person:yossi cohen

  • Comment les services de renseignement israéliens collaborent à la lutte contre #BDS à travers le monde

    Mossad involved in anti-boycott activity, Israeli minister’s datebooks reveal - Israel News - Haaretz.com

    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-mossad-involved-in-anti-boycott-activity-israeli-minister-s-diarie

    The datebooks of Strategic Affairs Minister Gilad Erdan for 2018 reveal that he cooperated with the Mossad in the fight against the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement.

    The diaries, which were released in response to a Freedom of Information request, show that Erdan met with Mossad head Yossi Cohen about “the struggle against the boycott.” The request was made by the Hatzlaha movement, an organization promoting a fair society and economy, to all ministers, deputy ministers and ministry directors-general.

    Officials in the Strategic Affairs Ministry are proud of their work with the state’s security agencies, but hide the content and full scope of these activities on grounds that if these would be revealed, it would undermine the covert efforts being made against BDS and its leaders. Officials in Erdan’s office said that the meeting with Cohen was merely a “review,” but sources familiar with the ministry’s activities told Haaretz that the ministry indeed cooperates with the Mossad.

    Erdan’s datebooks also show meetings with the head of the National Security Council and the head of the NSC’s intelligence branch, as well as meetings with representatives of numerous Jewish organizations, including the American Jewish Committee, B’nai B’rith, the American Jewish Congress, the umbrella organization of French Jewry, the U.S. Reform Movement and others. There are also logs of various meetings and phone calls that Erdan’s chief of staff held with foreign leaders and diplomats, as well as meetings with settler leaders, including the heads of the Samaria Regional Council and the Hebron Hills Regional Council.

    Many of Erdan’s meetings in 2018 were devoted to establishing a public benefit corporation which at first was called Kella Shlomo but whose name was later changed to Concert. Its aim was to covertly advance “mass awareness activities” as part of “the struggle against the campaign to delegitimize” Israel globally. This corporation, which received 128 million shekels (about $36 million) in government funding and was to also collect 128 million shekels in private contributions, is not subject to the Freedom of Information Law.

    In early 2018 Haaretz published the list of shareholders and directors in the company, which include former Strategic Affairs Ministry director general Yossi Kuperwasser; former UN ambassador Dore Gold, a former adviser to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu; former UN ambassador Ron Prosor; businessman Micah Avni, whose father, Richard Lakin, was killed in a 2015 terror attack in Jerusalem; Amos Yadlin, who heads Tel Aviv University’s Institute for National Security Studies; Miri Eisin, who served as the prime minister’s adviser on the foreign press during the Second Lebanon War; former National Security Council chief Yaakov Amidror; and Sagi Balasha, a former CEO of the Israeli-American Council.
    Demonstrators wear shirts reading “Boycott Israel” during a protest in Paris, Dec. 9, 2017.
    Demonstrators wear shirts reading “Boycott Israel” during a protest in Paris, Dec. 9, 2017. AP Photo/Kamil Zihnioglu

    According to a government resolution, the funding was granted to implement part of the ministry’s activities related to the fights against delegitimization and boycotts against the State of Israel. It says the company would raise the private portion of its financing for the initiative from philanthropic sources or pro-Israel organizations. A steering committee was to be appointed for the initiative to comprise representatives of the government and the other funding partners.
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    According to a ministry document revealed by The Seventh Eye website, the organization was expected to carry out mass awareness activities and work to exploit the wisdom of crowds, “making new ideas accessible to decision-makers and donors in the Jewish world, and developing new tools to combat the delegitimization of Israel.”

    Elad Mann, Hatzlacha’s legal adviser, said, “Revealing the date books of senior and elected officials is crucial to understanding how the government system works and it has great value taken together with other details of information. This is how to monitor the government and its priorities or the actions it takes with more efficiency and transparency.”

    Erdan’s office said that he “met during this past term with heads of the security echelons to give them a survey of the ministry’s activities in the struggle against the delegitimization and boycott of Israel.”

    Josh Breiner contributed to this report.

  • EXCLUSIF : Le plan secret entre les États du Golfe et Israël pour réhabiliter Assad | Middle East Eye
    https://www.middleeasteye.net/fr/reportages/exclusif-le-plan-secret-entre-les-tats-du-golfe-et-isra-l-pour-r-habi

    EXCLUSIF : Le plan secret entre les États du Golfe et Israël pour réhabiliter Assad

    Le chef du Mossad, Yossi Cohen, a rencontré des responsables saoudiens, émiratis et égyptiens le mois dernier pour discuter des moyens de contrer l’influence régionale turque, selon des informations recueillies par MEE

    L’Arabie saoudite, les Émirats arabes unis et l’Égypte ont manigancé un plan avec Israël pour accueillir de nouveau le président syrien Bachar al-Assad au sein de la Ligue arabe afin de marginaliser l’influence régionale de la Turquie et de l’Iran, révèle en exclusivité Middle East Eye.

    Cette initiative diplomatique a été approuvée lors d’une réunion secrète, tenue dans une capitale du Golfe le mois dernier, à laquelle ont assisté de hauts responsables des services de renseignement des quatre pays, dont Yossi Cohen, directeur du Mossad, ont indiqué à MEE des sources au fait de cette réunion.

    La réunion a également été organisée en réaction au « refroidissement » notable des relations entre le président américain Donald Trump et Riyad depuis l’assassinat du journaliste Jamal Khashoggi au consulat d’Arabie saoudite à Istanbul en octobre.

    Trump a publiquement pris le parti du prince héritier saoudien Mohammed ben Salmane, que la CIA et des membres du Congrès américain tiennent pour responsable du meurtre de Khashoggi.

    Cependant, selon un responsable au courant de la réunion, il aurait été dit aux responsables des services de renseignement : « Trump a fait ce qu’il pouvait et ne fera rien de plus. »

    Les responsables ont également convenu lors de la réunion qu’ils considéraient la Turquie, et non l’Iran, comme leur principal rival militaire dans la région, et ils ont discuté de plans pour parer l’influence d’Ankara.

    Les Israéliens ont déclaré à cette occasion que l’Iran pouvait être maîtrisé militairement, mais que la Turquie avait des capacités beaucoup plus grandes. Lors de la réunion, Cohen aurait déclaré : « Le pouvoir iranien est fragile. La vraie menace vient de la Turquie. »

    Quatre mesures selon l’article :
    – Négociations avec les talibans
    – « contrôler la carte sunnite » en Irak
    – retour à la Ligue arabe pour Assad
    – soutenir les Kurdes de Syrie contre les tentatives de la Turquie d’expulser les YPG et leur homologue politique, le PYD

    #grand_jeu

  • L’« accord du siècle » : les maîtres espions entrent en scène
    Middle East Eye - 28 juin 2018
    http://www.middleeasteye.net/fr/reportages/l-accord-du-si-cle-les-ma-tres-espions-entre-en-sc-ne-1793925807

    Yossi Cohen, directeur du Mossad israélien assistant à la fête nationale du 4 juillet à l’ambassade américaine en Israël, 2017 (AFP)

    Une importante réunion a rassemblé, le 17 juin dernier, à Aqaba en Jordanie, les responsables des services secrets israéliens, saoudiens, égyptiens et palestiniens.

    Selon le site français Intelligence online, cette réunion intervenait un jour avant la rencontre entre le Premier ministre israélien, Benyamin Netanyahou, et le roi de Jordanie, Abdallah II.

    Le chef du Mossad israélien, Yossi Cohen, le directeur des services secrets saoudiens, Khaled ben Ali al-Humaidan, le responsable du Service de renseignement général égyptien, Abbas Kamel, le chef des services secrets jordaniens, Adnan Issam al-Jundi, et le directeur du renseignement de l’Autorité palestinienne Majed Faraj, auraient assisté à cette réunion secrète dans la ville côtière jordanienne.

    Selon les sources du site Intelligence Online, ce sont le conseiller de Donald Trump, Jared Kushner, et l’émissaire spécial de Donald Trump pour le Moyen-Orient, Jason Greenblatt qui sont à l’origine de l’organisation de ce conclave entre maîtres espions.

    L’ordre du jour de cette réunion reste encore inconnue. Plusieurs médias s’accordent toutefois à deviner qu’il s’agissait de convaincre l’Autorité palestinienne d’’accepter l’« accord du siècle » que veut imposer l’administration Trump.

    Mais le patron des services secrets palestiniens, Majed Faraj, aurait refusé de participer activement à la discussion lors de cette réunion, se contentant d’exprimer des observations d’ordre général.

    Or, mercredi 27 juin, Majed Faraj a déclaré devant des journalistes à Ramallah qu’il était satisfait du refus de plusieurs pays arabes à la proposition de Washington, appelé l’« accord du siècle ».

  • In blow to Iran, Egypt becomes surprise new player in Syria - Syria - Haaretz.com
    http://www.haaretz.com/middle-east-news/syria/.premium-1.808039

    A new and surprising player has recently entered the Syrian arena and has already contributed to establishing local cease-fires: Egypt received Saudi and Russian “permission” to conduct negotiations between the rebel militias and the regime, both in Ghouta al-Sharqiya (east of Damascus) and the northern neighborhoods in the city of Homs. In both cases, it managed to get a cease-fire deal signed – in the former on July 22, in the latter in early August.
    Both areas are part of the de-escalation zones on which Russia, Turkey and Iran agreed in May, in consultation with the United States. But this is the first time Egypt has played an active role in diplomatic negotiations between the warring parties that produced positive results.
    From Israel’s standpoint, Egypt’s involvement is important. Any country engaged in blocking Iran’s influence in Syria serves Israel’s interests. But that’s especially true when said country is Egypt, which is Israel’s partner in the war on terror in Sinai and an ally (together with Saudi Arabia and Jordan) with whom it sees eye to eye about both the Iranian threat and the danger of Syria disintegrating into cantons.
    Israel is also involved in discussions about the de-escalation zone in southern Syria that runs along Syria’s borders with both Israel and Jordan. Over the weekend, an Israeli delegation headed by Mossad chief Yossi Cohen began talks on the issue with senior U.S. officials in Washington, and a meeting has been scheduled for Wednesday between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Russian President Vladimir Putin.
    During these discussions, Israel will presumably push the superpowers to encourage Egypt’s involvement in Syria, thereby ensuring another Arab partner (alongside Jordan) that will be sympathetic to its interests.

    #Egypte #Syrie

  • Don’t Shoot Down Breaking the Silence, It’s Just the Messenger - Israel News - Haaretz -
    Amos Harel Dec 19, 2015
    http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.692603

    Breaking the Silence was founded in the spring of 2004. Four freshly released soldiers from the Nahal Brigade, who served long tours in Hebron during the height of the second intifada, organized an exhibition that documented their experiences, which was displayed at the Academic College of Tel Aviv-Jaffa. Although some people were outraged by the exhibition, the discussion about the soldiers’ claims was conducted far more calmly than it is today – despite the fact that, back then, suicide bombers were still blowing themselves up on buses in Israeli cities.

    The current Israel Defense Forces chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Gadi Eisenkot, was the commander of all IDF forces in the West Bank at the time, and he raised a concern: Why did the founders of the organization not oppose the army actions while they were serving, or at least report on them in real time? His argument was unconvincing. In most cases, a corporal will have a hard time going before the company or battalion commander in real time and saying, “That’s not allowed.” They are not equals. Few soldiers – particularly during regular service – have the ability to make such complaints, especially at a time when military casualties are high and the atmosphere is charged.

    As the years went on, the IDF made two other, more substantial claims. The first regarded the difficulty in translating the soldiers’ testimonies into legal or disciplinary proceedings. Breaking the Silence has always maintained the testifiers’ anonymity, in order to protect them. And during cases where the military prosecutor was interested in investigating, such probes generally ended without results. IDF officials got the impression that publishing the testimonies was more important to Breaking the Silence than any legal proceedings. The IDF’s second claim pertains to the organization’s activities abroad. One can assume that this activity is mostly done for fundraising purposes, but holding exhibitions abroad and making claims about Israeli war crimes certainly offended many.

    This week, there was a new low point in the public campaign against the organization. This combined two trends, only one of which was open and obvious. The first is the direct attack on Breaking the Silence by the right, comprised mostly of McCarthyesque attempts to silence it. These attacks have a sanctimonious air to them. In the eyes of the attackers, the international community is ganging up on Israel, and Breaking the Silence is the source of all our troubles – everything would be fine if it weren’t for this group of despicable liars slandering Israel’s reputation.

    It is hard to shake the suspicion that the attacks against Breaking the Silence aren’t the act of an extensive network operating with at least a degree of coordination. What began as some accusations on Channel 20 continued with a venomous video published by the Im Tirtzu movement, which was immediately followed by demands from the My Israel group (founded by Naftali Bennett and Ayelet Shaked) to prohibit Breaking the Silence representatives from visiting schools. Somehow, Education Minister Bennett succumbed to their demands within a day. In the background, there was also a blatant attack on President Reuven Rivlin. At first, they tried to link him to Breaking the Silence. That failed, because the president made sure to defend the IDF’s moral standing at the HaaretzQ conference in New York. And then the “flag affair” happened, involving Rivlin, Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat and the Israeli flag.

    As usual, Im Tirtzu delivered the most extreme elements of the assault. Its ubiquitous video showed the word “Shtulim” – Hebrew for implanted, or mole – above pictures of four left-wing activists who looked like they’d been plucked from a “Wanted” list. The video didn’t leave much room for the imagination: “Shtulim” is another way of saying “traitors.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=02u_J2C-Lso


    Im Tirtzu accuses leftist activists of being foreign agents. YouTube/Im Tirtzu

    When one of the four featured activists, Dr. Ishai Menuchin – executive director of the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel – says he felt as if the spilling of his blood was being permitted, you can understand why he reached that conclusion. (By the way, Menuchin did reserve duty until an advanced age – in the Givati Brigade, of all places.) The claims that these four organizations are “collaborating with the enemy” have been rejected by the two previous military advocate generals, Avichai Mendelblit and Danny Efroni. Indeed, the two told Haaretz that they are often assisted by these human rights organizations.

    The mainstream media has provided the complementary side of the trend by airing Im Tirtzu’s videos. As journalists, they cluck their tongues and mock the style of the videos, but reap higher ratings. This approach works well in conjunction with media coverage of the current terror outbreak, which is treated relatively superficially and is often an attempt to tackle these issues without providing any broader context. Here, the goal is not to damage the left-wing organizations, but rather marketing a slant on the current reality for Israelis – as if we have the exclusive capability to both maintain the occupation indefinitely and remain the most moral army in the world. But the truth is, it’s impossible to do both. Also, there’s no empirical proof that the IDF is the most moral army in the world (a cliché Rivlin himself employed earlier this week).

    In many cases, the IDF makes an effort – and sometimes a tremendous effort. But it is still a giant war machine. When it is forced to act to defend Israeli civilians and advance into crowded, urban Palestinian territory – as it did last year in Gaza – it causes lots of casualties, which will include innocent civilians. And its control of the occupied territories involves, by its very nature, many unjust acts: limiting movement, entering civilians’ homes, making arrests and humiliating people.

    It is a reality that every combat solider in the West Bank, regular or reservist, rightist or leftist, is aware of. I can attest to it myself: For more than 10 years I was called up to serve in the West Bank many times, as a junior commander in a reserve infantry battalion – before and during the second intifada. I didn’t witness anything I considered to be a war crime. And more than once, I saw commanders going to great lengths to maintain human dignity while carrying out complex missions, which they saw as essential for security. Even so, many aspects of our operations seemed to me, and to many others, to fall into some kind of gray area, morally speaking. In my battalion, there were also cases of inhuman treatment and abuse of Palestinian civilians.

    Those who believe, like I do, that much of the blame for the lack of a peace agreement in recent years stems from Palestinian unwillingness to compromise; and those who think, like I do, that at the moment there is no horizon for an arrangement that guarantees safety for Israelis in exchange for most of the West Bank, because of the possibility that the arrangement would collapse and the vacuum be filled by Hamas or even ISIS, must admit: There is no such thing as a rose-tinted occupation.

    Breaking the Silence offers an unpleasant voice to many Israeli ears, but it speaks a lot of truth. I’ve interviewed many of its testifiers over the years. What they told me wasn’t the stuff of fantasy but rather, descriptions from below – from the perspective of the corporal or lieutenant, voices that are important and should be heard, even if they don’t present the whole picture. There is a price that comes with maintaining this abnormal situation for 48 years. Covering your ears or blaming the messenger won’t achieve anything.

    The interesting thing is that when you meet high-ranking IDF officers, you don’t hear about illusions or clichés. The senior officers don’t like Breaking the Silence, but they also don’t attack it with righteous indignation (although it’s possible that sentiments for the organization are harsher among lower ranks). In recent months, I’ve been privy to closed talks with most of the chain of command in the West Bank: The chief of staff, head of Central Command, IDF commander in the West Bank, and nine brigade chiefs. As I’ve written here numerous times recently, these officers speak in similar tones. They don’t get worked up, they aren’t trying to get their subordinates to kill Palestinians when there is no essential security need, and they aren’t looking for traitors in every corner.

    Last Tuesday, when Im Tirtzu’s despicable campaign was launched, I had a prescheduled meeting with the commander of a regular infantry brigade. In a few weeks, some of his soldiers will be stationed in the West Bank. Last year, he fought with them in Gaza. What troubles him now, he says, is how to sufficiently prepare his soldiers for their task, to ensure that they’ll protect themselves and Israeli civilians from the knife attacks, but also to ensure that they won’t recklessly shoot innocent people, or kill someone lying on the ground after the threat has been nullified.

    The picture painted by the brigade commander is entirely different to the one painted by Channel 20 (which posted on Facebook this week that “the presidency has lost its shame” following Rivlin’s appearance in New York). But it is also much more complex than the daily dose of drama being supplied by the mainstream media.

    Another victory for Ya’alon

    Last Sunday, the cabinet approved the appointment of Nir Ben Moshe as director of security for the defense establishment. The appointment was another bureaucratic victory for Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon, part of a series of such appointments over the past year. The pattern remains the same: Ya’alon consults with Eisenkot; Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has reservations, delays the process or even opposes outright; Ya’alon insists, but takes care not to let the rift become public; and in the end Ya’alon gets what he wants.

    Ya’alon isn’t generally considered a sophisticated bureaucrat. His political power is also rather limited. He has almost no sources of power within the Likud Central Committee. The fact that he remains in his position, despite the close coordination with Netanyahu and the joint positions they held during the war in Gaza last year and during the current strife in the West Bank, seems to hinge only upon Netanyahu’s complex political considerations. Still, through great patience it seems the defense minister ultimately gets what he desires.

    Ben Moshe’s appointment was first approved by a committee within the Defense Ministry last month. Ya’alon asked that the appointment be immediately submitted to the cabinet for approval, but Netanyahu postponed the decision for weeks before ultimately accepting it. This is partly because of the prime minister’s tendency to procrastinate, which also played a part in the late appointment of Yossi Cohen as the next Mossad chief. But in many cases, there are other considerations behind such hesitations, with the appointment of the current IDF chief of staff a prime example: Ya’alon formulated his position on Eisenkot months before the decision was announced. Eisenkot’s appointment was brought before Netanyahu numerous times, but the prime minister constantly examined other candidates and postponed the decision until last December – only two and a half months before Benny Gantz’s term was set to end.

    Even the appointment of the new military advocate general, Brig. Gen. Sharon Afek, which had been agreed by Ya’alon and Eisenkot, was delayed for months by Netanyahu’s reservations – which, formally speaking, should not be part of the process. Here, it seems the stalling was due to claims from settlers about Afek’s “left-leaning” tendencies, not to mention the incriminating fact that Afek’s cousin is Michal Herzog – the wife of opposition leader Isaac Herzog.

    Over the next month, numerous other appointments to the IDF’s General Staff are expected, but Eisenkot will call the shots and Ya’alon needs to approve his nominations. The chief of staff is expected to appoint a new naval commander; a new ground forces commander; new head of the technology and logistics directorate; new head of the communications directorate; and new military attaché to Washington. In most cases, generals will make way for younger brigadier generals. Eisenkot will likely want to see a more seasoned general assume command of the ground forces, though, and could give it to a current general as a second position under that rank. However, this creates another problem – any general given this job would see it as being denied a regional command post, which is considered an essential stop for any budding chief of staff.

    #Breaking_the_Silence #Briser_le_silence

  • Israeli, Turkish officials meet in secret, reach agreements
    http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4740867,00.html

    Mossad chief Yossi Cohen Joseph Ciechanover, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s special envoy to Turkey, met secretly in Switzerland on Wednesday with Feridun Sinirlioğlu, the Turkish Foreign Ministry’s Undersecretary. The two nations agreed on a number of steps: Israel will found a compensations fund for victims of the raid on the Marmara; all charges against Israel will be cancelled; the ambassadors will be returned to work; and high-ranking #Hamas official Saleh al-Arouri will be banned from entering Turkey.

    Additionally, discussions on a gas pipeline from Israel to Turkey are expected to begin soon.

    #Turquie #Israel #Israël

  • Jérusalem: la France réclame des observateurs sur l’esplanade des lieux saints
    Par Cyrille Louis Publié le 16/10/2015 à 19:18
    http://www.lefigaro.fr/international/2015/10/16/01003-20151016ARTFIG00322-jerusalem-la-france-reclame-des-observateurs-sur-

    INFO LE FIGARO - Les membres du Conseil de sécurité des Nations unies devront se prononcer, à la demande de la France sur l’envoi par l’ONU d’observateurs internationaux sur l’esplanade des lieux saints à Jérusalem.

    L’ambassadeur francais auprès des Nations unies a déposé ce vendredi soir à New York un projet de texte réclamant l’envoi d’observateurs internationaux par l’ONU sur l’esplanade des lieux saints à Jérusalem.

    Ce document doit être débattu dans les prochaines heures par les membres du Conseil de sécurité des Nations unies. S’ils parviennent à un consensus, ce texte pourrait faire l’objet d’une déclaration endossée par le président du Conseil de sécurité.

    « Il s’agit de mettre en place des observateurs indépendants capables de recenser d’éventuelles violations du statu quo », précise une source informée de ces démarches. Mais un responsable israélien précise : « Un tel dispositif est à nos yeux inenvisageable. »

    Les tensions autour de l’esplanade des mosquées ont contribué à provoquer une vague de violences au cours de laquelle sept Israéliens et trente-cinq Palestiniens ont perdu la vie depuis le 1er octobre.

    ““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““
    Israel and U.S. Cooperating Against French Bid for Int’l Presence on Temple Mount

    ’The French proposal is completely absurd,’ senior Israeli official says of draft for UN Security Council presidential statement calling for observers to be deployed on Temple Mount.
    Barak Ravid Oct 17, 2015 6:19 PM
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.680872

    Israel, the United States and other countries are working together to remove from the agenda a French draft for a UN Security Council presidential statement calling for international observers to be deployed on the Temple Mount, senior officials in the Prime Minister’s Office said Saturday.

    “The French proposal is completely absurd,” a senior Israeli official said, noting that it is only a declarative step.

    According to the official, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu instructed National Security Adviser Yossi Cohen and the Foreign Ministry to protest the biased and absurd phrasing of the draft to France.

    “We expect the French to condemn the Waqf’s incompetence on the Temple Mount,” the official said, referring to the Muslim religious trust. “Those who brought in bombs and fired firecrackers were the Palestinians, who turned the Temple Mount to a terrorist storeroom and it is they who tried by that to change the status quo.”

    The Israeli official stressed that Israel is safeguarding the status quo and is committed to it. According to him, Jews are allowed to visit the site only according the status quo. He added that according to the 1949 armistice agreement, Jewish access to the Temple Mount was internationally guaranteed. “This right wasn’t realized until 1967,” the official said. “Israel is the one keeping the visits to the Temple Mount free. The torching of Joseph’s Tomb shows what would have happened to the holy sites if they weren’t under Israel’s control. Exactly what is happening in Palmyra in Syria and in Iraq.”

    France is pushing for a presidential statement on behalf of the UN Security Council that calls for the deployment of international observers to Jerusalem’s holy sites, notably the Temple Mount, to ensure the status quo is maintained, “Le Figaro” reported on Saturday, citing French diplomats.

    The presidential statement does not constitute a binding Security Council resolution, only serving as a statement of intent. 15 members of the UN Security Council need to consent in order for a presidential statement to be published. It remains unclear if France has managed to achieve such consensus.

    On Wednesday, Palestinian ambassador to the UN Riyad Mansour called on the Security Council to adopt a resolution guaranteeing the safety and protection of Palestinians and Islamic holy sites in Jerusalem, similar to Resolution 904 adopted after the Cave of the Patriarchs massacre in 1994, which saw international monitors deployed in Hebron.

    Israel’s new ambassador to the UN Danny Danon said on Friday that Israel objects to any international involvement or oversight on the Temple Mount since it would violate the status quo. In light of Israel’s position, it’s hard to see how the U.S. could support the call for deploying international observers on the Temple Mount, even if this is only a declarative step.

  • EU seeks talks with Israel over ‘red lines’ in West Bank

    Israeli officials fear that proposed negotiations are prelude to further European sanctions.
    By Barak Ravid | Oct. 22, 2014
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/1.622099

    The European Union is interested in opening negotiations with Israel with the aim of preventing a series of Israeli moves in the West Bank deemed “red lines” which may jeopardize the possibility of a future Palestinian state alongside Israel, an internal EU document obtained by Haaretz reveals. Officials in the Israeli Foreign Ministry are concerned the negotiations are a prelude to further European sanctions against Israel.

    In recent weeks, since the Israeli appropriation of 4,000 dunams in Gush Etzion in the West Bank and even more since the push forward in planning for additional construction in Givat Hamatos, a neighborhood beyond the Green Line, a series of discussions have been taking place in the EU’s headquarters in Brussels between the ambassadors of the 28 members states over the European response.

    During these discussions, which ended last weekend, it was decided to relay a sharp message to Israel in the name of all EU members, focusing on the Israeli moves which create a “focused and increasing threat to the possibility of the two-state solution.”

    The EU’s ambassador to Israel, Lars Faaborg-Andersen, is set to relay the message to Israel. He is expected to meet in the coming days with Foreign Ministry Director Nissim Ben Sheetrit and with national security advisor in the Prime Minister’s Office Yossi Cohen to propose negotiations over the issues which raised the EU’s concerns.

    Haaretz obtained an internal EU document with instructions as to the content of the message Ambassador Faaborg-Andersen is supposed to relay to the ministry’s officials and to the Prime Minister’s Office.

    “The EU considers the preservation of the two state solution a priority,” the document reads. “The only way to resolve the conflict is through an agreement that ends the occupation which began in 1967, that ends all claims and fulfills the aspirations of both parties. A one state reality would not be compatible with these aspirations.”

    The two-page document defines several of the EU’s “red lines” regarding Israeli actions in the West Bank:

    1. Construction in the Givat Hamatos neighborhood, beyond the Green Line in Jerusalem: The document said that construction in that area would jeopardize the possibility of a contiguous Palestinian state, with Jerusalem as the capital of both states. The EU “cautions the Israeli government not to move ahead with tenders and construction. Such a development would constitute one more grave “fact on the ground” which would be liable to crucially prejudge the outcome of peace negotiations,” the document reads.

    2. Construction in the E1 area between Ma’aleh Adumim and Jerusalem: The document said construction in that area would also jeopardize the possibility of contiguous Palestinian state, and added that it has already publicly and strongly opposed plans for E1’s development.

    3. Further construction in the Har Homa neighborhood in Jerusalem, beyond the Green Line.

    4. Israeli plans to relocate 12,000 Bedouin without their consent in a new town in the Jordan Valley, expelling them from lands in the West Bank, including E1: “The EU strongly urges Israel to put these plans on hold and search for other solutions together with the concerned populations and the Palestinian Authority. The EU underlines that implementing those plans may amount to a serious breach of International Humanitarian Law (IV Geneva Convention),” the document reads.

    5. Harming the status-quo at the Temple Mount: The document said that attempts to challenge the status-quo have led to instability in East Jerusalem and increased tensions. A top European diplomat noted that EU states consuls in East Jerusalem and in Ramallah planned to hold a joint tour of Temple Mount, but aborted their plans following instructions from Brussels, fearing Israel would consider such a visit a provocation.

    According to the document, the EU ambassador in Israel was instructed to clarify to the Foreign Ministry director and to the national security advisor that the EU is interested in holding “thorough discussion” on these and other issues related to the occupied Palestinian territories. “…there is a legitimate expectation to have a constructive dialogue with the Israeli authorities on measures from their side which may impact on our assistance and its ultimate objectives of creating a sound enabling environment for economic and social development in the occupied Palestinian territories and contributing to create the conditions for a viable Palestinian state,” the documents reads.

    Red lines still vague

    Senior European diplomats noted that in the discussions in Brussels the European “red lines” in the West Bank to be posed to the Israelis during negotiations have yet to be fully defined, if at all, and what would the repercussions for crossing them would be.

    “Some countries, first of which is France, believe Israel must be presented with specific sanctions to be leveled if Israel takes specific actions so that there won’t be any surprises and the price is clear,” a senior European diplomat said.

    “However, this issue is still under discussion and no final decision has been made.”

    Israel’s Foreign Ministry has followed the EU preparations to up the tone against Israel for several weeks. In discussions held over the issue in the ministry on Tuesday the expectation was floated that the message relayed by the EU ambassador would be the opening shot ahead of new European sanctions against the Israeli settlements in the West Bank.

    “The negotiations the EU is offering are really the hearing before the sentence,” a senior official in the ministry said.

    “We have a feeling they’re expecting us to reject the offer for negotiations and give them an excuse to push the sanctions against us, or that we’ll agree in any case to negotiations in which we’ll discuss which sanctions will be leveled,” he added.

    EU ambassador Lars Faaborg-Andersen refused to comment.

    “““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““
    L’UE établit une liste des “lignes rouges” à ne pas franchir par Israël
    http://www.i24news.tv/fr/actu/international/48200-141022-l-ue-liste-les-lignes-rouges-a-ne-pas-franchir-par-israel

    Certaines mesures prises par Israël constituent une « menace ciblée (…) à l’option d’une solution à deux Etats »

    L’Union européenne veut adresser un message clair à Israël pour empêcher que des « lignes rouges » ne soient franchies et mettent en péril la création d’un futur Etat palestinien, révèle un document européen interne cité par le quotidien Haaretz.

    Ces dernières semaines, plusieurs réunions ont eu lieu à Bruxelles sur la réponse européenne à adopter après l’approbation de constructions israéliennes à Givat Hamatos début octobre.

    Au terme de ces rencontres, l’UE a décidé de relayer un message fort à Israël, soulignant le fait que ce type de mesures constituent une « menace ciblée (…) à l’option d’une solution à deux Etats. »

    Dans le document consulté par Haaretz, l’UE établi une liste de points censés représenter la position européenne, relayée par l’ambassadeur européen en Israël Faaborg-Andersen lors de ses prochaines rencontres avec le directeur du Ministère des Affaires étrangères, Nissim Ben Shitrit et le conseiller à la sécurité nationale du Premier ministre, Yossi Cohen.

    La poursuite des constructions israéliennes à Jérusalem-est et en Cisjordanie figurent en tête de liste, ainsi que le relogement des Bédouins dans la vallée du Jourdain sans leur consentement. L’UE insiste également sur le maintien du statu-quo sur le Mont du temple pour éviter tout embrasement à Jérusalem-est.

    Un responsable israélien du Ministère des Affaires étrangères a critiqué la stratégie européenne qui selon lui, vise à trouver une excuse pour imposer des sanctions à Israël.

    « Nous avons le sentiment qu’ils attendent que nous rejetions leur offre de négociations afin de leur donner une excuse pour décider de sanctions contre nous », a-t-il confié à Haaretz.

  • Missile boat crisis ends as Germany gives Israel $382 million discount Agreement is a reversal of Berlin’s earlier decision to withhold the discount because of Israel’s settlement construction.
    By Barak Ravid | Oct. 19, 2014 | Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.621447

    A crisis between Israel and Germany over missile boats required to protect Israel’s offshore gas fields has ended after Berlin agreed to slash €300 million (about $382 million) off the cost, officials on both sides said. They are expected to initial an agreement for the boats within weeks.

    The talks between Israel and Germany to purchase three fast missile boats to protect the gas rigs off Israel’s shore began a year ago. Haaretz reported that the deal was worth about €900 million.

    Israel asked for a 30 percent reduction on the price, like it had received in previous deals on German submarines. The German discount, tantamount to a grant of hundreds of millions of euros, was part of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s policy to bolster Israel’s security.

    In the beginning of May, about two weeks after the talks between Israel and the Palestinians stalled, German’s national security adviser Christoph Heusgen told his Israeli counterpart Yossi Cohen that Israel would not receive the discount and would have to pay their full price.

    Heusgen said that following the breakdown in the peace talks with the Palestinians and the harsh criticism in Germany of Israel’s construction in the settlements, the Bundestag would not approve a grant of hundreds of millions of euros to subsidize the boats.

    The German decision deepened the crisis that has been developing between the two states over the past five years, due to the tense relations between Merkel and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

    The low-key talks were jumpstarted at the end of June when Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman visited Berlin and met German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier. According to a senior Foreign Ministry official in Jerusalem, Steinmeier told Lieberman “don’t worry, it will be o.k.,” and Lieberman left the meeting optimistic about the possibility of getting the missile boats deal back on track.

    The talks continued intensively for three months after the meeting between a small group of senior officials on both sides - Lieberman and Steinmeier, Israeli ambassador to Germany Yaakov Hadas and Germany’s ambassador to Israel Andreas Michaelis, national security advisor Yossi Cohen and his German counterpart Christoph Heusgen, as well as Finance Minister Yair Lapid and his counterpart Wolfgang Schäuble.

    Israeli officials who asked to remain anonymous said there were several factors which led to the German decision to give Israel the grant despite the criticism over the failure in the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks and the continued construction in the settlements.

    One official said Lieberman deserves most of the credit, for forging close cooperation with Steinmeier, who pushed to advance the deal in Germany. “Lieberman dealt with the issue incessantly,” the official said. “He played a very positive part and managed to enlist many German officials to advance the issue.”

    Another official said Finance Minister Yair Lapid’s visit in Berlin for talks with German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble was extremely helpful in advancing the deal in its last stages.

    Lapid also met Heusgen and told him he was trying to restrain Israel’s money transfers to the settlements.

    Another official said the Germans understood that the missile boats were a vital security necessity for Israel. Cohen, who held talks with Heusgen and other German officials, told them there was a real threat that Hezbollah would attack the gas rigs.

    Moreover, the deal was worth hundreds of millions of euros for the German economy and for shipyards which employ thousands of workers. The initial German refusal to give the discount made Israel examine the possibility of purchasing the boats from South Korea. Eventually, the Germans understood they too have an interest in promoting the deal and in putting the discount back on the table. 

    What finally swung the deal was Merkel’s personal commitment to Israel’s security, a Foreign Ministry official said. “Though she has a lot of criticism, when it’s come to Israeli security she puts it all aside,” said the official. “This deal will strengthen Israel’s strategic ties with Germany for the next 20 years,” he said.

  • L’unité des Palestiniens se forge dans la résistance
    vendredi 29 août 2014 - David Hearst - 27 août 2014 - Middle East Eye / Traduction : Info-Palestine.eu - al-Mukhtar
    http://www.info-palestine.net/spip.php?article14913

    (...) L’un d’entre eux était de maintenir le siège de Gaza. Il n’est maintenant plus un gouvernement en Europe ou en Amérique qui puisse imaginer qu’aider Israël à maintenir le blocus soit une bonne idée. Le désarmement du Hamas est également sorti de tous leurs agendas et parler de prévenir le réarmement du Hamas est une politique assez différente. Un signe du décalage qu’il y a entre insister sur le désarmement du Hamas et empêcher son réarmement est visible dans le document concocté par les représentants de l’Allemagne, de la France et du Royaume-Uni, puis communiqué au conseiller israélien à la sécurité nationale Yossi Cohen et qui a servi de base à une résolution des Nations Unies.

    Le deuxième objectif stratégique des gouvernements israéliens successifs a été de garder les Palestiniens divisés. Cela a été la pierre angulaire de toute une stratégie pour empêcher la naissance d’un État palestinien, et elle s’est érodée à la suite de cette guerre, bien que la haine personnelle de Mahmoud Abbas à l’égard du Hamas ne doit jamais être sous-estimée. C’était l’assaut le plus brutal jamais lancé par Israël sur Gaza, mais cela ne reste pas sans conséquences. Les choses ne sont plus là où elles en étaient il y a 50 jours.

    Les célébrations auxquelles on a assisté à Gaza la nuit dernière en ont fourni la preuve. L’accord politique d’unité entre le Fatah et le Hamas est moins important à cet égard, et en particulier plus fragile que l’aspect militaire de la question. Le Hamas n’a pas réussi à briser le siège et la deuxième série de pourparlers au Caire sur un port et l’aéroport pourrait ne jamais commencer, ou plus probablement, ne jamais aboutir. Mais ce que la guerre de 50 jours a fait à Gaza, c’est de restaurer la notion de résistance militaire comme moyen de l’unité palestinienne. Et c’est ce que les habitants de Gaza et les Palestiniens dans le monde entier ont fêté.

    Ce n’était pas écrit sur le Playbook de Netanyahu. Rappelez-vous quand il a commencé la guerre il y a 50 jours. Il disait que c’était un bon moment pour frapper le Hamas. Israël et en particulier l’Autorité palestinienne avaient imaginé que le Hamas était impopulaire dans la bande de Gaza et que les Gazaouis se révolteraient s’ils étaient soumis au malheur d’une autre guerre. Netanyahu pensait que le Hamas était privé de fonds et d’armes en provenance d’Iran et du Sinaï, maintenant que l’Égypte avait fermé tous les tunnels. On parlait même de réinstaller Mohammed Dahlan dans un Gaza sans Hamas.

    C’est le contraire qui s’est produit. Le Hamas a contre-attaqué, avec efficacité. Même au plus fort de la seconde Intifada, le Fatah étaient considéré comme co-responsable de la résistance, en grande partie en raison de son histoire. Aujourd’hui, il n’y a aucun doute dans la rue palestinienne, de qui dirige la résistance aujourd’hui : les Brigades al Qassam, dont la figure de proue est Mohammed al-Daif.

    La guerre s’interrompt avec les Brigades al-Qassam placées au sommet d’une force de résistance plus large qui comprend d’autres factions palestiniennes, dont une partie affiliées au Fatah. La résistance remplace les factions et l’idéologie, et sur le champ de bataille, elle a réussi à combler la fracture Hamas-Fatah.

    Le changement dans l’équilibre du pouvoir entre les deux principales factions palestiniennes se reflète aussi dans une réunion houleuse à Doha entre Mahmoud Abbas et Khaled Mechaal. Meshaal a critiqué Abbas pour la récente vague de répression contre les manifestants en Cisjordanie, et Abbas a accusé Meshaal de tenter de monter un coup de force contre lui, se référant à une histoire étrangement publiée au préalable dans les médias israéliens.

    Meshaal a répondu avec mépris que personne ne pouvait monter un coup d’État alors que l’ensemble de la Cisjordanie est sous occupation. Meshaal a ensuite demandé à savoir quand Abbas signerait le traité de Rome qui permettrait à l’État non membre de Palestine à rejoindre la Cour pénale internationale. Toutes les factions palestiniennes ont signé, sauf bien sûr, Abbas. Meshaal voulait savoir quand ce sera fait. Abbas n’a rien répondu.

    L’autre conséquence de la guerre était d’exposer qui faisait le mouchard à l’oreille de Netanyahu et pourquoi Israël et l’Égypte ont pensé pouvoir contourner leur bienfaiteur commun, l’Amérique. Le soutien à Israël par l’Arabie Saoudite, l’Égypte et les Émirats arabes unis (EAU), qui avant la guerre était un secret, est maintenant devenu manifeste. Les responsables israéliens n’arrêtaient pas de se vanter à ce sujet. Israël a révélé que Abdel Fatah al-Sisi et Mohammed bin Zayed, le prince héritier d’Abou Dhabi, voulaient la destruction du Hamas, en allant même plus loin que ce qu’’ils étaient en train de faire. Les pays du Golfe ont considéré la guerre contre Gaza comme faisant partie intégrante de leur campagne contre les Frères musulmans et les islamistes en général et dans toute l’Afrique du Nord.

    Ce n’est pas une coïncidence si la semaine qui a précédé le cessez-le-feu, les EAU ont emprunté les aéroports égyptiens et ont bombardé des cibles islamistes et du mouvement de Misrata à Tripoli pour empêcher l’aéroport international de tomber entre leurs mains. La guerre par procuration en Libye a impliqué directement des avions du Golfe et des bases égyptiennes. Les Américains étaient si furieux qu’ils l’ont fait savoir par le New York Times. Ces mêmes États voulaient et avaient besoin de la destruction du Hamas.