News Nosh 7.25.17

APN's daily news review from Israel
Tuesday July 25, 2017
 
Quote of the Day #1:
“I will never justify the murder of innocent people in their homes. Or how a mother can praise her murderous son. But retaliating just leads to more violence. Coming here can lead to something better. I’m not sure what – I don’t have concrete answers. But I know that I had to be here, because women can create something different.”
--Leah, a 34-year-old Jewish-Israeli teacher, who came from the Galilee to the Jewish-Arab rally of the Women Wage Peace group Sunday night.*

Quote of the Day #2:
"Now we're back at the starting point, just in worse shape, with rotten egg on our faces."
-Senior Maariv political commentator Ben Caspit in a biting Op-Ed.**

Front Page:
Haaretz
Yedioth Ahronoth
Maariv This Week (Hebrew links only)
Israel Hayom
  • “You, the Israelis, only want to humiliate Muslims” - After the incident in Jordan, our correspondent Daniel Siryoti reports from Amman
  • Special - We are left without them - Members of the Salomon family retell what happened in the attack in Halamish
  • Mom escaped from the terrorist and telephoned: “A miracle happened” // Noam Davir, his family owns the shop where the attack (in Petach Tikva) took place
  • The singer and artist Amir Frisher Gutman was laid to rest; His corneas were donated
  • Israeli company NeuroDerm was sold to Mitsubishi Tanabe for $1.1 billion

News Summary:
Israel agreed to remove the metal detectors from the Temple Mount in exchange for Jordan’s permission for an Israeli security guard, who shot dead two Jordanians, to leave the country, ending a severe crisis with Jordan over the killings and with the Palestinians and the Arab world over the metal detectors and making the top story in today’s Hebrew newspapers - pushing to the middle of the newspapers a stabbing attack by a young Palestinian ‘for Al-Aqsa’ against an Israeli, who turned out to be Arab, at a food stand inside Israel. The Israeli was injured, the Palestinian was caught.

Yedioth reporters who traveled to Amman yesterday and reached the Israeli embassy reported that it looked like a war zone, surrounded by Jordanian tanks and hundreds of police and special forces - to keep the Israelis from getting out and angry Jordanians from entering, they said. That was after an Israeli guard of the embassy staff shot the son of a furniture shop owner who attacked him at an apartment with a screwdriver.

The official news agency of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan said that another worker and the guard of the building confirmed the Israeli security man's version of the attack. The argument took place over a delay in delivering the bedroom furniture. The Israeli guard also shot the owner of the apartment building, a Jordanian doctor. The two were rushed to the hospital, but both succumbed to their injuries. (Maariv)

Jordan would not let the guard leave the country before being interrogated and Israel eventually agreed to allow Jordanian police to arrive at the embassy compound to hear the guard's description of the incident in the presence of Israeli diplomats. Nearly an hour later, the entire embassy staff boarded a convoy and headed back to Israel.

Earlier, the father of the killed Jordanian teen demanded that Jordan take action against the security guard, saying the killing was “cold-blooded murder” and that his son took two bullets to the chest and had no political affiliation or ideology no political affiliation.

The security guard's release and the embassy staff's evacuation was made possible after a phone call between Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Jordan's King Abdullah. During their conversation, the king urged Netanyahu to remove the metal detectors to solve the crisis at the Temple Mount. Also, Shin Bet Chief Nadav Argaman went to Amman to help solve the crisis.

The papers implied that Jordan released the security guard because Israel would remove the metal detectors from the Temple Mount, which for 10 days had been sparking violence and a major crisis. Numerous former Israeli security chiefs had been interviewed by the press over that period saying Israel should remove them. Yesterday, former Shin Bet chief Yoram Cohen urged their removal and former Mossad chief Danny Yatom did the same: “Now it seems that we will have to pay a price to end the affair with the Jordanians, and the incident may have given us an opportunity to solve the metal detector problem. We'll get our people and they'll get the metal detectors (removed),” he said. (Maariv)

Later that night, the Israeli security cabinet held an emergency meeting and the ministers made the decision they avoided making last Friday: to remove the metal detectors. And despite voting in favor of their removal, Avigdor Lieberman still accused Arab lawmakers for being responsible for the attack by a Palestinian in Halamish, saying they incited.

Israel Hayom surprisingly ran a piece on its front page sharing the views of Jordanians about the Temple Mount crisis, in which its Arab affairs correspondent, Daniel Siryoti, wrote: “In the eyes of the average Jordanian, Israel used the July 14 terrorist attack at the Temple Mount compound, in which three Israeli Arabs killed two Israeli policemen, as a pretext to change the status quo and usurp more control over the area.” Siryoti interviewed numerous Jordanians and Israel Hayom printed their quotes, such as: “You kill Palestinian women, children and elderly every day…The settlers have usurped private Palestinian land, and they expect to live peacefully? They should leave the Palestinian land. The settlements are like cancer. If the disease is not cured, it will metastasize."
Haaretz prepared a video info clip explaining the Temple Mount crisis.

Temple Mount/Al-Aqsa metal detector crisis Quickees:
  • Ministers Discuss Technological Alternative to Metal Detectors at Temple Mount Proposed by Police - Suggested alternatives include sophisticated cameras combined with facial recognition software. Shin Bet warns security cabinet of rise in terror threats amid Temple Mount tensions, Jordan embassy crisis.  (Haaretz and Ynet)
  • Egypt's El-Sisi calls on Israel not to provoke Muslim - Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi directly addresses the Israeli public and government, calling on both not to take steps that provoke Muslims; El-Sisi: 'We want to live side by side and that is a shared issue that we need to protect.' (Ynet)
  • PRCS: 1,090 Palestinians injured by Israeli forces over course of 10 days - Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS) released a statement Monday detailing the casualties of the past 10 days, ever since Palestinians in occupied East Jerusalem launched a civil disobedience campaign in the city in protest of increased Israeli security measures at the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound. (Maan)
  • Palestinian shot in the head by Israeli forces during clashes in Hizma in critical condition - A Palestinian, who was shot and seriously injured in the head with live fire by Israeli forces during clashes that erupted Monday evening in the town of Hizma, northeast of Jerusalem, was undergoing surgery in Ramallah. (Maan)
  • Israeli police detain grieving father, cousin of Palestinian slain in Jerusalem - As the family of 20-year-old Muhammad Abu Ghannam continued to grieve his death at the hands of Israeli forces during violent clashes around the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound on Friday, Israeli police have detained his father and cousin. (Maan)
  • Israeli forces shoot, injure 4 Palestinian protesters marching near Ramallah - The march Monday was reportedly launched by students from Birzeit University to protest against the killing of fellow student Muhammad Abu Ghannam at the hands of Israeli forces during violent clashes in occupied East Jerusalem on Friday. (Maan)
  • PFLP hails Palestinian killed by Israeli forces in al-Eizariya clashes Saturday - Israeli forces shot Yousif Abbas Kashur and at least one other Palestinian with live bullets during Saturday clashes in al-Eizariya over the new Israeli security measures at the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound in occupied East Jerusalem. (Maan)
  • *Jewish and Arab Women in Israel Reaffirm Pledge for Peace as Temple Mount Crisis Rage - 'In the midst of all this blood, I am here with my Jewish sisters to put an end to this killing,' says one Muslim attendee at Women Make Peace event. (Haaretz+)
  • For second time this week, protests against Israel's Temple Mount moves in front of Istanbul synagogue - Over two dozen men protest the situation at the Temple Mount in front of one of Turkey's oldest synagogues
    For second time this week, protests against Israel's Temple Mount moves in front of Istanbul synagogue. (Haaretz)

 

Quick Hits:
  • Israel Strikes Hamas Position in Response to Sunday night Gaza Rocket Fire - This is the second rocket attack from the strip in 24 hours. IDF chief says the situation in Gaza is volatile, complex and could escalate rapidly. (Haaretz and Israel Hayom)
  • Bill Would Allow Parts of Jerusalem to Be Transferred to a New Israeli Local Authority - The bill, sponsored by Education Minister Bennett and Jerusalem Affairs Minister Elkin, breaks taboo over talk of the city's division and would allow Arab neighborhoods to be split off from the city. (Haaretz+)
  • 19-year-old Jewish Shepherd Says He Was Attacked by Palestinians in West Bank - Incident takes place near West Bank settlement of Kokhav Hashahar on Monday, with man taken to Jerusalem hospital for treatment. (Haaretz+)
  • (Israeli Ambassador to UN) Danon shows photos from Halamish terror attack at UN - 'Instead of condemning terrorism and calming down the situation, the Palestinians are spreading lies and claiming this horrific murder is Israel's fault,' the Israeli ambassador says, urging the UN Security Council to demand PA stops incitement to terrorism. (Yedioth/Ynet)
  • Lapid Appears With Bennett at Illegal West Bank Outpost Slated for Demolition - Bennett to Netiv Ha'avot settlers: 'We'll help you.' Lapid: 'We've become addicted to casting blame instead of taking responsibility.’ (Haaretz)
  • Lawyer asks Attorney General to bar Prime Minister’s special envoy Yitzhak Molcho from working for Prime Minister - Attorney Shahar Ben-Meir claims Molcho's continued work for the prime minister constitutes a conflict of interest as he is also a senior partner at the same law firm as David Shimron, who is currently under investigation for suspected corruption in submarines deal. (Yedioth/Ynet)
  • Israeli Government Proposes Funding Civil Claims Against Racist Businesses - New state-sponsored bill based on recommendations from interministerial committee on how to help Israelis of Ethiopian origin. (Haaretz+)
  • New Law Allows Israeli Security Agencies to Record Calls and Texts of Intel Workers - Shin Bet and Military Intelligence can now record phone conversations and text messages of intelligence employees with access to sensitive materials. (Haaretz+)
  • Israelis outraged at being 'marked' at Romanian resort -Israelis vacationing at Mamaia beach resort are surprised to discover strangers know their country of origin, until they realize the bracelets they were given by the resort indicate they are Israeli • Tourist: This is reminiscent of Nazis' yellow patch. (Israel Hayom)
  • U.S. Interfaith Delegation Barred From Boarding Flight to Israel 'Over BDS Activism - Three of the members were from Jewish Voice for Peace, including a rabbi: 'I'm heartbroken and outraged.’ (JTA, Haaretz)
  • Israel to build $3.9 million memorial honoring Jabotinsk - Cabinet approves NIS 14 million shekel project to memorialize the Revisionist Zionist leader's heritage • PM Netanyahu: "This is an important decision that will preserve the memory of one of the founders of Zionism and his famous Iron Wall principle." (Israel Hayom)
  • Israeli Taxpayers to Start Funding 'Failing' Jewish Day Schools Abroad - 'Jewish return on investment' is aim of new inter-ministerial scheme to strengthen religious identity and engagement with Israel. (Haaretz+)
  • Israel's NeuroDerm sold for $1.1 billio - Israeli pharmaceutical company NeuroDerm, specializing in central nervous system disorders treatments, sold to Japanese pharmaceutical giant Mitsubishi Tanabe Pharma for $1.1 billion. (Ynet)
  • Jordanian police prevent Haredim from leaving Petra hotel - Some 20 ultra-Orthodox Jews visiting the Hashemite Kingdom to hold annual celebration marking death anniversary of the high priest Aaron are barred from leaving hotel, say kippahs, prayer shawls, tefillin taken from them. (Yedioth/Ynet)
  • Ancient Egyptian Records Indicate Philistines Weren't Aegean Pirates After All - New study of 3,200-year-old documents from Ramses III suggests the much-reviled Philistines were not alien belligerents but native Middle Easterners. (Haaretz)
  • Rights Group Calls for Investigation of Libyan Forces After Mass Execution Video Hits Social Media - Video appears to show a military unit linked to eastern commander Khalifa Haftar executing 20 hooded men they accuse of being Islamic State militants near Benghazi, Libya. (Agencies, Haaretz)
  • ZOA Calls on Trump to Fire Tillerson Over 'anti-Israel' Global Terrorism Report - Although State Department's latest report uses similar wording on Israel-Palestine conflict to previous year's report, ZOA President Mort Klein says he didn't expect anti-Israel reports from new administration. (Haaretz+)


Commentary/Analysis:
Netanyahu's Tough Lesson This Week: When It Rains in the Middle East, It Pours (Barak Ravid, Haaretz+) As long as Israel controls the Temple Mount, the prime minister must think twice, thrice, a hundred times, before making a move in the face of that powder keg.
Amman embassy shooting was just what Netanyahu needed (Nahum Barnea, Yedioth/Ynet) While the incident at the Israeli embassy compound cost two Jordanian citizens their lives, it provided the prime minister with a way out of the metal detector fiasco. Instead of strengthening Israeli sovereignty at the Temple Mount, the government demonstrated to the entire world that Israel is not the landlord there.
The Former Gatekeeper’s Curious New Caucus (Uri Misgav, Haaretz+) MK Jacob Perry was once head of Israel's internal security service and spoke of how it was impossible to rule over the Palestinians. So why is he now heading a group in the Knesset promoting 'military victory over Israel's enemies'?
**The metal detectors farce: the defeat of arrogance, smugness and the drunkenness of power (Ben Caspit, Maariv) Now we're back at the starting point, just in worse shape, with the rotten egg on our faces. On the next dress of Culture Minister Regev they’ll also embroider a metal detector [She wore a dress with the Old City of Jerusalem imprinted on it to the Cannes Festival - OH]. That's how things are when words turn into actions…The most amazing thing is that last night the Prime Minister's Office organized a "victory photo” for the metal detectors. "The Prime Minister is talking to the Israeli ambassador in Jordan, Einat Shlain," was the caption of the smug leader holding the telephone receiver. Indeed, that’s leadership. The man is on the phone! The update, according to which the famous metal detectors, symbols of eternal Jewish sovereignty on the Temple Mount or any other mountain, will be carefully folded and thrown into the garbage bin of arrogance, was not published in the same notice on behalf of the Prime Minister’s Office. They preferred that the shame be published after the newspapers close (as if there were no Internet). Also the fact that even the "smart" cameras will disappear and be taken down from their high places, they did not mention. That's how it is when the cameras are smarter than those who have decided to install them.
Which is the real Israel: Startup Nation or Jewish Nation? (David Rosenberg, Haaretz) The startling disconnect between fanaticism, bloodshed and stunning technology exits can't persist forever.
Everything is sacred, everything is a threat (Yoaz Hendel, Yedioth/Ynet) Whoever put Waqf in charge of Temple Mount instead of Antiquities Authority created a religious monster. Removing metal detectors from site is a security mistake and governmental weakness. Nowhere in the world would metal detectors be given up for hurting people’s feelings.
With Jerusalem Burning, President Trump Needs to Engage (Daniel B. Shapiro, Haaretz) To de-escalate the crisis, junior officials can't hope to replace visible, vocal interest at the highest levels of the White House. But the president is silent and his secretary of state, mysteriously absent.
Muslim self-racism: The ‘low expectations syndrome’ (Ben-Dror Yemini, Yedioth/Ynet) Why do Muslims insist on being inferior? Why are they refusing to see themselves as equals? They’re allowed to call for the destruction of others, publish anti-Semitic cartoons and attach electronic bracelets to every Mecca pilgrim, but when others do so, it’s ‘an offense to Muslim honor.’
Israel's Inciter-in-chief (Moshe Arens, Haaretz+) The leader of the northern branch of the Islamic Movement, whose battle cry is 'Al-Aqsa is in danger,' is the one most responsible for the current spate of violence.
The crisis with Jordan: King Abdullah has no interest in breaking the rules (Yossi Melman, Maariv) Against the background of the events of Al-Aqsa there is great pressure from the public in the Hashemite Kingdom to sever ties with Israel. In Jerusalem, they understand the distress the king is facing and it is reasonable to assume that they did everything to end the crisis quickly.
If You Can't Say Israeli Settlers Are Civilians Too, You're Propping Up Apologists for Terror (Sara Yael Hirschhorn, Haaretz+) To those activists on the left and for Palestinian human rights who deny West Bank settlers can be terror victims: 'Thou shalt not kill' isn't conditional.
Death penalty will not help (Dr. Haim Shine, Israel Hayom) Executing terrorists would be misguided. Not only is capital punishment incongruent with Jewish values, it will not be effective in deterring future attackers.
Israel Can Solve Jordan and Temple Mount Crises With One Simple Act (Zvi Bar'el, Haaretz+) Arab nations have never been more amenable to talking with Israel, but they need a responsive partner in Jerusalem.
Death sentence for terrorists (Brig. Gen. (res.) Zvika Fogel, Israel Hayom) Capital punishment for terrorists is not only a penalty for an individual's actions, but also a component of our national deterrence.
Partners on the Temple Mount (Haaretz Editorial) The lesson from the crisis: Israel needs Arab and Muslim allies, who are just as fearful of a conflagration that could set the streets in Arab nations on fire.
We elected the Knesset and the government to make decisions, not the head of the Shin Bet and the IDF Chief of Staff (Kalman Libeskind, Maariv) It is legitimate to want to seat at the head of the table a uniformed officer who will decide for us what to do, but whoever wants to take us there must know that that kind of regime has a name. Hint: They do not call it a democracy.
Between Appetite and Starvation: The Search for a Jewish and Palestinian Compromise (Shmuel Harlap, Haaretz+) Jabotinsky's metaphor for the Jewish and Palestinian nations is still relevant; to achieve peace today, each side must settle for satisfying its appetite, not its hunger

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