News Nosh 3.26.19

APN's daily news review from Israel
Tuesday March 26, 2019

 
Quotes of the day:
"It is impossible to keep a hold over a state for 100 years. Because of the strength of the people living in the vicinity of Gaza…some say that it is possible to manage the conflict and not to resolve the conflict. (But) our strength is also a shot in the foot because it allows us not to solve the problem."
—Aviva Loten, a resident of Moshav Dekel, which is adjacent to the Gaza Strip, said after dozens of rockets were shot into Israel from Gaza and she spent the night in the safe room. (Maariv)

"The rocket attack is a surprise only if we allow ourselves to forget the wider context of the daily reality of occupation — from arrests of Palestinian children in their classrooms to settler attacks on Palestinian farmers — or the siege on Gaza, which has left the Gazans impoverished and hopeless."
--Journalist Haggai Matar writes in +972mag.*

"Netanyahu is not willing to take the additional step that would lead to a cease-fire or a long-term arrangement with Hamas. All he has to do is make a courageous decision to say that in exchange for Hamas' agreement to such a move, Israel will agree to a thorough and comprehensive reconstruction of Gaza in order to improve the standard of living and well-being of Gaza's residents."
—Maariv's Intel correspondent, Yossi Melman, in today's Op-Ed.**

Front Page:
Haaretz
Yedioth Ahronoth
  • It’s enough - Ceasefire was supposed to begin at 22:00, but at 23:00, a heavy barrage began towards the south
  • Direct hit to house of Wolf family
  • Time bomb // Alex Fishman
  • The deterrence is disappearing // Yossi Yehoshua
  • Put out a hand // Ben-Dror Yemini
  • That’s what the elections are about // Shimon Shiffer
  • Hamas is in a Catch-22 // Shimrit Meir
  • And suddenly the telephone rings from Israel // Nahum Barnea in Washington
  • The cry of the youth - At the initiative of Yedioth, youth from the Gaza envelope area met their friends in the Tel-Aviv area, who experienced a siren for the first time. Together they called on Netanyahu, Gantz and the other candidates in the elections: Deal with what is really important, so we can leave without fear
Maariv This Week (Hebrew links only)
Israel Hayom

Elections 2019 News:
What Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu hoped would be today’s big story, US President Donald Trump’s recognition of Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights, was pushed to the side as rockets and missiles crossed between the Gaza Strip and Israel, and Netanyahu cut short his trip and returned to Israel just after his meeting with Trump - missing giving his speech at AIPAC. (His opponent, Benny Gantz, however, gave his and made good impressions.) The papers were filled with Israeli commentators and analysts arguing whether Israel should open an expansive operation against Gaza, how this affects and is affected by the elections and what could have Israel from reaching this situation.

The Israeli papers generally reported that it all started with a Gazan rocket shot into the Tel-Aviv region early Sunday morning and hitting a house. However, some analysts said that if Netanyahu had made the long-term ceasefire arrangement with Hamas that has been on the table since the summer, then the Gazans would not be suffering from the Israeli siege that they are protesting against with incendiary balloons and rockets. (See Commentary/Analysis below.) Hamas said it didn’t shoot the rocket, but the IDF said it holds Hamas responsible for everything coming out of Gaza and began calling up reservists for deployment at the Gaza border. Israel began bombing Hamas buildings at about 5PM, 12 hours after the rocket hit the house north of Tel-Aviv. The wave of attacks by Israeli warplanes were just the first stage of what would be a broad operation, the IDF spokesman told Ynet. The Egyptians got involved and a ceasefire was supposed to begin at 22:00. But some 30 Gazan rockets were reportedly fired after that towards Sderot and the IDF continued striking Hamas targets in Gaza. (VIDEO of Israeli strikes) Bomb shelters opened across Israel and Hamas leaders headed underground in fear of Israeli reprisals. Politicians on right and left attacked Netanyahu for failing to keep citizens safe as election approaches, saying that “‘Israel's deterrence has collapsed.” However, Tourism Minister Yariv Levin (Likud) said, “The timing of an operation must not depend on elections or anything else…The fight against terrorism does not end overnight, we will need a response here that is a step up. Levin said Israelis should look at things “soberly and not as fervent and shameful as we experienced this morning by people who pretend to be leaders of the state.” (Maariv) Israel closed roads and halted farming near the border, closed border crossings into Gaza and canceled Palestinian family-prisoner visits for Hamas prisoners, sending a bus of 23 relatives back.

Meanwhile, regarding the US recognition of the Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights - not everyone accepted it. The UN said that it’s “clear that Golan status has not changed,” Damascus called it an attack on Syrian sovereignty and Gulf states rejected it, including US allies, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain and also Qatar and Kuwait. Here’s the full text of Trump’s proclamation.



 
Quick Hits:
  • Israeli Army Warns Moving Prisoners Could Increase Tensions After Two Israeli Guards Stabbed - Following riots and an incident in which Hamas prisoners stabbed two guards, the Shin Bet and army express concern over plans to move 100 Hamas prisoners. (Haaretz+)
  • Presidency condemns Israel Prison Service assault of Palestinian prisoners - The Palestinian presidency condemned the Israeli escalation against Palestinian prisoners in Israeli prisons, particularly oppressive measures taken by the Israeli Prison Service (IPS) against those in the Negev prison (Ketziot). (Maan)
  • Israeli forces detain elderly Palestinian, ban 2 youth from Al-Aqsa - The Israeli police detained the elderly man after he had performed prayers at the al-Rahma Gate (Gate of Mercy) area inside the Al-Aqsa compound. (Maan)
  • Israeli settlers vandalize vehicles, spray racist graffiti in (E.) Jerusalem - Locals said they were surprised to find that Israeli settlers spray painted racist, anti-Arab slogans on the walls and doors of one of the homes in the Mount Scopus neighborhood, including the word “revenge" and a Star of David. They also punctured the tires of 28 Palestinian-owned vehicles belonging to four Palestinian families. (Maan)
  • IDF: Boy, 7, lightly injured in terror shooting at West Bank settlement - Child taken from Beit El to nearby hospital after bullet strikes his hand; army says shots were fired from adjacent Palestinian village. (Times of Israel and Maariv)
  • Israel orders stop-construction of 2 Palestinian homes in Ithna - Israeli forces delivered halt of construction notices to several Palestinian homes, one belonging to a family of 12, and agricultural structures in Ithna, west of Hebron. (Maan)
  • Jordanian king cancels Romania trip over PM's plan for Jerusalem embassy - Romania's prime minister told AIPAC that the country would move its embassy in Israel, but the statement was strongly contradicted by the country's president. (Haaretz+ and Ynet)
  • Germany said to open probe into sale of submarines to Israel - Move reportedly comes in response to Israeli request tied to Case 3000, focuses on possible bribery offenses. The prosecutor's office in the city of Bochum, which has expertise in investigations into allegations of economic corruption, launched an investigation into the sale of the submarines: "An Israeli request for assistance was received.” (Maariv and Times of Israel)
  • North Korean Hackers Cited in Rare Attack in Israel - The plot was uncovered when an employee of the unidentified Israeli firm received an email from a colleague in broken Hebrew. (Haaretz+)
  • Chinese giant Alibaba acquires Israeli augmented reality startup - Alibaba, which already owns shares in the Ramat Gan-based Infinity AR, reportedly to pay $10 million • Israeli CEO Motti Kushnir says "Alibaba's expertise in turning technologies into next generation products will be a great platform" for Infinity. (Israel Hayom)
  • Israel's chip sales to China jump as Intel expands - Semiconductor exports to China up 80 percent, most produced by Intel's Kiryat Gat plant; Jerusalem pushing for deeper trade ties with Beijing, now its second-largest export market. (Agencies, Ynet)
  • Selfie at a distance of 131,000 km: Israeli spacecraft Beresheet captures sunrise from space - Some four weeks after blasting off from Cape Canaveral and two weeks before its anticipated moon landing, Israel's spaceship continues to send back stunning footage of Earth. One video includes sunrise from unique angle. (Israel Hayom and Yedioth/Ynet)
  • ISIS won't blow up the Eurovision, and Israelis are disappointed - France threatened to pull out of the Eurovision, which Israel is hosting in May, if it runs a television comedy show about ISIS recruiting the French representative to carry out an attack during a live broadcast. (Haaretz+)
  • France bans Iran's Mahan Air for flying arms, troops to Syria, elsewhere - The United States imposed sanctions on Mahan Air in 2011, saying it provided financial and other support to Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards. (Agencies, Haaretz)
  • Yemen's Hodeidah Under Heavy Fire as UN Pushes for Troop Pullout - The clashes were the heaviest since the ceasefire went into effect on December 18, residents said. (Agencies, Haaretz)


Elections 2019 Commentary/Analysis:
Israel launches Gaza campaign that may last several days (Amos Harel, Haaretz+) Netanyahu has been ignoring Gaza. Now it's election time and it's come back to haunt him.
Damage to the soft stomach: The Likud loses the two sources that put it in power (Dr. Revital Amiran, Maariv) The preoccupation with the submarines affair and the ostensible statements against the Mizrachi immigrants undermine the two elements in which the ruling party and Netanyahu excelled in: security and being a people’s party.
If You're Still Voting Netanyahu After This Rocket, You're Thinking Like Hamas (Bradley Burston, Haaretz+) By voting Bibi you're turning the government into a version of Hamas - anti-democratic, brutal, theocratic, callous, maximalist, mendacious, militarist, racist, manipulatively scapegoating in deflecting blame, fascistic.
*This doesn't need to happen: Another pre-election war on Gaza (Haggai Matar and Oren Ziv, +972mag) We need leaders who can talk about ending the siege, about ending the occupation, about equality, freedom, and security as the only solution for both Israelis and Palestinians.
AIPAC Performance, Gantz Shows U.S. There Is an Alternative to Bibi (Amir Tibon, Haaretz+) While the prime minister always has the D.C. crowd in the palm of his hand thanks to his oratorial polish, his rival was the archetypal native Israeli – and all the more appealing to Americans for that.
To explode from nerves: This election campaign is the most nauseating that I remember (Natan Zehavi, Maariv) In the coming elections, I may do a demonstrative act: I will reach the polling station, I will stick my finger down my throat, and I will try not to miss when I vomit into the slot to which the ballots are cast…Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu is sunk deeply in the investigations and charges against him, subject to a hearing that was brought before him by Attorney General Avihcai Mandelblit, who was appointed by the prime minister himself. He pours fire and brimstone on the top of the police and the courts, where people he appointed sit. He gets involved, to put it mildly, in half-truths about the submarine affair, his business partnership with his cousin, the financing and management of future trials against him, and the activities of his many expensive lawyers. The renowned leader who promised to topple Hamas is negotiating with the heads of the organization with the help of mediators (mainly Egyptian intelligence). Hamas is not collapsing. He promised to respond with mortal blows to any harm to Israel, but the fields surrounding the Gaza Strip are burning, with incendiary balloons and explosive kites sowing fear and terror in the south, and there is no savior. He builds himself a luxury airplane at an astronomical price, because he likes to fly with his wife and show the public in Israel what an  admired persona he is around the world. The fact that some of the leaders he meets are despicable creatures, hated by their own people, does not bother him. From time to time he takes his son with him (at the expense of the family, according to his statements), but it turns out that someone has forgotten to pay the inflated bills of the sweet son, who acts with arrogance and condescension, as if any moment he were assuming the role of prime minister as inheritance from his father. Netanyahu's judgment is frightening. Most of the public does not know, but he has appointed Miri Regev as acting prime minister for some of his trips in the last two years (to Lithuania, India and the United States). Yes, that's no joke. It's a fact. The vulgar, quarrelsome, and inciting woman serves as the acting prime minister even when Bibi is admitted to a periodic medical examination under anaesthesia in a hospital. When he is under atomic pressure in his personal life, Netanyahu serves as prime minister, defense minister, foreign minister and health minister. A series of appointments he made of people to key positions in the administration in recent years have proved to him at least as failures. Some have resigned, some have been fired, some have become state witnesses against him, and others have moved to other parties and are currently working against him. One of his most notable failures is in his home. His son, Yair. A loathsome, boastful, arrogant creature who keeps getting into trouble. It is hard to forget the piercing statement of the parasitic prince Yair about journalist Amnon Abramovich, a handicapped IDF veteran and hero of Israel, who for him is "a garbage can, a fool, a Soviet propagandist." Just last week he Tweeted against the former head of the Mossad, Shabtai Shavit, who was considered to be a brave, wise man. He wrote the following sentence: "You idiot! It's scary to think you were in a security job!" I have known Shavit for many years. The fact that a little twat such as Yair Netanyahu would call him an "idiot" and doubts his ability to serve in a security position is record-making. It's a good thing that the little flea did not even Tweet about the fact that Shavit was not fit to serve in Sayeret Matkal commando because he was an idiot. Maybe Dad didn’t tell him that Shavit was in the unit. There is no need to be a great educator to understand that Bibi the Great failed miserably in the education of his 27-year-old son, who until recently lived with Father and Mother, and whose nightlife stories adorned the tabloid pages and what was published was only a small part of his righteous deeds. In the last week Bibi's Yair did what is done by the BDS, the greatest enemies of the State of Israel. Netanyahu Junior and his band of supporters called for the boycott of an Israeli artist, the singer Miri Masika, who "dared" to support Rotem Sela. Yair called on the people of the "right-wing flock" not to go to her performances. In the past week, Bibi realized that he was becoming increasingly entangled. Miri Regev will no longer serve as acting prime minister. The damage she caused after the attack in Ariel is irreversible. The minister, who thinks she is the messenger of God in the Holy Land, has begun to be excluded. Some of her party partners said in private conversations that the minister had become a troublemaker. A trouble for the party.
Hamas Rocket Rains on Netanyahu’s Victory Parade With Trump (Chemi Shalev, Haaretz+) The electoral asset of the prime minister’s sterling ties to a president reborn after the Mueller report are outweighed by perceptions that he is soft on the Gaza group.
Netanyahu's dilemma: Should a large-scale military operation be launched two weeks before the elections? (Tal Lev-Ram, Maariv) The prime minister is arriving at the last two weeks before the elections with the issues he has least wanted to deal with now - the submarines, Hamas, the Palestinian arena…The prime minister is familiar with the complexity of Gaza and it can be assumed that he is not interested in a large-scale ground operation of the kind that you know where it will begin, but you don’t know how it will end. Even a limited round of escalation, as it was a few months ago ending with dissatisfaction of the Israeli public about the extent of the IDF's success in it, can affect the situation in one way or another when the election campaign is about to start…Any military action that Israel chooses to carry out in response to the fire should be such that it leaves no question marks about its operational effectiveness. The IDF knows and holds plans for effective strike against targets, and the question is Israel's willingness, at this time, in anticipation of elections, to exercise the required powers. If there are other considerations, according to which Israel is not interested in escalation, it is sometimes preferable to postpone a significant response, so that there will be not be a response that will be perceived as Israel's erosion [of deterrence - OH] in the south.
A War Now Will Strengthen Hamas (Amira Hass, Haaretz) We cannot let the awful nightmare that Gazans have experienced three times in 10 years repeat itself.
'Mr. Security' Netanyahu Is Looking Very Insecure Days Before the Election (Yossi Verter, Haaretz+) Despite receiving the priceless gift of Golan Heights recognition by U.S. President Donald Trump, the prime minister is hounded by escalation with the Palestinians.
Ruling gives racism a boost (Doron Nehemia, Israel Hayom) Anti-Zionism and racism against Arabs are two sides of the same coin, which is why the Supreme Court contradicted itself when when it allowed extremist left-wing candidates run but disqualified former MK Michael Ben-Ari.
Unprecedented: Trump Gave Israel the Golan as a Gift and Asked for Nothing in Return (Aluf Benn, Haaretz+) In the past, American support always entailed Israel providing something in exchange. Not this time.
Trump handed Netanyahu the Golan with a bow on top. It's a first step toward annexation (Noa Landau, Haaretz+) From the standpoint of international law, the Golan Heights is no different from the West Bank.

Commentary/Analysis:
**No one wants it, but the Fourth Gaza War is coming (Yossi Melman, Maariv) Even if we do not get into an all-out war, as one might expect from the announcement of Islamic Jihad, which is waiting for Egyptian mediation, the basic problems will not go anywhere. Even in his view, Netanyahu is not willing to take the additional step that would lead to a cease-fire or a long-term arrangement with Hamas. All he has to do is make a courageous decision to say that in exchange for Hamas' agreement to such a move, Israel will agree to a thorough and comprehensive reconstruction of Gaza in order to improve the standard of living and well-being of Gaza's residents. But the Israeli government refuses to agree to this, as long as a prisoner swap is not reached. A prisoner deal is possible only if Israel partially meets Hamas' demands to release hundreds of terrorists. Netanyahu, who has already agreed to this in the Shalit deal - where he released more than 1,000 terrorists - does not even think of repeating his mistake. And so everything is stuck.…The Palestinians are also afraid - but they more daring, and the situation is deteriorating.
Choose Calm, Not Punishment (Haaretz Editorial) Previous large-scale military operations achieved periods of calm but the need to launch such operations again and again shows that they alone cannot guarantee our security.
Not time for a ground operation (Meir Indor, Israel Hayom) Israel must gradually reinstate the policy of targeted assassinations from the air against terrorist leaders. Our soldiers are not a spear for the Palestinian Authority and PLO.
IDF playing the same old game in Gaza (Alex Fishman, Yedioth/Ynet) With elections, Eurovision and Passover looming, the army has a limited timeframe for its current operation against Hamas; so instead of taking a bold step to change the situation on the ground, it finds itself trying to achieve limited goals that look good in pictures.
Hamas Rockets Put Egypt in a Bind (Zvi Bar'el, Haaretz+) Recent escalations could thwart attempts to establish an agreed-upon joint Gazan government that would serve both Egyptian and Israeli interests.
Israel must end this round with tangible gains (Yoav Limor, Israel Hayom) Ending this round without a clear Hamas pledge to prevent rocket fire would ensure that violence returns in the near future. Israel must also implement new measures to prevent access to the border fence.
Donald Trump has just legitimized Israel's illegal conquest of occupied territory (Victor Kattan, Haaretz+) The U.S. president has just knifed the international legal order in the back, on Israel's behalf. Now there's nothing to stop him backing an Israeli annexation of the West Bank.
From apologies to a battle cry (Dror Eydar, Israel Hayom) This year's AIPAC policy conference is taking place under tremendous pressure form the liberal left-wing elite, which objects to Israel's very existence as a Jewish state.
In AIPAC speech, Mike Pence tells moving story about Golan Heights battle. One problem: It May Not Be True (Allison Kaplan Sommer, Haaretz+) Pence's tale of a 'young tank commander who single-handedly kept a fleet of enemy tanks at bay' in 1973 war has since been debunked — although not by the tank commander himself.
Was It Netanyahu’s Financial Savvy or Insider Information? (Sami Peretz, Haaretz+) Either way, the premiere bought the stock at close to a 95 percent discount, and later sold it to his cousin for seven times what he paid for it.
The real reason progressive fundamentalists hate Israel with such passion (William Kolbrener, Haaretz+) Pro-BDS progressives in Congress and academia claim to be advocates of pluralism. But they've adopted a binary, absolutist way of thinking we associate more with the far right, and their quasi-religious fervor only targets Jews.

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