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Gaza War Diary Tue-Wed. May 17-18, 2016 Day 688-689 2am
From:
Gail Winston -- Winston Mid East Analysis and Commentary Gail Winston -- Winston Mid East Analysis and Commentary
For Immediate Release:
Dateline: Bat Ayin,Gush Etzion, The Hills of Judea
Tuesday, May 17, 2016

 

Dear Family & Friends,

Meir Ettinger is being released on June 1st after 9 months in ‘administrative detention’ with no trial, no charges, no evidence…& most of the time in solitary confinement. Why? Because of what he thinks? & says?!! He was denied the father’s right to attend his son’s brit milah. But, the media (some of it – like the JTA below – are still smearing him & the Shin Bet will still follow him – as if he’s a convicted terrorist. What’s going on?

Second big story of the day. Avigdor Liberman will join Bibi Netanyahu’s government coalition after Isaac ‘Buji’ Herzog flubbed his chance & is now blaming Bibi. I’ve heard that his nickname: ‘Buji’ means ‘cupcake’ & he’s certainly acting like one. Not sure what is final yet. More tomorrow.

Have a nice night. It’s breezy & cool. A good day.

All the very best, Gail/Geula/Savta/Savta Raba x 2/Mom

Our Website with Manny’s articles: WinstonIsraelInsight.com

1.Jewish extremist Meir Ettinger to be released from detention by JTA

GAIL SEZ: NOTE THE JTA ARTICLE BELOW. IT’S TOO FULL OF SMEAR & LASHON HA-RAH, SMEARING A 23 YEAR OLD FATHER & GRANDSON OF RABBI MEIR KAHANE. THEN READ THE POEM BELOW IT BY THE ‘SO-CALLED’ JEWISH EXTREMIST. Tell me if you think he sounds like an Extremist or a “suspected head of a right-wing Jewish terrorist cell”??!! Or is the JTA prejudicing the Jewish public & everyone else?

JTA Jewish extremist Meir Ettinger to be released from detention News Brief 1.Jewish extremist Meir Ettinger to be released from detention by JTAJewish Telegraphic Agency 5/17/16 11:04am 1Meir Ettinger, grandson of Rabbi Meir Kahane at Nazareth Magistrate’s Court, Aug. 4, 2015. (Basel Awidat/Flash90)

JERUSALEM (JTA) — Meir Ettinger, the suspected head of a right-wing Jewish terrorist cell who is being held in administrative detention, will be released from jail.

The Lod District Court determined Tuesday that Ettinger would be released in June after the Shin Bet security service said it would not request an extension of his detention. But the Shin Bet also said it would impose restrictions on whom Ettinger can come in contact with and what communities he can live in and visit, the Hebrew-language news website Walla reported.

Ettinger, the grandson of the slain far-right extremist Meir Kahane, has been held in administration detention without being charged since August 2015. The detention was extended in February.

Administrative detention allows Israeli authorities to hold suspected terrorists for six months at a time without filing formal charges. The detention, which is generally used against Palestinians, can be renewed indefinitely.

Ettinger, who spent several weeks in solitary confinement and has had limited contact with his family, was arrested for “involvement in violent activities and terrorist attacks that occurred recently, and his role as part of a Jewish terrorist group,” according to Israeli authorities.

His arrest was linked to the firebombing of a home in the West Bank Palestinian village of Duma that left an infant and his parents dead. Three people were convicted in connection with the attack.

Shin Bet officials have said Ettinger heads a movement that also was responsible for the June arson of the historic Church of the Multiplication of the Loaves and Fishes, and seeks to bring down the government and replace it with a Jewish theocracy.

Jewish extremist Meir Ettinger to be released from detention by JTA

2.An administrative detainee’s poem: The Hilltop Youth

Meir Ettinger wrote this poem in Hebrew, with literary merit and flowing rhymes. Recently sent to Arutz Sheva, the English translation preserves the ideas, so readers can get to know the writer’s feelings, but is not on the level of the Hebrew. Arutz Sheva IsraelNationalNews.com Published: Tuesday, May 17, 2016 4:29 PM

2 Meir Ettinger

The writer is a Jewish activist who is the grandson of Rabbi Meir Kahane, H”yd, and the unofficial leader of the hilltop youth.

You know, it’s not easy for us to be heard

The media hardly allows us a word

And he who dares say that the media’s wrong

Is ground into bits by their teeth and their tongue.

They have a system that’s oiled to perfection

One schemes, one directs, then they pen a confession

And he who dares question their machinations

Will find out that his past needs “investigations.”

Still, we will try to explain a thing or two

In the hope that you’ll realize it all rings true –

No, I don’t mind repeating our story to you

I’m in prison for months, there’s nothing to do.

If you’ve listened to all the distortions of truth

Then you shudder at hearing the words “hilltop youth.”

Someday we will tell you about the machine

That processes facts and decides what they mean

But for now, here’s a message we hope will hit home

(We’re writing our story in rhyme, like a poem.).

The hilltop youth – you won’t hear in the news –

Have hearts filled with love for their fellow Jews

And when they noticed the emperor’s clothes were awry

They couldn’t, like others, just let him pass by.

In their young minds many questions arose

When they saw that the emperor lacked more than his clothes

True, they had no proper contacts and methods and means

But were willing to try – after all, they are teens.

The truth they were missing, that is what they sought

To fill the lacunae in what they’d been taught

To them life was simple, they needed no frills

They went out to find truth on the bare, rocky hills.

Down below was erudition, with all degrees listed,

Could that be the reason so much had been twisted?

Only when young can this search be undertaken

We could step back from the crowd and try to awaken.

Families murdered on roads? In our land? – we asked why?

We know it’s preventable, if you really try

Perhaps someone up there has a head that is hollow

That doesn’t keep him from leading – but why do you follow?

And when no one could give us a good explanation

It deepened our fear for the state of our nation

And led us to feelings of isolation

If matters so crucial are covered in plaster,

It’s no wonder foundations just crack all the faster.

Then many fine youths came to join and do good

Feel the pain of the nation – as all of us should

The establishment shunned them and on them heaped blame

And everyone else rushed to join in the game.

The youth on the hilltops were stunned by this ploy

Why the unleashed aggression, the need to destroy?

How could adults abrogate their own rules?

And behave towards their children in ways that were cruel?

At first they had gazed on the children in wonder

But when truth posed a threat, they tore them asunder

For they know by themselves what we know very well

That power and honor is what makes their hearts swell.

We must have stumbled on some great mystery

Maybe someone is trying to rewrite history

Otherwise there is no way to fathom

What led them down to this moral chasm.

How turn evil into good and good into evil?

They gathered against us as if we’re the devil

Why create a new story every few days?

When we’d watch the news, we’d be simply amazed.

True, we do dream of ending our people’s disgrace

Hoping one day to see the Temple in its rightful place.

We believe that all of Israel is our eternal possession

And want our leaders to say no to secession.

This is what Jews prayed for throughout the years

Through gas and fire and blood and tears

So why do they treat us as if we’re deranged?

What Jewish aspiration has changed?

Why did they arrest us with such needless violence?

And leave us to languish in cells of silence?

Police made a mockery of the law

And when they caused us pain, broad smiles we saw.

Why does terror continue despite Tzahal forces

While the world keeps silent and its media endorses?

Our leaders with stopping the terror just toy

But command the army, “Settlement hilltops destroy!”

This policy did not emerge out of the blue

With every new government, it’s resurrected anew

Once again the British White Paper comes to pass

As each new government hopes that their power will last.

If someone notices that the emperor is sans his attire

He becomes a threat to be extinguished like fire

All the media join to burn the witch at the stake

With all of the threats and wild claims they can make.

You may feel that I am too rash in penning these words

But what we have here is a theater of the absurd.

Just one last question allow me to bring:

If my being free is the threatening thing

Maybe something very fundamental is the matter

If I, a singer at heart, am deemed the Mad Hatter.

All right, enough, I will silence my breath

Lest jailers administratively detain this bad poet to death.

An administrative detainee’s poem: The Hilltop Youth

3.’Diplomatic isolation is just an empty media threat’

Deputy Foreign Minister Tzipi Hotovely tells trainee diplomats: “The Israel of 2015 is strong diplomatically, and you will play a role in further developing our ties and battling against the voices seeking to delegitimize our moral standing in the world.”

Shlomo Cesana and Israel Hayom Staff

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Deputy Foreign Minister Tzipi Hotovely Photo credit: Oren Ben Hakun

“Talk about [Israel’s] diplomatic isolation is just an empty media threat,” Deputy Foreign Minister Tzipi Hotovely (Likud) told new cadets in the Foreign Ministry’s diplomat training course on Sunday.

“The Israel of 2015 is strong diplomatically, and you will play a role in further developing our ties [with the world] and battling against the voices seeking to delegitimize our moral standing in the world,” Hotovely said.

This year’s cadet course will include new material such as mandatory tours in Judea and Samaria, lecturers affiliated with the right-wing of the Israeli political spectrum, Judaism lessons and classes on how to justify settlements under international law. The new content was introduced by Hotovely and Foreign Ministry Director General Dore Gold.

The course is the only program that trains and prepares diplomats for careers in the Israeli foreign service. The Right has complained for years that the ministry is too “left-leaning,” and that one of the ways to try to change this is to adopt new course material.

This year’s cadet class comprises 14 women and 12 men. This marks the first time there have been more female than male cadets.

‘Diplomatic isolation is just an empty media threat’

4.Netanyahu’s man in DC: Ambassador to the US Ron Dermer the closest thing to actually having the prime minister in Washington. By Herb Keinon, JPOST

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It’s an answer strikingly characteristic of Israel’s ambassador to the US Ron Dermer: unapologetic, unexpected, articulate and completely faithful to his boss, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Asked in an email interview with The Jerusalem Post what have been the highlights and lowlights of his two and a half years so far in Washington, one might have expected Dermer to say that the lowest point was Netanyahu’s controversial speech to Congress in March 2015.
Dermer, whom some blamed for orchestrating the highly contentious speech, took a lot of heat for the move, including calls that he be removed because of what some contended would be his “obvious” inability to work effectively going forward with an incensed Obama Administration.

Dermer, being Dermer, said that was not the lowest point of his tenure, but indeed the highlight.

“In my eyes, the prime minister fulfilled a fundamental moral obligation to speak out about a potential threat to the survival of our country,” he said.

“This was a sovereign right that the Jewish people were long denied and the failure to exercise that right would have been a gross dereliction of his duty as prime minister of Israel.”

It was a different kind of ambassador Netanyahu sent to Washington in October 2013 when he dispatched Dermer, who will be speaking at the Post’s annual conference in New York on May 22, to replace Michael Oren.

Like Oren, Dermer was a political appointment, not someone who came up through the Foreign Ministry.

Unlike Oren, he was close to Netanyahu – very close – having served him as his chief adviser from 2009 to 2013.

Not in a generation had a prime minister appointed so close a personal adviser as ambassador to the country most important to Israel. Some have called him Netanyahu’s alter ego, others “Bibi’s brain.” As such, Dermer, 45, has the complete confidence and trust of Netanyahu, as well as unfettered access to him. The Americans know that when they speak to him, their messages will be directly relayed back to Netanyahu; and – more importantly – they know when he speaks, he is reflecting – more accurately than probably anyone else on the planet – the positions of the prime minister.

You have been ambassador since October 2013. During this period, there have been highs and lows in the relationship. How would you characterize the state of US-Israel ties at this time?

The state of the relationship is very strong & I believe it will grow stronger in the coming years.

First, because the US will be facing serious security threats emanating from the Middle East for the foreseeable future and Israel is the one solid, reliable democratic ally in the region – an ally that shares American values and interests, is truly capable of defending itself, provides vital support to the US and helps the US project power in the region.

Second, the importance of Israel as a technological power will grow in the years ahead. In IT, science, medicine, water, energy, cyber, and many other areas, Israel’s value as a strategic partner of the United States will become more and more apparent.

I know people always focus on the disagreements between us, but just as friendships between people are often tested in times of disagreement, friendships between countries are often tested during times of disagreement between governments.

One of the enduring strengths of the US-Israel relationship has been its ability to weather serious disagreements between our two governments to build an even stronger relationship between the two countries. That is what has happened despite serious policy disagreements in the past, and that is what I believe will happen in the future, despite the serious policy disagreement over the Iran nuclear deal.

What has been the highlight of your tenure? What has been the lowest point?

From a national point of view, the highlight for me was definitely Prime Minister Netanyahu’s speech to Congress.

In my eyes, the prime minister fulfilled a fundamental moral obligation to speak out about a potential threat to the survival of our country. This was a sovereign right that the Jewish people were long denied, and the failure to exercise that right would have been a gross dereliction of his duty as prime minister of Israel.

The fact that the prime minister spoke up in the face of so much unjust criticism is not just a highlight of my tenure in Washington, but in my view one of the highlights of his premiership and one of the many reasons I am so proud to serve him.

A second highlight for me was the Righteous Among the Nations ceremony we hosted earlier this year at the embassy.

It was the first time such a ceremony was held in America recognizing Americans who were given what is perhaps our nation’s highest honor….President [Barack] Obama graciously agreed to speak at the ceremony, becoming the first sitting president to speak at our embassy. He spoke movingly about the Holocaust and paid a fitting tribute to these heroes, as well as contributed greatly to raising awareness about the Holocaust.

On a personal level, the highlight for me was probably speaking in Martin Luther King’s Ebenezer Baptist Church, where I spoke about the relationship between African-Americans and Jews.

Those among your readers who were raised in the United States can surely appreciate what an honor that was.

By the way, the most fun I have had as ambassador is the trip Robert Kraft and I led that brought 19 NFL Hall of Famers to Israel last June – which generated very positive press coverage that exposed audiences that are otherwise very difficult to reach to our remarkable country.

As for the low point, there is not one single moment that stands out. As ambassador, there are obviously days when you feel that you have made a real positive difference and other days that are more frustrating for all sorts of reasons.

Nevertheless, I always remind myself that whatever problems we are dealing with today, our grandparents and their grandparents, going back 100 generations, would have given anything to trade their problems with ours. With that perspective, the lows are not really that low, and I always feel that it is a great privilege to serve as Israel’s ambassador to the United States.

Is the Iran battle behind us? Did the battle cause lasting damage?

Unfortunately, the battle is far from being behind us. If Israel believed that this agreement actually blocked Iran’s path to a nuclear weapon, I would have gone from city to city throughout America asking people to support it.

However, this deal does not block Iran’s path to the bomb. It ultimately paves Iran’s path to the bomb. What the deal does is put temporary restrictions on Iran’s nuclear program that are automatically removed in 10 or 15 years.

To automatically remove the restrictions at a certain date in the future is at best – if Iran does not violate the deal – to delay Iran’s path to the bomb by a decade or so.

That delay comes with a very high price tag: legitimizing Iran’s limited nuclear enrichment program today and an industrial-size program tomorrow, and – of course – removing the sanctions.

An Iran that was facing a headwind of sanctions is now facing a tailwind of sanctions relief.

So the foremost sponsor of terrorism in the world, a regime that openly calls and actively works to destroy Israel, has now become richer and more dangerous.

Now Israel must deal with that reality – a reality in which Iran is continuing to violate its international obligations by continuing to arm Hezbollah with increasingly sophisticated weapons, continuing to try to arm Palestinian terrorist organizations, continuing to develop and test ballistic missiles, and continuing to set up terrorist cells across the world.

At the UN last year, the prime minister outlined a three-point policy that should unite both those who supported the deal and those who opposed it: (1) keep Iran’s feet to the fire and ensure it does not violate the deal; (2) confront Iran’s regional aggression; (3) dismantle Iran’s global terrorism network.

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As far as lasting damage, the fallout of the deal will prove much more lasting than the fallout over fighting that deal.

In fact, in my view, real lasting damage would have come from not opposing something that poses an existential threat to our country.

Don’t forget, despite our disagreement with the administration, strong majorities in both houses of Congress and no less important, the overwhelming majority of the American people, do see eye-to-eye with Israel on this issue.

While Israel’s opposition to the nuclear deal was not popular in certain quarters, I have no doubt that the willingness of Israel to stand up for its interests did not go unnoticed in the region and among our enemies….

The media constantly discuss the dysfunctional nature of the Obama-Netanyahu relationship. How does the fact that this is repeated over and over as truth impact the relationship?

Much less than people think. It makes for great copy, but I do not think it materially affects the reality of the relationship all that much.

I have been present at all the meetings between the president and prime minister, and I would certainly not call their relationship dysfunctional.

A sign of dysfunctionality to me would be if they were unable to communicate their views to one another.

That is not the case. In fact, I would bet that they have had more meetings and phone calls than perhaps any pair of presidents and prime ministers in the history of the US-Israel relationship.

A sign of dysfunctionality would also be if their disagreements prevented them from working on areas of agreement.

That is also not true. There have been many times when they have confided in one another on vital matters and worked closely together.

It is true that they have had serious disagreements on fundamental issues.

But given the stakes involved in those disagreements, I would say their relationship has functioned well despite those disagreements.

They are both very cerebral people who make their case to one another and listen respectfully to the arguments of the other, even when they don’t agree.

What has been your biggest challenge as ambassador?

To fight a nuclear deal made between our greatest enemy and our greatest friend, while reminding people that after this deal Iran remains our greatest enemy and America remains our greatest friend.

What is the one thing that surprised you the most as ambassador?

I always knew there was a great deal of ignorance when it came to Israel – about our history, both ancient and modern, about the small size of the country, about the security challenges we face, and many other things.

The ignorance of even well-educated diplomats about our conflict with the Palestinians actually surprised me. You know, new ambassadors to Washington from around the world generally ask for courtesy meetings with a handful of their fellow Ambassadors.

I have never turned down those requests, because they are not only good for our diplomatic relations with those countries, but they are also a great opportunity to learn about those countries.

A meeting with an ambassador is probably worth about five years of reading the Economist – and you save yourself from having to read all of its anti-Israel vitriol to boot.

Last year, the ambassador of Burundi to the US asked to meet with me. We met on one of those rare days when I was actually tired of listening to myself speak. Believe it or not, that occasionally happens.

So rather than spend most of our time talking about Iran or the situation in Syria or the conflict with the Palestinians, most of our meeting was spent with him answering all sorts of questions I had about Burundi – about which I must admit, I was largely ignorant.

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When I asked him whether his country had a security problem, he said not since 2004. I asked what happened then. He said that they had achieved a cease-fire after years of violence that spilled over from Rwanda in the 1990s.

I asked him how many Burundians had been killed in the violence. He said 300,000. I had known about the horrific carnage in Rwanda, but I had no idea that so many people in Burundi had been killed.

Then I asked him how many people he thought had been killed in the nearly 100-year history of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He guessed about two million.

When I told him he was only off by two zeroes – and that the real number was closer to 20,000 – he was stunned.

I told him that the Arab-Israeli conflict had claimed about 125,000 lives over the last century but that the Israeli- Palestinian conflict had claimed a little more than 20,000 lives on both sides.

I figured perhaps it was only natural that he knew as little about Israel as I did about Burundi. So I started asking the same question to other ambassadors in town, many of whom were supposedly much more informed about the conflict, including people who had been the heads of the Middle East bureaus in their foreign ministries.

Their educated guesses were all way off by at least a factor of 10. One European ambassador simply refused to believe me and told me that the number must be well over a million.

There was no way, he said, that the world would pay so much attention to a conflict that had claimed roughly 200 lives a year on both sides over the last century.

It was simply inconceivable, he repeated over and over again. I told him to Google it for himself and watch The Princess Bride before our next meeting.

Much has been written about the growing alienation of American Jewry from Israel because of the government’s policies. Do you sense that?

If there is alienation from Israel, I do not see it as being fundamentally connected to the policies of this particular government – or the policies of any Israeli government for that matter.

That is not to say there is not opposition to Israel’s current policies among some American Jews. There is. But to use a familiar word, the fiercest critics of Israel make a “disproportionate” share of the noise.

I think the “problem” that you have among some American Jews when it comes to Israel is that if you are not over the age of 75, you have no recollection of a world without Israel. So it is harder for younger people to appreciate how fundamentally Israel has transformed the life of the Jewish people.

If you are not over the age of 55, you do not remember a vulnerable Israel.

All you know is a strong Israel that has been unjustly depicted for decades as a Goliath to the Palestinians’ David. So you may not appreciate that while Israel is indeed strong, it can go from great strength to great vulnerability very quickly if we make foolish mistakes.

That said, there is broad, strong and deep support for Israel among the American Jewish community. Whenever American Jews, young and old alike, perceive that Israel is in danger, they rally to Israel’s side. You saw that in the summer of 2014, and I am confident you would see it any time Israel was perceived to be in danger.

If there is alienation of some Jews from Israel, it is generally a function of the alienation of these Jews from their Jewish identity. You don’t have to be a rocket scientist to understand that Jews with a weaker Jewish identity will tend to have a weaker identification with the Jewish state.

In the late 1960s, my father was the mayor of Miami Beach, and had the opportunity to meet with David Ben-Gurion on a trip to Israel. My father asked him what is the one thing he would recommend to Jewish parents. Ben-Gurion pointed at my six-year-old brother and said, “teach him Jewish history.”

At that time, Yitzhak Rabin was Israel’s ambassador to the US. My father had the opportunity to host him in our home and he asked him what is the most important thing American Jews can do for Israel. Rabin answer: “Give their children a Jewish education.”

What Ben-Gurion and Rabin said then is even truer for a generation of Jews who have not had the indelible experiences of the Holocaust and the rebirth of the Jewish state.

Jewish education and knowledge of Jewish history is perhaps more important than ever. It will strengthen Jewish identity.

The stronger one’s Jewish identity, the stronger the connection to Israel will be.

The problem, frankly, is the cost of Jewish education. Many people simply can’t afford it – especially if they have large families.

The best thing that leaders in Jewish communities across America could do for Israel is to figure out how to lower the cost of Jewish education dramatically to make it affordable for anyone who wants it and to promote greater awareness of Jewish history for young people and adults. They should also continue to support terrific programs like Birthright and MASA that strengthen Jewish identity.

That will ensure both a vibrant Jewish community in America and a community strongly connected to Israel.

American demographics are changing dramatically. What can Israel do to gain support among those demographics not known to have an emotional pull to the country. The Hispanics, Asians, African-Americans?

What Israel can do is to engage with those communities as much as possible, particularly leaders. We should not underestimate the impact direct contact can have.

That means meeting with those leaders, and it means bringing those leaders to see Israel for themselves – something many pro-Israel organizations are doing rather well.

My own experience with African- American leaders has convinced me how important this outreach is.

That outreach actually came about as a result of the prime minister’s speech to Congress. One member of the Congressional Black Caucus had said to me that they saw the speech as an affront to the first African-American president.

Obviously, that was not the intention of the prime minister and I wanted to make that clear.

So I decided to reach out to members of the Congressional Black Caucus – not to change their votes on the Iran deal but to make clear that as someone born and raised in the US, the last thing I wanted was a legitimate policy disagreement between the prime minister of Israel & the president of the United States to lead to a rupture in relations between African-American & Jewish communities.

I met with about 40 of the 45 members of the CBC. Some had actually never had an Israeli ambassador come to their office – even some members who had been in Congress for decades.

I found that engagement very constructive in reducing a lot of the misunderstandings that could have otherwise made the situation significantly worse.

I also heard from nearly every single member that while they had policy disagreements with Israel, they remain committed to strengthening the relationship between America and Israel.

We should not assume people understand Israel’s concerns. We have to communicate those concerns directly, particularly when much of the media present a distorted picture of the situation.

And the best thing is to bring people to Israel to see the situation for themselves.

Another thing Israel must do to engage with more progressive constituencies is to remind people of the progressive nature of our society – about how the rights of women, gays and minorities are protected and how we have upheld our progressive values despite being the most endangered democracy on earth.

Democracies are tested under fire.

That is something that is better understood after attacks like those in Paris, San Bernardino and Brussels. Given that Israel has been under fire for 68 years, Israel’s democracy, while imperfect, is nothing less than extraordinary.

Does Israel pay too much attention to BDS? How much of a threat is it?

I don’t think that if Israel ignores the BDS movement, it will simply go away.

I think we have to fight it aggressively and smartly.

That said, I do not think BDS is an economic problem for Israel. Its economic effects are negligible because Intel, Microsoft, Apple, Google and dozens of other hi-tech companies are not in Israel because they are Zionists. They are in Israel because they want access to perhaps the most innovative workforce on the planet.

A much greater threat to Israel’s economic future than BDS is a potential brain drain that would be the result of our best and brightest not being able to enjoy the quality of life in Israel that they can have elsewhere.

This is why the prime minister’s long-standing effort to liberalize Israel’s economy, cut taxes, cut regulation and lower prices through increased competition is so important. Hopefully, reforms in the housing market will make it more affordable to live in Israel.

While it’s not an economic problem for Israel, BDS is a moral problem. It is an attempt to demonize Israel, to cast it as a pariah state that has no legitimacy and should be destroyed.

As a moral attack, BDS must be fought in moral terms – by exposing those who support BDS as the anti-Semites they are.

That label is not necessarily true of all the Jewish and Palestinian supporters of BDS. The fact that Jews and Palestinians decide to boycott Israel and not all the other countries of the world is not in and of itself evidence of anti-Semitism.

After all, it is natural to focus on one’s own problems before solving the world’s problems. These groups may just suffer from run-of-the-mill moral idiocy and hatred.

But the same cannot be said of national or international organizations that have decided to single Israel out for boycott, divestment and sanctions.

When I hear that church groups or academic associations have decided to boycott or divest from Israel, my first question is whether Israel is the 51st, 71st or 121st country on their list of boycotted nations.

If Israel is one of many countries they are boycotting, then at least I know these groups may have some principle by which they are judging Israel. I would not call them anti-Semites. I would say they are ignorant or misinformed, and that we need to educate them about the facts.

But if these groups single out Israel, the only liberal democracy in the Middle East, and are silent on all the egregious human rights violations that exist throughout the world – North Korea, Syria, Iran & dozens of other countries I will not mention because I am a diplomat–then they are anti-Semites.

The best that may be said of them is that they are anti-Semitic in effect rather than intent – to borrow an astute observation from the former president of Harvard, Larry Summers.

What makes the offense all the more egregious is the sheer absurdity of these groups boycotting Israel.

We live at a time when ancient Christian communities in the Middle East are being decimated, when Christians are being decapitated en masse, when Christians are literally fleeing for their lives in the region – and a group of Christians actually call to divest from Israel, the one country in the region where Christians are free and safe, with a Christian population five times larger than it was in 1948? We live at a time when academics in dozens of countries are shot or imprisoned for their beliefs and an academic group calls to boycott Israeli academics who enjoy the privilege of living in a country where they are free to say what they want, research what they want, and publish what they want? To fight BDS effectively, Israel should not try to explain itself to these organizations.

These organizations must be asked to explain why they are not anti-Semities.

Ask them a simple question: What is the principle by which you singled out Israel, alone among the nations, for boycott or divestment? They cannot answer that question because there is no such principle – other than anti-Semitism.

Do you believe Israel will finalize an MOU with the Obama administration? And what do you say to those who argue that Israel is a rich enough country to forgo US assistance?

I hope that we will be able to conclude the MOU [Memorandum of Understanding] soon, and I think there is great value in finalizing it with the Obama administration.

I think it’s important for your readers to have a little background on the assistance we get from the United States because there is a lot of confusion on this subject.

In our first two decades of statehood, Israel received very little economic assistance and even less military assistance from the United States.

Israel began receiving significant military and economic assistance from the United States in the wake of the Yom Kippur War and especially after the signing of the peace treaty with Egypt, in which Israel gave back the strategically valuable and oil producing Sinai Peninsula, from which Israel had been repeatedly attacked.

This military and economic aid together was roughly $3 billion a year and was designed to strengthen Israel economically and militarily in the wake of the historic peace agreement.

But there is a big difference between the two kinds of aid. Economic aid is essentially a direct cash payment, whereas military aid is primarily spent in America to purchase US military platforms and weapons, such as fighter planes and ammunition.

In Israel’s case, about ¾ths of military assistance is spent in the US to buy US military systems.

After about 15 years of receiving over $1b. a year in economic assistance, then-prime minister Netanyahu told a joint session of Congress in 1996 that while he deeply appreciated US economic support, Israel’s economy was strong enough to begin to stand on its own two feet.

In the wake of that speech, the first Memorandum of Understanding was signed with the Clinton administration. It phased out economic aid over 10 years. In 2007, Israel stopped receiving economic aid from the US.

Military assistance under that original MOU grew gradually to $2.4b. per year. In 2007, a second MOU was signed with the Bush administration that gradually increased military assistance to $3.1b. per year, where it has remained for the last few years. That second MOU will expire in two years.

In addition to this military assistance, the United States has also generously helped Israel build a three-tiered missile defense system – Iron Dome, David’s Sling and the Arrow 2 and 3.

These systems mostly use Israeli technology and R&D, but a larger and larger share of the production occurs in the United States.

The US financial contribution to developing these systems varies from year to year but has averaged about $600 million over the last three years.

So total military assistance has averaged about $3.7b. over the last three years.

I was involved with forging Israel’s second MOU when I was economic attaché in Washington in 2007. That MOU took about eight months to complete.

We have been dealing with this third MOU in earnest for about the last six months, and I hope we can complete it soon.

As to your question as to why Israel still needs military assistance, it is true that Israel has a relatively high GDP per capita – about $37,000. The problem is Israel doesn’t have enough “capita.”

We have a very small population–8.5 million people–and a total GDP of approximately $300 billion.

Because of Israel’s enormous defense needs and very small population, Israel has always been forced to dedicate a much larger percentage of its GDP to defense than other countries. That is especially true when you compare Israel to other democracies.

For example, European countries spend about 1% of their GDP on defense and almost never more than 2%.

The United States traditionally spends about 4% of its GDP on defense. In recent years, Israel has spent roughly 6% of our GDP without factoring any US assistance.… While Israel is deeply appreciative that the US has helped Israel shoulder this enormous defense burden for the past four decades, Israel also believes that the generous assistance the US provides Israel is also a great investment in US security.

Israel shares American interests and values and provides the US with vital intelligence and critical security cooperation that saves American lives & helps protect US interests in the Middle East.

A strong Israel not only protects its own population, but also strengthens our peace partners, Jordan and Egypt, and serves as a bulwark for stability in a region that is experiencing unprecedented volatility and violence.

The prime minister recently pointed out that in the last 10 to 15 years, the US has spent over $1.5 trillion in Iraq and Afghanistan. That’s the equivalent of about 500 years of US assistance to Israel. And Israel has never asked American soldiers to risk their lives to defend us – only to provide us with the tools we need to better defend ourselves.

That is probably why former Secretary of State Alexander Haig once called Israel the largest American aircraft carrier in the world that cannot be sunk, does not carry even one American soldier, and is located in a critical region for American national security, and why Vice President Biden recently said that if there were not an Israel, America would have to invent it.

If there is a country in the world from which American is getting the most bang for its buck, it is Israel – a strong, reliable democratic ally in the most dangerous region on earth.

Netanyahu’s man in DC: Ambassador to the US Ron Dermer

[Gail Sez: Why do I send you pictures of another culture’s statues which are ‘avoda zara’ for us? Because it is a demonstration of how Israel, our ‘Eretz Yisrael’ was always–for 3,000 years–the center of world civilization, the crossroads. And everyone always wanted it – to take it away from us. So, nu, what’s changed? We’re still here thriving & defending our ancestral HolyLand. Be proud & stand up for & with Israel whenever you can, wherever you are!”]

5.Divers Discover ‘Spectacular’ Cargo of Ancient Shipwreck in Caesarea Harbor By: JNi.Media JewishPress.com Published: May 16th, 2016

A fortuitous discovery before the Passover holiday by two divers in the ancient port of Caesarea has led to the revelation of a large, spectacular and beautiful ancient marine cargo of a merchant ship that sank there during the Late Roman period, about 1,600 years ago.

As soon as they emerged from the water, divers Ran Feinstein and Ofer Ra‘anan of Ra‘anana contacted the Israel Antiquities Authority and reported the discovery and the removal of several ancient items from the sea.

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Fragment of a bronze lamp decorated with the image of the sun god Sol, as discovered on the seabed. Photo: Ran Feinstein.

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The rare bronze artifacts that were discovered in Caesarea. Photographic credit: Clara Amit, courtesy of the Israel Antiquities Authority.

A joint dive at the site together with IAA archaeologists revealed that an extensive portion of the seabed had been cleared of sand and the remains of a ship were left uncovered on the sea bottom: iron anchors, remains of wooden anchors and items that were used in the construction and running of the sailing vessel. An underwater salvage survey conducted in recent weeks with the assistance of many divers from the Israel Antiquities Authority and volunteers using advanced equipment discovered numerous items that had been part of the ship’s cargo.

Many of the artifacts are made of bronze and are in an extraordinary state of preservation: a bronze lamp depicting the image of the sun-god Sol, a figurine of the moon goddess Luna, a lamp in the image of the head of an African slave, fragments of three life-size bronze-cast statues, objects fashioned in the shape of animals: a whale, and a bronze faucet in the shape of a wild boar with a swan on its head. Fragments of large jars were found that were used for carrying drinking water for the crew on the ship. One of the biggest surprises was the discovery of two metallic lumps composed of thousands of coins weighing about 45 lbs., Shaped like the pottery vessel in which they had been stored.

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Lumps of coins that were discovered at sea, weighing a total of c. 20 kilograms. Photographic credit: Clara Amit, courtesy of the Israel Antiquities Authority.

This discovery comes a year after the exposure by divers and the IAA of a treasure of gold Fatimid coins, which is currently on public display at the “Time Travel” presentations in Caesarea harbor.

According to Jacob Sharvit, director of the Marine Archaeology Unit of the Israel Antiquities Authority and Dror Planer, deputy director of the unit, “These are extremely exciting finds, which, apart from their extraordinary beauty, are of historical significance. The location and distribution of the ancient finds on the seabed indicate that a large merchant ship was carrying a cargo of metal slated for recycling, and apparently encountered a storm at the entrance to the harbor and drifted until it smashed into the seawall and the rocks.”

A preliminary study of the iron anchors suggests there was an attempt to stop the drifting vessel before it reached shore by casting anchors into the sea; however, these broke – evidence of the power of the waves and the wind which the ship was caught up in.

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Fragment of a life-size head of a statue. Photographic credit: Clara Amit, courtesy of the Israel Antiquities Authority.

Sharvit and Planer stress that “a marine assemblage such as this has not been found in Israel in the past thirty years. Metal statues are rare archaeological finds because they were always melted down and recycled in antiquity. When we find bronze artifacts it usually happens at sea. Because these statues were wrecked together with the ship, they sank in the water and were thus ‘saved’ from the recycling process.” Sharvit and Planer added that, “in the many marine excavations that have been carried out in Caesarea only a very small number of bronze statues have been found, whereas in the current cargo a wealth of spectacular statues were found that had been in the city and were removed from it by way of the sea. The sand protected the statues; consequently they are in an amazing state of preservation – as though they were cast yesterday rather than 1,600 years ago.”

11A figurine of the moon goddess Luna. Photographic credit: Clara Amit, courtesy of the Israel Antiquities Authority.

The coins that were discovered bear the image of the emperor Constantine who ruled the Western Roman Empire (312–324 CE) and was later known as Constantine the Great, ruler of the Roman Empire (324–337 CE) & of Licinius, an emperor who ruled the eastern part of the Roman Empire and was a rival of Constantine, until his downfall in the 324 CE Battle of Adrianople that was waged between the two rulers. Following the battle at Adrianople, Constantine moved to besiege Byzantium.

12 The ship’s anchor as it was discovered in the sea. Photographic credit: the Marine Archaeology Unit of the Israel Antiquities Authority.

According to Sharvit, “In recent years we have witnessed many random discoveries in the harbor at Caesarea. These finds are the result of two major factors: the absence of sand on the seabed causing the exposure of ancient artifacts, and an increase in the number of divers at the site. In this particular instance, the divers demonstrated good citizenship and are deserving of praise. They will be awarded a certificate of appreciation and invited to tour the storerooms of the National Treasures. By reporting the discovery of the marine assemblage to the IAA they have made it possible for all of us to enjoy these spectacular remains from antiquity.”

13 Exemplary citizenship: the divers, Ran Feinstein (right) and Ofer Ra‘anan after the discovery. Photographic credit: Old Caesarea Diving Center

The Rothschild Caesarea Foundation is a major supporter of the conservation and development of the secrets of ancient Caesarea throughout the ages. The Israel Antiquities Authority, the Nature and Parks Authority and the Caesarea Development Corporation continue working intensively on major projects around the harbor. Michael Kersenti, director-general of the Caesarea Development Corporation, notes that the recent discoveries “reiterate the uniqueness of Caesarea as an ancient port city with a history and cultural heritage that continues to surprise us, as parts of the mysteries of its past are revealed in the sea and on land. These & the cultural treasures which will be discovered in the future will be made available for viewing by the numerous visitors who come to Caesarea each year.”

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Divers Discover ‘Spectacular’ Cargo of Ancient Shipwreck in Caesarea Harbor

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