Sunday, November 6, 2022

THE RETURN OF ISRAELI COMMANDO LEADER(PRIME MINSTER) BENJAMIN NETANYAHU: The main reason of all wars in Mideast lays in hands of Ali Hosseini Khamenei(from Syria to Afghanistan and everything in between as not a single prosperous Muslim state sees good in total evil what Kremlin was and is - exception is only Iran)

It was Iran who poisoned everyone in area and one is still quacking its lunacy to the world with its mindset set on final solution - end of the world.
As I stated in title Ali Hosseini Khamenei - a religious lunatic not fanatic. 

I have no idea what Ukraine have done to Iran(anyone please advise me !!?????) , but Chechens, Tatars,  Kazakhs, Tadjiks, and many others are all Muslims...Ali Hosseini Khamenei is a madman what can also be seen from what was done to Irani people in Iran just a week ago....

SUCH A CRAZY LEADER REQUIRES SPECIAL ATTENTION, SO RETURN OF BENJAMIN NETANYAHU IS OF NO SURPRISE TO ME....

AS FOR VLADIMIR PUTIN, HE WAS ON A QUEST FOR CORRUPTION AND TOTALLY ISOLATED REJECTED BY OWN PEOPLES' LUNATICS....
ISRAEL AND ITS ALLIES ARE NOT GONNA TAKE IT....IRAN IS A GLOBAL MENACE NOT ONLY REGIONAL. ITS NOT FAR RIGHT - ITS THE RIGHT TO SELF PRESERVE. I DON'T THINK KHAMINEI CARES ANY LONGER....HE JUST WANTS HIS OWN COUNTRY BLOWN UP TO PIECES WITH THE REST OF THE WORLD.....






Far Right’s Rise in Israel Driven by Anxiety and Fear

To win election, Benjamin Netanyahu and his far-right allies harnessed perceived threats to Israel’s Jewish identity after ethnic unrest last year and the subsequent inclusion of Arab lawmakers in the government.

Supporters of Benjamin Netanyahu last month during a Likud party rally in Sderot, Israel. A far-right alliance, Religious Zionism, has given back to Mr. Netanyahu his parliamentary majority.Credit...Amit Elkayam for The New York Times





Published Nov. 5, 2022Updated Nov. 6, 2022, 1:25 a.m. ET


LOD, Israel — The sectarian unrest between Arabs and Jews that swept across Israeli cities in May 2021 helped end Benjamin Netanyahu’s last term in office. Seventeen months later, fallout from that same unrest has helped put him back in power — at the head of one of the most right-wing coalitions Israel has ever known.

Last year’s riots, in places like Lod, a central city with a mixed Arab and Jewish population, helped nudge Naftali Bennett — a onetime ally of Mr. Netanyahu — toward breaking ranks. Mr. Bennett promised to try to heal Israel’s sectarian divides, and he formed a rival coalition with centrist, leftist and Arab lawmakers that ousted Mr. Netanyahu from office last June.

Right-wing Jewish voters this past week punished Mr. Bennett’s party for that decision, which they grew to see as a betrayal of Israel’s Jewish identity. His party suffered a wipeout in the general election on Monday, while support for a more extreme alliance doubled. And it is that far-right alliance, Religious Zionism, that has given back to Mr. Netanyahu his parliamentary majority.

“Nobody who voted for Bennett looked at what happened over the last year and thought, ‘Let’s do that again,’” said Noam Dreyfuss, a community organizer in Lod who voted for Mr. Bennett in 2021.



“Most of us voted this time for Religious Zionism,” Mr. Dreyfuss said. With Religious Zionism, he added, “What you vote for is what you get.”





An event on Friday that was organized by Noam Dreyfuss, a community organizer in Lod who voted for Naftali Bennett in 2021 but for Religious Zionism this year.Credit...Amit Elkayam for The New York Times




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Mr. Dreyfuss on Friday in Lod. With Religious Zionism, he said, “What you vote for is what you get.”Credit...Amit Elkayam for The New York Times


Israel’s rightward shift began decades ago and accelerated after the second Palestinian intifada, or uprising, in the early 2000s. A wave of Palestinian terrorist attacks at the time swayed many Israelis toward the right-wing narrative that Israel had no partner for peace.

Israel’s lurch toward the far right in this election, however, was also born from more recent fears about Israel losing its Jewish identity.



The 2021 riots occurred against the backdrop of unrest in Jerusalem and the outbreak of war between Israel and Gazan militants. The unrest saw two Arabs and two Jews killed, hundreds injured and thousands arrested, most of them Arabs. Among Arabs, the fallout fueled a sense of discrimination and danger. Among Jews, it fed fears of an enemy within — Israel’s Arab minority, which forms about a fifth of the population of nine million.

Ever since, the riots have become a shorthand among some Jews for wider anxiety about other kinds of threats, including deadly attacks on Israelis and unrest in southern Israel this year.

The formation of a unity government last summer that included right-wingers like Mr. Bennett as well as Arab Islamists was partly rooted in political pragmatism, but it also aimed to salve the wounds of the riots and encourage greater Jewish-Arab partnership.

Yet to many right-wing voters, it was seen as a betrayal. They perceived the coalition’s dependence on Raam, the Arab party that sealed the government’s majority, as a danger to the state’s Jewish character. The efforts by Jewish-led leftist parties in the coalition to secularize aspects of Israeli public life, like permitting public transportation on the Jewish Sabbath, also exacerbated fears that Israel’s Jewishness was under threat.

Mr. Netanyahu’s main far-right ally, Itamar Ben-Gvir, campaigned on a promise to tackle perceived lawlessness, end perceived Arab influence on government and strengthen Israel’s Jewish identity.



Itamar Ben-Gvir, Mr. Netanyahu’s main far-right ally, during a night walk with supporters last month in Jerusalem.Credit...Avishag Shaar-Yashuv for The New York Times




Mr. Ben-Gvir’s main campaign slogan asked: “Who’s the landlord here?”

Critics of Mr. Ben-Gvir focus on his history of extremism and antagonism toward Arabs.



As a young man, he was convicted of racist incitement and support for a terrorist group. He was barred from army service because Israeli officials deemed him too extremist. He was a follower of a rabbi who wanted to strip Arab Israelis of their citizenship. Until 2020, he hung in his home a large photograph of a Jewish extremist who shot dead 29 Palestinians in a West Bank mosque in 1994. Today, he still wants to deport anyone he deems disloyal to Israel.

But many of Mr. Ben-Gvir’s new supporters saw someone else: a straight-talker who recognized their anxieties and proposed a response.

“People voted for him, not necessarily because they are racists, but because they thought he might be a strong leader that could bring order to the street,” said Shuki Friedman, the vice president of the Jewish People Policy Institute, a Jerusalem-based research group that focuses on Jewish identity.



The streets of Lod on Friday. Sectarian unrest swept across Israeli cities, including Lod, last year.Credit...Amit Elkayam for The New York Times




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Hussen Shehada, the father of the former Lod city councilor Fida Shehada, picking olives in his garden on Friday in Lod.Credit...Amit Elkayam for The New York Times





The streets of Lod on Friday. Sectarian unrest swept across Israeli cities, including Lod, last year.Credit...Amit Elkayam for The New York Times




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Hussen Shehada, the father of the former Lod city councilor Fida Shehada, picking olives in his garden on Friday in Lod.Credit...Amit Elkayam for The New York Times


“Sami was here with the people after the events of May,” said Fida Shehada, a former Lod city councilor who voted Balad for the first time. “It’s natural for people here to support him.”

Known in Arabic as Lydda or Lydd, Lod’s recent tensions exacerbate longstanding Palestinian trauma. During the wars surrounding the creation of the state of Israel in 1948, after local Arabs and their allies refused the partition proposed by the United Nations, many Palestinian residents of the city were expelled and never allowed to return.



Mr. Ben-Gvir’s new supporters say they do not necessarily agree with all of his positions.

Rinat Mazuz-Bloch, a youth group leader, voted for Mr. Bennett in 2021 and Mr. Ben-Gvir in 2022 — but not out of a desire for revenge.

“People didn’t vote Ben-Gvir because we want to hit the Arabs back,” Ms. Mazuz-Bloch said. “They’re here and we need to relate to them.”

But, she added, “We have to say out loud that this is a Jewish state.”


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Rinat Mazuz-Bloch, a youth group leader, on Friday with her family in their home in Lod. She voted for Mr. Bennett in 2021 and Mr. Ben-Gvir in 2022.Credit...Amit Elkayam for The New York Times




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A game of table tennis on Friday in the backyard of Omri Saar, a city councilman for Likud in Lod.Credit...Amit Elkayam for The New York Times




Mr. Dreyfuss, the community organizer, said that he was not necessarily opposed to Arab participation in government, and that he accepted that Raam, the small Arab party that formed part of the departing government, made a sincere effort to accept Israel’s status as a Jewish state.

But Mr. Dreyfuss still believes that an Arab party should not hold the balance of power in the government, as Raam did.

“The mistake is to be dependent on them,” he said. “Once you have a majority, then you can add them.”



Mr. Ben-Gvir’s success was rooted not only in his hard-line approach to Arabs, but also in his opposition to the departing government’s moves to secularize aspects of Israeli public life. And some simply voted for him to enlarge his party’s presence in Parliament, making it harder for Mr. Netanyahu’s party, Likud, to form an alliance with centrists.

“The vote for Religious Zionism was a vote for a clearer and sharper position,” said Omri Saar, a city councilman for Likud in Lod.

After Mr. Bennett’s U-turn in 2021, Mr. Saar said, “There’s no doubt many chose a more extreme party than Likud to make sure that their vote would stay in the right-wing camp.”

And to Mr. Saar, that was a positive thing, even if it cost Likud a few votes itself. “It’s good that we have someone who can pull us in the right direction,” he said.


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Religious Zionism posters affixed to a house on Friday in Lod. Credit...Amit Elkayam for The New York Times




Mr. Dreyfuss, whose organization was subject to an arson attack during the riots, also denied that Mr. Ben-Gvir’s election would be so harmful to Arabs.

By cracking down on lawlessness in Arab neighborhoods, Mr. Ben-Gvir would improve the personal safety of any Arab who was not involved in crime, Mr. Dreyfuss said.



“Everyone can live here,” Mr. Dreyfuss said.

“But they need to remember that we’re the landlords here,” he added.



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