News Nosh 01.20.16

APN's daily news review from Israel
Wednesday January 20, 2016
 
Quote of the day:
"Whoever thinks it's possible to heal the hatred by using force alone is raising with his own hands the next monster: a boy without hope can be 50,000 times more dangerous than adults who have come to accept the reality."
--Yedioth commentator Merav Betito goes past the politics in examining what makes Palestinian youth murder Jews.**

You Must Be Kidding:  
A carwash in Petah Tikva was set on fire on Monday, with the police suspecting that it was an arson attack provoked by the fact that the company employs Arabs.*


Front Page:
Haaretz
Yedioth Ahronoth
  • Rupture in the government – Bennett attacked Netanyahu and Yaalon
  • Bennett about Yaalon: “Failed and stuck defense minister, Bibi flows with him. In every conflict, we are bleeding.”
  • Yaalon about Bennett: “Childish, lacking responsibility, chases ‘Likes’ on Facebook”
  • Wanted: Kindergarten teacher // Nahum Barnea
  • The terrorist who murdered Dafna Meir: 15-years-old [Photo of handcuffed boy with face blurred]
  • Criminal attack in the heart of the city – Enormous bomb laid in car of criminal blew up
  • From Shabbat: Cold wave comes
Maariv This Week (Hebrew links only)
Israel Hayom

 
News Summary:
Government top brass battle over policy, the IDF detains the 15-year-old suspect of the murderer of Dafni Meir – and the bereaved and the father of the alleged attacker make insightful statements, and a car blows up in broad daylight in Tel-Aviv – in an assassination attempt of gangsters making top stories in today’s Hebrew newspapers. Also in the news, Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and US Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro meet to reconcile and the police arrests two more left-wing human rights activists, one Palestinian and one Jewish Israeli and a state-funded settler group sent a private eye to spy on Israeli human rights NGOs. 
 
The annual conference of the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv had a rocking day Tuesday. Education Minister Naftali Bennett, ex-minister Gideon Saar of Likud, Opposition leader MK Isaac Herzog and Yesh Atid Chairman MK Yair Lapid each made harsh attacks against the conduct and policies of the Israeli government yesterday and generals attacked generals. Most significant was Bennett’s attack, in which he slammed “stagnated thinking” in Israel’s security policy, because he is a senior coalition member. Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon accused Bennett of being reckless. Yaalon also spoke at the conference and contradicted IDF Chief of Staff Gadi Eisenkot’s statement yesterday, that Hezbollah is Israel’s greatest enemy and there were “opportunities” in the Iran nuclear agreement, declaring that "Iran is our main enemy, after I heard voices saying different things."  Former general Yoav Galant also slammed Eisenkot for his “opportunities” remark, saying he should focus on “threats.” Gideon Saar said Israel was “losing Jerusalem,” as the Jewish population decreased, due to Israeli policies and stressed that Israel needs to restore its ties with the world, particularly the US. (MaarivLapid also said that the rift with the US was a terrible public diplomacy failure. 
Herzog surprised with a turn to the right saying that a two state solution was presently unrealistic and that Israel must focus on security not diplomacy – first and foremost by completing the separation barrier and separate from E. Jerusalem neighborhoods. He said that neither Netanyahu or Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas were partners for peace, contradicting statements by former president Shimon Peres. (Haaretz+)
 
Early Tuesday morning, Israeli forces detained 15-year-old Murad Adais from his bed as he slept in the village of Yatta, two nights after he allegedly stabbed to death Dafna Meir, a mother of six, in the adjacent settlement of Otniel. Meir’s husband, Natan, said, “We have no anger. I am not angry at anyone. We do not curse Arabs. We are not people who hate. That's not how Dafna and I educated the kids.” Their daughter, Renana, 17, saw Adais and screamed as he tried to pull the knife out of her body, after which he ran away, she said. Adais acted alone and had no previous record, thus making it extremely difficult for security forces to know of his plans in advance. He had snuck into the settlement, putting to rest rumors that he was a laborer there. 

Adais’ father, Bader, spoke with the Israeli media and told them his surprise at the arrest and how he opposed it: “At three in the morning I woke up to prepare to go out to work in Israel and I heard my children screaming to me from the floor downstairs that the army was in the house. I went downstairs and the officer asked me if I knew why they were in our house. I told him I had no idea.” Adais told Yedioth they searched the house for two hours and did not tell him why. “They took our cellular phones and one of the officers threatened that they would destroy our home and deport us to Gaza. I answered him that the honor would be mine to go and live in Gaza.” At around 5AM they left the house and took his son. In some of the interviews the father gave to the Israeli media he expressed doubt that it was his son. “He is a young boy, only 15-years-old, he doesn’t know what a Jew is, he never saw a Jew, he never did anything with a Jew and he has everything in life.” When asked if he were proud of his son’s attack, he said: “No, of course not. Why would I be proud? Can anyone be proud of murder? No one is proud of murder. If I had known he had committed the murder I would have likely turned him in myself.” Yet, Maariv and Walla News reported, that he told “Palestinian media” that he was “proud” of his son. Adais’ relatives told Channel 2 that “no one here was proud of the murder.” Maariv reported that people from his village gave the information about Murad being the killer. “This was a 15-year-old boy who apparently fought with his family and because of that he decided to do what he did,” the head of Mt. Hebron settlements, Yochai Dimri, told Yedioth. “This is a very worrying reality in which any youth who something goes wrong for him in life can take a knife and destroy a whole family.”
 
Netanyahu promised to demolish the Adais home and bar family members from working in Israel. The IDF has already mapped the Bader home for demolition, Maariv reported, as well as the home of the youth who stabbed and injured Michal Froman in Tekoa.
 
Meanwhile, Froman, 30, said she didn’t believe her attacker wanted to kill her. "He could have killed me, but he stabbed me once and ran away. I felt like someone had sent him or he had wanted to check off a task. If he'd wanted to kill me, he could have made more of an effort,” she said from hospital. Muhammad Kamel Shaalan, 15, from Bethlehem, was shot as he ran out of Tekoa settlement, but he is not dead as the media reported yesterday. He is in stable condition at Hadassah Hospital after being shot in the leg, Maan reported.  
 
Netanyahu made a condolence call at the Meir family in Otniel and told the EU it should “stop its hypocrisy” and visit Otniel “to see the truth.”  Netanyahu is angry at the EU for labeling settlement products and deciding this week that no agreements it makes with Israel will be applicable to settlements. Netanyahu said that the murder was simply because Palestinians don’t accept a Jewish state within any borders. Later in the day at a special event celebrating the Knesset's 67th birthday, he said emphasized the point saying, "The root of the conflict is the negation of the very existence of the State of Israel, the aspiration to wipe us off the face of the earth,” at which point the Arab MKs left the plenum in protest, saying the prime minister's speech was "cheap right-wing demagogy and exploitation of the event,"  Ynet reported. They returned after his speech. Other evens and activities were held throughout the Knesset building during the day, including MK Stav Shaffir playing piano and singing, some MKs doing Karate and another giving a spinning lesson.
 
Netanyahu was also angry at US Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro for saying that Israel had a legal double standard for Jews and Palestinians in the West Bank and that settlement activity must stop. His former aide, Aviv Bushinsky, even called Shapiro a ‘Jew boy’ in response, Haaretz+ reported. Nevertheless, Netanyahu held a ‘sulha’ (reconciliation) meeting with Shapiro in his office, nonetheless. (Maariv) And the US stood by Shapiro’s comments and also by the EU labeling, saying the US does not see it as a boycott of Israel. And despite it all, a US delegation will arrive in Israel next week to finalize details of a new military aid package. 
 
Quick Hits:
  • Poll: More than a third of Jewish Israelis see Arab citizens as 'enemies' - Poll by Institute for National Security Studies says 80 percent of Jews view Arab Israelis with a degree of suspicion. But 70 percent of Arabs identify as 'Israeli' in some form. (Haaretz+ and JTA)
  • Poll: 46% of Israeli Jews don't think Arabs should have equal rights - Did the good folks at Israel’s Army Radio station not think to ask Arab citizens themselves whether they think they deserve full and equal rights? (+972mag)
  • *'Don't employ Arabs': Carwash in central Israel set alight - A carwash in Petah Tikva was set on fire and spray-painted with graffiti against the employment of Arabs. An investigation reveals it was a deliberate fire. (Ynet)
  • 'Jewish flour' mill in central Israel hit with discrimination lawsuit - Owner of mill, which labels its products as being produced 'only by Hebrew workers,' allegedly threatened complainant that he'll 'see to it the word goes out that you don’t buy Hebrew products.' (Haaretz+) 
  • Hunger-striking Palestinian journalist receiving 'forced treatment' - The Israeli authorities have been forcing treatment on Palestinian hunger striker Muhammad al-Qiq in violation of medical ethics, said medical rights group Physicians for Human Rights Israel. (Maan)
  • Israeli court postpones trials of 3 Palestinian children  -  Sources said the court announced that the trial of Ahmad Manasra, 13, had been postponed until Feb. 16, while the joint trial of Shadi Farah, 12, and Ahmad Zaatari, 12, was postponed until March 1. (Maan)
  • Major West Bank checkpoint to be severely restricted  - Huwwara checkpoint, the southern entry into the city of Nablus, will be closed to south-bound traffic leaving Nablus during the morning and evening rush hours, Israeli authorities told the Palestinian Authority. Israeli settlers late Monday reportedly threw stones at Palestinian vehicles near the checkpoint while Israeli soldiers stood by and watched, said locals. (Maan
  • Human Rights Watch calls on private businesses to cease operations in Israeli settlements - By servicing West Bank settlements, the group says, businesses contribute to Israel's unlawful maintenance and expansion of them; Israel's Foreign Ministry calls group's report 'one-sided' and 'politicized.' (Haaretz and Maan)
  • Slovenia's biggest supermarket chain takes Israeli products off shelves - Pressure from BDS activists leads to Mercator removing Israeli produce, including pomelos, dates and avocados, from its stores. (Yedioth/Ynet)
  • Red flag: Tel Aviv terrorist previously attacked policemen - Years before he murdered three people and triggered a nation-wide manhunt, Nashat Melhem tried to choke a police officer and steal another's weapon during an investigation. (Ynet)
  • Father of slain Palestinian attacker released from Israeli custody - Shortly after his son, Thaer, 19, was shot dead on Oct. 8 after carrying out a stabbing attack in Tel Aviv, Abd al-Salam Abu Ghazaleh was detained and held for three months without trial. (Maan)
  • Who is raising money for 100,000 mezuzahs for Israeli army bases, and why? - Socks, combat gear and mezuzot are just some of the 
items for which unsupervised fundraisers raise money, efforts which the IDF spokesman calls a 'moral failure.' (Haaretz+)
  • Leading rabbi opposes religious rule in Israel - In a new booklet, influential national-religious Rabbi Eli Sadan slams refusal of orders in the army, supports Shin Bet inquest into the murder of the Dawabsheh family, and warns against left-wing 're-education' of soldiers. (Haaretz+) 
  • State Directive Comparing Software Market to Arms Trade Has Israeli Cyber Industry in Uproar - Draft rules issued late last year will undermine an important new sector, industry says. (Haaretz+) 
  • Shimon Peres discharged from hospital after suffering mild heart attack - Former Israeli president underwent successful cardiac catheterization after experiencing chest pains last week. (Agencies, Haaretz)
  • Israel Police uncover sting operation to defraud immigrants from former Soviet Union - Interpol involved in undercover operation that revealed international hoax by crime ring centered in Lithuania. (Haaretz+) 
  • Israel Police mishandling murdered tourist's case, Scottish family asserts - Testimony by friends and acquaintances being ignored, possibly because her tourist visa had expired, says aunt, Britain's Daily Record reports. (Haaretz
  • Soldier sentenced to 6 months in jail for raping colleague - A military court hands down a lenient sentence for a soldier who attacked his female colleague because the pair had previously engaged in consensual oral sex. (Ynet
  • Judge in Olmert appeal: ‘Why should he get discount?’ - Supreme Court Justice Hendel questions former prime minister’s request for concurrent sentences. (Haaretz+) 
  • New road-accident data justify fears of Israel's elderly - New data reveal that the percentage of people over the age of 65 who were killed in any sort of road accident in 2015 was 28 percent – three times their proportion in the greater population. (Haaretz+) 
  • Revolutionary Knesset bill: Time to ask prime minister questions instead of no confidence votes - (Likud) MK Tzachi Hanegbi and (Zionist Camp) MK Merav Michaeli cooperated on proposal to be discussed Wednesday, reducing the number of no-confidence in the government proposals - in exchange for a question period, as used by the British Parliament. (Maariv)
  • "New bill would allow ordinary citizens to submit legislation" - According to the proposal, any bill submitted by a minimum of 50,000 eligible voters would go directly to first reading before a Knesset committee. Matters of security, Basic Laws, clemency for " New bill would allow ordinary citizens to submit legislation. (Israel Hayom)
  • Egypt revokes citizenship of Jewish woman - because she joined the IDF - Born as Rouleen Abdullah in Alexandria, Dina Ovadia didn't even know she was Jewish until the age of 15; she moved to Jerusalem with her family, but angered Cairo when she joined the 'occupation army.' (Yedioth/Ynet)
  • Choice of arbitrator in Israel-Iran oil dispute could signal progress - Appointment of Alex Hertman, one of Israel’s most prominent arbitration and commercial lawyers and a vocal Iran critic, can be interpreted as either the opening shot in a PR campaign, or as a sign of Israel's interest in practical discussion. (Haaretz+) 
  • Israeli 'Blindspot' App Funded by Stars Like Nikki Minaj and David Guetta Encourages Bullying, Critics Say - The campaign against the ‘wacky’ and ‘fun’ anonymous messaging app founded by Bar Refaeli’s brother is being spearheaded by Israeli teens themselves. (Haaretz+)
  • U.S. LGBTQ Conference Backtracks on Banning Jewish Event With Israeli Gays - Organizers had initially cancelled a reception by a U.S. Jewish LGBTQ group following pressure from anti-Israel activists. (Haaretz+) 
  • French Police Arrest Two Suspects in Murder of Jewish Politician - Police are yet to determine whether Alain Ghozland's murder was motivated by anti-Semitism, but say the suspects have criminal records. (Haaretz+)
  • Iran essential to Mideast stability, German FM says - ‘We need Iran to calm the conflicts and re-establish stability in this crisis-hit region,’ says Frank-Walter Steinmeier. Germany intends to act in order to remove Iran from its political isolation and enlist it in the struggle to calm conflicts in the region. (Times of Israel and Maariv/JPost)
  • Some Jewish-American groups welcome Iran deal but remain wary - A Jewish-American group that lobbied for the Iran nuclear agreement says the prisoner swap and Tehran's release of captured US sailors were positive signs for US-Iranian relations but that strict verification remains paramount. (Agencies, Ynet)
  • Amnesty: Kurds' Campaign to Uproot Arabs in Iraq May Constitute a War Crime - Kurdish forces have a duty to bring to justice individuals they believe aided ISIS crimes, but they must not punish entire communities based on vague suspicions, says human rights watchdog. (Agencies, Haaretz
  • UN: Some 3,500 Held by ISIS as Slaves - Report accuses Islamic State group of possible genocide amid 'obscene' death count of at least 18,802 in Iraq alone. (Agencies, Haaretz)


Features:
Avner’s version
Avner Gveriyahu of ‘Breaking the Silence’ became one of the most vilified people in Israel. He is attacked because he spoke at the UN against the State and members of his Paratroopers unit claim he lied and (the far-right-wing NGO) ‘Im Tirtzu’ turned his face into a campaign against left-wing organizations. Now, he talks about threats to his life, he deals with difficult questions and explains why he still sees himself as a Zionist patriot, why he is completely at peace with his testimonies and why he has no complaints against the soldiers themselves [who allegedly committed violations – OH], but rather against the government, which believes that it is possible to be an ‘enlightened occupier.’ He says he stands by what he said happened in his military unit and it was just the tip of the iceberg and he has video to prove it. He said that the soldiers “who don’t want to lie to their souls need to look inside and they know what I’m talking about….There is no doubt that we wanted to be good. I remember some of the guys mopping the floors after operations (inside Palestinians’ homes), and (soldiers) who left money for the Palestinian families. But you cannot ignore that the occupation has an erosive routine. And unnecessary violence towards Palestinians. And taking souvenirs from people’s homes..." (Yehuda Shochat, Yedioth’s ’24 Hours’ supplement, cover)

Commentary/Analysis:
**How he grew up into being a murderer (Merav Betito, Yedioth, p. 4) You can call him a terrorist. Possibly a psychopath, murderer, crazy. He is still a 15-year-old youth who popped out of the bushes with a knife under cover of darkness, who attacked with all the pent up anger inside of him on a woman who stood on her doorfront quietly painting the entry. Like a wild animal ambushing from a hiding place and waiting patiently for the moment of weakness that he will come and attack, to submit and kill – he thought about his chances and then returned to his home and went to bed. The human tendency looks towards explanations for phenomena of the type of the murdering teen, questions in shock what would bring an adolescent to do such a horrifying act, thinks that this is an unusual incident statistically and the overwhelming majority of the murderers are indeed adolescents, and even take into account the biblical text that “human nature is evil from youth.” But the murderer of Dafna Meir requires other explanations, it screams for a deep discussion around the question of how did a monster like this grow up? Not a philosophical discussion and definitely not a religious one and of course not a political one – because all those will do is only miss the mark and again they will deal with the horror instead of going after the footprints from where the murderer came. Again the political speculators will turn it into profit and quickly call for all power to be used, heavy punishments, house demolitions and everything that will add more to the ring of hatred of the generation (of Palestinians) who don’t know Jews. Whoever looks for the roots of the hatred will find them in every speck of dust that the murderer breathed from birth. For him – a Jew is an enemy. Even without the sermons at the mosque and the incitement at school, he hates us: For the Jewish neighborhoods (settlements) turning green in range of view from the neglected streets of Yatta [village of murderer – OH], for the armed soldiers, for the never-ending superiority. This youth lacks any consciousness connecting between “Jew” and “good,” he has no Jewish friends and also no positive memories from violent meetings with them. The village of Yatta in the Hebron district is soaked in religious spirit, which is easy to set alight mainly because of its proximity and constant friction with the settlers, and the unbridled demagoguery in the houses of prayer and on social media networks, only confirm the real life outside. Whoever thinks it is possible to heal the hatred by using force alone is raising with his own hands the next monster: a boy without hope can be 50,000 times more dangerous than adults who have come to accept the reality. 
The Incredible Archaeological Discovery Made by the U.S. Ambassador to Israel (Zvi Bar'el, Haaretz+) 'Concerned and perplexed' over Israel's double standards? You don't say, Mr. Shapiro. 
The language of security and fear has won (Sever Plocker, Yedioth/Ynet) The transition from social-economic stories to national-political ones in the public discourse is not because the former have exhausted themselves. The turning point was caused by internalization, slow but invasive, of last year's election platforms. Netanyahu put the Jewish-Arab and Israeli-Palestinian conflict at the center of his campaign publicity. Herzog put society and the economy at the center of his.
The Brave Israeli Soldiers and the Palestinian Pothole Attack (Amira Hass, Haaretz+) In the West Bank, the Israeli army strategy seems simple: Potholes for Palestinians, asphalt for the Jews. 
The general’s visit: Things you see from there are not seen in the Prime Minister’s Office (Ran Adelist, Maariv) What can be learned from the presence of former CIA director David Petraeus at the Israel National Strategic Studies Institute conference, and about the plug whose name is Benjamin Netanyahu?... The plug is Netanyahu. The main reason is because he has been labeled as an unrestrained and irresponsible provocateur, who harms the interests of the current US administration and harms the ability of Israel to rescue itself from the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. I guess if there is a meeting between Netanyahu and Petraeus, they will talk about “the situation" and the excellent intelligence cooperation, which is code for self-interested deals in which information is exchanged in exchange for information and try to gather diplomatic and political profit to please the bosses in Jerusalem and Washington. Overall, after two years of working in the country and abroad on the subject of relations between intelligence agencies and politicians worldwide, we (my friend and partner David Arbel and I) arrived at the problematic conclusion that, usually, the intelligence services, who are directly accountable to the politicians, adapt themselves to the political agenda of those who appointed them. In some cases this is because it is a democratic imperative, and in less democratic countries, they won’t be in places where the ruler wants to hear what is convenient for him. 
Israel's Chief-of-staff Shows More Statesmanship Than Its Elected Officials (Haaretz Editorial) In a speech to the INSS, Lt. Gen. Eisenkot made a courageous admission of the limitations facing the IDF, against a backdrop of false scenarios disseminated by politicians.
Questions of identity: most Israeli Arabs want to integrate but feel discriminated against (Amos Gilboa, Maariv) The huge investment of 15 billion shekels in the Arab population is a welcome step and because of it feelings of inequality among the country’s 1.4 million Israeli Arabs (including Druze, Circassians and Bedouin, not including E. Jerusalemites) will be lessened. About the sector: They have multiple indentities: 1/3 consider themselves Israelis and another third consider themselves Palestinians, and another third consider themselves neither of the two. The majority don’t believe Israel has right to be a Jewish-Zionist state, but accept that reality.
Another Day of Combat in the Israeli Government as Bennett Tries to Have It Both Ways (Yossi Verter, Haaretz+) The education minister feels great in the government, and doesn't for a minute consider leaving it. Instead, he’s building an internal opposition of sorts.
A message from the White House (Shimon Shiffer, Yedioth/Ynet) US Ambassador Dan Shapiro's condemnation of the Israeli government on Monday was a rarity, but no accident. It's no exaggeration to assume that Israel will no longer be able to rely on the US's veto at the UN or to enjoy the automatic support that we have been used to.
The Absurdity, Racism and Inequality of Conscription to the Israeli Army (Shoham Smith, Haaretz+) In the IDF, while one arm forcibly grabs those who don’t wish to serve, the other rejects the very people who who long to do so.
Shapiro's delegitimization speech (Ruthie Blum, Israel Hayom) U.S. Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro did his administration proud on Monday. His boss, Secretary of State John Kerry, couldn't have done a better job of twisting reality to suit fantasy.
The New Frontier for BDS: Targeting Settler Businesses (Kathleen Peratis, Haaretz+) Too many progressive Jews think criticizing Israeli policies on the occupation is enough, but it's not working. Challenging settler businesses to shut up shop is the new frontier for BDS. 
As usual, the Jews are to blame (Dror Eydar, Israel Hayom) Jewish settlement throughout our homeland is not the problem, it is the solution. 
Will Israel’s Opposition Leader Oppose Netanyahu at Last? (Guy Ziv, Haaretz+) Head of the Zionist Union Isaac Herzog has finally grasped that he needs to present the Israeli public with a proper alternative. It’s a shame he didn’t reach this epiphany earlier. 
The threat to 'national existence' (Clifford D. May, Israel Hayom) Are existential threats the only ones the U.S. needs to worry about?

 
Prepared for APN by Orly Halpern, independent freelance journalist based in Jerusalem.