Archive for March 29, 2019

Off Topic – Official: Obama White House Pushed Delay of Anti-Israel U.N. Resolution to Provide Cover for Clinton

March 29, 2019

Source: Official: Obama White House Pushed Delay of Anti-Israel U.N. Resolution to Provide Cover for Clinton

( Obama & Hillary anti-Israel?  Who would have guessed? – JW )

Barack Obama and Samantha Power / Getty Images

BY: 

A former Obama administration official said the administration orchestrated the delaying of a controversial anti-Israel United Nations resolution until after the 2016 presidential election, knowing it would pass when the United States abstained.

The official’s claim contradicts on-the-record denials by Obama administration officials, who attacked critics at the time who suggested they were involved in its drafting.

Speaking anonymously to the New York Times, the official said the White House feared putting pressure on Hillary Clinton to either condemn or defend the resolution against Israeli settlements and potentially upset Jewish donors during her election fight against Donald Trump. The U.S. decision to abstain on U.N. Security Council resolution 2334 was widely viewed as a parting shot by Obama at Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

“There is a reason the U.N. vote did not come up before the election in November,” the former official said, in a portion of the report flagged by Jewish Insider. “Was it because you were going to lose voters to Donald Trump? No. It was because you were going to have skittish donors. That, and the fact that we didn’t want Clinton to face pressure to condemn the resolution or be damaged by having to defend it.”

The official said fear of donor wrath dictated not only “what was done but what was not done, and what was not even contemplated.”

Former U.S. Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro strongly denied the anonymous quote, telling Jewish Insider it was a “garbage claim” and the administration, as it professed at the time, was caught by surprise by the Egyptian-Palestinian drafted resolution.

The U.N. Security Council voted 14-0 on Resolution 2334 on Dec. 23, 2016, to demand a halt to settlement construction in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, deeming both areas to be illegally occupied by Israel. East Jerusalem is home to the Western Wall of the Temple Mount, a Jewish holy site.

U.N. Ambassador Samantha Power could have killed the resolution with the veto power of a permanent member, but she essentially voted yes by abstaining, delighting the Palestinian Authority and infuriating Israel.

Netanyahu was unequivocal at the time in his accusation of Obama’s involvement, saying “we have no doubt that the Obama administration initiated it, stood behind it, coordinated its versions and insisted upon its passage.”

Obama officials strongly denied the administration played any role in the resolution’s timing, including then-Secretary of State John Kerry, in a December 2016 speech eviscerating Israeli settlement policies and Netanyahu’s government for an “extreme” agenda.

“We also strongly reject the notion that somehow the United States was the driving force behind this resolution,” Kerry said. “The Egyptians and Palestinians had long made clear to all of us, to all of the international community, their intention to bring a resolution to a vote before the end of the year. And we communicated that to the Israelis and they knew it anyway. The United States did not draft or originate this resolution, nor did we put it forward.”

He acknowledged telling other countries that the U.S. would consider abstention on the vote if it was “balanced,” calling such diplomacy “standard practice.”

The Free Beacon reported Vice President Joe Biden denied accusations he personally lobbied foreign leaders to support the resolution. Sources told Tablet and the Free Beacon Biden spoke to Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko and pressured him to vote “yes,” but Biden’s national security adviser Colin Kahl said no such phone calls took place.

Kahl was one of the leading voices behind the initial decision to remove recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s capital from the 2012 Democratic platform.

Obama deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes also denied it in a CNN interview shortly after the vote, blaming the Israeli settlement policy for making a two-state solution “impossible” but saying the administration didn’t know anything about the language of the resolution until it was put forward. Only then, Rhodes said, did Obama instruct Power to abstain.

Egypt withdrew its sponsorship from the resolution after Trump, then the president-elect, called the Egyptian president and urged him not to go forward. The resolution was eventually sponsored by New Zealand, Malaysia, Venezuela and Senegal.

A foreign policy expert involved in the fight over the resolution at the time told the Free Beacon “everyone in DC” knew Rhodes worked the phones against the Israelis to push the resolution with reporters.

“He was absolutely furious with the Egyptians for not wanting to destroy their relationship with Israel by advancing the resolution,” the official said. “This one was emotional and personal for him.”

Rhodes came under fire in 2016 when a lengthy New York Times profile quoted him boasting of creating an “echo chamber” of know-nothing reporters to sell the Iran nuclear deal.

Administration spokesman Ned Price tweeted at the time that reports of a secret meeting between U.S. and Palestinian officials to orchestrate the anti-Israel resolution were false. Egyptian media reported Kerry and National Security Adviser Susan Rice expressed willingness to Palestinians to support a “balanced” resolution and accused Netanyahu of trying to destroy a two-state solution.

Ned Price (NARA)

@Price44

We’ve been clear the alleged meeting incl @AmbassadorRice & @JohnKerry described in this document never occurred. Account is 100% false.

@thehill

Leaked documents claim to prove collusion between U.S., Palestinians on U.N. votehttp://hill.cm/427AG6X 

View image on Twitter

Ned Price (NARA)

@Price44

This is a total fabrication. This meeting never occurred. https://twitter.com/gidonshaviv/status/813821590752415744 

Ned Price (NARA)

@Price44

Gal Berger גל ברגר

@galberger

Palestinian top official just confirmed to me that there were 2 separated meetings with Kerry and Susan Rice

Obama defended the abstention in remarks to a New York City synagogue last year, saying it was in keeping with U.S. values and maintaining credibility with the rest of the world.

A writer for the Brookings Institution think tank guessed as early as October 2016 that Obama had a “surprise” to settle a score with Netanyahu once Obama was a lame duck. One of the possible ways: “Abstain on a Palestinian move to bring a new draft resolution branding settlements as illegal (a revised version of the 2011 draft resolution, which the United States vetoed) to a vote at the Security Council.”

Support for Israel from Democrats has dwindled dramatically in favor of increased support for the Palestinians over the past decade, while Republican support for Israel has grown stronger. Netanyahu and Trump are strong allies, while Netanyahu and Obama were often at loggerheads, particularly over the latter’s support for the Iran nuclear deal.

One Obama official anonymously called Netanyahu a “chickenshit” who had “no guts” in 2014, and the White House was enraged by Netanyahu’s 2015 address to Congress, at the invitation of Speaker John Boehner (R., Ohio), to attack the nuclear deal as dangerous and ill-conceived.

Rhodes, now an MSNBC contributor, told the Times he and other officials wanted the administration to take an even tougher stance against Israel while in office but they were handcuffed by “the donor class.”

“The Washington view of Israel-Palestine is still shaped by the donor class,” Rhodes said. “The donor class is profoundly to the right of where the activists are, and frankly, where the majority of the Jewish community is.”

 

Off Topic:  Jeanine Pirro to return says Fox News host during Trump interview 

March 29, 2019

Source: Jeanine Pirro to return says Fox News host during Trump interview – American Politics – Jerusalem Post

Trump personally called for the outspoken judge and Fox News host to return in an interview with Sean Hannity.

BY JERUSALEM POST STAFF
 MARCH 28, 2019 14:48

Jeanine Pirro

Suspended Fox News commentator Jeanine Pirro will reportedly return Saturday, following her controversial comments about Rep. Ilhan Omar.

Justice with Judge Jeanine, the top rated show on the American cable news network, has been off the air for the past two weeks after Pirro made an issue of Omar’s comments regarding the pro-Israel community.

US President Donald Trump personally called for Fox News to reinstate Pirro during a May 27 interview with long-time Fox News host Sean Hannity, to which Hannity replied, “she’s back Saturday.”

Pirro, whose top-rated weekly show covers American politics and the Middle East, discussed the firestorm over Omar’s anti-Israel rhetoric which many said bordered on overt antisemitism. On her March 9 show, Pirro blasted Omar for questioning the loyalty of American Jews by rhetorically asking if her Muslim faith means she is more loyal to Islam.
“Omar wears a hijab which according to the Quran 33:59 tells women to cover so they won’t get molested. Is her adherence to this Islamic doctrine indicative of her adherence to Sharia law which in itself is antithetical to the United States constitution?”
Pirro’s comments drew complaints of Islamophobia, and a rare condemnation from her own network.

Fox News never officially suspended Pirro, but bumped her Saturday program for a special broadcast two weeks in a row.

Pirro was born in New York to Lebanese parents and served as a court judge and district attorney. She is the author of five books, the latest titled, Liars, Leakers, and Liberals: The Case Against the Anti-Trump Conspiracy. Her Fox News show has aired since 2011 with consistent high ratings.

Donald J. Trump

@realDonaldTrump

Ilhan Omar, Democratic representative of the 5th district of Minnesota assumed office in January. Born in Somalia to a Muslim family, she is a member of the powerful House of Representatives foreign relations committee.

 

Japanese refiners halt Iran oil imports as waiver expiry looms

March 29, 2019

Source: Japanese refiners halt Iran oil imports as waiver expiry looms – World News – Jerusalem Post

The last Iranian oil cargo onboard supertanker Kisogawa is expected to arrive at Chiba, Japan, on April 9, the data showed.

BY REUTERS
 MARCH 29, 2019 08:18
Japanese refiners halt Iran oil imports as waiver expiry looms

TOKYO – Japanese refineries have put a halt on imports of Iranian oil after buying 15.3 million barrels between January and March ahead of the expiry of a temporary waiver on US sanctions, according to industry sources and data on Refinitiv Eikon.

The waiver, which allowed Japan to buy some Iranian oil for another 180 days, expires in early May. However, Japanese refiners want to ensure enough time for all cargoes already loaded to arrive in Japan and for payments to be completed.

“We think it would be difficult to keep on lifting Iranian oil after March,” a Fuji Oil spokesman said, noting that banks and insurance companies want to make sure all the transactions and deliveries are done well before the waivers expire.

The last Iranian oil cargo onboard supertanker Kisogawa is expected to arrive at Chiba, Japan, on April 9, the data showed.

The United States last year demanded that nations cut all Iranian oil imports when it reimposed sanctions on the country’s petroleum sector on Nov. 4 over Tehran’s nuclear program.

However, Washington granted temporary exemptions to Iran’s biggest oil clients – Japan, China, India, South Korea, Taiwan, Italy, Greece and Turkey.

Refiners in Japan, the world’s fourth-biggest oil consumer, had stopped loading Iranian oil by mid-September, and only resumed loading in late January after banks received government assurances about processing payments to Iran.

Japan has loaded 15.3 million barrels of Iranian crude in the first three months this year, which is equivalent to 86,430 barrels per day (bpd) during the six-month waiver period, according to Refinitiv data and Reuters calculations.

This represents a 33 percent drop from an average of 129,300 bpd that Japanese companies lifted between January and September last year before the sanctions kicked in, Refinitiv data showed.

The drop was more than the 20 percent reduction in supplies that Washington was said to have sought from each country over the six-month waiver period.

Japan has increased imports from the Middle East, Russia and the Americas as its Iranian imports fell, according to government data.

Japanese refiners have been pushing the government to seek an extension of the US sanctions waivers after the initial exemption period expires.

Japanese officials and their US counterparts met earlier this month in Washington to discuss the US sanctions.

“I think the waiver could be extended, but maybe for a smaller volume and for a smaller number of countries,” said Takayuki Nogami, chief economist at Japan Oil, Gas and Metals National Corp.

“If the US government does not extend the waiver, it could push crude oil prices up significantly as the gasoline season approaches and it could hurt Trump’s reputation,” he said.

On Wednesday, Japan extended state-backed insurance to cover imports of oil from Iran for another year.

 

Microsoft seizes 99 Iranian websites used for hacking and cyber attacks 

March 29, 2019

Source: Microsoft seizes 99 Iranian websites used for hacking and cyber attacks – Middle East – Jerusalem Post

BY JERUSALEM POST STAFF
 MARCH 29, 2019 11:28
A man holds a laptop computer as cyber code is projected on him

Microsoft says it has seized 99 Iranian websites used to steal confidential information and launch cyber attacks.

In a report by the Associated Press, Microsoft said that it had been tracking and watching the group of hackers for almost six years – since 2013.

The group used websites and links disguised to look like popular internet sites ncluding Microsoft and its LinkedIn, Outlook and Windows products to try and steal information from reporters, activists, groups, and political dissidents in the Middle East, including those “protesting oppressive regimes,” Microsoft confirmed in court filing.

The hackers were found to be from Iran but “not specifically to its government,” AP reported. Tehran has also denied being involved in hacking-related sandals in the past.

Speaking to AP, security researcher at Atlanta-based Secureworks, Allison Wikoff, said it is one of the “more active Iranian threat groups” she has observed.

She added Microsoft’s take down was “a big win” using a practice known as “sinkholing,” which involves taking over adversary domains and analyzing their traffic to protect against future attacks.

In the past, Microsoft has taken hackers to court. It used a similar strategy to “sinkholing” in 2016 to seize fake domains created by Russia-backed hackers.

 

Is the IDF prepared for Palestinian violence this weekend? 

March 29, 2019

Source: Is the IDF prepared for Palestinian violence this weekend? – Arab-Israeli Conflict – Jerusalem Post

What has the IDF done to prepare for Land Day and the 1year anniversary of The Great Return Marches?

BY ANNA AHRONHEIM
 MARCH 28, 2019 19:15
IDF troops in action near the Gaza Strip

With a violent week behind it, Israel’s security establishment is bracing for thousands of Palestinians to riot this weekend across the West Bank and Gaza Strip, marking Land Day and the one-year anniversary of the Great March of Return demonstrations along the Gaza front.

Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh called on “our Palestinian people in Gaza, the occupied West Bank and abroad to participate in Land Day [March 30] and take part in the million-man march.”

Land Day commemorates the Israeli government’s expropriation of Arab-owned land in the Galilee on March 30, 1976. Six unarmed citizens were killed and hundreds wounded and arrested in the ensuing riots and confrontations with the IDF and police.

Last year on Land Day, Palestinians in the Gaza Strip began their Great March of Return with thousands of Gazans violently demonstrating along the security fence with Israel, demanding an end to the 12-year-long blockade of the coastal enclave.

Close to 300 Gazans have been killed in the past year, including women and children as well as medics and journalists.

In late January, an IDF officer was lightly wounded after he was struck in his helmet by sniper fire along the Gaza Strip security fence, with PIJ claiming responsibility. The officer was struck near Kibbutz Kissufim, the same area where Staff Sgt. Aviv Levi was fatally shot in the chest by sniper fire. Levi was the first soldier killed along the Gaza front since Operation Protective Edge in 2014. Another soldier was struck by sniper fire in the area less than a week after Levi was killed.

The reinforcement of IDF troops began on Monday, following the firing of a long-range rocket which destroyed a home in Moshav Mishmeret, some 120 km from where it was launched in Rafah.

Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Aviv Kochavi ordered the mobilization of a divisional brigade and three regular brigades, as well as the call up of additional reserve forces. He also canceled the exchange of IDF battalions in multiple regions that had been scheduled for later this week.

A quick drive to Israel’s South reveals the tanks and armored personnel carriers parked  in fields close to the Gaza border waiting for the order to enter Gaza.

But the order to begin a ground operation never materialized. Instead a shaky ceasefire was reached.

But the IDF did not cancel the deployment of the extra troops. The army is anticipating an exceptionally violent weekend along the fence, not only on Friday when the usual riots take place, but also on Saturday when Palestinians will mark both the one-year anniversary of the Great March of Return and Land Day.

On Wednesday, Kochavi visited the Gaza Division and met with Brig.-Gen. Eliezer Toledano, along with the head of the Southern Command Maj.-Gen. Herzi Halevi.

“During the situational assessment, the chief of staff was briefed on the readiness of troops and for various scenarios, as well as on the readiness of the additional troops that arrived in the past few days,” the IDF said in a statement, adding that operational plans were also discussed.

The IDF is not ruling out any scenario for this upcoming weekend, including the breaching of the security fence by thousands of rioters and Hamas operatives who would try to abduct soldiers or civilians and bring them back inside the Hamas-run enclave.

As such, the IDF has also deployed additional snipers who have been stationed to defend against Gazan sniper fire and explosive devices thrown by Palestinians. Unmanned aerial devices with observation equipment and crowd control measures, as well as combat helicopters, have also been deployed.

During the violent weekly protests, Gazans have been burning tires and hurling stones and marbles, as well as other types of violence which include the throwing of grenades and improvised explosive devices (including military-grade explosives) towards troops. Ball bearings and other projectiles are also launched by high-velocity slingshots towards Israeli forces along the border.

In addition, mines and booby-trapped explosive devices with delayed detonation devices are also laid along the fence during the riots under the cover of smoke and crowds, and “pose a direct threat to the lives and safety of IDF forces operating in the border area,” the military said.

In response to the protests, the IDF has already “substantially” increased its forces deployed on the Gaza border and all troops have undergone “specially developed trainings designed to replicate the expected elements of the Gaza border events.” Israel has also stationed counter-terrorism forces in communities along the Gaza border in order to rapidly respond to any infiltration or military attacks.

The IDF has also deployed Iron Dome missile defense systems across the country should Gazan groups launch rockets towards Israel’s home front.

The IDF has also constructed sand berms to provide defenses for IDF forces along the border, and also dug long trenches and laid barbed wire behind these berms in an attempt to delay crowds and vehicles from reaching Israeli civilian communities following any large-scale infiltration.

The military is also currently developing a fortified vehicle that can shoot water at great distances. Once operational, it is expected these water cannons will help with riot control.

Kochavi – who was recently sworn in as the military’s top officer – has prioritized the southern front as one which could explode into war at any moment, and has visited the Southern Command dozens of times, where he’s met with senior officers and approved operational plans for war, including setting up a centralized administrative unit to prepare a list of potential targets in Gaza should war break out.

While the calm has held since Monday, the tinderbox remains highly combustible. All that is needed is a spark to ignite a conflagration.

 

Haniyeh: Our behaviour at march of the million depends on our demands 

March 29, 2019

Source: Haniyeh: Our behaviour at march of the million depends on our demands – Arab-Israeli Conflict – Jerusalem Post

BY TAMAR BEERI
 MARCH 29, 2019 15:32
Hamas Chief Ismail Haniyeh looks on as he attends the funeral of Palestinian Hamas militants

Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh spoke on Friday afternoon regarding the negotiations with Israel mediated by Egypt, explaining that the behavior of Hamas at march of the million will depend on their demands being met.

“We continue our discussions today with our Egyptian brothers and with the participation of the factions,” Haniyeh said. “We are completing our earlier discussions so as to achieve our goal. We stand at a crossroads and a deep examination of Israeli stances, as well as Israel’s response to the needs of our nation.”

Haniyeh explained that based on decisions made at these deliberations, they will “determine the way in which the situation will pan out at the march of the million of Land Day.”

“We are in the final stretch of the road, which will have a serious impact on the decisions of Hamas and the factions and especially on the future,” he stated.

“We are working with our Egyptian brothers to find a solution to the humanitarian crisis in Gaza to end the suffering of our people and establish their dignity in their country,” Haniyeh said. “All of this will be achieved by reaching some serious understandings that will be respected by the enemy, understandings which include the need for a ceasefire, the entrance of humanitarian aide and the implementation of projects, the opening of crossings and fishing, employment programs and treatment of electricity problems and more, by way of the removal of the siege over the Gaza Strip.”

Haniyeh said that Hamas continues to “coordinate intensely with our brothers in Qatar.”

 

Hamas and Israel risk another Gaza war in deadly game of chicken

March 29, 2019

Source: Hamas and Israel risk another Gaza war in deadly game of chicken | The Times of Israel

As the threat of violence looms over border protests planned for Saturday, Egypt is scrambling to avoid another bloody conflict

Fire and smoke around buildings in Gaza City during reported Israeli strikes on March 25, 2019. (Mahmud Hams/AFP)

Fire and smoke around buildings in Gaza City during reported Israeli strikes on March 25, 2019. (Mahmud Hams/AFP)

In the lead-up to this Saturday, when tens of thousands of Palestinians are expected to take part in protests along the Gaza border to commemorate both Land Day and the first anniversary of the “Great March of Return,” Hamas and Israel appear to be playing a high-stakes game of chicken, with each side — in both word and deed — threatening all-out war against the other.

As an Egyptian military intelligence delegation shuttles back and forth between Tel Aviv and Gaza to broker a ceasefire agreement between the two sides, Hamas is attempting to extract the greatest possible concessions from Israel using the specter of a punishing assault on the Israeli home front just before a national election — one that it knows would also cost Gaza dearly.

Though the main stated goal of the past year’s protests — the right for Gazan refugees and their descendants to return to their ancestral villages in Israel and the West Bank — is almost surely a nonstarter with Jerusalem, Hamas is hoping for Israel and Egypt to lift their blockade of the Strip, which the two countries maintain is necessary to prevent terror groups from importing weapons into the coastal enclave.

Israel, in turn, is looking to restore calm to the communities surrounding the Gaza Strip — meaning an end not only to rocket fire but to all violence along the border, including the riots along the security fence and the airborne incendiary and explosive devices — while also denying its enemy, Hamas, a victory, but says it is prepared for war if these talks fail.

IDF tanks stationed near the Israel-Gaza border on March 27, 2019. (Dudi Modan/Flash90)

“I recently ordered that units be reinforced and that additional [armored] vehicles be dispatched in preparation for an extensive campaign. All citizens of Israel know that if an extensive campaign is necessary, we will go into it strong and secure, after all other possibilities have been exhausted,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a statement Thursday.

Also on Thursday, Hamas officials said their group would only agree to an Egypt-mediated ceasefire with Israel after the protests for Land Day, the annual commemoration of the expropriation of Arab-owned land by the Israeli government in the northern region of Galilee in 1976.

The group is trying to paint Israel’s stubbornness and threats of force as the result of the ruling Likud’s election campaign, a fairly dubious assertion as another bout in Gaza — what would be Netanyahu’s third in under seven years — is as liable to negatively effect the prime minister’s re-election chances as help them.

The Islamist terror group is desperate for a victory in order to justify its reign over the beleaguered coastal enclave. Over 11 years into Hamas’s rule, the majority of young people in the Strip are unemployed, electricity is available for just a few hours per day and potable water is scarce.

Hamas’s latest gambit in its fight against the Jewish state, the March of Return protests, which began March 30, 2018, has resulted in nearly 200 people — both civilians and combatants — killed by Israeli gunfire, according to a recent UN report, but has yielded few to no significant achievements for the terror group.

Palestinians burn tires during a demonstration near the fence along the border with Israel, east of Gaza City, on February 22, 2019.(Photo by MAHMUD HAMS / AFP)

In recent weeks, residents of the Strip have started voicing their anger with Hamas, holding demonstrations in the streets against the economic conditions in Gaza. The terror group has responded with swift and harsh crackdowns to quell the unrest, sending its security forces to beat protesters and conduct mass arrests.

As the one-year anniversary of the March of Return protests approaches, Hamas and other terror groups in the Strip have stepped up their violent activities against the State of Israel: Scores of balloon-borne incendiary and explosive devices have been launched across the border; so-called “confusion units” set off powerful explosives during nightly riots along the security fence to frighten the Israelis living nearby; and, this week, Hamas fired a powerful, long-range rocket deep into Israel, destroying a home and injuring seven, followed by dozens of additional projectiles in response to Israeli retaliatory strikes.

Somewhat out of the public eye, Hamas members serving sentences in Israeli prisons have also been increasingly violent, stabbing two guards earlier this week, injuring one of them seriously. Israel has also been cracking down on Hamas prisoners, isolating them, searching their cells, and blocking the use of illegally smuggled cellphones.

Palestinians prepare explosive devices to use in nighttime clashes along the border with Israel, at a house in al-Bureij refugee camp in the Gaza Strip, on March 7, 2019. (Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90)

Israeli officials, along with Hamas’s rival the Palestinian Authority, have accused the terror group of trying to use violence against the Jewish state as a way to channel the frustration and disaffection that Gazans feel over their squalid living conditions and economic instability.

The Israeli military is preparing for the possibility that Saturday’s protests will be some of the most violent yet. Though Hamas is referring to the Land Day demonstrations as the “million-man march,” only a few tens of thousands of people are expected to participate. The weather, which is currently predicted to be cold, rainy and windy, may help keep the numbers even lower than that.

Throughout the past year, these riots have seen attempts to breach the Gaza security fence en masse, explosive devices thrown across the border and, in a few cases, shooting attacks on Israeli troops, including one in July that killed IDF soldier Aviv Levi.

The Israel Defense Forces is not counting on precipitation to prevent Saturday’s riots and has deployed an additional three brigades — two infantry, one armored — to the Gaza border, along with an artillery battalion. The military also called up reservists for air defenses and other select units, and weekend leave for troops in the Southern Command has been canceled.

Israeli soldiers sit on top of mobile artillery near the border with the Gaza Strip, in southern Israel, March 27, 2019. (AP Photo/Tsafrir Abayov)

On Saturday, hundreds of snipers will be deployed along the security fence, supported by tanks, aircraft and infantrymen.

“IDF troops have completed operational preparations for the events of Land Day in the southern region and are continuing to increase preparedness for a possible escalation of violence caused by violent and terrorist acts during [the protests],” the army said.

 

Israel said to warn Hamas any error could lead to war, as IDF preps for violence

March 29, 2019

Source: Israel said to warn Hamas any error could lead to war, as IDF preps for violence | The Times of Israel

After overnight siren sends southern residents scrambling for bomb shelters in false alarm, some leave the area ahead of possible uptick in violence over the weekend

IDF tanks stationed near the Israel-Gaza border on March 27, 2019. (Dudi Modan/Flash90)

As the Israeli military continued its preparations for a possible outbreak of violence at protests along the Gaza border planned for Saturday, an Egyptian delegation reportedly told Hamas that any mistake it makes could lead to war.

The Israeli military said Thursday it is readying for protests along the Gaza border planned for Saturday, Palestinians’ Land Day, and a possible outbreak of violence. Land Day also marks a year since the start of weekly violent protests along the Israel-Gaza border, known as the March of Return, which at times have escalated into exchanges of fire between Israel and Palestinian terror groups in the coastal enclave, most recently earlier this week.

An Egyptian military intelligence delegation has been working to broker a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas ahead of the mass protest, amid fears that clashes along the border could snowball into a larger conflagration.

On Thursday, the delegation passed a message from Israel to Hamas, telling the Gaza-ruling terror group: “Any mistake you make on Saturday could lead to war,” Channel 12 news reported.

Israeli troops take up positions near the Gaza border on March 26, 2019. (Israel Defense Forces)

According to the report, Hamas is planning a mass transportation operation for Saturday, picking up protesters from 38 locations in the enclave and shuttling them to five sites along the border. Field hospitals have reportedly been set up at various points, and medical facilities in the Strip are on an emergency footing.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he’d ordered the military to prepare for an “extensive campaign” should Egypt-brokered ceasefire negotiations fail.

Ahead of the protests and riots expected for the weekend, the Israel Defense Forces deployed three additional brigades to the Gaza Division, along with an artillery battalion, and called up reservists from air defense and other select units.

According to the Walla news site, senior commanders are preparing for a variety of scenarios, including the possibility of deterioration to the point of a large-scale ground operation.

The military canceled weekend leave for all combat soldiers stationed in the Southern Command and published a video it said showed troops in recent days preparing for fighting inside Gaza, including training for urban warfare and house-to-house fighting similar to the conditions in the Strip.

A number of residents of Israeli communities along the Gaza border have chosen to leave the area for the weekend ahead of the planned demonstrations.

“We mainly want the children to be far from all these events,” one resident told the Ynet news site.”This time we decided because of the preparations, which are expected to be very tense, we just want to go outside and breathe, all of us together as a community and return at the end of the fighting.

“It’s the safest for everyone — the army must act as much as necessary — but mainly allows us peace of mind after very tense days, sirens and missiles,” the resident added.

A falsely triggered rocket alarm sent Israelis on the border region scrambling for bomb shelters early Friday morning, amid sky-high tensions along the frontier.

Residents of southern Israel protest over the government’s response to rocket fire from the Gaza Strip, at the entrance to city of Sderot, on March 26, 2019. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

The Israel Defense Forces said the rocket siren, which sounded in the Eshkol region just before 1 a.m., was a false alarm.

It did not say what triggered the siren, which went off following a day of low-level violence along the border, following a flare-up of cross-border fire earlier in the week.

The siren came as Gazans were reportedly holding low-scale nighttime riots along the border, which often include the throwing of improvised explosives at the border fence and at Israeli troops across the volatile border. In the past, the explosives have managed to set off rocket alarms.

On Thursday, an Israeli drone fired at a group of Palestinians launching balloon-borne incendiary devices into Israel from the northern Gaza Strip, lightly injuring three of them, according to local media reports.

Throughout the day, several incendiary devices attached to balloons landed in the Eshkol and Sha’ar Hanegev regions of southern Israel.

Violence this week started after a rocket fired from Gaza struck a farming community in central Israel early Monday, leveling a home and injuring seven people, including two small children.

Israeli security forces inspect the scene of a house that was hit by a rocket fired from the Gaza Strip in the town of Mishmeret in central Israel on March 25, 2019. (Noam Revkin Fenton/Flash90)

Israeli warplanes subsequently carried out dozens of bombing runs and Gazans fired some 60 projectiles at southern Israel, with the violence only waning before dawn Wednesday.

A senior member of Hamas’s military wing said Thursday that the rockets recently fired from the Gaza Strip toward central Israel launched on their own due to the terror group’s heightened war footing.

Saturday, Palestinian Land Day, marks a 1976 decision by the Israeli government to seize thousands of dunam of Arab-owned land in the Galilee region of northern Israel.

Last year on Land Day, Palestinians in the Gaza Strip launched the Great March of Return, a series of weekly protests and riots along the security fence that have at times seen the participation of tens of thousands of Palestinians. Israel maintains that the Hamas terror group appropriated the campaign for nefarious purposes, using the civilian protesters as cover for violent activities.

A picture taken on March 26, 2019, shows a Hamas policeman standing guard next to the rubble of a building in Gaza City that was targeted the night before by an Israeli air raid. (Mahmud Hams/AFP)

Some 30,000 Palestinians participated in the first protest event, held on March 30 2018. Fifteen Palestinians were killed in clashes with IDF soldiers protecting the border. Since then over 180 Palestinians have been killed in border violence, according to February figures from the UN Human Rights Council. Hamas has claimed dozens of the dead as members.

Israeli defense officials — as well as Hamas’s political foe, the Palestinian Authority — accuse the terror group of encouraging the border riots in an effort to distract from its failures in governing the Gaza Strip, a crowded patch of land with crushing unemployment, limited access to electricity and potable water, and few economic prospects.

 

Hamas officials back Egypt’s plan for Gaza border calm ahead of massive protest

March 29, 2019

Source: Hamas officials back Egypt’s plan for Gaza border calm ahead of massive protest | The Times of Israel

In reported deal, protesters to stay several hundred meters from border, Israel won’t fire unless they approach fence

Illustrative: A Palestinian uses a slingshot to fling back a tear gas canister thrown by Israeli forces during clashes at the fence along the border with Israel, east of Gaza City, on March 8, 2019. (Mahmud Hams/AFP)

Illustrative: A Palestinian uses a slingshot to fling back a tear gas canister thrown by Israeli forces during clashes at the fence along the border with Israel, east of Gaza City, on March 8, 2019. (Mahmud Hams/AFP)

Hamas has backed an Egyptian proposal to foster calm on the Israel-Gaza border ahead of expected major protests, two officials from the terrorist group said Friday.

There was no immediate comment from the Israeli side on the potential agreement, and the leader of the Gaza terror group confirmed that work was ongoing on “serious understandings” that will ease the humanitarian condition in the Strip.

Tens of thousands of Palestinians are expected to gather Saturday for the first anniversary of the often violent protests along the border.

An Egyptian delegation held talks with Hamas and other factions in Gaza in meetings that stretched into the early hours of Friday, the officials said.

A Hamas official who took part in the meetings told AFP on condition of anonymity they had backed an Egyptian proposal that will see protesters stay several hundred meters from the border.

Hamas-backed attacks in the West Bank would also cease, the official said. In exchange, “the Egyptians informed us that the (Israelis) promised to ease their measures.”

IDF tanks stationed near the Israel-Gaza border on March 27, 2019. (Dudi Modan/Flash90)

In particular, the Israelis will not fire on protesters unless they approach the border fence and will also allow Qatar to increase the amount of aid it funnels into the Gaza Strip.

His remarks were confirmed by a second Hamas official. Meanwhile, Ismail Haniyeh, Hamas’s leader, issued a statement emphasizing the concessions that his organization expected from Israel under an Egyptian-brokered agreement.

“We are working with our brothers in Egypt through the Egyptian delegation currently here in Gaza to resolve the humanitarian crisis in Gaza in a way that ensures an end to our people’s suffering and strengthens their dignity,” he said.

“We are working to do this by reaching serious understandings that will be respected by the enemy, especially as pertains to it halting its fire and aggression, allowing the entry of humanitarian aid, implementing projects, opening crossings and expanding the fishing zone, cash for work projects, and dealing with issues such as electricity,” Haniyeh said.

Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh flashes a ‘v for victory’ sign on March 27, 2019, next to the rubble of what was once his office in Gaza City, which was destroyed in an Israeli airstrike two days earlier. (Hamas)

“We will continue our marathon talks with the Egyptian brothers, which have been ongoing since the day before yesterday and include the national factions, in order to complete all prior dialogue and achieve the desired goal,” he said, adding that the situation was at a “crossroads” and the coming hours would be significant.

“All options are on the table,” Haniyeh said.

The comments came as the Israeli military continued its preparations for a possible outbreak of violence at the protests and after an Egyptian delegation reportedly told Hamas that any mistake it makes could lead to war.

The Israeli military said Thursday it is readying for protests along the Gaza border planned for Saturday, Palestinians’ Land Day, and a possible outbreak of violence. Land Day also marks a year since the start of weekly violent protests along the Israel-Gaza border, known as the March of Return, which at times have escalated into exchanges of fire between Israel and Palestinian terror groups in the coastal enclave, most recently earlier this week.

An Egyptian military intelligence delegation has been working to broker a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas ahead of the mass protest, amid fears that clashes along the border could snowball into a larger conflagration.

On Thursday, the delegation passed a message from Israel to Hamas, telling the Gaza-ruling terror group: “Any mistake you make on Saturday could lead to war,” Channel 12 news reported.

Israeli troops take up positions near the Gaza border on March 26, 2019. (Israel Defense Forces)

According to the report, Hamas is planning a mass transportation operation for Saturday, picking up protesters from 38 locations in the enclave and shuttling them to five sites along the border. Field hospitals have reportedly been set up at various points, and medical facilities in the Strip are on an emergency footing.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he’d ordered the military to prepare for an “extensive campaign” should Egypt-brokered ceasefire negotiations fail.

Ahead of the protests and riots expected for the weekend, the Israel Defense Forces deployed three additional brigades to the Gaza Division, along with an artillery battalion, and called up reservists from air defense and other select units.

According to the Walla news site, senior commanders are preparing for a variety of scenarios, including the possibility of deterioration to the point of a large-scale ground operation.

The military canceled weekend leave for all combat soldiers stationed in the Southern Command and published a video it said showed troops in recent days preparing for fighting inside Gaza, including training for urban warfare and house-to-house fighting similar to the conditions in the Strip.

A number of residents of Israeli communities along the Gaza border have chosen to leave the area for the weekend ahead of the planned demonstrations.

A tense calm settled over the region Wednesday morning after an outbreak of violence that started after a rocket fired from Gaza struck a farming community in central Israel early Monday, leveling a home and injuring seven people, including two small children.

Israeli warplanes subsequently carried out dozens of bombing runs and Gazans fired some 60 projectiles at southern Israel, with the violence only waning before dawn Wednesday.

Israeli security forces inspect the scene of a house that was hit by a rocket fired from the Gaza Strip in the town of Mishmeret in central Israel on March 25, 2019. (Noam Revkin Fenton/Flash90)

Saturday, Palestinian Land Day, marks a 1976 decision by the Israeli government to seize thousands of dunam of Arab-owned land in the Galilee region of northern Israel.

Last year on Land Day, Palestinians in the Gaza Strip launched the Great March of Return, a series of weekly protests and riots along the security fence that have at times seen the participation of tens of thousands of Palestinians. Israel maintains that the Hamas terror group appropriated the campaign for nefarious purposes, using the civilian protesters as cover for violent activities.

A picture taken on March 26, 2019, shows a Hamas policeman standing guard next to the rubble of a building in Gaza City that was targeted the night before by an Israeli air raid. (Mahmud Hams/AFP)

Some 30,000 Palestinians participated in the first protest event, held on March 30 2018. Fifteen Palestinians were killed in clashes with IDF soldiers protecting the border. Since then over 180 Palestinians have been killed in border violence, according to February figures from the UN Human Rights Council. Hamas has claimed dozens of the dead as members.

Israeli defense officials — as well as Hamas’s political foe, the Palestinian Authority — accuse the terror group of encouraging the border riots in an effort to distract from its failures in governing the Gaza Strip, a crowded patch of land with crushing unemployment, limited access to electricity and potable water, and few economic prospects.

Adam Rasgon and Judah Ari Gross contributed to this report. 

 

IDF at peak readiness in Gaza sector, adds reinforcements after failed Egyptian truce bid – DEBKAfile

March 29, 2019

Source: IDF at peak readiness in Gaza sector, adds reinforcements after failed Egyptian truce bid – DEBKAfile

Israel’s armed forces around Gaza are at peak readiness for Hamas’ “March of the Million” on Friday and Saturday, March 30-31. On Thursday, the IDF further ramped up the force piling up on the Gaza border with additional ground troops and artillery units.

DEBKAfile’s military sources report that the Egyptian intelligence officers shuttling between Tel Aviv and Gaza City for days failed to broker an agreement for an Israeli-Hamas truce. Neither party was willing to make commitments as to its response should the “March of the Million” rage out of control.

Hamas adamantly refused to guarantee that the mass demonstration would be peaceful, or to rein in attacks on Israeli troops like those which have plagued southern Israel in the past year. Neither would the Palestinian terrorist group ruling the Gaza Strip agree to halt its incendiary balloon assaults on Israeli civilian locations or even rocket fire.

Israel’s answer was to refuse to make any promises about how the IDF would respond if Hamas’ and allied groups’ violent conduct continued.