Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Netanyahu: PA President must choose between peace with Israel and peace with Hamas




Israeli Prime Minister criticizes deal reached between Hamas and Fatah, according to which Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas will head a unity caretaker cabinet.

By Barak Ravid

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu criticized on Monday the agreement reached between Hamas and Fatah, according to which Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas will head a unity caretaker cabinet.

"Hamas is a terrorist organization that wants to destroy Israel and is supported by Iran," Netanyahu said at a Likud meeting. "Israel had made great efforts to advance the peace process. If Abbas realizes what was signed in Doha it shows that he is choosing to abandon the path of peace and join with Hamas, without Hamas accepting the minimal conditions of the international community."

Abbas and Hamas chief Khaled Meshal said in a joint announcement on Monday that the unity cabinet could pave the way for a long-sought-after reconciliation between the rival factions.

"We are serious, both Fatah and Hamas, in healing the wounds and ending the chapter of division and reinforcing and accomplishing reconciliation," Meshal said in remarks televised live by Al Jazeera from Qatar.

Abbas, head of the secular Fatah organization, promised that this effort will be implemented in the shortest time possible.

A Palestinian source speaking with Haaretz indicted that both parties were considering the option of naming Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad and Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh as Abbas' deputies.

The Doha Agreement stipulates that the unity caretaker government will be comprised of non-affiliated technocrats, and its mission will be to start Gaza's rehabilitation and to prepare for a general Palestinian election for both president and parliament.

Joint drill with US to be held after delay




By YAAKOV KATZ

Israel, US to hold Austere Challenge missile-defense exercise before the end of the year, likely in October or November.

Israel and the United States will hold the postponed Austere Challenge missile-defense exercise before the end of the year, likely in October or November.

Senior American military officers from the European Command are scheduled to arrive in Israel later this month to finalize plans to hold the exercise, which has been billed as the largest joint missile-defense exercise in the countries’ history.

The drill was initially scheduled for April and was supposed to see the deployment of thousands of US troops and various sophisticated American military equipment in Israel.

In December, however, Defense Minister Ehud Barak asked the Pentagon to consider the possibility of postponing the drill until later this year. Talks about postponing the drill took the Americans as well as the Israel Air Force’s Air Defense division, which is responsible for missile defense in the IDF, by surprise.

The Defense Ministry never gave an official explanation for its decision to postpone the maneuvers, citing instead vague reasons ranging from budget to logistical problems. It is considered more likely, however, that Israel asked to postpone the drill due to the possibility it might decide to attack Iran sometime in the near future.

It is possible that Israel did not want American troops in the country at a time when it might be preparing such a strike and also did not want to be accused of implicating the US in helping Israel prepare for the strike by the mere fact that its soldiers were in the country prior to an attack.

Israel and the US will use the drill to simulate missile-defense scenarios with the objective of creating a high level of interoperability so that, if needed, US missile-defense systems would be able to work with Israeli systems during a conflict.

This year’s drill is expected to be unique in its size and scope, and will also mark the first time that commander of the US European Command Adm.

James Stavridis will participate in the simulations. In the event of war, the EUCOM commander will be responsible for approving Israeli requests to deploy US missile-defense systems in Israel.

The planned drill had caused tension in the region amid concern that Israel is planning an attack against Iran’s nuclear facilities in the near future, and therefore is bolstering its defenses together with the US.

The IAF is also planning to hold a massive international drill in Israel in 2013 and is inviting air forces from around the world to participate. The United States is expected to send at least one fighter squadron to the drill, in addition to several European countries.

Israel has significantly increased the frequency of its joint maneuvers with foreign air forces in recent years as part of the IAF’s desire to learn from its counterparts overseas and to train with other aircraft that it does not encounter regularly, such as the Typhoon and the Eurofighter, planes that are in the hands of some Arab nations in the Middle East.

IAF sources said that the international drill was still in the planning stages, but that it would hopefully attract a large number of participants. Over the past year, the IAF has held joint aerial maneuvers with Romania, Italy and Greece.

'Hezbollah will hit Israel if Syria attacked'




By JPOST.COM STAFF

Hezbollah is prepared to attack should Western powers "interfere" in Syrian affairs, Lebanese official says.

Hezbollah is prepared to attack Israel if Western powers interfere in Syria against the regime in Damascus, a Lebanese Hezbollah official said Sunday according to the Palestinian News Network.

The unnamed official said Hezbollah was prepared if Western powers intervened in Syria in order to stop Syrian President Bashar Assad's crackdown on anti-government protesters, even if the "price for it" is to engage the IDF in battle in order to divert attention away from the Syrian arena.

According to the report, Hezbollah - which is believed to have a stockpile of over 30,000 missiles - believes that a war in the Middle East may prevent the fall of Assad.

The Jerusalem Post could not confirm this report.

The Shi'ite group supports a compromise based on reforms and "easing the crisis" between anti-government forces and the Syrian regime, according to the official. While Assad himself has said his government will push reforms, and has released thousands of detainees arrested since the start of the 11-month conflict, the violence in Syria has not dwindled.

Last week, over 200 people were killed in an overnight military assault on the restive city of Homs. At least 18 people were gunned down by Syrian troops on Sunday according to activists, and nine Syrian troops were killed in clashes with rebels in the northwestern Idlib province bordering Turkey.

Israel has said that Hezbollah along with Iran are providing weapons to their ally Syria to help suppress Syrian opposition activists calling for Assad's ouster, in a conflict that has resulted in the deaths of more than 6,000 Syrians.

“The radical axis is trying to retain its power and as time passes, Iran and Hezbollah increase their efforts to help the Assad regime survive by providing knowledge, weaponry and other capabilities,” head of Military Intelligence Maj.-Gen. Aviv Kochavi said in January.

Hezbollah has been one of the few voices in the Arab world making statements in support of Assad and the Syrian regime.

Hamas - another Iran proxy in the region - quietly backed away from vocalizing support for the Assad regime, and many of the group's officials have left their political bureau in Damascus for neighboring countries.

Rabbi's 'Kosher Jesus' book is denounced as heresy




Shmuley Boteach's book focuses on Jesus' Jewishness, portraying him as a hero who was not resurrected or divine. But some other rabbis express contempt for the book and forbid followers to read it.

By Mitchell Landsberg, Los Angeles Times

For an Orthodox Jewish rabbi, Shmuley Boteach has a deeply unorthodox streak.

The bestselling author and TV host has written books on "Kosher Sex," "Dating Secrets of the 10 Commandments" and his relationship with the late pop star Michael Jackson.

But nothing he has done in a career as one of America's best-known rabbis has caused quite the stir of his latest book. Even before its publication this month, Boteach came under withering attack in his own Orthodox community, with critics accusing him of exploiting controversy to boost sales and some going so far as to accuse him of heresy.

The title of Boteach's book? "Kosher Jesus."

The book focuses on the Christian savior's Jewishness, portraying him as a hero who stood up to Roman rule of Palestine and paid with his life. In keeping with Jewish theology, it does not accept his resurrection or his divinity. And it emphasizes Boteach's belief that the New Testament intentionally deflected blame for the crucifixion from the ruling Romans and redirected it — unfairly, Boteach believes — on the shoulders of the Jews.

Given all that, one might expect Christians to take exception. But Boteach's Jewish critics were way ahead of the curve.

"Boteach's latest book is apikorsus and must be treated as such," Rabbi Yitzchok Wolf of Chicago said on an Orthodox news site Jan. 10, using a Hebrew word that roughly translates as heresy. Wolf said he had "utter contempt" for the book — or, at least, for the title.

That, as it turns out, was the only part he had read.

"I am not the consumer that seeks to consume such writings," he said.

Rabbi Jacob Immanuel Schochet, a prominent Canadian cleric, wrote that the book "poses a tremendous risk to the Jewish community" and proclaimed that it was "forbidden for anyone to buy or read this book, or give its author a platform in any way, shape or form to discuss this topic."

Both Wolf and Schochet, along with most of the other early critics, are affiliated with Chabad, a large organization of Hasidic Jews known for their strict religious observance. Boteach has a long and tempestuous relationship with the organization.

"I expected ... to be criticized by some Christian clerics," but not by Jews, Boteach said one night recently, discussing the book before a friendly crowd at a Beverly Hills synagogue.

Boteach is not the first Jew to write about Jesus. His book is based on the work of the late Hyam Maccoby, a Jewish scholar in Britain. Numerous Christian writers have also explored Jesus' Jewish roots. Still, it is perilous turf for a Jewish writer, especially an Orthodox rabbi.

Boteach says the book is designed to win over both Jews and Christians to a message that he believes has been lost to the mists of history and misunderstanding: Rather than being a divisive figure, Jesus can be a bridge between the faiths.

"We in the Jewish community have a choice," he said in an interview. "We can either, as has happened for 2,000 years, allow the Christian community to teach us about the Christian Christ, or we can take the initiative and the responsibility of teaching the Christian community about the Jewish Jesus.... He was a Jew, after all."

Christians, he said, can benefit from a new understanding of Jesus' humanity. "Embracing Jesus' Jewishness begins to elucidate his story, his life, his passionate beliefs," he writes in the book.

That's fine, said Darrell Bock, a professor of New Testament studies at the Dallas Theological Seminary and a leading authority on the life of Jesus. But, he said, Boteach is wrong in some of his details and not likely to convince Christians, who will be turned off by the presumption that Jesus was fully human.

"The book is a mixed bag," Bock said. "There are some points that he's making about the Jewish roots of Jesus … that are certainly the case. But there are other points he is making about Jesus' mission and the way the Jewish leadership handled him that are probably not an accurate reflection of what took place."

Jewish critics say they are worried that Christians will use Boteach's book to try to convert Jews. They also say he is deliberately exploiting controversy.

Boteach insists that is not the case, although he has hardly been shy about it. Then again, shyness is not really a term that applies to a man who claims to be "America's rabbi." (That title could change — his name has come up as a potential successor to the chief rabbi of England.)

Boteach was incensed when an Orthodox website refused to publish his response to Wolf's criticism, saying that it wasn't appropriate for Jewish children.

"We are the People of the Book," he said. "We aren't the people who ban books."

A prelate says the mandate for religious institutions' workers is 'un-American.'



Catholics plan fight on coverage of birth control


by Mitchell Landsberg

The Catholic Church reacted strongly Friday to a White House defense of new rules that will force many religious employers to provide contraception to their workers in government-mandated health insurance plans.

"The White House information about this is a combination of misleading and wrong," said Anthony Picarello, general counsel of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. He said the bishops would "pursue every legal mandate available to them to bring an end to this mandate. That means legislation, litigation and public advocacy. All options are on the table."