(IsraelNationalNews.com)
Haaretz Editorial
Benjamin Netanyahu has responded to the political turmoil in Arab states with renewed entrenchment in his right-wing views. In his address to the Knesset last week the prime minister warned that the regional instability could last for years, patted himself on the back for opposing the 2005 withdrawal from the Gaza Strip and spoke in favor of a continued Israeli presence in the Jordan Valley as part of a future agreement with the Palestinians, to keep Iran from “walking into” the West Bank.
Netanyahu described himself as being disappointed by the refusal of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas to negotiate. Netanyahu is ostensibly willing to talk with the Palestinians, but he offers them nothing beyond the future recognition – laden with preconditions – of a Palestinian state. He is not open to a change in the territorial status quo, and insists on going ahead with the expansion of the settlements, which undermines the chances for compromise.
In such circumstances it is understandable that the international community views Netanyahu’s talk of peace as empty words meant to buy time in order to perpetuate the right’s control of the government and to bolster the settlement enterprise. The U.S. veto prevented the harsh condemnation of the settlements by the UN Security Council, but the voting underlined Israel’s growing isolation.
Netanyahu’s position causes even friendly leaders, such as German Chancellor Angela Merkel, to turn her back to him. “You did nothing to advance peace,” Merkel told the prime minister when he called her to complain about Germany’s support for the Security Council resolution, according to a report by Barak Ravid in Friday’s Haaretz. Netanyahu promised Merkel that he will soon issue a new peace proposal, but the German chancellor was not inclined to believe him.
It is precisely during times of regional instability and uncertainty that Israel needs the support of the international community. But the Netanyahu government prefers to turn its back to the world and to barricade itself within Hebron and Beit El, Ofra and Yitzhar. Its policy is causing serious harm to Israel’s national interests and will only impede Israel’s integration into the new regional order that is taking shape. Netanyahu must heed the warnings of friendly leaders and put forth a practical peace plan – and not another attempt to use high-flown rhetoric to get the world off his back.
www.haaretz.com, 27.02.11
Israeli paper reports that PM was told in fractious phone call: ‘You haven’t made a single step’
Harriet Sherwood in Jerusalem
The German chancellor, Angela Merkel, has sternly rebuked the Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, in an unusually fractious telephone call, according to media reports.
Netanyahu had done nothing to advance the peace process, Merkel said in a conversation this week, reported in the Israeli daily Haaretz.
The Israeli prime minister telephoned Merkel on Monday to say he was disappointed that Germany had voted for a UN security council resolution condemning settlements that was vetoed by the US.
According to a German official quoted by Haaretz, Merkel was furious. “How dare you?” she said. “You are the one who has disappointed us. You haven’t made a single step to advance peace.”
A spokesman for the Israeli prime minister said he could not confirm the report.
The quoted comments reflect growing impatience in Europe with the impasse in the Israeli-Palestinian talks and a belief that Israel is stalling or impeding progress. With the exception of the US last Friday’s resolution was backed by all the security council members including Britain, Germany and France.
Despite the resolution being carefully worded to reflect American policy on settlement building in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, the US wielded its veto for the first time under Barack Obama’s presidency.
Reaction among Palestinians has been angry. Demonstrations have been held across the West Bank, in Ramallah, Nablus and Bethlehem.
Netanyahu told Merkel that he was planning a new initiative to be disclosed in the next few weeks. “I intend to make a new speech about the peace process in the next two to three weeks,” he was quoted as saying.
An Israeli government official confirmed that a fresh statement by Netanyahu on negotiations was in preparation but declined to say when it might be delivered.
During a visit to Israel this month the German chancellor warned that “the stalemate in negotiation is dangerous. There is no room for excuses.“
She dismissed the notion that Europe was becoming more hostile to Israel. “Europe will not turn its back on Israel and neither will the United States. We feel uncomfortable because things are not progressing. In an honest and straightforward manner I will tell you that you are missing an opportunity. History will not give you many more.“
At a joint press conference on Thursday with the Polish prime minister, Donald Tusk, Netanyahu said he expected Poland to be robust in defending Israel when it took over the presidency of the European Union on 1 July.
“We have two expectations: upgrading Israel’s standing in the EU and upgrading the truth,” he said. “Israel is fighting for its right to exist, to live in security and exist at all, against ceaseless waves of attacks.”
www.guardian.co.uk, 25 February 2011
Top Aide Says Turkey Should ‘Compensate’ Israel for Making Them Kill Aid Workers
by Jason Ditz, December 07, 2010
Reports that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is close to making a deal to normalize relations with long-standing ally Turkey, and that such a deal might involve officially apologizing for the Israeli attack on the Mavi Marmara aid ship and the killing of nine aid workers have riled Israel’s Foreign Ministry.
Turkish PM Tayyip Erdogan
Top aides to Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, who has repeatedly clashed with Netanyahu over his lack of involvement in overseas diplomacy, warned that apologizing to Turkey for the killings was a de facto surrend to “terror.”
The Mavi Marmara was carrying wheelchairs and medication to the Gaza Strip, despite an Israeli blockade barring such aid arriving by sea. Israeli commandos attacked the ship, and at the time Israeli officials insisted the ship was secretly full of al-Qaeda members.
But even though all the claims of heavily armed terrorists hiding on the ship have given way to the lack of arrests, Israel’s Foreign Ministry still insists not only that the attack was justified, but that Turkey owes Israel “compensation” for making them go to the trouble of killing the aid workers.
via Israeli Foreign Ministry Slams Netanyahu for Turkey Reconciliation Efforts — News from Antiwar.com.
On Friday Turkey strongly condemned the Israeli proposal to build 1,300 apartments in East Jerusalem, throwing a wrench into peace talks, which had resumed in September after an interruption of nearly two years.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Selçuk Ünal said Turkey strongly condemns Jewish settlements in East Jerusalem despite repeated calls from the international community to halt the illegal settlements.
Ünal said such activities would lead to failure in efforts for resumption of peace talks in the region.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said he won’t renew a 10-month ban on construction in West Bank settlements that expired in September, and he will not curb building in East Jerusalem. This week, Israel’s announcement that it is moving ahead with plans for 1,300 new apartments for Jews there set off a harsh public exchange with the US and the EU.
“Attempts to change demographic structure, status and cultural identity of Jerusalem raise concerns,” Ünal stressed, adding that Turkey expects Israel to halt its settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem and avoid taking unilateral steps that would negatively affect talks on final status.
via Today’s Zaman, your gateway to Turkish daily news.
PM praises “professionalism, heroism, and restraint” of IDF commandos at Atlit navy base; Turkey’s Erdogan continues to call for flotilla apology.
With Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan continuing to call for an Israeli apology for May’s Mavi Marmara incident, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu met Wednesday with Shayetet 13 commandos who took part in the deadly raid on the ship, referred to their “professionalism,” “heroism” and “restraint,” and made clear – without having to say so – that no apology was in the works.
“The Shayetet’s mission was vital, necessary, legal and of the utmost importance,” Netanyahu said, referring to the raid which left nine passengers of the ship dead after the commandos came under attack when they boarded the boat to keep it from breaking Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza.
“The operation was carried out under very difficult conditions,” Netanyahu said.
“You, the fighters, encountered a violent terrorist-supporting force armed with knives, clubs and electric chain saws, and also with arms.”
“I have to say that your actions against people that came to kill you and tried to kill you were professional and characterized by heroism, restraint and a morality that I don’t believe could be exemplified any better by any army or navy in the world.”
Speaking while both the Turkel Committee and a UN commission were still conducting their investigations into the incident, Netanyahu told the soldiers at their base in Atlit that “you enjoy my full backing as well as the full backing of the Israeli government, the Israeli people and of every decent person looking at the facts as they are.”
Sources in the Prime Minister’s Office said that Netanyahu’s visit to the base was not connected to the Turkel Committee or the UN commission, nor to Erdogan’s continual demand for an Israeli apology and reparation payments to victims of the incident and their families. Rather, the sources said, the prime minister just wanted to show support and appreciation to the commandos involved.
Erdogan has said that an apology and reparations were a precondition to restoring normalcy to Israeli- Turkish ties. In recent speeches, however, Netanyahu has made clear he realizes that the relations have changed dramatically, comparing the souring of Israeli-Turkish ties to what happened to Iranian-Israeli ties after the Iranian revolution in 1979.
“Things have changed in Iran, and unfortunately in other places as well, almost overnight,” he said in a reference to Turkey earlier in the month, at a speech at the opening of the Knesset’s winter session.
Despite the tidal wave of rhetorical barbs against Israel flowing out of Ankara since the flotilla incident, Jerusalem has taken a very moderate public tone, not wanting – according to diplomatic sources – to make the situation worse, or harm the bilateral business ties that still exist between the two countries.
Netanyahu, during his comments to the commandos Tuesday, said that the Shayetet has dealt with other vessels since that incident, and even in the same flotilla as the Mavi Marmara, without any casualties, since those other boats did not harbor people coming with violent intent.
“You acted to defend Israel against the people who came to help break our bulwark against terrorist infiltration,” Netanyahu said of the naval blockade of Gaza.
Netanyahu described Gaza as an “Iranian terror base that endangers the State of Israel. It is very close to us, it is very dangerous. This is not a theoretical danger – thousands of missiles and rockets from Gaza have rained down on us. There is a constant attempt by Hamas, backed by Iran, to bring more and more weapons directed against Israeli citizens.”
Netanyahu said the task of his government, and the Olmert government that preceded it and established the naval blockade, was to stop the arms smuggling “using legitimate means at our disposal – the naval blockade, and other ways in which we work, both nearby and far away – to stop the entry of these lethal weapons directed against Israeli citizens.”
Netanyahu told the commandos he was glad to see among them those who “managed to get through this experience and recuperate. I salute all of you. You act in the name of the State of Israel for Israel’s security. Nobody’s better than you. I salute you.”
Netanyahu was accompanied on his visit by Chief of General Staff Lt.-Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi and navy commander Adm. Eli Marom.
“You shot at whom you had to, and not at those you didn’t have to,” Ashkenazi said.
Alluding to the classified missions the unit carries out, Ashkenazi said it was “a pity that the country does not know what we know about these fighters, and a little about what our enemies have experienced from them.”
In a related development, the security cabinet is expected to meet on Wednesday to discuss the missiles that have been smuggled into the Gaza Strip and are threatening IAF flights over and near the area.