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Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

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Posts Tagged ‘avigdor-lieberman’

Senior Israeli Diplomat Quits in Disgust, Can No Longer Support Government Policies

Thursday, March 3rd, 2011
ilan baruch

Ilan Baruch, veteran Israeli diplomat, could no longer defend the indefensible (Guy Raivitz)

An Israeli diplomat with over 30 years of foreign service experience has quit his job in disgust, saying he can no longer defend or interpret to a foreign audience the policies of his government under the leadership of Bibi Netanyahu or Avigdor Lieberman.  Ilan Baruch, a decorated IDF veteran, served in numerous major diplomatic postings including stints as ambassador to South Africa and the Philipines.  Several months ago, after one too many stiff diplomatic cables from Lieberman chiding his colleagues for braying insufficiently loudly on behalf of Israel, Baruch decided he’d had enough.  He put in his papers and retired though he was not scheduled to do so for several more years.

He wrote a letter to his colleagues in which he noted a few of reasons for ending his career prematurely:

“Over the past two years the political and diplomatic messages by the state’s leaders, which have grown more pointed, have infuriated me and given me no rest. I find it difficult to represent them and explain them honestly.”

…Baruch said there is a great deal of frustration brimming below the surface at the Foreign Ministry.

The veteran diplomat explained the genesis of his discontent:

…He sensed an initial warning sign, he added, the day Lieberman took office as foreign minister and gave a speech in which he rejected the possibility of peace with the Palestinians.

“Lieberman completely denied [Israel's] role in the failure of the peace process,” Baruch said. “The outcome is not good and it is not only because of the Palestinians’ conduct.”

Baruch is not alone is his “disgust” at the course Israel’s diplomatic efforts are taking:

“It has become impossible to explain Israel to others these days,” one ambassador said. “There is no clear policy and it is very difficult to respond to international criticism.”Another ambassador said: “The diplomatic impasse is dangerous to the State of Israel, and it doesn’t seem as if the prime minister has a solution in the form of a diplomatic initiative. Under such circumstances, the international community will simply force a solution on us.”

It is always tempting in circumstances like this to read too much into the courageous act of one individual.  One wants to see a groundswell of opposition and hopes that this is but the beginning.  But the truth is that Israel’s Occupation regime is entrenched.  There are many others in the system waiting for their chance to replace someone of Baruch’s high rank.  His leaving may only be a blip on the screen.

Nevertheless, it is a cri de coeur that some will hear and heed both within the foreign ministry and perhaps outside it.

Uzi Arad Resigns As Bibi’s National Security Advisor

Monday, February 21st, 2011
uzi arad

Uzi Arad: the spy who came in from the cold after the Franklin-Aipac spy scandal (Tess Scheflan)

Caught up in a tug of war between Avigdor Lieberman and Bibi Netayahu over who would become Israel’s new ambassador to London, Uzi Arad resigned in a huff as Netanyahu’s national security advisor.  Lieberman bridled at Arad’s nomination for the post being shoved down his throat.  Netanyahu refused to force the issue.  And just like that, the former senior Mossad agent is gone from the prime minister’s office.

Frankly, I’m slightly shocked at the tone deaf nature of the nomination of Arad to the London post considering the English government’s anger that the Mossad cloned several passports of British nationals as part of the al-Mabouh hit in Dubai.  Naming as new ambassador the very agent responsible for the Larry Franklin-Aipac spying scandal seemed a bit over the top.

Arad, during the Bush administration was even persona non grata and unwelcome in this country because of his role in this matter.  All that changed when Bibi named him to his post and apparently the Obama administration didn’t wish to make a big stink over the matter.  He was welcomed back to the White House and accompanied his boss to meetings there.  I guess Arad has friends like Dennis Ross in high places.

Bibi in 1989 Supported Palestinian Mass Expulsions

Thursday, January 13th, 2011
bibi supports palestinian expulsion

Original Hebrew text of Netanyahu statement supporting Palestinian expulsion from Territories

For the life of me I don’t know why this 1989 statement from Bibi Netanyahu, when he a was a junior minister in the Shamir government, hasn’t received more play.  The following is from Yaakov Lazar (note his biting satire in the second paragraph) in the left-wing, now defunct Al Ha-Mishmar (translated by Mark Marshall):

Deputy Foreign Minister MK Bibi Netanyahu, the man who this week bitterly lamented the lack of Glasnost in the Arab states, is the same man who said this week: ‘Israel should have taken advantage of the suppression of the demonstrations in China [Tiananmen Square], when the world’s attention was focussed on what was happening in that country, to carry out mass expulsions among the Arabs of the Territories. However, to my regret, they did not support that policy that I proposed, and which I still propose should be implemented.’

It is a good thing that there is Glasnost in Communist bloc countries, because that permits us to say to the Arab states: why don’t you try a little Glasnost yourselves? Isn’t it about time you joined the family of civilized nations? But on the other hand, there is no need to carry this blessed process too far, because it is useful that a few Communist states remain that suppress Glasnost with an iron fist, preferably with bloodshed. Because if none such remain, how can we take advantage of the world’s attention being focussed on what is going on there, in order to transfer our Arabs in a civilized way here?

Alas, in those days Bibi was more inclined to speak what he really believes as opposed to now, when he’s learned how to speak with a forked tongue, saying nothing and meaning precisely the opposite of what comes from his mouth (or meaning nothing at all).

Lest anyone believe that this man will bring peace, that this man will negotiate in good faith with Palestinians, that this man will recognize a Palestinian state, let them read this and try to say otherwise.

Hey, and for those of you who complain about how nasty and racist Yvet Lieberman is compared to his polished boss, Bibi, just remember when the latter was in foreign ministry his views were frightening similar to Lieberman’s.

H/t to Yossi.

Carmel Fire Thaws Israeli Relations With Turkey

Friday, December 10th, 2010
mavi marmara victim

Mavi Marmara victim who couldn't be saved

Turkey’s humanitarian gesture of sending firefighting air tankers to help combat the Carmel fire seems to have melted the ice in Turkish-Israeli relations.  Haaretz is reporting that a possible resolution of the Mavi Marmara impasse may be at hand, by which Israel would pay $100,000 to each dead victim’s family and a smaller amount to those wounded.  One of the main sticking points appears to be Israel’s refusal to use the word “apology” and its insistence on the term “regret.”  Israel is also balking at apologizing to the Turkish people and prefers that its statement be addressed in humanitarian terms only to those who were killed or wounded in the incident.

Another intent of the settlement would bar Israel or its citizens from being sued for damages as a result of the attack.

At any rate, if a deal is struck it will mark a major climb-down by Netanyahu from his formerly adamant position that Israel’s actions were entirely defensive and praiseworthy.  It will also mark a major victory for the Turkish prime minister in his international campaign for Israeli accountability for the massacre.  I doubt Israelis will make Bibi pay a price for such a deal.  They will cynically view it as the cost of doing business in terms of Israel’s position on the world stage.

As is typical of Israeli politics, we have the spectacle of disgraced former prime minister and Bibi-enemy, Ehud Olmert denouncing Bibi’s possible deal while holding up to view his own government’s supposedly spotless record of maintaining an impermeable seal on Gaza.  And of course, Avigdor Lieberman considers an agreement akin to selling out Israel’s interests.  Next, we’ll hear Tzipi Livni weigh in with some mindless grandstanding of her own.

Brad Burston Called Me an Anti-Semite

Sunday, October 31st, 2010
brad burston

Brad Burston called progressive Jews who deny Israel as the Jewish state 'anti-Semites'

Well, not precisely, but read on.

Burston is a Haaretz columnist with a set of quirky progressive ideas and a maverick streak.  You can’t pin him down precisely.  Sometimes he writes columns that make me proud and sometimes I want to throw a shoe at him (his phrase from a talk he delivered tonight) or at least his column on the computer screen.  A few months ago during the Anat Kamm case he wrote to me some lovely compliments about my coverage of the story.  He said I was brave and I was gratified to hear him say that.  Then I found that he’d been a very close friend of David Twersky, a former Jewish journalist and press officer of American Jewish Congress, who recently passed away from cancer.  Twersky and Burston were part of a garin that lived on Kibbutz Gezer in the 1970s.  I had spent a summer month on Gezer with an earlier American garin in 1972.  We had things in common.

So when I read that J Street would be hosting a talk by Burston tonight at my shul, I e mailed him and invited him to join me for a cup of coffee (which unfortunately didn’t happen).  I was looking forward to meeting him for the first time and made plans to attend his talk.  I was hoping to like him and his views as much as I had over the past few months.  But I was disappointed.  Not in Burston the person, but in his talk.

There are Israelis who, when they speak abroad deliver talks they never would in Israel.  They think their job is to rally the troops, to get them not to give up hope.  And I understand this impulse, I really do.  I too used to be a liberal Zionist (I’m still a Zionist, but that’s another blog post entirely).  But it doesn’t do anyone any good.  It sugarcoats Israeli reality.  It in a sense infantilizes the Diaspora audience by presuming that it either can’t take or wouldn’t understand a full-bore analysis of the extremity of the political situation in Israel.

At the present moment, an Israeli speaking in the Diaspora does a disservice when he makes things appear not quite as bad as they really are.  Only the truth suffices in the present situation.  Perhaps in 1972 or 1982 or 1992, one could perhaps understand the impulse to truncate one’s message.  But such bowdlerization of truth can no longer be justified.

So what did Burston say?  That brings me back to my title.  At one point, Burston said:

About the progressive Jew who sees nothing wrong with the many Muslim nations in the world, but who cannot allow the Jews to have a single state of their own anywhere in the world, I say that person is an anti-Semite.

That’s why I say that Burston called me an anti-Semite, though he didn’t do so personally.  But let me clear about my own views.  I do support an Israel that has a Jewish identity, just as I support an Israel that has a Muslim and Christian identity for those religious groups.  I do not support an Israel which affirms Judaism as its sole or primary national religion to the exclusion or detriment of others.  If Israel is to be a true democracy it must not favor one religion over others.  It must treat religions equally.  That does not mean that Judaism or Jewishness will be disrespected or ignored or subordinated.  But it means that this particular religion will take its place as one of several religions practiced by the nation’s citizens.

That’s why I believe Brad Burston called me an anti-Semite.

There were other parts of his talk that troubled me as well.  When Israeli liberals speak here they usually try to tell audiences things aren’t as bad as they are.  So did the Haaretz columnist.  He told his listeners that things weren’t as bad as they might seem, that Israeli democracy was strong.  As proof, he used a Yediot poll which asked respondents which Israeli politicians they felt most embodied ultra-nationalist, even fascist views.  60% named Avigdor Lieberman.  The speaker used this poll result to say that not only didn’t Lieberman represent a “real and present danger” to Israeli democracy, but Israelis saw through him and would never support him.

What Burston neglected to acknowledge was that the entire premise of the poll and accompanying newspaper articles about it was that fascism was a real and present danger in Israel.  There were other questions in this same poll whose results actually proved precisely the opposite of what he claimed: that is (for one example), that Israeli by large margins support curbs on free speech and democratic rights even when the issues addressed are NOT security related.

Burston argued that while it was true that the Israeli liberal concept of “land for peace” was dead, so was the far right vision of Greater Israel.  He denigrated the notion of the power of the Israeli right over Israeli political life by claiming that it doesn’t even truly represent its ideological legacy.  As proof, he cited the fact that by party, 96 of the 120 Knesset members support a two-state solution.  I find such a claim to be so weak and unpersuasive, I’m surprised anyone with Burston’s clear level of political intelligence would use it.  This presumes of course that every Likud MK supports a Palestinian state, which is ludicrous and Burston should know it.

In fact, the vast majority of Israelis say they support a two state solution but few are willing to actually make the compromises necessary right now to make it happen.  The same is true of Knesset members.  There are very few that, if you asked them–do you support a return to 1967 borders, sharing Jerusalem, and a negotiated resolution of the Right of Return allowing some refugees to return–would say yes.  So saying you support a two state solution means nothing in this case, since you’re not willing to face the compromises necessary to achieve it.

I left Burston’s talk during the Q&A when the local Stand With Us board member, David Brumer, began his question with the lie:

I don’t disagree with anything you said tonight.

I knew it could only go downhill from there, and I didn’t have the heart to listen to the rest of a statement from someone who once wrote me an e mail saying I should be spanked for my views.

I’m also struck by the phrase “love for Israel” bandied about by so many liberal Zionists including Burston tonight.  One of the reasons (there were others as well) I didn’t attend Daniel Sokatch’s (he is the CEO of the New Israel Fund) talk here in Seattle this month was its title, Loving Israel in Challenging Times.  I find the notion that one must profess love for Israel before criticizing it to be preposterous.  It’s one thing in a marriage to criticize one’s wife while doing so in the context of the love you have.  But Israel is not a wife.  It is a country.  Wives don’t kill people (not usually), countries do.  I don’t want to make love to Israel.  I don’t want to have children with Israel.  I want it to be a country of which I can be proud as a Jew.  But what’s love got to do with it?  Love is a red herring.  It disables critical debate.  Love means that Israel cannot be something I think it should be, a normal state.  Love puts Israel on a pedestal just as traditional male attitudes toward women put them on similar pedestals that prevented them from being normal human beings.

In the time when I was still on e-mail terms with Leonard Fein, he practically made a fetish out of my supposed lack of love for Israel.  To him, it proved I had left the Zionst reservation because you could only express criticism of Israel out of such deep concern and affection, that your criticism would clearly be couched as that of a concerned parent for a loved one gone astray.  Naturally, I don’t have patience in this hour in which Israel finds itself in extremis for such mollycoddling.

To me it is self-evident that I would not write this blog unless I loved Israel.  It would simply be a waste of time to devote as many tens of thousands of hours to this enterprise as I have unless there was deep emotion attached to the subject.  And there is.  Many decades of my life have been devoted to Israel.  I could not do so unless I loved it.  But I will not trot out such love as if it were a stamp on a passport in order to prove my Zionist bona fides.

It’s the same way with the American far right which accuses the left of hating America and similar nonsense.  No one on the American left owes any explanation, justification or defense to their political opponents on this matter.  I don’t need to confess my love for America in order to criticize it.  In that sense, criticism is love.

It shouldn’t be surprising that Burston has been touring the U.S. on behalf of J Street.  This type of pulling of punches regarding Israel is J Street’s trademark.  I have pretty much given up on J Street as having any useful purpose regarding the Israeli-Arab conflict.  But I had hoped for more from Brad Burston and his talk tonight.

It’s possible that Brad Burston would not deliver the same address to an Israeli audience.  That he would speak more unguardedly, more forthrightly, more directly to such an audience.  That I would admire the penetrating analysis he would bring to bear before such a group.  It’s possible that there’s a Brad Burston in there I can still admire politically.  But I don’t think tonight he did Israel or himself any favors.

Israel’s Loyalty Oath: Let’s Drink to New Jewish Republic

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

It seems a virtual certainly that sometime in the coming weeks Israel’s rightist government will pass a law requiring new citizens to affirm Israel as a Jewish state.  As currently formulated the law would only require such an oath of non-Jewish citizens, which would effectively bar most non-Jews, especially Muslims or Arabs, from becoming citizens.  As such, the law would be racist on its face and likely rejected by the Israeli Supreme Court. Bibi Netanyahu is calling for amending the bill so that it includes all new citizens including Jews, hoping that this will pass muster with any justices who may have quibbles over the law’s diminution of democratic values.

As one of my commentators with whom I rarely agree wrote:  it’s an answer to a question no one is asking.  There are very few non-Jews seeking to become citizens of Israel.  So the oath is a political provocation by Avigdor Lieberman meant to gin up hysteria and support among his far-right nationalist base.  As I’ve written here, the only reason this bill will become law is as a quid pro quo from Bibi to his farther right allies hoping to retain their support when and if he extends a settlement freeze.

One of the very strange outcomes of this law may be to deny Israeli citizenship to Jews.  Since few Arabs seek to become citizens and mainly Jews do, it is the Haredi Jews who seek citizenship who would be barred from it, since they refuse to acknowledge that Israel is a Jewish state in pure halachic terms.  Wouldn’t that be a delicious irony?  I’m guessing that the State will find a way to create an exemption for the ultra Orthodox allowing them to circumvent the entire oath process, just as it does to exempt their children from military service (though on different grounds).

israelis demonstrate against loyalty oath

Thousands of Israelis protest against Lieberman loyalty oath (Tal Cohen)

Aux armes, citoyens!  My interest tonight is strategizing how the progressive left should respond to the eventuality of the passage of this bill.  Two days ago, Israelis held a large rally denouncing the loyalty oath.  A good start.  But I think we should prepare for a longer term campaign against this racist law.  We should prepare a series of acts of resistance.  For example, I can see a rally on the day the law is passed with a mass of Israelis proclaiming en masse an alternate oath affirming Israel as a state of all its citizens regardless of religion or ethnicity.  I’d love to see an oleh chadash (new immigrant) leading such an oath-taking as a symbolic but powerful protest.

I would begin asking American Jews to withhold whatever portion of their UJA contributions are designated for Israel.  Jewish leaders tend to avoid and ignore issues unless there are financial ramifications that harm fundraising campaigns or cause deep embarrassment.  This issue could cause both.

We must also continue to point out that such a law will reinforce a slogan that hasn’t been widely heard since the 1970s when the UN General Assembly passed a “Zionism is racism” resolution.  At the time, many of us disagreed strongly with such sentiment.  But can we honestly do so now?  Yes, there are those of us who can argue that Zionism as we express and define it is different than what passes for Zionism in arch nationalist right-wing circles in Israel.  But that may be too much subtlety for the world to bear when it sees an Israeli government prepared to use a sledge-hammer domestically and on the world stage to define itself and its interests.

At another earlier protest, an Israeli professor likened this bill to the 1935 Nuremberg Race Laws which set the stage for the Holocaust:

Israeli educational psychologist Prof. Gavriel Solomon said that “the idea of Judenrein or Arab-rein is not new… Some might say ‘how can you compare us to Nazis’. I am not talking about the death camps, but about the year 1935. There were no camps yet but there were racist laws. And we are heading forward towards these kinds of laws. The government is clearly declaring our incapacity for democracy.”

A state which needs such oaths is a state unsure of its own identity, lacking self-confidence, perhaps sensing unconscious guilt at the injustices that lie  at its foundation.  It signifies a state at war with itself.  That is why you don’t see firmly established democracies like the U.S., Britain, Germany, France racing to affirm their identities as Christian nations.  These are countries more or less comfortable in their own skins.

When it affirms this oath as law it will cease being Israel and become the Jewish Republic, as Gideon Levy writes.  And let us be very clear, they are not the same thing.  Jewish citizens should no longer be called Israelis, but rather Judeans.  At that point, Judea or whatever you want to call it might just as well have a king as a Knesset.  Let’s call him Yvette I, shall we?  Let’s rebuild the Temple and install Moshe Feiglin as High Priest.  King Yvette can reign from Jerusalem and have his winter palace at Nokdim (the settlement he calls home), just as Herod built his at the fateful Masada.

It’s at this point I seek to join the party of Rabbi Yochanan Ben Zakkai, who, according to a legend some claim to be apocryphal, could see the handwriting on the wall during the Roman siege against Jerusalem.  He escaped the city in a coffin during a period of plague, negotiated with the Roman general conducting the siege, who allowed him to flee to a little town called Yavneh.  There he established a rabbinic academy that sought to come to terms with the trauma of the destruction of the Second Temple, and hence laid the groundwork for the survival of the Jewish people as they scattered to the Diaspora.

In other words, Lieberman and even Bibi are sowing the seeds of Israel’s destruction.  It’s really plain and simple (but also horrible).  If you are prepared for this to happen you will stand and watch.  If not, you will do something to object, to resist.

We should remind Israeli and Diaspora Jewish leaders that the specter of BDS hovers over ever such Israeli act and strengthens the movement.  This reinforces the notion that Israel is its own worst enemy, and that all its opponents need to do is sit back and watch as Israel virtually destroys any credibility or sympathy it may retain on the world stage.  Indeed, such laws perfectly illustrate the Midrash which states that the Holy Temple was destroyed due to the sinat hinam (senseless hatred) of two brothers for each other.  Today, we’re looking at an Israel which destroys itself inch by inch while the rest of us (or at least some of us) look on in horror and disbelief.

To conclude, let us all say no to a state that defines itself solely in religious terms; to a state that affirms that Judaism is its dominant religion; to a state that subordinates democracy to religion; to a state that is Jewish to the exclusion of all else and all others.  Ours is a vision of an Israel that affirms and values the religions of all its citizens; that offers equal rights to all citizens; that embraces all ethnicities while derogating none (including Judaism, lest dyed-in-the-wool Zionists claim that this means the death of Israel or Zionism).

Yediot Poll Notes Threat of Fascism in Israel

Sunday, October 17th, 2010
Yediot achronot graphic

Israeli ID card with emblems of Kach and Nazi party superimposed (Yediot Achronot)

I am usually loathe to use words like “fascism” in this blog to denote anything about Israel since the term is loaded, incendiary and draws fierce rebuke from apologists for Israeli policy here.  But when I read polls like this one and see powerful graphics like this one published with the poll, then I realize there are many thoughtful Israelis who are thinking and publishing the same thoughts I have.

What stands out in the results below is the absolutely schizoid nature of the Israel polity.  While 80% of Israelis are “proponents of democracy,” 55% favor limiting free speech even when it poses no security threat.  Go figure.

Only 63% support the right of Israeli Palestinian citizens to vote and 26% would prefer a political leader who would bypass democratic institutions and rule by fiat.  13% place themselves on a continuum between nationalist to fascist (which I would take to be about the size of the settler population and its supporters).  60% of Israelis believe that Avigdor Lieberman is the politician most responsible for incorporating fascist themes into Israeli politics.  It makes one understand the psychology at work historically in societies that turn to fascism, even while retaining the illusion that they are still at least marginally democratic.

A few words on the masterful and profound graphic: it pictures in the background an Israeli ID card, which is apt because the entire poll dealt with the nature of Israeli identity.  Superimposed on the identity card are the Kahane Kach raised fist logo alongside one-half of the Nazi eagle (the most incendiary feature of the graphic).  The document features the pictures of the four Israeli politicians whom respondents were asked to rate in terms of the their responsibility for fascist attitudes entering Israeli politics.

Here is an English translation of the poll results as reported by Yediot Achronot:

Yedioth Ahronoth 15 October, 2010 (by Dahaf Polling Institute) –

Q: Where do you situate yourself on the scale between being a clear proponent of democracy and a supporter of fascism?

Proponent of democracy also in the face of security needs — 16%

Proponent of democracy — 64%

Inclined towards nationalism — 5%

Nationalist  — 5%

An extremist nationalist to the extent of supporting fascism — 3%

Yes, it is justified to add the words “as a Jewish and democratic state” to the pledge of allegiance for non-Jews?

Entire population — 63%

Jews — 69%

Yes, it is justified to limit the freedom of speech when this poses a possible risk to non-security related interests of the state

Entire population — 55%

Jews — 58%

Religious —82%

Yes, I support the right of non-Jewish citizens to vote in Knesset elections

Entire population — 63%

Jews — 62%

ultra-Orthodox — 32%

Religious — 42%

Secular — 75%

Q: Are you bothered by the possibility of fascism in Israel?

Yes — 64%

No — 34%

Yes, I prefer a strong leader who reaches decisions alone rather than one who is subject to the decisions of the government and Knesset?

Entire population — 26%

Jews — 25%

Immigrants — 53%

Religious —24%

Secular — 21%

Q: Who among the politicians is most responsible for the increase extreme nationalist and near fascist tendencies?

Avigdor Lieberman — 60%

Eli Yishai — 40%

Binyamin Netanyahu — 30%

The poll questioned 500 people. The margin of error is 4.4%

Thanks to Zvi Solow for the Yediot graphic.  The English version of the Yediot article is available here.

One minor caveat about this poll: it claims to incorporate Israel Palestinian opinion which is 20% of the overall population.  Yet the results on questions where one would expect almost total unanimity from Palestinians doesn’t seem to reflect that in the comparison between Israeli Jewish opinion and overall Jewish opinion–such as the question about Israeli non-Jews voting in which 62% of Jews support it while only 63% of the overall population does.  That result seems improbable.


Mavi Marmara: the Massacre That Will Not Die

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

Mavi Marmara in Haifa harbor

A reader whose friend has a sweeping Mt. Carmel view of Haifa harbor from his/her home took this recent shot of the Mavi Marmara, which has been towed to Haifa from Ashdod, where it was originally brought after being captured by the Israeli navy.

The flotilla attack is the disaster that keeps on giving in terms of the negative fallout it provides Israel.  Haaretz reports that at the urging of Barack Obama Bibi secretly sent an Israeli minister to negotiate a resolution of the outstanding issues dividing Israel and Turkey over the massacre.  The Turks are demanding an apology (that would be the second one, since Danny Ayalon made the Turkish ambassador sit in a baby chair in order to demean him), victim’s compensation, and an end to the Gaza siege.

Turkey also seems to be ratcheting up the pressure by issuing a new threat to withdraw the right of commercial flights to pass through its airspace.  This would be a very strong slap in Israel’s face as it would have practical repercussions for Israeli flights to Europe.

Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman found out about the meeting and had a monumental hissy-fit declaring for all the world to see that Bibi was not nice to him and that if he didn’t shape up he might, just might, take Yisrael Beiteinu’s marbles and play elsewhere.  All just a technical error on his office’s part, explained the prime minister.  It will all be cleared up in a private meeting between the two.  However, a wounded Yvet is not taking Bibi’s calls just yet.  Make the big guy stew a little seems to be the idea.

Haaretz also reports that the IDF investigation of the attack headed by Maj. Gen. Giora Eiland may be more critical than expected.  In an Israeli context, that seems to mean very little.  But who knows, we might be surprised by the outcome.  Even in Biblical Sodom there was at least one honest man.

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