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Sinwar’s knockout victory over Netanyahu

March 29, 2019
Opinion: Every round of fighting with Hamas only serves to further illuminate how empty the prime minister’s policies are when it comes to our enemies in the south, and how incapable he is of solving the problem of Hamas once and for all
https://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-5485916,00.html

“We are back in control of the situation,” Benjamin Netanyahu said as he departed from Washington on Monday, as if there had been an event back home that demanded his urgent care.

For doing what he actually did in Gaza, Netanyahu could have definitely stayed in the US, delivered his AIPAC speech and given an interview in his fancy English. Even Immigration and Absorption Minister Yoav Galant could have handled the events in Gaza, such as they were.

Benjamin Netanyahu and Donald Trump at the White House (Photo: Reuters)

Benjamin Netanyahu and Donald Trump at the White House (Photo: Reuters)

Five years have passed since 2014’s Operation Protective Edge. Five years in which our “Mr. Security” has not done a single thing to match the achievements of the military operation on the political Level.

Instead, he has let Hamas’ leader in Gaza Yahya Sinwar do whatever he pleases. For when Sinwar wants peace, there is peace, and when he wants war, there is war. Everyone in Gaza must surely be familiar with Netanyahu’s drill by now: We bomb them, they rocket us, and the prime minister agrees to a cease-fire.

Air strikes on the Gaza Strip on Monday night (Photo: AFP) (Photo: AFP)

Air strikes on the Gaza Strip on Monday night (Photo: AFP)

For years – and especially in the past year – residents of the south have been living through a never-ending nightmare of uncertainty. No one in Netanyahu’s government cares for them.

It is absurd for southerners to wish for missiles on central Israel merely so that warplanes will be ordered out of their hangars. Even in the midst of the latest round of hostilities they offered to withstand rocket attacks and stay in shelters until Hamas was defeated.

The residents of southern Israel have learned from bitter experience. They too know that “Mr. Security” has nothing to offer. And what is worse is that he has no desire to resolve the situation in Gaza.

Which has led is to where we are now. For not wanting to do anything leads to an enemy on the other side of the Gaza fence that is only getting stronger, is not afraid to launch rockets of ever-increasing range, and is more than familiar with Netanyahu’s habit of delivering a blow from the air, flexing his muscles and rushing to declare a cease-fire.

The house in Mishmeret demolished by the rocket

The house in Mishmeret demolished by the rocket

The only good thing that can be said about Netanyahu’s handling of the Gaza mess is that he doesn’t let the show drag on for too long, and quickly ceases fire. He knows that there no clear end to this movie and therefore prefers to shout “cut” after the first scene.

When Netanyahu signed the 2011 deal for the release IDF soldier Gilad Shalit from Hamas captivity, he probably did not predict that one of the prisoners he freed for the hostage – Yahya Sinwar – would become the bitterest of rivals and lay bare his inability to protect his country.

Sinwar brought a new kind of leadership to Gaza and turned Hamas into an organization that calls the shots. On the other side, Netanyahu has lead Israel to a policy of retaliation and instead of initiation.

Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar

Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar

As of now, in the battle between Netanyahu and Sinwar, the latter has won by a knockout. He is teaching his people and the rest of the leaders in the region that you can launch rockets at Israel and ultimately ou will get a suitcase full of money. Every time Sinwar does this, he further erodes Israel’s standing, and further illuminates how empty the prime minister’s policies are when it comes to our enemies in the south.

Netanyahu was probably walking the red carpets of the White House and embracing the leader of the free world while Sinwar was hiding in a tunnel from Israeli airstrikes. But while Netanyahu may have been playing a winner on TV, the real victor was not him.

 

Report: Israel Capitulates, Will Grant Concessions, Ease Restrictions, in Return for Quiet in Gaza

March 28, 2019

https://www.jewishpress.com/news/eye-on-palestine/hamas/report-israel-capitulates-will-grant-concessions-ease-restrictions-in-return-for-quiet-in-gaza/2019/03/28/
Photo Credit: Abed Rahim Khatib / Flash90
Arabs participating in the “Great March of Return” demonstration near the Gaza border, March 22, 2019.

Talal Abu Trifa, a member of the Political Bureau of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, on Thursday revealed details of the meeting held by the Egyptian security delegation in the Gaza Strip, the Hamas leadership, and the local terror factions Wednesday night, in which Egypt announced that Israel was willing to grant concessions to the Gaza Strip in exchange for quiet in the south, Channel 13 reported.

According to Abu Trifa, at the meeting, which lasted until after midnight, the Egyptians said Jerusalem had expressed willingness to comply with Hamas demands regarding the expansion of fishing areas to 18 miles, rehabilitation of the electricity lines in the Gaza Strip, and allowing the flow goods and money into the Strip.

Israel also expressed its readiness to allow the export of goods from the Gaza Strip.

These concessions will be given in return for the return of quiet to the south, including the cessation of rocket launches and the cessation of the firing of incendiary balloons, as well as the removal of the mobs of Arab rioters to a distance of 300 yards from the border fence.

In addition, Abu Trifa said that the Egyptian security delegation would continue to conduct rounds between Israel and the terror factions until after Friday, in order to closely monitor the “march of the million” planned for Saturday’s Land Day, which follows Friday’s one-year anniversary of the border fence riots.

Last night, the Egyptian delegation met with Hamas chairman Yahya Sinwar, and conveyed a message from Israel that his organization must stop firing rockets and incendiary balloons, and also stop the demonstrations at the fence.

Sinwar responded that he would only stop firing rockets, and demanded in return that Israel stop attacking the Gaza Strip in response to the balloons carrying explosive charges.

Hamas is expected to respond to Israel’s offer of a truce in the coming hours.

Thursday night, IDF units completed their deployment in the Gaza perimeter, and the fighters are preparing for the demonstrations along the fence on Friday, which should indicate if Hamas is willing to grant Israel’s request for quiet.

Sderot mayor Alon Davidi said on Thursday that “every day that goes by, we understand that eventually there will be an operation in Gaza, because this way we will not be able to continue, it’s clear to everyone.”

Shuttle diplomacy: Egyptian delegation returns to Israel after meeting Hamas in Gaza

March 28, 2019
After presenting terror group’s response to Israeli proposal for calm, team of intelligence officials set to return to Strip for futher consultations as they work towards ending days of fighting between the sides
The Egyptian team tasked with mediating an agreement to end days of fighting in the Gaza Strip continued with its shuttle diplomacy Thursday afternoon, returning to Israel at around 1pm, after meeting with Hamas and other Palestinian militant groups.
The delegation, made up of Egyptian intelligence officials, returned from Gaza via the Erez Crossing, to convey the Hamas response to an Israeli proposal for restoring calm along the border.

IDF tanks on the Gaza border (Photo: AP) (Photo: AP)

IDF tanks on the Gaza border (Photo: AP)

The Egyptian team is expected to return to Gaza for further negotiations, following their consultations with Israeli officials.

On Wednesday night, the Egyptian team met at Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar’s office in Gaza for talks that also included representatives from Islamic Jihad, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

Ismail Haniyeh flashes a victory sign as he stands next to at the rubble of his office building in Gaza City, March 27, 2019
The Egyptians handed Hamas the Israeli proposal, which sources in Gaza told Ynet includes the following terms:

Concessions for Gaza

• Increase in the number of trucks carrying essential supplies entering the Gaza Strip through the Kerem Shalom crossing

• Expanding a temporary employment project by the United Nations to 40,000 people

• Increasing the Gaza fishing zone to 12 nautical miles

• Improving the supply of electricity from Israel to the Gaza Strip

• Easing restrictions on the issue of import and export permits

• Approving the entry into Gaza of some materials currently classified as dual use 

Israeli demands

• End to the nightly confrontations along the border

• Ceasing the coordination for fence protests near Kibbutz Zikim, as well as ending the attempts to sail into Israeli waters in the area

• Guarantees that the demonstration on Saturday will be nonviolent 

A Palestinian woman amid the rubble in the Gaza Strip after IAF strikes on Hamas targets (Photo: Reuters) (Photo: Reuters)

A Palestinian woman amid the rubble in the Gaza Strip after IAF strikes on Hamas targets (Photo: Reuters)

 

The Egyptian mediators rushed to the Strip via the Erez Crossing and a senior Hamas leader emerged from his hideout as the unofficial cease-fire between Israel and the terror group appeared to take hold after two days of fighting. The key test will be Saturday, when Hamas holds its demonstration to mark the one-year anniversary of weekly protests along the Israeli border.

 

In a sign that both sides had stepped back from a major conflagration, Ismail Haniyeh made his first public appearance since violence with Israel erupted earlier this week. During times of fighting, Hamas leaders typically go underground, fearing assassination by Israel.

 

I pay my deepest respect for this Hero by posting this article

March 27, 2019

Hero pilot from hijacked Entebbe flight dies at 95

Air France captain Michel Bacos refused to leave behind his Jewish and Israeli passengers.

By Amy Spiro
March 27, 2019 17:20

https://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Hero-pilot-from-hijacked-Entebbe-flight-dies-at-95-584838

Michel Bacos (R) speaks to the media in 1976. (photo credit: AFP PHOTO)

Michel Bacos, the pilot of the Air France flight from Tel Aviv which was hijacked in 1976 and landed in Entebbe, has died at age 95.

Christian Estrosi – the mayor of Nice, where Bacos lived – announced the news on social media on Tuesday.

“He refused to abandon his passengers, who were taken hostage because they were Israeli or of Jewish origin, risking his own life,” Estrosi wrote. “Michel bravely refused to surrender to antisemitism and barbarism and brought honor to France.”

President Reuven Rivlin said Wednesday that Bacos was “a quiet hero and a true friend of the Jewish people. May his memory be a blessing.”

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tweeted that the pilot “stayed with the hostages through all their hardships, until IDF soldiers – led by my brother Yoni z”l – freed him in a daring operation. I bow my head in his memory and salute the Michel’s bravery.”

On June 27, 1976, Bacos was the captain of Air France Flight 139, from Tel Aviv to Paris, with a stop in Athens. After the plane departed Greece, four hijackers took control of the cockpit and forced Bacos at gunpoint to head for Benghazi, Libya, and then Entebbe, Uganda.

The terrorist “sat behind me with his gun pointed at my head,” Bacos told Ynet in 2016. “Every time I tried to look in a different direction, he pressed the barrel of his gun against my neck.”

Several days later, the terrorists split up the hostages between those who were Israeli or Jewish and those who were not. Bacos demanded the hijackers give him access to both groups.

“‘I’m responsible for all of the passengers and demand to be able to see all of them – be they Israeli or not – at any given moment.’” he recounted to Ynet. “I insisted, and the Germans agreed. I was able to go from one hall to the other without receiving permission, every time.”

A few days after that, the hijackers were planning to let Bacos, the rest of his crew and the remaining non-Jewish hostages go. But he refused.

“I gathered my crew and told them there was no way we were going to leave – we were staying with the passengers to the end,” he said. “The crew refused to leave, because this was a matter of conscience, professionalism, and morality. As a former officer in the Free French Forces, I couldn’t imagine leaving behind not even a single passenger.”

After the successful rescue by the IDF, Bacos was repeatedly honored for his heroic actions. That year he was awarded the National Order of the Legion of Honor, France’s highest decoration. In 2008, he was honored by B’nai Brith International, and in 2016 by the American Jewish Committee. Bacos visited Israel several times after the incident, attending memorial ceremonies for Lt.-Col. Yoni Netanyahu, who was killed in the operation.

Bacos continued to fly with Air France for six more years, before retiring in 1982 at age 58. He is survived by his wife, Rosemary, three children and several grandchildren.

Tributes to Bacos began to pour in on Wednesday as news of his death spread.

“He refused to leave the Jewish passengers behind and stayed with them until they were rescued by the IDF,” wrote Dani Dayan, the Israeli consul-general to New York. “He passed away in France at the age of 95. We salute you, Captain.”

AJC said that it was “saddened to learn of the passing of Michel Bacos, the Air France pilot who heroically refused to abandon Jewish hostages after his plane was hijacked to Entebbe. We honored him with the AJC Moral Courage Award at Global Forum 2016. May his memory be a blessing.”

The Israeli Airline Pilots Association wrote that “this dear man passed away today after a long life. The pilots of the State of Israel salute Captain Bacos.”

AND that is what you get if you show weakness !

March 27, 2019

Hamas chief emerges from hiding in Gaza, declares victory

‘The resistance has had the last word,’ Haniyeh claims during visit to the rubble of his office, destroyed in an Israeli airstrike

Hamas political bureau leader Ismail Haniyeh (Hamas website)

Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh on Wednesday made his first public appearance since Israel destroyed his office in a retaliatory airstrike this week, claiming victory over “Zionist arrogance.”

Haniyeh visited the rubble of his Gaza City office, coming out of hiding after a two-day flare-up of violence, which ended with an unofficial Egyptian-brokered ceasefire between Israel and the Hamas terror group, which rules the Gaza Strip.

The fighting broke out after a rocket fired from Gaza struck a home in central Israel and wounded seven people. Israel responded with dozens of airstrikes in the Strip, while Palestinian terrorists fired dozens of rockets at communities across the border.

“The resistance has had the last word, and Israel got the message,” Haniyeh said. “I am grateful to all parties who helped stop the Zionist arrogance in the Gaza Strip.

View of the Gaza City office of Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh on March 26, 2019, after it was destroyed a day earlier by an Israeli airstrike. (Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90)

In a statement, an Israeli diplomatic official quipped that Haniyeh “had better find a new office before he brags.”

The Hamas leader also urged Gazans to participate in mass protests along the Israel-Gaza frontier on Saturday to mark the first anniversary of a movement officially aimed at ending the Israeli-Egyptian blockade and resettling Palestinian refugees and their descendants in Israel proper.

Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Aviv Kohavi ordered troops along the Gaza border to remain on alert for “various scenarios in the region,” the army said.

Earlier in the day, Kohavi visited the Gaza Division and met with its commander, Brig. Gen. Eliezer Toledano, along with Southern Command chief Maj. Gen. Herzi Halevi.

The IDF has sent reinforcements to the border in advance of expected clashes this weekend and has allowed the media to publicize the troop buildup.

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

There are fears that violence will ramp up this weekend, with Hamas hoping to draw hundreds of thousands of rioters to the fence to mark a year of so-called March of Return protests, which began March 30, 2018.

Israel says the demonstrations are orchestrated by Hamas in order to provide cover for the organization’s nefarious activities along the security fence, including infiltration attempts, the planting of explosives and attacks on Israeli soldiers.

Their organizers have said the protests aim to achieve the “return” of Palestinian refugees and their descendants to lands that are now part of Israel, and pressure the Jewish state to lift its restrictions on the movement of people and goods into and out of the coastal enclave.

The launch of incendiary and explosive devices into Israel tied to kites and helium-filled balloons became a common tactic in violent protests along the Gaza border over the past year, burning thousands of acres of farmland and nature reserves, and killing livestock and other animals.

 

Avigdor Liberman: Netanyahu personally torpedoed my plans for Gaza

March 27, 2019

Avi Dichter: “We have to destroy the military infrastructure in Gaza, and it will not be by a political move or only by airstrikes.”

By Anna Ahronheim
March 27, 2019 15:25
https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Avigdor-Liberman-Netanyahu-personally-torpedoed-my-plans-for-Gaza-584877
Avigdor Liberman speaks at a Maariv conference, March 27th, 2019. (photo credit: ALONI MOR)

Former Defense Minister MK Avigdor Liberman said Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu personally torpedoed plans to strike Gaza during a significant escalation in violence between Israel and Hamas in November.

“Netanyahu personally torpedoed the plans,” the Chairman of Yisrael Beytenu told Ben Caspit at the Maariv Security Conference on Wednesday. “We have enough tools to deal with Gaza and I had a full plan.”

Liberman resigned from his post as defense minister in November following a ceasefire deal signed between Israel and Hamas after over 500 rockets were fired towards southern Israeli communities.

The ceasefire with Hamas, he said at the time “cannot be interpreted in any way other than a capitulation to terrorism. This will severely harm our security in the long run. The response that we gave to the 500 rockets shot from Gaza was not enough, to say the least. The South should come first. Our weakness is being broadcast to other fronts.”

On Sunday the latest escalation with Hamas in the Gaza Strip saw over 100 mortars and rockets fired towards southern Israeli communities, and that, Liberman said, shows that Israel does not have security.

“Security is when people don’t have to run to bomb shelters,” he told Ben Caspit, adding that Israel is paying protection money to terror groups instead of destroying it.

“There’s no terror without money and now Israel is allowing money into Gaza for Hamas. We are paying protection to a terror organization and doing everything not to get the terror organization mad. Netanyahu said he said he struck Hamas hard, but not even one terrorist was even hurt,” he said.

Former deputy IDF Chief of Staff Maj.-Gen. Yair Golan, who also spoke at the conference, told the crowd that Israel’s military has been doing the same thing over and over and over again, allowing the enemy to learn.

“For the past 30 years the IDF has been acting pretty much the same and the enemy has learnt. When you are able to know how the war is going to play out, you know how deal it and how to take the blows,” he said.

In the last round of violence between Israel and Hamas, a civilian home in central Israel was destroyed by a long-range rocket launched from Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip and close to 100 rockets and mortars were fired to communities in the south.

“Imagine 60 rockets in Tel Aviv or Gush Dan or Jerusalem,” Liberman said. “Nobody would stand for it!”

According to Liberman, “peace will come with the Messiah, not before. There’s no way we can have peace with the Arabs around us…peace like in Finland or Canada. That won’t happen. We have to understand where we are, and who we are surrounded by.”

Also speaking at the conference, MK Avi Dichter, current Chairman of the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, said that the Israeli homefront cannot be turned into a front.

“The homefront is facing threats from the north, south and the west–first it was Iraq but now it’s Iran.”

According to Dichter, who reminded the crowd of the Park Hotel bombing in Netanya in 2002, Israel must do an operation similar to Operation Defense Shield which saw reservists, troops and heavy weaponry deep into the hearts of six major Palestinian cities, surrounding towns and West Bank refugee camps to wipe out Hamas and other terror groups.

“Today, when the military enters Gaza, it will have significantly better capabilities than the Second Lebanon War. But in the end, when you embark on such a campaign, you want to ensure the safety of the soldiers,” he said. “Terror always has a bottom. In order to dry out terror, we must reach the critical mass. You have to kill thousands, arrest thousands more, and the rest will disperse.”

But, he said, “The reality in Gaza is that the group has terror infrastructures with military capabilities, and this is a very problematic situation. We have to destroy the military infrastructure in Gaza, and it will not be by a political move or only by airstrikes.”

Jews Must Never Be Afraid to Use Their Well-Earned Power

March 27, 2019

Ashkenazi: Must kill soldiers, not strike empty buildings, to deter Hamas

March 27, 2019

Blue and White candidate Gabi Ashkenazi, ex-IDF chief of staff, also said that the only way to remove the Iranians from Syria is to threaten Bashar Assad’s rule.

By Yonah Jeremy Bob
March 27, 2019 12:59

In order to restore deterrence with Hamas, the IDF must kill Hamas soldiers and not just attack empty buildings, former IDF chief-of-staff and Blue and White candidate Gabi Ashkenazi said at the Maariv Security Conference in Tel Aviv on Wednesday.

Ashkenazi said it was critical to make Hamas feel the cost of continuing to periodically fire rockets on Israel as well as continuing a year long confrontation on the Gaza border.

He said that “our deterrence has crashed,” but that Hamas is “not an irresolvable problem.”

The former IDF chief acknowledged that Hamas will respond and the situation “will not be simple,” but said there was no choice if Israel is going to succeed in breaking the cycle of violence with Gaza.

Regarding the threat of Iran building threats against Israel in Syria, he said that the only way to remove the Iranians from that front is to threaten Bashar Assad’s rule.

Complimenting the IDF’s attacks on Iran in Syria in recent years, he said that it would not be sufficient to get Tehran to remove its forces.

Israel needs to “change its strategy. [Russian President Vladimir] Putin smiled, but cannot succeed” at getting Iran and Hezbollah out of Syria.

“We need to take a price from Assad,” saying that Israel would need to directly attack Syrian units and threaten Assad himself, as opposed to only attacking Iranian units in Syria.

He explained that only once Assad himself felt the price of having Iranian forces in his country would he force them to leave.

Source: Order for TLV Missile Strike Was Given by Iran

March 27, 2019

https://www.jerusalemonline.com/source-order-for-tlv-missile-strike-was-given-by-iran/

An anonymous Palestinian official has informed the Israeli newspaper Israel Hayom, that the recent firing of a rocket towards northern Tel Aviv earlier this week was caused by a direct order from Iran.

Initially, Palestinian reports in Gaza indicated that the rocket launched earlier this week that hit a house in central Israel and started the escalation of violence in recent hours “by mistake” or even hinted that it was because of the weather.

However since than Palestinian and Egyptian sources reported that the, was fired by orders from Iran and to influence elections in Israel.

According to this official the launch was carried out without the knowledge of the high command of the political arm of Hamas in Gaza but in coordination with some of the leaders of Islamic Jihad and even with some low class officers of of Hamas who had enoug power to approve the launch.

Israel Hayom further reported that its Palestinian source admitted that the rocket was fired as an “attempt to influence elections and the political agenda in Israel and even to get Netanyahu and Likud removed from government.

They also added that in Gaza they were expecting that Israel would not launch a significant operation in Gaza two weeks before the elections and that is why they bet that Netanyahu would not order any strong attacks while he was in Washington.

The source also said that “according to all the indications they have, Iran is the one behind the order to fire the rocket, first and foremost to hinder Egyptian efforts to reach an agreement in Gaza and to create political chaos in Israel two weeks before the elections.

Fourth Gaza War May Start Friday or Saturday

March 27, 2019

https://www.jewishpress.com/news/eye-on-palestine/hamas/fourth-gaza-war-may-start-friday-or-saturday/2019/03/27/
Photo Credit: Yonatan Sindel/Flash90
IDF tanks amassed along the Gaza border, March 26, 2019

Two commemorations of events in the short history of the Jewish-Arab conflict will take place this week, which, ironically enough, also marked the 40th anniversary of the Camp David agreement: Friday marks the first anniversary of the Marches of Return, those weekly riots along the Gaza Strip border which resulted in about 200 dead and close to 20,000 injured—85% of whom were estimated to have been paid by Hamas and the Islamic Jihad; then Saturday marks the 23rd anniversary of Land Day, commemorating the 1976 clash between Israeli Arabs and the Rabin government over the latter’s plans to expropriate state-owned land.

It’s the very definition of a gunpowder keg, two in this case, and it follows a week of alarming clashes between Gaza terrorists and the IDF which included a long-range rocket destroying a home in Israel’s Sharon region near Tel Aviv, and IDF retaliatory bombings of vital terrorist assets across the Gaza Strip.

Israeli security officials are expecting all of this to blow up this weekend, unless Hamas and the Jihad take meaningful, active steps to prevent it. Indeed, in this equation only one side appears to have a choice: the Arabs. Because, should violence erupt on schedule, Prime Minister and Defense Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will have no choice. Less than two weeks from the April 9 election, which will decide his political future, Bibi cannot appear to be appeasing the enemy. He is already being torn apart by Naftali Bennett inside the tent, and Benny Gantz and Avi Gabai who are circling the tent from the outside.

Netanyahu and IDF Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Aviv Kochavi and the command staff spent Tuesday in meetings that resulted, for now, in amassing firepower around the Strip and calling in the reserves. Should war become inevitable, the needed troops will all be in place. Lt. Gen. Kochavi so far has been more aggressive than his predecessor, Gadi Eizenkot, who allowed for long lags between Arab attacks and IDF retaliation, frustration the nation and confusing the troops. Should there be a clash, Kochavi is more likely to inflict great pain on the Strip.

Tuesday also saw a string of minor Arab provocations: a rocket over Ashkelon; a group of Arabs who crossed the border to set fire to an abandoned IDF post and raise the Palestinian flag; and dozens of balloon clusters carrying explosive charges into Israel, at least four of which started fires in Israeli settlements. On Wednesday Israeli schools near Gaza have opened as usual – a sign that the security apparatus is not expecting serious clashes today.

However, on Wednesday morning Ma’an reported that four youths were shot dead in clashes with Israeli forces in the Deheisheh refugee camp south of Bethlehem, reminding us that danger lurks not only in Gaza this weekend.

Despite his hurried departure from the US on Monday, Netanyahu did not assemble his security cabinet, most likely because he was reluctant to give his nemesis Naftali Bennett, who keeps demanding the role of defense minister, to lecture the PM in his newly adapted, take-no-prisoners style, like this recent post:

“I said from the morning that whoever runs away from terrorism – terrorism pursues him, and that’s exactly what happened. […] I call on Prime Minister Netanyahu to defeat Hamas and not allow it to turn the residents of the south into Hamas hostages. We know what needs to be done and how it should be done. I call on the prime minister – give the IDF the order to neutralize and defeat Hamas.”

It continues to be a tense weekend, folks. Stay tunes.