Requiem, or new lease on life for Labor?

The two coin-operated black-leather massage couches, the kind that you sit in and relax while the little motorized balls inside the leather work their way up your leg muscles and into your back and back down again, should have been working overtime. But none of the 1200 Labor Party convention delegates packed into the smoke-filled cafeteria at the Tel Aviv Convention Center on Tuesday had any time for a 5-minute massage.

The last time the Labor delegates convened two months before the general elections in November was over a simple vote on internal party rules and procedures. This time they were deciding Labor’s future. Sitting around cafeteria tables, the conversations were about how Labor’s anti-coalition MKs would behave after they lost Tuesday’s vote, whether they would split the party, whether the party itself had any future, and, which jobs would be given to which ministers and MKs. Continue reading

Mutiny and machinations in Israel’s fourth largest party

This is how Labor dies. Not with a whimper. Not with a bang. More like assisted suicide.

Mark this day, Tuesday 24 March 2009. It is on this day that Israel’s founding party ‘finishes its historical role’. Regardless of which way the vote in the convention goes today, Labor is finished. If Barak wins, Labor will serve as the fig leaf for Netanyahu’s ‘orange and black’ administration, gradually withering away under international diplomatic isolation and economic stress. If Barak loses, he could jump ship and join Bibi, alone or with a few others, while leaving the rest of Labor [what will they call themselves, the Real Labor, True Labor, Provisional Labor, Continuity Labor?] to rot under the long shadow cast by the much bigger Kadima. Seven constantly-bickering opposition MKs won’t take Labor over the next electoral threshold. Continue reading

What Peres really told the Iranian people

Presidents Barack Obama and Shimon Peres both addressed the Iranian people this week in broadcast messages in honor of the Iranian new year, Nowruz. Obama sent a video message that was widely received and spoke in a respectful, conciliatory tone of a “new beginning”. Peres’ message was broadcast to a narrow audience on Israel Radio’s Farsi Service and was less optimistic – calling on the Iranian people to choose a better leadership. The Israeli President’s message was different to Obama’s, and reflected the gloomy mood in the Jewish state. The differences in the messages reflects the wide gap between an American administration willing to give diplomacy with Iran a serious push, and an Israeli leader’s apprehension of a coming disaster. Continue reading

The war inside Labor

Now it’s all out in the open. The war inside Labor pits the party’s generals versus its social activists over whether to enter Prime Minister-designate Binyamin Netanyahu’s government. And in war, the generals play dirty. Continue reading

Homesick yes, but this is scary

I haven’t managed to take some time off and go visit my former home in over 2 years. I really miss Johannesburg and usually look for ways to get back home.

Here’s why I don’t feel so bad about it today:

The clip is part of a fascinating story by Real Clear World on the World’s Most Dangerous Cities, where Johannesburg ranked 7th.

Did you pack your Jewish identity yourself?

Israel’s Ben Gurion Airport was named ‘Best Performing Airport in the Middle East’ for the second year in a row this week by The Airports Council International.

Airports in in Abu Dhabi and Doha came in second and third respectively.

Ynet News reports that the Israel Airports Authority allocated NIS 3.7 billion ($873,000,000) towards improving safety, security and customer service at the terminal.

I wonder if the ACI rankings took into account that in a recent report the US Federal Aviation Authority recently found several flaws in safety procedures at Ben Gurion Airport, and has lowered the safety ranking given to Ben Gurion from Category 1 to Category 2, a classification usually assigned to third world countries. Continue reading

Rafael slums it on Bollywood arms sales video

Rafael Advanced Defense Systems LTD displayed a Bollywood-style dance number featuring Israeli artists in full Bollywood costume singing in English about the potential for the Indo-Israeli defense trade relationship on on large screen televisions at their stall at Aero India 2009 recently. This one’s not going to get any Oscars.

Thanks to Noah Shachtman from Wired for pointing this out.

Can’t believe this is the best they could do. Continue reading

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