Israel and the Middle East News Update

Tuesday, August 18

Headlines:

 IDF Intelligence: Deal could help Rein in 's Terror Activities  340 US Rabbis Sign Letter Urging Congress to Support Deal  Israel Denies Holding Truce Talks with : Hamas-IL Agreement would lead to Separate Gaza State  'Iran Behind Attacks Launched Against IL From Syrian Border'  Israel Willing to Free hunger Striker if he leaves the Country  IDF Demolishes 14 illegal Palestinian Shacks in Ma’aleh Adumim

Commentary:  Yedioth Ahronoth: “On the Edge of the Abyss”  By Nahum Barnea  New York Times: “Iran and American ”  By Roger Cohen

S. Daniel Abraham Center for Middle East Peace 633 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, 5th Floor, Washington, DC 20004 www.centerpeace.org ● Yoni Komorov, Editor

News Excerpts August 18, 2015 Ynet News IDF Intelligence: Deal could help Rein in Iran's Terror Activities While Prime Minister Netanyahu has been leading a campaign against the Iran nuclear deal, IDF Intelligence has pointed to possible benefits to Israel as a result of the agreement. The IDF Military Intelligence Directorate's Research Department recently presented its stance on the deal to the political leadership, and along the risks and problems it mentions a number of opportunities and positive possibilities that the deal can lead to. Primarily, that Iran will not have military nuclear capabilities in the coming few years. In addition, the US is currently negotiating with Iran over different security issues relating to the Middle East. The Department went on to say that the deal might also stop Iran from performing terrorist acts against Israel, such as bombing embassies.

Times of Israel 340 US Rabbis Sign Letter Urging Congress to Support Deal Over 300 rabbis have signed a letter in support of the Iran nuclear accord, which urges the House of Representatives and Senate to endorse the agreement. “As rabbis, we support the agreement,” the letter begins. Signed by 340 rabbis from “all streams of Judaism,” many of them identified with progressive causes, the letter was publicized Monday by the left-wing Zionist group Ameinu, which says it promotes “a progressive Israel and a just America.” Noting that “we are deeply concerned with the impression that the leadership of the American Jewish community is united in opposition to the agreement,” the letter states, “We, along with many other Jewish leaders, fully support this historic nuclear accord.” See also, “Rabbis Urge Congress to Support Nuclear Deal with Iran” (Ameinu)

Times of Israel Israel Denies Holding Truce Talks with Hamas Israel has not held any recent ceasefire negotiations with Hamas, the Prime Minister’s Office said Monday evening, after days of reports of an imminent comprehensive agreement on removing the Israeli blockade on the in return for a long-term truce. “Israel is officially clarifying that there have been no meetings with Hamas, not directly, not through another country and not through intermediaries,” said the PMO in a statement. “Regarding relations with Turkey, that agreement is still far off,” the statement added.

Jerusalem post Fatah: Hamas-IL Agreement would lead to Separate Gaza State Fatah officials in the on Monday expressed deep concern over reports that Hamas and Israel are close to signing a long-term truce. The officials warned that the agreement would pave the way for the establishment of a separate Palestinian state in the Gaza Strip. The warning came amid reports that Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal and former British PM Tony Blair have reached understandings regarding the proposed truce. Fatah spokesman Ahmed Assaf said that the reports about an imminent agreement between Hamas and Israel mean the consolidation of the split between the West Bank and Gaza Strip. 2

Ha’aretz 'Iran Behind Attacks Launched Against IL From Syrian Border' Though hundreds of Hezbollah militants are operating in the Golan Heights, Iran is behind recent attempts recent to carry out terror attack against Israel, a senior IDF officer said in a briefing with reporters on Sunday. The officer, who serves in the Golan division, said an example of Iranian involvement was apparent last April, when explosive devices were planted at three spots near the Su'heita outpost, on the border between Israel and Syria. An Israel Air Force aircraft in April struck a militant cell that was trying to place the explosives on the border while they were in the process of placing the charges. "It's clear that Iran is behind all of the terror attacks here (in the Golan) in the past two years," the officer said. "The Iranians are using the border – they establish units – whether it's [Imad] Mughniyeh, [Samir] Kuntar, and more – to carry out [the attacks]." He added that the Iranian involvement manifests itself in Iranian advisers, who according to foreign reports are based in Syria, as well as in the transferring of funds, giving instructions and providing training.

Ynet News Israel Willing to Free hunger Striker if he leaves the Country Israel is willing to consider releasing hunger striking administrative detainee Mohammed Allaan, if he agrees to leave the country and not return to the West Bank for four years, according to a proposal made at a Supreme Court hearing on Allaan's case on Monday. The court was discussing a petition submitted on Allaan's behalf by the Adalah Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel and Attorney Jamil Khatib, which claimed his immediate release was necessary for medical reasons. The Adalah Center said it intends to reject the compromise proposal. "The proposal proves that the administrative detention became a severe, extensive punishment, without a trial, which is based on extraneous considerations," read the petitioners' response.

Jerusalem Post IDF Demolishes 14 illegal Palestinian Shacks in Ma’aleh Adumim The Civil Administration early Monday morning demolished 17 illegal shacks and tents in three different Palestinian Beduin communities located within the municipal boundaries of the Ma’aleh Adumim settlement. The NGO B’Tselem charged that the temporary structures in the herding communities housed 14 families who are now homeless and have no shelter from the harsh sun. But the NGO Regavim which monitors illegal Palestinian construction, said that none of the structures which were razed had housed families. The demolitions occurred less than a week after a Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee sub-committee on Judea and Samaria had urged the Civil Administration to do more to combat illegal Palestinian construction, particularly in the area just outside of Jerusalem, where the Ma’aleh Adumim settlement is located.

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Yedioth Ahronoth – August 17, 2015 On the Edge of the Abyss Israel is willing to do anything to thwart the nuclear deal, including publicly threatening Iranian scientists, interfering with the internal affairs of the US, and dividing US Jews; meanwhile, Netanyahu's mistaken 2002 assessment of Iraq is coming back to haunt him in his battle against Tehran.

By Nahum Barnea

 The past summer has been one of the strangest we've known, a crazy summer. A great diplomatic drama is unfolding, one that could have a considerable effect on our lives, but it only occupies those dealing with the issue. A handful of bureaucrats, military men, politicians, journalists. Diplomats are dispatching coded telegrams to their capitals, in which they admit they do not have any explanation of what is going on.  "Every day I wake up feeling it cannot possibly be worse," says one of those closely monitoring the crisis. "And every day I'm surprised anew."  The nuclear agreement with Iran causes great concern in Israel. The entire world understands that. The question is how Israel's leadership is dealing with these concerns. What is it that Israel hopes to achieve in the war it is waging against the Obama administration? What is its plan in case Congress comes to terms with the presidential veto, which would lead to the approval of the agreement? What is its plan in case the majority in Congress defeats the president, and the US has to reject the agreement? Is anyone in Jerusalem or Tel Aviv doing this cost-benefit analysis? Is anyone thinking about the day after? The American administration in Washington is following what is happening in Israel, and notices the following things:  At this point in the crisis, Israel has no cabinet, no government, no defense establishment, no Knesset, no free media. Everything is determined and run based on the desires of one person - Benjamin Netanyahu. The IDF prepared, as is expected of it, official opinions about the agreement and its consequences. These opinions are balanced - they analyze the downsides of the agreement, along with its advantages. No one delayed the arrival of these opinions to the top. The cabinet ministers are aware of them. They also know what the head of Army Intelligence thinks and what the Chief of Staff thinks, and whether there is a gap between their conclusions and those of the prime minister. But there was no serious discussion in the cabinet about the day after the US Congress vote.  Israel is willing to invest quite a lot in putting the military option back on the table. Defense Minister Ya'alon threatened last week in the media that Israel will resume targeted assassinations of Iranian nuclear scientists. It was strange, because in the past, Israel didn't make its threats in the media - according to foreign reports, it conducted its assassinations in secret. Ya'alon's comments were not for Tehran's ears, however, but for Washington. There were other moves, more concrete ones. It's important to Israel to create the impression in Washington that approving the agreement would lead to war.  Unlike the Gulf States, which are fighting against the agreement while at the same time negotiating with the American administration about their security on the day after, Israel, 4

under Netanyahu's orders, has stopped cooperating with Washington. Talks over a memo of understandings between the two states were due to start in April. These understandings were to make up a framework for the next ten years, determining, among other things, guidelines for security aid. It's important to the Israeli defense establishment to know what to expect. Nevertheless, there are no talks. There are also no negotiations over the compensation Israel is supposed to get over the deal with Iran and the new security benefits given to the Gulf States.  The American administration is convinced it is fighting on the same side as Israel against Islamic terrorism, including against the aid Iran provides Hezbollah and Hamas. Washington is prepared to expand and deepen this cooperation. Israel, meanwhile, refuses to discuss these issues on the diplomatic level. When US Secretary of State John Kerry has recently traveled to the Gulf States to promote the talks about the day after, he skipped Israel. In the past, ignoring Israel would create uproar. This time, Netanyahu said that "Really, there's no point for him to come."  The fight in Congress is so important to Netanyahu that he is willing to divide the Jewish community and turn AIPAC into a single-party organization. Democratic Congressmen are torn between their loyalty to their president and their party, and their fear of losing Jewish voters and donors. All of the Democrats who announced they would oppose the agreement so far are Jewish: Chuck Schumer, Eliot Engel, Nita Lowey - all from New York. Jews from other districts are conflicted between the concern they could be accused of having a double loyalty - primarily to Israel and only then to the United States - and the claim made by Jewish voters that they were sacrificing Israel for their career.  Netanyahu managed to convince many Jews that the threat is that of another Holocaust. The residue of guilt left from the world war - how could we be silent? Why did we allow the American administration to look away from the extermination camps? - all came back to the surface. Khamenei's comments and the calls from the crowds in Tehran only serve to bolster that feeling. Obama and Kerry's half-hearted acceptance of these comments only adds to the feeling of betrayal.  Israel's Ambassador to Washington Ron Dermer is, according to American accounts, making the rounds from one room to the next in Congress, from one office to another, trying to convince the members of Congress to vote against the deal. From their perspective, this is an intolerable interference in the internal affairs of another nation. You could only imagine what Israel would think if the American ambassador was working to lobby members of the Likud party to vote against Netanyahu. The American administration will have a hard time letting this go after the crisis passes; Obama, despite his aversion to mixing personal feelings with politics, will not forgive this.  The fight is for 60 Democratic senators and congressmen. That is the target audience. It is not the media, the American public opinion or the Israeli one. Obama will do everything to convince them. His speech at American University, dedicated mostly to his argument with Netanyahu, raised a few eyebrows. Every prime minister in the world, from Bulgaria to India, was asking himself why Israel's prime minister was receiving this upgrade, but Obama was only interested in the response to Netanyahu's Congress speech.  Eventually, Netanyahu will lose: There won't be enough votes to defeat the presidential veto. But he could still take credit for a moral victory. After the first vote he would say: "The 5

American people have spoken, the majority opposes the agreement with Iran." He could also claim victory later on. Even if the agreement is signed - "Iran will violate it," he will say, "I'm the first one that warned you about it." And if Iran makes good on the agreement, he could say, "It is all thanks to my firm stance." Netanyahu might gain; Israel might lose. A concerned citizen  In September of 2002, former prime minister, the concerned citizen Benjamin Netanyahu, decided to save the world from an enemy like no other. He chose an appropriate stage: The US Congress. His testimony, made to a House of Representatives sub-committee, was filmed and is available online in its full version (43 minutes), an abridged version (five minutes), and an even more abridged version (four minutes). If you're really interested, I recommend finding the video on Google under "Netanyahu expert testimony on Iraq in 2002 - C-SPAN." It is worth the effort.  The members of Congress were debating at the time whether to support an American invasion of 's Iraq, or oppose it. At the heart of the debate was the question of whether Saddam Hussein's Iraq was developing weapons of mass destruction. Netanyahu sought to add his powerful influence, as well as that of his country, to the Republican campaign in favor of the invasion.  He spoke in the meeting while behind him, concerned citizen Ron Dermer - now Israel's ambassador to Washington - was whispering. The curious viewer could not help but wonder about Netanyahu's physical appearance - then and now. It turns out that in the years that have passed, his appearance has improved, his skin is thicker, his self-confidence is stronger. Returning to a leadership position has only done him good. The rest is not as positive. Here is a selection of quotes.  "There is no question whatsoever that Saddam is seeking and is working and is advancing towards the development of nuclear weapons," Netanyahu determined. "A nuclear-armed Saddam will place the security of our entire world at risk. Make no mistake about it — if and once Saddam has nuclear weapons, the terror networks will have nuclear weapons."  The chairman, Congressman John Tierney, asked Netanyahu if Iraq played a part in the . "It's not whether Iraq was connected to September 11, but how do you prevent the next September 11," Netanyahu responded.  An invasion of Iraq, Netanyahu explained, would save the world not just from Iraq, but from Iran as well. "The question now is a practical question," he said.  "What is the best place to proceed? It's not a question of whether Iraq's regime should be taken out, but when should it be taken out. It’s not a question of whether you’d like to see a regime change in Iran but how to achieve it," he continued. "Iran has something that Iraq doesn't have... (There are) internal forces of dissension that are available in Iran, which is paradoxically probably the most open society in that part of the world. It is a lot more open than Iraq which is probably the most closed society.  "If you take out Saddam, Saddam's regime, I guarantee you that it will have enormous positive reverberations on the region. And I think that people sitting right next door in Iran, young people, and many others, will say the time of such regimes, of such despots, is gone.

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 "In 1986 I wrote a book in which I had said that the way to deal with terror was to deal with the terrorist regimes. And the way to deal with the terrorist regimes among other things was to apply military force against them... as quickly as possible.  "People said that there would be tens of thousands of people streaming into , zealots outraged by America's invasion, and this would produce a counter-reaction in the Arab world... what we saw was everybody streaming out of Afghanistan.  "The application of power is the most important thing in winning the war on terrorism. If I had to say what are the three principles of winning the : winning, winning, and winning... The first victory in Afghanistan makes a second victory in Iraq that much easier. The second victory in Iraq will make the third victory that much easier, too."  And now for the facts, as they are known today: Saddam didn't have nuclear weapons, nor was he working on obtaining such weapons; he didn't play a part in the September 11 attack - his terrorism was mostly aimed at the Iraqi people; the invasion, that started in March 2003, lasted nine years and left behind 100,000 Iraqi deaths and 4,800 deaths among the coalition forces, most of them American; it dissolved Iraq and left some of it open to Iran for the taking, strengthening the ayatollah regime instead of overthrowing it; it also made it easier for Iran to advance its nuclear program; and brought hundreds of thousands of terrorists into the area to fight in the ranks of crazy organizations like the Islamic State and al-Qaeda. America didn't go from victory to victory, it went from one failure to the next.  Very few are left in the US who are willing to defend that invasion. Even Jeb Bush, the brother of the president who decided to invade, admits it was an enormous mistake.  The belief that democracy can be forced on nations in the Middle East using military power, and that eliminating one tyrannical regime will necessarily lead to the downfall of another tyrannical regime, was a wish at best, and a bad marketing ploy at worst. Reality disproved it completely.  The IDF didn't push the Bush administration into Iraq. Moshe Ya'alon, who was the IDF chief of staff at the time, repeatedly told me in real time that the IDF wasn't pushing for the invasion, nor was it wishing for it. But performances like Netanyahu's, and a fiery campaign by neoconservatives - all enthusiastic Israel supporters, most of them Jewish - created the impression that it was Israeli lobbying that pushed to invade. Now, as Netanyahu tries to convince Congress to thwart the agreement with Iran, that speech is coming back to him like a boomerang.  Secretary of State Kerry mentioned Netanyahu's Iraq speech once, and won't do so again. But he will talk mockingly of Netanyahu while he, Kerry, and most of his colleagues on the left and right, all voted in favor of the invasion. The responsibility for this catastrophe is on their shoulders, not on the shoulders of the expert witness from Israel.  Diplomatic assessments are not an exact science. Neither are military assessments. Netanyahu's assessments about Iran cannot be rejected just because he was wrong about Iraq. But questions should be raised about his pretension, the complete lack of doubt. A little modesty wouldn't hurt him, neither then, nor now.  On the other hand, Netanyahu can be judged for the fact that as the prime minister of Israel, he did not implement a single piece of the advice he generously gave the Americans. He didn't

7 initiate wars, wasn't quick to attack. He recommended to the Americans to conquer Iraq; in Israel, he was careful not to conquer Gaza. His goal was and still is to reach a state of calm with Hamas and Hezbollah, create deterrence, reach secret understandings; live with terrorism, not exterminate it. He only exterminates in other people's homes.

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New York Times – August 17, 2015 Iran and American Jews By Roger Cohen

 Earlier this month, Roland Moskowitz, a Cleveland physician, and Sandra Lippy, a retired health care executive of Boca Raton, Florida, got on the line with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel. As two people who have been active in major Jewish organizations, they were among thousands of American Jews invited to listen to a webcast whose message was: Oppose the Iran nuclear deal.  Moskowitz and Lippy listened as Netanyahu claimed the deal would give Iran “hundreds of bombs tomorrow;” turn any terrorist group backed by Iran into a “terrorist superpower;” allow Iran to “have its yellowcake and eat it, too;” cause a nuclear arms race in the Middle East; provide Iran with billions of dollars; and pave Iran’s path to a bomb. The Israeli prime minister was contemptuous of the view, expressed by President , that those who oppose the deal favor war, calling it “not just false, but outrageous.” Netanyahu insisted, against all evidence, that he rejects the deal “because I want to prevent war.”  Lippy was not impressed. She felt all the doomsday lines were tired. She’s not about to get on the phone to her representative to press for Congress to condemn the deal and then gather enough votes to override Obama’s inevitable veto of the resolution. That’s what Netanyahu wants to achieve, the deal’s demise, using American Jews as a vehicle.  “It’s not a great deal, but it’s enough of a deal to postpone the nuclear situation and maybe give us time to work things out,” Lippy told me. “While they’re being sharply reduced in their nuclear capacity, we can sit down again over the next several years and talk about the Holocaust, Israel and human rights, and that is why I go along with it.”  She’s right. A merit of this deal is that it would condemn the United States and Iran to a relationship — hostile, but still a framework for airing differences and doing business — over the next 15 years. Most young Iranians no more believe in “Death to America” than they believe the Hidden Imam is going to show up tomorrow.  Moskowitz was left feeling uneasy. He thinks the deal is worrying, but not worrying enough for the United States to walk away. Nor does he want family strife. His wife, Peta Moskowitz, is a firm supporter of the deal and a member of J Street, the largest Jewish organization to back Obama’s Iran diplomacy. These strains are not unusual. Within families and across the American Jewish community, discussion of the Iran deal is fiery.  A few things must be said. Netanyahu’s performance was of a piece with his habit of intervening in American politics, evident at the time of the last presidential election, when his preference for Mitt Romney was clear. His relations with Obama are bad. He tries to circumvent Obama, often in clumsy ways, further undermining the relationship. It’s enough to imagine Obama calling thousands of Israelis to encourage them to oppose a piece of sensitive legislation in the Knesset to gauge how inappropriate Netanyahu’s behavior is.

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 The Netanyahu webcast was co-sponsored by the Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish Organizations (an umbrella organization so resistant to the age-old fertile cacophony of Jewish opinion that it rejected J Street’s application for membership last year) and Jewish Federations. Several leading Jewish groups — including the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (Aipac), the American Jewish Committee and the Anti-Defamation League — have come out against the Iran deal. This is unsurprising; they tend to move in lockstep with Israel. But it’s troubling because it’s unclear how representative of American Jews as a whole these organizations are.  Some polls have suggested a majority of Jews favor the Iran deal; certainly the community is divided. It’s no service to Jews, or Israel or Middle Eastern peace for major Jewish organizations to be unreflective of this wide diversity of opinion within American Jewry — or for them to give air time to Netanyahu on Iran rather than Obama.  The alternative to this deal, as Obama said, is war. Why? Because sanctions on Iran will fall apart as Russia and China conclude the United States is not serious about a compromise with Tehran that increases the distance between Iran and a bomb, ring-fences its nuclear program, and subjects it to intense international inspection. Centrifuges, slashed in number by America’s diplomacy, will increase again, as will Iran’s uranium stockpile. The war drumbeat will resume. Folly will loom.  Rather than listen to Netanyahu, American Jews should listen to the longest-serving Jewish member of the House, Sander M. Levin, who supports the agreement because it is “the best way to achieve” the goal of preventing Iran from advancing toward a nuclear weapon, so making the Middle East and Israel “far more secure.” They should note that five Jewish senators have come out in favor.  In the real world, this is the best achievable deal for America and the ally, Israel, it would never forsake.

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