Friday, July 25, 2014

Proportionality!

What is fascinating is Israel's Iron Dome has saved many Israeli lives from Hamas'indiscriminate rocket attacks.

Consequently, Israeli casualties are low compared to those of Hamas,which has no defensive system and urges their citizens be killed protecting hidden rockets located in school, hospitals, mosques etc.

What does the world do? What do the elitist press and media do?   They accuse Israel of wanton killing, blame Israel for Hamas' message to Palestinians to stay put and be killed  and raise the issue of proportionality.

In essence, would the world get off Israel's back if more Israelis were killed by terrorists?

Meanwhile, the Obama administration treats Hamas as if they were not terrorists and recently approved the sale of American weapons to one of Hamas' Middle East allies.

Israel might be better off if Obama did not have their back and spent more time on the golf course, attended more fund raisers and kept repeating how tranquil things were. (See 1 below.)
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Israel will observe Shabbes with a 12 hour unilateral cessation.(See 2 below.)
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For its interest: http://www.safeshare.tv/w/cqjiYhtiXs  and then, http://www.safeshare.tv/w/cqjiYhtiXs 
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Dick
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1)Israel Rejects Kerry's Ceasefire Proposal
Cabinet unanimously votes to reject the ceasefire proposed by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry.
By Elad Benari, Canada

Tanks gearing up for Gaza
Israel rejected U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry’s proposal for a ceasefire in Gaza on Friday evening.
According to reports in the Israeli media, the Cabinet which met on the issue unanimously voted to reject the proposal.
"The security cabinet has unanimously rejected the ceasefire proposal of Kerry, as it stands," Channel 1 News reported, adding that ministers would continue discussing it.
According to Channel 10 News, even though the ceasefire proposal was rejected, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu would still prefer to avoid an extensive ground operation in Gaza at this time.
Earlier on Friday, the London-based Al Hayat newspaper reported that Hamas had agreed to a five-day "humanitarian ceasefire" on terms suggested by Kerry.
Kerry's proposal reportedly includes some of the unprecedented terms proposed by Hamas leaders, but not all. According to the daily, the truce would not see any terrorists released, despite Hamas's demands.
News of a possible deal surfaces less than one day after Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu declared that the operation would continue "at full strength in both the air campaign and land campaign."
Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal declared on Wednesday that Israel must accept his list of unprecedented conditions for a ceasefire in order for any truce to be declared.
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2)

Israel to observe 12-hour unilateral cease-fire in Gaza
By JPOST.COM STAFF,REUTERS 
Hours after rejecting terms for a longer cease-fire,
Netanyahu told Kerry that Israel will begin a 12-hour
 pause in hostilities starting at 7 a.m. Israeli time on
Saturday, a US official said.
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has told US Secretary of State John Kerry that Israel will begin a 12-hour pause in
Gaza hostilities starting at 7 a.m. Israeli time  on Saturday, a US official said on Friday.

The official, who spoke to reporters on condition of anonymity, made the comment when asked about Kerry's earlier
statement on a goodwill gesture by Netanyahu at a press conference in Cairo.

Earlier Friday, Netanyahu's security cabinet rejected proposals for a longer cease-fire in the Gaza Strip and is seeking
changes to the plans, a government source said on Friday.

Kerry has been pushing for a halt to 18 days of fighting between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

Full details of the proposed truce have not been released, but the government official, who declined to be named, said
Israel wanted modifications before agreeing to any end to hostilities. Hamas has yet to respond to the proposed ceasefire.

France will host several foreign ministers, including those of the United States, Turkey and Qatar, in Paris on Saturday
to coordinate efforts to try and enable a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, a French diplomatic source said.

"In support of initiatives currently under way, most notably Egypt's initiative, our objective is to converge all international
efforts so that the conditions of a ceasefire can emerge as quickly as possible," the source said.

The meeting, which will start early on Saturday morning, will also be attended by Germany, Italy, Britain and European
Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton.

There will not be any representatives at this stage from Israel, Hamas or the Palestinian Authority.

Kerry said on Friday that there are still disagreements on the terminology for a Gaza truce but he is confident there is a
framework that will ultimately succeed.

He told reporters in Cairo that "serious progress" had been made on a truce but there was more work to do and he was
sure that Netanyahu is committed to working towards a ceasefire.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, also at the press conference, called for a seven-day humanitarian truce with an
extendable 12-hour pause.

Earlier Friday, Channel 10 cited sources in the diplomatic-security cabinet who said that Israel viewed Kerry's bridging
 proposals as "a Qatari proposal with ornaments."

Qatar has been accused by Israel of providing financing and political support to Hamas. According to Channel 10, senior
Israeli ministers have ruled as "out of the question" a cease-fire in which the IDF would be prevented from fully rooting
out the threat of underground tunnels built by Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

Media reports indicated that Kerry's cease-fire proposal included a week-long halt to fighting so that humanitarian
supplies could be distributed in Gaza.

Earlier on Friday, aides to Kerry were said to be cautiously optimistic regarding the chances of a cease-fire between
Israel and Hamas, Channel 10 reported.

According to the report, officials close to the secretary of state said that there is a chance a week-long halt in fighting
 could be announced as soon as Friday evening.

Netanyahu convened his security cabinet on Friday to discuss Kerry's pitch for a limited humanitarian truce under which
Palestinian movement would be freed up to allow in aid and for casualties to be recovered.

Earlier Friday, Channel 2 quoted "senior Hamas officials" as saying that the leadership of the Islamist group was
"leaning toward" accepting the Kerry framework.

An Israeli official said the Netanyahu government envisages the initial halt to the fighting lasting seven days, during
which the army would keep digging up tunnels on Gaza's eastern frontier.

"First Israel wants to hear Hamas's response to the (Kerry) proposals," an official said, adding that some members of
the security cabinet also sought assurances that Gaza would be stripped of its remaining rockets under any extended
ceasefire.

Officially, Hamas had no immediate comment on the proposal. On Wednesday, its leader, Khaled Meshaal, voiced
support for a humanitarian truce, but only if Israel eased restrictions on Gaza's 1.8 million people.

Hamas wants Egypt to open up its border with Gaza, too, and has demanded that Israel release hundreds of prisoners
rounded up by Israel in a sweep of the West Bank last month following the kidnap and killing of three Jewish teenagers.

Such concessions appear unlikely, however, as both Israel and Egypt consider Hamas a security threat.

One Cairo official said next week's Eid al-Fitr festival, which concludes Ramadan, was a possible date for a truce. But
 US officials were circumspect on progress made by Kerry in the mediation that has involved Egypt, Turkey, Qatar and
 Abbas.

"Gaps remain between the parties, so his focus is on finding a formula that both sides can accept," a senior US official
said on Thursday, adding that Kerry would not stay "for an indefinite amount of time".
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