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DAILY ALERT |
Wednesday, May 27, 2020 |
News Resources - North America, Europe, and Asia:
Moscow recently deployed military fighter aircraft to Libya to provide close air support and offensive fire for the Wagner Group of Russian state-sponsored private military contractors operating on the ground there. Russia is supporting the Libyan National Army's (LNA) fight against the Tripoli-based Government of National Accord. "Russia is clearly trying to tip the scales in its favor in Libya. Just like I saw them doing in Syria, they are expanding their military footprint in Africa using government-supported mercenary groups like Wagner," said U.S. Army Gen. Stephen Townsend, commander, U.S. Africa Command. "Russia flew fourth-generation jet fighters to Libya." (U.S. Africa Command) The Oklahoma State Senate passed a law on May 15 barring the state government from providing contracts to companies that boycott Israel, in a 36-7 vote. It passed the State House on May 4 by 75-20. 30 states now have anti-BDS legislation. (Los Angeles Jewish Journal) George Washington University provost M. Brian Blake on Friday reaffirmed the university's opposition to the anti-Israel BDS movement and said that BDS activist Dr. Ilana Feldman, who was appointed as interim dean of the Elliott School of International Affairs, will not be a candidate for the permanent position. (Jewish Insider) News Resources - Israel and the Mideast:
Alongside their public rejection of the Israeli plan to extend sovereignty to the Jordan Valley and Israeli settlements in Judea and Samaria, senior officials in Jordan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf States say their leaders have met in recent months with U.S. officials Jared Kushner and Avi Berkowitz and, in effect, gave them a green light to continue the work of the U.S.-Israel mapping committee to advance the sovereignty plan. A senior Saudi diplomat close to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman told Israel Hayom that Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and the UAE have an unofficial coordinated position in favor of the sovereignty plan. "With all due respect to the few Palestinians who live in the Jordan Valley, Arab states like Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the UAE and Jordan will not endanger their relations with the Trump administration for them," he said. "The Palestinians weren't smart enough to take advantage of the supportive Obama government and continued their rejectionism. It is time for Abbas and his veteran leadership to wake up and understand that the interests of the region and the world have changed. If they miss yet another opportunity to establish an independent state alongside Israel because of Israeli sovereignty in the Jordan Valley and the settlements, in another 20 years they will be left with nothing." A senior Egyptian security official added that moderate Arab leaders headed by Egyptian President Sisi "see the struggle to block Shiite Iran's drive for hegemony over Sunni nations in the Middle East as a more important issue than that of the Palestinians." (Israel Hayom-Hebrew, 27May2020) U.S. Ambassador to Israel David Friedman met Tuesday with Israeli Communications Minister Yoaz Hendel as part of U.S. efforts to warn allies against using Chinese companies to build their 5G internet networks. The U.S. has argued that Chinese companies will use their involvement for espionage or possibly sabotage of communications infrastructure. (Jerusalem Post) See also Israel Defense Ministry Wants China Excluded from Israeli 5G - Gad Perez The Israel Ministry of Defense recommends against allowing Chinese firms to participate in the construction of 5G mobile telecommunications infrastructure in Israel, Channel 12 reported. (Globes) The International Criminal Court at The Hague requested the Palestinian Authority on Tuesday to provide clarification regarding Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' recent declaration that he is ending all agreements with Israel and the U.S. The ICC Prosecutor requested information "on the question whether [Abbas' statement] pertains to any of the Oslo agreements between Palestine and Israel." The court asked to know the current status of the agreements, in part, because Israel claims that the Oslo Accords established that the PA is not a state and that it therefore is not under the ICC's jurisdiction. In a legal opinion delivered to The Hague, Israel wrote that it would take an "act of implausible 'legal gymnastics' to claim that the Palestinians have criminal jurisdiction of any kind over Israeli nationals that they can delegate to the Court...such jurisdiction is explicitly excluded in the very agreements that established the Palestinian Authority." (Ha'aretz) See also Undermining the International Criminal Court - Dore Gold and Alan Baker, eds. This monograph details the extent of the political abuse and manipulation of the International Criminal Court by the Palestinians. (Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs) Israeli security forces arrested seven Palestinian suspects in the West Bank in predawn raids on Wednesday, following a five-day lull in such operations that partially coincided with the Eid al-Fitr holiday. It was the first operation since the PA frozen security coordination with Israel. Yet no clashes were reported with Palestinian security forces, indicating some degree of ongoing coordination. (Times of Israel) The Israel Defense Ministry's Institute for Biological Research has found two drugs used to treat the genetic disorder known as Gaucher's disease are also effective against the coronavirus and potentially other viruses as well, the laboratory announced Tuesday. Since Cerdelga has already been approved for use by the U.S. FDA and Venglustat has almost completed the approval process, they may be fast-tracked for use with Covid-19 patients, the Defense Ministry said. A study on mice found that the medications inhibited the replication of the coronavirus, and were also found to work against Neuroinvasive Sindbis virus, West Nile virus and Influenza A virus. (Times of Israel) Israeli start-up Greeneye Technology has secured $7 million in funding, the company announced Tuesday. Greeneye is developing an artificial intelligence system that helps farmers accurately detect and spray weeds without blanketing their crops in herbicides. The technology will greatly reduce water and soil contamination by reducing herbicide usage by up to 90%. (Jerusalem Post) Global Commentary and Think-Tank Analysis:
It is hard to take Europe's insistence on the 1967 lines as sacrosanct too seriously. EU members collectively still refuse to move their embassies to the western parts of Jerusalem, which have been part of Israel since 1948. It is a very strange formulation when land on the western side of the 1967 line - that is, land indisputably belonging to Israel for 72 years - is considered negotiable, but every inch on the other side is off the table. It is a double standard, applied to Jews but not to Palestinians. Fifty years of propagandistic debate over Israel must not be allowed to obscure the facts. The legal disposition of all the territories defined by the League of Nations' Mandate for Palestine of 1921 is still grounded in that Mandate. The preamble to the Mandate "recognizes" that the Jewish people have an inherent right to the territory defined by the Mandate, as opposed to being "granted" that right by the international body. It essentially says that the international community cannot therefore grant to a people that which is already theirs. That makes Israel one of only a very few nations anchored in an inherited right (which can be revoked by no one), rather than a granted right (which the giver of the right can take back). Article 5 of the Mandate asserts the principle that the Jewish people, as the deed-holders of the land, possess the sole legal right to make any modifications to the territorial definitions (including borders) of that land. The 1949 Rhodes Agreement, which delineated the 1967 lines, said: "The Armistice Demarcation Line is not to be construed in any sense as a political or territorial boundary." Thus, under international law, the 1967 lines cannot be considered a border and for the EU to regard the 1967 lines as some sort of legal absolute in fact has no legal foundation. The writer, a former senior intelligence officer and adviser to the U.S. National Security Council, is a fellow at the Center for Security Policy. (National Review) In 2006, the Free Patriotic Movement, Lebanese President Michael Aoun's Christian party, and Hizbullah began an alliance which has lasted 14 years. The FPM provided Christian political cover while Hizbullah provided the political muscle, leading to Aoun's election as president. But recently, visible cracks have appeared in this alliance as hawkish figures within the FPM have gone to the media over the harmful effect Hizbullah's arsenal has on Lebanon's ability to respond to its abysmal economic conditions. Ziad Aswad, an FPM lawmaker, stressed that for Hizbullah "to keep their weapons means the Lebanese going hungry." In reality, however, FPM's President Gebran Bassil and Hizbullah are umbilically connected. The moment Hizbullah decides to drop Bassil, he will be open to criminal and judicial action or simply go back to losing elections like he did twice before. (Al Arabiya) Observations: Iran Presents the "Final Solution"
- to the Question of Palestine - Lt.-Col. (ret.) Michael Segall (Institute for Contemporary Affairs-Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs)
The writer, an expert on strategic issues with a focus on Iran, is a senior research fellow at the Jerusalem Center. Daily Alert was founded by the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations in 2002.
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