Inside the Likud’s generational battle

Legislation to bend the legal establishment to the will of politicians; legislation against left-wing NGO funding; laws mandating loyalty oaths, fines against boycotts, increasing the minimum fine against libel, enforcing noise pollution on mosque muezzins, and much, much more.

What’s behind this ‘Assault on Democracy,’ this rush of legislation from the ruling coalition and its satellite parties? Why are young Likud legislators working overtime on changing the nature of the state? On the one hand we want our lawmakers to make laws, but on the other hand, many are alarmed at the rate of the laws being proposed, as well as their content. Continue reading

Obama’s Stennis Decision

UPDATE: I’ve just been informed that the USS John C. Stennis will not be returning to its base in Bahrain, and was not scheduled to in the first place. Another carrier group will take its place. So the Iranians can use plausible deniability when the new carrier arrives back in the Gulf, saying that the ship they warned was the Stennis, not this new ship. And the Americans can save face by bringing another ship into the Gulf, and not confronting the Iranians over the Stennis. Continue reading

2012 New Years Resolutions

They’re a few days late, but these things take time if they are to be serious.

I promise to love my fellow Israelis, even the despicable ones. I’ll love them until I can’t love them anymore. And then I’ll try not get too angry with them. Continue reading

VIDEO: At Judaism’s holiest site, abuse of a young girl

This is such a shocking video.

I have no idea who these people are, but it seems that the man beating the young girl is her father. How else can one explain the scene? Surely a stranger would never attack a girl he doesn’t know in public. Coming up the stairs, the man stops to talk to what seems to be his wife. The wife then says something about the daughter, and then turns her back. The man then walks over to the daughter and proceeds to deliver a brutal beating, in full sight of the public, without any shame or restraint, as the mother continues to look the other way. He pushes her to the floor, beats her when she’s down…a real hero. If he can do this in public, at a place like this, I shudder to think about the kinds of beatings he’s capable of in the privacy of his home. Continue reading

Poll shows political backlash against religious

Once every couple of months, Israel Radio’s Thursday morning political talk show Hakol Diburim (It’s All Talk) publishes a poll by Shvakim Panorama that tests the political waters in Israel. This week’s poll, coming as it does on the backdrop of intense media coverage of ultra-Orthodox exclusion and abuse of women, is particularly interesting, as it predicts a dramatic wellspring of support for a secular party, should one arise. The poll predicts that should TV journalist Yair Lapid [son of the late Yosef Lapid – leader of the secularist Shinui party] decide to join the political fray and establish a secular party, he would win 15 Knesset seats and overtake both Kadima and Israel Beitenu. Lapid hasn’t stated what his intentions are yet, but this poll will surely give him pause to consider entering politics. However, he could also be thinking that, since elections are only scheduled to take place in October 2013, the country’s current preoccupation with religious extremism will be long gone by then, replaced with another burning issue. As Shimon Peres famously said: Polls are like perfume, sweet to the smell, but deadly to drink. Continue reading

Forecast Israel 2012

What’s in store for Israel in 2012?

Will Israel attack Iran’s nuclear facilities? And will the attack succeed? What will Iran’s retaliation look like? Will there be Knesset elections in Israel, and what effect will this past summer’s social protests have on the country’s political landscape? What will become of Egypt and Syria, Israel’s large and unstable neighbors? What of the peace process with the Palestinians, now that Hamas and Fatah seem to be moving closer to a unity government? What of the rapidly deteriorating situation in the Sinai – a badlands awash with weapons, terrorists, and economic migrants? And who will win the US Presidential elections towards the end of the year, and how big a part will Israel ultimately play in the campaigns of both Republicans and Democrats?

So many questions and possibilities present themselves in the coming year. Here are some trends I believe are worth looking out for in the coming year. Continue reading

With leaders like these, Israel’s zealots will win

Leadership. You either have it or you don’t. The following Israeli leaders don’t.

1. A day after prime time Channel 2 TV news shows a segment about a little 8 year old girl being spat on by religious extremists in Beit Shemesh, the Israeli Minister of Culture and Sport, Limor Livnat [Likud] goes on national radio and says that in majority religious towns, gender segregated public buses should be allowed. What we have is a minister in the Israeli government going against a Supreme Court ruling saying that all gender segregation on public transportation is illegal. Continue reading

Israel’s [real] statement against European condemnation

Israel on Wednesday accused four European countries of meddling in her affairs and warned that they risked making themselves “irrelevant.”

The communiqué came a day after Britain, France, Germany and Portugal called on Israelis and Palestinians to present proposals on territory and security to the Quartet. The Europeans called on Israel to reverse its settlement building plans, saying that they were illegal, sent a “devastating message” and threatened the prospects for a two-state solution.

In an exclusive for my blog, I’ve gotten my hands on a “leaked copy” of the original draft of the Foreign Ministry statement. The statement that was released to the media did not contain the [text in parentheses] Continue reading

Make them a threat they can’t refuse

Washington is reportedly backing down on its threat to suspend aid to the Palestinian Authority over its unilateral bid to join UN organizations instead of entering into direct talks with Israel. Jerusalem is reportedly backing this policy.

From the Los Angeles Times:

The appropriations bill won’t penalize the Palestinian Authority for joining UNESCO. But aid would be cut off if the Palestinians joined another U.N. group. Officials noted that funds could still be provided under a waiver from Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton saying aid continuation was in the national interest of the United States. Robert Danin, a former U.S. official in the Middle East, said the appropriators’ move appears to reflect their judgment that although the threat of a cutoff might help persuade the Palestinians to stop their U.N. strategy, “it’s a more potent tool when it’s threatened than when it’s actually carried out.”

Continue reading

Love in the time of Uranium

“America’s commitment and my commitment to Israel and Israel’s security is unshakeable. It is unshakeable. I am proud to say that no U.S. administration has done more in support of Israel’s security than ours. None. Don’t let anybody else tell you otherwise. It is a fact. We are determined to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons. And that’s why, rest assured, we will take no options off the table.” – US President Barack Obama, December 17, 2011

Continue reading

Songs of the Hilltop Youth – Jewish extremist gangster rap

With all the brouhaha about price tag attacks and the hilltop youth over the past few days I thought it would be a good exercise to get to know these people a little better, get into their minds, so to speak.

You want to know how the Hilltop Youth feel about Arabs? How they see secular Israelis who live in Tel-Aviv? How they feel about the media? Continue reading

The Jewish Self-Destruct Button

The fact that 30 attackers could break into an IDF base in a military zone in Palestinian areas without the IDF having any prior intelligence, vandalize the base, damage IDF equipment, knock a few soldiers around, and walk out scot free, as if they had just won a battle, is not a scandal. That’s already happened before. Two attackers were arrested in the Epfraim Brigade attack. Only two. And one of them ‘escaped.’ That’s the scandal.

The fact that Jewish attackers can ambush an IDF vehicle carrying a Brigade Commander and a Deputy Brigade Commander, open the vehicle door, and throw a concrete block at the Deputy Commander’s head, is not a scandal. That’s also happened before. What’s a scandal is that these Israel Defense Forces officers didn’t put a bullet between the eyes of the man who dared to open the door of their armored car. Continue reading

What of Syria’s unconventional weapons if Assad falls?

Once again, I apologize for being the voice of doom and gloom, but I sincerely hope that Israel is thinking about what will happen to Syria’s unconventional weapons if and when Bashar Assad is removed from power. Not that I think Assad will use them against us, that would be most unwise. But as former Mossad chief Efraim Halevy said this morning on Army Radio, Israel is extremely concerned about who or what takes control of these weapons if and when Assad goes. Halevy made the point that “very advanced weaponry” from Libya has recently made its way to “sensitive locations.” Halevy added that the situation in Syria would become extremely uncertain and chaotic should the Syrian army disintegrate. Continue reading

It’s official: In 50 years time Israel won’t work

It’s official: we’re screwed.

In an exclusive story released today in Hebrew, Israel Radio published a report compiled by the Central Bureau of Statistics which posits interesting forecasts of Israel’s population makeup in 50 years time [the year 2059].

The research was commissioned by the Treasury’s Budget Department. Continue reading

Peace now? Forget about it

Why the Palestinians and settlers don’t want peace now

The Palestinians are certainly interested in a sovereign and independent state that will allow them to realize their self-determination as other peoples have done across the world. But they’re not pursuing a negotiated settlement with Israel. Instead the Palestinian Authority is pursuing a unilateral drive for statehood, still promising its people, as well as the Palestinian Diaspora, that they will eventually return to their former homes in Jaffa and Haifa. Continue reading

Absorption minister defends expat ad, but apologizes if Diaspora Jews were hurt

[Many thanks to Haviv Rettig Gur for providing the quotes straight out of the committee meeting.]

Immigrant Absorption Minister Sofa Landver (Yisrael Beitenu) on Wednesday defended a controversial public relations campaign produced by her office, saying it was her job to return Israelis living abroad, but also apologizing if the campaign hurt the Diaspora Jewish community. Continue reading

Netanyahu and Obama are running against each other

Some thoughts on the situation

1. Silvan Shalom, the Likud’s number 2 man, had no idea that PM Netanyahu was planning to bring forward the Likud primaries date. He was caught completely by surprise. And just for that, he doesn’t deserve to be Likud leader. In this profession, and in this neighborhood, if you’re not constantly trying to politically or militarily outmaneuver your opponents, chances are they will get you. The wolf and the sheep have not laid down together yet here. If Shalom doesn’t know that by now, he’ll never know it, and he can’t lead the Likud, or this country. Continue reading

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