Israel's U.S. ambassador, Michael Oren, said the Oscar-nominated documentary “The Gatekeepers” complicates his mission.
The movie compiles interviews with six former leaders of the Shin Bet, Israel's internal security service, and records their perceptions of how successive Israeli governments missed opportunities for peace.
“This is a good movie that presents a narrative of 45 years of occupation but is completely devoid of information on Israel's peace plan offers — (Ehud) Barak's Camp David attempts, then [Ehud] Olmert, from the unilateral withdrawal from the Gaza Strip and the rocket fire on us,” Oren told Ynet in a story posted Sunday. “Whoever views the movie without knowing the background can leave feeling that Israel is to blame and didn't do a thing.”
Oren said he hesitated to criticize the movie for fear of being attacked as limiting speech freedoms, but added that he felt that Israel was “on the defensive” in its effort to explain its right to exist.
Israel's new housing minister said on Sunday that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's incoming cabinet would keep expanding Jewish settlements to the same extent as his previous government.
The remarks came two days ahead of a visit by U.S. President Barack Obama who has urged Israel to halt settlement on land that Palestinians seek for a state. They suggested that Netanyahu's new cabinet could prove to be as hawkish as his outgoing coalition.
Housing Minister Uri Ariel, a Jewish settler and member of the pro-settler Jewish Home party, said in a television interview that in the territory “building will continue in accordance with what the government's policy has been thus far.”
Using the biblical names for the territory Israel captured in a 1967 war, Ariel told Israel's Channel 10 television the government “will build in Judea and Samaria more or less as it has done previously. I see no reason to change it.”
Ariel added that Israel planned the bulk of housing construction for more sparsely populated areas within its sovereign borders in the Negev desert to the south and Galilee region in its north.
He said construction in the West Bank was “not the main story” for his housing plans.
Most world powers see settlements as illegal under international law. Some Israelis claim historical and biblical ties to the West Bank and East Jerusalem, home to some 500,000 settlers, and dispute that building in these areas is illegal.
Peace talks for a two-state solution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict have been frozen since 2010, in a dispute over settlement building.
Netanyahu has accelerated settlement plans anew after Palestinians won recognition for statehood in the United Nations General Assembly in November, a move Israel opposed as a unilateral step that undermines peace efforts.
In December and January, Israel announced plans to build more than 11,000 new houses in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, almost double the 6,800 built under Netanyahu's previous administration since March 2009, figures by the settlement watch group Peace Now showed.
Netanyahu has built a new government since a January 22 election, based on centrists elected on the strength of popular protests against steep cost of living rises, and right-wing parties championing the concerns of Jewish settlers.
Writing by Allyn Fisher-Ilan; Editing by Stephen Powell
A recent poll shows that 64% of Americans sympathize with the Israelis- the highest percentage of support in the last 22 years. This high percentage of support was last presented during the Gulf War in 1991.
The Israeli Embassy in Argentina launched the campaign “Amor Mata Atentado (love kills terrorism) ahead of the 21st remembrance day of the terrorist attack on the embassy, which took the lives of 28 people. The campaign, which was highly covered by main Argentinian media, features four stories which symbolize the continuation of life and love after the tragic attack.
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An app that understands your culinary taste?
Yes, it exists. A group of young Israelis has created a brand new app, which will find you the right place to have breakfast, lunch or dinner. LikeEat doesn't only find you the restaurant closest to your whereabouts,but also recognizes your personal taste, and provides you with a customized list of restaurants. Moreover, the app is also a social network, which recommends to you the places your friends liked or didn't like, so you will be guaranteed the perfect place to dine. Currently, the app works only in Israel, but according to one of the developers, Ben Diamand, it may branch out of Israel as well. In the meantime, don't forget to download it to your iPhones before your next visit in Israel.
The one and only, the legendary Jewish American singer, Barbra Streisand, is scheduled to perform in Israel in June. She will also participate in the opening night of the Israeli Presidential Conference on June 18 at the Jerusalem International Convention Center.
“Hacktivists Starting Cyber Attack against Israel on 7th of April,” Anonymous wrote on Twitter, calling on hackers around the world to join up for a second ‘OpIsrael.’ The Hacktivist group Anonymous, along with numerous other hackers, is planning a massive cyber-attack on Israel, threatening to “erase” the country from Internet.