this report.

Hamas Says Truce Would Only Be to Plan Next War

August 12, 2014

Hamas Clarifies Truce Would Only Be to Plan Next War

Hamas leadership in Gaza and Qatar reportedly divided over continuing terror war or stopping to ‘plan next campaign.

‘By Ari YasharFirst Publish: 8/12/2014, 3:55 PM

via Hamas Says Truce Would Only Be to Plan Next War – Defense/Security – News – Arutz Sheva.

 

Hamas Al-Qassam Brigades terrorist Reuters
 

Even as Israeli representatives are in Cairo to discuss a truce with Hamas on Tuesday, the terrorist group is taking pains to clarify it has no intentions of desisting from trying to wipe Israel off the map.

Hamas’s “military wing,” the Al-Qassam Brigades, released a statement presenting its position on the ongoing talks in Egypt.

“The warriors in Gaza are waiting with Allah’s help to renew the fighting, or to return to planning the next campaign. There’s no escape. Either jihad or planning (for the next jihad),” declared the statement.

The remarks leave no doubts that even in the case of a truce, from Hamas’s perspective the lull in fighting would only be an opportunity to rearm for the next terror war on the Jewish state. This facet is particularly concerning in light of reports of Israel agreeing to finance Hamas’s officials in Gaza as part of an agreement.

Slamming this proposal, Economics Minister Naftali Bennett (Jewish Home) stated Monday “this is political protection money: you pay us, then we’ll shoot you later; you don’t pay us, then we’ll shoot you right now. …It is impossible to fight our enemy with one hand and to fund it with the other.”

Further demonstrating how Hamas appears to view the talks as a chance for financial gains and to prepare for the next round of fighting is analysis suggesting that Hamas agreed to the current 72-hour ceasefire, which began on Sunday night at 12 a.m., as a means to gain Saudi and UAE funds.

Hamas divided over ending or continuing the war

Azzam al-Ahmed, the head of the Palestinian Authority (PA) delegation in Cairo for the truce talks, told Walla! on Tuesday that the talks are advancing, but “the gaps are still wide.”

The PA official, who represented Fatah in the Hamas unity deal in April and led negotiations in forming the unity government, insisted that Hamas’s period of controlling Gaza is over, and called for Israel to concede to Hamas demands for a sea and airport while supporting the PA in taking control of the Hamas enclave.

Another senior official from the PA delegation told Walla! that there are estimations that the current ceasefire may be extended by an additional 72-hour period.

Revealing Hamas’s position on the talks, the official commented “I’m still not sure that there’s a decision by Hamas to end this war.”

“There’s a great disagreement now between the Hamas leadership in Qatar headed by Khaled Mashaal, and between the senior members of the organization in Gaza. Doha (Qatar’s capital – ed.) is urging Mashaal all the time not to agree to Egypt as an intermediary,” disclosed the official.

The Gaza branch of Hamas also seems to hold enmity towards Egypt; just this week a senior Hamas leader, Mustafa Sawaf, urged the Palestinian Arab negotiating team to reject Egypt as an intermediary and find another third-party country to help Hamas realize its demands.

Liberman to ‘Post’: First get rid of Hamas, then hold PA elections, then pursue regional accord

August 12, 2014

Liberman to ‘Post’: First get rid of Hamas, then hold PA elections, then pursue regional accord

By HERB KEINONLAST UPDATED: 08/12/2014 15:34

As long as Hamas is strong on the ground, controls Gaza, and is popular in Judea and Samaria, a diplomatic process is simply impossible,” foreign minister says.

via Liberman to ‘Post’: First get rid of Hamas, then hold PA elections, then pursue regional accord | JPost | Israel News.

 

Avigdor Liberman Photo: MARC ISRAEL SELLEM/THE JERUSALEM POST
 

Getting rid of Hamas is a necessary condition for any wider diplomatic breakthrough, Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman told The Jerusalem Post in an interview on Tuesday.

“In order to make a diplomatic process possible, we have to get rid of Hamas,” he said. “As long as Hamas is strong on the ground, controls Gaza, and is popular in Judea and Samaria, a diplomatic process is simply impossible.”

Liberman’s comments came following skeletal diplomatic plans presented recently by two of his colleagues on the eight-person security cabinet: Justice Minister Tzipi Livni and Finance Minister Yair Lapid. Each of those plans leaned heavily on the Palestinian Authority, with Livni calling for a renewal of negotiations with the PLO (of which the PA is an organ), and Lapid calling for an international conference.

The foreign minister, during the interview conducted in his Jerusalem office, said it would be a mistake to build any process right now based on PA President Mahmoud Abbas.

“Abu Mazen’s [Abbas’s]legitimacy does not exist,” he said. “After we get rid of Hamas, the next stage is elections… We have to sign an international agreement with somebody with whom there is no doubt whether he has the authority to sign an agreement with us.”

Abbas does not have that legitimacy or authority, because there has not been an election in the PA since 2006, Liberman said.

“First topple Hamas, then elections, then a diplomatic process,” he said.

But the diplomatic process Liberman envisions is not a return to Oslo-style separate negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians. Rather, he envisions something much larger, which he termed a “regional comprehensive solution.”

“It is important to emphasize that our conflict is not a conflict with the Palestinians. Therefore, all the attempts to solve the conflict with the Palestinians failed,” he said.

The failure on the Palestinian track time after time was because of a faulty diagnosis, he stressed.

Israel’s conflict is not with the Palestinians, but rather with the Arab world, and has three dimensions: the Arab countries, the Palestinians, and the “split identity” of the Israeli Arabs, Liberman said. What was needed was one package that would solve – or as he said, “arrange” – Israel’s “relations with all three dimensions at one time.”

“This is the only way it will work,” he said. “The Palestinians alone do not have the critical mass to finish a deal with Israel that will demand many difficult decisions. If they do not feel that the Arab world is with them, they will not do it.”

In a departure from his position in the past, Liberman said the 2002 Saudi initiative could form a “basis” for arranging Israel’s relations with the Arab world, as long as it does not include any reference to a Palestinian right of refugee return.

“I think the Saudi initiative is much more relevant today than it was previously,” he said, adding that the central idea behind the initiative was not only an agreement between Israel and the Palestinians, but also an arrangement with the entire Arab world.

Asked what has changed to make him more amenable to the Saudi initiative, the foreign minister said there was a greater commonality of interests than there was a decade ago between Israel and the moderate Arab world.

Liberman pointed out that at the summit in Riyadh in March between US President Barack Obama and Saudi King Abdullah, the Saudi monarch – according to media reports – raised three issues: Iran, the Muslim Brotherhood, and the spillover effect of the conflict in Syria on the region.

“These are exactly the three problems bothering us,” he said. “So where there is a commonality of interests that is clear to everyone, there is an opportunity.”

While a separate agreement with the Palestinians would only be a “headache” for Israel, since there would be constant demands and friction over issues such as border crossings and taxes, there would be benefits in a wider arrangement that includes ties with Saudi Arabia and the moderate states in the Persian Gulf, Liberman said. “I think they understand now that no one from the outside will solve the problems of the Middle East,” he said.

He stressed that such an arrangement would have to include arrangements regarding the Israeli Arabs, and that he would insist on redrawing borders to transfer land and populations.

“When talking about [land] swaps, the [Arab] Triangle [east of Kfar Saba] needs to be part of a future Palestinian state,” he said, restating a position he has long advocated.

Liberman said he could not countenance a situation whereby Israeli citizens hold a sympathy strike with Hamas in Gaza during a time of war, while Israelis – both Jews and Muslims – were being killed by Hamas.

“From my perspective, those who identify with Hamas during a time of war should not be Israeli citizens,” he said, adding that the “dividing line” was not whether one was Jewish, Christian or Muslim, but rather whether one was loyal to the state, its symbols and values.

Studies were under way to check the feasibility of his ideas, Liberman said. An international conference would be the last stage of this “regional comprehensive solution,” and numerous understandings would have to be drawn up beforehand, he said.

Liberman said the commonality of interests he spoke of was not only recognized by governments, but was trickling down to the people as well.

“In order to understand what is happening in the Arab world, to see the difference in the Arab world, turn on Al Jazeera and Al-Arabiya to see how things are broadcast,” he said. “ It is like night and day.

While he characterized the Qatar-backed Al Jazeera as a “brainwashing tool” for global terrorist movements, he said the Saudi-supported Al-Arabiya “understands that the central problem is the Muslim Brotherhood, and that the suffering in Gaza is not because of Israel, but because of Hamas.”

While extremely critical of the role Qatar is playing by funding terrorist groups not only in the Middle East, but also in Africa, Asia and even Europe, he did not exaggerate the leverage the country has over Hamas.

Qatar was hosting Hamas and other terrorist organizations in Doha, and funding them handsomely, to ensure that they only operate outside Qatar, the foreign minister said. He characterized this as Qatar paying “protection money” to the terrorist organization.

“It is paying protection money in order to ensure security and quiet and calm inside Qatar, so they would work only outside,” he said. “I don’t know how much they are able to influence Hamas. I think Hamas has more influence on Qatar, than Qatar does on Hamas.”

Liberman was not optimistic about the outcome of the cease-fire talks being held in Cairo, saying that Hamas’s minimum demands were much more than Israel could give – in both the short and long terms. In the short term, he said, Hamas will stymie Israel’s demands for disarmament of Gaza, and also the introduction of any effective supervisory mechanism to ensure that money and construction materials pouring into the Strip after the conflict will not be diverted for Hamas’s use.

Furthermore, certain long-term goals of Hamas – such as a sea port – are things that Israel could never agree to.

“Hamas’s ultimate demand for a sea port is designed to bypass all the supervisory mechanisms we want to set up,” Liberman noted. “It is clear that the whole idea of a sea port is to smuggle in weapons, construction materials, terrorists and advisers from Iran and other places.”

Regarding the composition of the UN Human Rights Council commission named to investigate the Gaza operation, Liberman would not say whether Israel would cooperate with the probe, saying “We don’t have to say what we are going to do.”

He did, however, blast the appointment to the panel of Canadian professor William Schabas, whom he said not only thinks that Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu – but also former president Shimon Peres – needed to face charges at the International Criminal Court.

Considering Schabas’s record, Liberman said, he was surprised the UNHRC did not appoint Hamas head Khaled Mashaal to lead the inquiry, since their ideas about Israel are “more or less the same.”

On another issue, Liberman – when asked what he meant recently when he said that Israel would respond to Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s anti-Semitic comments if they continued after Sunday’s presidential elections – said that while Israel was not looking for any conflict or friction with anyone, “we cannot accept a situation where we are someone’s punching bag.”

“We are trying to preserve correct ties with Turkey,” Liberman said. “We have no interest in creating a conflict.”

He pointed out that trade with Turkey has increased over the past few years, and that the Foreign Ministry approved recent requests from Ankara to send drugs and humanitarian aid to Gaza, as well as to fly injured Palestinians to Turkey for medical treatment.

Bennett: Giving Hamas money in exchange for quiet is ‘political extortion’

August 12, 2014

Bennett: Giving Hamas money in exchange for quiet is ‘political extortion

‘By JPOST.COM STAFF 08/12/2014 14:08

Bennett says money given to pay salaries to Hamas employees will be used to fund more tunnels, rockets and terror; MKs say any deal must include return of bodies of IDF soldiers killed in Gaza.

via Bennett: Giving Hamas money in exchange for quiet is ‘political extortion’ | JPost | Israel News.

 

Naftali Bennett Photo: MARC ISRAEL SELLEM/THE JERUSALEM POST
 

As reports emerged Tuesday of a possible deal being crafted between Israeli and Palestinian negotiators to end more than a month of hostilities on the Gaza front, right-wing politicians began speaking out against making concessions to Hamas.

Economy Minister Naftali Bennett (Bayit Yehudi) addressed reports that Israel was considering agreeing to a Hamas demand to pay the back salaries of thousands of its employees in Gaza. “The ‘money for Hamas in exchange for quiet’ formula is political extortion,” he wrote on his Facebook page.

“Let’s tell the truth: the money will go to terrorists who are digging [tunnels] beneath us, to those producing missiles and to the people shooting at us,” the minister warned.

Bennett argued that the Hamas “extortionists,” were essentially saying, “Pay us, and we will shoot at you later; don’t pay us, and we will shoot at you now.”

He said that the “money to terrorists in exchange for quiet” formula would allow Hamas to recuperate after Operation Protective Edge and rearm itself for the next round of fighting.

“We can’t fight Hamas with one hand and fund them with the other,” he argued.

Bennett said that he was fighting to prevent Israel from agreeing to such cease-fire terms in the security cabinet’s discussions of the issues and he called on the other government ministers to do the same.

“You don’t pay Hamas, you defeat them,” he stated.

Deputy Transportation Minister Tzipi Hotovely (Likud) said that the emerging truce deal would “cancel out all the achievements of Operation Protective Edge and turn Hamas into the victor.”

She said that rather than give Hamas more benefits, Israel should worsen conditions in Gaza immediately. Hotovely called for Israel to halt shipments of goods to Gaza and to stop supplying electricity to the Strip.

Likud MK Miri Regev said that any cease-fire deal would have to require Hamas to return the bodies of St.-Sgt. Oron Shaul and Lt. Hadar Goldin, the two IDF soldiers killed in Gaza whose place of burial remains unknown. She said that an agreement would also have to include the understanding that Hamas will be held responsible for all rocket fire from Gaza and expect a heavier response from Israel to the fire.

Bayit Yehudi MK Orit Struck said that Israel “must staunchly oppose any deal that allows for money and building materials to enter Gaza without tight supervision that will completely prevent the development of new tunnels, weapons and terror.”

Struck added that Israel should not agree to allow any salaries to be paid to Hamas employees before the bodies of the IDF soldiers are returned.

Swedish politician quits after ‘Jewish pigs’ slur online

August 12, 2014

Politician quits after 'Jewish pigs' slur online

A soldier near Gaza. Photo: Tsafrir Abayov/TT

Politician quits after ‘Jewish pigs’ slur online

Published: 05 Aug 2014 11:28 GMT+02:00
Updated: 05 Aug 2014 14:28 GMT+02:00

Omar Omeirat, Social Democrat candidate for the town council of Filipstad, central Sweden, gave a speech in the town on Friday evening advocating diversity and openness.

On Saturday he sang a very different tune.

“The entire Muslim world is sitting and watching while our brothers and sisters in Palestine are slaughtered by the Jewish pigs,” Omeritat wrote on his Facebook page.

“May Allah strengthen those who defend Palestine, and be merciful towards the dead Muslims. Amen.”

His Facebook page also included a flag used by the Islamist group Isis, local paper NWT reported.

The post quickly became public knowledge, and the young politician came under fire for his choice of words.

“I called Omar about what he had written, and he said that he had watched a film where Palestinian women and children were murdered by Jews,”  Åsa Hååkman Feldt, Social Democrat spokeswoman in Filipstad, told The Local.

Omeirat quickly regretted the post, and updated his Facebook status to an apology.

“He never meant to judge people who are Jews, Christians, or anything else,” Feldt explained. “He just meant to judge Israel as a state.”

On Tuesday it was announced he would be stepping down from his position.

“I regret what I said,” Omeirat told Sveriges Television. “It was the wrong choice of words and no one should say something like that.”

Feldt confirmed that Omeirat had decided to leave politics, and said it was entirely his own choice.

“Of course we condemn his statement,” Feldt told The Local. “But it is Omar himself who has decided that he should take the consequences for his actions and leave the party.”

Feldt called the situation “unusual”, saying that the most common reason to step down is sickness. She explained that the town’s voting slips are already printed and that Omeirat’s name will still be on the list, but that he will not be eligible for a position in autumn elections.

“You really have to think about what you write on Facebook, especially as a politician,” Feldt added. “It’s a public record and there are consequences.”

Last month Social Democrat party leader Stefan Löfven was criticized for expressing his thoughts about Gaza, when he wrote on Facebook that “Israel has the right to defend itself”.

—-

 

Löfven: Israel has the right to defend itself

Stefan Löfven meets a member of the Jewish community to discuss anti-Semitism during a recent visit to Malmö. Erika Oldberg/TT

Löfven: Israel has the right to defend itself

Published: 13 Jul 2014 14:31 GMT+02:00
Updated: 13 Jul 2014 14:31 GMT+02:00

The election favourite posted the comment on Saturday night and within minutes he was on the receiving end of angry replies from users of the social network.

“Israel must respect international law but obviously has the right to defend itself. It is a huge tragedy that the violence escalates,” Löfven wrote.

Most of the comments were critical of the political party leader’s stance with one user posting; “Israel kills right now Palestinian children every day. Is that self-defence?”

Several other people said they had no intention in voting for Löfven in September following the remark.

Others said he was letting the Social Democrats down by not maintaining the stance of the late Olof Palme and Anna Lindh, who were critical of Israel when they were in office.

“It is fairly modest wording but that makes no difference, it is an issue where there is only room for two opinions,” political scientist Stig-Björn Ljunggren told Aftonbladet.

Löfven’s comment appears to clash with a statement released by the Social Democrats’ foreign policy spokesperson Urban Ahlin. In a press release issued on Thursday Ahlin stated that the party needed to be clear in its reaction against the Israeli bombing of Gaza.

He also condemned the Hamas rocket fire against Israel and called for a peaceful two-state solution.

“It’s very surprising (what Löfven wrote) as it differs from what the party’s foreign policy spokesperson Urban Ahlin said the other day,” Ulf Bjereld, a professor of political scientist at Gothenburg University, told Aftonbladet.

On Saturday several demonstrations were held across Sweden in protest over the Gaza bombings. A manifestation in Stockholm attracted over a 1,000 people with many carrying signs which were critical of Israel.

At the time of writing Löfven’s post has attracted more than 2,300 comments. He has yet to speak publicly on the furore surrounding his remark.

The Local/pr