News Nosh 05.19.16

APN's daily news review from Israel
Thursday May 19, 2016
 
Quote of the day:
“At this rate, Elor Azariya will be appointed Deputy Defense Minister.”
--In a reference to the IDF soldier on trial for shooting in the head and killing an already shot and neutralized Palestinian assailant who was laying on the ground, Zionist Camp MK Erel Margalit reacts to the announcement that Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu offered far right-wing MK Avigdor Lieberman to be Defense Minister if he joins the government.**


Front Page:
Haaretz
Yedioth Ahronoth Maariv This Week (Hebrew links only) Israel Hayom

News Summary:
In a move that shocked the country and just as it appeared he was making an agreement to bring the opposition Zionist Camp into a unity government, Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu offered the far-right-wing MK Avigdor Lieberman to be defense minister if he joined the government instead. The story and all of its implications and reactions dominated the Hebrew newspapers today, making the report that the gas cartel had revised a key part of its agreement with Israel a side story.
  
Yesterday the front pages announced that a unity government was practically a done deal. Last night, everything changed when, Netanyahu dumped opposition leader Isaac Herzog and offered Lieberman the defense ministry portfolio – dismissing Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon, with whom he and other members of the far-right-wing government had ideological differences about issues of purity of arms. The new government expected to be formed by Friday morning, will be the most right-wing in Israel’s history – and the last three governments have consecutively been more right-wing than the previous one. The move was shocking for two reasons. First, because of Netanyahu’s 180-degree ideological change of plan, switching from the centrist Zionist Camp faction, which hoped to make peace with the Middle East, to the Yisrael Beiteinu party, whose controversial leader mainly made headlines for saying things such as Israel needs to bomb Egypt’s Aswan Dam, attack Iran and behead unloyal Arab Israeli citizens. The other shock is that such a radical right-winger would be appointed as Israel’s Defense Minister. Yedioth’s senior political commentator, Nahum Barnea, called it a ‘tragedy dressed as a comedy.’ Likud MK Benny Begin, [apparently the only moderate Likud MK left – OH], called the appointment “surreal” saying, “This move displays a lack of responsibility toward the defense establishment and toward the citizens of Israel.” Even Dan Margalit, the top political commentator of the Netanyahu-supporting tabloid, Israel Hayom, wrote an Op-Ed against the appointment. [It was not translated to English. – OH]
 
Indeed, besides the Defense Ministry, Lieberman demanded a law giving terrorists the death penalty. (Haaretz+ writes: “Such a law would be designed to make it easier for Israel’s military courts, which are empowered to impose the death penalty, to hand down that sentence on convicted Palestinian terrorists. Israeli civil law prohibits the death penalty; the only convict ever hanged in the country was Adolf Eichmann in 1962.”) Lieberman said that getting the Defense Ministry was an achievement for immigrants of the former Soviet Union. However, he dropped one of the key demands of his constituents and party: to advance legislation on matters of religion and state – so that non-Jews could marry in Israel with Jews. 
 
Naftali Bennett’s Habayit Hayehudi party was thrilled. A source told the papers that, “Lieberman entering the government is great. This would be a deeply right-wing government, the most right-wing ever in Israel.” A source from the party also said that Defense Minister Yaalon was a ‘security attack’ to the country and they were happy to be rid of him. “(Yaalon) will leave and Lieberman, who took an active role part in the demonstrations for Elor Azaria [the Hebron shooter], will come in his place. He will bring this worldview into the defense establishment.” [And bringing right-wing ideology into the IDF values over purity of arms is exactly what Yaalon was speaking out against. – OH]
 
Yaalon’s associates gave opposing reactions from him. Some said he wasn’t surprised in light of the tensions, while others said he never expected it. Israeli municipal heads of the Gaza area communities issued a statement of support for Yaalon [which is interesting because it shows they are not supportive of Lieberman’s ‘we must re-occupy the Gaza Strip’ idea. – OH] One source close to Yaalon accused Netanyahu of “doing politicking over the most important job in the Middle East." (Maariv) Netanyahu reportedly offered Yaalon the Foreign Ministry portfolio as compensation, but Maariv reported that Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan and Education Minister Naftali Bennet also want it.
 
**After he was dumped by Netanyahu, Zionist Camp leader Herzog blamed his Labor party rival, MK Shelly Yachimovich, for Lieberman’s appointment and also blamed a “pact” between Yacimovich and Zehava Gal-On, the leader of the Meretz party, calling them ‘radical leftists.’  “The Yacimovich-Galon pact deterred voters because of radical left positions that don’t reflect our positions. We’re a center-left party, not radical left,” he said. Yachimovitch’s response to Herzog's speech: "Zero accountability. Apparently I will run against him (as head of Labor party),” Maariv reported. Some Labor party members are urging Herzog to quit. Others blamed Netanyahu. “Netanyahu beheaded the Defense Minister (Yaalon) on live TV, and the gangs defeated democracy. This is a holiday for the extremists, for La Familia (racist fan group of Beitar Jerusalem soccer team) and for the hilltop youth, and at this rate, the soldier Elor Azariya will be appointed deputy defense minister in Bibi’s government," Zionist Camp MK Erel Margalit said. MK Ayelet Nahmias Rabin (Zionist Camp): "The blood of the soldiers of the next war is on the hands of Netanyahu." (Maariv)
  
And the Egyptians, too, are furious: “We received a real shock: We started with Herzog and we're ending up with Lieberman.” Lieberman holds the record for a politician with belligerent, aggressive expressions, wrote Maarivbesides calling in 2001 to bomb Egypt's Aswan Dam, in 2008 Lieberman was responsible for rising tensions between Israel and Egypt, when he said in a speech in the Knesset that "Mubarak does not agree to come here for an official visit. If he wants to speak to us – he should come here. If he doesn’t want to come – he should go to hell."
 
Quick Hits:
  • Rampaging settlers use fake gun to sow panic among Palestinian commuters - Two Israeli settlers use a fake gun to threaten a bus full of Palestinian workers. The police make a quick arrest, yet the media totally ignores the story. (+972mag)
  • Red alert rocket siren near Gaza border towns prove to be false alarm - IDF official statement says no rockets were fired from Gaza into southern Israel Wednesday evening. (JPost and Maariv
  • WATCH: Maritime Iron Dome Successfully Shoots Down Rocket in Test - The installation of the anti-rocket system on ships will protect natural gas platforms until Sa’ar 6 missile boats arrive from Germany in 2019. (Haaretz+ and Ynet)
  • Israeli forces injure young Palestinian, fire at farmers in Gaza - An Israeli army spokesperson confirmed to Ma’an that a Palestinian had been shot by Israeli forces after "attempting to damage the security fence." She said that Israeli troops initially fired "warning shots" to discourage the man before shooting him, adding that the situation was "nothing out of the ordinary." (Maan)
  • Border Policeman pulled a gun at demonstrators in Jerusalem after he felt "threatened" - A demonstration in Jerusalem against IDF recruiting of ultra-Orthodox became violent when demonstrators threw stones at the Border Police instead. A video from the scene shows one of the Border Police aiming his weapon at a demonstrator. An investigation was opened. (Maariv)
  • Israeli forces detain Palestinian teens and fire tear gas at Ramallah-area schools - Israeli forces also fired tear gas towards schools in Beituniya, causing dozens of schoolchildren to choke, witnesses added. (Maan
  • Palestinian prisoner renews hunger strike in protest of his administrative detention - Sami Janazreh 43, from al-Fawwar refugee camp near Hebron, renewed Wednesday the more than two-month-long hunger strike he suspended last week as Israeli authorities reportedly agreed to present evidence against him within a week if he agreed to discontinue the strike. Janazreh demands to be put on trial. (Maan
  • Israel delivers demolition notices for EU-funded water tanks near Hebron - Israeli authorities delivered four demolition notices on Wednesday ordering several Palestinians to remove water tanks being used for irrigation in the northern and eastern areas of the town of Beit Ummar in the West Bank, locals said. (Maan
  • For the second time, Palestinian family sees their E. Jerusalem home demolished by Israel - “The occupation is stealing our dreams, depriving us of living safely in our own homes,” Nadia al-Hawarin told Ma’an as she looked at the ruins of her home in Beit Hanina. “Today, they demolished our house in Shufat for the sake of a road serving settlers.” (Maan)
  • Israeli forces detain 24 Palestinians, including former minister, in overnight raids - Local sources in the northernmost West Bank district of Jenin told Ma’an that Israeli troops raided the city of Jenin and detained Hamas member and former Palestinian Minister of Prisoners’ Affairs Wasfi Qabaha from his home. (Maan)
  • New National Service Unit Attracting Israeli Transgender Youths - Most transgender youths receive exemptions from the army on medical grounds, while those who do enlist often drop out soon thereafter because of difficulties and harassment. (Haaretz+)
  • Israel doubles budget for at-risk LGBT youth - In light of a growing number of LGBT youth in distress, the Social Affairs Ministry will, for the first time, open emergency and long-term facilities to serve individuals over the age of 18. (Haaretz+)
  • Israeli Military Intel Recruits Must Swear Off Drugs Until Age 40 - 'Not only does the army seek to control the lives of citizens many years after they’ve finished their military service, it is also seeking to do so in other countries and under other legal situations,' says lawmaker. (Haaretz+)
  • Is the IDF about to get its second female major general?  - Brig. Gen. Rachel Tevet-Wiesel and Brig. Gen. Doron Piles top the list of candidates for the role of Military Court of Appeals president. Tevet-Wiesel is one of only four women in the IDF holding the rank of brigadier general. (Israel Hayom)
  • Activist group: Israel ends closed military zone in Hebron's Tel Rumeida - If confirmed, the end of the closed military zone in Tel Rumeida would mark the first time the neighborhood of the flashpoint occupied West Bank city is reopened to the public since Nov. 1, 2015. (Maan
  • Israeli Teen in Central Israel Killed in Apparent Accidental Shooting - The 17-year-old girl possibly killed herself with boyfriend’s army weapon. (Haaretz+) 
  • Concern over possible economic recession in Israel - Data regarding the first quarter of 2016 show a worrying trend, with a mere 0.8% general increase and a decrease in exports and the business sector; Minister of Economy Moshe Kahlon will be convening a special meeting on the matter. (Yedioth/Ynet
  • Palestinian convicted after admitting to killing Israeli soldier, despite pleading not guilty - Nur a-Din Hashiya fatally stabbed Sgt. Almog Shiloni at a Tel Aviv train station in November 2014. (Haaretz+ and Ynet)
  • Multi-million Palestinian Museum Opens Without Exhibits - A dispute over vision led to the resignation of the previous museum director just six months ago. (Agencies, Haaretz)
  • Palestinian BDS group: Israeli Mossad 'spying on us' - In letter to U.N. Human Rights Council, Palestinian group accuses Israeli intelligence agency of giving incriminating information on activists to local authorities • Public Diplomacy Minister Gilad Erdan: Israel shifting to offensive strategy against BDS. (Israel Hayom)
  • Fatah praises 1972 airport attackers - Post on Fatah party's official Facebook celebrates anniversary of Japanese Red Army terrorist attack on Lod Airport that killed 24 people. Fatah media official Munir Jaghob: We are proud of all the people who worked for the Palestinian cause. (Israel Hayom)
  • Jewish/Muslim couple video goes viral - Actors dressed up as mixed Jewish/Muslim couples walk hand in hand in the streets of New York and receive insults, abuse but some find it 'highly liberating'. (Ynet+VIDEO)
  • New Egyptian textbook portrays Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty in positive light - Israel welcomes its publication and FM spokesperson calls it an 'extremely important demonstration of good will'; nevertheless, the textbook still depicts Israel as stolen land and Zionism as a threatening colonialist project. (Ynet
  • Egypt's media bill may bring demise of small, online outlets - The bill sets conditions for starting up media outlets, including the creation of a shareholding company with a minimum initial capital of 500,000 pounds (about $50,000), a sum that is far beyond the reach of the typically young entrepreneurs and journalists behind such enterprises. (Agencies, Ynet
  • Belgium Denies Aid to Daughters of Israelis Killed in Terror Attack - The authorities say the teens did not apply quickly enough after their parents died in the May 2014 attack in Brussels. (Haaretz+)
  • Leaders of Belgium's parliament nominate Marwan Barghouti for Nobel Peace Prize - “By granting the Nobel Peace Prize to someone who embodies the Palestinian people's struggle for freedom, but also their aspiration to achieve peace, a leader who can unite Palestinians around a political project that clearly includes a two-state solution on 1967 borders...the Committee for the Nobel Prize would be helping to resurrect the indispensable hope of creating a way out of the current [political] impasse.” (Maan)
  • Islamic State May Be Reverting to Its 'Terrorist Roots', U.S. Commander Says - Army General Joseph Votel says that after losing 40% of territory in Iraq, the Islamic State is adapting and diverting attention from losses. (Agencies, Haaretz
  • Germany Condemns Iranian Holocaust Cartoon Competition - The murder of six million Jews 'must not be abandoned to ridicule,' says German Foreign Ministry spokesman. (Agencies, Haaretz
  • Sheldon Adelson Calls on Republican Jewish Leaders to Back Trump- In email sent to more than 50 prominent Jewish party members, Casino mogul says that he became convinced after meeting Trump that he will be a 'tremendous president' when it comes to Israel. (Agencies, Haaretz
  • Sanders Slams Adelson for His Support of Trump - 'The American people are sick and tired of billionaires running our economy and our political life,' said the Democratic presidential hopeful. (Haaretz)


Features:
El Al’s biggest fan
He may have been born before its founding, but over the years Marvin Goldman has become El Al’s number one fan and the biggest collector of the company’s memorabilia; ‘I think the world can be divided into two types of people: those who are collectors and those who like to throw things out.’ (Ynet)
Why Is Pork Disappearing From Tel Aviv Restaurants?
In early-20th-century Jaffa and Tel Aviv, pork was a very popular item in local restaurants. So why is it that a century or so later, a growing number of restaurants are refusing to serve it, even if they aren’t kosher? (Libby Sperling, Haaretz+)
 
Commentary/Analysis:
Israel Now Torn Between Rule of Law and Rule of Ruthless Power (Ravit Hecht, Haaretz+) Plots and machinations have been part and parcel of Israeli politics since their early days, like anywhere else in the world. The novelty of the Netanyahu era lies in the reckless and unabashed chasing of short-term opportunism.
With Lieberman as Defense Minister, Israelis Should Head for the Bomb Shelters (Gideon Levy, Haaretz+) The State of Israel in the hands of someone who could destroy it: a man who threatened to bomb the Aswan Dam and sees Israel's Arab citizens as the enemy. 
Avigdor Liberman's new job: Control over four million Palestinians (Noam Sheizaf, +972mag) Netanyahu may have found an opportunity to take revenge on the old IDF elites, but in doing so has put one of Israel’s most hawkish politicians in charge of the occupation.
A step in the right direction (Smadar Perry, Yedioth/Ynet) Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi's Israeli-Palestinian peace initiative may be sincere, but it will be far from easy; as a former head of military intelligence, he's well-versed in Israeli internal politics. 
Sisi's speech - and then came Bibi's sting (Alex Fishman, Yedioth) The timing of Sisi's public call (for renewing Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations), which was almost like Sadat's historic speech, was arranged by Netanyahu. The plan worked like a Swiss clock. But then came the sting: Herzog began making sounds that he would join the government, problems were revealed with the Zionist Camp and Netanyahu charged for Lieberman. From here the plan shockingly and unexpectedly changed: there won't be a summit in Cairo, the tension in the [occupied] Territories will increase, and Sisi got a lesson in Israeli politics.
Israelis Will Pay Dearly for Their Prime Minister's Reckless Appointment (Haaretz Editorial) Netanyahu has demonstrated that he is prepared to drag the country into a potentially disastrous military adventure, to remove all moral constraints and to encourage blatant racism for the sole purpose of staying in power.
The story got out of control: What led to one of the most exaggerated day in Israeli politics? (Ben Caspit, Maariv) Lieberman is not as crazy as he seems. He acts with officialness and responsibility (when not in the opposition), and he speaks English very differently from Russian and Hebrew. There won't be a war.
Coalition Talks and the Poor Zionist Union Fans (Tel-Aviv Mayor Ron Huldai, Haaretz+) All these people now find themselves bewildered at the reports about talks of forming a unity government with Netanyahu, and can’t see what the point of it would be. 
Lieberman has already begun recruiting staff officers to get ready for new role (Alon Ben-David, Maariv) Three months ago, Lieberman turned to senior reserve officers: "I'm going to be defense minister. You do not identify with my political views, but you should know that I'm pragmatic." They will really miss Moshe Yaalon in the IDF, and not only there. The IDF does not know what to make of this appointment. After three years, during which the defense minister was not only a pillar of the army, but also gave officers complete support and the IDF can finally pass a multi-year plan, a minister arrives whose familiarity with the military is limited to a short compulsory service in the military government then in Hebron and afterward as a reserve soldier as a storeman (quartermaster). But Lieberman is a thorough person. He is expected to lead to a more aggressive policy in the Territories, and we need to hope it won't restart a wave of terror. Also against Gaza we need to hope the policy he wants won't lead to further unnecessary conflict. But he did not order the attack on the Aswan Dam in Egypt or on Iran's nuclear facilities.
Lieberman's First Battle as Defense Minister Will Be Against the IDF (Amos Harel, Haaretz+) The generals didn't see it coming, and if Avigdor Lieberman does become defense minister he can expect a rough ride unless he reins in his most extreme tendencies.
Netanyahu and Herzog’s Blessed Road Not Taken (Ari Shavit, Haaretz+) Was there really a willingness to begin talks with the Palestinians and Arab League? Now we get a government that can easily commit a spectacular national suicide. 
To Preserve His Rule, Netanyahu Willing to Stomach Even His Greatest Political Rival (Yossi Verter, Haaretz+) Following his displeasure with Ya'alon's status as the media's darling, the prime minister backtracks on his refusal to appoint Lieberman as the head of the Defense Ministry. His ultimate goal: To diminish and restrain the military brass.
An attack over nothing: Ya'alon only asked that commanders reflect "I believe" credo of the army since its inception (Amos Gilboa, Maariv) The defense minister needed, while protecting Deputy Chief of Staff Yair Golan with his body, to make a complete separation between Golan's words on values and between a comparison to Nazi Germany and to make clear that it has no truth.
A Wish for Israel’s 70th Birthday: 12 Million Tourists a Year (Sami Peretz, Haaretz+) Why are the tourists still not coming? It’s not just the security situation.
ADL's Armenian genocide recognition sends powerful statement — to Israel (Dahlia Scheindlin, +972mag) A major Jewish-American organization breaking with Israeli policy, especially regarding Jewish universalism and the Holocaust, is a statement in and of itself.
Future Democratic Presidential Candidates Will Be Tougher on Israel (Peter Beinart, Haaretz+) Bernie Sanders did not exploit the great divide between Hillary Clinton and pro-Palestinian liberals.
Victory, not 'disaster' (Uri Heitner, Israel Hayom) There is nothing more repugnant than the "Nakbaism" in our midst, among Jews and Israelis. 
Lost in the Shuffle of the Ben Rhodes Kerfuffle Over Iran: Reality (Chemi Shalev, Haaretz+) The U.S. Congress failed to block the nuclear deal with Iran because of old-fashioned power and politics rather than 1984-style media manipulation. 
Assad must go (Former IDF Military Intel Chief, Amos Yadlin, Yedioth/Ynet)  It's time for Israel to take a stand on the war in Syria: Moral and strategic concerns dictate that we must oppose Assad and work to push him out of power.
Yad Vashem Is Derelict in Its Duty to Free the Shoah From Its Jewish Ghetto (Daniel Blatman, Haaretz+) The Holocaust is a large component of Jewish Israelis’ national identity. It serves the right’s proto-fascist, racist, victim-centered discourse, meant to whitewash the ongoing crime against the Palestinians and to put the Christian world in a position of eternal apology.
 
Interviews:
French Prime Minister: France concerned with Israel's security
In an exclusive interview, France's Prime Minister Manuel Valls for the reinvigoration of the peace process and an end to Palestinian incitement; Valls also expresses regrets for UNESCO decision and says France needs French Jews. (Interviewed by Eldad Beck in Yedioth/Ynet)
 
Prepared for APN by Orly Halpern, independent freelance journalist based in Jerusalem.