POPULARITY
Desde o início da guerra não tínhamos um episódio com tantos temas na política interna. Tá longo, tá denso, mas tá bom demais. Bloco 1 - A guerra - Fim do cessar-fogo e o ataque ao Sul de Gaza só aumentam a crise humanitária no enclave. Hezbollah continua subindo o tom. - Seis palestinos morreram nas prisões israelenses, pelo menos dois com sinais de violência física. - Depois de ser autorizada pela polícia, manifestação da extrema direita no Monte do Templo é cancelada sem aviso prévio. - Membros do Hamas faturaram bilhões na bolsa fazendo um short antes do 07/10. Bloco 2 - Mansour Abbas, líder do Ra'am, partido islâmico,pede desarmamento em Gaza. - Reunião do Likud é quente e mostra rachas internos. - Votação da emenda do orçamento: Gantz pressiona, mas governo ignora e vota um orçamento surreal em época de guerra. - Volta do julgamento de Netanyahu. - Merav Michaeli, abandona a política e anuncia que adiantará as primárias para a liderança do Partido Trabalhista. Bloco 3 - Reféns voltam e contam casos de abuso sexual no cativeiro do Hamas. - Caso da execução do advogado Yuval Castelman. Para quem puder colaborar com o desenvolvimento do nosso projeto para podermos continuar trazendo informação de qualidade, esse é o link par a nossa campanha de financiamento coletivo. No Brasil - apoia.se/doladoesquerdodomuro No exterior - patreon.com/doladoesquerdodomuro Nós nas redes: twitter - @doladoesquerdo e @joaokm instagram - @doladoesquerdodomuro youtube - @doladoesquerdodomuro Episódio #223 do podcast "Do Lado Esquerdo do Muro", com Marcos Gorinstein e João Miragaya.
Dr. Wilf discusses the historical perspective of Ze'ev Jabotinsky, and why his ideas in contemporary Israel are dramatically misunderstood. When it comes to Jewish-Arab relations, is Jabotinsky an icon for the right, or would he align more with Israel's left-wing? Or perhaps, is the answer not that simple? Then, columnist Blake Flayton and Dr. Wilf discuss the ever prominent fault lines in Israel, and why looking to the past may be the best way to prepare for the future.
The Hashomer Hahadash (or New Guardians) organization held a conference Wednesday, attended by ministers and politicians, including Knesset member Mansour Abbas , head of the United Arab List. The organization started as a small group of volunteers which helped farmers in the Negev and Galilee, who were the victims of theft and vandalism. Today the group has grown considerably and works in close coordination with the police. KAN's Mark Weiss spoke with Hashomer Hahadash founder and current head , Yoel Zilberman. (Photo: Sraya Diamant)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Abraham Accords were signed in September 2020. This agreement between Israel, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, marked the first full normalization agreement between Israel and an Arab country since the 1994 Jordan-Israel agreement. Soon after the September 2020 signing, Morocco and Sudan joined the Accords as well. Since these historic breakthroughs, Israel has been through wild political swings, from a left-right coalition government that included Naftali Bennett from the Right, Yair Lapid from the center-Left, and Mansour Abbas from a Muslim-Arab party. Fast forward to today, there is a government of the Right led by Benjamin Netanyahu, who has been on this podcast. And through it all, the Abraham Accords have endured. One of the architects of the accords was Aryeh Lightstone, who served as Senior Advisor to the U.S. Ambassador to Israel David Friedman from 2017 to 2021. On a recent trip to Israel, I sat down with Aryeh to hear the latest and also discuss his book, "Let My People Know: The Incredible Story of Middle East Peace―and What Lies Ahead." Aryeh played a critical role in the opening of the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem and he was a U.S. Government point person in the Middle East for the actualization of the Abraham Accords. Aryeh Lightsone's book: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/let-my-people-know-aryeh-lightstone/1140125201
In this episode, BICOM Research Associate Jack Omer-Jackaman speaks to Calev Ben Dor about his recent Fathom essay ‘Politically homeless': Yamina voters tell their story. Calev assesses the impact on November's election results of former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett's stepping back from politics, the inter-communal violence of May 2021, the presence of Mansour Abbas in the previous government, and the rise of Religious Zionism. Calev Ben Dor is Senior Research Associate at BICOM and Deputy Editor of Fathom.
Mohammad Darawshe, an expert on Arab-Jewish relations in Israel, joins host Neri Zilber for a deep dive into the current state of Arab-Israeli politics ahead of the November 1 Israeli election. They discuss reasons behind the expected low turnout in Arab society, the divisions amongst Arab political parties, how Mansour Abbas is viewed after his historic move to join a governing coalition, and why Arab-Israelis likely hold the key to whether Benjamin Netanyahu returns to power or Yair Lapid continues as prime minister. Register to attend our post-Israeli election day video briefing with Michael Koplow, Shira Efron, and Neri Zilber on November 7 via Zoom here: ipf.li/electionbriefingPlease help us learn about our audience by filling out our podcast listener survey here: ipf.li/surveySupport the show
Our guest this week is Member of Knesset Yossi Shain, who joins the podcast to discuss how Yisrael Beitenu, his party, is preparing for the November 1 election. Shain argues that the secular right-wing party led by Finance Minister Avigdor Lieberman represents 'the true right-wing' in Israel, unlike the religious and far-right alliance of parties that was merged last week under pressure from opposition leader Netanyahu. Shain also explains how Lieberman, who has a long history of harsh statements against Israel's Arab politicians, found himself in a coalition together with Mansour Abbas of the United Arab List. In his view, Lieberman hasn't changed; but Mansour Abbas recognized Israel as a Jewish state, which made it possible for Yisrael Beitenu to cooperate with him. In other news, Meretz elected Zehava Galon as its old-new leader; Prime Minister Yair Lapid had a heart-to-heart with President Biden about Iran, and Israel narrowly averted a teacher's strike ahead of the new school year. But will any of it matter to the voters by November? Each week, hosts Anshel Pfeffer and Dahlia Scheindlin discuss all the news, polls, history and party trivia you need to know for Israel's upcoming election. Subscribe to the show on your podcast app, follow Dahlia (@dahliasc) and Anshel (@AnshelPfeffer) on twitter and read more of their articles and columns on Haaretz.com.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Our guest this week is Member of Knesset Yossi Shain, who joins the podcast to discuss how Yisrael Beitenu, his party, is preparing for the November 1 election. Shain argues that the secular right-wing party led by Finance Minister Avigdor Lieberman represents 'the true right-wing' in Israel, unlike the religious and far-right alliance of parties that was merged last week under pressure from opposition leader Netanyahu. Shain also explains how Lieberman, who has a long history of harsh statements against Israel's Arab politicians, found himself in a coalition together with Mansour Abbas of the United Arab List. In his view, Lieberman hasn't changed; but Mansour Abbas recognized Israel as a Jewish state, which made it possible for Yisrael Beitenu to cooperate with him. In other news, Meretz elected Zehava Galon as its old-new leader; Prime Minister Yair Lapid had a heart-to-heart with President Biden about Iran, and Israel narrowly averted a teacher's strike ahead of the new school year. But will any of it matter to the voters by November? Each week, hosts Anshel Pfeffer and Dahlia Scheindlin discuss all the news, polls, history and party trivia you need to know for Israel's upcoming election. Subscribe to the show on your podcast app, follow Dahlia (@dahliasc) and Anshel (@AnshelPfeffer) on twitter and read more of their articles and columns on Haaretz.com.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Welcome to The Times of Israel's Daily Briefing, your 15-minute audio update on what's happening in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, from Sunday through Thursday. Political correspondent Tal Schneider and legal affairs reporter Jeremy Sharon join host Amanda Borschel-Dan. Former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu released a pre-recorded statement this morning. What did he announce? Schneider held an on-stage interview with Ra'am head Mansour Abbas this weekend in which he said he hopes that the former coalition will again take power following the upcoming November 1 elections. Far-right Otzma Yehudit and the slightly less right Religious Zionism parties are talking about merging. What's happening here? Last week, in a reversal of a decision from two years ago, the High Court of Justice ruled that the Mitzpe Kramim settlement outpost that is built on private Palestinian land can remain in place. The court said that the outpost did not need to be evacuated because the land was allocated by the government to the settlers in good faith. What kind of ripple effect could this have? For the first time in Israel's history, a woman entered the role of military secretary to the president's office, Brig. Gen. Naama Rosen-Grimberg. Discussed articles include: Religious Zionism and Otzma Yehudit close in on far-right unity deal In reversal, High Court rules Mitzpe Kramim outpost can remain on Palestinian land In first, president appoints female officer as military secretary Subscribe to The Times of Israel Daily Briefing on iTunes, Spotify, PlayerFM, Google Play, or wherever you get your podcasts. IMAGE: Former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks to the media at the Likud headquarters in Tel Aviv on July 26, 2022. (Avshalom Sassoni/Flash90)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Welcome to The Times of Israel's Daily Briefing, your 15-minute audio update on what's happening in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, from Sunday through Thursday. Senior analyst Haviv Rettig Gur and Palestinian affairs correspondent Aaron Boxerman join host Amanda Borschel-Dan. We begin with the media storm surrounding the truly un-politically correct remarks made by Deputy Religious Affairs Minister Matan Kahana and their fallout. How did Ra'am head Mansour Abbas rebut? Rettig Gur gives highlights from an interview with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, speaking about her background and the increasingly woven ties between the EU and Israel. Boxerman looks at von der Leyen's visit through the prism of EU funding for the Palestinian Authority. Rettig Gur is working on an analysis that, he claims, explains how and exactly when the government will fall. They say prophecy is dead. What is he basing his theories on? Boxerman discusses the promises made to Ra'am in entering the diverse coalition and whether Israeli Arabs are actually seeing improvements. Discussed articles include: Yamina's Kahana says he'd expel all Arabs, but admits they're here to stay Abbas to Kahana: Accepting coexistence out of necessity isn't genuine tolerance As Russia threat grows, visiting European Union chief looks to Israel for solutions Visiting Ramallah, EU president confirms resumption of some Palestinian aid Subscribe to The Times of Israel Daily Briefing on iTunes, Spotify, PlayerFM, Google Play, or wherever you get your podcasts. IMAGE: European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen speaks to the media before a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett in Jerusalem, June 14, 2022. (Amir Cohen/Pool Photo via AP) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Welcome to The Times of Israel's Daily Briefing, your 15-minute audio update on what's happening in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, from Sunday through Thursday. Editor David Horovitz and military correspondent Emanuel Fabian join host Amanda Borschel-Dan. Unfortunately this weekend was again marked by tragedy with a shooting in Ariel which claimed the life of 23-year-old Vyacheslav Golev, who shielded his finance Victoria Fligelman. Fabian updates us on what we know so far. Prime Minister Naftali Bennett's family has been threatened twice in the past week. Security officials increasingly believe two different people sent threatening letters, each containing a bullet. What else are we allowed to report? Also in the realm of threats, in a speech Saturday night, Hamas's Gaza leader Yahya Sinwar said the terror group “will not hesitate to take any steps” if Israel “violates” the Al-Aqsa Mosque. Sinwar also praised the recent terror wave that has left 16 dead. Simwar has denigrated Ra'am head Mansour Abbas, saying, “For an Arab to say that this is a Jewish state is the height of degeneracy,” calling him a traitor. Ra'am head Mansour Abbas responded, saying, “We don't owe anything to Yahya Sinwar or anyone else. We are what is good for the Arab community and Palestinian nation.” Does remaining in the coalition meet that statement? Israel marked Yom Hashoah last week. Horovitz tells us about an oped he wrote, titled, “Never again? World response to Putin shows tragic failure to act on lessons of WWII” The tables turn and Horovitz asks Borschel-Dan about an article she wrote about Crusader-era hand grenades, and their tie to Monty Python. Discussed articles include: Suspects in Ariel shooting scoped out attack site, saw it as a weak point – report Officials believe 2 different people sent bullets, threats to Bennett's family Hamas's Sinwar threatens a ‘regional, religious war' if Al-Aqsa is again ‘violated' Ra'am leader Abbas brushes aside Sinwar's treachery claims: I don't owe you anything Lapid and Mansour Abbas agree Ra'am will end boycott, return to battered coalition Never again? World response to Putin shows tragic failure to act on lessons of WWII Was Monty Python's ‘Holy Hand Grenade of Antioch' fact? Crusader-era explosive found Image: Welcome to The Times of Israel's Daily Briefing, your 15-minute audio update on what's happening in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, from Sunday through Thursday. Editor David Horovitz and military correspondent Emanuel Fabian join host Amanda Borschel-Dan. Unfortunately this weekend was again marked by tragedy with a shooting in Ariel which claimed the life of 23-year-old Vyacheslav Golev, who shielded his finance Victoria Fligelman. Fabian updates us on what we know so far. Prime Minister Naftali Bennett's family has been threatened twice in the past week. Security officials increasingly believe two different people sent threatening letters, each containing a bullet. What else are we allowed to report? Also in the realm of threats, in a speech Saturday night, Hamas's Gaza leader Yahya Sinwar said the terror group “will not hesitate to take any steps” if Israel “violates” the Al-Aqsa Mosque. Sinwar also praised the recent terror wave that has left 16 dead. Simwar has denigrated Ra'am head Mansour Abbas, saying, “For an Arab to say that this is a Jewish state is the height of degeneracy,” calling him a traitor. Ra'am head Mansour Abbas responded, saying, “We don't owe anything to Yahya Sinwar or anyone else. We are what is good for the Arab community and Palestinian nation.” Does remaining in the coalition meet that statement? Israel marked Yom Hashoah last week. Horovitz tells us about an oped he wrote, titled, “Never again? World response to Putin shows tragic failure to act on lessons of WWII” The tables turn and Horovitz asks Borschel-Dan about an article she wrote about Crusader-era hand grenades, and their tie to Monty Python. Discussed articles include: Suspects in Ariel shooting scoped out attack site, saw it as a weak point – report Officials believe 2 different people sent bullets, threats to Bennett's family Hamas's Sinwar threatens a ‘regional, religious war' if Al-Aqsa is again ‘violated' Ra'am leader Abbas brushes aside Sinwar's treachery claims: I don't owe you anything Lapid and Mansour Abbas agree Ra'am will end boycott, return to battered coalition Never again? World response to Putin shows tragic failure to act on lessons of WWII Was Monty Python's ‘Holy Hand Grenade of Antioch' fact? Crusader-era explosive found Subscribe to The Times of Israel Daily Briefing on iTunes, Spotify, PlayerFM, Google Play, or wherever you get your podcasts. IMAGE: Security guards guard at the entrance to Ariel, where on April 29, 2022, Palestinian assailants shot and killed a security guard. (Flash90) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Welcome to The Times of Israel's Daily Briefing, your 15-minute audio update on what's happening in Israel, the Middle East, and the Jewish world, from Sunday through Thursday. US correspondent Jacob Magid and political reporter Carrie Keller-Lynn join host Jessica Steinberg for today's podcast. Keller-Lynn dives deeper into the internal politics of Arab Islamist party Ra'am and a recent conversation with party leader Mansour Abbas, who announced a temporary break from Prime Minister Naftali Bennett's coalition due to the clashes on the Temple Mount. Magid looks at how the US and United Nations have reacted to the recent clashes on the "Holy Esplanade," as UN Envoy Tor Wennesland, called it. He also talks about the seder hosted by Vice President Kamala Harris and the Second Gentleman, Douglas Emhoff, and where a Psagot wine, made in a West Bank settlement, was served, creating a Twitter storm. Discussed articles include: As Ra'am freezes ties with coalition, some ask if party should ever renew membership UN Security Council to hold emergency consultation on Jerusalem unrest VP Harris serves wine made in West Bank settlement at Passover seder Subscribe to The Times of Israel Daily Briefing on iTunes, Spotify, PlayerFM, Google Play, or wherever you get your podcasts. IMAGE: Vice President Kamala Harris (R) and Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff host a Passover seder in the Vice President's Residence, serving wine from the Psagot settlement winery, on April 16, 2022. (Doug Emhoff/Twitter) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Welcome to The Times of Israel's Daily Briefing, your 15-minute audio update on what's happening in Israel, the Middle East, and the Jewish world, from Sunday through Thursday. Zman Yisrael editor Biranit Goren and Tech Israel editor Ricky Ben David join host Amanda Borschel-Dan. Some 1,500 Jews attended the priestly blessing at the Western Wall, protected by a police force of 2,500 in Jerusalem's Old City. Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said last night that police had "free rein" to quell problems. What did he mean by that? Last night, Ra'am party leader Mansour Abbas said the Arab party was going to "freeze" its membership in the coalition for the next two weeks. Goren discusses the possible permutations of this. We have a new real estate section at The Times of Israel. Ben David gives us the scoop. And finally, Tel Aviv has installed the award-winning Lumiweave system at Atidim Park. What is this all about? Discussed articles include: With Jerusalem on edge, relatively low turnout at Western Wall Passover prayer event Bennett says Israeli forces have ‘free rein' to maintain security Ra'am freezes its coalition and Knesset membership amid Temple Mount tensions ‘Like a diet during Ramadan': Joint List mocks Ra'am for freeze amid Knesset recess Real Estate Israel: Your open door to the property market Tel Aviv pilots shade-giving, solar-powered fabric that lights up at night Subscribe to The Times of Israel Daily Briefing on iTunes, Spotify, PlayerFM, Google Play, or wherever you get your podcasts IMAGE: Israeli police is deployed in the Old City of Jerusalem, April 17, 2022. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Illean) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ben Caspit speaks this week with Lt. Col. (res.) Jonathan D. Halevi, who currently serves as senior Middle East researcher at the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs. Commenting on the unprecedented decision by the head of the Islamic Ra'am party Mansour Abbas last May to join the ruling coalition, Halevi says that from Abbas' perspective, this decision legitimizes Israel as a Jewish and democratic state. "Analyzing Abbas' statements over the last decade, one can see he is guided by two principles, pragmatism and Islamism," says Halevi. Abbas had said very clearly, even after joining the coalition, that he bases his political agenda on Islam. Inspired by Prophet Muhammed, Abbas, he argues, also strived to create an alliance with the Jews.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
A British national of Pakistani origin took hostages at a Texas Synagogue. Reforestation efforts in southern Israel have sparked riots by Bedouins who say it displaces them from the open country. Mansour Abbas of the Arab Ra'am Party says he will not support the coalition until the crisis is resolved. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Download “The Israel Guys” social media app, available on iOS, Google Play and at https://app.theisraelguys.com/home. Become a monthly supporter at https://www.patreon.com/theisraelguys or https://theisraelguys.com/donate/. Israel's government passed a law to legalize more than a hundred thousand illegal Arab Bedouin structures in the Negev Desert and hook them up to electricity. At the same time, Israel is cracking down on Jewish settlement in Judea and Samaria. Homesh, where Yehuda Dimentman was murdered several weeks ago, is currently in process of being destroyed. JNF, who has been planting trees in Israel for more than a hundred years, tried to plant trees in the Negev recently and the Arabs rioted. Mansour Abbas, leader of the Arab party in the government, pushed for the tree planting to stop, and Israel caved to the pressure. Israel's un-unified government is facing pressures from within themselves, and from the international community. How long will they hold up?
Is the Bennett government selling Israel out to the Israeli Arabs as the opposition parties claim. And is the Arab party leader Mansour Abbas a dangerous man to have in the coalition? We will look at this and also evaluate the performance of the Bennett government so far. The struggle for the settlement of Homesh continues and leads a minister to talk about “subhumans” – extremely controversial. Islamic Jihad celebrates victory on Gaza – why? And why is it a dangerous thing to have Norway as chair of the UN Security Council? Archaeology and the weekly Torah portion finishes off this podcast as usual.
Selger Bennett-regjeringen Israel til de israelske araberne slik opposisjonspartiene hevder? Og er den arabiske partilederen Mansour Abbas en farlig mann å ha i koalisjonen? Vi vil se på dette og også evaluere resultatene til Bennett-regjeringen så langt. Kampen for bosettingen Homesh fortsetter og får en minister til å snakke om "undermennesker" - ekstremt kontroversielt. Islamsk Jihad feirer seier på Gaza – hvorfor? Og hvorfor er det farlig å ha Norge som leder av FNs sikkerhetsråd? Arkeologi og den ukentlige Toralesingen avslutter ukens podkast som vanlig.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Sally Abed discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week. Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon Link to Give to Standing Together —This Would Not Have Happened a Year Ago— United Arab List head, Dr. Mansour Abbas, says that Israel always has been, and always will be a Jewish State, it's time for everyone to accept that. How big a deal is that? —Sara— Did we have Sara all wrong, all along? —This Is Reality, Itamar!— Politicians, professors and pundits are all turning up on Reality TV. Is gravitas dead? —“Happy” New Year?— For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about how this New Year's finds us: Down in the Duldrummy dumps? Ready to break out? Dazed and confused? Guardedly optimistic? Weirdly sober? It's kind of a window into our souls! All this and the music of Gedy Ronen!
In Israeli history, 2021 will be remembered as the end of an era. After 12 years, Benjamin Netanyahu lost power – something many Israelis found unimaginable. But this big development was only one event in a tempestuous year. There were multiple waves of COVID-19 , a vaccine campaign and a world-leading push for a booster shot. U.S. President Joe Biden entered the White House with a very different attitude toward Iran than his predecessor. In May, Israel experienced a traumatic 11 days that sent Israelis to the bomb shelters and upended the relationship between the country's Arabs and Jews. This was followed by a major unexpected development: Mansour Abbas, the head of the United Arab List party, joined the new post-Netanyahu government and became a key player. Haaretz editor-in-chief Aluf Benn and senior national security analyst Amos Harel join host Allison Kaplan Sommer on the podעcast to analyze the most dramatic stories of the year – and speculate on what's in store for 2022, from COVID to the stability of Naftali Bennett's government. Plus, Haaretz reporters share their favorite stories of the year - from Capitol Hill to the ruins of ancient Yavneh, and also, Israel's worst falafel. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Welcome to The Times of Israel's Daily Briefing, your 15-minute audio update on what's happening in Israel, the Middle East, and the Jewish world, from Sunday through Thursday. Political correspondent Tal Schneider and culture editor Jessica Steinberg join host Amanda Borschel-Dan on today's podcast. Schneider discusses the latest in the Benjamin Netanyahu corruption trial, including whether the former prime minister will testify on the stand, even though he does not have to, according to Israeli law. Schneider looks at recent statements made by Ra'am party leader Mansour Abbas regarding the Jewish nature of Israel, and why he made those comments now. She also reports on the state secrets allegedly revealed by former ex-Mossad chief Yossi Cohen to his former lover and her now ex-husband, which were then revealed to the media. Steinberg discusses the new Maggie Gyllenhaal-directed film based on an Elena Ferrante novel and produced by the Israeli Pie Films team. She also talks about the new Gordon Gallery branch in Jerusalem's Givat Shaul neighborhood, better known for its ultra-Orthodox residents and big box stores. Discussed articles include: Netanyahu will likely testify in trial if no plea bargain reached, report says Arabs should move past contesting Israel's Jewish identity, Ra'am chief Abbas says Report: Ex-Mossad chief had affair, shared state secrets with woman and her husband Israeli producers put passion into movie version of Ferrante's ‘The Lost Daughter' Tel Aviv's Gordon Gallery brings contemporary art to an unlikely corner of Jerusalem Subscribe to The Times of Israel Daily Briefing on iTunes, Spotify, PlayerFM, Google Play, or wherever you get your podcasts. IMAGE: Opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu during a Likud party meeting at the Knesset in Jerusalem on December 13, 2021 (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Episódio quente essa semana. E o que temos para hoje? Corona: - Bennett diz que quinta onda do Corona está aí mas não há consenso na coalizão sobre o que fazer. - Gabinete aprova quarta dose da vacina antes da aprovação do ministério da saúde. - Liberman chama Ômicron de gripezinha. Política: - Ayelet Shaked negocia com a oposição a lei da cidadania e gera crise interna. - Bibi ataca Israel Katz e acirra as coisas dentro do Likud. - Mansour Abbas diz que Israel é e será um estado judeu. - Lapid convoca primárias no seu partido e é o único candidato. - Ben Gvir saca arma contra segurança árabe. Justiça e Conflito - Nir Hefetz, testemunha de acusação, delator, faz novas acusações contra Yair Netanyahu, filho de Bibi. - Procurador Mandelblit faz acordo com Arye Derye para que ele não vá a julgamento. - Rabino da Yeshivá de Chumash é detido e investigado a caminho de uma manifestação. Tudo isso bem explicadinho no episódio #117 do podcast Do Lado Esquerdo do Muro, com Marcos Gorinstein e João Miragaya.
Semana fria mas com notícias interessantes: - Yair Lapid é ameaçado de morte, - Vai à votação lei que limita cadência de primeiro ministro em 8 anos. - Ministério da Saúde aprova a vacianção de crianças entre 5 e 11 anos. - Agência reguladora investiga possível cartelização entre redes de supermercados. - Israel pede que governo americano tire a empresa NSO de sua lista de exclusão. - Mansour Abbas se encontra com o Rei Abdullah em Aman. - Operação para trazer judeus de origem etíope causa muita polêmica. Tudo isso no episódio #111 do podcast Do Lado Esquerdo do Muro, com Marcos Gorinstein e João Miragaya.
Israel's Ambassador to the UK gets harassed before a college debate; Mansour Abbas turns down a talk with Mahmoud Abbas & Morocco launches direct flights to Tel Aviv. Social Media links, Newsletter sign-up &, Support the show $ here: https://linktr.ee/israeldailynews Music: Flying High; Erika Krall https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BE0fnZ9Ktuk --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/israeldailynews/support
Hear: Walter's account of the background and cause of the horrendous Nazi pogrom during the night from the 9th to the 10th November 1938, that is recognised as the beginning of the Holocaust. The: Gateway to Jerusalem is how the Tower of David Citadel describes itself. It is at present undergoing a total renewal of its courtyards and exhibition areas to facilitate easy access. Entrance will be from a new pavilion on the west side of its walls. There is a report of the progress. As: Finally travel restrictions to and from Israel are being relaxed, the Programme's travel advisor discusses the implications, Israeli's favoured destinations and required documentation. Also, the hotel situation in Israel. Invaluable information for the prospective visitor as well as for Israelis intending to travel abroad. Also: Why our unsustainable government must and will fall. The alternative is that coalition partner Mansour Abbas and his Arab Party will dictate Israel's policy. And: Is climate change really such a priority for little Israel that we sent 140 delegates to the Glasgow conference, when China is 437 times larger than Israel and is the world's largest polluter and still builds coal mines? Why did Naftali Bennett attend when neither Xi Jinping of China nor Vlatimir Putin of Russia did? Just a photo opportunity! Plus: US Democrats ponder the ominous signs for the Midterm elections. The Walter Bingham File 09NOV2021 - PODCAST
Ben Caspit speaks this week with Channel 12's diplomatic correspondent Dana Weiss. The senior analyst comments about Prime Minister Naftali Bennett appearing on Time Magazine's list of the 100 most influential people of 2021. What is amazing, she notes, is not that Bennett was included in the list, but rather that Arab politician Mansour Abbas would be the one to endorse him. "This is practically science fiction, to think that this could have happened. That this leader of an extreme right party and of the settlers, would be endorsed by someone that until the last elections was considered almost as an outcast in Israeli politics," she notes.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
00:39 - Incendiary Balloon Fires in Southern Israel 02:35 - Israel Negotiates with Hamas 05:16 - Israel Inaugurates Embassy and Consulate in UAE 09:35 - Shadow War with Iran 13:06 - Palestinians Protest PA in Ramallah, Hebron, and Bethlehem 16:00 - Editorial - Who is Mansour Abbas and what does the Ra'am Party stand for?
The Coalition government is at an impasse over the Family Reunification Law, a law prohibiting Israeli citizens to pass on citizenship to their Palestinian spouses. Mansour Abbas has been pushing for renewed negotiations with the PLO. What does this mean for the new government?
HOTTEST NEWS PREDICTIONS- Psychic News by Clairvoyant House "Dimitrinka Staikova and daughters
Mansour Abbas (Leader of the United Arab List) – Clairvoyant/Psychic reading June 18, 2021 – by Clairvoyant House “Dimitrinka Staikova and daughters Stoyanka and Ivelina Staikova” – from Europe, Bulgaria, Varna http://clairvoyantdimitrinkastaikova.weebly.com http://clairvoyant-dimitrinka-staikova.mystrikingly.com https://dimitrinkastaikova.wordpress.com http://sites.google.com/site/dimitrinkastaikova At June 13, 2021 – I see pain in the left kidney of Mansour Abbas, pain in the left pelvic area, pain in the muscles above the both lungs and inside them. His liver and bile are inflamed, painful. There is a severe pain at the forehead and the entire frontal left pard of the head. The urinary tract is inflamed. He is ill by Coronavirus and the temperature of his body and the blood pressure will often play (raise and fall). He has agreed with fear for the coalition with Naftali Bennett. He is thinking that the coalition is up to him. Mansour Abbas is in a moment of hiding by the world and secret talks, messages, agreements with State leaders. Between July 8 and 15, 2021 – there will be changes for him. August 2021 – I see him aside of the Knesset, but he will still have a wish to keep the dialogue. That government of Israel will almost split twice and it will be united again until the coming of the next one. READ MORE ABOUT THE FUTURE OF ISRAEL SEEN BY CLAIRVOYANT DIMITRINKA STAIKOVA THROUGH THE EYES OF BENJAMIN NETANYAHU, BENNY GANTZ : https://dimitrinkastaikova.wordpress.com/?s=Benjamin+Netanyahu+ Oul Latest Ebooks : Find more Ebooks by Clairvoyant Dimitrinka Staikova in our Ebook Store – ● https://clairvoyantdimitrinkastaikova.weebly.com/HottestNewsPredictions BUY OUR EBOOKS AND PAPERBACK BOOKS FROM AMAZON : ● http://www.amazon.com/s?k=Dimitrinka+Staikova HOTTEST NEWS PREDICTIONS Psychic News by Clairvoyant House “Dimitrinka Staikova and daughters Stoyanka and Ivelina Staikova” – from Europe,Bulgaria,Varna. Authors of more than 80 books with Clairvoyant predictions/Psychic readings on the Hottest News of the day published in Amazon ● CLICK HERE TO ORDER A CLAIRVOYANT/PSYCHIC READING BY Clairvoyant House “Dimitrinka Staikova and daughters Stoyanka and Ivelina Staikova” – from Europe,Bulgaria,Varna http://clairvoyantdimitrinkastaikova.weebly.com https://dimitrinkastaikova.wordpress.com http://sites.google.com/site/dimitrinkastaikova ●Follow us –| Twitter | Instagram | NEW ! Follow our Telegram channels : Psychic News – https://t.me/s/dimitrinkastaikova Hottest News Predictions – https://t.me/hottestnewspredictions
Political: Party policies delay establishment of government, but the last chance to scupper the ‘Government of Change' has passed last Friday afternoon. Detailed: Critique of the new government's policies and Bennett's betrayal of the voters. His lies and how he acts as a figleaf for the political left. Which: Is more harmful to the fabric of our country, when the religious sector holds the balance of power or when that important power is in the hands of Mansour Abbas and the 4 seats of the Ra'am party? Shame on Bennett. Why: Netanyahu cannot be counted out. Advice and information: To the anti-Semites and Israel haters. Hear: An important life lesson How: The ‘Women Of The Wall' fake religious devotion for political ends and cause disturbance at the Western Wall, that lead to fights. News: From the UK, where anti-Semitism runs wild. Plus: The University Debate that amazed everyone, because it did not torn out to be what it seemed. And: More The Walter Bingham File 15JUNE2021 - PODCAST
Foreign policy specialist Dr. David Wurmser of the Center for Security Policy, the Kohelet Forum and a former advisor to the White House speaks to Eve Harow on the incredible balancing act that will be necessary for the new Israeli government to survive. He focuses on Ra'am and how Mansour Abbas is counting on the Arab Israelis understanding that a type of tribal authority should now take precedence over ideological and religious dogma. Israeli strength is what gets us respect and peace; the paradigms of concessions have failed - although the Biden Administration apparently didn't read those memos. A fascinating discussion with a brilliant man who understands how the other side thinks and how we need to act to further our interests in the continued existence and success of the Jewish state in an insanely tumultuous region.
…So Much Trouble in the World… It isn't just one of the greatest Bob Marley songs, it's the truth. We live in a wild place during a crazy time. But, it helps to remember that ‘We Didn't Start the Fire'…things have by and large been ‘burning since the world's been turning.' Only now, we have the added benefit of social media, a decentralized media landscape, echo chambers, clickbait, hardcore polarization, the 8-second attention span, Q, Wokeism, endless conflicts abound (especially in the Middle East) and it just seems like the thing's starting to spin out of control – so much so that it's kind of hard to make sense of it all. This week's guest, Seth Frantzman, gets up each and every day and tries to do just that – to make sense of the chaos and explain it to the world with proper context, nuance, and care – all with the perfect modicum of outrage, sensibility, and perspective. Seth J. Frantzman is a Middle East affairs analyst based in Jerusalem. He is the author of After ISIS: America, Israel and the Struggle for the Middle East and 'Drone Wars: Pioneers, Artificial Intelligence, Killing Machines and the Battle for the Future, and executive director of the Middle East Center for Reporting and Analysis. He runs the Israel Gulf Report, which follows developments between Israel and the Gulf countries, and has reported extensively from and conducted research in Iraq, Turkey, Jordan, Egypt, Israel, and the UAE. A former lecturer at Al-Quds University on US foreign policy, he has a Ph.D. from The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, he writes on Middle East Affairs for The Jerusalem Post and contributes to Defense News and other publications and media. Our time with Seth on the show was just as interesting and thought-provoking as his articles. Together, we jumped right into some amazing topics such as modern warfare (Seth's newest book, Drone Wars: Pioneers, Killing Machines, Artificial Intelligence, and the Battle for the Future comes out next week!), contextualizing Israel's predicament in Gaza, the prevalence of atrocities and Western European resistance to the Nazis, western thought supremacy, the arrogance of some western approaches to Israel and the Palestinians and positive attributes of western culture such as human rights, freedom, and democracy, the cause celebre of turning Israel into a pariah state, progressive politics and false narratives of Israel as a white supremacist, settler-colonialist enterprise, the media's deliberate omission of Hamas from its coverage of the conflict, the peace industry = war industry, the frequent disingenuity of the Israeli right's approach to Palestinian national aspirations, Mansour Abbas and Raam, whetherIsrael's adversaries (Iran & Turkey) will test the new Israeli government, and much much more. Links: https://www.amazon.com/Drone-Wars-Pioneers-Artificial-Intelligence/dp/1642936758/ref=sr_1_2?crid=7NWK7W5S62FL&dchild=1&keywords=seth+frantzman&qid=1623415621&sprefix=seth+frantzman%2Cstripbooks-intl-ship%2C285&sr=8-2 (Pre-order) Seth's newest book, Drone Wars: Pioneers, Killing Machines, Artificial Intelligence, and the Battle for the Future, on Amazon. Visit Seth's official https://sethfrantzman.com/ (website) Seth Frantzman at the https://www.jpost.com/author/seth-j-frantzman (Jerusalem Post) Seth Frantzman at https://www.defensenews.com/author/seth-j-frantzman/ (Defense News) Seth Frantzman at https://foreignpolicy.com/author/seth-j-frantzman/ (Foreign Policy) Seth's https://www.facebook.com/SethFrantzman/ (Facebook page) Drone Wars, Seth's forthcoming book's https://www.facebook.com/DroneWarsBook (Facebook page) Seth's https://twitter.com/sfrantzman?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor (Twitter page) As always, make sure to subscribe to Jewanced on https://open.spotify.com/show/6984NiP7H1ULW9lJeVt8Ie?si=6LouGFFLTsq7N2bKJhLXRw (Spotify), https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewanced/id1522195382 (Apple...
On this Washington Roundtable episode of the Defense & Aerospace Report Podcast, sponsored by Bell, our guests are Dov Zakheim, PhD, former DoD comptroller, now with the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Arnold Punaro, the chairman of the National Defense Industrial Association and CEO of the Punaro Group consultancy, Bob Hale, former Pentagon comptroller, Byron Callan of the independent equity research firm Capital Alpha Partners and senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security, and Dr. Patrick Cronin of the Hudson Institute. Topics: — A look at whether the Biden administration’s 2022 defense spending request aligns with the aim of better deterring China — How the administration is working with Pacific allies and partners to improve collective security — China and the region 32 years after the Tiananmen Square crackdown and massacre — Key takeaways from the $715 billion defense budget request — Whether Congress will step in to change the administration’s plan and support unfunded priorities — The need for better Biden administration messaging regarding national security and the need for change — at home and aboard — Update on what’s next as Naftali Bennett, Yair Lapid and Mansour Abbas work to form a new government to replace Benjamin Netanyahu and his government
3 de junio | Nueva YorkHola, maricoper. Vuelve Megan.Bienvenido a La Wikly diaria, una columna de actualidad y dos titulares rápidos para pasar el resto del día bien informado.Y para el podcast: vuelve El juego de Megan, el podcast sobre la industria de Hollywood que presentan Emilio y Pablo Moloco. Está grabado en directo con la audiencia de nuestro Discord, la comunidad a la que os podéis sumar rellenando este formulario.El podcast de La Wikly también está disponible en iTunes, Spotify y iVoox.* Añade el podcast a tu plataforma favorita haciendo click en el botón “Listen in podcast app” que aparece justo debajo del reproductor. Las entregas premium te llegarán allí conforme se publiquen —Spotify todavía carece de esta funcionalidad de podcast privados.Leer esta newsletter te llevará 5 minutos y 5 segundos.Mira a esta vaca con el número 7 en la cabeza. Bienvenido a La Wikly.
Welcome to The Times of Israel's Daily Briefing, your 15-minute audio update on what's happening in Israel, the Middle East, and the Jewish world, from Sunday through Thursday. Today's panel comprises ToI editor David Horovitz and our Hebrew sister-site Zman Yisrael editor Biranit Goren, along with host Amanda Borschel-Dan. Yesh Atid head Yair Lapid announced late Wednesday night that he has managed to herd the "change" bloc into a 61-member coalition. Yamina head Naftali Bennett is set to assume the prime ministerial role until September 2023, after which time Lapid will take up the mantle until November 2025. But will the coalition actually come to pass? We discuss some of the innumerable obstacles facing the (motley) crew of politicians as its leaders continue herding their members until the -- possibly much delayed -- Knesset vote. Who says there's nothing new under the sun? If the Lapid/Bennett coalition comes to pass, there are a full string of firsts to accompany it. It is not, however, the first time an Arab party is part of a Knesset coalition. Goren counts down. Discussed articles include: Lapid informs president he can form government removing Netanyahu from power Lapid and Bennett have a coalition on paper, but Netanyahu will fight to the end Change bloc seeks to replace Knesset speaker; Yamina MK says he won't back move History made as Arab Israeli Ra'am party joins Bennett-Lapid coalition Subscribe to The Times of Israel Daily Briefing on iTunes, Spotify, PlayerFM, Google Play, or wherever you get your podcasts. Image: Yesh Atid leader Yair Lapid (L), Yamina leader Naftali Bennett (C) and Ra'am leader Mansour Abbas sign a coalition agreement on June 2, 2021 (Courtesy of Ra'am) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Le gouvernement est-il susceptible d'être investi dès mardi ? Selon les rumeurs, Mansour Abbas serait enclin à soutenir le projet Lapid-Bennett… Un gouvernement qui ne sera pas simple à gérer, et que nous dépeint David Ben Ichou, au micro de Yaël Bornstein. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
After a survey of the New York headlines, Rudy, Trudy, Shruti and Bernie visit with Florida Governor Ron DeSantis who steps in to sing an something by Eric Clapton. Then we talk a little wonkish policy stuff with his fellow Floridians Congressman Matt Gaetz and Senator Marco Rubio and Utah's Senator Mitt Romney. Then Bernie, amidst his usual gripe about Facebook and some commiseration on the matter with Pillow Guy Mike Lindell, takes a look around the world at India, Russia and the UK including a few show tunes with guests Vladimir Putin and Boris Johnson. Bibi and Mansour Abbas are back and we are back on the hunt all over the globe. Listen and learn, compadres.YouTube links coming.
This Week in the Middle East with William Morris of the Next Century Foundation
Israel's fourth elections in two years held on 23rd March 2021 were yet again inconclusive. At stake was whether the electorate would give Benjamin Netanyahu the necessary 61 seats to form a government. A government that, consequently, would provide immunity from his corruption trial. This wasn't granted, with the pro-Netanyahu bloc gaining 59 seats whilst the anti-Netanyahu bloc won 57 seats in the 120-seat Knesset. This left an unlikely kingmaker: the head of the Islamist faction, Mansour Abbas.This leaves the Arab voter as, arguably, the biggest winner of the ensuing uncertainty. The four seats garnered by Abbas have become highly coveted by both the anti-Netanyahu and pro-Netanyahu blocs. Before the elections, he broke away from the Joint Arab List with the Ra'am faction and campaigned on a platform to join the coalition to bargain for budgets and influence policies that affect the Arab voter. Whilst his joining the coalition was ruled out by many parties during the election, realpolitik now calls.This has led to an overnight ‘kosherising' (hachshara), as Israel's media pundits say, of Arab participation in coalitions; a taboo whose only precedent remains Yitzhak Rabin's second government when two Arab parties provided parliamentary support from outside the coalition. Traditionally, the Arab parties have been marginalised in the coalition building process, being viewed as illegitimate coalition partners by Jewish Zionist parties of almost all stripes. That said, for their part they have in any case hitherto been reluctant to join a government that they view as occupying the West Bank and besieging Gaza.The Rubicon has now been crossed with both camps' courting of Ra'am, and Ra'am loosening its ideological objection to participation in Israel's governments. The Arab voter stands to gain a government that funds its municipalities, deals with the rife crime impacting the Bedouin villages of the Negev, and reverses the harm done by the Nation State bill.Netanyahu can't be declared the loser as he may yet cobble together a coalition, should he succeed in courting Ra'am and gaining approval from his natural coalition partner to his right, the Jewish supremacist party Religious Zionism. The chances are slim, and meanwhile the witness stage of his trial has begun . . . Support the show (https://www.justgiving.com/tncf)
This week we're joined by Allison Kaplan Sommer, Ha'aretz journalist and panelist for The Promised Podcast, to discuss some of the headliners from the Israeli election: potential kingmaker and Ra'am Party leader Mansour Abbas and Rabbi Gilad Kariv, who will be the first Reform rabbi to serve in the Knesset. Kaplan Sommer also discusses how democracy plays out in Israel and the United States and what it's like to live in Israel, a complex, multicultural society. Then, AJC CEO David Harris shares a moving Passover message about his first-hand involvement in the Soviet Jewry movement and modern-day exoduses. _____ Episode Lineup: (00:40) Allison Kaplan Sommer (18:26) David Harris (20:27) Manya Brachear Pashman (23:34) Seffi Kogen ___ Episode Transcript