organization:israeli government

  • Le manuel de propagande israélien n’est plus confidentiel...

    Israel-Gaza conflict: The secret report that helps Israelis to hide facts - Comment - Voices - The Independent

    http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment

    Israeli spokesmen have their work cut out explaining how they have killed more than 1,000 Palestinians in Gaza, most of them civilians, compared with just three civilians killed in Israel by Hamas rocket and mortar fire. But on television and radio and in newspapers, Israeli government spokesmen such as Mark Regev appear slicker and less aggressive than their predecessors, who were often visibly indifferent to how many Palestinians were killed.
    There is a reason for this enhancement of the PR skills of Israeli spokesmen. Going by what they say, the playbook they are using is a professional, well-researched and confidential study on how to influence the media and public opinion in America and Europe. Written by the expert Republican pollster and political strategist Dr Frank Luntz, the study was commissioned five years ago by a group called The Israel Project, with offices in the US and Israel, for use by those “who are on the front lines of fighting the media war for Israel”.

    Every one of the 112 pages in the booklet is marked “not for distribution or publication” and it is easy to see why. The Luntz report, officially entitled "The Israel project’s 2009 Global Language Dictionary, was leaked almost immediately to Newsweek Online, but its true importance has seldom been appreciated. It should be required reading for everybody, especially journalists, interested in any aspect of Israeli policy because of its “dos and don’ts” for Israeli spokesmen.

    These are highly illuminating about the gap between what Israeli officials and politicians really believe, and what they say, the latter shaped in minute detail by polling to determine what Americans want to hear. Certainly, no journalist interviewing an Israeli spokesman should do so without reading this preview of many of the themes and phrases employed by Mr Regev and his colleagues.

    Mark Regev The booklet is full of meaty advice about how they should shape their answers for different audiences. For example, the study says that “Americans agree that Israel ’has a right to defensible borders’. But it does you no good to define exactly what those borders should be. Avoid talking about borders in terms of pre- or post-1967, because it only serves to remind Americans of Israel’s military history. Particularly on the left this does you harm. For instance, support for Israel’s right to defensible borders drops from a heady 89 per cent to under 60 per cent when you talk about it in terms of 1967.”

    How about the right of return for Palestinian refugees who were expelled or fled in 1948 and in the following years, and who are not allowed to go back to their homes? Here Dr Luntz has subtle advice for spokesmen, saying that “the right of return is a tough issue for Israelis to communicate effectively because much of Israeli language sounds like the ’separate but equal’ words of the 1950s segregationists and the 1980s advocates of Apartheid. The fact is, Americans don’t like, don’t believe and don’t accept the concept of ’separate but equal’.”

    So how should spokesmen deal with what the booklet admits is a tough question? They should call it a “demand”, on the grounds that Americans don’t like people who make demands. “Then say ’Palestinians aren’t content with their own state. Now they’re demanding territory inside Israel’.” Other suggestions for an effective Israeli response include saying that the right of return might become part of a final settlement “at some point in the future”.

    Dr Luntz notes that Americans as a whole are fearful of mass immigration into the US, so mention of “mass Palestinian immigration” into Israel will not go down well with them. If nothing else works, say that the return of Palestinians would “derail the effort to achieve peace”.

    The Luntz report was written in the aftermath of Operation Cast Lead in December 2008 and January 2009, when 1,387 Palestinians and nine Israelis were killed.

    There is a whole chapter on “isolating Iran-backed Hamas as an obstacle to peace”. Unfortunately, come the current Operation Protective Edge, which began on 6 July, there was a problem for Israeli propagandists because Hamas had quarrelled with Iran over the war in Syria and had no contact with Tehran. Friendly relations have been resumed only in the past few days – thanks to the Israeli invasion.❞

  • #Hamas to respect 24-hour #truce if Israeli soldiers leave #Gaza
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/hamas-respect-24-hour-truce-if-israeli-soldiers-leave-gaza

    Israel’s security cabinet approved extending the humanitarian #ceasefire begun early on Saturday until midnight local time (2100 GMT) on Sunday, an Israeli government official said, while Hamas said it would respect the truce if #occupation forces left Gaza. “At the request of the United Nations, the cabinet has approved a humanitarian hiatus until tomorrow (Sunday) at 24:00. The (Israel army) will act against any breach of the ceasefire,” the official, who was not named, said in a statement. read more

    #Israel #Palestinian

    • Message to journalists in Gaza from the Israeli Government Press Office which I reproduce without comment
      http://www.twitlonger.com/show/n_1s2hmr9

      (...) The GPO is doing everything in its power to provide the foreign press with timely information and to facilitate access.

      Nevertheless, we wish to stress that Gaza and its vicinity are a battleground. Covering the hostilities exposes journalists to life-threatening danger (and involves risk to equipment).

      As part of Hamas’ strategy of hiding behind the civilian population it has frequently exploited journalists as human shields, deliberately putting them at risk of injury or death.

      Israel is not in any way responsible for injury or damage that may occur as a result of field reporting.

      The GPO advises the members of the press to take every possible precaution. Journalists in need of assistance should contact the GPO to facilitate expedited passage from the Erez crossing.

      Be safe in your mission.

    • Israël appelle les journalistes étrangers à la prudence
      http://www.zonebourse.com/actualite-bourse/Israel-appelle-les-journalistes-etrangers-a-la-prudence--18763595

      Le bureau de presse du gouvernement israélien a averti samedi les journalistes étrangers qu’il n’était pas responsable de leur sécurité dans la bande de Gaza, où l’armée israélienne mène depuis jeudi soir une opération terrestre.

      « Gaza et ses alentours sont un champ de bataille. Couvrir les hostilités expose les journalistes à un danger qui peut être mortel », précise le bureau de presse dans un communiqué.

      « Israël n’est en aucun cas responsable des blessures ou des dégâts qui pourraient résulter de reportages sur le terrain. »

      Depuis le 8 juillet, les bombardements puis l’opération terrestre menée par Tsahal dans la bande de Gaza ont fait 336 morts côté palestinien, en majorité des civils. Les Israéliens ont eu cinq morts, trois militaires et deux civils. (Maayan Lubell, Guy Kerivel pour le service français)

  • « Top Obama official blasts Israel for denying Palestinians sovereignty, security, dignity »

    https://t.e2ma.net/webview/t6dqj/b87aa7dc243c297c721b77c383942cd6

    C’est une position assez rare et assez violente de la part d’un officiel américain et ça mérite d’être signalé, même si ça n’aura probablement aucun impact sur la manière dont Israël conduit son actuelle politique.

    Israel’s ongoing occupation of the West Bank is wrong and leads to regional instability and dehumanization of Palestinians, a top American government official said Tuesday in Tel Aviv, hinting that the current Israeli government is not committed to peace.

  • African Migrants Forcibly Removed From Encampment Near Israeli-Egyptian Border

    Hundreds of African migrants were forcibly removed from a makeshift encampment near the Israeli-Egyptian border today where they were protesting their treatment at an Israeli detention camp.

    https://news.vice.com/article/african-migrants-forcibly-removed-from-encampment-near-israeli-egyptian-b

    #migration #asile #réfugiés #Israël #Egypte #camps #détention #rétention #manifestation #protestation

  • In Their Silence, Israeli Academics Collude With #Occupation - The Chronicle Review - The Chronicle of Higher Education
    http://chronicle.com/article/In-Their-Silence-Israeli/146815

    Most academics around the world know very little about the fact that since the early 2000s, the Israeli government has prohibited Palestinian residents of Gaza from studying in the occupied West Bank—despite the fact that many programs, including preparation for vital medical and paramedical professions, are simply unavailable in the Gaza Strip. They are unaware how the Israeli military continues to obstruct academic studies in the occupied territories. In late January, for example, soldiers entered the Al-Quds University campus in Arab Jerusalem, breaking doors and terrifying students and professors.

    #Israël #Palestine

  • Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters and Nick Mason: Why Rolling Stones shouldn’t play in Israel - Salon.com
    http://www.salon.com/2014/05/01/pink_floyds_roger_waters_and_nick_mason_why_rolling_stones_shouldnt_play_in_i

    With the recent news that the Rolling Stones will be playing their first-ever concert in Israel, and at what is a critical time in the global struggle for Palestinian freedom and equal rights, we, the two surviving founders of Pink Floyd, have united in support of Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS), a growing, nonviolent global human rights movement initiated by Palestinian civil society in 2005 to end Israel’s occupation, racial discrimination and denial of basic Palestinian rights.

    The BDS movement is modeled on the successful nonviolent movements that helped end Jim Crow in the American South and apartheid in South Africa. Indeed, key figures who led the South African freedom struggle, like Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Mandela’s close associate, Ahmed Kathrada, have come out in support of BDS for Palestinian rights. BDS offers us all a way to nonviolently pressure the Israeli government to fully realize that its injustices against the Palestinian people are legally and morally unacceptable and unsustainable.

    The movement does not advocate a particular political framework — one state or two — and neither do we. Rather, we call for a resolution that upholds freedom, justice and equal rights for all, irrespective of identity, and does not cause additional suffering for either people.

    So, to the bands that intend to play Israel in 2014, we urge you to reconsider. Playing Israel now is the moral equivalent of playing Sun City at the height of South African apartheid; regardless of your intentions, crossing the picket line provides propaganda that the Israeli government will use in its attempts to whitewash the policies of its unjust and racist regime.

    #BDS #Rolling_Stones #Pink_Floyd #Roger_Waters

    • Les Pink Floyd aux Rolling Stones : « Ne jouez pas pour l’Apartheid ! »
      Ali Abunimah
      http://www.info-palestine.net/spip.php?article14528

      Cet appel a également été partagé par des milliers de médias sociaux et a recueilli beaucoup d’attention sur la page Facebook de Roger Waters avec près de 10 000 like et 800 commentaires.

      Mais un grand nombre de commentaires, venus apparemment d’internautes israéliens, sont extrêmement violents contre Waters et les Palestiniens et sont pour beaucoup islamophobes.

      Toutefois, ceci révèle combien de nombreux Israéliens sont devenus sensibles face aux appels pour que leur État ​​subisse les conséquences de ses violations systématiques des droits de millions de Palestiniens.

  • Israel’s War on African Refugees

    Exactly two years (this Saturday) after then-20-year-old Haim Mola, and a group of his fellow Jewish Israelis firebombed the homes of several African families and an African nursery in Tel Aviv, their acts of terrorism can be considered unqualified successes in terms of influencing the Israeli government’s agenda. Rather than punishing them for their actions, the state has rewarded the group by implementing public policies that support its racist agenda. In the past twenty-four months, Israel has deported thousands of non-Jewish Africans from the country and the Netanyahu government has declared that it will not rest until the remaining 50,000 are expelled, as well.

    In a country where human rights are respected and racist violence is abhorred, such despicable acts would have been punished severely. Elected leaders would have expressed solidarity with the community under attack and publicly proclaimed the terrorists’ professed goals— the expulsion of all non-Jewish Africans — would never be achieved.

    But, Israel is no such country. Here, the human rights of non-Jewish Africans are not respected, because a majority of Jewish Israelis do not view them as humans deserving of rights, but rather as a form of “cancer”. Here, racist violence against non-Jewish Africans is not abhorred; in fact, according to a survey by the Israel Democracy Institute, a third of Jewish Israelis openly support such actions.

    An Israeli court released the terrorist Haim Mola eight months after his rampage without sentencing him to a single day in jail. The same month, the Israeli government deported the man who ran the firebombed nursery back to Africa.

    Although I have been reporting on Israel’s war on Africans for the past four years, the issue has received only scant attention in the mainstream media. Therefore, I decided this year to travel to North America for a one month tour of communities and college campuses to raise awareness about the plight of non-Jewish African asylum-seekers in Israel.

    The video featured below is a recording of one of my stops on this cross-continental tour, at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada. In this 72-minute presentation (which includes a slideshow), I examine the causes of Israel’s African refugee crisis and document in detail the horrific depths the Israeli state has unashamedly plumbed to achieve its goal of ethno-religious purity.

    http://muftah.org/israels-war-african-refugees

    #Israël #réfugiés #asile #migration

  • U.S. officials angry: Israel doesn’t back stance on Russia
    Haaretz By Barak Ravid | Apr. 13, 2014
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.585333

    White House and State Department officials in Washington have built up a great deal of anger over Jerusalem’s “neutrality” regarding Russia’s invasion of the Crimean Peninsula. Senior figures in the Obama administration have expressed great disappointment with the lack of support from Israel for the American position on the Ukraine crisis and with the fact that the Israeli government puts its relations with the United States and with Russia on the same plane.

    One senior U.S. official noted that one of the reasons for the anger in the White House was Israel’s absence from the UN General Assembly vote about two weeks ago on a resolution censuring the Russian invasion and expressing support for the territorial integrity of Ukraine.

    “We have been consulting closely on Ukraine not only with our partners and allies around the world," a senior U.S. official told Haaretz. "Obviously we are looking to the entire international community to condemn Russia’s actions and to support Ukraine, so we were surprised to see that Israel did not join the large majority of countries that voted to support Ukraine’s territorial integrity at the United Nations.”

  • #Israel cancels Palestinian prisoner release
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/israel-cancels-palestinian-prisoner-release

    Updated at 12:25 pm: Israel has told the Palestinians it will not be making the fourth release of prisoners they had been expecting alongside US-brokered #peace_talks, a senior Palestinian official said Friday. “The Israeli government has informed us through the American mediator that it will not abide with its commitment to release the fourth batch of Palestinian prisoners scheduled for tomorrow, Saturday 29,” Jibril Rajub told AFP. “Israel has refused to commit to the names that were agreed upon of prisoners held by Israel since before the 1993 Oslo agreements,” Rajub said. read more

    #Palestine #Top_News

  • Under U.S. pressure, Israel issues first statement on Ukraine crisis -
    | Haaretz
    By Barak Ravid | Mar. 5, 2014
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.578197

    After pressure from the United States government, the Israeli government issued its first official statement on the crisis in Ukraine Wednesday night. In its laconic statement, Israel did not comment on the Russian invasion into Crimea but only underscored that it hopes the crisis will be solved peacefully.

    “Israel is following developments in Ukraine with great concern for the well-being of all its citizens, and hopes the situation does not deteriorate to the point of loss of life,” the statement read, which was published by Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman’s office. “Israel expects the crisis in Ukraine to be solved diplomatically and peacefully.”

    The statement was issued after a long silence by the government. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu refused to address the issue in recent days and Lieberman did not speak about it either. Jerusalem’s radio silence was especially conspicuous in light of the fact that most Western countries, especially U.S. allies, sharply criticized the Russian invasion and expressed support for Ukraine’s territorial sovereignty.

    A source at the Foreign Ministry noted that in recent days, the U.S. increased pressure on Israel to issue a statement, ahead of the meeting scheduled to take place in Rome on Thursday between Lieberman and his counterpart U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry.

    The statement was ultimately publicized just hours before Lieberman’s departure for Rome. It is unclear whether the terse statement, which was careful not to insult Russia or President Vladimir Putin, will satisfy the Americans.

    Kerry will also be meeting Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Rome.

  • Did Israeli apartheid wall really stop suicide bombings? | The Electronic Intifada

    http://electronicintifada.net/blogs/ben-white/did-israeli-apartheid-wall-really-stop-suicide-bombings

    The decision this Christmas by a prominent London church, St James’s of Piccadilly, to build a replica model of Israel’s apartheid wall as part of the festival “Bethlehem Unwrapped“ provoked a predictable hasbara — propaganda — offensive by the Israeli government and Zionist lobby groups.

    When Israel lobby group BICOM ”fellow” Alan Johnson appeared (from 37’40) on BBC Radio 4’s Sunday show last weekend to discuss the issue, he made two main points.

    #israel #palestine #mur #attentats_suicides

  • #Israel scolds Dutch envoy over bank #Boycott
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/israel-scolds-dutch-envoy-over-bank-boycott

    Israel on Friday summoned the Dutch ambassador to protest over a move by a Netherlands-based pension fund to divest from Israeli banks because of their dealings with illegal Jewish settlements built on internationally recognized occupied land. The decision by the fund, PGGM, reflects growing tensions between the Israeli government and the European Union over settlement building in the #west_bank and East Jerusalem, and heightened Israeli fears about a possible economic boycott gathering speed. read more

    #BDS #Divestment #Palestine #sanctions #Top_News

  • #African_refugees decry Israeli crackdown
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/photoblogs/african-refugees-decry-israeli-crackdown

    Tens of thousands of African migrants and asylum seekers took the streets from January 5 - 7 in #Tel_Aviv and other cities to protest #Israel's targeting of them.

    Thousands of African asylum seekers staged a protest in Tel Aviv on January 5, 2014 (Photo: AFP - Jack Guez) Thousands of African asylum seekers staged a protest in Tel Aviv on January 5, 2014 (Photo: AFP - Jack Guez)

    Thousands of African refugees slammed the Israeli government’s long-term detention of illegal immigrants. (Photo: AFP - Jack Guez) Thousands of African refugees slammed the Israeli government’s long-term detention of illegal immigrants. (...)

  • Are Israeli Universities Critics of or Collaborators with the Israeli Government?
    http://coreyrobin.com/2014/01/01/are-israeli-universities-critics-of-or-collaborators-with-the-israeli-go

    Critics of the ASA academic boycott often claim that the boycott is illegitimate because it targets Israeli universities, which are the site of some of the greatest criticism of the Israeli government and support for the Palestinian cause. As prominent scholar and former ASA president Shelley Fisher Fishkin said:

    Israeli universities are often at the forefront of fostering dialogue between Arabs and Jews, of educating the future leaders of Arab universities, and of providing the next generation with the tools of critical thinking that can allow them to construct a society more equitable and just than that of their parents.

    It’s a little more complicated.

    Here are just some of the facts about the Israeli academy that Fishkin failed to note but which eight professors in Indiana emphasized in their letter to the presidents of Purdue and Indiana University.

    – Israeli universities, like Hebrew University, have illegally built parts of their campuses in the occupied territories.

    – 20% of the Israeli population is Palestinian, yet only 11% of university students are Palestinian. (In the US, by contrast, which is no picnic for African Americans, the black population is 13.1%, while the black student population in universities is 14%.) Palestinian applicants to Israeli universities are three times more likely to be rejected than Jewish applicants. 32% of Jewish applicants meeting minimal requirements are accepted into Israeli universities, while only 19% of Palestinian students meeting those requirements are accepted.

    – 20% of the Israeli population is Palestinian, yet only 1% of the university staff is Palestinian.

    – In 2008, a petition for academic freedom in the occupied territories was sent to about 9,000 Israeli academics. It was signed by 407 professors, about 4.5% of the total.

    In the United States, professors have a reputation for being far more radical than they are. Seems like the same may be true in Israel.

    #bds #discrimination #universités #collaborateurs #Israël

    • Un tournant dans le monde universitaire ? Par Omar Barghouti
      par Omar Barghouti
      http://www.bdsfrance.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2911%3Aun-tournant-dans-le-m

      « Ce qui semblait impossible il y a seulement un an semble désormais possible », m’écrivait un universitaire impliqué dans la ratification d’un boycott universitaire d’Israël par l’American Studies Association (ASA), juste après le vote en faveur du boycott par les membres de l’ASA. En réponse à un référendum organisé par le Conseil national de l’ASA auprès de ses membres, 66 % des votants ont validé la résolution.

      Indépendamment, mais au même moment, la Native American and Indigenous Studies Association (NAISA) a annoncé le soutien unanime de son conseil élu au boycott universitaire (http://naisa.org).

      Ceci, joint à plusieurs autres développements cette année dans la lutte globale en faveur des droits palestiniens, conduit à la conclusion que le mouvement de Boycott, désinvestissement et sanctions (BDS) atteint un tournant, en particulier dans le monde académique et culturel.

  • Israel accelerates controversial park project | Maan News Agency
    http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=647601

    Israel accelerates controversial park project
    Published today (updated) 15/11/2013 10:33
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    JERUSALEM (AFP) — The Israeli government has accelerated a project for a national park between two Palestinian villages near annexed east Jerusalem to stop Palestinians building in the area, Israeli daily Haaretz reported Thursday.

    The project, which authorities say is aimed at preserving the environment on the slopes of Mount Scopus, was announced at the end of October along with the construction of a further 1,500 homes in the east Jerusalem settlement of Ramat Shlomo.

    Haaretz quoted an employee of Israel’s Nature and Parks Authority as saying the project’s real but unstated aim is to block Palestinian construction between the villages of Issawiya and al-Tur.

    The newspaper did not provide any details on how the project was being speeded up, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office could not immediately be reached for comment.

  • In Syria, Israel finds a ’blessed war’€™
    http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2013/9/14/in-syria-israel-findsaablessedwara.html

    So why has the Israeli government expended so much energy pressing Washington to draw a red line on the Assad regime’s alleged use of chemical weapons, and why was the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), the key outfit of America’s pro-Israel lobby, pressing Congress to authorize military force? The answer is not just about Syria. Indeed, in a press release calling for U.S. intervention, AIPAC homed in not on Damascus but Tehran, stating, “As we witness unthinkable horror in Syria, the urgency of stopping Iran’s nuclear ambitions is paramount.”

    Zalman Shoval, a former Israeli ambassador to Washington and Netanyahu confidant, put it more succinctly when he declared, “The very fact that the U.S. was getting ready to act militarily in Syria is positive with regards to the situation in Iran. Confidence in an American commitment that Iran won’t get the bomb has been strengthened.”

    Since Obama’s decision to seek congressional authorization for a military strike on Syria, Israeli media have depicted him as a weak, dithering figure who has failed to demonstrate “seriousness” in the face of evil. With U.S. missile strikes on hold, and possibly off the table, the Israeli government has begun disseminating threats that it will take matters into its own hands — by bombing Iran, not Syria.

    But even if the U.S. fails to intervene, the Israelis can take heart in knowing that the “blessed war” will continue well into the future.

  • Exclusive: Does Israel Have Chemical Weapons Too? - By Matthew M. Aid | Foreign Policy
    http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/09/09/does_israel_have_chemical_weapons_too

    A newly discovered CIA document indicates that Israel likely built up a chemical arsenal of its own.

    (...)

    Reports have circulated in arms control circles for almost 20 years that Israel secretly manufactured a stockpile of chemical and biological weapons to complement its nuclear arsenal. Much of the attention has been focused on the research and development work being conducted at the Israeli government’s secretive Israel Institute for Biological Research at Ness Ziona, located 20 kilometers south of Tel Aviv.

    But little, if any, hard evidence has ever been published to indicate that Israel possesses a stockpile of chemical or biological weapons. This secret 1983 CIA intelligence estimate may be the strongest indication yet.

    • But what makes the single page found at the Reagan Library so explosive is that it contains the complete and unredacted portion of the intelligence estimate that details what the CIA thought it knew back in 1983 about Israel’s work on chemical weapons, which the CIA’s censors had carefully excised from the version released to the National Archives in 2009.
      The estimate shows that in 1983 the CIA had hard evidence that Israel possessed a chemical weapons stockpile of indeterminate size, including, according to the report, “persistent and non-persistent nerve agents.” The persistent nerve agent referred to in the document is not known, but the non-persistent nerve agent in question was almost certainly sarin.
      (…)
      But the CIA assessment suggests that the Israelis accelerated their research and development work on chemical weapons following the end of the 1973 Yom Kippur War. According to the report, U.S. intelligence detected “possible tests” of Israeli chemical weapons in January 1976, which, again, almost certainly took place somewhere in the Negev Desert. A former U.S. Air Force intelligence officer whom I interviewed recalled that at about this time, the National Security Agency captured communications showing that Israeli air force fighter-bombers operating from Hatzerim Air Base outside the city of Beersheba in southern Israel had been detected conducting simulated low-level chemical weapons delivery missions at a bombing range in the Negev Desert.
      (…)To complicate things further, in January 1976 the long-simmering civil war in Lebanon was beginning to heat up. And the CIA was increasingly concerned about the growing volume of evidence, much of it coming from human intelligence sources inside Israel, indicating that the Israeli nuclear weapons stockpile was growing both in size and raw megatonnage. At the same time that all this was happening, the Israeli “chemical weapons” test mentioned in CIA document occurred. It increased the already-heightened level of concern within the U.S. intelligence community about what the Israelis were up to.
      (…)
      At some point in late 1982, as the Reagan administration strove with minimal success to get the Israeli government to withdraw its forces from Lebanon, American spy satellites discovered what the 1983 CIA intelligence described as “a probable CW nerve agent production facility and a storage facility ... at the Dimona Sensitive Storage Area in the Negev Desert.”

      The CIA report, however, provides no further elucidation about the size or production capacity of the newly discovered Israeli nerve agent production facility near Dimona, or even where the so-called “Dimona Sensitive Storage Area” was located.

      At my request, a friend of mine who retired years ago from the U.S. intelligence community began systematically scanning the available cache of commercial satellite imagery found on the Google Maps website, looking for the mysterious and elusive Israeli nerve agent production facility and weapons storage bunker complex near the city of Dimona where Israel stores its stockpile of chemical weapons.

      It took a little while, but the imagery search found what I believe is the location of the Israeli nerve agent production facility and its associated chemical weapons storage area in a desolate and virtually uninhabited area of the Negev Desert just east of the village of al-Kilab, which is only 10 miles west of the outskirts of the city of Dimona. The satellite imagery shows that the heavily protected weapons storage area at al-Kilab currently consists of almost 50 buried bunkers surrounded by a double barbed-wire-topped fence and facilities for a large permanent security force. I believe this extensive bunker complex is the location of what the 1983 CIA intelligence estimate referred to as the Dimona Sensitive Storage Area.

      If you drive two miles to the northeast past the weapons storage area, the satellite imagery shows that you run into another heavily guarded complex of about 40 or 50 acres. Surrounded again by a double chain-link fence topped with barbed wire, the complex appears to consist of an administrative and support area on the western side of facility. The eastern side of the base, which is surrounded by its own security fence, appears to consist of three large storage bunkers and a buried production and/or maintenance facility. Although not confirmed, the author believes that this may, in fact, be the location of the Israeli nerve agent production facility mentioned in the 1983 CIA report.

  • Le gouvernement israélien va donner des bourses à des centaines d’étudiants de ses universités à condition qu’ils postent de la propagande pro-israélienne sur Facebook et Twitter.
    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/students-offered-grants-if-they-tweet-proisraeli-propaganda-8760142.h

    In a campaign to improve its image abroad, the Israeli government plans to provide scholarships to hundreds of students at its seven universities in exchange for their making pro-Israel Facebook posts and tweets to foreign audiences.

    The students making the posts will not reveal online that they are funded by the Israeli government, according to correspondence about the plan revealed in the Haaretz newspaper.

    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office, which will oversee the programme, confirmed its launch and wrote that its aim was to “strengthen Israeli public diplomacy and make it fit the changes in the means of information consumption”.

    Je fais partie des gens généralement très paranoïaques quant aux magouilles israéliennes, et pourtant je suis toujours dépassé par la réalité. Mais là, quand même…

    The government’s hand is to be invisible to the foreign audiences. Daniel Seaman, the official who has been planning the effort, wrote in a letter on 5 August to a body authorising government projects that “the idea requires not making the role of the state stand out and therefore it is necessary to adhere to great involvement of the students themselves, without political linkage or affiliation”.

    • Israel: Government pays students to fight internet battles
      http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-news-from-elsewhere-23695896

      The Prime Minister’s office is reportedly spending around £540,000 recruiting more than 500 students to respond to social media posts calling for boycotts and sanctions against the country, the Jerusalem Post says. Those with foreign language skills who receive these “scholarships” would not identify themselves as being in the pay of the government. Instead, Israel’s Ha’aretz newspaper says, the plan is to make the programme appear to be based on the activity of politically-neutral students, with the Prime Minister’s Office also hoping to recruit from pro-Israel student groups from around the world.

  • Israeli scientists: Cutting ties with EU would seriously damage research
    By Jonathan Lis, Yarden Skop and Eli Ashkenazi
    Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/1.540100

    Israeli scientists warn that cutting ties with the European Union could cause irreparable harm to Israeli research. The researchers were reacting to Economy Ministry Naftali Bennett’s call for the Israeli government to end all cooperation with the EU in response to new guidelines banning funding to Israeli entities with ties to West Bank settlements, East Jerusalem or the Golan Heights.

    On Monday, National Security Council chairman Yaakov Amidror convened a meeting to discuss the implications of the new EU rules. The discussion, which took place at the level of ministry directors-general, was in preparation for a similar meeting Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu plans to hold in the coming days.

    One of the topics discussed was whether Israel should join the EU’s Horizon 2020 research and development program, in which the economy, education and science ministries are all slated to participate beginning next year.

    Bennett’s associates said that the opinion he expressed was his personal position, and that at the meeting with Netanyahu, the ministry’s professional opinion will be presented.

    #BDS

  • Swedish FM refuses to recognize Israeli seat in Jerusalem -
    by Barak Ravid 23 rd of July 2013
    Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/blogs/diplomania/.premium-1.537494

    Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt has never been a fan of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government or of the Israeli occupation, but he went one step further a couple days ago when he refused to acknowledge that the Israeli government sits in Jerusalem.

    Bildt tweeted his support for the renewal of the peace process on Friday, but his wording was reminiscent of Egypt under Gamal Abdel Nasser or modern-day Iran:

  • UN Accuses Israel of Torturing Palestinian Children
    http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content

    I think the Israeli government is much more concerned about the image than about the moral concerns, than about the actual lives and safety of Palestinian children. And indeed the Israeli government is trying to limit those bad-looking incidences, those bad PR instances. In a law from September 2011, Israel has recognized for the first time after about 45 years of occupation that Palestinian children would be considered children until the age of 18 rather than until of age of 16. So they would have the same age categories as Israeli children.

    But despite that decision, Palestinian children are still being tried by martial court, by military court, and in the Hebrew language, which is not their language, so often they don’t understand what they’re being accused of, what they’re signing, what they’re admitting. They are not allowed the rights to see a lawyer, to have an adult or their parent in the room while they’re being interrogated is not observed. So these violations continue.

    And one of the reasons for this is that there is a sort of disconnect inside the Israeli political and military system between the part that looks outward, that tries to improve Israel’s foreign relations, and the part that looks inward that is more concerned with gaining popularity and mobilizing the public for more solidarity with the national cause against Palestinians and for the occupation.
    The Israeli army has hired philosophers to write its ethical code, and these military philosophers wrote that when it comes to choosing between the safety of Israeli soldiers and the safety of enemies or even foreign civilians regardless of their age, the Israeli soldiers should always prefer the safety of themselves, of the Israeli soldiers. And an Israeli blogger, Yossi Gurvitz, commented on that—not legislation—that recommendation that it actually means that if the Israelis would believe that they could tie Palestinian children to their tank and surround their tank by bodies of Palestinian children to deter Palestinians from shooting at that tank, there is actually no moral reason for them not to do so according to this ethical book of the Israeli military. This is the sort of message that the Israeli soldiers are receiving—Palestinian children are dispensable and the lives of Israeli soldiers is sacred. And that’s why one of the most key issues in that report by the United Nations human rights council, but also in other reports, is the issue of human shields.

    #Israël #enfants #tribunaux_militaires #torture #boucliers_humains

  • Netanyahu blocks bid for transparency in legislation process of Israeli government - National Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/national/netanyahu-blocks-bid-for-transparency-in-legislation-process-of-israeli-gov

    The chances of the public ever learning how cabinet ministers voted in the Ministerial Committee for Legislation have dropped considerably, after a legal opinion was issued stating that revealing this information will require the approval of the cabinet.

    The initiative to publicize how the ministers vote on the legislative proposals the committee debates came from Justice Minister Tzipi Livni, who views this as an important step toward transparency.

    The Ministerial Committee on Legislation determines which bills go to the Knesset plenum with government backing − which makes it almost certain they will pass into law − and which bills go nowhere. The panel’s debates are confidential; they are not transcribed and how the ministers vote is not documented. The lack of transparency makes it easier for interested parties to exert pressure, make deals, and stymie legislative initiatives without the public being able to monitor the process.

    Livni, who is chairman of the Ministerial Committee for Legislation, announced two months ago, at the current panel’s first meeting, “It would be proper for there to be transparency in the committee, and I plan to examine this.”

    Cabinet Secretary Avichai Mandelblit, however, delayed the move in order to check its legality, apparently with the backing of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is not very excited about Livni’s idea.

    The legal opinion was provided by the Prime Minister’s Office legal adviser, Shlomit Barnea-Fargo, and is being revealed here for the first time. The adviser determined that Livni does not have the authority to make the change she wants on her own, nor is the ministerial committee empowered to change the cabinet work regulations.

    Barnea-Fargo said that the authority to do so rests with the full cabinet. Livni has already asked the prime minister and cabinet secretary to bring the issue up for debate by the cabinet as soon as possible.