Steve Forbes Interviews Bibi: How The Small State Of Israel Is Becoming A High-Tech Superpower

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Prosor: "When the Palestinians Set the Temple Mount Ablaze, Mahmoud Abbas Fuels the Fire, and the Security Council Fans the Flames" (Israel UN Mission)

Israel's Ambassador to the UN Ron Prosor said Thursday:

"This past Sunday, as Jews around the world prepared to celebrate the Jewish New Year, Palestinian terrorists once again used the holiday season to instigate riots on the Temple Mount and to launch terror attacks, which lead to the murder of an Israeli citizen, Alexander Lebelovitch. Instead of condemning these acts, Mahmoud Abbas has chosen, once again, to fuel the fire in the most shameful manner....Only yesterday, he declared: 'We cannot allow the filthy feet of the Jews to desecrate Al-Aqsa.' This rhetoric is obscene and dangerous."

Responding to the Security Council statement on the topic, released Thursday, Ambassador Prosor said: "This statement, which only uses the Arabic name for the Temple Mount, affirms the right of Muslims to be present and to pray at the compound, but completely ignores the Palestinian violence, the deep connection of the Jewish People to the Temple Mount, and the right of all to visit the site. Instead of calming tensions, the Council sides with those who are trying to set the region on fire. When the Palestinians set the Temple Mount ablaze, Mahmoud Abbas fuels the fire, and the Security Council fans the flames, it is a recipe for a regional explosion."


 

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Palestinian Violence on the Temple Mount (Israel UN Mission)


In a letter to the UN Secretary General and the Security Council, Israeli Ambassador Ron Prosor said Thursday:

"Once again, radical Islamic operatives have used the occasion of a Jewish holiday to stage provocations and instigate violence on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. These groups have a long track-record of attacking Jews on their holiest days, at their holiest place."

"The operatives prepared for this violent confrontation by stockpiling rocks, planks, wooden sheets and fireworks. They also prepared lethal weapons such as Molotov firebombs and explosive devices in advance of the calculated provocation. When Israeli police entered the area to maintain order, and ensure free access, the operatives unleashed their attack. The violent attacks continued for three consecutive days, throughout the Jewish festival, as the masked operatives threw rocks, firebombs, and firecrackers at the police, who responded with non-lethal riot dispersal measures."

"I wish to emphasize that these three days of Palestinian violence on the Temple Mount were not provoked by any Israeli activity. I would also like to make it clear that at no point did Israeli police forces enter the mosque. All damage sustained at the mosque was a direct result of the activities of the militants."

"We would expect Palestinians and the Arab world to condemn such profanation of holy sites, but their silence on this matter is deafening."

================
Where's Angelina Jolie???
 

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What are you waiting for Israel, permission from the UN or the fictitious 'World Community'? You'll never get it!

Egypt's War on Terrorism - Khaled Abu Toameh (Gatestone Institute)
Egypt began this week flooding smuggling tunnels along its border with Gaza with water from the Mediterranean Sea.
The Egyptians are convinced that Hamas and other Palestinian groups in Gaza have been providing aid to the terror groups in Sinai that have killed dozens of Egyptian soldiers and police officers.

At the same time, Hamas continues to dig new tunnels on the border between Gaza and Israel. It is no secret that Hamas has rebuilt many of the terror tunnels that were used to infiltrate gunmen into Israel during last year's military confrontation.
Hamas is planning to use these tunnels in the future, to dispatch its men to kill as many Israelis as possible.

 

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But I thought the Fakeastinians were there first?

3,000-Year-Old Seal Discovered by Temple Mount Sifting Project - Daniel K. Eisenbud (Jerusalem Post)
A 3,000-year-old seal, from the time of King David in the 10th century BCE, was recently discovered by a 10-year-old Russian volunteer at Jerusalem's Temple Mount Sifting Project.
The project sifts through thousands of tons of earth illegally removed from the Temple Mount in 1999 by the Wakf religious trust to build a mosque.
"The dating of the seal corresponds to the historical period of the Jebusites and the conquest of Jerusalem by King David, as well as the construction of the Temple and the royal official compound by his son, King Solomon," said archaeologist Dr. Gabriel Barkay, co-founder and director of the project.

 

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U.S. Navy Buys Israeli Therapy System to Treat Vets - David Shamah (Times of Israel)
The U.S. Navy will be using an Israeli-developed transcranial magnetic stimulation system to treat patients with a range of psychological conditions, including post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), stress, major depressive disorder, and others.
The Navy has ordered several Deep TMS therapy helmets made by Jerusalem-based Brainsway. The device applies brief magnetic pulses to the brain.
Studies have shown TMS to be effective in a number of neurological, psychiatric and medical conditions.
 

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Remember the attacks in the 1972 Olympics by Pals on the Israel village? The money guy is now the chairman of the Pal Authority. Murderers don't rehabilitate.


  • Abbas: "We Welcome Every Drop of Blood Spilled in Jerusalem"
    Mahmoud Abbas, Chairman of the Palestinian Authority, told Palestinian television on Sept. 16: "We welcome every drop of blood spilled in Jerusalem. This is pure blood, clean blood, blood on its way to Allah. With the help of Allah, every shaheed (martyr) will be in heaven, and every wounded will get his reward." He said only the Palestinians have rights to Jerusalem: "Al-Aqsa is ours and the (Church of the) Holy Sepulcher is ours. Everything is ours, all ours." Abbas also praised two recently outlawed radical Islamist organizations whose activists are paid to harass Jewish visitors to the Temple Mount. (Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs)
 

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Should have tried transporting it by Flotilla....


  • Israel Intercepts Sulfuric Acid Shipment to Gaza - Yaakov Lappin
    The Israel Tax Authority's Customs Office and Israel Security Agency intercepted 15 tons of sulfuric acid en route to Gaza, authorities announced on Thursday. The acid, which was labelled as paint thinner, could have made three tons of TNT explosives. (Jerusalem Post)
 

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Mideast Countries Are Agents of Their Own Destiny - Neil Rogachevsky
No superpower can fix the Middle East's endemic malaise, writes Efraim Karsh, a longtime professor at King's College London, in The Tail Wags the Dog, his fast-paced history of British, American and Russian involvement in the Middle East since World War I. Karsh argues that foreign powers have had a much more limited impact on regional politics than is assumed. Success stories like the emergence of Turkey as a secular modern state in the 1920s was due to the statecraft of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk. The Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty of 1979 was the result of local factors seized upon by local players rather than American diplomacy.

Similarly, the sectarian violence currently engulfing the region is, at root, the product of religious and political divisions that foreign powers have sometimes helped contain but have never resolved. At a time when the ills of the Middle East are so often blamed on colonialism, imperialism or "Satans" great or small, the author's perspective is refreshing. (Wall Street Journal)
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That said, expect news of the first Russian soldiers killed by ISIS or Syrian rebels momentarily.
 

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Another Phoni Pali Claim Dispelled (Pffftttt)

Canada Park Wasn't Stolen from the Palestinians - Alan Baker (Canadian Jewish News)


  • Some serious misconceptions appeared in a recent column charging that the land on which the Jewish National Fund-administered Canada Park is located was illegally stolen from Palestinians in contravention of the Geneva Convention. The land, including the former Arab villages that existed in what is now Canada Park, was never part of any Palestinian state or entity. No such entity has ever existed, and hence the land could not have been "stolen" from a non-existent entity that neither owned nor occupied it.
  • During the 1948-49 War of Independence, in which Israel defended itself from a combined attack by neighboring and local Arab forces, the area in question, including the villages that were located there, together with units of the Jordanian army, played an active and strategic role in blocking the route to Jerusalem and in attacking and bombarding both Jerusalem itself and convoys driving to and from Jerusalem.
  • In the 1949 Jordan-Israel armistice agreement, the Latrun area, including what is now Canada Park, was determined as "No-Man's Land" and remained so until the 1967 Six-Day War. The armistice demarcation line has never been considered to be a border and has never been so designated by UN agencies or governments.
  • During the course of the Six-Day War, in which Jordan attacked Israel, the area fell under Israel's control and administration, together with the other West Bank areas of Judea and Samaria. In light of its strategic location commanding the main route to Jerusalem and the vital security implications involved, and in accordance with Israel's rights pursuant to the rules of armed conflict, the area was declared by Israel to be a closed military area. Since then, Israel has undertaken to observe the relevant norms of international humanitarian law, pending a final peace agreement and ultimate disposition of the territory.
  • This area, together with all other areas that fell under Israel's control in 1967, are the subject of the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiation process pursuant to the 1993-95 Oslo accords signed by the Palestinian leadership and Israel, and endorsed and witnessed by the major powers. Therefore the legal status of the area is pending negotiation. It cannot be denominated as "Palestinian territory," since the Palestinians themselves are committed to negotiating the permanent status of the area with Israel. It is therefore governed by the special regime agreed upon by the Palestinians and Israel under the Oslo accords.
  • As such, any claim that Israel's administration of Canada Park is in violation of the provisions of the Fourth Geneva Convention has no basis in fact or law. Maintaining the area as a park in which its natural and historic character, integrity and heritag# are preserved and protected, falls squarely within the requirements of international humanitarian law and cannot in any way be described as a violation of the Geneva Convention.

    The writer served as the legal adviser to Israel's Foreign Ministry and Israel's ambassador to Canada (2004-08).
 

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Death penalty for these Fuckers? Yeah, right! More like 3 hot meals a day, all the card and board games you want, a ping pong table, a soccer field, visitations, and maybe 2 years later one kidnapped Israeli for 100 of you
##)

  • Israeli Arabs in ISIS-Inspired Terror Cell Planned Attacks on IDF, Police - Hassan Shaalan and Itay Blumenthal
    Seven Israeli Arabs were indicted in Nazareth's District Court on Thursday. The accused "created an Islamic State cell with the intention of carrying out terror attacks," the Israel Security Agency said. Some had been in contact with several Israelis who joined ISIS in Syria. Some had trained in the woods in the Lower Galilee in preparation for the planned attacks. Ahmed Mahagna, Mohammad Sharif, and Mohammad Ghazali were charged with contacting a foreign agent and an illegal organization while planning to attack Israeli military targets - specifically, to open fire at a police vehicle and an IDF base. (Ynet News)
 

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Dead for nothing / Children's lives ruined.
This is what happens when you fight either Gaza or West Bank scum with one arm tied behind your back.

Palestinians Murder Israeli Couple in Front of their Children - Marissa Newman
Eitam and Na'ama Henkin, a husband and wife in their 30s, were shot to death while driving between Itamar and Elon Moreh in the West Bank on Thursday night. Their four children who were in the car were physically unharmed. The family was ambushed by two Palestinians who opened fire with a handgun and a rifle. A unit within Fatah claimed responsibility for the attack. (Times of Israel)
 

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Israeli Baby Wounded by Palestinian School Kids in West Bank - Ben Hartman
Erica Marom, of Tekoa, feels lucky to be alive after she and her family came under a barrage of rocks and cement blocks thrown by a group of Palestinian school kids on Thursday that left her and her six-month-old infant lightly hurt. "It was very, very scary and it's a miracle we survived this attack. They were trying to kill us," said Marom.
Marom was in the passenger seat and her husband, Moshe, was driving with their three children in the back seat when she told Moshe to slow down because there were school children in uniforms walking on the side of the road. All of a sudden, she heard a series of loud booms "and they were smashing our car with cement blocks." The car sped away with its back windshield shattered. Six-month-old Adir, who was in a rear-facing child seat, had glass all over him.
(Jerusalem Post)
 

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[h=2]Wednesday, October 14, 2015[/h][h=3]Palestine: The Psychotic Stage -The truth about why Palestinians have been seized by their present blood lust[/h]
Wall Street Journal By Bret Stephens


If you’ve been following the news from Israel, you might have the impression that “violence” is killing a lot of people. As in this headline: “Palestinian Killed As Violence Continues.” Or this first paragraph: “Violence and bloodshed radiating outward from flash points in Jerusalem and the West Bank appear to be shifting gears and expanding, with Gaza increasingly drawn in.”


Read further, and you might also get a sense of who, according to Western media, is perpetrating “violence.” As in: “Two Palestinian Teenagers Shot by Israeli Police,” according to one headline. Or: “Israeli Retaliatory Strike in Gaza Kills Woman and Child, Palestinians Say,” according to another.


Such was the media’s way of describing two weeks of Palestinian assaults that began when Hamas killed a Jewish couple as they were driving with their four children in the northern West Bank. Two days later, a Palestinian teenager stabbed two Israelis to death in Jerusalem’s Old City, and also slashed a woman and a 2-year-old boy. Hours later, another knife-wielding Palestinian was shot and killed by Israeli police after he slashed a 15-year-old Israeli boy in the chest and back. [...]


Regarding the causes of this Palestinian blood fetish, Western news organizations have resorted to familiar tropes. Palestinians have despaired at the results of the peace process—never mind that Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas just declared the Oslo Accords null and void. Israeli politicians want to allow Jews to pray atop the Temple Mount—never mind that Benjamin Netanyahu denies it and has barred Israeli politicians from visiting the site. There’s always the hoary “cycle of violence” formula that holds nobody and everybody accountable at one and the same time.


Left out of most of these stories is some sense of what Palestinian leaders have to say. As in these nuggets from a speech Mr. Abbas gave last month: “Al Aqsa Mosque is ours. They [Jews] have no right to defile it with their filthy feet.” And: “We bless every drop of blood spilled for Jerusalem, which is clean and pure blood, blood spilled for Allah.”


Then there is the goading of the Muslim clergy. “Brothers, this is why we recall today what Allah did to the Jews,” one Gaza imam said Friday in a recorded address, translated by the invaluable Middle East Media Research Institute, or Memri. “Today, we realize why the Jews build walls. They do not do this to stop missiles but to prevent the slitting of their throats.”


Then, brandishing a six-inch knife, he added: “My brother in the West Bank: Stab!”


Imagine if a white minister in, say, South Carolina preached this way about African-Americans, knife and all: Would the news media be supine in reporting it? Would we get “both sides” journalism of the kind that is pro forma when it comes to Israelis and Palestinians, with lengthy pieces explaining—and implicitly justifying—the minister’s sundry grievances, his sense that his country has been stolen from him?


And would this be supplemented by the usual fake math of moral opprobrium, which is the stock-in-trade of reporters covering the Israeli-Palestinian conflict? In the Middle East version, a higher Palestinian death toll suggests greater Israeli culpability. (Perhaps Israeli paramedics should stop treating stabbing victims to help even the score.) In a U.S. version, should the higher incidence of black-on-white crime be cited to “balance” stories about white supremacists?


Didn’t think so.


Treatises have been written about the media’s mind-set when it comes to telling the story of Israel. We’ll leave that aside for now. The significant question is why so many Palestinians have been seized by their present blood lust—by a communal psychosis in which plunging knives into the necks of Jewish women, children, soldiers and civilians is seen as a religious and patriotic duty, a moral fulfillment. Despair at the state of the peace process, or the economy? Please. It’s time to stop furnishing Palestinians with the excuses they barely bother making for themselves.


Above all, it’s time to give hatred its due.[...]


Today in Israel, Palestinians are in the midst of a campaign to knife Jews to death, one at a time. This is psychotic. It is evil. To call it anything less is to serve as an apologist, and an accomplice.
 

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The Paranoid, Supremacist Roots of the Stabbing Intifada

Knife attacks on Jews in Jerusalem and elsewhere are not based on Palestinian frustration over settlements, but on something deeper.
lead_960.jpg

Mahmoud Illean / AP

In September of 1928, a group of Jewish residents of Jerusalem placed a bench in front of the Western Wall of the Temple Mount, for the comfort of elderly worshipers. They also brought with them a wooden partition, to separate the sexes during prayer. Jerusalem’s Muslim leaders treated the introduction of furniture into the alleyway in front of the Wall as a provocation, part of a Jewish conspiracy to slowly take control of the entire Temple Mount.

Many of the leaders of Palestine’s Muslims believed—or claimed to believe—that Jews had manufactured a set of historical and theological connections to the Western Wall and to the Mount, the site of the al-Aqsa mosque and the Dome of the Rock, in order to advance the Zionist project. This belief defied Muslim history—the Dome of the Rock was built by Jerusalem’s Arab conquerors on the site of the Second Jewish Temple in order to venerate its memory (the site had previously been defiled by Jerusalem’s Christian rulers as a kind of rebuke to Judaism, the despised mother religion of Christianity). Jews themselves consider the Mount itself to be the holiest site in their faith. The Western Wall, a large retaining wall from the Second Temple period, is sacred only by proxy.

Arson at Joseph’s Tomb

The spiritual leader of Palestine’s Muslims, the mufti of Jerusalem, Amin al-Husseini, incited Arabs in Palestine against their Jewish neighbors by arguing that Islam itself was under threat. (Husseini would later become one of Hitler’s most important Muslim allies.) Jews in British-occupied Palestine responded to Muslim invective by demanding more access to the Wall, sometimes holding demonstrations at the holy site. By the next year, violence directed against Jews by their neighbors had become more common: Arab rioters took the lives of 133 Jews that summer; British forces killed 116 Arabs in their attempt to subdue the riots. In Hebron, a devastating pogrom was launched against the city’s ancient Jewish community after Muslim officials distributed fabricated photographs of a damaged Dome of the Rock, and spread the rumor that Jews had attacked the shrine.

The current “stabbing Intifada” now taking place in Israel—a quasi-uprising in which young Palestinians have been trying, and occasionally succeeding, to kill Jews with knives—is prompted in good part by the same set of manipulated emotions that sparked the anti-Jewish riots of the 1920s: a deeply felt desire on the part of Palestinians to “protect” the Temple Mount from Jews.

When Israel captured the Old City of Jerusalem in June of 1967 in response to a Jordanian attack, the first impulse of some Israelis was to assert Jewish rights atop the Mount. Between 1948, the year Israel achieved independence, and 1967, Jordan, then the occupying power in Jerusalem, banned Jews not only from the 35-acre Mount—which is known to Muslims as the Haram al-Sharif, the noble sanctuary—but also from the Western Wall below. When paratroopers took the Old City, they raised the Israeli flag atop the Dome of the Rock, but the Israeli defense minister, Moshe Dayan, ordered it taken down, and soon after promised leaders of the Muslim Waqf, the trust that controlled the mosque and the shrine, that Israel would not interfere in its activities. Since then, successive Israeli governments have maintained the status quo established by Dayan.

There is another status quo associated with the Temple Mount, however, that has been showing signs of weakening. This is a religious status quo. The mainstream rabbinical view for many years has been that Jews should not walk atop the Mount for fear of treading on the Holy of Holies, the inner sanctum of the Temple that, according to tradition, housed the Ark of the Covenant. The Holy of Holies is the room in which the Jewish high priest spoke the Tetragrammaton, the ineffable name of God, on Yom Kippur.

The exact location of the Holy of Holies is not known, and Muslim authorities have prevented archeologists from conducting any excavations on the Mount, in part out of fear that such explorations will uncover further evidence of a pre-Islamic Jewish presence. This mainstream rabbinical view concerning the Mount—that it should be the direction of Jewish prayer, rather than a place of Jewish prayer—has made the lives of Jerusalem’s temporal authorities easier, by keeping Muslim and Jewish worshippers separated.

In recent years, however, small groups of radical religious innovators who oppose the mainstream rabbinical view have sought to make the Mount, once again, a site of Jewish prayer. (Here is a New York Times Magazine story I wrote about these radical groups.) These activists have gained sympathizers among some far-right political figures in Israel, though the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has not altered the separation-of-religions status quo.

One of the tragedies of the settlement movement is that it obscures what might be the actual root cause of the Middle East conflict.Convincing Palestinians that the Israeli government is not trying to alter the status quo on the Mount has been difficult because many of today’s Palestinian leaders, in the manner of the Palestinian leadership of the 1920s, actively market rumors that the Israeli government is seeking to establish atop the Mount a permanent Jewish presence.

The comments of the Palestinian Authority president, Mahmoud Abbas—by general consensus the most moderate leader in the brief history of the Palestinian national movement—have been particularly harsh. Though Abbas has authorized Palestinian security services to work with their Israeli counterparts to combat extremist violence, his rhetoric has inflamed tensions. “Every drop of blood spilled in Jerusalem is pure, every martyr will reach paradise, and every injured person will be rewarded by God,” he said last month, as rumors about the Temple Mount swirled. He went on to say that Jews “have no right to desecrate the mosque with their dirty feet.”

Taleb Abu Arrar, an Israeli Arab member of the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, argued publicly that Jews “desecrate” the Temple Mount by their presence. (Fourteen years ago, Yasser Arafat, then the leader of the Palestine Liberation Organization, told me that “Jewish authorities are forging history by saying the Temple stood on the Haram al-Sharif. Their temple was somewhere else.”)

These sorts of comments, combined with the violence of the past two weeks—including the sacking and burning of a Jewish shrine outside Nablus—suggest a tragic continuity between the 1920s and today. For those who believe not only in the necessity, but in the practical possibility, of an equitable two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict—and in particular, for those who believe that the post-1967 settlement project is the root cause of the conflict—recent events have been sobering.

One of the tragedies of the settlement movement is that it obscures what might be the actual root cause of the Middle East conflict: the unwillingness of many Muslim Palestinians to accept the notion that Jews are a people who are indigenous to the land Palestinians believe to be exclusively their own, and that the third-holiest site in Islam is also the holiest site of another religion, one whose adherents reject the notion of Muslim supersessionism. The status quo on the Temple Mount is prudent and must remain in place. It saves lives, lives fundamentalist Jewish radicals would risk in order to advance their millennial dreams. But it is the byproduct of the intolerance of Jerusalem’s Muslim leadership.

When violence against Jews occurs inside Israel, or on the West Bank, a consensus tends to be reached quickly by outside analysts and political leaders, one that holds that such violence represents the inevitable consequence of Israel’s occupation and settlement of Palestinian territory. John Kerry, the U.S. secretary of state, said in an appearance earlier this week at Harvard that, “What’s happening is that unless we get going, a two-state solution could conceivably be stolen from everybody. And there’s been a massive increase in settlements over the course of the last years.” He went on to say, “Now you have this violence because there’s a frustration that is growing, and a frustration among Israelis who don’t see any movement.”

(On Friday morning, speaking with NPR’s Steve Inskeep, Kerry revised and extended his comments, criticizing Abbas—in a passive way — for the violence: “There's no excuse for the violence. ... And the Palestinians need to understand, and President Abbas has been committed to nonviolence. He needs to be condemning this, loudly and clearly. And he needs to not engage in some of the incitement that his voice has sometimes been heard to encourage.”)

Many Palestinians believe that “this is not a conflict between two national movements, but a conflict between one national movement and a colonial and imperialistic entity.”

It is sometimes difficult for policymakers such as Kerry, who has devoted so much time and energy to the search for a solution to the Israeli-Arab impasse, to acknowledge the power of a particular Palestinian narrative, one that obviates the possibility of a solution that allows Jews national and religious equality. Writing in Haaretz, the left-center political scientist Shlomo Avineri describes an important disconnect that often goes unnoticed, even in times like these: Many Palestinians believe that “this is not a conflict between two national movements but a conflict between one national movement (the Palestinian) and a colonial and imperialistic entity (Israel).” He goes on to write, “According to this view, Israel will end like all colonial phenomena—it will perish and disappear. Moreover, according to the Palestinian view, the Jews are not a nation but a religious community, and as such not entitled to national self-determination which is, after all, a universal imperative.”

Avineri, like most sensible analysts, understands the many and variegated reasons for the continued failure of the peace process:
Mutual distrust between the two populations, internal pressures from the rejectionists on both sides, Yasser Arafat’s repeated deceptions, the murder of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, the electoral victories of Likud in Israeli elections, Palestinian terrorism, continuing Israeli settlement activities in the territories, the bloody rift between Fatah and Hamas, American presidents who did too little (George W. Bush) or too much and in a wrong way (Barack Obama), the political weakness of Mahmoud Abbas, governments headed by Netanyahu that did everything possible to undermine effective negotiations. All this is true, and everyone picks and chooses what fits their views and interests—but beyond all these lies a fundamental difference in the terms in which each side views the conflict, a difference many tend or choose to overlook.


The violence of the past two weeks, encouraged by purveyors of rumors who now have both Israeli and Palestinian blood on their hands, is rooted not in Israeli settlement policy, but in a worldview that dismisses the national and religious rights of Jews. There will not be peace between Israelis and Palestinians so long as parties on both sides of the conflict continue to deny the national and religious rights of the other.

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Push these stabbing, murdering, country stealing, myth spewing, Jew hatings Fucks into Syria Or Jordan, where they belong.
And you guys call Obama weak!
 

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2015 Sets Record for Israeli Mergers and Acquisitions - Niv Elis (Jerusalem Post)
2015 has already broken records for Israeli mergers and acquisitions, posting a 52% increase over the same time period last year and reaching $21 billion so far, according to Alain Dobkin, a managing partner of the Catalyst CEL Fund.
Since 2010 there have been over $10b. worth of such transactions with China.
French-Israeli Edouard Cukierman, chairman of Cukierman & Co. Investment House and managing partner of Catalyst Funds, which runs the annual Go4Israel investor conference in Tel Aviv, said that this year, more participants came from China than from Europe.
 

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Four Israeli Medical Apps Win Top International Competition - Sagi Cohen (Ynet News)
Four Israeli applications are among the 10 winners of the international 2015 Medica App Competition held recently in Dusseldorf, Germany.
The Voiceitt company's Talkitt app enables people who have speech disabilities communicate using their own voice.
Mobile ODT's Enhanced Visual Assessment System assists healthcare professionals to conduct smarter visual cervical cancer screenings by managing patient information, consulting with peers for second opinions, and referring patients for proper care.
iFeel Labs Match3 developed a game which uses a biosensor to help asthma and COPD patients learn how to breathe effectively and improve pulmonary function.
Doctome developed a telemedicine platform that allows for video calls/chats anywhere around the globe with doctors speaking the patient's language, 24/7, 365 days a year.
 

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Israel Has Most Per-Capita Winners of European Young Research Grants - Judy Siegel-Itzkovich (Jerusalem Post)
Israel is in first place in Europe in the per capita number of research grants given to young people in 23 European countries this year, according to the Science, Technology and Space Ministry.
A total of 24 research grants were awarded to Israel out of 291 overall, said Minister Ophir Akunis.
On a per-capita basis, he said, this means Israel is No. 1 this year.

 

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Japan Turns to Israeli Tech to Treat Radiation Disease - David Shamah (Times of Israel)
Four years after Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant disaster, radiation poisoning remains a continued risk.
That is why Fukushima Medical University's Global Medical Science Center has signed a deal with Israel's Pluristem Therapeutics to further develop the company's PLX-R18 cells to treat acute radiation syndrome (ARS).
Tests have shown that the stem-cell technology developed by Pluristem can prevent damage to cells affected by ARS.

 

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Israel to Train Doctors for China (Xinhua-China)
In 2016, doctors from the underdeveloped southwestern provinces of Sichuan, Yunnan and Guizhou will have opportunities to study medicine in Israel, Amir Lati, Israel's consul general in Chengdu, said Friday.
China still needs state-of-the-art technology to better treat patients, said Dr. Moris Topaz, a plastic surgeon from the Hillel Yaffe Medical Center in Hadera.
Topaz is widely respected by his Chinese colleagues for helping treat victims of an earthquake in Sichuan Province in 2008. He introduced technology that spared many patients from amputation and reduced antibiotic dosages and inflammation risks.

 

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