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Report: Hamas offered long-term truce to Israel

May 7, 2018

Terror group that rules Gaza reportedly seeks cease-fire in exchange for easing of restrictions on goods entering Gaza.

Hamas trains for confrontation with Israel

Reuters

Hamas leaders in Gaza have sent messages to Israel through various channels in recent months offering to negotiate a long-term ceasefire.

According to a report in the Israeli daily Haaretz on Monday, Hamas wants to tie the cease-fire to an easing of the partial blockade on Gaza, a green light for large-scale infrastructure projects and a prisoner exchange.

Israel has “not responded clearly” to the messages, according to Haaretz.

Hamas reportedly is more open to discussing such a cease-fire since it is in “dire and unprecedented strategic distress,” the report said. In addition, reconciliation efforts between Hamas and the Palestinian Authority remain frozen in the wake of an assassination attempt in March on PA Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah during his visit to Gaza.

Hamas has called on Gazan demonstrators to continue to protest at the border with Gaza as part of the March of Return protests, and has vowed that the protests will continue past what was supposed to be the end date, May 14, the date on the Gregorian calendar that marks Israel’s 70th birthday, and which the Arab world calls The Nakba, or The Catastrophe. The Palestinian Authority also is planning a large demonstration on that day in Ramallah in the West Bank, the seat of government of the PA.

The Israel Defense Forces estimates that 70 percent of the 48 Gazans killed in the current protests are connected to Hamas or the military wings of other terror organizations in Gaza, according to Haaretz.

Former US Senator Joe Lieberman: ‘I Hope Trump Leaves the Iran Nuclear Deal’

May 7, 2018

Former US Senator Joe Lieberman: ‘I Hope Trump Leaves the Iran Nuclear Deal’

Former U.S. Senator Joe Lieberman on Fox News Futures, discussing the Iranian JCPOA

Photo Credit: Fox News Futures / screen capture

Former Connecticut U.S. Senator Joe Lieberman — also a former Democratic vice presidential candidate and currently chairman of the advocacy group, United Against Nuclear Iran — says he hopes President Donald Trump decides to withdrawn from the Iranian nuclear deal next week.

Lieberman told Fox News Futures host Marie Bartiromo in an interview on Sunday (May 6), “I give you the perspective of somebody who was in the Senate for 24 years, worked with people in both parties to put sanctions, economic pressure on Iran with a singular goal which was to denuclearize Iran to stop their nuclear weapons development program.

“What the Obama administration and our allies in Europe did was not that. It basically gave away all our leverage against them in return for a pause in their nuclear program – if they’re keeping their word, which they don’t have a good reputation for doing – and it gave them $100 billion which they’ve used to support terrorists and to spread their rule throughout the Middle East.

“So it was a bad deal, a mistake for us. I think the president really has the power to correct that mistake and I hope he does.”

The worst part of the nuclear deal, says Lieberman, is that it “didn’t really end Iran’s nuclear program. It’s clear they’ve got tremendous capacity.”

Lieberman says that Iran signed the JCPOA in 2015 in order to “get the economic pressure off of them to get the $100 billion. They can go back and have a legitimate nuclear weapons development program in about ten years — and that’s not the security that the world needs.”

The second point, he says, is that although the agreement gave United Nations International Atomic Energy Agency inspectors the right to inspect facilities “all over Iran,” the Tehran government has not allowed those inspectors to enter any military site, which is “where they would be cheating, if they’re cheating,” says Lieberman, adding, “and I worry that they are.”

Regarding whether or not Europe will ultimately go along with Washington if the president decides to withdraw from the deal — Lieberman says despite the vocal protests to the contrary, he is convinced they will, for the simple reason that the United States has a bigger economy than that of Iran. Money talks.

“The Iranian economy is four or five hundred billion dollars. Ours is like $44 trillion,” Lieberman emphasized, “so you give the European banking and business community a choice of what to do if we pull out, and slap the sanctions back on Iran.

“It’s no choice: They’re going to continue to do business with us and they’re going to turn their backs on the Iranians, and most of the rest of the world will do the same,” he said.

“Then, hopefully the Iranians will come back to the table and negotiate a total denuclearization of their country and then we can welcome them into the world community.”

Putin inaugurated as Russian president (FULL VIDEO)

May 7, 2018

Iran says it could remain in nuke deal even if US pulls out

May 7, 2018

President Rouhani says Tehran won’t bolt accord provided the European Union offers guarantees it’ll keep benefiting from it

Today, 2:00 pm

https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog-may-7-2018/

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani says his country would be willing to remain in the nuclear deal even if the United States pulls out, providing the European Union offers guarantees that Tehran would keep benefiting from the accord.

Rouhani’s remarks came ahead of President Donald Trump’s decision expected later this week on whether to pull America out of the landmark deal between Iran and world powers. Rouhani speaks during a meeting with officials in the northeastern city of Mashhad.

He says a US pullout would be a “strategic mistake.”

He says that “what we want for the deal is that it’s preserved and guaranteed by the non-Americans” — a reference to other signatories of the 2015 agreement.

He adds that in this case “the US pullout will be OK.”

We’ll Assassinate Assad, Warns Senior Israeli Minister

May 7, 2018

We’ll Assassinate Assad, Warns Senior Israeli Minister

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, Russian President Vladimir Putin, in Sochi

Photo Credit: Courtesy the Kremlin

(JNi.Media) Minister Yuval Steinitz, who is a member of Israel’s Security Cabinet made it very clear that Israel intends to assassinate Syrian president Bashar Assad, if Assad continues to allow Iran to operate in Syrian territory, Steinitz said in an interview with YNet on Monday.

“If Syrian President Bashar Assad continues to allow the Iranians to operate from Syrian territory, Israel will eliminate him and collapse his regime,” Steinitz said.

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Yesterday reports emerged in the Israeli media that Iran was planning a missile strike on Israel, probably using its proxies in Syria, including Hezbollah.

Steinitz said, “Until now, Israel has not intervened in the Syria civil war. If Assad allows Iran to transform Syria into a military base against us, to attack us from Syrian territory, he needs to know that that is his end.”

Steinitz said Israel previously had that same dilemma with Hezbollah, when Hezbollah attacked Israel from Lebanese territory — should Israel respond to just Hezbollah or also to Lebanon?

Israel has since made it clear, her policy would be to bomb Lebanon back to the stone age if Hezbollah attacks Israel from their territory.

Assad, Steinitz said, can decide whether or not Iran can act from his territory, bringing in missiles and weapons. But Assad won’t be allowed to sit quietly in his palace while Syria is turned into a base to attack Israel.

Referring to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s upcoming meeting this Russian President Vladimir Putin, Steinitz said Israel has unprecedented levels of dialogue with Putin, many ties and common interests, as well as few conflicts of interest.

Issuing a not-so-disguised hint to Putin, Steinitz said that Israel has red lines, and that if someone is interested in maintaining Assad’s survival, they had better respect our red lines, and tell Assad to not allow any missile or drone strikes against Israel.

Steinitz said Israel isn’t interested in a war with Iran or any other party, but Israel will not allow Iran to turn Syria into a base for the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps. What happened to Lebanon from Hezbollah is serious enough.

On Sunday, PM Netanyahu said “We have no interest in an escalation [with Iran], but we are prepared for every scenario. We don’t want a confrontation – but if one must come, it’s better now than later.”

A few months ago, Netanyahu warned Putin that Iran was building weapons factories in Lebanon, where its military advisers were attempting to manufacture precision weapons for use against Israel. He also warned Putin that Iran was continuing to establish a permanent military presence in Syria – an existential threat to the State of Israel, which would not be allowed to continue.

Update: Minister Steinitz later clarified that he was expressing his own personal opinion.

Make Turkey great again: Erdogan trumpets more Syria ops & ‘100% local arms’ in bold manifesto

May 7, 2018
https://www.rt.com/news/425997-turkey-military-syria-manifesto/
Turkish AK Party’s Istanbul congress © Osman Orsal / Reuters
Ankara will conduct more cross-border military operations in Syria and will focus on developing a fully self-sufficient defense industry, the Turkish president said, unveiling his ruling party’s manifesto ahead of June elections.

“Turkey will launch new operations in the new period, like Operation Euphrates Shield and Operation Olive Branch, to clear its borders from terrorists,” president Recep Tayyip Erdogan said, outlining the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) manifesto, ahead of a snap general election on June 24.

The country’s priorities for the next five years will focus, among other things, on military production, an independent foreign policy and on border security.

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A Turkish tank near the Turkish-Syrian border in Kilis province, Turkey January 31, 2018. © Osman Orsal

“Turkey is becoming an important power in the world. Turkey will be a global power, a leading force,” Erdogan said Sunday, noting that the country aims to enter the ranks of the world’s top 10 economies by 2023.

Part of the domestic development would focus on achieving complete “independence” in defense, as NATO allies continue to hinder weapons-supply and technology-sharing with Ankara.

“Turkey’s goal is to have 100 percent indigenously-made land, air and sea defense systems,” Erdogan said. “We will continue to produce our own weapons to become a global power. We will increase our defense industry [assets], like our ALTAY tank, ATAK helicopter, drones, armed drones.”

“The basic principles of our foreign policy will continue to be independence, national interest, national security and a conscientious stance,” the president added, addressing thousands of AKP’s loyalists in Istanbul.

Erdogan’s pledge to conduct further incursions into a neighboring country comes in the middle of the ongoing cross-border ‘Olive Branch’ operation in the north-western Syrian region of Afrin, which began in January.

Besides fighting the remnants of radical Islamists in the region, the Turkish offensive is also focused on rooting out the Kurdish-led Democratic Union Party (PYD), and especially its armed wing People’s Protection Units (YPG), from the border areas.

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A Lockheed Martin F-35 aircraft. © Axel Schmidt / Reuters

Ankara considers Syria’s Kurdish entities an extension of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which has been a thorn in Turkey’s side for decades. The Afrin campaign is the country’s second such operation in Syria, after the so-called ‘Euphrates Shield’ was completed in early 2017.

Turkish persecution of the Kurds on Syrian territory has further deteriorated its relations with the United States, which has long relied on the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), comprising mainly Kurds, to do its bidding along Turkish borders. Ankara has repeatedly criticized the US and other NATO allies for their support of Kurdish militias to keep a foothold in Syria, reiterating on an almost daily basis that it views them as a national security threat.

In addition to the Kurdish issue, Ankara has locked horns with its NATO allies over their criticism of Ankara’s ‘undemocratic’ post-2016 coup-attempt crackdown and their increasing refusal to sell arms and share military technology with Turkey. The reluctance by the West to cater to the needs of NATO’s second largest armed contingent has led Turkey to develop its indigenous arms production and even to seek arms supply from Russia – which has, in turn, evoked anger in Washington.

Palestinian terrorists to receive NIS 10 million each by their 80th birthdays

May 6, 2018

Defense Ministry releases info on finances of Henkin, Salomon, Shevach and Ben-Gal killers ahead of Knesset vote on cutting payments to the PA until it stops paying terrorists

Today, 2:13 pm

https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog-may-6-2018/

Omar al-Abed (c) smiles in the Judea Military Court ahead of his sentencing on February 15, 2018 for the murders of Yosef, Elad, and Chaya Salomon. (Courtesy)

Henkin, Salomon, Shevach and Ben-Gal killers to receive NIS 10 million by age 80

The Palestinian terrorists responsible for killing Eitam and Naama Henkin; Yosef, Elad and Chaya Salomon; Raziel Shevach; and Itamar Ben-Gal will each receive at least NIS 10 million ($2.77 million) by their 80th birthdays, statistics from the Defense Ministry show.

The numbers have been released ahead of a Knesset vote to cut payments to the Palestinian Authority until it stops paying terrorists.

Omar al-Abed, who was convicted of murdering three members of the Salomon family, has so far earned NIS 12,200, with a monthly salary of NIS 1,400 for the first three years. He is expected to reach a cumulative salary of NIS 12,604,000 by the age of 80.

Karem Lufti Fatahi Razek, who was convicted of the 2015 Henkin murders and was sentenced to two life sentences and another 30 years, has earned NIS 40,600 and is expected to receive a cumulative salary of NIS 11,232,000 by the age of 80.

Zaid Ziyad, who was also convicted over the Henkin murders and sentenced to life in prison, has earned NIS 40,600 and is expected to earn a cumulative wage of NIS 10,056,000 by age 80.

Asi Abed El-Hakim, who was charged with the murder of Rabbi Itamar Ben Gal and was arrested a month ago, has already earned NIS 1,400. If he is sentenced to life imprisonment, he is expected to earn NIS 12,604,800 by the time he’s 80.

Turkey will ‘retaliate’ if US halts weapon sales over purchase of Russian arms – Ankara

May 6, 2018

Published time: 6 May, 2018 11:16

https://www.rt.com/news/425966-turkey-retaliation-us-weapons/

A Lockheed Martin F-35 aircraft. © Axel Schmidt / Reuters

In a deepening rift between two major NATO allies, Turkey says it will retaliate if Washington stops the sale of US weapons over Ankara’s decision to buy Russian military hardware. Such a move would be “wrong” and “illogical.”

“If the United States imposes sanctions on us or takes such a step, Turkey will absolutely retaliate,” Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu told CNN Turk. “What needs to be done is the US needs to let go of this.”

“Turkey is not a country under your orders, it is an independent country… speaking to such a country from above, dictating what it can and cannot buy, is not a correct approach and does not fit our alliance,” he said, referring to the fact that both countries are part of NATO.

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© Igor Zarembo

The notion of halting weapons sales has been put forward by lawmakers in the US House of Representatives through the proposed US National Defense Authorization Act. The latter would ask the defense department to provide Congress with a report on the relationship between the US and Turkey and would block the sale of major defense equipment until the report is complete.

This move could throw a spanner in the works for Turkey as it plans to buy more than 100 Lockheed Martin F-35 Joint Strike Fighter Jets. It is also in talks with Washington over the purchase of Patriot missiles.

Cavusoglu said he plans to travel to Washington next week to meet with US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who previously said he was concerned over Ankara’s decision to buy the Russian S-400 missile batteries.

The foreign minister’s comments come after US State Department spokesperson Heather Nauert said on Thursday that Washington has “serious concerns about Turkey’s potential acquisition” of S-400 anti-aircraft systems.

Nauert added that NATO countries are only supposed to buy weapons and other materiel that are “interoperable with other NATO partners.”

In April, Assistant Secretary of State Wess Mitchell warned that the decision to buy Russian military hardware exposed Turkey to the possibility of sanctions. He added that it may bar Ankara from receiving any F-35 jets under the Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA), which is mainly aimed at hindering Russian arms exports.

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S-400 battery is being deployed in Russia on Jan 13, 2018. © Aleksey Malgavko

Mitchell strayed from the usual “interoperable with NATO equipment” justification, instead stating that it was “in the American national interest to see Turkey remain strategically and politically aligned with the West.” He specifically noted his disapproval that Ankara had “increased its engagement with Russia and Iran.”

Responding to Mitchell’s comments, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov described the US threats as “a typical example of attempted blackmail” with the intention of giving US companies an “unfair advantage in market competition.”

The deal between Turkey and Russia was signed in December. Deliveries of the S-400 systems to Turkey are scheduled to start in 2020. However, following talks with Cavusoglu in March, Lavrov stated that Moscow is ready to speed up the process.

Cavusoglu’s Sunday remarks come amid increased tensions between the US and Turkey, particularly over Ankara’s Operation Olive Branch, which was launched against Kurdish fighters in Afrin on January 20. A war of words broke out after the top US commander in the US-led coalition against Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS) said that Turkey would face a sharp response if it struck Manbij, Syria as part of its operation.

“It is obvious that those who say they will ‘give a sharp response’ if they were hit have not been hit by the Ottoman slap,” Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in response. His words referenced a Turkish martial arts move that involves an open-palm hit, resulting in a one-hit knockout or even skull fractures and death.

The relationship between Washington and Ankara also hit a speed bump in October, when Turkey arrested a US consulate worker for alleged ties to exiled Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen, whom Ankara blames for a failed coup attempt in 2016. Ankara has criticized the US for failing to extradite Gulen, who lives in Pennsylvania, while Western governments have slammed Turkey for its post-coup crackdown.

Netanyahu: No Interest in Conflict with Iran, But Better Now Than Later

May 6, 2018

http://www.jewishpress.com/news/middle-east/iran-news/netanyahu-no-interest-in-conflict-with-iran-but-better-now-than-later/2018/05/06/

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Photo Credit: Omer Miron / GPO

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in his opening remarks to Sunday’s government cabinet meeting that although Israel has no interest in a conflict with Iran, if one is inevitable, it is better to deal with it now than later.

“We are determined to block Iranian entrenchment [in Syria], even at the cost of a confrontation,” Netanyahu said. “We have no interest in an escalation, but we are prepared for every scenario. We don’t want a confrontation – but if one must come, it’s better now than later.”

 The prime minister also underscored the exceptional importance of his upcoming meeting this Wednesday in Moscow with Russia’s President Vladimir Putin. “My meetings with the Russian president are always important for the IDF and the country,” he said, “but the meeting this week is especially important in light of the attempts by Iran to establish itself in Syria.”

Netanyahu meets regularly with Putin, and the two are on good terms. They last met for talks in January after they together attended a ceremony at the Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center in Moscow to mark the 75th anniversary of the uprising of the inmates at the Sobibor concentration camp during the Holocaust.

During that meeting, Netanyahu warned Putin that Iran was building weapons factories in Lebanon, where its military advisers were attempting to manufacture precision weapons for use against Israel. He also warned that Iran was continuing to establish a permanent military presence in Syria – an existential threat to the State of Israel, which would not be allowed to continue, he warned.

Last week three Iranian bases were struck in Syria, including at least one being used as a major weapons depot. At least 200 surface-to-surface long-range missiles were destroyed and some 30 military personnel were killed, including many Iranian officials.

Iran issued a statement denying that any of its bases in Syria were targeted and said none of its soldiers were killed.

One day later, Netanyahu revealed the existence of more than 100,000 files detailing a comprehensive Iranian nuclear weapons development program that was put on hold a number of years ago, with its files carefully tucked away in a high-security storage facility in Tehran, obviously for future use.

In a daring operation earlier this year, Israel’s international Mossad intelligence agency managed to penetrate the facility, take the files and leave Iran all in the same night. After months of scrutinizing and painstakingly translating the documents together with the United States, Netanyahu revealed the contents of some of them last week, sending shock waves through Tehran.

Israel’s Ambassador to the United Nations, Danny Danon, meanwhile also notified the UN Security Council in a briefing a week ago that Tehran has deployed some 80,000 Shi’ite fighters in Syria to support the regime of President Bashar al-Assad. The presence of such a formidable foreign military force across Israel’s northern border – as well as the increasing number of advanced weapons being transported by Iranian aircraft into Syria – is completely unacceptable, he told the Security Council, adding that Israel will “do what it must” to deal with the threat to its existence.

Iran has repeatedly declared its intention to “wipe the Zionist state (Israel) off the map.”

Armenian Genocide: Turkey Cracks Down

May 6, 2018