ARAB AND WORLD

Mon 05 Feb 2024 2:31 pm - Jerusalem Time

The attack by Israeli ministers on the terms of the new deal was “planned in advance.” A Hebrew newspaper reveals the details

An Israeli report said, on Monday, that the attack by a number of ministers on the terms of the new deal with Hamas, which according to sources familiar with it includes an exchange of prisoners and efforts to cease fire in the Gaza Strip, was “planned in advance.”


The Hebrew daily Maariv quoted unnamed sources as saying, “The attack against the deal was planned before the Israeli Cabinet meeting held on Sunday.”

 

It added: “According to the sources, a number of Likud ministers (the ruling party in Israel) were asked to speak publicly in the media against the parameters of the deal, even though Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu leads this party.”

 

It continued: “The sources explained that this does not mean that the ministers were asked to say things they disagreed with, but mainly that they were asked to highlight and publicize their position, while publishing the attack on the deal at the cabinet meeting well.”

It pointed out that the Likud ministers who opposed the deal were the Ministers of Economy Nir Barkat, Diaspora Affairs Minister Emhai Shikli, Foreign Affairs Minister Yisrael Katz, Agriculture Minister Avi Dichter, Justice Yariv Levin, Education Yoav Kisch, and Transportation Miri Regev.


The newspaper quoted Justice Minister Levin as saying during the cabinet meeting that “the number of prisoners scheduled to be released for each hostage is ‘unacceptable’ without details.

 

He added, “It is also impossible to release them to the West Bank.” We have to find a solution for this,” according to the same source.

 

As for the Minister of Education, he said at the meeting: “This cannot be the deal.” What was published in the media does not look good at all. “It is worrying.”

 

In turn, the Minister of Economy said: “The idea of a ceasefire day for every hostage is fictitious. In the previous round, they received a ceasefire day for every ten hostages.”

 

The newspaper did not explain the reasons for asking the ministers to attack the deal.

 

Israeli reports indicated that the United States is “pressing for the parties to accept this deal.”

 

In this context, Israel says that it is awaiting Hamas’ response to the specifics of the deal, which have not yet been officially revealed.

 

The deal includes the release of Palestinian prisoners from Israeli prisons in exchange for Israeli prisoners in the Gaza Strip and a ceasefire in the Strip, according to unofficial reports and statements.

 

Qatar and Egypt are mediating between Israel and Hamas in order to complete this deal.

 

On January 28, a meeting was held in the French capital, Paris, with the participation of Israel, the United States, Egypt, and Qatar, to discuss a prisoner exchange deal and stop the war in Gaza, which will take place in 3 stages, according to Palestinian and American sources.

 

Tel Aviv estimates that there are about 136 Israeli prisoners in Gaza, while it holds no less than 8,800 Palestinians in its prisons, according to official sources from both parties, but there is no confirmation of the final number by both parties.

ARAB AND WORLD

Mon 05 Feb 2024 2:27 pm - Jerusalem Time

Israeli plan: UNRWA will not be part of Gaza Strip the “next day” and this is the alternative..

As part of its fierce campaign against the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA), Israel plans to prevent the agency from working in the occupied Palestinian territories and replace it with another agency that is also affiliated with the United Nations. Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper reported today, Monday, that the most likely option is the World Food Program.


Israel claims that UNRWA employees participated in the “Al-Aqsa Flood” attack carried out by Hamas fighters in southern Israel, last October 7. Since the beginning of the war, Israeli bombing has targeted many UNRWA centers and facilities in the Gaza Strip.


The newspaper reported that Israel is considering another option to replace UNRWA, which is the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), which was working in the sector to a reduced extent, and Israel is considering expanding its activity if the United States agrees to that.


Israel is also considering introducing other international civil bodies in the fields of education and health into Gaza, or establishing bodies formed by states and providing humanitarian care.


The Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs is working on this plan, which aims to ensure that UNRWA will not be part of the “day after” in the Gaza Strip after the war. The newspaper reported that the Israeli Foreign Minister, Israel Katz, instructed the Ministry's Director General, Yaakov Blitstein, last Thursday, to form a special working group on this plan.

The plan will be subject to approval by the government and the political-security cabinet in Israel. Katz called for the dismissal of the head of UNRWA, and instructed his ministry employees not to hold meetings with him.


Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claimed during his cabinet meeting yesterday, “In recent days, we revealed to the world that UNRWA is cooperating with Hamas, and even that a portion of its employees participated in the massacre and kidnapping on October 7. This reinforces what we have known for a long time, "UNRWA is not part of the solution, but rather part of the problem. It is time to begin the process of replacing UNRWA with other bodies that are not tainted by supporting terrorism."

PALESTINE

Mon 05 Feb 2024 2:05 pm - Jerusalem Time

The War on Gaza: Continued Israeli bombing leaves dozens of killed and injured

A number of citizens were killed and others were injured, today, Monday, as a result of the continued Israeli bombing in various areas of the Gaza Strip.


According to local sources, 8 dead bodies were recovered in the targeting of a house in the Al-Zawaida area, the majority of whom were children.


The Israeli warplanes also bombed the Al-Rimal neighborhood in Gaza City, causing smoke to rise.


They added that the Quadcopter drones opened fire on citizens near the Wadi Gaza Bridge on Salah al-Din Street in the center of the Gaza Strip, wounding a number of them.


They added that 14 dead arrived at Nasser Hospital as a result of continued Israeli artillery shelling on the city of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip since this morning.


In Deir al-Balah, 4 citizens were killed and others were injured, as a result of the Israeli warplanes bombing a house in the Al-Hakar area.


In the south, a young man was martyred and another was injured by Israeli sniper bullets inside the Zahra School, which houses displaced people in Khan Yunis.


The Israeli forces have continued their aggression against the Gaza Strip since the 7th of last October, resulting in the death of more than 27,365 citizens, most of whom were children and women, and the injury of 66,630 others, while more than 8,000 are still missing under the rubble and on the roads, where Israeli forces prevents ambulance crews from reaching them.



PALESTINE

Mon 05 Feb 2024 9:59 am - Jerusalem Time

Israeli Knesset intends to ban UNRWA, and the right calls for the resettlement of Gaza

International newspapers continue to highlight the repercussions of the Israeli war on the Gaza Strip and the ideas and projects being raised inside Israel, as well as fears of the expansion of the conflict and the outbreak of a regional war.


The newspaper "Israel Today" said that the Israeli Knesset intends to discuss a draft law submitted by Knesset member Yulia Malinowski from the "Israel Our Home" bloc, demanding the end of relations with the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Refugees (UNRWA), whether directly or indirectly, preventing any of its activities, and imposing sanctions on... the organization.


The newspaper indicated that the Foreign Affairs and Security Committee in the Knesset (Parliament) will discuss this issue on February 20.


In turn, an analysis on the American Al-Monitor website said that the extreme right in Israel defends without deterrence the return of settlers to Gaza, adding that the Israeli extreme right - as part of preparations for the upcoming elections - has already begun a campaign to resettle the Jewish communities that were evacuated during the withdrawal from the Gaza Strip. Gaza in 2005.


The article points out that for such a step to take place, the Knesset must repeal the Gaza Disengagement Law of 2005.


For its part, the Israeli newspaper "Haaretz" said that the European Union is considering imposing sanctions on "extremist" settlers in the West Bank, following the executive order issued by US President Joe Biden, which includes sanctions against 4 of the toughest settlers in Israel.


The newspaper notes that European sanctions are likely to include a ban on entry into the European Union and a freeze on assets, adding that it is unclear whether the countries that have stood by Israel since the outbreak of the war will support such a step.


As for Kamel Ahmed, he wrote an article in the British newspaper “The Guardian” about what happened to the history and culture of the Gaza Strip as a result of the Israeli war, noting that more than 200 buildings of cultural and historical importance were turned into rubble, including mosques, cemeteries and museums.


The writer said that the few Palestinians who remained in their homes and the much larger number who were displaced with the hope of returning, their culture and history turned into memories.


In turn, the French newspaper "Liberation" wrote from Baghdad about the growing mixed feelings among Iraqis regarding regional tension, noting that "there is a clear escalation of anti-American sentiment, and on the other hand there is a fear that Iraq will turn into a war zone in the future."


The newspaper adds that the situation in Gaza is strongly present in the Iraqi street, and quoted Iraqis as saying that the suffering of the Palestinians is tearing their hearts apart.

PALESTINE

Mon 05 Feb 2024 9:29 am - Jerusalem Time

West Bank: Israel Launches a massive arrest campaign in the West Bank and Jerusalem

Today, Monday, the Israeli forces launched a massive arrest campaign in the West Bank and occupied Jerusalem.




PALESTINE

Mon 05 Feb 2024 8:35 am - Jerusalem Time

Report: “Guarantees” postpone the final response of Hamas to the “Paris Understandings”

Talk about “guarantees” related to stopping the aggression against Gaza has returned to the forefront of the scene awaiting the response of the resistance in Gaza, led by the Hamas movement, to the proposal that was finally formulated and approved in the Paris understandings to stop the aggression, amid continuing consultations at several levels, whether between Resistance factions or between the factions and the international forces supporting them, as well as between mediators.


There appeared to be a willingness to accept a “suspension” of the ceasefire, interspersed with a truce that would ultimately lead to a permanent and comprehensive ceasefire.


But the need for further consultation recently prompted Hamas to postpone the visit of a high-level leadership delegation to Cairo, which was scheduled for the end of last week.


These developments came amid disagreement regarding the proposal presented, which does not explicitly provide for a complete ceasefire, leaving that part to understandings during the period of suspension of military operations, guarantees from mediators, as well as signals from the American administration of a desire to end the war.


Hamas sees the danger of handing over prisoners to the Israel

This raises concern for the rest of the factions, which see an extreme danger in the occupation government handing over its prisoners without obligating it to end the aggression completely, which makes them resume military operations after getting rid of the internal pressures imposed on them by the opposition and the families of the prisoners, and perhaps more ferocious than before. They underestimated the importance of American promises, in light of the occupation’s failure to adhere to any previous pledges.


In this context, a prominent leader in the Islamic Jihad movement denied "the existence of any disagreements with Hamas regarding the vision presented to the resistance." He said: “There are no differences at all, and whoever promotes this has malicious goals,” adding: “The matter is merely more consultation, exchange of opinions, and consultation among us, in light of the unity of the resistance in Gaza, in the field and at the political level, and everyone presents his opinion, explaining the reasons.” 


The leader of Al-Jihad confirmed, in an interview with Al-Arabi Al-Jadeed, that “during the ongoing discussions with the brothers in Hamas, we affirm the principle of stopping the war, which is the same vision that they adopt, as there is an agreement that the sacrifices made by the people of Gaza must be It has a great price paid by the occupation, which does not stop at ending the aggression only, but also includes breaking the siege that was imposed on the Gaza Strip for the past 17 years, after the complete withdrawal from Gaza, facilitating the reconstruction process, and alleviating the burden on the shoulders of the displaced and displaced.


The leader continued: “We see that the proposed guarantees may be insufficient before agreeing to the proposal presented to the resistance in Gaza, and it is possible that the movement will accept negotiations or a cessation of military operations, provided that this ultimately leads to a permanent and comprehensive ceasefire, as well as the presence of clear guarantees.” It is stipulated that the mediators and the American administration adhere to.”


He said: “Today we have in our hands what places the neck of (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu under the feet of the resistance - in reference to the prisoners - which makes him, his government, and the American administration eager and eager after the resistance in order for it to agree to a ceasefire and the exchange deal, especially after the war entering its fourth month without achieving any of the goals they announced.”

Hamas is committed to a complete end to the aggression

For his part, a Hamas leader stressed that “there is no change in the movement’s position,” stressing “their adherence to the necessity of ending the aggression completely.”

The leader of the movement, preferring not to mention his name, said in statements to Al-Araby Al-Jadeed, “A decision, such as concluding a deal with the enemy, must be taken with complete agreement between the resistance factions, as they are partners.”


He pointed out, "If there is no agreement from the first moment on a permanent ceasefire in any proposal, the guarantees surrounding that must be clear, and this is what is being agreed upon between the factions." He stressed, at the same time, that "there is no disagreement about this principle, and that what is currently taking place is further discussion to produce a response in the appropriate form, whether accepting or rejecting the presented offer, if it does not meet the aspirations of our people."


The leader of the movement believed that a delegation headed by Haniyeh would arrive in Cairo within a few days to discuss the offer, before announcing the official position, pointing out that the visit would take place during the current week.


The leader of the Hamas movement, Osama Hamdan, said the day before yesterday that “the discussion and consultation on the general framework proposal, which was circulated at the Paris Quartet meeting, is based on the negotiations reaching a complete end to the aggression, a complete withdrawal of Israeli army out of Gaza, and lifting the siege on the Gaza Strip, ensuring shelter for the displaced, reconstruction, completing a serious prisoner exchange deal, and practical international recognition of our people’s right to self-determination and establishing their independent, fully sovereign state with Jerusalem as its capital.”


Hamdan stressed, during a press conference from Beirut, that the movement “will be where the interest of our Palestinian people is,” noting that it is “in constant communication and consultation with all Palestinian resistance forces and factions, especially partners and comrades in the field and in arms.”


For his part, Deputy Secretary-General of the Islamic Jihad Movement, Muhammad al-Hindi, indicated in press statements that “the Paris meeting came to search for a way out of the war for Israel.” He said, "The talks during which came in twisted and unclear language about talking about a humanitarian truce leading to a ceasefire, but they did not talk about a complete ceasefire and ending the occupation." Al-Hindi confirmed that Netanyahu seeks to "snatch the Israeli prisoners from the hands of the resistance, so that Israel will continue its aggression against the Gaza Strip."


This comes as the Hamas movement announced, earlier, consultations that took place between the head of its political bureau, Ismail Haniyeh, and the Secretary-General of the Islamic Jihad Movement, Ziad al-Nakhalah, as well as with the Deputy Secretary-General of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, Jamil Mezher, during which “initiatives to end the aggression” were discussed.





ARAB AND WORLD

Mon 05 Feb 2024 8:30 am - Jerusalem Time

Report: “Initial positive signs towards a diplomatic path” to end the escalation with Hezbollah

Senior White House Advisor Amos Hockstein held talks on Sunday evening with senior officials in the Israeli government as part of American efforts to ease tensions on the border between the Israeli occupation army and Lebanese Hezbollah, while Israeli Channel 12 indicated “positive indicators and initial signs towards a diplomatic path that may lead to a political settlement that ensures that the war does not expand.


The channel stated that Hockstein brought with him to Israel “indications that there is room for a diplomatic settlement,” and said that these signals would not have existed “without the tacit approval” of Hezbollah regarding making further efforts in an attempt to reach a settlement through the diplomatic track. The channel pointed out that During the talks in Tel Aviv, the American official reviewed Washington's formula for the settlement, which has Israeli approval.


The American equation for the possible settlement, which was reviewed by Hockstein and reported by Channel 12, consists of two stages. The first includes Hezbollah’s withdrawal from southern Litani, the strengthening of the deployment of UNIFIL forces and Lebanese army forces in the region, and the return of residents of the Israeli border towns that were evacuated due to Hezbollah attacks.


The second stage, according to the channel, is negotiations between the Lebanese state and the Israeli government in an effort to demarcate the land borders between the two sides, and resolve disputes over the areas occupied by Israel and the disputed areas in the border region, provided that Israel is “ready to make concessions.” Note that Hockstein had mediated the demarcation of the maritime borders between Lebanon and Israel in October 2022.


According to the channel, the answer that the American mediator received from officials in Israel was that Israel will not stop the shooting in southern Lebanon and the attacks it launches in the region, until a political settlement is reached that guarantees the return of about 90,000 citizens to their homes in the border towns.


For his part, the former head of the Military Intelligence Division (“Aman”), Amos Yadlin, pointed out a dilemma facing the leadership in Israel, which is to rely on the diplomatic track, or launch a large-scale pre-emptive war against Hezbollah’s capabilities while the northern towns are evacuated of their residents, and a large number of people have been withdrawn. 


During his meeting with Israeli Security Minister Yoav Gallant, Hockstein discussed “various options to strengthen diplomatic means that will lead to an end to the conflict on the northern border,” according to what was stated in a statement issued by Gallant, and the latter said that “our commitment to our citizens is greater than any other commitment.” We are ready to solve the crisis politically, but we are also prepared for all possibilities."


The statement stated that Gallant and Hochstein discussed "the necessity of changing the security situation on the northern border, and ways for the residents of the north to return to their homes only after the security situation in the region changes." Gallant stressed that "Israel is committed to improving the security situation in the northern region, for the return of the residents of the north, after removing the threat of incursions and direct fire from Lebanese territory."


In turn, the Minister in the Israeli “War Cabinet”, Benny Gantz, said during his meeting with the American official, “The State of Lebanon is responsible for the terrorism that emanates from its territory. Israel will expand and deepen military activities to remove the threat unless the international community and the State of Lebanon remove the threat, regardless of developments in the fighting in the south, he said referring to the war on the Gaza Strip.

Sama News

ARAB AND WORLD

Mon 05 Feb 2024 8:25 am - Jerusalem Time

Politico: Biden described Netanyahu in closed talks as a crazy bad man

US President Joe Biden described Benjamin Netanyahu in closed talks as a “crazy bad man.”


The president's spokesman, Andrew Bates, was quick to deny the statement: "The president did not say that, and he will not say that in the future." Bates added that the two leaders have a "respectable relationship that extends for decades."


According to the author of the article on the American Politico website, Biden's main concern is that Netanyahu seeks to drag the United States into an all-out war in the Middle East, which will ensure the flow of American weapons and soldiers in the process. The pressure on Netanyahu to end the war in Gaza will dissipate, along with the internal political pressure on the prime minister.


According to the site, the president will not say these words publicly, but he has begun to show signs that he is listening to the complaints of pro-Palestinian activists. Examples of this include the presidential order he issued against settlers who committed acts of violence against Palestinians, and his statement that he is praying for the safety of “those being held hostage under bombs, and those displaced from their homes.”

ARAB AND WORLD

Mon 05 Feb 2024 8:16 am - Jerusalem Time

US Senate issues a bill regarding $118 billion in aid to Ukraine and Israel

On Monday, the US Senate issued a bill on border security and aid to Ukraine and Israel, which includes a budget totaling $118 billion.


According to American media reports, it was decided to divide the budget of the draft law issued by the Council, allocating $60 billion for military assistance to Ukraine, and $20.23 billion to address the American border crisis (that is, three times less than the aid provided to Ukraine).


It was also decided to grant $14.1 billion to Israel, and allocate $10 billion to humanitarian aid, including to Gaza, the West Bank, and Ukraine, as well as $2.33 billion to Ukrainian refugees.


The Council allocated $2.44 billion for American operations related to the conflict in the Red Sea and strikes directed at the Ansar Allah group, while it allocated $26.15 billion to replenish the stock of American weapons provided to Ukraine, Taiwan, and Israel, and finally $4.83 billion for measures to “deter China” in the Indo-Pacific region.


For his part, US President Joe Biden supported the draft law, and also called on Congress to quickly approve it.

ARAB AND WORLD

Mon 05 Feb 2024 8:13 am - Jerusalem Time

CNN faces pressure from its employees because of its bias toward “Israel”

The Guardian newspaper said that the American CNN network is facing violent reactions from its employees over editorial policies that they say adopt the Israeli narrative, while censoring the viewpoints of Palestinians in the network’s coverage of the war on Gaza.


Journalists in CNN newsrooms in the United States and abroad say the broadcast was skewed by administration rules and a topic approval process that resulted in very partial coverage of the October 7 attack and the Israeli war in Gaza.


“Most of the news since the war began, no matter how accurate the initial reporting, has been skewed by systemic and institutional bias within the network toward Israel,” a CNN employee said, adding that CNN’s coverage of the Israeli war on Gaza amounts to journalistic malpractice.


According to accounts from six network employees in multiple newsrooms, and more than a dozen internal memos and emails obtained by The Guardian, daily news decisions are shaped by a flow of direction from CNN headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia, which sets strict guidelines on coverage.


They include severe restrictions on quoting the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) and conveying Palestinian views, while Israeli government statements are taken at face value. In addition, every war story or news item coming from the Jerusalem office must be deleted.


A policy biased towards Israel

The American network's journalists say that the tone of the coverage was set by its new editor-in-chief and CEO, Mark Thompson, as some employees are concerned about Thompson's willingness to tolerate external attempts to influence coverage, as Thompson previously served as director general of the British Broadcasting Corporation, and was accused of caving in to government pressure. In a number of positions, including calling for the dismissal of one of the network’s most prominent correspondents in Jerusalem in 2005.


In early November, David Lindsay, the network's director of news standards and practices, issued a directive banning the publication of most Hamas statements, describing them as "inflammatory speech and propaganda."


CNN sources admitted that no interviews had been conducted with Hamas and its leaders since the October 7 attack.


CNN correspondent Sarah Sender faced criticism for repeating the alleged Israeli story that Hamas beheaded dozens of children at the beginning of the Al-Aqsa Flood operation. The correspondent later apologized for the story.


One of the network's journalists told the Guardian that there are selected individuals who edit all reports with an institutional pro-Israel bias, and often use language and phrases to absolve the Israeli army of responsibility for its crimes in Gaza, and downplay the number of Palestinian deaths and Israeli attacks.


While other employees said that some journalists with experience covering war and news in the region are avoiding assignments related to Israel, as they believe that they will not be free to tell the whole story.


One employee said there is a lot of internal conflict and opposition within the network, and some employees are looking to leave.


Some of the network's journalists believe that the problem of bias has been rooted for years as a result of the pressure the network faces from the Israeli government and groups allied with it in the United States, in addition to the fear of losing advertising.


During the last year, CNN - which was founded in 1980 - faced major challenges that toppled its leadership among American news networks, ranking third in terms of viewership, behind Fox and MSNBC.




ARAB AND WORLD

Mon 05 Feb 2024 8:10 am - Jerusalem Time

French Foreign Minister Rejects ‘Forced Displacement’ of Gazans to Egypt

France's top diplomat Stephane Sejourne said Sunday he rejects the "forced displacement" of Palestinians into Egypt from the Gaza Strip, where Israeli bombardment has pushed hundreds of thousands against the border.

At the start of his first Middle East tour as foreign minister, Sejourne addressed his Egyptian counterpart Sameh Shoukry in a joint press conference, acknowledging Cairo's concern "over forced displacement into your territory".

"We perfectly understand these concerns, and on this point, France's position remains the same: we condemn and will reject any action taken in this direction," he continued.

As Qatari and Egyptian mediators press to seal a truce deal between Israel and Gaza's Hamas rulers, Paris seeks to ensure "a ceasefire but also to prepare for the return of the Palestinian Authority to Gaza" Sejourne said.

Since 2007, Hamas and the Palestinian Authority have led rival governments, with the latter ruling parts of the occupied West Bank under president Mahmud Abbas.

Israel has trained its eyes on the border town as its next target in its campaign seeking to eliminate Hamas militants, who on October 7 launched an unprecedented attack that resulted in the deaths of about 1,160 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.

In response, Israel launched a massive military offensive that has killed at least 27,365 people, mostly women and children, according to Gaza's health ministry.

Sejourne said he told Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi on Sunday of France's desire "for a humanitarian ceasefire in Gaza and restarting talks for a... two-state solution", according to a post on social media.

Asked about France's plans to recognize a Palestinian state, the minister said the step would mark "the finalization of a political process."

That process, he said, "must lead to this, that's the logic."

"The whole question is when, at what moment and under what conditions," he continued, adding that Gaza would be "attached to the future Palestinian state".

 

OPINIONS

Mon 05 Feb 2024 8:08 am - Jerusalem Time

Is Anti-Zionism Always Antisemitic? A Fraught Question for the Moment

Jonathan Weisman

Jonathan Weisman

Opinion Writer

The brutal shedding of Jewish blood on Oct. 7, followed by Israel’s relentless military assault on Gaza, has brought a fraught question to the fore in a moment of surging bigotry and domestic political gamesmanship: Is anti-Zionism by definition antisemitism?

The question has deeply divided congressional Democrats when Republican leaders, seeking to drive a wedge between American Jews and the political party that three-quarters of them call their own, put it to a vote in the House.

It has shaken the country’s campuses and reverberated in its city streets, where pro-Palestinian protesters bellow chants calling for Palestine to be free from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea.

It surfaced in the Republican presidential debate a few weeks ago, when Nikki Haley, the former South Carolina governor, said, “If you don’t think Israel has a right to exist, that is antisemitic.” The following night, lighting the national menorah behind the White House, Vice President Kamala Harris’s husband, Doug Emhoff, who is Jewish, warned, “When Jews are targeted because of their beliefs or identity, and when Israel is singled out because of anti-Jewish hatred, that is antisemitism.”

Zionism as a concept was once clearly understood: the belief that Jews, who have endured persecution for millenniums, needed refuge and self-determination in the land of their ancestors. The word still evokes joyful pride among many Jews in the state of Israel, which was established 75 years ago and repeatedly defended itself against attacks from Arab neighbors that aimed to annihilate it.

If anti-Zionism a century ago meant opposing the international effort to set up a Jewish state in what was then a British-controlled territory called Palestine, it now suggests the elimination of Israel as the sovereign homeland of the Jews. That, many Jews in Israel and the diaspora say, is indistinguishable from hatred of Jews generally, or antisemitism.

Yet some critics of Israel say they equate Zionism with a continuing project of expanding the Jewish state. That effort animates an Israeli government bent on settling ever more parts of the West Bank that some Israelis, as well as the United States and other Western powers, had proposed as a separate state for the Palestinian people.

Expanding those settlements, to Israel’s critics, conjures images of settler colonialists and apartheid-style oppressors.

So for some Jews, the answer to the question is obvious. Of course anti-Zionism is antisemitism, they say: Around half the world’s Jews live in Israel, and destroying it, or ending its status as a refuge where they are assured of governing themselves, would imperil a people who have faced annihilation time and again.

Many Palestinians and their allies recoil just as fiercely: The equating of opposition to a Jewish state on once-Arab land — or opposition to its expansion — with bigotry is to silence their national aspirations, muffle political dissent and denigrate 75 years of their suffering. But perhaps nowhere is the question more fraught than among Jews themselves. Younger, left-leaning Jews, steeped in the cause of antiracism and terms like “settler colonialism,” are increasingly searching for a Jewish identity centered more on religious values like the pursuit of justice and repairing the world than on collective nationalism tied to the land of Israel.

Many older liberal Jews have also struggled with the Israeli government’s lurch to the far right, but they see Israel as the centerpiece and guarantor of continued Jewish existence in an ever more secular world.

For Republicans, the issue is simple and convenient. The raising of anti-Zionism in the debate over antisemitism amid the Israel-Hamas war pushes aside the presence of white-nationalist bigots on the fringes of the Republican coalition and instead forces Democrats to defend the pro-Hamas demonstrators on their own coalition’s fringes.

For the broader Democratic community, by contrast, the debate has been wrenching, pitting allies against one another, splintering more conservative Jewish Democrats who absolutely believe anti-Zionism is antisemitic from progressive Democrats, especially Democrats of color, who argue just as strongly for the latitude to criticize Israel, and leaving a huge middle unwilling to draw bright lines.

The definition of antisemitism as drafted by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance and embraced by the Trump White House includes phrases that critics say squelch political — not hate — speech:

- Denying the Jewish people their right to self-determination, such as by claiming that the existence of a State of Israel is a racist endeavor.

- Applying double standards by requiring of Israel behavior not expected or demanded of any other democratic nation.

- Comparing contemporary Israeli policy to that of the Nazis.

The definition of Nexus Task Force, a group of academics and Jewish activists affiliated with the Bard Center for the Study of Hate, agrees that holding Jews around the world responsible for Israeli government actions, as pro-Palestinian protesters did a few weeks ago outside an Israeli restaurant in Philadelphia, is Jew hatred. It also holds that it is antisemitic to reject the right of Jews alone to define themselves as a people and exercise self-determination, as some on the left do in arguing that Jews are a religion, not a nation.

In other words, virulent anti-Zionism and virulent antisemitism ultimately intersect, at a very bad address for the Jews.

Still, Democrats worry that the debate is blurring the line between political speech and hate speech. Tibetans pressing for freedom from the Chinese are considered unserious or even repugnant in Beijing, just as Native American activists demanding to reclaim parts of the United States might be to the owners of that land. But are they bigoted?

To the young Jewish activists of left-wing groups like IfNotNow and Jewish Voice for Peace, which have themselves been accused of antisemitism, the search for a Jewish identity unrooted in the land has not been complicated. Jews, after all, survived without a state for nearly 2,000 years after the Romans destroyed the Second Temple in Jerusalem and scattered the inhabitants of the Holy Land to the four corners of the earth.

To which younger, leftier Jews might respond by asking what it even means to suggest that American politics should be focused on securing a safe haven for Jews abroad when the First Amendment ensures that the United States is such a safe haven.

In all of this, a generational divide is palpable. Older Jews lived through the trials and triumphs of the early Jewish state. Middle-aged Jews remember the hope of a peace that recognized the legitimate aspirations of the Jewish and Palestinian people, embodied in the Oslo accords of the 1990s, and a diplomatic process that was pursued vigorously until the early years of the 21st century.

The young Jews joining pro-Palestinian demonstrators in the last two months know only an Israel they see as powerful, violent against Palestinians and ruled by leaders far to their right.

The New York Times

 

OPINIONS

Mon 05 Feb 2024 8:02 am - Jerusalem Time

UNRWA's Mission is Critical to Regional Security

Alsharq Al Awsat  - “Al-Quds” dot com

Alsharq Al Awsat - “Al-Quds” dot com

Opinion Writer

Mara Rudman

United States, regional, Israeli and Palestinian security requires that American and other international support for UNRWA should resume, conditional on (1) outside audit on how the organization came to function in such as a way as to tolerate Hamas operatives embedded among its staff, and (2) an assessment on whether and how its mandate might be executed more effectively, including by other entities.

Five key points underlie this conclusion.

UNRWA has many shortcomings, which its most immediate failures expose.

UNRWA just fired 12 staff who, based on the strength and rapidity of the US pause on funding, were operatives who participated in the barbaric ISIS-like Hamas attack on Israelis; more may be affiliated with Hamas in some way. In my experience working with Israeli military, Palestinian leaders, and UN officials, I found some in UNRWA leadership to tend toward the sanctimonious, too often painting only in black and white, when the reality was much more often a continuum between the two. And in so doing, they rarely acknowledged fault or shortcomings within their own organization. This has rendered them on occasion blind, and often blinkered in their outlook.

UNRWA’s mission is unique, and it is critical to regional security and stability, including that in Israel.

UNRWA is mandated to provide assistance and protection specifically to some 5.4 million registered refugees, in Gaza, the West Bank, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria. UNRWA’s mandate includes providing education, health care, and social services to its target population, as well as employment and direct relief. Employing 13,000 Palestinians in Gaza; UNRWA is the single largest employer. It runs the only public school system in Gaza. A majority of the two million Palestinians in Gaza depended on UNRWA assistance before Oct 7. For the services UNRWA provides to a desperate population there is no substitute at this time.

Providing for the most basic needs of Palestinians is part and parcel of providing security for the State of Israel.

Having two million famished, increasingly desperate people, long treated as expendable by de facto Hamas rulers, with no ability to move and limited ability to provide for themselves and their families, within walking distance of southern Israel and Egypt’s Sinai, threatens Israeli and Egyptian security and stability.

Palestinians that are food secure, and able to sustain themselves and their families, and have a political horizon that will one day realistically offer a better future for their children, are Palestinians less likely to be drawn to, or be forced to serve terrorist forces such as Hamas.

Israeli military officials long have been committed to getting humanitarian assistance into Gaza.

I know from the countless hours I spent with them on the details -- they prioritized doing so because they saw it as directly serving Israeli security interests. They worked closely with UNRWA leaders and other UN officials to devise the most effective and secure means for executing these aims. They did so appreciating that there was risk involved, but they saw far greater risk to their country, and their security, if critical goods were not able to flow, and they knew these UN entities were vital actors to ensure provision of such services in Gaza in particular.

Aid to UNRWA is key to meeting basic needs of Palestinians, particularly in Gaza, and thus critical to Israeli, regional, and US security.

For that aid to resume, we need a framework to assess what has gone so terribly wrong within the agency and whether it can be righted with internal reform or requires a transition of responsibilities to another organization within or outside of the UN. The development and oversight of the audit necessary for such assessment should be led from outside of UNRWA.

Aid must resume to UNRWA as the assessment is being carried out; Palestinians, Israelis, the region, the United States, and the world, cannot afford the risk of famine taking root in Gaza.


Mara Rudman

Former deputy envoy and chief of staff for the Office of the US Special Envoy for Middle East Peace and former official at the National Security Council


 

PALESTINE

Mon 05 Feb 2024 5:46 am - Jerusalem Time

War on Gaza: Israeli bombing and raids on Khan Yunis and a new massacre in Deir al-Balah

Clashes rage between the Palestinian resistance and Israeli army forces in several areas of the incursion into the Gaza Strip, especially west of Gaza City, and in Khan Yunis, south of the Strip, which is witnessing fierce battles.


Today, Monday, the Israeli war on the Gaza Strip entered its 122nd day, as the Israeli army committed a new massacre in Deir al-Balah, leaving dozens of killed and injured, while the Israeli air force intensified its raids on Khan Yunis Governorate, which was subjected to severe artillery shelling.


Israeli aircraft continued to target residential squares in various areas of the Gaza Strip, blowing up homes in Khan Yunis Governorate, and bombing the vicinity of shelter centers to push Palestinians to flee towards Rafah Governorate, which was also subjected to a series of raids targeting the border areas with Egypt.


Clashes are raging between the Palestinian resistance and Israeli army forces in several areas of the incursion into the Gaza Strip, especially west of Gaza City, and in Khan Yunis, south of the Strip, which is witnessing fierce battles.


The Israeli army committed a new massacre in Deir al-Balah, claiming 30 killed and dozens of injured. The Israeli army claims that the city is safe, as it called on the Palestinians to take refuge and then committed a massacre there.


According to the government office in the Gaza Strip, the Israeli army has so far committed 2,325 massacres against civilians that were documented during the past four months, leading to the death of 34,238 Palestinians, of whom 27,238 arrived in hospitals, where the rest were considered missing, while an increase in the number of injured has reached 66,630 since the start of the war.

PALESTINE

Sun 04 Feb 2024 10:35 pm - Jerusalem Time

Hamas denies rejecting ceasefire proposals

A leading source in the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) denied the validity of the news circulating about the movement’s rejection of ceasefire proposals.


The leading source called on the media to be careful, "and not to fall into the trap of the Israeli media, which aims to confuse the Palestinian street."


He added, "We are in the final stage of internal consultations and with the factions regarding the proposal that we received, and we will respond soon."


White House National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan considered that “the ball is in Hamas’ court” regarding reaching a calm agreement in Gaza.

Sullivan told the American CBS television network on Sunday that the United States believes it is necessary to reach an agreement to release the remaining detainees, including Americans, during a humanitarian truce in the Gaza Strip.

He said: "This is in the national security interest of the United States. We will push for this tirelessly. For this, this is a top priority for us."


He added that "the ball is in Hamas' court" when it comes to such an agreement, noting that the Israelis put forward a proposal.


He continued, "Hamas will have to say yes, and we will continue to put pressure in every direction. Is the deal very close? I cannot say that, but it is something that could develop very quickly. I cannot say that it is around the corner."


On the other hand, Sullivan said that humanitarian issues in Gaza will be a top priority for US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken during his current visit to the Middle East.


Blinken is on his way to the Middle East on a tour during which he will visit Israel, Egypt, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the West Bank this week.


Blinken's top priority in this round will be to secure humanitarian aid to the Palestinians in Gaza who are suffering from severe distress, as Israeli attacks have continued for months.


“The needs of the Palestinian people will be front and center,” Sullivan said.

In an interview with the American Al-Hurra channel, Sullivan said: “The two-state solution must be accompanied by ensuring Israel’s security by integrating it into the region alongside its neighbors, and achieving this requires us to end the war in Gaza in a way that protects Israel’s security and this begins with reaching hostage deals.”

PALESTINE

Sun 04 Feb 2024 10:26 pm - Jerusalem Time

The war on Gaza: raids on Khan Yunis and Rafah, and the death toll rises to 27,365

Israeli aircraft continued to launch a series of raids on various areas in Gaza, and as the war on Gaza entered its 121st day today, Sunday, the raids expanded to affect various areas in Rafah Governorate. The number of killed in the war on the Gaza Strip rose to 27,365 people, while the number of those injured increased to 66,630 since the start of the war.


Israeli artillery renewed its bombardment of residential squares in Khan Yunis Governorate and the vicinity of shelter centers. The past hours witnessed intense battles in Gaza City, and violent clashes in several areas in Khan Yunis, between Palestinian resistance factions that confronted forces from the Israeli army.


The Israeli army committed 14 massacres against families in the Gaza Strip, claiming 127 dead and 178 injuries during the past 24 hours, according to a statement issued Sunday by the Ministry of Health in Gaza.

The Israeli army acknowledged the killing of an officer from its forces in battles in the southern Gaza Strip, bringing the number of officers and soldiers killed announced since the beginning of the war on the Gaza Strip on October 7 to 562, including 225 since the beginning of the ground invasion on October 27.

ARAB AND WORLD

Sun 04 Feb 2024 10:19 pm - Jerusalem Time

Canada joins America in imposing sanctions on settlers involved in terrorist attacks

Canada joined the United States of America in imposing sanctions on four settlers involved in terrorist attacks in the West Bank.


Canadian Foreign Minister Melanie Jolie said on Sunday that Canada will impose sanctions on Israeli settlers who incite violence in the West Bank.


Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced last Friday that he was considering imposing sanctions on extremist colonists in the West Bank.


It is noteworthy that the United States took a similar measure, as on February 1, it imposed sanctions on four Israeli settlers accused of involvement in acts of violence in the occupied Palestinian territories.


At least 10 citizens were killed by settlers' bullets during the past year, and settlers continue to launch terrorist attacks on Palestinian towns and villages, burning homes, vehicles and property of citizens and destroying their crops.

ARAB AND WORLD

Sun 04 Feb 2024 8:44 pm - Jerusalem Time

The Biden administration is pressuring Israel to agree to a 4-month truce

Israeli Channel 13 reported this evening, Sunday, that the administration of US President Joe Biden is exerting pressure on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in an attempt to push him to agree to a humanitarian truce in the besieged Gaza Strip for a period that may reach at least four months.


ARAB AND WORLD

Sun 04 Feb 2024 7:28 pm - Jerusalem Time

Israeli FM: UNRWA is part of the problem... We are working to expel it from Gaza

Israeli Foreign Minister Yisrael Katz continued the campaign to demonize the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA), repeating Israeli allegations that the UN agency constitutes “part of the terrorist infrastructure of the Hamas movement,” while stressing that the Israeli authorities are “working to expel the agency from Gaza.” 


This came in a publication by the Israeli Minister of Foreign Affairs on the “X” website, following press reports that revealed a recommendation made by senior officers in the Israeli army to the Chief of Staff of the Army, Herzi Halevy, on the necessity of stopping the smear campaign led by the Israeli government against the UNRWA agency in light of There is no alternative to it at the present time.


The Israeli government is leading a smear campaign against the agency, claiming that about 12 of its employees participated in the attack of last October 7 carried out by the Hamas movement on Israeli military sites and towns, and claims that more than 190 employees belong to the “Hamas” or “Islamic Jihad” movements, which is prompted several countries to announce the cessation of their funding to the agency.


Israel Katz said, “UNRWA is part of the problem. Part of Hamas’ terrorist infrastructure in Gaza. And part of the Palestinian lie that there are ‘refugees’ (Palestinians) who need to return to the State of Israel. We are working to expel UNRWA from the Gaza Strip, "It is the problem, not the solution."


Following Katz's post, UNRWA said that "as the largest humanitarian organization in the Gaza Strip, we will do everything we can to continue our indispensable work to support people in Gaza. Despite repeated appeals, there is still no humanitarian ceasefire."


In turn, the Commissioner-General of UNRWA, Philippe Lazzarini, asked on Sunday whether “the UN agency was paying the price for raising its voice in drawing attention to the plight of the residents of the Gaza Strip, and to the humanitarian catastrophe unfolding before our eyes,” in a statement he made to the Financial Times newspaper and published a clip of it on the UN agency’s account via the “X” platform.


The Commissioner-General of UNRWA asked: “Are we paying the price for raising our voice in drawing attention to the plight of the people of Gaza, and to the humanitarian catastrophe unfolding before our eyes?” The UN official believed that this "contributed to directing, accelerating, or amplifying criticism of us."


As of last January 30, 18 countries and the European Union had decided to suspend funding for UNRWA, based on Israel’s allegations that 12 of the agency’s employees participated in the October 7, 2023 attack on Israeli settlements around the Gaza Strip.


On Saturday evening, Israeli Channel 12 revealed a letter sent by senior officers in the Israeli military establishment to the Army Chief of Staff, Halevy, in which it stated that the Israeli leaks, which prompted several countries to stop funding UNRWA, “took place in an unorganized and ill-considered manner, which may have negative consequences."


The letter stated, “In the short term, we recommend not escalating the process of distorting UNRWA, before the expected discussion in Congress, as well as until discussions are held to determine policies on this issue in the coming week, by the (Israeli) political level, and to discuss alternatives to the role of the agency.


The letter considered that “this campaign (against UNRWA) is like a snowball,” and that “the international campaign against the agency no longer depends on Israel, and there is nothing that can be done about it,” and pointed out that “the army’s policy in this regard has not yet been determined now, the political level must decide whether to press more to put an end to the organization after 75 years of its activity.”


The Ynet website indicated that the Deputy Director General of the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs conveyed the Israeli allegations regarding the involvement of 12 UNRWA employees in the attack of last October 7, to the Agency’s Commissioner General, during a routine meeting held on January 18, Without the knowledge of the Israeli army leadership.

ARAB AND WORLD

Sun 04 Feb 2024 5:23 pm - Jerusalem Time

Democrats warn that support for Israel in Congress is eroding

A growing group of Democrats in the US Congress are warning that Israel's brutal bombing in its war on Gaza seeking to destroy Hamas is becoming more difficult to justify - eroding support for Tel Aviv on Capitol Hill.


Lawmakers were quick from the beginning to support Israel's right to defend itself, especially after the Hamas attacks on October 7 that killed more than 1,000 people and took hundreds of others hostage.


But the four-month-old Israeli war on Gaza has killed more than 27,000 people in Gaza, most of them women and children, according to Gaza Health Ministry officials and the United Nations.


A report by the website specialized in congressional matters on Sunday stated, “The increasing number of civilian casualties - coupled with growing allegations that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has done little to reduce harm to civilians - is sparking new dissatisfaction in Washington with Israeli military tactics, while calls are mounting for an immediate halt of fire, even temporarily, to allow the delivery of humanitarian aid."


The website quotes Representative Bennie Thompson (from Mississippi) as saying: “Many of the people I spoke to have real concerns about what is happening in Israel and Gaza, and their conversations with me recently were that we need some ceasefire, and some assessments have concluded "The killing must stop."


He continued: “Just because a group did something (Hamas on October 7) at some point does not mean that you can go ahead and eliminate many innocent people, excessively, who have nothing to do with this matter... People feel that “The matter (Israeli bombing) is excessive and exaggerated, and you cannot continue with this amount of widespread killing that targets children and women, who have nothing to do with the situation.”


Concerns are rising as Congress prepares to consider a package of national security proposals that combine tougher immigration policies on the US-Mexico border with billions of dollars in military aid to Ukraine and Israel.


The fate of the legislation is already in doubt due to strong opposition from House conservatives to both Ukraine-specific funding and domestic border provisions. But the path becomes more difficult if liberal Democrats begin to back down over fears that Israeli aid will be used to indiscriminately kill Palestinian civilians.


Senator Bernie Sanders (independent from Vermont) led a campaign against at least some of the funds allocated to Israel, accusing Washington of inciting the killing of civilians in Gaza. He is drafting an amendment to the national security package that would keep funding for Israel's defensive weapons systems, but cut $10.1 billion in funding for what his office describes as "the offensive weapons of Netanyahu's right-wing government."


“This (the indiscriminate bombing of Gaza) is not just an imaginary horror show taking place in some far-flung corner of the world,” Sanders said on Wednesday on the Dean Obeidallah program (of Palestinian origin). “It is being done with direct American military assistance.”


For many years, Democrats have repeatedly criticized the right-wing Netanyahu, but this scrutiny has intensified since his last victory in 2022, when he joined several far-right and ultra-Orthodox parties, formed the most extreme ruling coalition in Israel’s history and formed a government that included chauvinist nationalist agitators, to promote anti-Arab sentiments, such as Ben Gvir, Sometrich, and others.


At least two of those ministers joined a recent demonstration by Jewish settlers demanding Jewish control of Gaza – a position that Netanyahu officially opposed.


Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), a Jewish Democrat who has fought for the return of hostages and humanitarian aid for Gaza, said he is concerned that the extremist views of these coalition ministers have already eroded American support for Israel — at home and abroad.


Raskin said: “Many of the statements and actions of the right-wingers in Netanyahu’s war government greatly undermine Netanyahu’s reputation and status in the United States and in Congress,” noting that the extremists in Netanyahu’s government “held a conference last week about removing the Palestinians from Gaza, and then restoring settlement to Gaza.”


“This becomes a very serious political problem here, if this is the rhetoric of people in Netanyahu’s government,” Raskin warned.


Debate over US policy in the Middle East has long divided Democrats, but those differences have become more pronounced since the Hamas attack on October 7, pitting Israel's staunchest defenders against liberal lawmakers who have sharply criticized Netanyahu's retaliation in Gaza, some accused Israel of committing genocide.


Republicans, on the other hand, are more united on this issue. Most of them strongly support the Israeli war on the Gaza Strip, which “they see as necessary to eliminate the threat posed by Hamas forever,” according to the experts. “Some believe that Hamas’ regional popularity means that all Palestinians in Gaza are complicit in terrorism,” according to the site.


“These are not innocent Palestinian civilians, including infants,” Rep. Brian Mast (R-Fla.) told peace activists at the Capitol last week, who served in the Israeli occupation army.


This issue has become a huge headache for US President Joe Biden as he seeks re-election this year, as Muslim voters, who flocked to Biden in the 2020 elections, are angry at the president’s refusal to call for a ceasefire. Many of these critics have pledged to withhold their support on November 5 of this year, a threat that could have great significance in several so-called battleground states such as Michigan, Minnesota, and Pennsylvania.


Biden visited Michigan last week to shore up support with union workers and other friendly constituencies. But he also faced protesters angry at his continued support for Israel, some of whom accused him of killing children.


Biden has taken a number of steps to try to ease those tensions.


He has sent his senior government officials to the Middle East in an attempt to build regional support for the release of the hostages and reach a ceasefire agreement. He has pushed Netanyahu to work toward the creation of a Palestinian state when the conflict in Gaza subsides — a move the Israeli leader has repeatedly rejected. On Thursday, he issued an executive order imposing sanctions on Israeli settlers accused of carrying out violent attacks on Palestinians in the West Bank.


As part of this ongoing campaign, US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken traveled this week to a number of Middle Eastern countries, where he will press for a two-month ceasefire and the release of all remaining hostages.


As sensitive talks continue, and innocent casualties pile up, Democrats have become more vocal in their protests that civilian casualties are too many and that the war must stop.

PALESTINE

Sun 04 Feb 2024 1:12 pm - Jerusalem Time

Ben Gvir renews the call to displace the residents of Gaza and raises a storm of criticism in Israel

Israeli Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir once again called for encouraging the residents of the Gaza Strip to “voluntarily immigrate” and giving them financial incentives to do so. He attacked the administration of US President Joe Biden, accusing it of obstructing the Israeli war effort, which sparked a storm of criticism from Israel.


Ben Gvir said in an interview with the Wall Street Journal that Biden, “instead of providing full support to us, is providing humanitarian aid and fuel to Gaza, and that goes to Hamas,” and he considered that American behavior would be completely different if former President Donald Trump were in the presidency.


The American newspaper quoted the far-right minister as saying that he has a plan aimed at “encouraging the residents of Gaza to voluntarily migrate to other countries around the world” by providing financial incentives to do so, and Ben Gvir said that this is the real humanitarian effort that must be undertaken.


Ben Gvir proposed holding a global conference to help Israel find countries ready to receive Palestinian refugees.


He also said that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is at a crossroads now, and that he must choose the path he will take.


Sharp criticism

Ben Gvir's statements sparked dissatisfaction and sharp criticism, as Israeli War Council member Benny Gantz described them as irresponsible, and said that Netanyahu should order Ben Gvir to stop harming Israel's foreign relations.


Opposition leader Yair Lapid also considered it evidence that Netanyahu does not control the extremists in his government.


Lapid said, "Ben Gvir has proven that he does not understand anything in foreign policy, and Netanyahu has no control over the extremists in his government," and stressed that "Ben Gvir's statements are a direct attack on Israel's international standing and harm its security."


In turn, Knesset member Naor Shiri from the “There is a Future” party led by Lapid said, “Ben Gvir was not satisfied with the enormous damage he caused to internal security, and now he is causing international political damage to Israel,” according to what the Israeli newspaper Maariv reported.

ARAB AND WORLD

Sun 04 Feb 2024 1:02 pm - Jerusalem Time

American writer: What can we tell the children of Gaza?

In his column in the New York Times, Nicholas Kristof started from the story of a 10-year-old girl in Gaza. Her father was an X-ray technician. She was smart and spoke English well. She had been accepted into an international exchange program, and had to travel to Japan to meet a bright future that awaits her, but now she lies in a hospital bed with a severe wound to her thigh and part of her femur bone missing as a result of a bomb explosion.


Dr. Samer Al-Attar, the orthopedic surgeon who cared for the girl and told me about it, says Nicholas Kristof, says the girl needs to have her hip amputated to save her life, and her father is struggling to come to terms with how his life and the life of his daughter have collapsed.


Nicholas Kristof mentions that he covered many bloody wars, and wrote scathingly about how governments in Russia, Sudan, and Syria recklessly bombed civilians, but the matter is different this time, because “my government stands by what President Joe Biden referred to as indiscriminate bombing, and because I am this time helping pay for the bombs as a taxpayer."


While the writer understands Israel's reaction, the military response is not just one of two options without a third. Israel chose to respond with bombs weighing about two thousand pounds, destroying entire neighborhoods, and allowing a small amount of aid to enter the region, which is now teetering on the brink of famine. The result is This does not appear to be a war against the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas), but rather against the entire population of Gaza.


Responsibility for collusion

Nicholas Kristof wondered how Americans, with their conflicting views due to the war, could confront their friends from Gaza, pointing out that they might remain silent, or look away, instead of entering into a bitter and polarizing debate that might cost friendships, but “indifference is the most insidious danger.” Not at all,” says writer Elie Wiesel, who also said that “human suffering anywhere concerns men and women everywhere.”


The writer warned that the suffering of children - and half of Gaza's population is children - "should raise our particular concern," noting that estimates by the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) indicate that there are at least 17,000 children in Gaza who are unaccompanied or separated from their families. In the midst of the chaos of war and displacement.


Some will blame all of this on Hamas, but - for Nicholas Kristof - this seems to be an evasion of moral responsibility, because Israel and America have the ability to act, and “the atrocities suffered by Israeli civilians” do not justify leveling Palestinian neighborhoods to the ground.


The writer wondered how Biden criticizes Russia for bombing civilians and undermining the rules-based international order, while he himself supplies Israel with bombs that wipe out neighborhoods in Gaza, and how he gives diplomatic cover to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at a time when the residents of Gaza are facing famine, especially since he suspended funding for His country to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Refugees (UNRWA), which is responsible for providing assistance to them.


The writer concluded that decisions related to waging war are painful, because innocent civilians always suffer, stressing that a smart 10-year-old girl in Gaza is as valuable as the life of any American or Israeli child, “and therefore we Americans must bear responsibility.” “We are complicit in her tragedy and the tragedy of Gaza as a whole.”


Source: New York Times + Aljazeera

ARAB AND WORLD

Sun 04 Feb 2024 12:59 pm - Jerusalem Time

Palestinian detainees released by Israel show signs of aggravated torture

The testimonies collected from a number of Palestinians who disappeared at the hands of the Israeli occupying forces in Khan Yunis, in the south of the Gaza Strip, and who were released yesterday [February 1, 2024] in Rafah, state of aggravated physical and psychological torture practiced against them by the Israeli prison administration.

The detainees bore visible marks of torture and beatings on their bodies, including their legs, feet and arms. Mahmoud Al-Nabulsi said: "The army entered my house in the Al-Amal neighborhood of Khan Yunis and I told them that I was sick and that I could not move. They arrested me, put me in a demolished house and took us then transferred to detention centers in Israel. 


I stayed in prison for ten days. "Every day we were beaten and tortured. I have never seen such torture in my life. They carried out the worst forms of torture against us.""If I had stayed in prison two more days, I would have died. They asked me about the tunnels and Israeli prisoners of war held in Gaza, and I told them I knew nothing. I'm 70 years old," he explained. "We didn't drink water in the prison for four days. They poured water on the ground in front of us to torture us when we were thirsty," he added. 


Khaled Al-Nabris said: "When we evacuated Khan Yunis, we took the route that along the sea: "When we evacuated Khan Yunis, we took the road along the sea. When we passed the checkpoint, I was kidnapped by Israeli army forces. They took us to prisons, we were subjected to severe torture, we were covered with water-soaked blankets, we remained in the extreme cold and we did not drink water.""The army transferred us to another place. We were subjected to different types of torture. Each place had a different torture process. 


The officer would hit me on the head and when I complained, he would hit me even more. I couldn't sleep because cold," he added. "In addition to physical torture, we are subjected to great psychological humiliation... insults and other things," he explained. The detainees, - he added, "are subjected to double torture, because they are attacked by dogs while they sleep."

ARAB AND WORLD

Sun 04 Feb 2024 12:29 pm - Jerusalem Time

Washington's raids will not achieve calm... Wall Street: The Gaza ceasefire ensures that

The Wall Street Journal said that the aerial bombardment launched by American forces on the sites of pro-Iranian armed groups in the Middle East may be less effective in calming tensions in the region than an agreement that stops the fighting between Israel and the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas).


According to the newspaper’s report, the American retaliatory strikes in response to the killing of 3 American soldiers at a military base in northeastern Jordan were carefully planned to ward off attacks on American forces in the Middle East without pushing Iran into a direct conflict.


Whatever the reaction the bombing provokes, it is unlikely to prevent Iran's allies from launching further attacks against American and Israeli interests. However, analysts and officials in the region that the newspaper spoke to believe that stopping these attacks requires a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip.


On Friday, American forces launched strikes on sites they said were belonging to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard and the Quds Force in Syria and Iraq, in response to the killing of the three soldiers, amid warnings of dragging the region into war.

The US Central Command announced that the strikes were carried out by aircraft launched from the United States, including long-range bombers, noting that more than 125 precision-guided missiles were used.


It added that the targeted facilities are command, control and espionage centers and storage sites for missiles and drones.


American forces in Iraq and Syria have been subjected to more than 160 attacks since the start of the war in Gaza, which represents a sharp escalation in a slowly worsening conflict in which the militants aim to expel the United States from the region, according to the Wall Street Journal.


The American newspaper attributes the reason for igniting the fiery conflict between the United States and the "constellation of militias allied with Iran" to the war that Israel began in the Gaza Strip following the attack by the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) on southern Israel on October 7, 2023, which came in response to the ongoing Israeli violations of Al-Aqsa Mosque and the ongoing incursions into West Bank cities and towns.


Since Israel's invasion of Gaza, Lebanese Hezbollah has also engaged in an exchange of fire on Israel's northern border. The attacks launched by the Iranian-backed Houthis have severely affected international shipping traffic in the Red Sea, which prompted the United States to launch air strikes on the territory controlled by the group in Yemen.


The two groups - Hezbollah and the Houthis - announced that they would not stop the fighting until Israel stopped its aggression against the Gaza Strip.


The newspaper pointed out that the war in Gaza, which claimed the lives of 27,000 people - most of them women and children - put the administration of US President Joe Biden under greater pressure to achieve its dual political goal, which is that a ceasefire in Gaza would lead to the release of Israelis detained by Hamas.


The United States is pushing a proposal that would initially stop the war for 6 weeks to allow the hostages out and pave the way for a more sustainable peace.


However, the newspaper says that there are major obstacles preventing the two sides from being convinced to agree to the deal, especially internal divisions over accepting its terms as they are.

ARAB AND WORLD

Sun 04 Feb 2024 11:49 am - Jerusalem Time

Israeli division over the exchange deal, and Cohen warns against criticizing Qatar

The official Israeli radio reported that the Prime Minister did not want to hold a meeting of the mini-ministerial team to discuss the prisoner deal, before receiving a response from the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas), while former Mossad chief Yossi Cohen called for accelerating the conclusion of the deal.


The Israeli Prime Minister - according to the radio - fears that the differences will deepen and information about the position on the deal will leak. Channel 12 also quoted a senior political and security official as saying that the decision regarding concluding the prisoner deal is in the hands of the leaders of Hamas and the Al-Qassam Brigades in the Gaza Strip.


In the same context, former Mossad chief Yossi Cohen called for a single deal that includes all detainees still in Gaza. He also called on officials to stop publicly criticizing Qatar, which plays the role of mediator to conclude an agreement, and called on them to act wisely.


Cohen said - in an interview with Israeli Army Radio - that Qatar is the only country that can mediate an exchange agreement at the present time, stressing that criticizing it publicly by Israeli officials is wrong.


The former Mossad chief explained that Israel will have to pay a heavy price to complete the exchange deal, and added, "Therefore, let us pay it today from the beginning (to release) everyone and shorten the period of hostage-holding in Gaza."


Many statements issued by Israeli officials reflect the extent of the division in the corridors of the government and politicians regarding the expected exchange deal. Opposition leader Yair Lapid stated that the deal will be painful, but the detainees must be returned.


But Heritage Minister Amichai Eliyahu indicated that their release was not obligatory, and said, “Jewish morality does not hold us fully responsible for the release of the kidnapped.”


"We have to get out of the mental stagnation that the deal is the only way to release the kidnapped people," Eliyahu said.


Hamas conditions

Hamas leader Osama Hamdan announced yesterday, Saturday, that the movement had received a general framework for a possible deal with Israel, stressing that its decision is contingent on reaching a halt to the aggression, withdrawing the occupation forces, lifting the siege on the Gaza Strip, and guaranteeing the right of the Palestinians to self-determination and establishing their independent state with Jerusalem as its capital.


Hamdan confirmed - in a press conference from Beirut - that Hamas is open to everything that would stop the aggression and provide relief to the residents of the besieged Strip, at a time when Benjamin Netanyahu’s government continues to obstruct all initiatives.


He explained that Hamas is examining the general framework that was discussed at the Paris meeting, and is focusing on bringing the negotiations to a complete end to the aggression, withdrawing the occupation forces out of the Gaza Strip, lifting the siege on it completely, providing shelter for the displaced, reconstruction, completing a serious prisoner exchange deal, and the world’s recognition of the Palestinians’ right to Self-determination and the establishment of a fully sovereign state with Jerusalem as its capital.


Hamdan praised the efforts of Egypt and Qatar aimed at stopping the aggression against the Gaza Strip, stressing that Hamas “will be where the interest of the people is.” He said that the priority is to alleviate the suffering of the residents of the Gaza Strip and protect the Palestinians in the West Bank, as well as protecting the Al-Aqsa Mosque, the holy sites, and the Palestinians’ right to return and independence.


He also said that Hamas is in constant communication and consultation with all factions of the Palestinian forces, especially its field partners and comrades in arms, adding, "We commend all national positions that expressed unity and support for the resistance."


Mediation efforts

Efforts and calls have intensified - over the past few days - to reach a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip, amid cautious optimism towards concluding an exchange deal for prisoners and detainees between Hamas and Israel.


Last Thursday, Qatari Foreign Ministry spokesman Majid Al-Ansari said that the Hamas movement had received the ceasefire proposal in a positive atmosphere, awaiting its response.


In an interview organized by the Foreign Policy Institute at Johns Hopkins University, Al-Ansari expressed his hope that “the coming days will witness good news regarding the truce, even if the situation is volatile.” He added that efforts will now focus on the form of the humanitarian truce, although there are many details that must be discussed.


He pointed out that "optimism is present in light of the two parties' agreement on the hypothesis that will lead to the next truce, but the mediators still have a difficult road ahead of them."


Qatari mediation - with Egyptian-American support - succeeded in reaching a temporary humanitarian truce on November 24, which lasted for a week during which 240 Palestinian prisoners were released from occupation prisons in exchange for the release of more than 100 detainees held by the resistance in Gaza, including about 80 Israelis. .

PALESTINE

Sun 04 Feb 2024 11:48 am - Jerusalem Time

War on Gaza: More than 27 thousand Palestinians killed since October 7

The death toll in the Gaza Strip rose to 27,365 today, Sunday, the majority of whom are women and children, since the start of the occupation’s aggression on the 7th of last October.


According to the Ministry of Health in the Gaza Strip, the number of injured people rose to about 66,630, while more than 8,000 are still missing under the rubble and on the roads, and the Israel forces prevent ambulance crews from reaching them.


The Israeli aircraft targeted a civilian car in the Al-Salam neighborhood, east of the city of Rafah, leading to the death and injury of a number of citizens.


PALESTINE

Sun 04 Feb 2024 11:43 am - Jerusalem Time

West Bank: 1,593 attacks carried out by Israeli army and settlers last month

The head of the Wall and Settlement Resistance Committee, Moayed Shaaban, said that the Israeli authorities and colonizers carried out 1,593 attacks during the month of last November.


Shaaban explained in the commission’s monthly report on “violations of the Israel and colonial expansion measures” that the Israeli forces carried out 1,407 attacks, while the colonists carried out 186 attacks.


He pointed out that the violations were concentrated in Hebron Governorate, with 291 attacks, followed by Jerusalem Governorate, with 203 attacks, and then Nablus Governorate, with 200 attacks.


He stated that the settlers’ attacks were concentrated in Hebron Governorate, with 63 attacks, 38 in Nablus, and 23 in Ramallah, the most prominent of which was the shooting of the young man Tawfiq Ajaq in the Eastern Farm.


Shaaban pointed out that the colonists stole 47 heads of livestock, 3 agricultural tractors, and two tents, while the Israeli forces seized 82 vehicles, 7 surveillance camera recordings, 15 bulldozers and trucks, and 19 cases of theft of money and gold jewelry were recorded. 60 heads of livestock were seized.


He pointed out that the colonists' attacks also led to the uprooting and burning of a total of 836 trees, including 473 olive trees, in the governorates of Bethlehem, Qalqilya, Nablus, and Hebron, in addition to stealing more than 70 heads of cows. They also carried out 9 thefts of farmers' equipment, 3 mobile homes, and an agricultural tractor. .


He added that the Israeli authorities carried out 58 demolition operations, affecting 62 facilities, including 22 occupied homes, two uninhabited homes, 16 agricultural facilities, and others, and were concentrated in the governorates of Hebron, Jerusalem, Qalqilya, and Bethlehem. They also issued 26 notices to demolish facilities concentrated in the governorates of Jerusalem, Nablus, and Hebron during the same period.


Shaaban stated that the recent attacks have begun to take a new and dangerous form, represented by two additional aspects. The first is the heavy fines that have been imposed by the so-called “Settlement Council” on Palestinian farmers and shepherds, amounting to hundreds of thousands of shekels, in a new mechanism to restrict citizens and forcing them to leave, and secondly, with the military orders that the occupation forces have begun to disseminate in order to seize lands, and in order to implement the idea of buffer zones previously proposed by the extremist Bezlael Smotrich.


Shaaban confirmed that the two recent orders that targeted the lands of Deir Istiya in Salfit Governorate, specifically those surrounding the Rafafa settlement, and the Western Farm in Ramallah Governorate, which surrounds the Harasha hotspot, do not only seize the targeted land, but rather form a buffer zone over vast areas of land that prevent citizens from accessing them. .


Shaaban warned of the new policy followed by the occupying state these days of preventing citizens from accessing the lands according to military orders, which is completely inconsistent with the applicable international laws that govern the work of the occupation in the occupied land, stressing that these measures have prevented citizens from reaching more than half a million dunums of their land as a result of colonial attacks and the systematic closure of Palestinian villages and cities by the Israeli forces in the recent period.

PALESTINE

Sun 04 Feb 2024 9:16 am - Jerusalem Time

War on Gaza: Israel continues its aggression against Gaza for the 121st day

The Israeli aggression against Gaza continues for the 121st day, with continuous bombing of civilians in the Strip, where the death toll of Palestinian killed, according to the latest statistics of the Ministry of Health in Gaza, has reached 27,238 people since last October 7, adding that the aggression also resulted in 66,452 injuries.


The Hebrew Broadcasting Corporation reported, quoting the former head of the Mossad in Israel, Yossi Cohen, that Tel Aviv will need 5 years after the war to recover.


The former Mossad chief added that Tel Aviv will have to pay a heavy price to recover the detainees.


The government media office in the Gaza Strip announced that Israel destroyed 140 government headquarters, 100 schools and universities completely, 295 schools and universities partially, 183 mosques completely, and 264 mosques partially. It also targeted and destroyed 3 churches, and completely destroyed 70,000 housing units. 290,000 housing units were partially destroyed and rendered uninhabitable, as a result of the occupation dropping 66,000 tons of explosives.


It confirmed that Israel put 30 hospitals out of service, and 53 health centers were also out of service, in addition to partially targeting 150 health institutions, destroying 122 ambulances, and targeting 200 archaeological and heritage sites.



PALESTINE

Sun 04 Feb 2024 8:17 am - Jerusalem Time

Israeli settler assaults a Christian cleric in occupied Jerusalem

An Israeli religious young man from the Haredi movement surprised Father Nicodemus Schnabel and spat on him. When Father Nicodemus stressed his right to photograph the attacker, another young Jewish man came and insulted Jesus Christ, peace be upon him.


Yesterday, Saturday, the General Superior of the Benedictine Monks in the Holy Land, Father Nicodemus Schnabel, was subjected to a racist attack in the “Mount Zion” area in occupied Jerusalem.


Commenting on the racist attack, the coordinator of the Holy Land Christians Forum, Wadih Abu Nassar, said: “We are tired of denouncing such racist attacks, and we are even more tired of the lack of deterrence of the aggressors, neither by the Israeli police, nor by political and religious officials in Israel.”


Abu Nassar added: "The minimum required of the Israeli police is to bring the assailants to justice, and what is required is to submit serious indictments against them."


The coordinator of the Holy Land Christians Forum called on senior political and religious officials in Israel to denounce the attack, in order to send a strict message not to repeat such crimes in the future, he said.

ARAB AND WORLD

Sun 04 Feb 2024 8:10 am - Jerusalem Time

Euro-Med: A “horrific” scene of execution of a Palestinian by an Israeli sniper in Gaza

The Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor said that its team documented a “horrific scene” of the execution of a Palestinian civilian who was searching for food near the Palestine Stadium in Gaza City, in the northern Gaza Strip.


The Observatory indicated that the target was shot directly in the back by an Israeli sniper, pointing to the documentation of cases of field executions carried out by Israeli snipers stationed on rooftops in various areas in Gaza.


The Observatory published a video clip showing a Palestinian lying on the ground as he appeared to be riding a bicycle, with bullet marks appearing on his back while two cats were standing on his body.


Observatory director Rami Abdo said on X: “(The clip) depicts the execution of a civilian who was searching for food near the Palestine Stadium. Every day, Israeli snipers stationed on rooftops kill dozens of civilians and restrict the movement of ambulances.”

The Observatory previously indicated that the Israeli army executed many residents of the Gaza Strip on the ground during its storming of residential homes as part of its ground invasion, while the victims’ children witnessed the execution scenes.


One of the testimonies documented by the Observatory was from a 16-year-old girl about a documented crime of genocide, in which she said: “My family and I were sitting in the house when the Israeli army stormed it. My grandfather came out raising a white flag. They shot him and killed him immediately. My brother came out.” "The 12-year-old was helping him, so they threw a bomb at him. I saw his insides coming out of his body, amidst the screams."


Last January, human rights organizations in the Gaza Strip monitored many field execution crimes, which caused civilian casualties and injuries even though they were carrying a white flag, including the execution of the two brothers Nahed (14 years old) and Ramez Barbakh (20 years old) in The city of Khan Yunis, on the morning of Wednesday, January 25, during their attempt to flee the neighborhood in which they lived.


A picture of the two killed brothers, with the white flag they were raising near them, was spread, and human rights organizations considered targeting them to be a premeditated murder carried out by sniper units in the occupation army.


After the Israeli army withdrew in recent days from the city of Beit Lahia in the far north of the Gaza Strip, an area that witnessed a ground incursion at the height of the brutal war, rescue crews and citizens found the bodies of 30 Palestinians placed in black bags and buried under rubble, while they were blindfolded and handcuffed. A field execution was carried out against these people after their arrest.


The Israeli army arrested thousands of Gazans during its ground incursion into the cities of the Gaza Strip, and practiced the most horrific methods of insult and abuse against them after stripping them of their clothes, claiming that they were members of the resistance, while one of the photos showed a long line of detainees stripped of their clothes, including Al-Araby Al-Jadeed correspondent Diaa Al-Kahlot, who He was later released.