After Hamas rejects Qatari aid, Israel girds for violent surge on Gaza border 

Posted January 25, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: After Hamas rejects Qatari aid, Israel girds for violent surge on Gaza border | The Times of Israel

Extra troops sent to border area, Iron Dome batteries deployed with Friday protests expected to intensify amid anger over brief Israeli freeze on Gulf cash

A protester draped in the Palestinian flag gestures at Israeli forces across the border fence, during clashes following a demonstration along the border with Israel east of Gaza City on January 18, 2019. (Said KHATIB / AFP)

A protester draped in the Palestinian flag gestures at Israeli forces across the border fence, during clashes following a demonstration along the border with Israel east of Gaza City on January 18, 2019. (Said KHATIB / AFP)

The Israeli military was gearing up Friday for renewed violence on the Gaza border, a day after Hamas rejected millions in Qatari aid money, ratcheting up tensions on the volatile frontier.

Officials from the Hamas terror group made the surprise announcement that they would be rejecting $15 million in aid money from Qatar Thursday, days after Israel temporarily froze the transfer — part of a tacit ceasefire deal — as a punitive measure following a series of shooting incidents along the border.

The move stoked fears in Israel that Hamas, which is the de facto ruler in the Gaza Strip, could allow weekly protests along the border to become more violent after several weeks of relative calm, and could also renew rocket fire on Israeli towns.

“If no agreement is reached, the chances for violence along the border tomorrow afternoon are high,” a Gazan source told the Ynet news site.

The Israel Defense Forces on Thursday began beefing up troop presence in areas near the Gaza border. It also ]deployed Iron Dome missile defense batteries in the Tel Aviv metropolitan area and in the south as a precautionary measure against potential attack from either the Gaza Strip or from the north, where the security situation has also been increasingly precarious.

Israeli soldiers stand near a battery of the Iron Dome defence system, designed to intercept and destroy incoming short-range rockets and artillery shells, deployed in Tel Aviv on January 24, 2019. (Menahem KAHANA / AFP)

Defense officials reportedly fear that the Iran-backed Islamic Jihad terror group could fire a longer-range missile from Gaza into Israel’s densely populated heartland.

Israeli officials are also worried that fighters in the Strip could carry out cross-border shooting attacks, either with light arms or anti-tank missiles, the Ynet news website reported. Some roads near the Gaza fence are expected to be closed off Friday.

The money transfer, originally slated for Wednesday, had been frozen Tuesday night by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu after two incidents in which Israeli soldiers were shot at along the border, including one in which a soldier was hit in the helmet and lightly injured. Israel also responded by shelling observation posts and carrying out airstrikes, killing one Hamas fighter.

A Palestinian man shows his money after receiving his salary in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip November 9, 2018. (Said Khatib/ AFP)

Under the unofficial ceasefire arrangement between Israel and Hamas, Doha has agreed to transfer a total of $90 million to Gaza in monthly installments of $15 million. The group received the funds, in $100 bills, in November and December.

The money, $10 million of which goes to Hamas civil servants and the rest to needy residents in the Strip, was seen by defense analysts as key to calming tensions between Israel and the Palestinian enclave, which has seen regular violence along the border over the past 10 months.

Israel approved the transfer on Thursday, but moments later Hamas announced it would reject the money, accusing Israel of violating the ceasefire agreement brokered by the Egyptian military, UN envoy Nickolay Mladenov and Qatar by delaying the transfer of the money.

“We say our people and Gaza will not be part of the blackmail and the internal Zionist elections,” senior Hamas official Khalil al-Hayya said.

Masked Hamas gunmen attend the funeral of Mahmoud al-Nabaheen, 24, in the Bureij refugee camp, in the central Gaza Strip, on January 23, 2019. (MAHMUD HAMS / AFP)

According to reports, Hamas had been trying to calm the situation after the Tuesday flareup to allow the money through, but the use of the cash as a carrot had increased pressure on the group to reject it and take a harder line toward Israel.

Israel’s entire security establishment had been in favor of moving forward with the transfer, including the Israel Defense Forces, the Mossad intelligence service, the Shin Bet security service, and the National Security Council.

During a security cabinet meeting on Wednesday, defense officials said that it was the Islamic Jihad terror group, not Hamas, that had been behind the attacks on Israeli troops on the Gaza border the day before, and that while Israel’s shelling in response had killed a Hamas fighter, the terror group that rules Gaza has refrained from responding.

The transfer of the funds to Hamas, which calls for the destruction of the Jewish state, is unpopular in Israel, esecially among right wing voters who will be going to the polls on April 9. Hamas had initially seen the freeze as little more than campaign posturing from Netanyahu.

Since March, Palestinians have been holding regular protests on the border. Israel has accused Gaza’s Hamas rulers of using the demonstrations as a cover for attacks on troops and attempts to breach the security fence.

Palestinian protesters during clashes with Israeli forces following a demonstration along the border with Israel, east of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, on January 18, 2019. (Abed Rahim Khatib/ Flash90)

Last week some 10,000 Palestinians participated in riots along the border on Friday afternoon, throwing rocks, fire bombs and hand grenades at Israeli troops, and burning tires. Israeli soldiers reportedly responded with tear gas and, in some cases, live fire.

Over 200 Palestinians have been killed and thousands more injured along the Gaza border by Israeli troops since March, according to statistics from the United Nations and the Strip’s Hamas-run health ministry. Hamas has claimed many of the dead as its members.

An IDF soldier was shot dead by a Palestinian sniper in July during a riot along the security fence. A Palestinian man living in Israel was also killed by a rocket attack from the Gaza Strip in November.

Adam Rasgon and Judah Ari Gross contributed to this report.

 

IDF accuses Iran-backed Islamic Jihad of undermining Gaza calm as tensions rise

Posted January 25, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: IDF accuses Iran-backed Islamic Jihad of undermining Gaza calm as tensions rise | The Times of Israel

Army’s Arabic-language spokesperson says terror group has been trying to ‘destabilize’ situation in the Strip for weeks

Members of the Iran-backed Palestinian Islamic Jihad terror group march during a military parade in Gaza City on October 4, 2018. (Anas Baba/AFP Photo)

The Israeli military on Thursday accused the Iran-backed Palestinian Islamic Jihad terror group of efforts to “destabilize” the situation in the Gaza Strip, as an unofficial ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas appeared to be in peril of collapsing.

“In recent weeks, we have monitored increasing attempts by the Islamic Jihad movement to destabilize the security situation in the Gaza Strip,” the Israel Defense Forces’ Arabic-language spokesperson tweeted.

“The activities of the radical Islamic Jihad movement risk… the attempts to improve the civilian reality in the Gaza Strip,” Lt. Col. Avichay Adraee added.

The accusations by the army spokesman came shortly after the Hamas terror group announced it would not be accepting millions of dollars in funding from the Qatari government, a key aspect of the unofficial ceasefire arrangement with Israel.

Hamas government employees wait to receive 60 percent of their long-overdue salaries, at the main Gaza Post Office, in Gaza City, November 9, 2018. (AP Photo/Adel Hana)

The $15 million tranche — out of a total of $60 million still to be paid to Hamas in four monthly installments — had originally been scheduled for transfer last week, but was blocked by the Israeli security cabinet over violence along the border. The funds were then due to be transferred on Wednesday, but were delayed then, too, after Israeli soldiers came under fire along the Gaza border on Tuesday.

The Israeli military believes the shooting attacks on its troops — including sniper fire at an Israeli commander, who was hit in the helmet by a bullet — were directed by the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, the second largest terror group in the Gaza Strip, which receives much of its funding from Israel’s nemesis, Iran.

“Residents of Gaza, through its activities, Islamic Jihad is putting your safety and security at risk,” Adraee wrote.

IDF Spokesman in Arabic, Avichay Adraee at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Jerusalem on September 6, 2017. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

“There is no question about the loyalty of this organization. The only issue is whether it will succeed in its plans to drag you all toward an escalation,” he added.

Following further cabinet discussions and in light of the recommendations of the heads of all of Israel’s security services, the government on Thursday said that it had approved the transfer of the funds to cash-strapped Hamas, which rules the Gaza Strip.

However, moments after the Israeli announcement, senior Hamas leader Khalil al-Hayya said his group was not accepting the Qatari money, accusing Israel of violating the ceasefire agreement brokered by the Egyptian military, UN envoy Nickolay Mladenov and Qatar by withholding the money in response to border violence.

The helmet of an IDF officer that was hit by a sniper bullet during a riot along the Gaza border on January 22, 2019. (Courtesy)

“We told the brother and ambassador [Qatari envoy Mohammed al-Emadi] that we reject the third Qatari grant in response to the occupation’s behavior and its attempts to disengage from the understandings that Egypt, the United Nations and Qatar mediated,” Hayya told reporters in a Gaza press conference.

“We say our people and Gaza will not be part of the blackmail and the internal Zionist elections,” he said.

Senior Hamas official Khalil al-Hayya making a statement to the press on January 24, 2019. (Screenshot: Al-Aqsa TV)

It was not immediately clear how Hamas’ refusal to accept the remaining money would affect the unofficial ceasefire.

Prior to Hamas’ announcement, the Israel Defense Forces deployed Iron Dome missile defense batteries in the Tel Aviv metropolitan area and in the south as a precautionary measure against potential attack from either the Gaza Strip or from the north, where the security situation has also been increasingly precarious.

Under the unofficial ceasefire arrangement between Israel and Hamas, Doha agreed to transfer a total of $90 million to Gaza in monthly installments of $15 million. The group received the funds, in $100 bills, in November and December.

The money, $10 million of which goes to Hamas civil servants and the rest to needy residents in the Strip, was seen by defense analysts as key to calming tensions between Israel and the Palestinian enclave, which has seen regular violence along the border over the past 10 months.

“With our many active forces and factions, we are leading our efforts in the direction of obtaining our rights, which have been taken from us, on the path to liberation and return,” Hayya said.

Palestinian protesters during clashes with Israeli forces following a demonstration along the border with Israel, east of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, on January 18, 2019. (Abed Rahim Khatib/ Flash90)

The Hamas official said al-Emadi “understood” the terror group’s decision not to accept the funds.

“In the name of the Palestinian people, I offer our gratitude to Qatar — its emir, its people and its institutions. We tell them that Qatar’s efforts are appreciated,” the Hamas official said.

Al-Emadi arrived in the Gaza Strip late Wednesday evening via the Erez crossing, the Hamas-linked Al-Quds TV reported.

A diplomatic source told The Times of Israel that al-Emadi was still in his office in Gaza as of Thursday evening, noting that it was unclear when he would depart Gaza — a possible sign that negotiations with Hamas were ongoing.

The transfer of the funds to Hamas, which calls for the destruction of the Jewish state, is widely unpopular in Israel.

Since March, Palestinians have been holding regular protests on the border. Israel has accused Gaza’s Hamas rulers of using the demonstrations as a cover for attacks on troops and attempts to breach the security fence.

Over 200 Palestinians have been killed and thousands more injured along the Gaza border by Israeli troops during this time, according to statistics from the United Nations and the Strip’s Hamas-run health ministry. Hamas has claimed many of the dead as its members.

An IDF soldier was shot dead by a Palestinian sniper in July during a riot along the security fence. A Palestinian man living in Israel was also killed by a rocket attack from the Gaza Strip in November.

 

ISRAEL AGAIN DESTROYS RUSSIAN PANTSIR S1 IN SYRIA 

Posted January 25, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Russia warned Iran of imminent Israeli attack – TV7 Israel News 24.01.19 

Posted January 25, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

 

 

Where’s David’s Sling and why wasn’t it used to intercept Iran’s missiles?

Posted January 25, 2019 by davidking1530
Categories: Uncategorized

I was wondering this too when I saw that it was an Iron Dome that was used.

Hmm…

https://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Wheres-Davids-Sling-and-why-wasnt-it-used-to-intercept-Irans-missiles-578377

Rafael have started delivering major components of the new US-Israel David’s Sling Weapon System

Missile defense system hasn’t been used since it failed to intercept Syrian missiles last year.

At around 2:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Israelis enjoying the slopes of the Mount Hermon ski resort heard a loud bang and saw smoke trails in the skies above them. The Iron Dome missile defense system had intercepted a long-range missile fired by Iranian forces in Syria.

The missile was an Iranian-made surface-to-surface model with a range of some 200 km. with a payload of hundreds of kilograms of explosives that was fired from the outskirts of Damascus. The launch of this type of missile doesn’t happen at a moment’s notice. It took months of preparation and the approval of the highest officials in Tehran.

Israeli intelligence must have identified the chatter. They knew it was coming.

According to Syrian reports, an hour earlier Israeli jets carried out a rare daytime strike on Iranian targets in Syria. No special instructions had been given to the thousands of civilians enjoying the day and no warning siren was sounded.

However, the IDF was prepared, operating the recently upgraded Iron Dome to cover Mount Hermon.

While the primary targets of the Iron Dome system are short-range rockets and other artillery rounds that have been successfully intercepted, like the Iranian surface-to-surface missile on Sunday, the job should be done by the David Sling missile defense system.

This system became operational two years ago, and was first used last year against two SS-21 Tochka tactical ballistic missiles launched from Syria.

But, they missed their mark and David’s Sling has not been used since then.

Part of Israel’s multi-layered missile defense system umbrella, David’s Sling was designed to intercept tactical ballistic missiles and medium-to-long-range rockets, as well as cruise missiles fired at ranges between 40 to 300 km.

The Iranian missile would have made an ideal target to demonstrate to the Israeli public that the expensive defense system actually works.

Each interceptor launched by Israel’s David’s Sling system costs an estimated $1 million, but the army insists that the cost is not relevant when they are launched in order to defend the home front.

Israel’s air defenses also include the Iron Dome, which is designed to shoot down short-range rockets; and the Arrow system which intercepts ballistic missiles outside of the Earth’s atmosphere. Compared to the David’s Sling costly interceptor, each Iron Dome Tamir interceptor has a reported price of between $100,000 and $150,000.

But that shouldn’t be why we haven’t seen the use of David’s Sling since its failed interception.

Israel continuously improves the technology behind its anti-missile systems, with the Iron Dome upgraded with the Tamir interceptor that has a demonstrated capability against cruise missiles.

A week before the system was used, it was reported by Inside Defense that the United States Army wanted to purchase two Iron Dome batteries from Israel.

The Iron Dome undergoes upgrades “all the time” a spokesman for Rafael Advanced Systems told The Jerusalem Post, adding that the “system performed in accordance with its variety of capabilities.”

It was a good opportunity to give the new system a chance to fire while showing off its new capabilities to the US, as well as to the Iranians who want to deter Israel from launching further attacks against their interests in Syria.

But the question keeps popping up: Where is the David’s Sling?

Are there problems with the joint Israeli-US project that the public doesn’t know about?

Fearing for Jewish community, Israel silent on Venezuela unrest

Posted January 24, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: Fearing for Jewish community, Israel silent on Venezuela unrest

Some 6,000 Jews still living in the Latin American country might find themselves in uncharted waters after President Maduro, accused of fostering anti-Semitism due to Iran ties, breaks off diplomatic relations with US.

Itamar Eichner|Published:  01.24.19 , 11:44

Israeli officials have decided to keep mum on the unrest in Venezuela due to fears it might harm the Jewish community in the Latin American country after Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro broke off diplomatic ties with the United States. Maduro’s government has been accused of fostering anti-Semitism and extreme anti-Israeli views due to Venezuela’s expanding relations with Iran.Maduro ordered American diplomats to leave the country within 72 hours, after Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido declared himself interim president during a rally on Wednesday. Guaido’s call for elections in the country quickly won the backing of the Trump administration, and was later followed by similar statements from Canada and a slew of right-leaning Latin American governments, including Venezuela’s neighbors Brazil and Colombia.

Riots in Venezuela (Photo: AFP)

Riots in Venezuela (Photo: AFP)

Venezuela’s 20,000 Jewish population has dropped by more than 50 percent over the past decade—with most emigrating to the United States, Mexico or Israel—due to concerns over rising anti-Semitism as well as economic and political unrest in the oil-rich state.

An attack on a synagogue in Caracas, 2009 (Photo: AP)

An attack on a synagogue in Caracas, 2009 (Photo: AP)

Today, some 5,000-6,000 Jews still live in Venezuela, the majority of whom reside in the capital Caracas. The community preserves the traditional Jewish lifestyle, attending synagogues, Jewish schools and community centers.

The Jewish Agency and other Jewish organizations say they are ready to assist Venezuela’s Jews, while Jerusalem is monitoring developments in case the situation deteriorates.

A protest against anti-Semitism in Venezuela (Photo: AP)

A protest against anti-Semitism in Venezuela (Photo: AP)

At a rally in the east of Caracas that drew hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans, Guaido accused Maduro of usurping power. He promised to create a transitional government that would help the country escape its hyperinflationary economic collapse.

“I swear to assume all the powers of the presidency to secure an end to the usurpation,” 35-year-old Guaido told an exuberant crowd.

Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido at a rally in Caracas (Photo: EPA) (Photo: EPA)

Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido at a rally in Caracas (Photo: EPA)

Guaido’s declaration takes Venezuela into uncharted territory, with the possibility of the opposition now running a parallel government recognized abroad as legitimate, but without control over state functions.

Reuters contributed to this report.

 

Russias rebuke of Israels Syria strikes wasnt mere lip service

Posted January 24, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: Russias rebuke of Israels Syria strikes wasnt mere lip service

Analysis: By making itself the sole superpower in the region, Moscow must create balance that keeps everyone happy; but the Israelis, the Syrians and the Iranians are all griping and fighting to advance their own interests.

Ron Ben Yishai|Published:  01.24.19 , 14:30

Following the kinetic military conflict in Syria on Sunday night between Israel, the Iranian Revolutionary Guards and the Assad regime, Wednesday saw the “soft” conflict between the sides on the public diplomatic arena. This is how struggles on the international arena are managed in the second decade of the current millennium: the fighting continues, but not with violence.

The Syrians started the soft war when they filed a complaint against Israel with the United Nations Security Council and demanded that Israel stop violating their sovereignty by attacking targets in their territory. Of course, Syria’s UN ambassador said not a single word about the Iranian military entrenchment in his country.On Sunday and Monday, the Russian military headquarters in Syria settled for laconic statements of facts, with no condemnation or demands of Israel, and this must have angered Damascus. Russia prefers not to anger Assad, as it doesn’t want him to withdraw his invitation to Moscow to keep air and naval bases along the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea, for the first time since the time of the czars.

IAF attack overnight Monday near Damascus (Photo: EPA)

IAF attack overnight Monday near Damascus (Photo: EPA)

Russia also wants to profit from the rehabilitation of Syria after the civil war, and it needs the goodwill of the regime in Damascus to reach a political agreement that would stabilize the situation in the country, following which the rehabilitation could begin in earnest.

For all of these reasons, the Russian Foreign Ministry released a statement through a lower rank, its spokesperson, in which it condemned Israeli operations and demanded that it ceases its attacks in Syria—just as the Assad regime demanded.

Except that the Russian Foreign Ministry’s statement included an interesting sentence, calling on all sides to stop waging geo-political struggles on Syrian territory. This sentence, it appears, was not just meant for Israeli ears but also, and perhaps mostly, for the ears of the ayatollahs regime in Iran.

Behind this implied message to Tehran is rather credible information published by the Kuwaiti newspaper Al Jarida. The paper’s reporter in Jerusalem has good sources, and the paper has had several decent scoops about the Iranian fight against Israel on Syrian soil. A story published on Wednesday morning, which was written by the paper’s correspondents in Jerusalem and Tehran, said that Qasem Soleimani, the commander of the Revolutionary Guards’ elite Quds Force, toured the Syrian Golan Heights about a week ago, some 45 kilometers from the Israeli border.

 (Photo: ImageSat International ISI)

(Photo: ImageSat International ISI)

It’s safe to assume Al Jarida’s credible sources meant for this information to reach the Russians. Russian President Vladimir Putin did commit to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and to US President Donald Trump that he would keep the Iranians at least 80 kilometers away from the Syria-Israel border on the Golan Heights.

If Soleimani did visit that area on January 18, at such a close distance from the border with Israel, it would constitute a clear violation of the promises Moscow made to Jerusalem and Washington. It is quite possible that behind Al Jarida’s credible sources were powers who sought to make it clear to the Russians that the Iranians, their so-called allies, don’t care about the promises the Kremlin made. These sources wanted to show Moscow that Iran is provoking Israel, and therefore the Russians have no right to complain to the Jewish state about its attacks in Syria.

It’s also quite possible that Soleimani’s visit to the Golan was in order to prepare the missile his men fired at Israel earlier this week.

According to Al Jarida, Soleimani also met with the heads of the National Security Council in Tehran and told them Netanyahu is pushing for escalation on the Syrian front to get more votes in the upcoming Israeli elections. It’s unclear whether the information about Soleimani’s comments was accurate, but the very fact that he met with the heads of the Iranian National Security Council is interesting in and of itself.

It appears questions are being asked in Tehran about the entanglement in Syria, and this is a positive development from an Israeli standpoint. But more importantly, Israel is signaling to Moscow that it needs to keep its word, which was probably not very pleasant for the Russian Foreign Ministry to hear.

 (Photo: ImageSat International ISI)

(Photo: ImageSat International ISI)

Israel should nevertheless take the Russian statement seriously. It’s not just lip service the Kremlin is paying to Damascus, which lost several anti-aircraft batteries in the latest round of fighting. It should be taken as serious statement of Russian intent to limit the IAF’s freedom of operations in Syria, which could limit the fight against Iranian entrenchment in the country. The situation at present is delicate, and Israel’s Security Cabinet will have to thoroughly discuss future moves.

Life’s not easy for the Russians. Everyone is constantly coming to them with complaints. The Syrians complain that Moscow isn’t defending them from Israel’s strikes; the Israelis complain that the Russians are not fulfilling their promise to curb the Iranians; and the Iranians claim the Russians don’t sufficiently value their contribution to preserving the Assad regime.

This is what it’s like now that the Russians have made themselves the dominant superpower in the Middle East, and particularly in the Syrian arena. The position of dominant superpower has its pluses, but also quite a few minuses.

 

Off Topic:  Israel is the first country to finalize post-Brexit trade deal with UK 

Posted January 24, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: Israel is the first country to finalize post-Brexit trade deal with UK – Israel News – Jerusalem Post

Israel’s trade with Britain in was valued at more than £10 billion in 2018.

BY SARA RUBENSTEIN
 JANUARY 24, 2019 14:22
Israel is the first country to finalize post-Brexit trade deal with UK

The United Kingdom agreed “in principle” to a post-Brexit free trade agreement with Israel at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

UK’s Secretary for International Trade Liam Fox announced the decision on Wednesday together with Israel’s Economy Minister, Eli Cohen.

Embedded video

Dr Liam Fox MP

@LiamFox

“I’m delighted that as Britain prepares to leave the European Union and to ensure continuity for our businesses in both directions, we’ve reached agreement in principle today with our colleagues in Israel,” Fox said.

“Israel has been one of the most cooperative and productive partners in this relationship where our trade is already strong and set to go further,” he added. “For us, the continuity as we leave the European Union will be a precursor to an even more ambitious agreement in the future.”

Cohen commented that Israel’s trade with Britain in was valued at more than £10 billion in 2018, and expressed his hopes that, “this free trade agreement will accelerate, increase and strengthen our economic relationship.”

Israel has been in talks with the UK for more than a year to ensure that there is continuity in trade between Israel and the UK once Brexit is enforced, according to Yariv Becher, the Economy and Industry Ministry’s commercial attaché in London.

Currently Israeli trade with the UK is governed by its free trade agreement with the EU but Britain is likely making a “no-deal” exit from the European Union.

Britain’s exit from the EU places the government under pressure to form its own trade agreements, but they cannot sign them until they officially leave the European Union.

Herb Keinon contributed to this report.

 

Off Topic: Israel jumps to No. 5 on Bloomberg Innovation Index 

Posted January 24, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: Israel jumps to No. 5 on Bloomberg Innovation Index – Israel Hayom

 

Off Topic: Federal judge upholds Arkansas law against boycotting Israel 

Posted January 24, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: Federal judge upholds Arkansas law against boycotting Israel – Israel Hayom