In-Depth Issues:
Poll: Over Half of Arab Israelis Feel Sense of "Shared Destiny" with Jews - Gianluca Pacchiani ( Times of Israel) 51.6% of Arab Israelis feel that the prolonged war against Hamas in Gaza has given rise to a sense of "shared destiny" between Arab and Jewish citizens of Israel, according to a recent survey by the Moshe Dayan Center at Tel Aviv University. Arik Rudnitzky, Director of the Konrad Adenauer Program for Jewish-Arab Cooperation, who led the survey, said that for "Israel's Arab citizens... sympathizing with Palestinians in Gaza is not the same as identifying with their political leadership." "In fact, a significant part of the survey's respondents believe that local elements in Gaza , and not Hamas, should govern life in Gaza after the war, and another third say that a non-Palestinian body should do this." Only 15% said Hamas should run Gaza.
India Is Providing Military Assistance to Israel - Itamar Eichner ( Ynet News) India has been providing significant military assistance to Israel since Oct. 7. Indian media reported in February that India was supplying Israel with advanced Hermes 900 drones manufactured in Hyderabad in a factory established by Israel to supply these drones to the Indian military. Twenty drones were converted specifically for the IDF due to the shortage created during the war. India has also supplied Israel with artillery shells and other weapons since the start of the war. "The Indians always remind us that Israel was there for them during the Kargil War," says Daniel Carmon, former Israeli ambassador to India, referring to India's military conflict with Pakistan in 1999. "Israel was one of the few countries that stood by them and provided them with weapons. The Indians don't forget this and might now be returning the favor."
Columbia Administrators Exchange Hostile Text Messages during Alumni Reunion Panel on Jewish Life - Eliana Johnson ( Washington Free Beacon) On May 31, several top members of the Columbia University administration attended a panel discussion about Jewish life at Columbia. Throughout the panel, Susan Chang-Kim, the vice dean and chief administrative officer of Columbia College, was texting her colleagues about the proceedings with mockery and vitriol, dismissing claims of antisemitism. Matthew Patashnick, the associate dean for student and family support, suggested that Jewish figures on campus were exploiting the moment for "fundraising potential." Chang-Kim also used vomit emojis to describe an op-ed about antisemitism by Columbia's campus rabbi. The text messages were captured by an audience member sitting behind Chang-Kim who photographed the messages. See also 3 Columbia Deans Placed on Leave Over Conduct at Antisemitism Panel - Hurubie Meko ( New York Times)
Catching the BBC Pushing Fake News ( David Collier) On June 21, the BBC published a story about how Gaza's water system is broken - and how it is crippling children and making them sick. On the 19th, it published a story about how Gazan children are living "alongside rotting rubbish and rodents." On the 18th, there was a story about "a desperate mother's plea to feed her baby." It's the same story packaged 1000 different ways, as the BBC pushes out empty, skewed and fact-free propaganda articles like a drumbeat. The latest article about the water system contained images of healthy-looking parents sitting next to extremely s ick children in hospital beds. Parents who clearly eat well do not let their children suffer from famine. Something else is at play. BBC ran an image of a broken child - Yunis Jumaa - next to his healthy-looking mum, who informed readers: "when he developed this malnutrition and dehyration, he became as you see him now." Yet just before the BBC published their story, Canadia CBC published the same photo, noting that Yunis had quadriplegic spastic cerebral palsy.
Israel's Birth Rate Remains Highest in OECD ( Times of Israel) Israel's birth rate remains the highes t among countries in the 38-member Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, according to an OECD report released on Thursday. Israel's fertility rate is 2.9 children per woman, followed by Mexico and France with 1.8 children. Israel's rate is almost twice the OECD average of 1.5.
Study Shows Israeli Teens Excel at "Creative Thinking" - Gavriel Fiske ( Times of Israel) The percentage of Israeli 15-year-olds who excel at "creative thinking" is among the highest in the world, according to the 2022 Creative Thinking Assessment, an international study of 63 countries, released on June 18. 30% of Israeli students rated "excellent" in creative thinking, compared to the OECD average of 27%. The study found that among Hebrew speakers, 35% were rated "excellent," one of the highest rates in the study. "Creativity is the ability to bring up multiple ideas and solutions," explained Prof. Anat Zohar, Chair for Integrated Studies in Education at Hebrew University. In Israel, "there is a tendency to think out of the box, to be creative about things, to look at different angles and look for different solutions." "There is something about Israeli culture that encourages wide, divergent creative thinking," Zohar said.
|
| News Resources - North America, Europe, and Asia: - U.S. Says It Would Back Israel in War Against Hizbullah - M.J. Lee
Senior U.S. officials told visiting Israeli officials that if a full-out war breaks out with Hizbullah on Israel's northern border, the Biden administration is fully prepared to back its ally. (CNN) - Thousands of Iran-Backed Fighters Offer to Join Hizbullah in Its Fight Against Israel - Bassem Mroue
Hizbullah leader Hassan Nasrallah said Wednesday that militant leaders from Iran, Iraq, Syria, Yemen and other countries have offered to send tens of thousands of fighters to help Hizbullah, but he said the group already has more than 100,000 fighters. Thousands of Iran-backed fighters from around the region are already deployed in Syria. Eran Etzion, former head of policy planning for the Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said Thursday that there could be intervention by the Houthis and Iraqi militias and a "massive flow of jihadists from (places) including Afghanistan, Pakistan" into Lebanon and into Syrian areas bordering Israel. (AP-Washington Post)
News Resources - Israel and the Mideast: - Netanyahu: I Tried Addressing "Diminution" of U.S. Weapons Privately before Going Public - Jacob Magid
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Friday in an interview that he had tried to resolve the issue of the Biden administration withholding weapons shipments to Israel privately for months with no success. "We tried, in many, many quiet conversations between our of ficials and American officials, and between me and the president to try to iron out this diminution of supply. I felt that airing it was absolutely necessary after months of quiet conversation that did not solve the problem." After Netanyahu issued a video statement on Tuesday slamming the "inconceivable...bottlenecks" that the U.S. had placed in transferring weapons and ammunition, the Biden administration insisted it had no idea what Netanyahu was talking about. Netanyahu responded that he was prepared to incur criticism as long as Israel "receives the ammo it needs from the U.S. in an existential war." Netanyahu said that "I'm not talking about F-35s or F-16s that are years down the line. I'm talking about what is necessary now to both win the war in Gaza quickly and avoid a war in Lebanon that - in the absence of such a correction - the risks of it breaking out are increasing....I think it could be solved instantaneously with goodwill. It could be solved right away." Netanyahu added that a component of Gaza's post-war stabilization would be "some kind of deradicalization process that would begin in the schools and the mosques to teach these people a different future than the one of annihilating Israel and killing every Jew on the planet." (Times of Israel) - Israeli Murdered in Palestinian City - Raanan Ben-Zur
Amnon Muchtar, 67, was shot dead in the West Bank city of Qalqilya on Saturday. Following the shooting, assailants set fire to his car. (Ynet News)
Global Commentary and Think-Tank Analysis: Observations:
- Reports in the New York Times and the Washington Post in recent months have routinely noted that Palestinians are starving. Indeed, the notion that there was a genuine shortage of food in Gaza motivated President Joe Biden to order the U.S. Armed Forces to construct a floating pier and anchor it alongside the Gazan shoreline to facilitate the flow of vital supplies to those in need.
- On the strength of these allegations, the International Criminal Court has requested warrants for the arrest of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, largely because of the claim that they are committing war crimes by deliberately starving the Palestinians.
- But what if there is no famine? The UN's own Famine Review Committee admitted in a June 4 report that the claims about not enough food being sent into Gaza were untrue. Faulty data was being used to justify claims of a Gaza famine. If there are food distribution problems in Gaza - and, obviously, an area of an ongoing military conflict set off by Hamas's Oct. 7 attacks on Israel is going to experience disruptions - it is not due to a shortage of food. The amount of items being shipped into Gaza from Israel is, as studies show, clearly sufficient to feed the people of Gaza.
- Israel's efforts to keep aid flowing into Gaza are unprecedented in the history of armed conflict. It is a given that warring powers are not responsible for feeding their enemies, especially people under the control of hostile combatants. Even the U.S. has acknowledged that few of the supplies that had entered Gaza via the floating pier had reached their intended recipients.
- In wartime, food distribution networks are inevitably disrupted. But if Palestinians are suffering, then it's nothin g short of libelous to blame Israel for it. From the start of the war, armed Hamas operatives have hijacked most of the deliveries. In addition, gangs of smugglers - most of which are likely affiliated with the various terrorist movements - have also commandeered aid shipments.
- Then why are so many media outlets, international organizations and the Biden administration still talking about starvation and putting the onus on Israel for this largely fictional catastrophe? Inflating the predicament of Palestinians in Gaza into a famine must be seen as the latest in a long list of falsehoods that have been flung at the Jewish state since Oct. 7 by the anti-Israel media chorus that has faithfully repeated every lie spread by the Hamas propaganda machine.
- Every death and all of the privations suffered by Palestinian Arabs since Oct. 7 is the responsibility of the Hamas terrorists who started this war. The claim that Israel is starving the Palestinians should be seen for what it is: a 21st-century blood libel.
|