News Nosh 08.23.16

APN's daily news review from Israel
Tuesday August 23, 2016 
 
Quote of the day:
“The settlement in Hebron is the most extreme and callous of all, and the Netanyahu government is trampling legal standards to build a settlement exactly where the occupation and separation are the most callous and severe.”
--Peace Now settlement watch director, Hagit Ofran, on the Israeli government decision to to expand the Jewish settlement in Hebron for the first time in over a decade.**


Front Page:
Haaretz
Yedioth Ahronoth
  • Blue and white breakthrough in the battle against cancer
  • Message to Hamas: New ‘price-tag’
  • A signal from Lieberman // Alex Fishman
  • A bolt of energy for hi-tech from the Finance Ministry
  • Despite the investigation: 1.7 million shekels going to commemorating (controversial assassinated former minister Rehavam Zeevi) ‘Gandi’
Maariv This Week (Hebrew links only)
 
Israel Hayom
  • “The equation changed” – Israel in response to Turkey: “Think twice before condemning (our) attack (on Gaza)”
  • Hope for melanoma patients
  • Senior officers support (‘Shooting Soldier from Hebron’) Azariya
  • Unemployment at historic low: only 4.7% in July
  • Aid agreement with the US: Israel to purchase from Israeli security industries for five years
  • The Volcanic Institute developed particularly durable figs

News Summary:
Israeli scientists develop a way to prevent the spread of melanoma, Israel retaliates unusually sharply at Hamas targets in the Gaza Strip after a rocket falls in Israel and slams Turkey for saying it was a ‘disproportionate attack', while Egypt says that Russia is willing to host Israeli-Palestinian peace talks. Meanwhile, more than half of Palestinians and Israelis still believe in a two-state solution, but the media had different ways of sharing that.
 
Ynet’s Elior Levy wrote that the IAF strikes on Hamas targets in Gaza “were noteworthy in their breadth” because “normally, the IDF retaliates once, in the hours following (a) rocket attack or in the night afterwards.” A senior IDF officer spoke with the Hebrew media military reporters after the air strikes, which injured five Palestinians, telling them that the IDF hit Hamas hard. Hamas denied shooting the rocket and blasted a local ISIS-affiliated group for doing so, saying the group was 'not dedicated' to fighting the occupation. Hamas accused Israel of seeking 'to create a new equation’ in the power of balance. Indeed, Israeli analysts said that Israel used the rocket as a means to pound Hamas. Turkey slammed Israel for the scale of its response, but Israel told Turkey to 'think twice before criticizing’ it. In Turkey, five were arrested for an attempted break in at Israeli consulate in Istanbul meant to protest the air strikes on Gaza. 

On positive and negative reports in the media: Maariv reported that a “majority of Israelis, Palestinians still believe in a two-state peace settlement.” Haaretz noted that it was a “slim” majority. And Ynet wrote “Only a small majority support it.
 
Quick Hits:
  • IAF strikes Syria after mortar falls in Israel - After day of escalating violence with Gaza, Israel turns its gaze to the northern border after mortar shells land in Israeli territory, prompting IAF to take to the skies and and strike back; while mortar believed to be accidental, Israel says it will not tolerate any kind of fire into its territory. (Ynet)
  • Arab Students in Jerusalem Get Less Than Half the Funding of Jewish Counterparts - Municipality transfers less to East Jerusalem schools than the budget provided by the Education Ministry. (Haaretz+)
  • **Watchdog (Peace Now): Expansion of Hebron settlements amounts to ‘right of return for Jews only’ - According to a statement released by Peace Now, renovations were already underway at the Israeli military compound of Plugat Hamitkanim to pave the way for new housing for Jewish settlers. (Maan)
  • IDF Roadblocks Disrupting Daily Life in West Bank Village - NGO claims that two of the three entrances to Hizma have been blocked, but army insists that only one is closed. (Haaretz
  • Rights groups: Israel's new policy is to rearrest freed Palestinian prisoners - Israel putting recently released prisoners on detention without trial or simply keeping due to be released Palestinians in jail. (Haaretz+) 
  • Israeli Bill to Require Flag to Be Flown at Every Event With Lawmakers' Participation - Bill stipulates a $1,300 fine for event organizers who won't comply. 'We'll soon reach the point that if people don't kiss the flag every morning, they'll be punished,' says MK Zouheir Bahloul. (Haaretz+)
  • Israel's Defense Industry Fears Fallout From Increased U.S. Aid - Washington conditioning more assistance on eliminating allocations for Israeli firms. (Haaretz+) 
  • Unauthorized Visit to West Bank Holy Site Ends in Violence for Ultra-Orthodox - Troops had to extricate Hasids after Palestinians threw stones at their bus en route to predawn visit to Joseph's Tomb in Nablus. Israeli teen lightly injured in incident. (Haaretz, Maan and Ynet)
  • Court slams cops for holding minors in cuffs overnight - Laws stipulates that minors cannot be questioned at night without the explicit approval of an authorized officer, and even that, only in exceptional cases. (Haaretz+) 
  • Hunger-striking prisoner Mahmoud Balboul evacuated to hospital - Palestinian prisoner Balboul was evacuated to the Assaf Harofeh hospital suffering from fatigue, severe pains, dizziness and his weight dropped seriously after 49 days on hunger strike, to protest being held in administrative detention -- internment without trial or charges -- by Israel. (Maan)
  • Fewer religious, Arab schools on list of 'excellent' Israeli schools - Annual Education Ministry figures show reversal of recent trends. Teachers in listed schools to receive bonuses. (Haaretz+) 
  • "The Shadow" following becoming a Likud member: "I got hundreds of others to become members of the party" - The registration form of rapper Yoav Eliasi, aka “The Shadow,” has not yet reached the Secretariat of the party, but he has been trying to strengthen his position. (Maariv
  • Likud comptroller takes party to court - Three years ago, Shai Galili began to look into the salaries and contracts of party employees. Following the party’s refusal to provide him with the information he requested in 2014, Galili appealed to the Tel Aviv District Court. (Haaretz+)
  • Police Crack Ring That Smuggled Deaf Eastern Europeans Into Israel to Work as Beggars - Six human smuggling ringleaders arrested on suspicion of trafficking, forced labor, assault and rape. (Haaretz+) 
  • WATCH: Battle of Ammunition Hill recreated for new (Christian) docudrama - CBN is making a film for the 50th anniversary of the Six-Day War that seeks to portray as accurately as possible the personal stories and experiences of the Israeli soldiers from the bloody battle that took the lives of 36 Israelis and 71 Jordanians. (Ynet
  • Israelis claim Facebook deleted posts critical of social media giant - Facebook says it's investigating claims by Israelis that posts related to the social network and its PR firm have disappeared. (Haaretz+) 
  • Egyptian FM denies saying no connection between Israel and terror - Egyptian Foreign Ministry Samah Shoukry was reported to have said that Israel isn't connected to terrorism, which has no agreed-upon definition - and was lambasted in Arabic media for comments. (Ynet
  • WATCH: Israel, Pakistan, U.S. hold Red Flag aerial military exercise - For the second year in a row, the Israel Air Force takes part in Red Flag combat simulation. But this year, the United Arab Emirates and Spain have joined too. (Haaretz
  • Holocaust, immigration to Israel has Dutch Jewry in a crisis - After the Nazis killed over 75 percent of Dutch Jewry - the highest death rate in occupied Western Europe - thousands of families made aliyah. Now, the community has become too small to maintain itself. (JTA, Haaretz
  • Seinfeld star lands in Israel - Wayne Knight, who starred as Newman in award-winning 'Seinfeld' Television comedy series arrived in Israel Sunday morning for 4-day trip; actor to be photographed for Ikea catalogue campaign. (Ynet
  • Israel to present new technology designed to assist Africa - Exhibition organized by Israeli envoy to the U.N. Danny Danon will feature cutting-edge technology in the fields of science, agriculture, and medicine • PM Netanyahu to meet African leaders in New York in September to further boost Israel-Africa ties. (Israel Hayom)


Features:
Women of war: Meet the IDF's special operations officers
When IDF Special Forces go on covert operations, they receive crucial information from the special operations officers at the situation room. The Judea and Samaria Division's five special operations officers talk about their challenging jobs and sleepless nights. (Elisha Ben-Kimon, Yedioth/Ynet
At Berlin Summit, Muslim and Jewish Youth Offered Glimpse of Bright Future
The seventh annual Muslim-Jewish Conference brought together over a hundred participants from all over the world who want to help their civilizations come to terms with one another. (Joel Braunold, Haaretz+) 
Bayit Yehudi: The 'Jewish Home' that wants more Druze
A new registration drive for Naftali Bennett's party is taking advantage of a recent change to party rules that permit its members to be secular or even gentiles; the Druze community is signing up in the hundreds; some allege that it's all a cynical attempt to refill empty party coffers. (Yuval Karni, Yedioth/Ynet)
 
Commentary/Analysis:
The Americans Simply Don’t Care About Israel and the Palestinians (Zeev Sternhell, Haaretz+) The territories are not Israel, but rather a colony that heaps shame on Zionism and on Jewish history. 
Where’s the Photo of the Gazan Child? (Jack Khoury, Haaretz+) The Israeli media needn’t look to Aleppo for wars and crushed bodies if it wants horrific photos. 
Carrots and sticks for Gaza (Giora Eiland, Yedioth/Ynet) Israel's deterrence against Hamas has remained strong, but deterrence alone is not enough: Offering Gaza's rulers some positive incentives could serve the interests of both sides. 
The Palestinians that Israel attacks don’t have flak jackets and helmets (Amira Hass, Haaretz+) The fearless youths resisting the army’s strikes on the al-Fawwar refugee camp see their futures darkened by us. 
Lieberman's obligations: the method of "sticks and carrots" is contrary to democracy (Ronit Sela, Maariv) The new plan of the Minister of Defense towards the Palestinians in the West Bank is contrary to the values of the system of government by the people. The army is responsible for taking care of the residents without them proving they deserve it.
No, Moving to Berlin Isn't an Ideological Act It's Just Plain Old Privilege (Dror Etkes, Haaretz+) The vast majority of the people living here cannot save themselves from the terrible storm that seems set to destroy the dilapidated ship on which we live.
Exacerbating the response in Gaza: not a new policy of Lieberman (Yossi Melman, Maariv) It was Yaalon's guidance, contrary to reports according to which the incoming defense minister is the one who ordered the attack. In actuality, these are the orders of his predecessor, Moshe Yaalon, and of the chief of staff Gadi Eizenkot. The principle: exploiting every rocket (into Israel) in order to attack targets (in Gaza). 
Sending My Daughter to the Army - and Other Israeli Ties That Bind (Chemi Shalev, Haaretz+) Coming back from five years in New York isn’t easy, especially when everyone wants to know if you’re crazy. 
Gaza Rocket Fire Gives Israel the Chance to Strike at Key Hamas Assets (Amos Harel, Haaretz+) Despite the magnitude of the assault, Israel clearly made an effort to avoid hitting civilians. Both sides would apparently still prefer to avoid another large-scale conflict. 
IDF takes advantage of strike opportunity to target strategic Hamas assets (Yoav Zitun, Ynet) The rocket fired from Gaza on Monday gave Israel reason to strike Hamas operational assets, as part of its most significant strike in the Strip since Operation Protective Edge. 
Don’t Fight Terror on the Backs of Women Wearing Burkinis (Allison Kaplan Sommer, Haaretz+) Anyone who defends the rights of women to bare their shoulders, legs and hair must also defend the right of women to choose to cover them up. 
Defense: the most important challenge in cyberspace (Gabi Siboni, Yedioth/Ynet) The director of the Cyber Security Program at the INSS writes that one thing needs to be clear to anyone who heads a security organization: Defense is the key to everything. 
Who Needs Morality When You Have Force - Lots of Force (Odeh Bisharat, Haaretz+) I turned to look around during the screening in the prime minister's residence, thinking that perhaps I’d mistakenly wandered into a meeting of Kahane Chai. 
How Netanyahu Smooth-talked Haaretz Staff (Uzi Baram, Haaretz+) The achievements for which Netanyahu is proud are hanging by a threat. 'The honeymoon with moderate Arab countries is dependent upon real progress with the Palestinians, and Netanyahu won’t be able to move forward.'
An Israeli Provocation in Hebron (Haaretz Editorial) By approving new Jewish construction at one of the conflict's worse flashpoints, Israel is playing a legal game that can only end with more anger and hatred.
BDS encounters a fight in Europe (Ariel Bolstein, Israel Hayom) The decision by the students at Leipzig University to reject BDS as an "anti-Semitic movement" is a sign that Europeans are tired of the Palestinians' demagogic discourse that demonizes Israel.
If Trump Wins, We Could See the Worst of U.S.-Israel Ties on Steroids (Daniel Levy, Haaretz+) The effects of a Trump administration’s specific brand of pro-Israelism would likely accelerate – perhaps dramatically – two trends already in motion. 
Will Turkey's Erdogan visit Israel in September? (Zvi Bar'el, Haaretz+) If he does, the Turkish president will complete his rounds of reconciliation with the two enemy nations Israel and Russia. 
 
Prepared for APN by Orly Halpern, independent freelance journalist based in Jerusalem.