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Israel - Summary Of Editorials From The Hebrew Press

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  • Israel - Summary Of Editorials From The Hebrew Press

    ISRAEL - SUMMARY OF EDITORIALS FROM THE HEBREW PRESS, 12 JAN 2010

    Ministry of Foreign Affairs
    http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/Archive/Editoria ls/2010/Editorials-12-Jan-2010.htm
    Jan 12 2010
    Israel

    Yediot Aharonot comments on US Middle East envoy George Mitchell's
    recent remarks to the effect that the Obama administration could
    at some point consider delaying US loan guarantees to Israel, in
    the absence of sufficient progress in the peace process with the
    Palestinians. The author is less troubled by this threat per se than
    he is by the mindset behind it, which he believes is "an additional
    disturbing sign of a chill in US-Israeli relations." The paper
    suggests that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu "immediately say
    that Israel will, in any permanent diplomatic settlement, evacuate
    Judea and Samaria, except for the large settlement blocs, and will
    completely halt construction in all of those areas of Judea and Samaria
    due to be evacuated" in order to "defuse the increasing tension in
    US-Israeli relations and maybe even facilitate the resumption of the
    talks." However, the author warns, "In a few months, the foregoing will
    no longer be sufficient, just as the decision to freeze construction,
    which was made too late, has been ineffectual. In the diplomatic
    bazaar, the price being demanded of Israel only rises."

    The Jerusalem Post comments that the US administration "is heavily
    invested in re-starting negotiations. Israel is on board. But the
    Palestinians appear to have adopted Syria's bargaining approach. Just
    as Damascus will not come to the table until it is assured - in advance
    - that its maximalist demands will all be met, the Palestinians, too,
    have developed an ever-longer list of prerequisites that need to be
    accommodated before they will deign to talk. Mitchell is due back in
    the region later in the month. What should Jerusalem do? Continue to
    show appreciation for the administration's efforts.

    Because a viable two-state solution that permanently ends the conflict
    is in Israel's interest."

    Two papers discuss the latest developments in Israeli-Turkish
    relations:

    Ma'ariv refers to Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon's on-camera
    reprimand of the Turkish Ambassador, who was given a low chair at
    a table with an Israeli flag only, and believes that Israel could
    no longer ignore Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's
    provocations. The author says, "The time has come to drop the gloves.

    If obsequiousness does not work, then it is worthwhile to speak the
    truth: Erdogan is the last one who has the right to open his mouth. It
    is not just Turkey's murderous past, with the genocide carried out
    against the Armenians, it is the current Turkey. Turkey has eliminated
    tens of thousands of Kurds, whose threat to Turkey is much less than
    Hamas's threat to Israel. And it is the same Erdogan who, as Mayor of
    Istanbul in 1995, sent the police to massacre Alevis as they sat in
    a café." The paper declares, "The degrading reception that Deputy
    Foreign Minister Ayalon meted out yesterday was the right thing to
    do but was ill-timed. We should have done this months ago. Restraint
    was proper once, maybe twice, but enough is enough."

    Yisrael Hayom suggests that, "As is known, the phrase 'national
    honor' has faded from international discourse and Foreign Minister
    Liberman has been unjustly criticized for trying to restore the honor
    to 'national honor'." The author calls for the recall of Israel's
    Ambassador to Turkey for a thorough re-evaluation of Israeli-Turkish
    relations and suggests that American Jewish organizations likewise
    reconsider their support for Turkish interests in Washington. The
    paper also asserts that Israel should have already recognized
    "the genocide of the Armenian people" and suggests that it do so
    forthwith, "regardless of the degree of warmth, and mainly the chill,
    in Israeli-Turkish relations."

    __________

    Haaretz writes: "Former president Moshe Katsav began testifying this
    week in Tel Aviv District Court in his rape case. The trial is closed
    to the public but the start of his testimony reminded people that it
    is taking place and that it has entered the defense phase. Contrary
    to popular belief, closing such trials to the public is not mandatory.

    Society seeks confidentiality for the testimony of complainants in
    sexual offense cases, primarily so they may testify without fear;
    this does not require building a fortress around a trial involving a
    clear and exceptionally strong public interest. The Katsav case cannot
    be covered over with a blackout until the court issues its verdict,
    several months from now. Justice must not only be done but also be
    seen to be done."
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