Showing posts with label Israelies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Israelies. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 3, 2016

Postcard from Israel: Mahaneh Yehuda - video from the open market in Jerusalem


Postcard from Israel: Mahaneh Yehuda

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Published on Jul 29, 2015
Postcard from Israel - Mahaneh Yehuda, Open Air Market in Jerusalem
Video by Asi Aivas for ISRAEL21c


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Monday, December 14, 2015

Jesus is Making Headlines in Israel | David Lazarus ISRAEL TODAY

Jesus is Making Headlines in Israel

Monday, December 14, 2015 |  David Lazarus 
 ISRAEL TODAY
The second largest internet portal in Israel is putting Hebrew-language testimonies about Jesus on their front page, and 95% of Israelis are hooked into the internet everyday, all day.
Walla!, the mainstream Israeli media giant, is producing, at their own expense, a series of up to 24 live interviews with Messianic Jews about Jesus. In the interviews, a well-known Israeli actress asks Israeli believers questions about faith in Jesus.
Some of the topics being discussed are:
  • Who are these Messianics Jews;
  • What is the difference between Messianic Judaism and Christianity;
  • Talmudic fables intended to dismiss Jesus;
  • Why is the Hebrew New Testament not available in Israeli book stores;
  • Isaiah 53
Management at Walla! had noticed popular video clips about Jesus produced by the Israel College of the Bible (ICB) on social media. In an unprecedented and exceptional move for a mainstream Israeli media company, Walla! asked the team at ICB if they could produce their own series about Jesus for the Israeli public.
Walla! has already begun placing the clips about faith in Jesus on the front page of their site, and they are uploading new clips during the busiest hours of their Internet traffic. Already on the first day of exposure, the numbers of visitors and comments are enormous.
Of the multitude of subjects argued and debated in Israel, Jesus is by far the most controversial. Walla!, the second largest Internet news company in Israel, has taken a bold and risky step by promoting interest in Jesus, and in Messianic Jews, to their massive audience. There are likely to be repercussions and resistance to such a major promotion about Jesus, but the management of Walla! seems to think that Israelis are ready to listen.
Eitan Bar, one of the Messianic Jews being interviewed for the series, says that Messianics in Israel can expect strong reactions as well. “Please pray for us and for all of the Messianic Jews in Israel. We know that there will be unyielding opposition.”
Bar and the team at ICB are also asking for prayer that this massive exposure to Jesus would bring the Gospel closer to Israeli hearts and minds. They are garnering support from Messianic believers across Israel to get active in the discussions with the thousands of comments and interactions about Jesus with Israelis on the website.
Bar also suggests some practical ways Christians around the world can help.
“Use your blogs and websites to link to the Messianic websites being promoted by Walla!. This really helps as it increases exposure to these sites and raises the sites rating on Google’s search engine. When Israelis search for keywords in Hebrew like 'Yeshua the Messiah', 'New Testament', 'Jesus of Nazareth' or 'Messianic Jews' they will be pointed to the Hebrew websites where they will be able to learn more about who Jesus really is, rather than to the many anti-Messiah, deceitful websites, some even denying that Jesus ever existed!"
Here is a link to the first Walla interviews about Yeshua. Click here to see the first interview (in Hebrew).
The two Messianic websites (Hebrew) being promoted by the series are: www.igod.co.ilwww.messiah.co.il
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Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Trump: ‘Obama Hates Israel, Jewish State Safe With Me’ - II&ET Nov. 1, 2015

Trump: ‘Obama Hates Israel, Jewish State Safe With Me’ - II&ET Nov. 1, 2015

REPUBLICAN presidential candidate attacks deal with Iran, which he says leaves Israel in ‘so much trouble’ “So many friends in Israel, they don’t know what happened,” “They actually think Obama hates Israel. I think he does.”
R

epublican presidential candidate Donald Trump said Thursday that he believes US President Barack Obama hates Israel, citing the recent nuclear deal with Iran which he said was “so bad” for the Jewish state.

“So many friends in Israel, they don’t know what happened,” he said of the agreement between Tehran and the US, along with other world powers. “They actually think Obama hates Israel. I think he does.”

Speaking during a campaign speech in Reno, Nevada on, the business magnate added: “Honestly, I think Israel is in such a massive amount of trouble because of the agreement.”

Trump vowed to defend Israel if elected president. “Israel is safe with this one,” he said, pointing to himself. “Nothing bad is going to happen to Israel.”

Trump, a brash billionaire businessman, dominated the Republican field for months. Recently he has been losing ground to neurosurgeon Ben Carson.

Neither Trump nor Carson are career politicians but both have capitalized on anti-Washington, anti-establishment feeling among many conservatives.

Israeli leadership has sharply criticized the Iran deal, and the issue had served to further fracture relations between Jerusalem and Washington. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is said to have enraged Obama by trying to turn Congress against the deal behind the president’s back. Meanwhile the US’s handling of the nuclear negotiations, the Palestinian conflict and other regional challenges have greatly diminished Israelis’ trust in the American leader, with many seeing him as weak, naive, or both.

Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon this week declared the dispute over the accord over. “The Iran deal is a given,” he said in Washington while meeting with his US counterpart Ashton Carter. “Our disputes are over. And now we have to look to the future.”

Netanyahu is to be hosted by Obama at the White House on November 9 — their first face-to-face talks in over a year.
Though generally unpopular in Israel, some security experts — including former heads of the Shin Bet and Mossad — have said it has its good aspects. Former IDF chief of staff Benny Gantz has said he sees the benefits of the accord, which he has acknowledged will probably put off a nuclear-armed Iran for at least 10-15 years. The diplomatic effort, he said, probably prevented war from breaking out.
The Republican nominee will most likely face Hillary Rodham Clinton, former first lady and secretary of state in the 2016 presidential race. The overwhelming favorite for the Democratic nomination, her campaign received a boost from a strong debate performance two weeks ago.

Monday, October 26, 2015

ISIS Jihadi Threatens Israelis in Hebrew - CBN NEWS

ISIS Jihadi Threatens Israelis in Hebrew

Screen Capture
JERUSALEM, Israel -- The Islamic State aired its first Hebrew-language video on social media Friday morning.
Entitled, "A message to the Jews, the first enemy of the Muslims," the narrator, his face hidden under a black mask with only slits for his eyes, begins.
"To all the Jews who conquered the land of the Muslims, the real war has not yet started. All that you had before this was child's play compared to what is going to happen to you in the near future, Allah willing," he says, according to a YNet translation.
"Do whatever you want in the meantime until we reach you. Then we will make you pay back 10 times for all the crimes you've committed, and we assure you that soon there will not be a single Jew in Jerusalem and throughout the country and we shall move on until we eradicate this disease worldwide," he says.
"Look what happened to you after several vehicular attacks carried out by our Palestinian brothers. You flipped out after the first one and you feared all fast drivers. You even feared anyone carrying something in his hand. This is just your level," he continues.
His claim that Israelis have "flipped out" falls short of the reality, where day-to-day life continues despite the attacks. 
With each terror attack, the Israel Defense Forces provides details as soon as they're confirmed. And the latest upsurge in violence is not by any means the country's first experience with terrorism, and most are handling it much better than the narrator would like. He still seeks to instill fear in what he threatens is coming.
"Think even for a few seconds what will happen to you when tens of thousands, Allah willing, come after you from all over the world to slaughter you and throw you into the trash for good. Aside from the vehicles and bombs, the smallest child is ready to get on this car and send you straight to hell," he says in typical Islamic rhetoric.
In similar rhetoric to Iran's Ayatollah Khamenei and Hezbollah's Hassan Nasrallah, he promises that ISIS will wipe Israel off the map.
"We are advancing toward you from the north, the south, Sinai and Damascus. From all over the world we will come after you to finish you off," he says, ending the tirade in Arabic with a butcher knife in hand.
In related news, the IDF lifted a gag order Sunday morning on a 23-year-old Israeli Arab from the town of Jaljulya in Samaria who used a hand glider to cross into Syria from the Golan Heights on Saturday, presumably to join ISIS.
The Golan Heights is a popular spot for hand gliding so it was unclear initially if someone had gone off course. As soon as the hand glider was spotted, the IDF began a search-and-rescue operation using helicopters, drones and ground troops. 
On Sunday, the IDF confirmed their findings and the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) launched an investigation to determine if ISIS' newest recruit had ties with other Islamic terror groups.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu strongly recommended revoking his Israeli citizenship. 

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Israelis: Frustrated and Scared, but Strong and Resilient

Molotov cocktails are a favorite weapon of terrorists and instigators in Israel.

Molotov cocktails are a favorite weapon of terrorists and instigators in Israel. (YouTube)

Israelis: Frustrated and Scared, but Strong and Resilient

Standing With Israel




This week, I had that very uncomfortable and awkward conversation with one of my kids. Actually, I had the same conversation with most of my kids.
No, not that conversation. We talked about the situation of increased terror, heightened tension and fear that's been plaguing our lives in Israel these past weeks and for which there seems to be no end in sight.
At different levels, each of my kids and I discussed the overall situation. One daughter going off to college and who normally travels through a part of Samaria with large concentration of Palestinian Arabs didn't need me to tell her that it wasn't safe and she should go the longer, safer, way. Usually, she pushes back and resists my telling her not to drive that way, noting, "It's our land and our country, and we can go anywhere we want."
Of course I know she's right, and I am proud that I am raising her and her siblings in Israel to appreciate this reality. But as her father, I am still responsible for her safety and well-being. It's a conflict I don't relish, but am glad in this case she didn't argue with me.
Because I have been traveling abroad, another daughter felt the need to recount the week's victim list and locations of terror attacks in case I wasn't aware what was going on. On one hand, it's considered "normal" for Palestinian Arabs to attack Israelis in Judea and Samaria where we live, but she was shocked that Arabs, many of whom are Israeli Arabs, are attacking us in Tel Aviv, Kiryat Gat, Beersheba, Afula, Hadera, Nazareth and not to mention Jerusalem and other parts of the Galilee. I had heard of most of the instances but let her continue because it seemed therapeutic.
In discussing walking around Jerusalem, the same daughter understood that she needs to avoid talking on her phone—something teenagers have a hard time doing as it is—in order that she should be aware of her surroundings. Then she said, "Don't worry Abba, I'm so scared to walk around that I am going to be looking at everyone as if they were a terrorist."
The same day, my youngest son matter-of-factly told me that his friend in a nearby town had a hard time getting to basketball practice because there was a terrorist in his community and the whole town had been shut down with nobody allowed in or out.
Since I was traveling, I told my wife where I keep the extra pepper spray, which probably won't do much anyway, but can't hurt. She related to me running errands in Jerusalem and feeling uncomfortable around all the Arabs, knowing full well that most were harmless, but that these days one with a knife makes them all suspect. We're not racist, just careful.
These are the "normal" conversations we've been having that serve as part venting, part therapy and part just catching up on "What'd you do today?" In short, as one blogger put it, we are frustrated, scared and feeling helpless. I have an extra measure of guilt being overseas and away from the family.  
In our community, notices went out to have everyone save the emergency services number in their phones as the first contact. We've been told to discuss security precautions with our family. Some suggestions include:
  • Be alert to anything suspicious and report suspicious behavior or situations.
  • Car windows should be made of plastic, resistant to stone throwing.
  • If you legally own a gun, carry it at all times.
  • Buy pepper spray for you and your teenagers, and learn how and when to use it.
  • Familiarize yourself with the laws of appropriate use of force and how to respond in specific instances:
For Stoning, Molotov Cocktail and Shooting
  • In a dangerous situation, keep driving with two hands on the steering wheel until you are in a safe area.
  • Call and report the location of the incident.
  • When you reach the nearest army checkpoint, or entrance of the nearest community, report the incident again.
For Shooting From a Passing Car
  • If you see a suspicious car trying to pass you in an attempt to shoot, drive faster to create a greater distance between you and the car.
  • In the case of a passing car that cannot be avoided, brake in order to interfere with his ability to shoot accurately.
  • As soon as you have stopped, quickly turn the car around and drive away as fast as you can.
For a Rock Roadblock
  • Avoid driving over the roadblock. Your car may turn over or the car might get stuck or stopped.
  • If you cannot drive around the roadblock, brake before it and then drive away from the dangerous area.
  • The car is damaged and cannot be driven, leave the car and get away as fast as you can by foot.
Preventing Carjacking
  • Lock your car doors when you leave your community.
  • Avoid stopping in or close to Arab villages, including fruit and vegetable stands along the road.
  • When travelling on roads that are more prone to attacks, do not travel alone; wait for more cars and travel in a convoy
  • Try to travel with at least two passengers carrying guns.
Various self-defense organizations, such as the Israeli Counter Terror and Security Academy, are promoting an increase of security precautions. They offer the following courses at discounted prices:
  • Krav Maga for children, youth and adults, women and girls
  • The sale of and proper use of pepper spray
  • Basic and advanced shooting (pistol) courses
  • Safety and security awareness
  • Defensive driving in dangerous situations
  • And sales of self-defense items such as pepper spray and "shockers" as well as weapons and ammunition to those who are qualified.
Yes, Israel is weary, frustrated, scared and feeling helpless. But we derive strength and comfort from knowing that it is by divine promise that we have returned to our land, and that the God of Israel still protects us. Our response is not more violence, but prayer.
When my wife dropped off our son at school one day, the entire school—several hundred students and all the faculty—was outside singing Psalms, blowing shofars and calling out to God to continue to protect us and foil the plots of those who wish to harm us. Seeing and experiencing this, she broke into tears, leaving the person on the phone whom she was talking to think she had lost it.
I'm on my way home and will join in the prayers and active parenting. I will be more careful and be more aware of my surroundings and of my kids' needs.
But we will continue to win, to overcome, to survive, and to live and thrive because, though God may not have promised us that it would be easy, He did promise us that we would return and thrive. We will survive with strength and resilience.
Please join us in solidarity, in prayer and support of Israel at this challenging and stressful time.
 
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Sunday, October 11, 2015

Israel and the Palestinians - THE TIMES OF ISRAEL


Israel and the Palestinians slide deeper into conflict

Stabbing attacks are multiplying, PA security forces are shrinking away in the West Bank, the IDF is getting more deeply involved and more Palestinians are joining the clashes.

BY AVI ISSACHAROFF October 9, 2015  THE TIMES OF ISRAEL

WRITERS
Avi Issacharoff, The Times of Israel's Middle East analyst, 
fills the same role for Walla, the leading portal in Israel. … [More]


RELATED TOPICS
ISRAELI-PALESTINIAN CONFLICT
WEST BANK
PALESTINIAN TERRORISM
MORE ON THIS STORY
At Jerusalem stabbing site, protest tent marks new status quo
Israel may outlaw far-right Lehava organization
Abbas trying to quell violence — Israeli security officials
PM to Abbas: Stop the incendiary speeches about Temple Mount
Leading rabbi: Jewish visitors to Temple Mount sparked tensions
Jordan slams Israel for Palestinian deaths, urges world intervention
At least 6 Palestinians die in clash with IDF along Gaza border
Israelis buy pepper spray, sign up to self-defense courses as stabbing attacks surge
Attempted Afula stabber identified as Nazareth woman
Settler leader’s family hurt in West Bank crash as car pelted with rocks


The events of the last few days show a deeply alarming trend: Three or more Palestinians, mostly East Jerusalemites, are daily attacking Israelis — knowing that they are likely to die in the attempt. These are a kind of suicide attacks. They are far less devastating than the bus and restaurant and market bombings of the Second Intifada, but they are motivated by the assailants’ desire to become martyrs. The upsurge of these kinds of attacks is all the more disquieting given that the overwhelming majority of them are not organized by a terror group or known orchestrator, but rather are carried out by “lone wolf” terrorists.

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This simply didn’t happen at this kind of rate during the Second Intifada. At its height, in the spring of 2002, that strategic onslaught of terrorism was producing horrific suicide bombings every few days. But today, we have entered an almost surreal reality of attack after attack every day, mostly carried out by young Palestinians (mostly, but not only male) with no known previous involvement in terrorism, willing to kill and to die “for Jerusalem” and “for al-Aqsa.”


Is the day drawing near when one of the terrorist organizations will try to initiate a Second Intifada-style suicide bombing inside Israel? For now, at least, there is no intelligence information indicating this. But that does not mean no such plans exist.

Hamas does not want to declare all-out war against Israel, and to completely destroy its relations with the Palestinian Authority. Therefore, it apparently will not initiate this kind of attack. The same can be said of Fatah’s well-armed Tanzim forces. But it may well be that within Islamic Jihad, with the encouragement of the Iranians, there may be those who will — if only to “steal the show” and show up the “paralysis” of the rival terror groups.

Even without these kinds of bombings, the relentless daily attacks are sowing fear and deep disquiet among Israelis. This is a kind of assault not previously encountered. The closest precedent was a rash of knifings in 1990, on a much smaller scale, also motivated by concern for ostensible threats to the al-Aqsa Mosque.

Part of Israelis’ concerns stem from uncertainty: what exactly are we facing, and how is it going to develop? It’s not (yet) a popular uprising. In the Palestinian twittersphere, some are calling it the “al-Quds Intifada” — the Jerusalem uprising — much like the al-Aqsa Intifada of 15 years ago. But that’s just what would-be opinion-shapers are branding it. Are we truly entering a Third Intifada? It’s still hard to say with any certainty. Something has clearly shifted, however, and things are unlikely to revert to the way they were. The status quo that has prevailed since 2007, rooted in close coordination between the Israeli and PA security hierarchies, is coming to an end.
Uncomfortable meeting

The crack, or possibly the rift, in security ties between Israel and the PA is not official, and may not be irreversible. Nobody on the Palestinian side has formally declared that coordination is over. Quite the opposite. PA President Mahmoud Abbas is ostensibly maintaining it. His security chiefs met with their Israeli counterparts this week, despite all the problematics and sensitivities of such a meeting at a time like this.

Word of the meeting leaked out, and the PA promptly denied that it had taken place, claiming that it had rebuffed an Israeli invitation to meet. In fact, according to an Israeli source, PA officials — including Nidal Abu-Dahan, the head of PA National Security, Intelligence chief Majed Faraj and Preventive Security chief Ziad Habalreeh — discussed ways to calm the situation with their Israeli counterparts. The PA officials emphatically did not announce an end to the coordination, or any plans for such a rupture.

In fact, earlier this week, PA security officials safely extracted Israeli solders who had entered PA territory by mistake, and also carried out a series of more than 20 arrests among Hamas activists.

But the PA security chiefs did, nonetheless, convey a sense of disquiet to the Israelis. What they were wondering was, what happens next? As in, if they help calm the situation, and thwart the upsurge in attacks, what will the Israeli government do for the PA? Faraj, who is regarded as particularly close to Abbas, was one of the officials making this concern clear, the source said.

Israeli suggestions to withdraw forces from certain areas, and allow the PA to deploy there, were met with hesitancy. For instance, there was talk of the PA placing forces at the northern entrance to Ramallah, across from the IDF’s Judea and Samaria HQ. The Israelis pointed out that it was an affront to the PA for Palestinian youths, including Hamas supporters, to be running riot so close to the PA’s own West Bank capital. But the PA officials were disinclined to act decisively to completely douse a fire they feel was started by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his ministers surrounding al-Aqsa.

There was also talk of encouraging a greater Jordanian role regarding the contested holy site, specifically for King Abdullah to reassert a more direct role in the oversight of the Muslim holy places there. Such a move, it was thought, might constitute another de-escalating step, to follow up on Netanyahu’s ban on MKs and ministers, Jewish and Muslim, from visiting the site.

In truth, however, another reason for the PA security chiefs’ hesitation was that most of the demonstrations taking place in West Bank cities in recent days and weeks have been organized by Fatah activists, not senior Fatah officials directed by Abbas, but Fatah and Tanzim figures some of whom are close to the leadership and some of whom directly work in the Fatah bureaucracy. The PA security apparatuses have no interest in entering into confrontations with these people. And the absence of the PA forces was indeed conspicuous this week during clashes in Bethlehem, Tulkarem and Ramallah.

This may also explain the dramatic rise in the numbers participating in these protests and clashes. Now, hundreds are gathering — 10 times as many as was the case a mere two or three weeks ago.

Fatah wants to play a role in the confrontation against Israel, in part so as no to lose more of the Palestinian street to Hamas. All this unsurprisingly hinders Israeli-PA security coordination. And that’s not about to change.

The bottom line: The PA forces no longer can, and no longer want to, do what they were doing a few short weeks ago.

A case in point: Three days ago, gunmen from Ramallah opened fire at an IDF command post in Beit El. These were Fatah-Tanzim gunmen. The PA security forces told them to desist, but it is unlikely that this order will be heeded for long.
Abbas’s thinking

It may be that the current situation has its perceived benefits for Abbas. He’s not ripping up relations with Israel altogether, and he is not directly responsible for the deteriorating situation. But the escalation is producing so much anxiety in Israel that, Abbas may be calculating, Netanyahu may resort to widening his coalition, to bring in the center-left National Union, and perhaps even freezing settlement construction.

In this context, Abbas’s insistent refusal to condemn the terror attacks is telling. In the past, he did condemn all attacks and bloodshed. This time, he has been silent, and his Fatah colleagues have been hailing and praising the attacks.

The breach between Israel and Abbas, as reflected in his speech to the UN General Assembly last week, was followed, predictably, by the planned dispatch by Abbas of a delegation to Gaza to discuss a unity government with Hamas, except that Hamas refused to host Abbas’s emissaries.

Again, it is not impossible that this new wave of terror will be calmed for a while. But the fundamental causes will remain. The coals will keep burning unless or until there is a substantive diplomatic process — even in the highly unlikely event that the specific issue of al-Aqsa is effectively addressed.

For now, the cycle of violence is well and truly in motion: Palestinian attacks, in some cases bringing Jewish “revenge” attacks, and more Palestinian attacks, and wider Palestinian demonstrations, with a rising insistence by Fatah that it play a role. The PA security forces shrink away. The IDF has to intervene more directly — as in this week’s operation by undercover forces near Beit El. And the deterioration accelerates.

Last weekend, after the terror attack near Itamar in which Naama and Eitam Henkin were gunned down in front of their children, some 40 incidents of Jewish attacks on Palestinians were reported. That constitutes a portent of what could unfold during the olive-picking season, which is now getting under way. Each week’s Friday prayers constitute another event that potentially widens Palestinian participation in protest and violence in Jerusalem and the West Bank.


In a classic Catch-22, each new Palestinian terror attack prompts pressure on the government to cancel work permits for tens of thousands of West Bank Palestinians in Israel and for the imposition of a closure on the territories — as Zionist Union’s Isaac Herzog, of all people, urged on Thursday. Such a step would likely be disastrous, and would probably mean that rather than 3,000 Palestinians participating in West Bank protests against the IDF, we would see 30,000 or more.

At which point, any attempt to halt a popular uprising would become almost impossible.

Monday, July 21, 2014

Why Israel Attacked a Densely-Populated Gaza Neighborhood

Why Israel Attacked a Densely-Populated Gaza Neighborhood

Monday, July 21, 2014 |  Ryan Jones  ISRAEL TODAY
More than two weeks into the current Gaza war, Israel on Sunday suffered its first bout of serious international condemnation after a day of bloody fighting that left dead 13 Israeli soldiers and at least 70 Palestinians.
If Palestinian estimates are to be believed, the bulk of their dead were civilians, residents of the battered Gaza City suburb of Shejaiya.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon labeled the Israeli operation “an atrocious action,” and US Secretary of State John Kerry sarcastically quipped, “It’s a hell of a pinpoint operation.”
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, meanwhile, explained that the assault on Shejaiya was absolutely necessary, given that the neighborhood had been used to launch some 150 missile attacks on the Jewish state over the past week, and that it continued to house a sizable arsenal of projectiles.
Situated less than a mile from Gaza’s border with southern Israel, Shejaiya was described by Israeli troops operating there as a vast Hamas stronghold, with a huge network of terror tunnels used to store missiles and infiltrate southern Israel.
Netanyahu said this was a strategic threat that simply had to be dealt with. Addressing a press conference in which he confirmed the deaths of 13 Israeli soldiers during the fighting in Shejaiya, the prime minister stated:
“Last night ’s action revealed more tunnels, in addition to others that we already uncovered, some of which reached Israel. We found handcuffs, sedating drugs. There is no question this is a strategic component for Hamas. …If these tunnels were not found, then the results would have been a lot worse.”
As for the high number of Palestinian deaths, Netanyahu stressed that Israel had very clearly warned the residents of Shejaiya to evacuate days before the assault.
“We urged the civilian population to evacuate for days, through leaflets, broadcasts, telephone calls. We urged them to evacuate, because we didn’t want to see innocent civilians caught in the crossfire between Israel and Hamas,” the Israeli leader insisted. “But it is Hamas that ordered the civilians to stay put. It is Hamas that wanted those civilians to stay, so it would have a human shield for its terrorist machine.”
As former US President Bill Clinton explained last week, the high civilian death toll was likely part of Hamas’ barbaric plan.
Hamas has “a strategy designed to force Israel to kill their own civilians so that the rest of the world will condemn them (Israel),” Clinton told India’s NDTV.
Some argue that if Clinton’s assertion is indeed true, then Israel should refrain from obliging the terror group.
But the situation is like that of a petulant child, incessantly kicking, biting and otherwise assaulting an older and stronger sibling until the inevitable retaliation comes, and then crying foul. Being a father of five, I am well acquainted with this scenario.
At some point, barring parental interference, the older sibling has to take some kind of action to halt the assaults and, if possible, deter future aggression. If not, the younger, belligerent sibling will simply continue escalating his or her attacks until a response of some sort materializes.
The very same is the case with Hamas. It has been steadily escalating its attacks against Israel, drawing out that inevitable response. And the international community, like a bad parent, all but ignored the long initial provocation, and only interfered in any meaningful capacity after Israel had become fed up and taken action.
If the world truly cared about the 70 or more Palestinians killed on Sunday, it would have nipped this problem in the bud months or even years ago by preventing Hamas’ military build-up, because for any reasonable observer, the ultimate outcome was obvious.
The same is true of our parent in the above scenario. If I, as a father, really care about preventing violence between my children, then I stop the unruly younger sibling in his or her tracks before the older child has need of responding.
Likewise, if politicians and pundits are genuine in their position that Israel has a right to defend itself, then why in their criticism of actions like yesterday’s do they not offer viable alternatives? If Israel shouldn’t have assaulted Shejaiya in such force in order to destroy the vast number of terror tunnels and rockets found there, then what should it have done?
Israel needed to do something, because its parent, the international community, clearly wasn’t going to. No one is happy about the deaths in Shejaiya. But no one is providing alternative solutions to a situation that couldn’t be permitted to continue.
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