Showing posts with label Jerusalem Post. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jerusalem Post. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 12, 2017

'ISRAEL MAY HAVE STRUCK THE SYRIAN WEAPONS FACILITY BEFORE HEZBOLLAH COULD TAKE OVER' - ANNA AHRONHEIM Jerusalem Post

'ISRAEL MAY HAVE STRUCK THE SYRIAN WEAPONS FACILITY BEFORE HEZBOLLAH COULD TAKE OVER'


BY ANNA AHRONHEIM  Jerusalem Post
SEPTEMBER 7, 2017 12:58 

A top Israeli security expert says that there's a strong chance Hezbollah leader Hassan Nassrallah was planning on taking over the chemical weapons facility Israel targeted.

The Syrian military research center allegedly struck by Israeli warplanes on Thursday morning could have been targeted because of fears Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah asked Damascus to hand over the facility to his Lebanese Shi’ite terrorist group, a former national security adviser said on Thursday.

According to Maj.-Gen (res.) Yaakov Amidror, an analyst at the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies in Ramat Gan, the strike on the Al-Tala’i Scientific Studies and Research Center may have been a consequence of Nasrallah’s visit to Damascus last week.

Nasrallah boasted of his visit to the Syrian capital in a live speech, but according to Amidror – who was speaking on a conference call organized by the Israel Project – it may be more than a case of the facility producing weapon systems for Hezbollah; Nasrallah may have asked the Assad regime to give it to his group.

The facility has been known for many years as a center for research and development for weapons systems, including chemical weapons.

Noting that Thursday’s strike came almost 10 years to the day after the Israeli strike on the Syrian nuclear reactor in Deir Ezzor, Amidror said that it should be clear to Damascus that Israel will not allow Iran or Hezbollah to build up their capabilities because of the “chaotic mess in Syria.”

While the IDF did not comment on the strike, as it does not comment on foreign reports, it would not be the first time Israeli jets have hit Assad regime and Hezbollah targets in Syria.

Jerusalem has repeatedly said while it has no interest in getting involved in Syria’s seven-year- old civil war, it has red lines, including the smuggling of sophisticated weaponry to Hezbollah and an Iranian presence on its borders.

In a recent interview with Haaretz, former Israel Air Force head Maj.-Gen. (res.) Amir Eshel said that Israel carried out at least 100 strikes over the past five years against the transfer of advanced arms, including chemical weapons, from the Assad regime to Hezbollah.

According to Amidror, while the latest strike would fit that policy, destroying advanced weapon systems destined for Hezbollah, Israel actually prevented them from being produced in the first place.

Israel is closer than ever to its demise: Hezbollah official (credit: MEMRI)

Play VideoHezbollah official says Israel is closer than ever to its demise (credit: MEMRI)

“It’s another level of intervening,” Amidror said, adding that it was the first time that the Syrian target which was attacked is a full-fledged facility, not just a warehouse but one responsible for producing chemical weapons and rockets and missiles.

Michael Horowitz, director of intelligence at Prime Source, a Middle East-based geopolitical consultancy firm, told The Jerusalem Post that this Israeli strike is significant due to its location, which is close to both a Russian air defense base as well a suspected Iranian missile production facility.

While Israel has a “de-conflict” mechanism with Moscow and has implemented a system in order to avoid accidental clashes over Syria, according to Horowitz, the reports that Israel carried out the strike from Lebanese airspace “was likely meant to decrease the risk of a Russian response – whether or not Moscow would indeed approve of such a response.”

In March, the IAF struck several targets in Syria, one of which nearly hit Russian troops in the area, and led to Moscow summoning the Israeli ambassador in protest. Thursday’s strike came shortly after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with President Vladimir Putin in Sochi, where he reiterated Israel’s red lines.

According to Horowitz, “One of the goals of the strike was to push Russia to take into consideration Israeli concerns and show that otherwise Israel would act unilaterally, without Putin’s approval.”


Amos Yadlin, a former head of IDF Military Intelligence and executive director of the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv, took to Twitter, saying that the strike sent an important message, namely that Israel intends to enforce its red lines, “despite the fact that the great powers are ignoring them.”

Yadlin said that it was now important to prevent things from escalating and to prepare for a Syrian-Iranian-Hezbollah response.

Following the strike, the Syrian Army warned against the “dangerous repercussions of this aggressive action for the security and stability of the region.”

But according to Horowitz, it is likely that any response by the Assad regime or Hezbollah will be limited. “Thus far, both the Syrian regime and Hezbollah have failed to respond to the Israeli effort to stop the smuggling of weapons from Syria and the building of new missile production facilities in the country,” he told the Post.

“Beyond symbolic attacks coming from Syria, which remain quite risky in the current context with both [President Bashar] Assad and Nasrallah busy in eastern Syria, I think the main response will be an acceleration of Iranian efforts to entrench themselves in Syria.

As long as none of the ‘great powers’ commits to countering Iranian influence in the country, Israeli can only delay what seems inevitable – namely an Iranian militarization of Syria,” Horowitz said.

Friedman: US to Move Embassy to Jerusalem under Trump - CBN News John Waage

US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman
US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman
Friedman: US to Move Embassy to Jerusalem under Trump
09-05-2017
CBN News John Waage
JERUSALEM, Israel – U.S. Ambassador to Israel David Friedman stirred up some controversy in the Muslim world when he told the Jerusalem Post what President Donald Trump pledged on the 2016 campaign trail for months: that the U.S. will ultimately move its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
Friedman said the president has made his position clear on the embassy move and that it is a matter of "when," not "if."  Vice President Mike Pence used the exact same description in July.
In Friedman's wide-ranging interview with the Post, he explained that the only issue remaining concerning the embassy move is the timing. "We think about that all the time," he added.
Palestinian representatives and their supporters were also upset by Friedman's reference to Israel's "alleged occupation" of Judea and Samaria (a/k/a the West Bank). It was a phrase in the Post interview in which Friedman was explaining how there are much more nuanced views among both the left and right in Israel than he had imagined before becoming ambassador. But it was seized upon in a number of media outlets.
One unnamed Palestinian official called on the Trump administration to clarify its position on the West Bank. He told The Guardian that Friedman "has an extensive record of attacks against the national rights of the Palestinian people, including funding illegal colonial settlements and participating in celebrations of the Israeli occupation."
Israel considers the territory to be disputed rather than occupied.
Last week, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared the uprooting of Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria has ended.
Friedman described Trump's relationship with Netanyahu as "phenomenal."

Wednesday, August 2, 2017

ANNE FRANK WROTE HER LAST DIARY ENTRY ON THIS DAY - BECKY BROTHMAN JERUSALEM POST

anne frank amsterdam

Anne Frank in 1940, while at 6. Montessorischool, Niersstraat 41-43, Amsterdam. (photo credit:PUBLIC DOMAIN)

ANNE FRANK WROTE HER LAST DIARY ENTRY ON THIS DAY

BY

 Jerusalem Post  AUGUST 1, 2017 

Coincedentally, the anniversary shares the same day this year as Tisha Be'av, a somber Jewish holiday commemorating the destruction of the ancient Temples in Jerusalem.


Jews around the world today are observing the 9th of Av or Tisha Be'av, a Jewish holiday that 
commemorates the destruction of the ancient Temples in Jerusalem.


Coincidentally, this year the somber fasting holiday shares the same Gregorian calendar date as
another sad anniversary in Jewish history.


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August 1, 1944 was the date of Anne Frank's last diary entry. Frank wrote the diary during the 
two-year period that her family hid in the attic of Opekta, her father Otto's former place of business, 
in Amsterdam.

The Frank family went into hiding on June 12, 1942 and Anne began writing in her diary two days 
later on the 14th. From June 14, 1942 to August 1, 1944, the teenager would document life inside 
the attic in her diary, which she addressed to "Kitty," ultimately becoming one of the most complete 
first-hand accounts of a Holocaust victim.

The original occupants of the attic were Anne, her older sister Margot, and their parents Otto and 
Edith. Three members of the van Pels family -- Hermann, Auguste, and their son Peter -- and 
Fritz Pfeffer, a German-born dentist, moved into the attic later in 1942.

Three days after her last diary entry, on August 4, 1944, German police entered the attic and arrested 
all the occupants.
Anne and Margot were sent to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in Germany. Both died of 
typhus shortly before the camp was liberated in 1945. The exact dates of their deaths are unknown.

Of the seven occupants of the attic, only Otto Frank survived. After the war, he devoted much of 
his life to publishing his daughter's diary. The diary (published in English as The Diary of a 
Young Girl) has been translated into over 60 languages and adapted into multiple award-winning 
plays and films.


15-year-old Anne's entry from August 1, 1944 reads as follows:
Dearest Kitty,

"A bundle of contradictions" was the end of my previous letter and is the beginning of this one. 
Can you please tell me exactly what "a bundle of contradictions" is? What does "contradiction" 
mean? Like so many words, it can be interpreted in two ways: a contradiction imposed from 
without and one imposed from within.

The former means not accepting other people's opinions, always knowing best, having the last 
word; in short, all those unpleasant traits for which I'm known. The latter, for which I'm not 
known, is my own secret.

As I've told you many times, I'm split in two. One side contains my exuberant cheerfulness, 
my flippancy, my joy in life and, above all, my ability to appreciate the lighter side of things. 
By that I mean not finding anything wrong with flirtations, a kiss, an embrace, an off-color joke. 
This side of me is usually lying in wait to ambush the other one, which is much purer, deeper 
and finer. No one knows Anne's better side, and that's why most people can't stand me.

Oh, I can be an amusing clown for an afternoon, but after that everyone's had enough of me to 
last a month. Actually, I'm what a romantic movie is to a profound thinker – a mere diversion, 
a comic interlude, something that is soon forgotten: not bad, but not particularly good either.

I hate having to tell you this, but why shouldn't I admit it when I know it's true? My lighter, 
more superficial side will always steal a march on the deeper side and therefore always win. 
You can't imagine how often I've tried to push away this Anne, which is only half of what is 
known as Anne-to beat her down, hide her. But it doesn't work, and I know why.

I'm afraid that people who know me as I usually am will discover I have another side, a better 
and finer side. I'm afraid they'll mock me, think I'm ridiculous and sentimental and not take 
me seriously. I'm used to not being taken seriously, but only the "light-hearted" Anne is used 
to it and can put up with it; the "deeper" Anne is too weak. If I force the good Anne into the 
spotlight for even fifteen minutes, she shuts up like a clam the moment she's called upon to 
speak, and lets Anne number one do the talking. Before I realize it, she's disappeared.

So the nice Anne is never seen in company. She's never made a single appearance, though she 
almost always takes the stage when I'm alone. I know exactly how I'd like to be, how I am… 
on the inside. But unfortunately I'm only like that with myself. And perhaps that's why-no, 
I'm sure that's the reason why I think of myself as happy on the inside and other people think 
I'm happy on the outside. I'm guided by the pure Anne within, but on the outside I'm nothing 
but a frolicsome little goat tugging at its tether.

As I've told you, what I say is not what I feel, which is why I have a reputation for being 
boy-crazy as well as a flirt, a smart aleck and a reader of romances. The happy-go-lucky Anne 
laughs, gives a flippant reply, shrugs her shoulders and pretends she doesn't give a darn. The 
quiet Anne reacts in just the opposite way. If I'm being completely honest, I'll have to admit 
that it does matter to me, that I'm trying very hard to change myself, but that I I'm always up 
against a more powerful enemy.

A voice within me is sobbing, "You see, that's what's become of you. You're surrounded by
negative opinions, dismayed looks and mocking faces, people, who dislike you, and all because 
you don't listen to the advice of your own better half."

Believe me, I'd like to listen, but it doesn't work, because if I'm quiet and serious, everyone 
thinks I'm putting on a new act and I have to save myself with a joke, and then I'm not even 
talking about my own family, who assume I must be sick, stuff me with aspirins and sedatives, 
feel my neck and forehead to see if I have a temperature, ask about my bowel movements and 
berate me for being in a bad mood, until I just can't keep it up anymore, because when everybody 
starts hovering over me, I get cross, then sad, and finally end up turning my heart inside out, 
the bad part on the outside and the good part on the inside, and keep trying to find a way to 
become what I'd like to be and what I could be if… if only there were no other people in the world.

Yours, Anne M. Frank

Sunday, July 30, 2017

TEMPLE MOUNT CRISIS ‘COMING TO AN END,’ SAYS LIBERMAN - JEREMY SHARON Jerusalem Post



Jewish visitors in Temple Mount. (photo credit: ARNON SEGAL)

TEMPLE MOUNT CRISIS ‘COMING TO AN END,’ SAYS LIBERMAN


BY JEREMY SHARON Jerusalem Post
JULY 30, 2017 

“If Moshe Dayan gave the Wakf the keys to the Temple Mount in 1967, then last week Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gave over sovereignty of the Temple Mount to the Wakf,” said an activist.

As tensions in Jerusalem subsided over the weekend following two weeks of political and religious turmoil over the Temple Mount, the police face another potentially turbulent week with more than 1,000 Jews expected to visit the holy site on the Fast of the Ninth of Av this Tuesday.

Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said that security assessments are being conducted, noting that many thousands of people are expected to visit the Old City and specifically the Western Wall over the fast.

Specific visiting hours for non-Muslims at the Temple Mount will be based on those security assessments, but any disturbances which occur before Tuesday could alter arrangements.

The situation in the capital and surrounding the Temple Mount is still extremely sensitive, and the possibility of a new spike in tensions and violence is not being discounted.

However, Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman said on Saturday that he believed the crisis is almost over.

“I think we are coming to the end of the crisis, the braking time takes more than one or two days, but I think we are coming to the end,” he said in an interview with Channel 2 news.

The defense minister also defended the way in which the metal detectors and security cameras placed at the entrances to the site, which led to the furious Palestinian reaction, were swiftly put up and then taken back down again.

“There is frequently no correspondence between security considerations and public opinion. The ability to take unpopular decisions is very important, even critical. I think we acted correctly, and I am happy that the cabinet gave its support to the Israel Police, who acted in an excellent manner.

“You cannot conduct security matters based on polls and emotions. The metal detectors are not the parameter [by which success should be measured], and I think that in retrospect we acted correctly.”

Complicating the security situation this week is the Fast of the Ninth of Av, commemorating the destruction of the First and Second Temples in Jerusalem, the exile of the Jewish people from the Land of Israel, and other catastrophes of Jewish history.

Asaf Fried, a spokesman for an association of organizations dedicated to Jewish rights on the Temple Mount, said that he expects more than 1,000 Jewish visitors to make their way to the site this year because of the “humiliating behavior” of the government last week.

“If Moshe Dayan gave the Wakf [Islamic trust] the keys to the Temple Mount in 1967, then last week Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gave over sovereignty of the Temple Mount to the Wakf,” said Fried, speaking for the Joint Committee of Temple Organizations.

“People are very angry. The government’s behavior last week was humiliating and degrading, and we have been receiving many calls about how to practically prepare, religiously, for visiting the Temple Mount,” he continued.

Asked whether, in light of the emotions, he expected Jewish visitors to defy the ban on non-Muslim prayer at the holy place, Fried observed that many Jewish visitors often pray individually despite the ban, but do so in a discreet manner.

He also said that the police are not stringent about searching out such possible infractions when there are large numbers of Jewish visitors, although he added that any attempts at demonstrative Jewish prayer would not be tolerated by the police.

Last year on the Fast of Av, Fried said, some 400 people visited the site, and he expressed hope that the large number of visitors this year “will cover up what happened last week to some extent.”

Although the Friday prayers at the Aksa Mosque on the Temple Mount were widely expected to end with more riots, the prayers and their aftermath passed off peacefully, with thousands of Muslims attending the prayers and dispersing calmly afterward.

Security was high in the Old City with large numbers of Israel Police and Border Police personnel present.

Saturday, July 22, 2017

WEST BANK TERROR: A KILLER'S LAST TESTAMENT ON FACEBOOK > Three Israelis dead, one wounded in West Bank stabbing attack > Top security officials visit scene of deadly West Bank attack - Jerusalem Post BYEYTAN HALON JULY 22, 2017 14:06

Photo added By Steve Martin, Love For His People - Bethlehem Hills - May 2017

WEST BANK TERROR: A KILLER'S LAST TESTAMENT ON FACEBOOK

BY
 
   Jerusalem Pos t JULY 22, 2017 14:06
 

"All that I have is a sharpened knife, and it is answering the call of al-Aksa."





A Facebook post written by Omar Al Abed a short time before killing three Israeli citizens in the West Bank settlement of Halamish, 21 July 2017.. (photo credit:ARAB MEDIA)

Less than two hours prior to the terror attack that claimed the lives of three Israeli citizens and seriously wounded one more, 19 year old Omar al Abed from the West Bank village of Khobar wrote what he presumed would be his final words on Facebook.

With these final sentences, and expecting to die, he walked the short distance from his village to the West Bank settlement of Halamish and stabbed four people in their home.

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"I am writing my last testament and these are my last words," wrote al Abed.

"I am young, not even twenty-years old, I had many dreams and many aspirations. But what life is this in which our women and our young are murdered without any justification? They are desecrating the al-Aksa mosque and we are sleeping, it's an embarrassment that we are idly sitting by.

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"You, those who have a gun and who are worn out, you who only bring out your gun at weddings and celebrations, are you not ashamed of yourselves? Why are you not declaring war for God? Here they are closing the al-Aksa mosque and your gun is silent.

"All that I have is a sharpened knife, and it is answering the call of al-Aksa. Shame on you, you who preach hatred. God will take revenge on you and will make it count. All of us are the sons of Palestine and the sons of al-Aksa. You, sons of monkeys and pigs, if you do not open the gates of al-Aksa, I am sure that men will follow me and will hit you with an iron fist, I am warning you."

Three of the victims died as a result of their wounds, and one was evacuated to Shaare Tzedek hospital. The assailant, Omar al Abed, was neutralized by the victims' neighbor.

A still photo of the scene of the attack shared by Israeli television showed a kitchen floor completely red with blood. The family had sat down to a traditional Friday evening meal when the attack occurred, according to Israel Radio.

Friday, July 21, 2017

THE TEMPLE MOUNT CHARADE AND 50 YEARS OF DECLINING SOVEREIGNTY - Jerusalem Post

JEWS WILL have to keep on looking at the Temple Mount from a distance.. (photo credit:MARC ISRAEL SELLEM/THE JERUSALEM POST)

THE TEMPLE MOUNT CHARADE AND 50 YEARS OF DECLINING SOVEREIGNTY

> In rare call, Rivlin asks Erdogan to condemn Temple Mount violence
> Watch: Police release video footage of Temple Mount terror attack

BY YAAKOV KATZ   JULY 20, 2017 19:53 

There is nothing better to set the Arab world on fire than false claims that the Jewish state is altering the status quo on the Temple Mount.


"The Temple Mount is in our hands.”

With those famous words, Col. Motta Gur shook the soul of a nation when he announced on June 7, 1967 that his IDF paratroopers had stormed and conquered Judaism’s holiest site during the Six Day War.

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“In our hands” could not be farther from reality when visiting the Temple Mount this week. I’ve been there a number of times in the past, but when I went on Wednesday – during a short one-hour window when it was open to Jews – it was eerily different than my previous visits.

For one, the Mount was empty. There were some tourists – one Chinese group, and another from Europe – but almost no Muslims were there. One who was there, wearing a gray jalabiya and holding an umbrella to shield himself from the sun, whizzed by on an electric wheelchair. Another Arab man, a representative of the Wakf identifiable by the walkie-talkie he held in each hand, eyed Jewish visitors suspiciously, but didn’t follow.

He couldn’t – there were too many police officers. Four walked in front, four in the back and three on each side. Two carried cameras, filming the entire visit in case they would need to arrest and charge one of the visitors for violating the long list of rules posted at the entrance. There, Jews and foreigners alike go through metal detectors and have their bags and identity cards inspected before being allowed to ascend the Mount.

One tourist, for example, had come to the Temple Mount after doing some shopping at the nearby Arab shuk. The guard found a wooden cross and a rosary in her bag. Those had to be left in a locker, since religious paraphernalia – at least those that are not Islamic – are not allowed on the compound.

The identity of the Jewish visitors is also carefully scrutinized. Identity cards are collected, names are punched into a computer, and if something suspicious comes up, the visitor is taken aside for further questioning.

While foreigners can visit the compound alone, Jewish visitors are gathered into groups that are escorted at all times by armed policemen. Observant or not makes no difference – all Jews are forced to stay together.

For the police, there is something strange when a random Israeli decides to visit the holy site. Observant Jews are expected. Tourists are expected. But a random non-observant Israeli? That is already something strange.

Police immediately get suspicious. Either the person is a journalist or a nut. “Don’t you know where you are?” was how one police officer greeted me (I was wearing a baseball cap) on Wednesday before I told him that I was a reporter.

So while the Temple Mount is the holiest site for Jews and one of the holiest sites for Muslims, it is also the scene of one of the greatest charades of the last 50 years.

Israel might officially rule the territory that encompasses the Temple Mount, but it does not have it in its hands – that only Jewish and foreign visitors were required until this week to go through metal detectors while Muslim visitors did not, is just one example.

Another is that the Temple Mount is the primary site today in Israel where religious discrimination takes place on a daily basis.

This might be necessary due to diplomatic and religious sensitivities, but the truth needs to be said: 50 years after liberating its holiest site, Israeli sovereignty over the Temple Mount has declined.

The charade is amplified by the Muslim campaign to erase any Jewish connection to the Temple Mount. Dennis Ross, the former Middle East envoy under president Bill Clinton, told of Yasser Arafat’s position on the Temple Mount during the 2000 Camp David talks.

“The only new idea he raised at Camp David was that the temple didn’t exist in Jerusalem, it existed in Nablus,” Ross told Fox News a year after the peace negotiations broke down. “He was denying the core of the Jewish faith.”

That denial continues today. The attack last Friday when three Israeli Arabs from Umm el-Fahm killed two policemen underscores the need for all visitors to the compound to undergo security inspection.

CCTV footage of the attack, released by police, shows how the terrorists sneaked up on the policemen from within the compound.

They had already entered with weapons, and then came out and attacked the policemen who were looking in the opposite direction toward people coming in.

Gideon Ezra, the late Likud minister and deputy head of the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency), used to tell me that violence on the Temple Mount has the potential to spark a third world war. That is what the terrorists seemed to be trying to achieve.

In the immediate aftermath, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu acted responsibly when he put in phone calls to Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Jordan’s King Abdullah. The voices of both those leaders needed to be heard condemning the attack in an effort to prevent further violence.

The installation of the metal detectors – which Israel on Thursday was under international pressure to remove – was justified.

They are needed to ensure that arms will not again be smuggled onto the Mount, and to show that all people are equal. Jews, Christians and Muslims: everybody goes through a metal detector.

As Seth Frantzman showed in Thursday’s paper, almost all religious sites around the world – from Mecca to Rome – come with extensive security measures. At Mecca, for example, there are 5,000 CCTV cameras and more than 100,000 people employed to provide security during the Hajj. At the Temple Mount, there are some cameras on the outside walls but none installed inside the actual compound, despite an agreement reached last year between Jordan, Israel and the United States.

Why? The answer is unfortunately simple and is part of the Temple Mount charade.

The Wakf knows about last Friday’s attack, and understands why metal detectors are needed. Privately, they even admit to police that they know it is in their own interest.

At the same time, the Wakf needs a cause to rally its troops around. It needs to be able to delegitimize Israel, and there is nothing better to set the Arab world on fire than false claims that the Jewish state is altering the status quo on the Temple Mount. It is a charade, and everyone knows it is, but it works every time.

Israel is in a perilous situation, caught between doing what is right and what is smart. What is right is allowing religious freedom on the Temple Mount, and permitting Jews to pray at their holiest site. But then there is what is smart, which in this case means maintaining the status quo and not giving justification for further violence.

Israelis remember violence the Temple Mount has set off in the past. In 1996, the opening of a new exit to the Via Dolorosa from the Western Wall Tunnel led to deadly riots; and in September 2000, Ariel Sharon went to the Temple Mount, a visit the Palestinian Authority later used as an excuse for launching the Second Intifada.

Will this situation ever change? Probably not. But it is time to unmask the Palestinians’ grand charade that perpetuates lies, historical rewrites and hatred for Israel, starting by doing what I did on Wednesday: walking through a metal detector.

Monday, May 22, 2017

ANALYSIS: WHY A PHOTO-OP OF PM AND TRUMP AT THE WESTERN WALL MATTERS - BY TOVAH LAZAROFF JERUSALEM POST

Fireworks over Jerusalems Old City May 21, 2017. 
(photo credit:MARC ISRAEL SELLEM/THE JERUSALEM POST)

ANALYSIS: WHY A PHOTO-OP OF PM AND TRUMP AT THE WESTERN WALL MATTERS

BY  jerusalem post

 MAY 22, 2017 01:03

Trump’s trip comes as the issue of Israeli sovereignty over Jerusalem in general and the Old City specifically has been hotly contested by the international community.

For Israel, a photograph of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the Western Wall with President Donald Trump could be worth more than a thousand words.

One can almost see Netanyahu playing the professorial role he so loves, explaining to Trump about King Herod and the ancient site that bears testimony to the steadfast Jewish roots to the Land of Israel and its holy city of Jerusalem.

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It would also be one more Netanyahu mark on Israeli history: he would be the prime minister that accompanied the first sitting US president when he visited the Western Wall.

But this is about more than a glorified selfie or a vanity play.

rump’s trip comes as the issue of Israeli sovereignty over Jerusalem in general and the Old City specifically has been hotly contested by the international community, which prefers to settle the city’s status within the context of a final-status solution with the Palestinians.

The United States government is divided on the issue with congressional legislation, passed in 1995, mandating that the US Embassy be relocated to Jerusalem.

A 1980 UN Security Council resolution called on nations to remove their respective embassies from Jerusalem to protest Israel’s annexation of areas of the city over the pre- 1967 lines. The State Department and the White House have held by this view, with US presidents waiving execution of the legislation twice a year. The next deadline for such a waiver is June 1.

Earlier this month UNESCO’s Executive Board passed a resolution disavowing Israeli sovereignty in Jerusalem.

In December, the Security Council, in Resolution 2334, affirmed the illegality of Israeli sovereignty in east Jerusalem, including the Old City and the Western Wall.

The double votes underscore the tenuous nature of Israel’s hold on its capital city, precisely as Israel readies to celebrate 50 years of the city’s reunification in the Six Day War.

An announcement by Trump during his visit that he planned to make good on his preelection promise to relocate the embassy, would have been a statement of legitimacy by the US in support of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

Since US officials have explained that this will not happen, the visual images of Trump with Netanyahu at the Western Wall could have subtly indicated that the White House considered the site part of Israel.

Such a diplomatic nod by Israel’s strongest ally would help bolster Israel’s claim to Jerusalem on the international stage.

It’s presumed Trump wouldn’t even take this small step because he wants to avoid angering the Palestinians or the larger Arab world on the subject of Jerusalem, precisely at the moment he is pushing for a peace deal to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Trump, therefore, is likely to stand alone, with Western Wall and Holy Site's Rabbi Shmuel Rabinowitz as Israel’s sole representative.

Such a solitary visit waters down the issue to a much more ambiguous statement.

It’s like a coin, Trump can turn from side to side, depending on the diplomatic message that suits him.

To the Israelis, Trump can say, he supports Israeli and Jewish history in Jerusalem, after all he visited the Western Wall.

To the Arab world and to the Palestinians, he can say, he did it alone, without any official governmental representation as a sign that east Jerusalem, could be part of their future state in any final-status agreement.

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