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Updated October 21, 2024

Hezbollah drone shot down at Lebanese border

The IDF shot down a Hezbollah drone attempting to enter Israeli airspace on Tuesday afternoon.

  • The drone, identified as a quadcopter (a small device with four rotors), was intercepted near the community of Zarit close to the Lebanese border.
  • Afterwards the IDF said the drone was being tracked and monitored long before it reached the border.
  • Earlier this week Syrian sources reported on the latest air strike in the Damascus area.
  • According to the Syrian reports the target was a Hezbollah weapons storage facility in the Saida Zeinab district.
  • According to the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, two Hezbollah operatives were killed in the air strike.
  • The Saudi Arabian Al-Arabiya network claimed the target was an Iranian anti-aircraft battery that had recently been deployed near the international airport in Damascus.
  • In a separate and unusual incident last week, an Irish UN peacekeeper was killed and several others wounded after their convoy was shot at whilst driving through the town of Al-Aqbiya in southern Lebanon.
  • The Irish Defence Forces said in a statement that a pair of armoured vehicles carrying eight Irish UNIFIL peacekeeping troops were fired on last Tuesday night.
  • Footage from the incident showed the convoy coming under machine-gun fire, with one of the vehicles subsequently losing control and overturning.
  • The UN confirmed that one peacekeeper was killed as a result of the gunfire and have opened an investigation.
  • Hezbollah’s use of drones has increased over the last few months, in the summer drones were dispatched to film Israel’s off shore gas rig, prior to the Israel-Lebanese maritime agreement.
  • The IDF is thought to have several methods for downing drones. In the past it has deployed fighter jets, helicopters, the Iron Dome system, their own drones or electronic jamming. They did not reveal which technology was used on this occasion.
  • In addition, Hezbollah operatives have continued to raise their presence on Israel’s border, they have increased their patrols and openly monitor and document Israeli troop movements.
  • Hezbollah has also set up dozens of lookout posts along the border.
  • Hezbollah is also continuing efforts to strengthen its presence in Syria. Last week it was reported that the IDF attacked a Hezbollah facility in the area of As-Suwayda, in the south-west of Syria, not far from the Israeli border.
  • Following that incident the IDF dropped leaflets in the area, warning Syrian military personnel against continuing to allow Hezbollah to operate in the area.
  • Iranian attempts to smuggle advanced weapons continues both by air to various Syrian airports, and also via land, through Iraq and Syria.
  • In a rare revelation last week, IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Aviv Kochavi confirmed that Israel was behind an attack on a weapons shipment on the Iraqi-Syrian border last month.
  • He revealed that in a convoy of 25 fuel trucks Israeli intelligence had identified the eighth vehicle as containing weapons.
  • As well as thwarting the smuggling, Kochavi’s comments highlight Israel’s intelligence and operational capabilities.

Responding to the attempted drone infiltration the IDF said it will continue to prevent any attempt to violate Israeli sovereignty.

  • There are serious concerns, based on Israeli intelligence information, that Iran is looking to establish a new weapons route direct to Beirut airport. Israel has passed on warnings that it would not hesitate to bomb the airport. This would be a dramatic development, and it’s unclear how Hezbollah and other actors would respond.

December 21, 2022

Knesset in session for expanding police powers

The Knesset is in the midst of a marathon session as it tries to pass four pieces of legislation in the next few days.

  • There are four bills being debated in Knesset committees and being prepared for their second and third readings.
    • The first relates to the expansion of powers over the police for designated National Security minister Itamar Ben Gvir. Among the expanded powers, he wants more direct control over police operations and oversight of the police commissioner.
    • Secondly, an amendment to Basic Law: Government, to allow Shas leader Aryeh Deri to serve as minister (despite being convicted last year on tax offences). The new amendment will make a distinction between a suspended prison service (that Deri received last year) and serving prison time (that happened to Deri in the past).
    • The third change is also to the Basic Law: Government. It will move control over the Civil Administration (in the West Bank) and the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories from the ministry of defence to the leader of the Religious Zionist Party Bezalel Smotrich.
    • The fourth bill will repeal the clause in the Knesset law that allows four MKs to splinter off from an existing faction. This clause was changed by the previous government to try (unsuccessfully) to facilitate a split within the Likud. The repeal reverts to the previous situation that requires one-third of a party to split in order to form its own faction. 
  • Netanyahu is keen for the fourth bill to pass before he allocates ministerial portfolios and other positions to his Likud colleagues, lest those unsatisfied attempt a rebellion.
  • Itamar Ben-Gvir is still demanding veto power in the Knesset Constitution, Law and Justice Committee, but the Likud is opposed.
  • One issue on which Ben-Gvir could back down relates to ministerial oversight of the Police regarding criminal prosecution. The current compromise suggests the minister would have the power to determine which types of cases will be investigated, but not to interfere in specific cases.
  • Furthermore, this morning a moderated version of the Ben Gvir bill proposed that the minister will determine policy on investigations, including how long they will take, but only after first consulting with the police commissioner and the attorney general.
  • Ben Gvir has also reportedly agreed to insert a clause that stipulates that the police commissioner is the supreme commander, (but still subordinate to the minister).
  • Among other outstanding issues is Ben Gvir’s demand to give soldiers and police officers immunity for action taken during terrorist attacks.
  • Ben Gvir is also seeking revision of the rules of engagement used by the IDF and the police.
  • It appears Netanyahu is waiting to the very last moment to distribute ministerial portfolios and other positions to his own party colleagues. There is ongoing concern within his party that the coalition partners have already extracted too many concessions. One example is the Education Ministry, once seen as one of the most important positions. This time around it appears less appealing since various departments have been redistributed as part of the coalition deals.
  • Meanwhile, some of the most controversial proposals are expected to only have a vague commitment in the coalition agreement. For example, a new military draft bill, which places the Ultra-orthodox at odds with the Likud, will only be negotiated after the new government is formed.
  • Similarly, judicial reform and an ‘override clause’ are expected to only be discussed after the new government is sworn in. Bezalel Smotrich is still demanding an explicit promise to limit the authority of the judiciary. Netanyahu prefers to only make a vague commitment and wait a few months before moving forward.
  • However, if the legal establishment tries to reject one of the bills currently being prepared, for example, the Deri law, this could precipitate a constitutional crisis.

Netanyahu received a ten day extension of his mandate, which formally expires at midnight Tuesday. Though technically he can ask the president for an additional four-day extension.

  • Once Netanyahu formally updates the president that he has a government, the Knesset must convene a vote within seven days to swear in the new government.
  • They also need to publish the coalition agreements 48 hours ahead of the vote.
  • In parallel, Netanyahu hopes to have all of the planned legislation completed by the middle of next week.

December 16, 2022

300 Palestinians arrested over alleged Hamas affiliation

Reports suggest around 300 Palestinians with alleged Hamas affiliation were arrested in the West Bank this week .

  • The arrests have been interpreted both as a sign of the Palestinian Authority’s (PA) insecurity over its weakening authority in the West Bank and as an effort to persuade the US and international community that it still remains in control.
  • Senior Hamas official Hussam Badran called the arrests a “stab in the back of the Palestinian national unity.”
  • While according to Lior Ackerman, senior fellow at the Institute for Policy and Strategy, Reichman University, “The PA of the end of 2022 is an entity without governance, very weak and lacking any vision or leadership strategy.”
  • According to the Palestinian Lawyers for Justice group, PA security forces have arrested or summoned for interrogation more than 500 Palestinian activists since the beginning of the year.
  • Also this week, Relatives of the Palestinian activist Nizar Banat announced that they are to file a case against Mahmoud Abbas’s PA at the International Criminal Court (ICC) over his death.
  • Banat, a long-time critic of the PA and Abbas, died following his arrest by Palestinian forces in June 2021. An autopsy showed he had suffered extensive beating.
  • Fourteen members of the PA security services were arrested over the incident, before being released on bail earlier this year.
  • The family’s case – which the ICC is not obliged to agree to hear – accuses seven PA figures of responsibility for Banat’s death.
  • It represents the first time the court has been presented with a case filed by Palestinians against Palestinians.
  • Hamas marked its 35th anniversary celebrations. Addressing the crowd remotely, Hamas’ military commander Mohammed al-Deif criticised the PA’s policy of security cooperation with Israel and called instead for support for the Lions’ Den group in Nablus, the Balata Brigades, and militia in Jenin with which Israel has been engaged in regular operations.
  • Yehiyeh Sinwar, Hamas’ leader in Gaza  said, “We have to give the chance to ignite the resistance in the West Bank.”
  • At the same event, Hamas displayed what it claimed was the assault rifle of Hadar Goldin, the Givati Brigade soldier killed in Gaza, along with his colleague Oron Shaul, during Operation Protective Edge in 2014.
  • Hamas retains both soldiers’ bodies and is also believed to be holding captive two Israelis: Avera Mengistu and Hisham al-Sayed, both missing since crossing the border into Gaza in 2014 and 2015 respectively.
  • Sinwar also used his remarks to warn Israel that the window was rapidly closing for it to negotiate the return of Goldin and Shaul’s bodies.
  • In parallel the IDF this week also disclosed evidence of three rocket sites close to schools in Gaza City. According to their intelligence, staff at the Mo’ath Bin Jabal, the Khalil Al Nobani Secondary Female, and the Al-Furqan Public Schools were working in collaboration with Hamas.
  • An IDF statement said that the revelation provided further proof that Hamas ” uses the residents of the Gaza Strip, and in these cases innocent children, as human protectors.”

The week’s events show remaining hostility between Fatah and Hamas.

  • The events call into question the October reconciliation agreement, signed in Algeria by both Hamas and Fatah, designed to lessen conflict between the PA and Hamas.
  • Some Palestinian analysts speculated that Abbas had deliberately sought to sabotage the reconciliation talks.
  • Whilst the last few months have seen an increase in Israeli operations in the West Bank, relative quiet has prevailed on the Gazan front. However, in early December the IDF hit Hamas sites in Gaza in response to a single rocket fire directed at Southern Israel.
  • Although the rockets were thought to have been fired not by Hamas but by Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), Israel followed its policy of holding Hamas responsible for all terror emanating from Gaza.
  • Latest polling from the Palestinian Centre for Policy and Survey Research (PCPSR) showed declining support for Abbas, with his decree forming a high council for the judiciary under his own control proving particularly unpopular.
  • Palestinian satisfaction (both West Bank and Gaza) with Abbas’s leadership was at 23%.
  • Other headline numbers from the poll showed substantial support for armed factions rival to the PA – 72% were in favour of independent groups like Lion’s Den.

The further erosion of PA control, together with increasing local popularity and Iranian support could see West Bank militias continue operations against Israelis, leading in turn to further Israeli raids in the West Bank under “Operation Breakwater”.

  • With Palestinian elections remaining a distant prospect, and with no clear succession plan for the 87-year-old Abbas, political disunity amongst the Palestinians is likely to continue.
  • Hamas deputy chief Khalil al-Hayya recently suggested that Algeria was set to host another series of reconciliation talks at the end of December.
  • Hamas’s failure to return the bodies of Goldin and Shaul make it unlikely that Israel will relax the opening of Gaza to humanitarian supplies and other material.

December 14, 2022

Levin expected to be Knesset Speaker

Likud MK Yariv Levin is expected to be elected as the temporary speaker of the Knesset. This will finally give the incoming coalition control of the legislative process.

  • On Friday President Herzog agreed to extend Netanyahu’s mandate to form a government by ten days.
  • Herzog wrote to Netanyahu: “You said that you would form a government that would act on behalf of the entire public… Therefore, and in the spirit of your above-cited statements, I wish to repeat the call I issued on the day the Knesset was sworn in for the government that is formed to act on behalf of the entire Israeli public, and that the emerging coalition adhere to respectful and responsible dialogue.”
  • Over the weekend, the outgoing Prime Minister Lapid’s Yesh Atid Party and the Labour Party already began protesting the incoming government at various bridges and junctions. Lapid himself attended one of the demonstrations in Tel Aviv. He told the crowd, “We are here to tell the new government that is being formed that we aren’t your suckers. We aren’t here only to pay you taxes and to send our children to the army for a government that doesn’t send its own children to the army. Avi Maoz, who hates LGBTQs and hates women, won’t educate our daughters; and Itamar Ben Gvir, a violent criminal who was convicted of supporting terrorism and didn’t serve a single day in the army, isn’t going to send our children into battle. What’s being formed now is neither a Likud government nor a right-wing government; it’s the most extreme and the most insane government in the country’s history. Netanyahu is weak, and partners who are younger than him, more determined than him and more radical than him, have defeated him unconditionally. But we aren’t going to surrender. We are here to stay.”

Context: Levin is considered one of the Likud MKs closest to incumbent Prime Minister Netanyahu. He has served as the Likud’s lead negotiator during the coalition negotiations.

  • Levin will only be a temporary appointment because the Likud leadership could not agree to a permanent candidate at this stage. There are several Likud MKs vying for the position but it is dependent on the allocation of other ministerial positions that has not yet been decided.
  • The election of a new speaker is an essential step to forming the next government. Once in control of parliamentary proceedings they plan to pass a series of new laws before the government can be sworn in.  These include:
    • An amendment to Basic Law: Government to allow Shas leader Deri to serve as minister (despite being convicted last year on tax offences). The new amendment will make a distinction between a suspended prison service (that Deri received last year) and serving prison time (that happened to Deri in the past).
    • An amendment that would give Ben Gvir expanded powers over the police. Ben Gvir is set to be appointed national security minister. Among the expanded powers, he is seeking to place the police’s annual budget under his discretional purview. He also wants more direct oversight over the police commissioner.
    • Legislation that would move control over the Civil Administration (in the West Bank) and the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories, from the ministry of defence to Smotrich in the finance ministry.
  • Levin himself is considered the lead candidate to become justice minister. However, recent speculation has suggested his desire for judicial reform may be too extreme for Netanyahu.
  • From the outside a relatively homogeneous right wing religious coalition should have been easier to assemble. However, Israeli media is rife with speculation over disagreements and mistrust within the Likud faction and among the future coalition partners.

The first stage today will be for the Likud parliamentary faction to elect MK Yariv Levin as their candidate to serve as temporary Knesset speaker. Once approved by the faction, Levin’s nomination will be put to a vote in the Knesset plenum.

  • The new coalition then intends to pass several pieces of legislation within the next few days.
  • The plan is for these bills to pass their second and third readings by next week, to then allow the new government to be announced ahead of the December 21 deadline.
  • After informing the president, Netanyahu will have an additional seven days to formally swear-in the new government.

Ultra-orthodox demands: In addition to the coalition agreement on portfolios and legislation Channel 12 News revealed a slew of demands that have reportedly been agreed between Likud and United Torah Judaism (UTJ). However, according to the Likud not all these demands will be met.

  • Among the issues:
    • Stopping the production of electricity on the Sabbath.
    • Adding a representative of the Chief Rabbinate to all committees that decide on government work permits on the Sabbath.
    • Adding NIS 100 million (around £24m) in Education Ministry funding for Ultra-orthodox culture.
    • Initiating affirmative action to add Ultra-orthodox candidates to the board of directors of government companies.
    • Increasing the number of gender-separated beaches, proportionate to the size of the ultra-Orthodox population.
    • Government funding for the correct disposal of damaged holy documents containing God’s name, (according to Jewish law they must not be thrown away but buried).
    • Expanding Bible and Talmud studies in secular schools.
    • Establishing a government-funded hotline that will provide answers for questions related to Jewish religious law.
    • Allowing the heads of hospitals to prohibit unleavened bread being brought into hospitals during Passover.
    • Ensuring any government service now provided via the internet will also be available by phone operators or in person.
    • A review (with a view to closing) of the Diaspora Affairs Ministry’s department that deals with Reform Judaism.
    • Cancelling the outgoing governments reforms to the ‘kosher phone’ (non-smart phone) market.
  • Incoming Prime Minister Netanyahu related to the report from the Knesset plenum yesterday saying, “There is and will be electricity on Sabbath, there are and will be beaches for everyone. We will maintain the status quo, everybody will live according to their own beliefs.” He added that the state will not be governed according to Jewish Law. Insisting, “There will be a state here that will take care of all the citizens of Israel without exception. We were chosen to lead in our own way, the way of the national right and the way of the liberal right and we will do so.”
  • Outgoing Prime Minister Lapid responded saying, “The UTJ-Likud agreement is a disgraceful surrender agreement….If they think we’re going to pay taxes, go to the army, bankroll people who don’t work and then for them to tell us to lead our lives, I have news for them: We won’t allow Israel to become a benighted country. Netanyahu is weak and is selling our freedom for his own freedom.”

Looking ahead: Later today the police commissioner will appear in front of a special Knesset committee and give his opinion on the proposed changes.

  • The appointment of Levin as speaker is a temporary move for the next couple of weeks to facilitate the passing of those four pieces of legislation before the new government is sworn in. At the second stage a permanent speaker will be elected and Levin is expected to be the next minister of justice.
  • The plan is for these bills to pass their second and third readings by next week, to then allow the new government to be announced ahead of the December 21 deadline.
  • After informing the president, Netanyahu will have an additional seven days to formally swear-in the new government.

December 9, 2022

Counter-terror raid in Jenin yesterday

What happened? Three suspected Palestinian militants were killed during an Israeli counter-terrorism raid in a refugee camp in the West Bank city of Jenin yesterday.

  • The IDF said that its forces entered the camp to arrest terrorist suspect Khaled a-Hija when its troops came under “accurate fire” and responded in kind.
  • The local wing of Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) later claimed responsibility for engaging Israeli troops with gunfire and explosives.
  • The dead have been named as Sidqi Zakarneh and Tariq al-Damej, both 29, and Atta Shalabi, 46
  • Khaled a-Hija was apprehended, as were suspects Ahmad Jaradat and Daajef Bages in other raids in Jenin.
  • The IDF confirmed that forces also conducted separate counter-terrorism raids in Bethlehem and in the West Bank towns of Abu Dis, Bitut, Silwad, Anata, Ein, Nabi Saleh, and Bayt Rima.
  • Further suspects were arrested in Hebron, Ramallah, Mahafiaa, Jabal Shamali and Bayt Furik, and illegal vehicles confiscated in the towns of Yata and Khirbet Carme.
  • Near the West Bank village of Aboud, 16-year-old Diaa Muhammad Shafiq al-Rimawi died in an incident in which the IDF says its troops opened fire after stones and bottles of paint were thrown at them.
  • Elsewhere in Jenin, troops arrested the father of Moujahid Mahmoud Hamed, who died after firing on an IDF post near the settlement of Ofra on Wednesday.
  • The IDF reported that no injuries to its troops were sustained during the various operations.

Jenin, in the Palestinian Authority-controlled Area A, has long been regarded as a hotbed of militant activity and is a frequent flashpoint for clashes between militants and the IDF.

  • Yesterday’s events echo similar incidents last week in which troops returned fire after being fired upon during an arrest raid in the city. Members of both PIJ and the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade were killed.
  • These incidents follow further fatal West Bank clashes between Palestinians and the IDF in the last month, including in Beit Ummar near Hebron, and in Beit Rima and Al-Mughayyir, both near Ramallah.
  • The past year has seen a significant increase in both Palestinian terrorism and Israeli counter-terrorism operations in the West Bank.
  • The period has seen over 280 terror attacks (up from 91 in 2021), claiming the lives of 30 Israelis.
  • GazaHaving long armed and supported both Hamas and PIJ in Gaza, Iran has turned greater attention to growing the capacity and influence of proxies in the West Bank in the last 12 months.
  • PIJ in the West Bank has received significant funding from Tehran, which it has used to establish a series of local battalions whose personnel includes members of other, ostensibly rival, Palestinian factions.
  • Late November saw the first bomb attacks in Israel since 2016, with explosives in two locations near the entrance to Jerusalem claiming the lives of two Israelis.
  • In the face of this increase in what the IDF terms “popular terrorism” emanating from the territory, it has responded with “Operation Breakwater”.
  • 3,000 arrests have been carried out and over 500 attacks thwarted, according to Israeli Military Intelligence.
  • Analysts estimate that around half of the IDF’s troop resources are currently allocated to addressing West Bank threats.
  • Some 150 Palestinians have been killed, the majority during clashes with the IDF.
  • There has also been a significant rise in nationalist-motivated crime by right-wing Israelis against Palestinians.

Despite ongoing security coordination between Israel and the Palestinian Authority, the pattern of the past year points to the latter’s declining authority in the West Bank.

  • Its policies of formal opposition to armed resistance and cooperation with Israel security are said to be reducing the Authority’s already waning popular appeal.
  • On Wednesday Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas issued a statement affirming, though with caveats, his commitment to these policies.
  • “Security coordination is a part of the agreements. When it comes to security coordination our approach is to fight terrorism no matter where,” Abbas said. “I do not support armed Palestinian resistance, but that could change. It could change — tomorrow, the next day or some other time. Everything changes.”
  • The influence of Hamas, PIJ, and other armed groups, meanwhile, continues to grow.
  • The impact of the likely appointments of far-right figures Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben Gvir to portfolios with authority over civilian administration in the West Bank and the West Bank Border Police, respectively, remains to be seen. Outgoing Defence Minister Benny Gantz recently warned of the chances of an even greater escalation accompanying Ben Gvir’s appointment.

December 7, 2022

Herzog formally received in Bahrain

What happened in Bahrain: President Herzog was formally received on a State Visit by King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa.

  • On departure Herzog framed the trip as “a visit of peace….bringing and delivering a message of peace is another step toward the inclusion of Israel in the region built on cooperation for the wellbeing of the nations of the region. Inshallah, we will bring another step toward peace.”
  • In their meeting, President Herzog and King Hamad discussed the importance that their countries attach to their bilateral relationship and the expansion of Israeli-Bahraini cooperation.
  • Herzog told him, “You are at the forefront of making history in the region, where Jews and Muslims can dwell together, the sons of Abraham, and move forward in peace. It is a long process, but we can dream of it and we can see it. Our nations joined the path of peace and the Kingdom of Bahrain is really one of the pioneers in this process, joining other nations that are pursuing peace together for the benefit and wellbeing of our peoples and the nations in the region and the world at large.”
  • King Hamad said, “we are confident that this visit has an important role in consolidating relations between our two countries,” and to witness the “spirit of friendliness, tolerance and peaceful coexistence among the members of our honourable society of all religions and races, reaffirming our belief in the values of peace, brotherhood and cooperation among human beings.”
  • President Isaac Herzog also met with representatives of the Jewish community of Bahrain, which included Houda Nonoo, former Bahraini ambassador to the US.
  • To coincide with the visit Herzog wrote an op-ed in the Bahraini media. Having signed the Abraham Accords two years ago Herzog wrote, the task is now “making sure the benefits of regional friendly relations reach each and every Israeli and Bahraini.” He cited direct flights, a free trade agreement, and “envisions a future of student exchanges, of joint projects between youth, of collaborative ventures between universities—not only between Israel and Bahrain, but with our broader region.”
  • He highlighted the climate crisis “in which our small countries can and must punch above our weight.” He added, “our mission is to create a Renewable Middle East: a regional ecosystem of sustainable peace, in which we all join forces to provide common solutions to our common challenges. Southern Israel is already powered 100% by solar energy in the daytime, and when you open the faucet in much of our land, the water you drink is all desalinated. We want to scale up these solutions with our new friends, using our respective advantages to bring clean water and clean energy to Europe, Asia, and Africa.”
  • In Abu Dhabi: President Herzog delivered a keynote speech at the Abu Dhabi Space Debate.
  • In his speech the President noted, “I am proud of Israel’s close cooperation with NASA, the European Space Agency, and our counterparts in France, Italy, Germany, Japan, Brazil, and many other countries. But I am especially proud of our evolving space partnership with the United Arab Emirates. Our two countries are boldly leading our region toward new frontiers in space and leaving our mark on history.”
  • He highlighted the importance of transnational partnerships but also in education. He noted, “In Israel, we have introduced the TEVEL program, which is already working with high school students from across the country, Jews and Arabs alike. They are building, testing, and launching nanosatellites into space, and then using them to gather data and conduct experiments. Israel invites all the countries here to work with us to expand this program regionally and internationally. Together, we will harness the collective creativity, genius and wonder of our youth. And I would like to invite all of you to partake in this incredible venture.”
  • Herzog also had a meeting with UAE President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed in his private home.
  • President bin Zayed said: “Thank you very much, Mr. President, for coming back again to your second home. It really means a lot to us. This is a new relationship, and we are trying to build a very strong bridge between our two countries, and I think we have built a very strong bridge that we are both proud of. The Abraham Accords are achieving their goals, so we are very proud.”
  • This was the first official visit of an Israeli president to Bahrain. However both former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and Yair Lapid (while serving as foreign minister) have visited before.
  • This was the fifth meeting between Herzog and bin Zayed, since meeting last year they have kept in touch, including several telephone calls.
  • The Jewish community in Manama immigrated in the early 1880s, mostly from Iraq, Iran, and Kuwait.
  • Trade between Israel and the UAE is growing at an impressive rate. According to the Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics, Israeli imports from the UAE grew from $551m in 2021 to $1,398m this year. Israeli exports rose from $272m last year to $430m in 2022.
  • Beyond economic relations, there is also emerging security cooperation. Israeli media reported last month that two Israeli Barak air defence systems have been deployed in the UAE to defend against a range of aerial threats emanating from Iran.
  • As the signatory of the Abraham Accords two years ago, Designated Prime Minister Netanyahu is expected to visit Bahrain and the UAE on his first diplomatic trip abroad.
  • Israel and Bahrain hope to complete a free trade agreement before the end of the year.

December 7, 2022

Herzog in Bahrain

What happened in Bahrain: President Herzog was formally received on a State Visit by King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa in Bahrain.

  • On departure Herzog framed the trip as “a visit of peace….bringing and delivering a message of peace is another step toward the inclusion of Israel in the region built on cooperation for the wellbeing of the nations of the region. Inshallah, we will bring another step toward peace.”
  • In their meeting, President Herzog and King Hamad discussed the importance that their countries attach to their bilateral relationship and the expansion of Israeli-Bahraini cooperation.
  • Herzog told him, “You are at the forefront of making history in the region, where Jews and Muslims can dwell together, the sons of Abraham, and move forward in peace. It is a long process, but we can dream of it and we can see it. Our nations joined the path of peace and the Kingdom of Bahrain is really one of the pioneers in this process, joining other nations that are pursuing peace together for the benefit and wellbeing of our peoples and the nations in the region and the world at large.”
  • King Hamad said, “we are confident that this visit has an important role in consolidating relations between our two countries,” and to witness the “spirit of friendliness, tolerance and peaceful coexistence among the members of our honourable society of all religions and races, reaffirming our belief in the values of peace, brotherhood and cooperation among human beings.”
  • President Isaac Herzog also met with representatives of the Jewish community of Bahrain, which included Houda Nonoo, former Bahraini ambassador to the US.
  • To coincide with the visit Herzog wrote an op-ed in the Bahraini media. Having signed the Abraham Accords two years ago Herzog wrote, the task is now “making sure the benefits of regional friendly relations reach each and every Israeli and Bahraini.” He cited direct flights, a free trade agreement, and “envisions a future of student exchanges, of joint projects between youth, of collaborative ventures between universities—not only between Israel and Bahrain, but with our broader region.”
  • He highlighted the climate crisis “in which our small countries can and must punch above our weight.” He added, “our mission is to create a Renewable Middle East: a regional ecosystem of sustainable peace, in which we all join forces to provide common solutions to our common challenges. Southern Israel is already powered 100% by solar energy in the daytime, and when you open the faucet in much of our land, the water you drink is all desalinated. We want to scale up these solutions with our new friends, using our respective advantages to bring clean water and clean energy to Europe, Asia, and Africa.”

In Abu Dhabi: President Herzog delivered a keynote speech at the Abu Dhabi Space Debate.

  • In his speech the President noted, “I am proud of Israel’s close cooperation with NASA, the European Space Agency, and our counterparts in France, Italy, Germany, Japan, Brazil, and many other countries. But I am especially proud of our evolving space partnership with the United Arab Emirates. Our two countries are boldly leading our region toward new frontiers in space and leaving our mark on history.”
  • He highlighted the importance of transnational partnerships but also in education. He noted, “In Israel, we have introduced the TEVEL program, which is already working with high school students from across the country, Jews and Arabs alike. They are building, testing, and launching nanosatellites into space, and then using them to gather data and conduct experiments. Israel invites all the countries here to work with us to expand this program regionally and internationally. Together, we will harness the collective creativity, genius and wonder of our youth. And I would like to invite all of you to partake in this incredible venture.”
  • Herzog also had a meeting with UAE President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed in his private home.
  • President bin Zayed said: “Thank you very much, Mr. President, for coming back again to your second home. It really means a lot to us. This is a new relationship, and we are trying to build a very strong bridge between our two countries, and I think we have built a very strong bridge that we are both proud of. The Abraham Accords are achieving their goals, so we are very proud.”

Israel in the WorldContext: This was the first official visit of an Israeli president to Bahrain. However both former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and Yair Lapid (while serving as foreign minister) have visited before.

  • This was the fifth meeting between Herzog and bin Zayed, since meeting last year they have kept in touch, including several telephone calls.
  • The Jewish community in Manama immigrated in the early 1880s, mostly from Iraq, Iran, and Kuwait.
  • Trade between Israel and the UAE is growing at an impressive rate. According to the Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics, Israeli imports from the UAE grew from $551m in 2021 to $1,398m this year. Israeli exports rose from $272m last year to $430m in 2022.
  • Beyond economic relations, there is also emerging security cooperation. Israeli media reported last month that two Israeli Barak air defence systems have been deployed in the UAE to defend against a range of aerial threats emanating from Iran.

Looking forward: As the signatory of the Abraham Accords two years ago, Designated Prime Minister Netanyahu is expected to visit Bahrain and the UAE on his first diplomatic trip abroad.

  • Israel and Bahrain hope to complete a free trade agreement before the end of the year.

December 5, 2022

MK Maoz appointment criticised

Local government, school principals and parent groups have all heavily criticised the appointment of MK Avi Maoz from the Noam Party to a position within the Prime Minister’s office with authority over external curricula content in the state-run education system.

  • Maoz is best known for his long-standing opposition to the LGBTQ community and highly conservative views.
  • In response to his appointment the Tel Aviv municipality declared it would continue to fund external educational content “in keeping with the spirit of this city.” Tel Aviv Mayor Ron Huldai said, “The message that has been sent from local authorities is strong and clear: We will not allow anyone to play games with the education of our children. I will make sure that in our city, we continue to educate in keeping with our values.”
  • Over the weekend, dozens more mayors, including from the Likud, expressed their objections to Maoz’s appointment and announced that they would fund educational content themselves. The Likud Mayor from Bat Yam Tzvika Brot said, “No party has a monopoly on Judaism, just as no party has a monopoly on pluralism. We will not allow anyone to meddle with our policies or values and change the status quo in this city.”
  • Ramat Gan Mayor Carmel Shama Hacohen, a former Likud MK, said “The city of Ramat Gan will fund two hours of class time on liberalism, inclusiveness and equality for every hour the government slashes on those topics.”
  • In addition, around 200 school principals sent a letter to the designated prime minister Netanyahu. They wrote, “We, school principals from across the country, from a range of sectors will stand strong to protect our democracy and the basic rights of the citizens of this country when it comes to issues related to the Basic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty. We hereby express our opposition to the removal of the unit responsible for external content and partnerships from the Education Ministry and transferring responsibility for that unit to a department that will be headed by Avi Maoz of the Noam Party, who has openly expressed his racist, homophobic views that are very benighted and very extreme, which cancel, divide, tear apart and hurt entire communities and broad identities in Israeli society. We will not allow benighted views to dictate the agenda in our schools. We call for this decision to be changed immediately,”
  • In addition, more than 660 civics teachers and educators wrote, “We will not quietly accept educational leadership that promotes, via legislation and action, anti-democratic actions that is damaging to human rights.”

Context: The Noam Party was elected as part of the Religious Zionist list, but since the election the list has splintered into its constituent parts, leaving Maoz as his own one-person faction.

  • According to the agreement he reached with the Likud, Maoz will serve as a deputy minister in the Prime Minister’s Office.
  • He will head the unit for external content and partnerships that was taken from the Education Ministry. The role overseas all of the curricula beyond core curricula, such as maths, English, sciences.  The unit has a budget of NIS 2 billion (around £480m).
  • Privately, some in the Likud now acknowledge that this appointment was a mistake. They had thought that the unit was a small and unimportant department in the Education Ministry, and failed to realise the influence he could have.
  • One theory under consideration is to hold up the transfer of authorities to Maoz, to create a crisis whereby Maoz will resign and quit the coalition. The coalition could still function with 63 instead of 64 members. However, others in the Likud have dismissed this approach.
  • Another suggestion is that Netanyahu himself would oversee Maoz. Responding to this idea, outgoing prime minister Lapid wrote yesterday on Facebook: “Netanyahu said that he would ‘personally supervise’ the Gefen Unit, which is responsible for educational programmes at schools. Netanyahu knows that that’s a lie. He is saying that in the hope that the storm will blow over. Netanyahu knows that he has done something terrible—he has placed in the hands of a dangerous racist a budget of more than two billion shekels, with an open ticket to the hearts and minds of every child in Israel. Don’t let Maoz near your children. The authority is in your hands, and you can stop this.”

Looking ahead: Tomorrow the outgoing education minister, Yifat Shasha-Biton, is scheduled to convene an emergency conference. Attendees are expected to include outgoing Prime Minister Lapid, Defence Minister Benny Gantz, MKs, mayors, former education ministers, educators, parents and representatives of civil society organisations.

December 2, 2022

Coalition agreement reached

Prime Minister designate Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud and Bezalel Smotrich’s Religious Zionism have reached an agreement in their coalition negotiations.

  • The sides appear to have reached an understanding over the recognition and provision of services to outposts hitherto illegal under Israeli law (and referred to euphemistically as ‘newer settlements’).
  • These unauthorised settlements are set to be connected to water and electricity supply within two months, and those built on “state land” legalised within a year.
  • Smotrich will head an expanded Finance Ministry in rotation (after two years) with Shas leader Aryeh Deri, who will be appointed to both the Health and expanded Interior Ministry briefs.
  • Netanyahu had denied Smotrich the coveted defence portfolio, but instead will expand his party’s influence over some aspects of West Bank policy.
  • The Defence Ministry will retain the offices of Civil Administration in Judea and Samaria and Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories. Crucially, however, a Religious Zionism MK – likely either Orit Struck, Smotrich himself, or a combination– will oversee both offices and wield considerable influence over settlement policy.
  • Religious Zionism will also control the Immigration and Absorption Ministry (with Ofir Sofer the likely minister) and the chairmanship of the Knesset’s Constitution, Law, and Justice Committee (likely to be held by Simcha Rothman).

Other cabinet positions: The senior roles of Defence, Foreign, and Justice Minister will be filled from within the Likud and are expected to go to Yoav Galant, Amir Ohana, and Yariv Levin respectively. The Education and Transport ministries are likely be to headed by Likud MKs Eli Cohen and Miri Regev.

  • Shas will control the Religious Affairs and Welfare ministries.
  • Jewish Power leader Itamar Ben Gvir will be named National Security Minister and receive an expanded public security portfolio, including authority over Border Police operating in the West Bank.
  • Noam Party Chairman Avi Maoz’s will assume a “Jewish Identity” role in the Prime Minister’s office and will also oversee the Education Ministry’s external programming and collaborations.
  • The previous Negev, Galilee and Periphery Development Ministry will likely see its brief divided in two, with a Negev and Galilee portfolio handed to Jewish Power and responsibility for the periphery portfolio subsumed by an Interior Ministry under Shas control.

Context: The successful negotiations represent a major achievement for Religious Zionism.

  • Its oversight of West Bank civilian policy and control of the Immigration and Absorption Ministry and the Knesset’s Constitution, Law, and Justice Committee portfolio could prove crucial to the chances of implementing some of its most controversial legislative ambitions, including:
    • Changes to the Law of Return, including the removals of the “Grandfather Clause” (expected to be opposed by Netanyahu) and the recognition of non-Orthodox conversions for the purpose of immigration.
    • Increased building in settlements and clamping down on illegal Palestinian construction in area C.
    • Judicial reform, likely to include a Knesset override of Supreme Court rulings.
    • Barring the indictment of a sitting prime minister (the so-called ‘French Law’) and also providing immunity from criminal prosecution for ministers.
  • Netanyahu has sought to calm international concern by claiming that policy will reflect a traditional Likud approach. “Defence”, he said in a recent interview, “is not merely… preventing incoming missiles. It’s also deciding on policies that could be quite inflammatory. I’m trying to avoid that.”
  • Netanyahu has also made comments designed to reassure international and domestic audiences that despite the dominance of religious parties in the coalition, Israel will remain guided by secular traditions in forming its laws: “Israel is not going to be governed by Talmudic law”, he said.
  • United Torah Judaism officials are said to be angry that the Likud has prioritised concluding coalition deals with Jewish Power, Religious Zionism, and Shas over them. A UTJ source is quoted saying: “They think they can buy us with crumbs. That isn’t going to happen.”
  • Likud MKs are also said to be angry that Religious Zionism and Shas have been so well rewarded at the expense of their own part.
  • The announcement of Moaz’s roles has prompted concerns from Diaspora leaders and LGBTQ organisations.
    • The former are worried over Moaz’s proposals to annul recognition of non-Orthodox conversion and to restrict the right Aliyah to those who can prove at least one Jewish parent.
    • The latter fear that Moaz will use his educational remit to promote an anti-LGBTQ agenda, having been vocal opposing LGBTQ rights and having promised to end Jerusalem’s annual Pride Parade.
    • Outgoing Education Minister Yifat Shasha-Biton recently lamented that “a man for whom hatred is his vocation is going to control the materials that get taught at schools.”

Looking ahead: The breakthrough with Smotrich opens the possibility of Netanyahu being able to present a government to President Isaac Herzog by the initial deadline of December 11th.

  • However, it has been reported that Netanyahu plans to request that Herzog trigger a two-week extension, giving him until December 25th to ensure not only that all posts are filled and the coalition’s agenda coordinated, but also that Deri’s legal position has been clarified.
  • Deri’s appointment will require the Knesset to pass new legislation – already prepared by Shas – clarifying that a suspended sentence does not meet the threshold of moral turpitude required to bar someone from ministerial service.
  • To do this, the coalition bloc will first need to take over the parliamentary process by electing a new Speaker of Knesset. This will go to a Likud MK, though Netanyahu has not yet decided whom to appoint as it is dependent on first filling cabinet posts.

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