Numbers of
the day:** Israeli public trust in Knesset: 22%
Israeli public trust in High Court of Justice: 46% (40% don't trust)
Israeli public support for petitions to High Court challenging Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu's authority to
form a government while standing trial for alleged corruption: 50%
Israeli public trust in IDF: 81%
Arkady Mazin is an expert on the Russian-speaking public in
Israel. He is currently working on a book that among other topics examines attitudes among Israeli Russian
speaking Jews toward the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
In this episode, Mazin talks about what he depicts as an anomaly or a paradox. The two predictors for holding
dovish views on this issue in Israeli society are secularism and high level of education. Israeli Jews from the
former Soviet Union are much more secular than the overall population, and, on the average much better educated.
Yet their views on Israel’s conflict with the Palestinians are more hawkish than those of the average Israeli.
Yossi Alpher is an independent security analyst. He is the former director of the Jaffee Center for Strategic
Studies at Tel Aviv University, a former senior official with the Mossad, and a former IDF intelligence officer.
Views and positions expressed here are those of the writer, and do not necessarily represent APN's views and policy
positions.
Under the cover of a global epidemic, when the world is focused on saving lives and
preventing another great depression, Israel’s Prime Minister Netanyahu, with the active support of
Donald Trump, is advancing a plan that would threaten the chances of Israel ever achieving peace with the
Palestinians.
Netanyahu– together with his new coalition partner Benny Gantz -- has announced that come July 1st he will push
legislation to annex to Israel large parts of the West Bank. The Trump administration is not only giving
Netanyahu a green light but actually egging him on to take this destructive step.
APN's daily news review from Israel - Monday May 4, 2020
Quote of the day:
“There is no justice (for Palestinians) in the (Israeli) courts. Anyone who tells you otherwise there is a
liar. I can be arrested for months for a traffic violation, but they (who murdered my wife) have all been released,
even though their trial is not over. Nothing has happened for months.”
--Yacoub Rabi, whose wife Aisha, 49, was murdered by settler youth who threw rocks at her
car, speaks in an interview about his life since the murder.*
Yossi Alpher is an independent security analyst. He is the former director of the Jaffee Center for Strategic
Studies at Tel Aviv University, a former senior official with the Mossad, and a former IDF intelligence officer.
Views and positions expressed here are those of the writer, and do not necessarily represent APN's views and policy
positions.
APN's daily news review from Israel - Sunday May 3, 2020
Quote of the day:
"We're at the dawn of a new era.”
--Daoud Siyam, a social activist from the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Silwan, hopes that the
positive treatment by Jerusalem's right-wing mayor, Moshe Leon, to help Palestinian Jerusalemites facing the
corona crisis will not end with a vaccine.*
You Must Be Kidding: Justice Ido Droyan-Gamliel of the Lod district court has ruled to allow a young
settler suspected of killing a Palestinian woman after throwing a five pound rock at her car, killing her, to
return to his home, despite objections by the Shin Bet security service and state prosecutors. His DNA was found on
the rock.**
1. Bills, Resolutions, & Letters
2. Hearings
3. On the Record
Produced by the Foundation for Middle East Peace in cooperation with Americans for Peace Now,
where the Legislative Round-Up was conceived. Views and positions expressed here are those of the writer,
and do not necessarily represent APN's views and policy positions.
On Thursday, May 7, Dr. Marwan Muasher, former
Jordanian foreign minister and ambassador to Israel and the United States, discussed the impact Israeli
unilateral annexation in the West Bank will have, including on the close relations between Israel
and Jordan.
LISTEN:
Dr. Marwan Muasher is currently the vice president for studies at the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace. He served as foreign minister (2002–2004) and deputy prime minister (2004–2005) of Jordan, as
well as the Kingdom’s ambassador to Washington (1997 to 2002) and its first ambassador to Israel
(1995-1996). Muasher played a central role in developing the 2002 Arab Peace Initiative and the 2003 Middle
East Roadmap.
Muasher is the author of The Arab Center: The Promise of Moderation (2008) and The Second Arab
Awakening and the Battle for Pluralism (2014).