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Israel launch another Aggression on Syria heavy air strikes after F-16 downed

February 11, 2018 By administrator

Israel has struck what it referred to as Iranian targets inside Syria in “large-scale” raids. The operations come after an Israeli warplane crashed under fire from Syrian air defenses.

Israel’s raids came after it had intercepted what it said was an Iranian drone entering its airspace from Syria, which it labeled an “attack.” The incident marked the first occasion that Israel has publicly acknowledged attacking what it identified as Iranian targets in Syria since the conflict started.

“Twelve targets, including three aerial defense batteries and four Iranian targets that are part of Iran’s military establishment in Syria were attacked,” a military statement said. Israeli military spokesman Jonathan Conricus sent a warning to Syria and Iran, saying they were “playing with fire,” while he stressed that his country was not seeking an escalation.

“This is the most blatant and severe Iranian violation of Israeli sovereignty in the last years,” Conricus told journalists. The ongoing confrontations are seen as the most serious between archenemies Israel and Iran since the beginning of the Syrian civil war in 2011.

The Syrian military and its allies deny that the unmanned drone had violated the Jewish state’s airspace, saying it was on a regular mission gathering intelligence on “Islamic State” (IS) militants.

During the confrontations, an Israeli F-16 fighter jet was hit, presumably by Syrian fire, resulting in the plane crashing over Israeli soil. An Israeli official told the Reuters news agency that the jet was shot down. The two pilots involved survived the crash and are being treated for injuries.

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called on all parties to “exercise restraint” and work towards “an immediate and unconditional de-escalation of violence.”

In a statement, he stressed that the Syrian people are suffering “through one of the most violent periods in nearly seven years of conflict.”

Netanyahu discusses military actions with Putin

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meanwhile spoke with Russian President Vladimir Putin about the tensions in Syria in a telephone call, the Russian Interfax news agency cited the Kremlin as saying.

“They discussed the situation around the actions of the Israeli air force, which carried out missile strikes on targets in Syria,” Interfax said, stressing that Putin told Netanyahu that there was a need to avoid any steps that would lead to a new confrontation in the region.

Iran decries Israeli ‘lies’

Iran, meanwhile, denounced the news of successful Israeli strikes as “lies” and said Syria had the right to self-defense in response to Israeli strikes.

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Ghasemi said in order “to cover their crimes in the region, Israeli officials are resorting to lies against other countries.” Ghasemi added that “Iran does not have a military presence in Syria, and has only sent military advisers at the request of the Syrian government.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Israel, Syria

Syria air defenses respond to new Israeli aggression near Damascus: Army

February 7, 2018 By administrator

The Syrian army says its air defenses intercepted several missiles fired by Israeli warplanes towards a military position near the capital, Damascus.

In a statement carried by state media on Wednesday, the army said the Israeli aircraft used Lebanese airspace for the missile strikes.

Loud blasts were heard in Damascus at around 3:30 a.m. local time.

“Our air defense systems blocked them and destroyed most of them,” said the statement.

“The general command of the armed forces holds Israel fully responsible for the dangerous consequences for its repeated, aggressive and uncalculated adventures,” it added.

The new Israeli act of aggression was first reported by state media, which said the missiles had been aimed at a scientific research center in Jamraya village.

Over the past few years, Israel has frequently attacked military targets in Syria in what is considered as an attempt to prop up terror outfits that have been suffering heavy defeats against Syrian government forces.

Israel has also been providing weapons to anti-Damascus militants as well as medical treatment to the Takfiri elements wounded in Syria.

Netanyahu visits Golan Heights

The latest attack on Syria came shortly after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu paid a rare visit to the occupied part of Syria’s Golan Heights and peered across the border.

Netanyahu said the regime was ready for “any scenario and I wouldn’t suggest to anyone that they test us.”

The warning came one week after the Israeli minister of military affairs stressed that a new war with Lebanon would also likely involve Syria.

“Israel’s northern front extends to Syria; it is not just Lebanon. I am not sure that the Syrian government can resist Hezbollah’s attempts to drag them into a war with Israel,” Avigdor Liberman said.

Israel launched two wars on Lebanon in 2000 and 2006, in both cases the Hezbollah resistance movement inflicted heavy losses on the regime’s military.

The regime seized the Golan Heights from Syria after the 1967 Six-Day War and later occupied it in a move that has never been recognized by the international community.

It has built tens of illegal settlements in the area ever since and has used the region to carry out a number of military operations against the Syrian government.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: intercepted, Israel, Syria

Lebanese leaders agree to take action against Israel threats

February 6, 2018 By administrator

Lebanese leaders

Lebanese leaders have agreed to take actions at the regional and international levels against Israel’s plans to construct a border wall and the regime’s threats against Lebanon’s offshore oil and gas exploration projects.

President Michel Aoun held the meeting with Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri and Prime Minister Saad Hariri before noon at the presidential palace of Baabda on Tuesday in an attempt to boost stability amid rising Israeli threats against the country.

The Lebanese leaders discussed “the Israeli threats, and saw in them … a direct threat to the stability” of the border region, a statement by the presidential office said.

The top Lebanese officials denounced the Israeli threats against the country’s borders as violation of the UN Security Council resolutions, noting that Tel Aviv’s measures jeopardize the efforts by the Lebanese army and the UN peace keepers to maintain the regional security since 2006.

The meeting comes after tensions flared last week between the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM), founded by Aoun, and the Amal Movement, presided by Berri, fueled by a video in which Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil, who heads the FPM party, was shown calling Lebanon’s parliament speaker a “thug.” A wave of protests by Berri’s supporters ensued.

The gathering focused on discussing the necessary measures the country needs to take after Israeli remarks on oil and gas exploration in south Lebanon’s Block 9.

Israel’s minister of military affairs, Avigdor Lieberman, has described as “very provocative” a Lebanese tender for projects in two of its 10 offshore blocks in the Mediterranean Sea. Tel Aviv, which claims sovereignty over Block 9, also urged international firms not to bid.

Lieberman’s remarks came as Beirut is set to hold a meeting on February 9 to sign contracts with three international gas exploration firms.

In another hostile remark against Lebanon, Israel’s Transportation Minister Yisrael Katz threatened to return Lebanon to “the Stone Age,” if it is turned into what he said an Iranian factory of precision-guided weapons.

“Israel has set a red line—it will not allow Lebanon to become a factory for the production of precision-guided missiles for Iran,” Katz said in an interview with the Ynet studio on Sunday.

He claimed that “Iran is working to turn Lebanon into an advanced post against Israel and has basically taken Lebanon hostage through Hezbollah by implementing its aggressive trends.”

“We are being very clear. If an open, comprehensive conflict develops as a result of Hezbollah’s aggression, we will act very firmly, much more than we did in 2006. Not a single target in Lebanon will be immune, and any infrastructure used both by Hezbollah and for military purposes will be hit. Lebanon will go back many, many years, some say to the Stone Age and others say to the age of cavemen.”

Nearly 1,200 Lebanese, most of them civilians, lost their lives during Israel’s 33-day war on Lebanon back in the summer of 2006.

According to the 629-page Winograd Report by the Israeli regime itself, Hezbollah fighters involved in defending Lebanon against the Israeli war defeated the enemy and Tel Aviv was compelled to withdraw without having achieved any of its objectives.

Katz’s remarks echoed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s statements before his recent visit to Russia in which he accused Iran of trying to turn Lebanon into “one giant missile site” against Israel.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Israel, Lebanese leaders

Harut Sassounian, digs into Israel’s promise to not recognize Armenian Genocide

January 10, 2018 By administrator

Harut Sassounian, Publisher of The California Courier

Harut Sassounian, Publisher of The California Courier

Prominent Israeli scholar Yair Auron filed an official request with Israel’s Foreign Ministry on December 21, 2017 asking for all internal documents on agreements and commitments undertaken by the State of Israel with Turkey and Azerbaijan not to recognize the Armenian Genocide.

The request sent by Auron’s attorney Eitay Mack to the Foreign Ministry, states that “official Israeli denial of the Armenian Genocide is tied to its diplomatic and military relations with Turkey, and in recent years to the relations with Azerbaijan.”

Prof. Auron’s request under Israel’s Freedom of Information Law explains that “Turkey has purchased from Israel training and military systems worth billions of USD. The arms deals included the upgrading of planes and tanks, radar and monitoring systems, missiles and munitions.” Azerbaijan has also purchased from Israel close to $5 billion worth of advanced weaponry.

In 2011, during Knesset’s deliberations on the Armenian Genocide, Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon and Alex Miller, Chairman of the Knesset Education Committee, unequivocally ruled out the possibility of Israel recognizing the Armenian Genocide in order not harm relations with Azerbaijan — Israel’s “key strategic ally in the Islamic world.”

Prof. Auron’s letter also quotes from several leaders of the right wing “Yisrael Beiteinu” party stating that they will ensure that the Knesset does not recognize the Armenian Genocide. “Yisrael Beiteinu” is led by Israel’s Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman. Arye Gut, a propagandist for Azerbaijan and spokesperson for the International Israel-Azerbaijan Association, has affirmed that “Lieberman is one of the architects of the Azerbaijani-Israeli partnership.” In an interview with RTV-TV, Lieberman announced that the Armenian Genocide “was a theoretical, disputed historical issue and that the lack of recognition was not necessarily related to Turkey, but primarily to [Israel’s] strategic relations with Azerbaijan.” Prof. Auron stresses that these arguments sound very similar to those who deny the Jewish Holocaust.

As an example of Israel’s close relations with Azerbaijan, Prof. Auron’s letter reports that “613 trees were planted” on February 26, 2016, “at the Chaim Weizmann (1st President of Israel) Forest, to mark ‘24 years to the Khojaly genocide,’ in memory of 613 victims, attended by MK [Member of Knesset] Avigdor Lieberman. Only Azerbaijan and Turkey mark this ‘genocide’ event. In recent years, official Israel has become a direct and indirect supporter of the purported Khojaly genocide claim. The battle of Khojaly took place in February 1992, in the midst of a cruel war between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the Nagorno Karabagh province. There are several versions as to what happened there, including the number of those who perished, but one thing is not disputed among the international community — no genocide by its common definition took place there.”

Prof. Auron’s concludes his request from the Israeli government by stating: “one suspects that not only does the State of Israel ‘trade’ in the recognition of the Armenian Genocide, but that it has taken upon itself real commitments on this matter, in agreements with Azerbaijan and Turkey.”

Consequently, Attorney Mack specifically demands that the Israel’s Foreign Ministry should disclose the following information:

1) “Any documentation of agreements, understandings, commitments vis-à-vis Azerbaijan and Turkey as to the question of recognizing the Armenian Genocide.”

2) “Any correspondence with Turkish or Azeri representatives on the question of recognizing the Armenian Genocide.”

3) “Any documentation of meetings or communications between the representatives of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs with Turkish or Azeri representatives on the question of recognizing the Armenian Genocide.”

4) “Decisions and position papers of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as to the question of recognizing the Armenian Genocide, in view of Turkey and Azerbaijan’s objection.”

It remains to be seen if the Israeli Foreign Ministry complies with Prof. Auron’s legal request. Both the American and British governments, which have similar laws on requirements to disclose internal information, have responded to similar requests from their own citizens, making public secret documents on the Armenian Genocide. It would be understandable if certain portions of the disclosed documents were to be blacked out by the Israeli government for confidential reasons, to protect the identities of those providing the information or for national security reasons.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, Harut Sassounian, Israel

Dozens of Palestinians injured in clashes with Israeli security forces during ‘Day of Rage’

December 30, 2017 By administrator

Israeli forces reportedly responded with live fire to Palestinians throwing rocks and fire bombs. In Gaza, protesters chanted “Death to America, death to Israel, and death to Trump.”

Dozens of Palestinians were wounded by Israeli gunfire in the West Bank and Gaza on Friday as thousands took to the streets in a fresh “day of rage” protest over US President Donald Trump’s controversial decision to recognize all of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

It was the fourth week in a row that Palestinians demonstrated after Friday prayers. At least 50 people were wounded by Israeli gun fire, with some of the most violent exchanges occurring along the Gaza border.

An Israeli military spokeswoman said 4,000 Palestinians protested across the occupied territories, with some throwing rocks and fire bombs and setting tires on fire. Most of the protesters were met with tear gas, according to the Israeli military, but there was an acknowledgement that soldiers also responded with gunfire

Israeli soldiers took aim at the “main instigators” who she said posed a direct threat to the troops while trying to damage the security fence along the border.

In Gaza, demonstrators chanted “Death to America, death to Israel, and death to Trump” and militants fired rockets into Israel, prompting retaliatory strikes by Israeli tanks and aircraft.

“In response to the rockets fired towards Israel, IDF (Israel Defense Forces) tanks and IAF (Israeli Air Force) aircraft targeted two posts belonging to the terrorist organization Hamas in the northern Gaza Strip,” the army said in a statement.

Trump sparks outrage

Israel said it targeted posts belonging to Hamas, the Islamist group that controls the Palestinian enclave, after intercepting two of the three rockets fired into Israel. The third rocket struck a building, causing damage but no casualties.

Twelve Palestinians have been killed in clashes with Israeli forces since Trump’s controversial announcement on December 6.

Trump’s declaration sparked outrage among Palestinians and across the Middle East, as well as infuriating world powers. He reversed decades of U.S. policy on one of the most sensitive issues at the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Israel wants Jerusalem to be its eternal and indivisible capital but Palestinians want the city’s eastern sector to be the capital of an independent Palestinian state. Israel captured the eastern portion of Jerusalem during the 1967 Middle East War and subsequently annexed it in a move that has never been recognized internationally.

Many countries regard Jerusalem’s status as something to be negotiated during peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians, although that peace process is currently stalled.

The UN General Assembly rejected Trump’s Jerusalem declaration during a vote on December 21.

Among the 193 UN members, nine opposed the resolution rebuking Trump and a further 35 abstained, while 128 countries supported it. Twenty-one countries did not vote at all due to their absence.

bik/msh (Reuters, AFP, AP, dpa)

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Israel, Palestinians injured

Israel deports two of three arrested Turkish al-Quds demonstrators

December 26, 2017 By administrator

The Israeli Interior Ministry has announced that it will be deporting two of the three Turkish nationals that were arrested last week during protests against the US move to recognize Jerusalem al-Quds as the Israeli capital.

On Monday, an Interior Ministry spokeswoman said one of the men would be deported on Monday and another on Saturday, adding that both had entered Israel on Belgian passports.

She noted that she had no information concerning the third Turkish national who had been arrested.

A video circulating on social media shows a number of men in red shirts with the Turkish flag clashing with police forces in the occupied Old City.

According to Turkey’s state-run news agency Anadolu, two of the arrested individuals, who had dual Turkish and Belgium citizenship, were arrested for “assaulting Israeli police and resisting police” while the third man was accused of “disturbing public order and taking part in an illegal demonstration.”

Turkey has adopted a tough stance against the US decision on Jerusalem al-Quds. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan pledged on December 10 that Ankara would not abandon the Palestinian city to the mercy of a regime “that kills children.”

On December 6, US President Donald Trump announced his decision to recognize Jerusalem al-Quds as Israel’s capital and relocate the US embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem al-Quds.

The dramatic shift in Washington’s Jerusalem al-Quds policy has drawn fierce criticism from the international community, including the United States’ Western allies, and triggered demonstrations against the US and Israel worldwide.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Israel, Turkish al-Quds

YA’ALON: CORRUPTION IN ISRAEL IS BIGGER THREAT THAN IRAN, HAMAS

December 23, 2017 By administrator

BY GIL HOFFMAN, UDI SHAHAM, DANIEL K. EISENBUD
Thousands of people gathered in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem on Saturday night to demand transparency and accountability among elected officials.

In Jerusalem, some 600 people attended the rally at Zion Square, intended to be an alternative “pro” demonstration supporting the country’s institutions, as opposed to the anti-corruption tone of the protest held in Tel Aviv for the third week.

The key speaker at the rally was former defense minister Moshe Ya’alon, who criticized the current leadership as corrupt and divisive.

“This is not leadership. Leadership should unite, not divide. Politicians are turning topics such as integrity into ‘Left and Right’ issues,” he said.

Ya’alon then said that in the past, when asked what keeps him awake at night people expected him to say Iran, “But I answered: ‘Corruption.’”

“Corruption causes the common citizen to lose faith in our leadership and in the country’s institutions,” he said. “It is a bigger danger than the Iranian threat, Hezbollah, Hamas or ISIS.”

Commentators from the right including Education Minister Naftali Bennett, noted the participation of one protester who was walking around holding a cardboard model of a guillotine.

”The guillotine [that was used] tonight in Rothschild avenue [in Tel Aviv] is a call to murder prime minister Netanyahu [presented] alongside derogatory remarks against Zionism, the left protest in Rothschild crossed all the red lines.”

Attendees at the rally waved Israeli flags, and held signs reading: “We deserve clean politics,” and “Rule of law is not a matter of Left and Right.”

Protesters chanted: “Not Left and not Right – we are walking straight,” as well as, “Corruption is dangerous, we support the country.”

One of the main organizers of the rally, journalist Yoaz Hendel, stressed that it was not against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, but in favor of rule of law in Israel.

“I am not against Netanyahu, he has many advantages and great experience. I am here for the State of Israel. You can say whatever you want about my interests… [But] I am here because of how I was brought up.”

You cannot live at peace with a “divide and conquer” method of government, he said, with the fact that our political leaders do not find it important to set an example, to display humility, or to aspire to be a model society.

It was reported that politicians from the coalition have received threats not to attend the rally, which was portrayed as an “anti-Netanyahu” demonstration.

MK Merav Ben-Ari (Kulanu), who attended the event, told The Jerusalem Post that she was there to express support for the Supreme Court, the Israel Police and other institutions “that were under attack recently.”

“We are here to show that we are for the rule of law. Even among the Right, there are people who think that there are things that should improve, and there is criticism against those institutions, but there are also good things in them,” she said.

“The fact that so many people came out today – with short notice and with pressure against them – shows their devotion to the country,” Ben-Ari said.

At the same time, a smaller protest was held by supporters of the Left at the capital’s Paris Square, across from the Prime Minister’s Residence.

COALITION CHAIRMAN David Amsalem started his tenure with a surprising statement on Saturday, telling the Bar Association in Eilat: “A prime minister of the State of Israel who has been indicted for bribery cannot serve as prime minister.”

Amsalem balanced out what he said by adding that he did not believe the investigation of the prime minister in the “expensive gifts affair,” known as Case 1000, is legitimate.

“I think that in a reasonable democratic regime that is logical and balanced, you don’t investigate a prime minister who received cigars from a friend,” he said. “It is absurd and it creates a slippery slope. Tomorrow, why don’t we arrest and question a prime minister if he received a few pieces of chocolate? After all, the law is the same for a penny and a fortune.”

Zionist Union faction chairman Yoel Hasson said: “Any indictment of a prime minister is grave and should prevent him from continuing to serve. A country cannot be run from the bench of the accused in court.”

Amsalem responded to the uproar over his statement by writing on Twitter, “I am sorry to disappoint the Left and the press but this is my point of view: The police recommendations have no legal or public weight. From my perspective, bribery is receiving envelopes with forbidden money, not cigars from a personal friend. So the [hypothetical] indictment that I spoke about is not relevant at all to the prime minister.”

Meretz MK Tamar Zandberg, who has sparred with Amsalem repeatedly at the Knesset, said he had no right to redefine bribery to meet his political needs.

A Midgam poll broadcasted on Channel 2 Saturday night found that 63% of Israelis believe Netanyahu must quit if police recommend charges of breach of trust and fraud, lesser crimes than bribery. The poll of 504 respondents representing a statistical sample of the population found that 27% believe Netanyahu would not have to quit, and 10% did not know or did not have an answer. The poll had a 4.4% margin of error.

Asked if the allegations are justified or a witch-hunt, 59% said justified, 27% said witch-hunt and 14% said they did not know.

ON TEL AVIV’S Rothschild Boulevard on Saturday night, thousands of protesters convened for a third consecutive week to protest corruption among elected officials.

Holding a bullhorn, Amit Zilberg, 38, a self-professed “centrist attorney,” noted that the anti-corruption movement had gained significant traction nationally, with at least 15 other protests taking place Saturday throughout the country, including in Jerusalem.

“They should be protesting all over the country,” he said, as streams of people continued to congregate at the closed-off section of the upscale boulevard while police oversaw the activity.

“The corruption is everywhere,” he continued. “Here it is too much – every [politician] in every city is corrupt and the opposition is not fighting the right way. They need to fight harder. That’s why tens of thousands are out here to help them keep fighting.”

Ori Betsalel, 64, has participated in all three weekly protests in Tel Aviv despite living in Nahariya, the northernmost coastal city in the country.

“I keep coming because I am disappointed by the corruption,” he said. “There are too many things and they are trying to make rules for themselves to avoid investigations. This is way beyond what I can tolerate.”

Moreover, Betsalel, who attended Saturday night’s protest with his daughter Einat, deemed the level of perceived corruption to be “unprecedented,” and therefore transcending political leanings.

“This is not a question about Right or Left,” he said. “This is a question about almost total corruption.”

Einat, a 34-year-old resident of Jaffa, said the protests are long overdue.

“I’m happy people are finally waking up after sleeping for a long time,” she said. “The public can no longer sleep because they realize that a line has been crossed by the government that made them finally understand that the government is not really for them – that they are for themselves.”

Einat continued: “And more people realize they can do something about it.”

Recalling the unusually large turnout during the 2011 social justice protests in the same area that resulted in “tent cities” for large stretches of Rothschild Boulevard, she said a similarly galvanizing response is under way regarding corruption.

“There is a power sleeping in this country, and when it rises up, it rises with a lot of power,” Betsalel said. “So, I am here to make this power bigger.”

Meanwhile, a few meters away, near where Rothschild begins, a group of roughly seven male and female counterprotesters – protected by metal barriers and police – used megaphones of their own to support the prime minister.

Elad, a 32-year-old hi-tech worker who asked that his last name not be published for fear of reprisal, said the huge adjacent anti-government group of protesters was being unfair to the prime minister.

“They seem to have this urgency to convict Netanyahu without a trial, and that is very not liberal,” he said, adding that he believes the collective anger is strictly politically based.

“Secondly, the police should not be able to recommend indictments of political officials, because 60% [of such recommendations] are thrown in the garbage, and all the while the lives of the people who are being investigated are ruined. They lose their careers, maybe even lose their families.”

Source: http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Yaalon-Corruption-in-Israel-is-bigger-threat-than-Iran-Hamas-519855?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: corruption, Israel

Israel’s Anti-Armenian defense minister says ‘unacceptable’ to recognize the #ArmenianGenocide

December 20, 2017 By administrator

Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman

Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman stated on Sunday that the Israeli position
on the recognition of the Armenian Genocide has not changed, and it is currently unacceptable for the country to recognize the systematic massacres of the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire as genocide.

“I do not think that it is acceptable to rake this very issue, which is in many respects purely historical, controversial and theoretical. I do not think that this has a concrete impact on Israel’s current position on Turkey,” Lieberman told an interview to RTV TV channel as quoted by Turkish media sources.

The issue of the Armenian genocide recognition came to the spotlight of Israeli politics when opposition Yesh Atid Party leader Yair Lapid announced the need for Israel to adopt a dramatically more aggressive policy toward Turkey. The opposition politician called the authorities to recognize an independent Kurdistan and acknowledge the Armenian genocide, which Ottoman Turks committed a century ago.

Lapid’s comments come amid increasing bilateral tensions over Turkey’s comments on Israel’s imposition of new security measures in the wake of a terror attack on Jerusalem’s Temple Mount.

 

Source Panorama.am

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: anti, armenian genocide, Avigdor Lieberman, Israel

Opposition leader urges Israel to recognize the Armenian Genocide

December 14, 2017 By administrator

Israel should adopt a dramatically more aggressive policy toward Turkey, Yesh Atid party leader Yair Lapid said on Thursday in response to ongoing criticism from Ankara of the government’s recent actions on the Temple Mount, The Times of Israel reported.

While stopping short of calling for diplomatic ties to be cut, the opposition lawmaker said Jerusalem should recognize an independent Kurdistan and acknowledge the Armenian genocide, which Ottoman Turks committed a century ago.

“It’s time, generally speaking, to stop groveling before the Turks, who keep kicking us harder and harder,” Lapid told reporters during a briefing in Tel Aviv. “We will do the things we avoided doing as long as we had good relations with Turkey, because we don’t have any [now] and won’t have any [in the future],” he added.

The source reminds that many countries avoid acknowledging the events between 1915 and 1923, during which Ottoman forces massacred Armenian citizens in a systematically planned act of ethnic cleansing, as genocide out of concern for their ties to Turkey, which is a NATO member and an important Muslim ally of many Western countries.

To note, Lapid’s comments come amid increasing bilateral tensions over Turkey’s comments on Israel’s imposition of new security measures in the wake of a terror attack on Jerusalem’s Temple Mount.

 

Source Panorama.am

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Israel, Turkey

Erdoğan slams Israel as a ‘terrorist state’ and “oppressive, occupation state.”

December 10, 2017 By administrator

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on Dec. 10 described Israel as a “terrorist state.”

Speaking at a ruling Justice and Development Party’s (AKP) congress in the Central Anatolian province of Sivas, Erdoğan blasted the Israeli police’s “disproportionate” force against Palestinian protesters and said Israel is an “oppressive, occupation state.”

His words came after U.S. President Donald Trump on Dec. 6 officially recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, in a move that reversed decades of U.S. policy of remaining neutral on the holy city.

The decision triggered demonstrations in the Palestinian territories and across the Muslim world.

Two Palestinians were killed in Israeli airstrikes in the Gaza Strip earlier on Dec. 9, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, Israel, Jerusalem, Trump

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