PRICE LIST - PRIVATE ACCOUNT the Price of the Reservation in the “Round Trip” Model Is Based of the Time the Car Is Reserved for You and the KM Driven

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

PRICE LIST - PRIVATE ACCOUNT the Price of the Reservation in the “Round Trip” Model Is Based of the Time the Car Is Reserved for You and the KM Driven May 2019 ״ROUND TRIP״ - PRICE LIST - PRIVATE ACCOUNT The price of the reservation in the “Round Trip” model is based of the time the car is reserved for you and the KM driven. Tel Aviv • Givatayim • Ramat Gan, Herzliya • Ra'anana • Rishon le Zion • Jerusalem • Haifa • Natanya • Ashdod Category Type of Car DRIVE Plan LITE Plan monthly Membership Fee 50 NIS 20 NIS Nissan Micra Hourly/Daily* 17 NIS / 160 NIS 20 NIS / 180 NIS Basic Car Hyundai i10 Price per KM 2 NIS 2 NIS (For the first 50 KM’s) Smart Toyota Aygo Price per KM 1 NIS 1 NIS Chevrolet Spark (After the first 50 KM’s) Sentra Nissan Hourly/Daily* 23 NIS / 205 NIS 25 NIS / 225 NIS Family Car Hyundai i25 Price per KM 2 NIS 2 NIS KIA Rio (For the first 50 KM’s) Toyota Yaris Price per KM 1 NIS 1 NIS (After the first 50 KM’s) Hourly/Daily* 33 NIS / 260 NIS 35 NIS / 280 NIS Prestigious Car Mini Cooper Price per KM 2 NIS 2 NIS KIA Sportage (For the first 50 KM’s) Toyota C-HR Price per KM 1 NIS 1 NIS (After the first 50 KM’s) Hourly/Daily* 33 NIS / 260 NIS 35 NIS / 280 NIS Small Trucks Renault Kangoo Price per KM 2 NIS 2 NIS (For the first 50 KM’s) Price per KM 1 NIS 1 NIS (After the first 50 KM’s) Hourly/Daily* 48 NIS / 480 NIS 50 NIS / 500 NIS Large Van Citroen Jumpy Price per KM 2 NIS 2 NIS (For the first 50 KM’s) Price per KM 2 NIS 2 NIS (After the first 50 KM’s) Additional weekend fares (Thursday at 11:00 PM until Saturday evening – 4 ILS per hour and 40 ILS per day. * The hourly fee can’t exceed the daily fee - Meaning that once the hourly rate matches the daily rate, it will be capped”. The prices include tax. The company reserves the right to change or cancel the price or sale without prior warning. (Errors and emissions excepted). May 2019 ״ONE WAY״ - PRICE LIST - PRIVATE ACCOUNT The price of driving in the “One Way” model is based per minute driven. Natanya • Haifa Category Type of Car DRIVE Plan LITE Plan monthly Membership Fee 50 NIS 20 NIS Electric Car Renault ZOE Charge per minute 1.2 NIS 1.7 NIS Car reservation extension for One-Way vehicles / stopovers 50% of the per-minute trip rate The prices include tax. The company reserves the right to change or cancel the price or sale without prior warning. (Errors and emissions excepted). May 2019 ״ROUND TRIP״ - PRICE LIST - COMPANY ACCOUNT The price of the drives in the “Round Trip” model is based of the time the car is reserved for you and the KM driven. Tel Aviv • Givatayim • Ramat Gan, Herzliya • Ra'anana • Rishon le Zion • Jerusalem • Haifa • Natanya • Ashdod Category Type of Car Business DRIVE Business LITE monthly Membership Fee 190 NIS 50 NIS Nissan Micra Hourly/Daily* 13 NIS / 117 NIS 16 NIS / 144 NIS Basic Car Hyundai i10 Price per KM 1.7 NIS 1.7 NIS (For the first 50 KM’s) Smart Toyota Aygo Price per KM 0.85 NIS 0.85 NIS Chevrolet Spark (After the first 50 KM’s) Sentra Nissan Hourly/Daily* 18 NIS / 162 NIS 21 NIS / 189 NIS Family Car Hyundai i25 Price per KM 1.7 NIS 1.7 NIS KIA Rio (For the first 50 KM’s) Toyota Yaris Price per KM 0.85 NIS 0.85 NIS (After the first 50 KM’s) Hourly/Daily * 28 NIS / 217 NIS 31 NIS / 244 NIS Prestigious Car Mini Cooper Price per KM 1.7 NIS 1.7 NIS KIA Sportage (For the first 50 KM’s) Toyota C-HR Price per KM 0.85 NIS 0.85 NIS (After the first 50 KM’s) Hourly/Daily* 28 NIS / 217 NIS 31 NIS / 244 NIS Small Trucks Renault Kangoo Price per KM 1.7 NIS 1.7 NIS (For the first 50 KM’s) Price per KM 0.85 NIS 0.85 NIS (After the first 50 KM’s) Hourly/Daily * 43 NIS / 430 NIS 46 NIS / 460 NIS Large Trucks Citroen Jumpy Price per KM 1.7 NIS 1.7 NIS (For the first 50 KM’s) Price per KM 1.7 NIS 1.7 NIS (After the first 50 KM’s) Additional weekend fares (Thursday at 11:00 PM until Saturday evening – 4 ILS per hour and 40 ILS per day. * The hourly fee can’t exceed the daily fee - Meaning that once the hourly rate matches the daily rate, it will be capped”. The prices include tax. The company reserves the right to change or cancel the price or sale without prior warning. (Errors and emissions excepted). May 2019 ״ONE WAY״ - PRICE LIST - COMPANY ACCOUNT The price of driving in the “One Way” model is based per minute driven. Natanya • Haifa Category Type of Car Business LITE / DRIVE monthly Membership Fee 50 NIS Electric Car Renault ZOE Price per Minute 1.03 NIS Car reservation extension for One-Way vehicles / stopovers 50% of the per-minute trip rate The prices do not include tax. The company reserves the right to change or cancel the price or sale without prior warning. (Errors and emissions excepted)..
Recommended publications
  • ARTICLES Israel's Migration Balance
    ARTICLES Israel’s Migration Balance Demography, Politics, and Ideology Ian S. Lustick Abstract: As a state founded on Jewish immigration and the absorp- tion of immigration, what are the ideological and political implications for Israel of a zero or negative migration balance? By closely examining data on immigration and emigration, trends with regard to the migration balance are established. This article pays particular attention to the ways in which Israelis from different political perspectives have portrayed the question of the migration balance and to the relationship between a declining migration balance and the re-emergence of the “demographic problem” as a political, cultural, and psychological reality of enormous resonance for Jewish Israelis. Conclusions are drawn about the relation- ship between Israel’s anxious re-engagement with the demographic problem and its responses to Iran’s nuclear program, the unintended con- sequences of encouraging programs of “flexible aliyah,” and the intense debate over the conversion of non-Jewish non-Arab Israelis. KEYWORDS: aliyah, demographic problem, emigration, immigration, Israel, migration balance, yeridah, Zionism Changing Approaches to Aliyah and Yeridah Aliyah, the migration of Jews to Israel from their previous homes in the diaspora, was the central plank and raison d’être of classical Zionism. Every stream of Zionist ideology has emphasized the return of Jews to what is declared as their once and future homeland. Every Zionist political party; every institution of the Zionist movement; every Israeli government; and most Israeli political parties, from 1948 to the present, have given pride of place to their commitments to aliyah and immigrant absorption. For example, the official list of ten “policy guidelines” of Israel’s 32nd Israel Studies Review, Volume 26, Issue 1, Summer 2011: 33–65 © Association for Israel Studies doi: 10.3167/isr.2011.260108 34 | Ian S.
    [Show full text]
  • Israel and the Occupied Territories 2015 Human Rights Report
    ISRAEL 2015 HUMAN RIGHTS REPORT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Israel is a multiparty parliamentary democracy. Although it has no constitution, the parliament, the unicameral 120-member Knesset, has enacted a series of “Basic Laws” that enumerate fundamental rights. Certain fundamental laws, orders, and regulations legally depend on the existence of a “state of emergency,” which has been in effect since 1948. Under the Basic Laws, the Knesset has the power to dissolve the government and mandate elections. The nationwide Knesset elections in March, considered free and fair, resulted in a coalition government led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Civilian authorities maintained effective control over the security services. (An annex to this report covers human rights in the occupied territories. This report deals with human rights in Israel and the Israeli- occupied Golan Heights.) During the year according to Israeli Security Agency (ISA, also known as Shabak) statistics, Palestinians committed 47 terror attacks (including stabbings, assaults, shootings, projectile and rocket attacks, and attacks by improvised explosive devices (IED) within the Green Line that led to the deaths of five Israelis and one Eritrean, and two stabbing terror attacks committed by Jewish Israelis within the Green Line and not including Jerusalem. According to the ISA, Hamas, Hezbollah, and other militant groups fired 22 rockets into Israel and in 11 other incidents either planted IEDs or carried out shooting or projectile attacks into Israel and the Golan Heights. Further
    [Show full text]
  • Israel National Report for Habitat III National Israel Report
    Israel National Report for Habitat III National Report Israel National | 1 Table of content: Israel National Report for Habitat III Forward 5-6 I. Urban Demographic Issues and Challenges for a New Urban Agenda 7-15 1. Managing rapid urbanization 7 2. Managing rural-urban linkages 8 3. Addressing urban youth needs 9 4. Responding to the needs of the aged 11 5. Integrating gender in urban development 12 6. Challenges Experienced and Lessons Learned 13 II. Land and Urban Planning: Issues and Challenges for a New Urban Agenda 16-22 7. Ensuring sustainable urban planning and design 16 8. Improving urban land management, including addressing urban sprawl 17 9. Enhancing urban and peri-urban food production 18 10. Addressing urban mobility challenges 19 11. Improving technical capacity to plan and manage cities 20 Contributors to this report 12. Challenges Experienced and Lessons Learned 21 • National Focal Point: Nethanel Lapidot, senior division of strategic planing and policy, Ministry III. Environment and Urbanization: Issues and Challenges for a New Urban of Construction and Housing Agenda 23-29 13. Climate status and policy 23 • National Coordinator: Hofit Wienreb Diamant, senior division of strategic planing and policy, Ministry of Construction and Housing 14. Disaster risk reduction 24 • Editor: Dr. Orli Ronen, Porter School for the Environment, Tel Aviv University 15. Minimizing Transportation Congestion 25 • Content Team: Ayelet Kraus, Ira Diamadi, Danya Vaknin, Yael Zilberstein, Ziv Rotem, Adva 16. Air Pollution 27 Livne, Noam Frank, Sagit Porat, Michal Shamay 17. Challenges Experienced and Lessons Learned 28 • Reviewers: Dr. Yodan Rofe, Ben Gurion University; Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Hamas Attack on Israel Aims to Capitalize on Palestinian
    Selected articles concerning Israel, published weekly by Suburban Orthodox Toras Chaim’s (Baltimore) Israel Action Committee Edited by Jerry Appelbaum ( [email protected] ) | Founding editor: Sheldon J. Berman Z”L Issue 8 8 7 Volume 2 1 , Number 1 9 Parshias Bamidbar | 48th Day Omer May 1 5 , 2021 Hamas Attack on Israel Aims to Capitalize on Palestinian Frustration By Dov Lieber and Felicia Schwartz wsj.com May 12, 2021 It is not that the police caused the uptick in violence, forces by Monday evening from Shei kh Jarrah. The but they certainly ran headfirst, full - speed, guns forces were there as part of security measures surrounding blazing into the trap that was set for them. the nightly protests. When the secretive military chief of the Palestinian As the deadline passed, the group sent the barrage of Islamist movement Hamas emerged from the shadows last rockets toward Jerusalem, precipitating the Israeli week, he chose to weigh in on a land dispute in East response. Jerusalem, threatening to retaliate against Israel if Israeli strikes and Hamas rocket fire have k illed 56 Palestinian residents there were evicted from their homes. Palestinians, including 14 children, and seven Israelis, “If the aggression against our people…doesn’ t stop including one child, according to Palestinian and Israeli immediately,” warned the commander, Mohammad Deif, officials. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel “the enemy will pay an expensive price.” has killed dozens of Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad Hamas followed through on the threat, firing from the operatives. Gaza Strip, which it governs, over a thousand rockets at Althou gh the Palestinian youth have lacked a single Israel since Monday evening.
    [Show full text]
  • Tel Aviv-Jaffa
    Chapter 7 Tel Aviv-Jaffa 1 Introduction Tel Aviv-Jaffa is the second city of Israel, located on the Mediterranean coast- line. It is the nation’s financial center and technology hub; it is also the third- largest urban economy in the Middle East after Abu Dhabi and Kuwait City (Brookings Institution 2014). The city receives around three million tourists and visitors annually. It has been a long way since Tel Aviv was founded in 1909 by a few dozens of Jewish immigrants on the outskirts of the ancient port city of Jaffa, then mostly populated by Arabs. The first neighborhoods had been established in 1886 (Elkayam 1990) and new quarters made their appearance outside Jaffa in the following years. On 11 April 1909, 66 Jewish families gathered on a sand dune to parcel out the land. This was the official date of the establishment of Tel Aviv. By 1914, Tel Aviv had grown to more than one square kilometer. The town rapidly became an attraction for newcomers. These were the years of the British Mandate and the number of those immigrants – from Poland and Ger- many mainly – increased all along the 1930s, propelled by the world economic crisis of 1929 and the rise to power of Nazism in Germany in 1993. As a conse- quence, frictions intensified between Arabs and Jews in Palestine1 but did little to prevent Tel Aviv from growing (Glass 2002). In 1923, Tel Aviv was the first town to be wired to electricity in the country, and it was granted municipal status in 1934. By 1937 it had grown to 150,000 inhabitants, compared to Jaffa’s 69,000 residents.
    [Show full text]
  • Staring Back at the Sun: Video Art from Israel, 1970-2012 an Exhibition and Public Program Touring Internationally, 2016-2017
    Staring Back at the Sun: Video Art from Israel, 1970-2012 An Exhibition and Public Program Touring Internationally, 2016-2017 Roee Rosen, still from Confessions Coming Soon, 2007, video. 8:40 minutes. Video, possibly more than any other form of communication, has shaped the world in radical ways over the past half century. It has also changed contemporary art on a global scale. Its dual “life” as an agent of mass communication and an artistic medium is especially intertwined in Israel, where artists have been using video artistically in response to its use in mass media and to the harsh reality video mediates on a daily basis. The country’s relatively sudden exposure to commercial television in the 1990s coincided with the Palestinian uprising, or Intifada, and major shifts in internal politics. Artists responded to this in what can now be considered a “renaissance” of video art, with roots traced back to the ’70s. An examination of these pieces, many that have rarely been presented outside Israel, as well as recent, iconic works from the past two decades offers valuable lessons on how art and culture are shaped by larger forces. Staring Back at the Sun: Video Art from Israel, 1970-2012 traces the development of contemporary video practice in Israel and highlights work by artists who take an incisive, critical perspective towards the cultural and political landscape in Israel and beyond. Showcasing 35 works, this program includes documentation of early performances, films and videos, many of which have never been presented outside of Israel until now. Informed by the international 1 history of video art, the program surveys the development of the medium in Israel and explores how artists have employed technology and material to examine the unavoidable and messy overlap of art and politics.
    [Show full text]
  • MDA Operates 127 Stations Throughout Israel
    MDA 85 OnLine 0 2 111 6 Look for us on facebook https://www.facebook.com/ Like MDASchweiz/ Wave of Terror MK Shuli Mualem-Raffaelli Visited the MDA National Dispatch Cooperation Tightens Vetween MDA The First MDA Medics and and Medical Units of the IDF Paramedics were Trained to Use in Judea and Samaria Sign language Did you know? MDA operates 127 stations throughout Israel A Gift to Remember Paula Tepper's Birthday Gift to Israel Instructors' Conference at Volunteer The City of Givatayim Thanks its MDA The Fight to Save a Life Blood Donors Organization Youth Volunteers Par Excellence Serena Liesdek Wave of Terror Since the beginning of the Wave of Terror, September 13th 2015 until February 3rd 2016, MDA teams provided medical lifesaving treatment to 333 victims, 31 of which have died and 302 were injured: 28 in severe condition, 8 in moderate to severe condition, 46 in moderate condition, 11 in mild to moderate condition, and 209 in mild condition. In addition, MDA teams have assisted more than 106 people, suffering from stress symptoms. Phptos: MDA Spokesmen 2 Phptos: MDA Spokesmen MK Shuli Mualem-Raffaelli Visited the MDA National Dispatch: "It is important to regulate the budget of MDA the national rescue organization of Israel" MK Shuli Mualem, from the "Jewish Home" MK Mualem-Raffaelli expressed great interest party, visited on Thursday, February 4th, the in the unique Magen David Adom paramedic's MDA National Dispatch Centre in Kiryat Ono. course for Hesder yeshiva students in Ofakim MK Mualem-Raffaelli met with the medics and that trains yeshiva students as paramedics and paramedics and heard about the activities and the constitutes a significant reinforcement to the many calls arriving daily to MDA 101 emergency MDA volunteers of the periphery.
    [Show full text]
  • CONTENTS Page ORDINANCE CONFIRMED Confirmation of Ordinance No
    NO. 1599 THURSDAY, 31ST JULY, 1947 823 CONTENTS Page ORDINANCE CONFIRMED Confirmation of Ordinance No. 48 of 1946 - - - - 825 GOVERNMENT NOTICES Notice regarding Applications for Entry Permits to certain Locations - 825 Property Tax in Bulgaria - 825 Appointment of a President of a District Court to exercise Functions of a British Puisne Judge - 825 ׳ - - Leave of Government Officers—Approval of - - 826 Appointments, etc. - - - - - 826 Renewal of Land Valuers' Licences - 827 Cancellation of Medical Licences - - - 827 ־ - List of Graduate Nurses - - - 827 Adjudication of Contracts - - - - 828 Loss of Palestine Savings Certificates and Post Office Savings Bank Deposit Books - 829 Claims for Mutilated Currency Notes - 829 Citation Orders - - - - - - 830 ־ ־ - Notice of the Execution Office of Haifa - 831 RETURNS Quarantine and Infectious Diseases Summary - 831 Revenue and Expenditure Account for the Year ended 31st March, 1946, of the Jerusalem Water Supply Department - 832 Balance Sheet as at 31st March, 1946, of the Jerusalem Water Supply Department - 834 Summary of Receipts and Payments for the Year ended 31st March, 1946, of the Municipal Corporation of Haifa - 836 Statement of Assets and Liabilities as at 31st March, 1946, of the Municipal Corporation of Haifa - 837 Persons changing their Names - 839 Sale of Unclaimed Goods - 841 NOTICES REGARDING COOPERATIVE SOCIETIES, BANKRUPTCIES, INCORPORATION OF COM­ PANIES, REGISTRATION OF PARTNERSHIPS, ETC. - - - 841 CORRIGENDA - - - - - 858 SUPPLEMENT No. 2. The• following subsidiary legislation
    [Show full text]
  • Return of Organization Exempt from Income
    Return of Organization Exempt From Income Tax Form 990 Under section 501 (c), 527, or 4947( a)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code (except black lung benefit trust or private foundation) 2005 Department of the Treasury Internal Revenue Service ► The o rganization may have to use a copy of this return to satisfy state re porting requirements. A For the 2005 calendar year , or tax year be and B Check If C Name of organization D Employer Identification number applicable Please use IRS change ta Qachange RICA IS RAEL CULTURAL FOUNDATION 13-1664048 E; a11gne ^ci See Number and street (or P 0. box if mail is not delivered to street address) Room/suite E Telephone number 0jretum specific 1 EAST 42ND STREET 1400 212-557-1600 Instruo retum uons City or town , state or country, and ZIP + 4 F nocounwro memos 0 Cash [X ,camel ded On° EW YORK , NY 10017 (sped ► [l^PP°ca"on pending • Section 501 (Il)c 3 organizations and 4947(a)(1) nonexempt charitable trusts H and I are not applicable to section 527 organizations. must attach a completed Schedule A ( Form 990 or 990-EZ). H(a) Is this a group return for affiliates ? Yes OX No G Website : : / /AICF . WEBNET . ORG/ H(b) If 'Yes ,* enter number of affiliates' N/A J Organization type (deckonIyone) ► [ 501(c) ( 3 ) I (insert no ) ] 4947(a)(1) or L] 527 H(c) Are all affiliates included ? N/A Yes E__1 No Is(ITthis , attach a list) K Check here Q the organization' s gross receipts are normally not The 110- if more than $25 ,000 .
    [Show full text]
  • Tel Aviv Innovation Ecosystem Report: Resilience & Growth 2 3
    2020TEL AVIV INNOVATION ECOSYSTEM REPORT: RESILIENCE & GROWTH 2 3 REPORT HIGHLIGHTS Tel Aviv’s tech sector not only remained resilient during the global pandemic, but even outperformed itself by breaking records in capital raised, exits and number of companies. The Israeli tech sector witnessed similar trends. The local tech ecosystem demonstrated increased levels of maturity with 14 new unicorns, a greater impact of scaleups, and a growing number of local and foreign investors. Over two-thirds of investments were made by a diverse mix of international investors. AI, Fintech, Big Data and SaaS are the leading clusters in number of companies, fundraising and exits, enhancing the evolution from a startup city to a deep tech capital. INDEX Tech Companies Tel Aviv’s talent accounted for 20% of tech employees in Talent Israel and generated nearly half of Israel’s capital raised Clusters and exits. Investors Capital Raised Exits Multinational companies showed confidence in Tel Aviv’s ecosystem and talent by opening 9 new foreign R&D centers during a year of lockdowns and restrictions on international movement. 4 5 TECH COMPANIES THE TEL AVIV ECOSYSTEM 29% 25% Tel Aviv 2,750 47% 2,203 Greater 2,865 Tel Aviv 166 TECH COMPANIES New companies were created in 2016 2020 2020 2,750 115 Israeli tech companies GROWTH IN NUMBER Tel Aviv Tech Foreign R&D Greater Tel Aviv tech companies OF TECH COMPANIES Companies Centers Tel Aviv tech companies (Nationwide increase of 16%) Number Of Israeli Tech Companies Tel Aviv Tech Companies: Opened vs. Closed 452
    [Show full text]
  • ISRAEL Population R-Pihe POPULATION of the State of Israel at the End of June 1954 Was 1,687,886
    ISRAEL Population r-piHE POPULATION of the State of Israel at the end of June 1954 was 1,687,886. J. Of these, 188,936 (about 11 per cent) were non-Jews. The table below shows the growth of the population of Israel since May 1948. TABLE 1 JEWISH POPULATION OF ISRAEL, MAY 1948-JULY 1954 Tear Jews Non-Jews Total 1948 758,000 1949 1,013,000 160,000 1,173,000 1950 1,203,000 167,000 1,370,000 1951 1,404,000 173,000 1,577,000 1952 1,450,000 179,000 1,629,000 1953 1,483,505 185,892 1,669,397 1954 (July) 1,498,950 188,936 1,687,886 The total yearly population increase fell from 17 per cent in 1950 to 15 per cent in 1951, 3.3 per cent in 1952, and 2.3 per cent in 1953, due to a decrease in the number of immigrants. Since the first half of 1952 the natural increase had exceeded the net migration. During the first half of 1953 the number of emigrants exceeded the number of immigrants, but during the latter half of the year, immigration was again somewhat greater than emi- gration. During 1953 there were 11,800 immigrants and 8,650 emigrants in all. During the first six months of 1954, 4,128 new immigrants came to Israel. TABLE 2 GROWTH OF JEWISH POPULATION IN ISRAEL (in thousands) 1954 Year 1949 1950 1951 1952 7953 (Jan.-March) Net migration 235 160 167 10 2 4 Natural increase 20 29 35 35 35 9.5 TOTAL INCREASE 255 189 202 45 37 10.5 466 ISRAEL 467 VITAL STATISTICS The net birth rate (the number of live births per 1,000 residents) was 30.8 during the first months of 1954, as compared with 32 in 1953 and 33 in 1952.
    [Show full text]
  • 20141116 Herzliya ME WMD Report
    Pugwash Workshop on “The Unchangeable Middle East” Herzliya, Israel 14-15 November 2014 MAIN POINTS: • The ISIS/Daesh threat has emerged as the most serious threat to regional stability given its penetration into Iraq and Syria. Although it does not explicitly focus on Israel, as it now stands there is concern as it nears the northern border of Israel. • The extremism of the ISIS/Daesh movement has perversely weakened the perceived extremism of other radical movements in the Middle East such as Hizbollah and Hamas. • Although it appears that a deal on the Iran nuclear issue is close, there is still significant difference over what constitutes a good deal from Israeli perspectives; concern persists over breakout, possible military dimensions to Iran’s past nuclear activities, and verification. However, there is the risk of torpedoing a reasonable deal on these grounds. • The ramifications of a deal on the Iranian nuclear issue include a possible regional problem of technological proliferation in other states, as well as concerns over emboldening Iran to act through proxies vis-à-vis Israel. On the flipside, it was pointed out a deal could help bring Iran on board with action to be taken against Daesh. • Some consider that the major threat to Israel today has become the decline of Israel’s status in international public opinion, particularly in the wake of the most recent Gaza war. • There has been a predominant Israeli narrative that has been sold very well, and it is continued today, that there is no partner for peace on the Palestinian side. • The Israeli-Palestinian peace process does not really exist at this time, and the prospects for it being reinvigorated are slim.
    [Show full text]