In-depth
Legal Implication of the UN Resolution on Palestine
The vote to recognize Palestine as a non-member state of the UN will only make it harder to reach a two-state solution, writes Alan Dershowitz for Newsmax.
If all the territory captured by Israel in its defensive war is being illegally occupied then it might be open to the newly recognized “Palestinian State” to try to bring a case before the International Criminal Court against Israeli political and military leaders who are involved in the occupation. This would mean that virtually every Israeli leader could be placed on trial. What this would entail realistically is that they could not travel to countries which might extradite them for trial in the Hague.
Natan B. Sachs of the National Interest looks at the impact of Ehud Barak's retirement, the former army chief and prime minister who will end his tenure as defense minister and Knesset member in January.
Barak’s retirement stems from a paradox: though he is one of Israel’s most influential strategists and practitioners, having shaped much of its recent foreign policy, he is deeply unpopular with the public. He is—by all accounts—analytically brilliant, yet plagued by mistrust and even dislike from many of his peers. As Prime Minister he alienated many of his senior ministers and left his voters, many of whom were jubilant at his election, disillusioned and disappointed. He remains, many believe, a commando officer at heart: brilliantly executing complex (at times overly complex) plans but incapable of collaborating effectively with anyone.
U.S. overseeing mysterious construction project in Israel
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is supervising a five-story underground IDF facility near Tel Aviv at a cost of up to $100 million, writes Wlater Pincus in the Washington Post.
Security concerns are so great that non-Israeli employees hired by the builder can come only from “the U.S., Canada, Western Europe countries, Poland, Moldavia, Thailand, Philippines, Venezuela, Romania and China,” according to the Corps notice. “The employment of Palestinians is also forbidden,” it says. Among other security rules: The site “shall have one gate only for both entering and exiting the site” and “no exit or entrance to the site shall be allowed during work hours except for supply trucks.”
Daily Digest
- Times of Israel: Livni fleshes out new party list
- Haaretz: Joe Lieberman's parting words on Israel and Mideast
- Jerusalem Post: Olmert: Settlement decision is 'slap in the face' for Obama
- Ynet: Clinton looking forward to coffee in Tel Aviv
- New York Times: Letter From Syria
- Washington Post: Tunnels between Gaza and Egypt are back in business since cease-fire
- Wall Street Journal: U.S. Bears Down on Turkey's Gold Link to Iran
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