HEADLINES FROM THE IZRAELI PRESS

HEADLINES FROM THE HEBREW PRESS

 

HA’ARETZ

1. NEW PLANNING LAW FAVORS BUILDERS

(…).

 

 

2. ISRAEL TO US: WARNINGS AGAINST ATTACK SERVE IRAN

 

 

3. TEL AVIV MUNICIPALITY APPROVES BUSES ON THE SABBATH; TRANSPORTATION MINISTRY EXPECTED TO REFUSE

(…)

 

 

MA’ARIV

1. DOUBLE HIT IN RISHON LEZION: TWO CRIMINALS SHOT DEAD

(…).

 

 

2. WEINSTEIN OPPOSES [SETTLEMENT] OUTPOST COMMITTEE

Attorney General told Netanyahu that the State’s position regarding the evacuation of illegal outposts will not be influenced by recommendations of the committee „to legalize outposts” that he established, chaired by Judge Edmund Levy.

 

 

3. SUMMIT IN MARCH: OBAMA WILL TRY TO REASSURE NETANYAHU

 

YEDIOT AHRONOT

1. Tel Aviv decided: Public transportation on the seventh day.

CITY THAT NEVER STOPS

ON THE SABBATH AS WELL Tel Aviv City Council to ask Transportation Ministry to operate buses on Saturdays. (…)

YISRAEL HAYOM

1. Is the battle over public transportation on the day of rest resuming?

„WE WILL NOT AGREE TO BUSES IN TEL AVIV ON THE SABBATH.”

Thus Transportation Ministry is making clear following City Council’s decision to work to approve the move. (…)

2. „TWIST IRAN’S ARM

IMMEDIATELY”

So Israel insisted from the US. Obama’s National Security Advisor told Barak: Give sanctions a chance. March 5th: PM to meet Obama at the White House.

WALLA!

1. SENIOR OFFICIAL: „US PRESSURING ISRAEL NOT TO ATTACK IRAN”

 

 

NANA10

1. WEINSTEIN: [SETTLEMENT] OUTPOST COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATIONS NOT BINDING

 

 

[Headlines for Walla! and Nana10 are from their websites as of 11:05.] ______________________________

SUMMARY OF OP-EDS FROM THE HEBREW PRESS

Yediot Ahronot refers to the controversy over the defense budget and calls for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to intervene: „With a clear voice, the Prime Minister must turn to the public and explain what he must: Israel’s urgent and special security needs now require belts to be tightened and expenditures to be cut. Forget easements and benefits.”

Ma’ariv says, „The content of the Prime Minister’s statement regarding the resignation of the head of his staff, Natan Eshel<www.pmo.gov.il/PMOEng/Communication/Spokesman/2012/02/spokeeshel190212.htm&gt;, has been media fodder for the past two days. Most of the froth has been over the fact that Netanyahu did not back the senior officials in his bureau who turned to the Attorney General and told him about the suspicions against Eshel.” However, the author adds, „For me, something else was completely lacking in Netanyahu’s statement: Any reference to what happened to R, the woman employee whose privacy Eshel infringed on and of whom he even took ‘unacceptable’ photos. R is the true victim here.” The paper suggests that, „The Prime Minister, without needlessly humiliating Eshel, who has already been battered enough, could have taken this opportunity to send a sharp and values-based message about ‘infringing on privacy’ and ‘unacceptable photos’ and other types of harassment,” and adds that, „It seems that there is a greater problem here than the specific, embarrassing, example of Eshel’s photography: We have long ceased to expect elected leaders to

by word and deed set value standards. We are much more interested in gossip, i.e. what Sara says and what will happen to Hendel and Hauser.”

Yisrael Hayom discusses a recent New York Times story about the operational difficulties of a possible Israel Air Force strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities<www.nytimes.com/2012/02/20/world/middleeast/iran-raid-seen-as-complex-task-for-israeli-military.html?ref=middleeast&gt;. The author avers that, „The newspaper did not take into account the operational wisdom, the cunning and the stratagems that have turned air force operations into successes that frequently leave the world with its mouth agape,” and cites the aerial assaults on Egyptian and Syrian airbases that began the Six Day War, the 1976 Entebbe raid and the 1985 bombing of PLO headquarters in Tunis. The paper adds, „Without getting into the debate over whether or not Israel needs to carry out an operation of this sort or whether or not it can deal with the potential consequences, and with all due respect

and there is considerable respect to the New York Times, it seems that if there is one thing that the Air Force has taught us it is that if it decides to embark on an operation, it can carry it out. One more thing: The very possibility that Israel might attack is a threatening and important stick in the Americans’ hands vis-à-vis Iran.”

BreuerPress-info