A place to post and discuss news related to the recent events in Israel, including the Hamas/Islamic Jihad incursion and repercussions.
Okay, fresh start here as the situation in the Middle East and the world continues to circle the drain.
I'd like us to be able to continue *CIVIL* discussions of events as they progress, until such a time as the crises end in the Middle East, or we need a Third World War thread (which, of course, get your posts in quickly before the end).
Consider the scope widened to areas of conflict in North Africa, East Africa, the Arabian Peninsula, the Middle East, Turkey, Iran, India and related seas, oceans and canals. And I can't believe I'm writing this.
It's all going.... well it's going.
What Many Americans Misunderstand About Israel’s Unrest (The Atlantic Paywall)
Israel's former leader says Netanyahu should either reform his coalition or resign
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced on Monday that he would postpone a vote on a controversial overhaul of the country's judiciary until after parliament returns from recess at the end of April.
The move follows three months of massive protests that escalated in recent days, with labor strikes disrupting hospitals and airports and some military reservists skipping their duties — collectively raising all kinds of security concerns.
Among the thousands of protesters was one of Netanyahu's predecessors: Former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who served in the role from 2006 to 2009.
Olmert went on to spend over a year in jail on corruption charges, though he consistently has maintained his innocence. Netanyahu himself is currently on trial for three criminal cases alleging corruption — a large part of why his proposed judicial reforms are so controversial.
Olmert, who has led centrist parties in the past but says he's now retired from politics, is an outspoken opponent of Netanyahu. Last November an Israeli court found him guilty of defamation over remarks he had made about his successor the previous year. He continued his criticisms in a Tuesday interview with Morning Edition's Michel Martin.
Speaking from Tel Aviv, Olmert said that while Netanyahu was "forced to compromise temporarily" under significant pressure, the struggle was far from over.
Israel and Israel-with-a-goatee seem evenly matched in power.
*sighs*
Ah, Foucault's boomerang, we meet again.
Israel passes law stripping Supreme Court of power
Nothing says stable democracy like stripping courts of power.
Israel passes law stripping Supreme Court of power
Nothing says stable democracy like stripping courts of power.
On one hand, that is bad. On the other hand, we could use some of that shit here in The States.
farley3k wrote:Israel passes law stripping Supreme Court of power
Nothing says stable democracy like stripping courts of power.
On one hand, that is bad. On the other hand, we could use some of that shit here in The States.
If the US just made the House of Rep match population as it was supposed to, and got dark money out of politics I think that would do more than stripping the court of power.
farley3k wrote:Israel passes law stripping Supreme Court of power
Nothing says stable democracy like stripping courts of power.
On one hand, that is bad. On the other hand, we could use some of that shit here in The States.
Most of us genXers and older millenials will probably not outlive the trump appointees to see this happen (also, America’s expiration date can likely be measured in decades, not centuries) but don’t think for a second the right wouldn’t do exactly this if the SCOTUS shifted to a 6/3 progressive majority.
"We are at war", Netanyahu declares after surprise attack on Israel by Hamas
Israel was struck by a surprise attack by Hamas early Saturday morning in one of the most serious escalations in years between Israel and the Islamist militant group. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared the country was “at war."
Israel launched retaliatory air strikes on targets in Gaza.
The massive assault by Hamas combined a barrage of rockets fired from the Gaza Strip into Israel and dozens of heavily armed gunmen attacking the country’s south from Gaza. At least 22 Israelis have been killed in the attack with more than 250 wounded, Israel’s ambulance service said, according to media reports. The toll was expected to rise.
“We are at war, and we will win,” Netanyahu said in a message to Israelis.
So do I, but that's not happening before a LOT more people die.
Israel attack: PM says Israel at war after 100 killed in attack from Gaza
At least 100 people have been killed in Israel after Palestinian militant group Hamas launched its biggest attack in years.
Militants crossed into Israel from Gaza under the cover of heavy rocket fire - and have since taken dozens of Israelis captive.
Some hostages - both soldiers and civilians - were taken back to Gaza.
Israel has responded with a wave of air strikes on targets in Gaza killing 198 people, Palestinian officials say.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel was "at war" and vowed that Hamas, the militant group that rules Gaza, will "pay a price it has never known".
"This morning Hamas launched a murderous surprise attack against the state of Israel and its citizens," he said.
This is one of the most serious escalations in the Israel-Palestinian conflict in years.
The attack by Hamas saw fighters cross the perimeter fence at just after dawn. At the same time, barrages of rockets were launched from Gaza - some reaching as far as the cities of Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.
How the gunmen managed to penetrate one of the most heavily fortified borders in the world is unclear.
The Israeli military has said dozens of fighter jets are carrying out air strikes on Hamas sites in Gaza, and it has hit 17 Hamas military compounds. It also said it has mobilised tens of thousands of reservists.
The Palestinian health ministry says 198 people have been killed in Israeli strikes. and another 1,610 have been wounded.
Israeli bombs destroyed an 11-story tower in downtown Gaza City which houses Hamas radio stations in the rooftop.
Medical aid group Medecins Sans Frontieres said a nurse and an ambulance driver were killed in Israeli strikes on two hospitals in Gaza.
Reuters news agency reported Israel's energy minister, Israel Katz, as saying that Israel will cut off Gaza's electricity supply.
How did Israeli intelligence fail to stop major attack from Gaza?
"We have no idea how this could have happened."
That is the reaction Israeli officials have been giving today when I ask them how, with all its vast resources, Israeli intelligence did not see this attack coming.
Dozens of armed Palestinian gunmen were able to cross the heavily fortified border between Israel and the Gaza Strip, while thousands of rockets were fired from Gaza into Israel.
With the combined efforts of Shin Bet, Israeli domestic intelligence, Mossad, its external spy agency and all the assets of the Israel Defense Forces, it is frankly astounding that nobody saw this coming.
Or if they did, they failed to act on it.
Israel has arguably the most extensive and well-funded intelligence services in the Middle East.
It has informants and agents inside Palestinian militant groups, as well as in Lebanon, Syria and elsewhere.
It has, in the past, carried out precisely timed assassinations of militant leaders, knowing all their movements intimately.
Sometimes these have been done with drone strikes, after agents have placed a GPS tracker on an individual's car; sometimes in the past it has even used exploding mobile phones.
On the ground, along the tense border fence between Gaza and Israel there are cameras, ground-motion sensors and regular army patrols.
The barbed-wire topped fence is supposed to have been a "smart barrier" to prevent exactly the sort of infiltration that has taken place in this attack.
Yet the militants of Hamas simply bulldozed their way through it, cut holes in the wire or entered Israel from the sea and by paraglider.
To prepare for and carry out such a coordinated, complex attack involving the stockpiling and firing of thousands of rockets, right under the noses of the Israelis, must have taken extraordinary levels of operational security by Hamas.
I kind of get the impression that Mossad may have been resting on its laurels for too long.
I think the confluence of interests between Netanyahu, Iran, Putin, and Hamas is an interesting one here. All stand to benefit from this. All are authoritarians with little to no regard for the methods with which they achieve power. I have a hard time believing mossad was this blindsided. This smells like Netanyahu’s Moscow theater moment.
I've been having the same thoughts but wasn't sure if it was because I just finished watching season 1 of The Diplomat the night before.
50th anniversary of the Yom Kippur war. That can't be a coincidence.
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