Israel pushes back on Russian claim that Kyiv ambassador ‘glorified Nazism’

No one can lecture Israel on what is distortion of Holocaust memory, says Israeli Foreign Ministry.

By Batya Jerenberg, World Israel News

The Israeli Foreign Ministry lashed back Friday at Russian claims that Jerusalem’s envoy to Ukraine had “glorified Nazism.”

“There is no change in Israel’s policy, which is absolutely opposed to and rejects the glorification of criminals who collaborated with the Nazis in murdering Jews,” the ministry’s spokesperson, Lior Haiat tweeted.

However, he added, “No party should lecture the State of Israel, Israel’s Foreign Ministry, or its diplomats about the importance of preserving the memory of the Holocaust or about the war on historical distortion.”

In a Thursday interview with Israeli Russian-language station Iton TV, Ambassador Michael Brodsky had said it would be wrong to condition aid to Ukraine on its renouncing its adulation for those who fought for Ukrainian independence by joining the Nazis during World War II. He also made it clear that due to their antisemitism, Israel has always opposed the fact that statues are erected and streets are named after them throughout the country.

The troops who followed such men as Roman Shukhevych and Stepan Bandera were notorious for having murdered hundreds of thousands of Jews during the Holocaust while fighting against the Soviet Union that had swallowed their country years earlier.

Ignoring Israel’s enunciated position regarding those historic figures, Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova sharply criticized him Friday for saying that these men were “heroes” to most Ukrainians.

“No one has the right to have such heroes … These were not heroes, but demons, and this was not an identity, but a disgrace for the people of Ukraine,” she tweeted. “This is an act of glorifying Nazism.”

Zakharova also took on the role of “reminding” the ambassador on Telegram of the part Bandera’s nationalists had played in perpetrating the extermination of the Jews in Ukraine, “since there is no one else to defend the victims of the Holocaust but us.”

This is not the first time Brodsky has delinked these Ukrainian nationalists’ complicity in the Holocaust with realpolitik defense of Ukraine’s territorial integrity.

In January 2022, almost two months before Russia’s invasion of its southern neighbor on the pretext that it was a “neo-Nazi” regime, he said that Israel’s years-long “principled position” that people like Bandera “should not become heroes” as their crimes against the Jewish people have been proven by the historical research of Yad Vashem and others, it should not be a reason to stop supporting Ukraine, with Russian troops amassing on its borders.

 

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Teen Shot in Head Near Park, Ex-Boyfriend Arrested

An investigation in Kentucky is underway after a sixteen-year-old high school student was reportedly shot in the head and killed near a park on Wednesday. The Daviess County Sheriff’s Office verified that Gaymee Paw, an Owensboro High School student, passed away in a hospital after police were called to the scene of the shooting at 12:30 pm. The autopsy revealed that the cause of death was homicide due to a single gunshot wound to the victim’s head.

The suspect of this crime is also a sixteen-year-old whose name is not currently being released until the case is transferred to adult court. Before this, the county attorney must present a preliminary hearing to determine whether the child should be transferred to circuit court for trial. If the court finds that there is probable cause and two of the seven factors specified by the law favor transfer, it will issue an order transferring the child to circuit court.

Sheriff Brad Youngman has revealed that the victim and suspect were at one point in a relationship. County Attorney John Burlew has stated that he favors trying the individual as an adult in the case. The suspect is being held at the Warren County Regional Juvenile Detention Center on charges of murder, tampering with physical evidence, and possessing a handgun as a minor.

Gaymee Paw was remembered as a sweet person by those who knew her. A video of her being interviewed for a 2017 segment about a Fellowship of Christian Athletes camp for kids has been posted online. The Daviess County Sheriff’s Office has closely coordinated with the county attorney’s office, the Commonwealth attorney’s office, the Court Designated Worker’s Office, and the Daviess County Coroner’s Office to ensure justice for the victim and her loved ones.

Cyprus thwarts Iranian-backed terror targeting Jews, Israelis

Iranian-funded plan to murder Israelis and Jews in Cyprus prevented by Cypriot authorities, according to reports.

By World Israel News Staff

Cypriot intelligence agencies and security forces successfully thwarted an Iranian terror plot to harm Jewish and Israeli targets in the country, according to reports on Sunday.

Cyprus-based Phile News reported that the government had been informed of potential terror attacks planned and financed by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), with the U.S. and Israeli governments believed to have raised concerns with their Cypriot counterparts.

According to Phile News, terrorists were planning to use the disputed northern Cyprus territory, which is occupied by Turkey, as the base for their attacks.

The Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus is officially recognized as an independent country only by Turkey, and is seen de jure as part of Cyprus by the United Nations.

Although the Phile News report was scant on details of the terror plot, the goal of the foiled attack was to murder Cypriot residents and citizens of Israeli and Jewish origin, the outlet stated.

The reports come two years after a similar plot was stopped by Cyprus, with help from Israel’s Mossad intelligence agency.

In 2021, an Azeri man who held Russian citizenship was arrested by the Cypriot government for his role in a plot to assassinate Israeli businessmen in Cyprus.

That man was also reportedly funded and supported by the IRGC.

“Iran continues to be a global and regional threat as well as a challenge to Israel,” said then-Defense Minister Benny Gantz at the time of that thwarted plot.

“We will continue to act to protect our citizens and the security of the State of Israel everywhere and in the face of any threat.”

The Israel-based Alma Research & Education Center said in 2021 that “Iran continues its attempts to attack Israeli civilian targets around the world through the Quds Force. So far, Iran has struggled to carry out an effective attack on Israel’s borders and is therefore looking for other courses of action.”

Iran’s embassy in Cyprus denied responsibility for the plot in a statement to Reuters, saying, in reference to Israel, “this regime is always making such a baseless allegation against the Islamic Republic of Iran.”

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Terrorists open fire at Israeli soldiers in drive-by near Nablus

Troops returned fire at the vehicle, and a search was launched for the assailants. No injuries were were reported.

By JNS

Terrorists fired from a passing vehicle at Israeli soldiers near Nablus (Shechem) on Sunday morning, according to the Israel Defense Forces.

The Israeli forces, who were stationed at a military post, returned fire, and a search was launched for the shooters, according to the military.

The military post suffered damage, but no Israeli injuries were reported.

The shooting comes amid heightened tensions in Samaria following a series of deadly Palestinian terrorist attacks, including last week’s shooting at a restaurant near the town of Eli that killed four people and wounded four others.

On June 20, in response to the wave of attacks, dozens of Jews rioted in several Palestinian towns and villages, damaging several homes and businesses and injuring 36 people according to Palestinian Red Crescent.

The violence was condemned as terrorism by Israel’s security establishment.

The IDF Chief of Staff, the head of the Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet) and Israel’s national police commissioner said in a statement, “These attacks are against every moral and Jewish value and are also nationalistic terrorism in every way, and we are committed to fighting them.”

“The IDF, the Shin Bet and the Israel Police are committed to continuing to act with determination and with all the means at our disposal to maintain security and the law in Judea and Samaria,” they added. “The IDF will divert and increase forces to prevent incidents of this type, and the Shin Bet will also expand arrests, including administrative arrests against rioters who act in a violent and extremist manner in the Palestinian villages.”

The statement also called on the leaders and educators in the various communities to publicly denounce these acts of violence and to join the effort to fight against them.

Gush Etzion Regional Council Mayor and Yesha Council Chairman Shlomo Ne’eman issued a statement in response, condemning vigilantism but expressing frustration at the increase in Palestinian terrorism and calling for the government to take action against Palestinian violence.

“After an unbearably difficult week, we see what is happening in Judea and Samaria and we don’t have a positive feeling about it. For more than a year, terrorism has been rampant in our streets and most recently has been increasing, and has reached a peak,” said Ne’eman.

“We demand that the IDF and the political echelon act with all of the tools at their disposal in order to strike at the terrorist infrastructure, including those who support, instigate and finance terrorism, and defeat them.

“Unfortunately, until now, it seems that these demands have not been met. The heroism of our fighters in order to neutralize the threats is extremely important, but it has not changed the de-facto security reality. Terrorism continues and is harming the state of Israel and her citizens.

“In this reality, a small handful of Jews, out of desperation and frustration, have taken the law into their own hands. We should not mimic our barbarous enemy, go wild and do harm indiscriminately. We have what the terrorists and their supporters do not have—a sense of humanity,” the statement continued.

Ne’eman concluded: “The residents of Judea and Samaria are not violent and don’t take the law into their own hands. And those who are criminals, should be dealt with to the full extent of the law.”

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UN admits Hezbollah violated Israeli territory, following Jerusalem’s pressure

Should UNIFIL fail to remove the outpost the IDF may step in, Israeli army officials warned.

By Lauren Marcus, World Israel News

The United Nations finally acknowledged over the weekend that operatives from the Lebanon-based Hezbollah terror group had established an outpost in Israeli territory, after Jerusalem pressured the international body to comment on the incursion.

“Several weeks ago, two temporary structures (a container and a tent) were erected south of the Blue Line, crossing it by more than 30 meters into Israeli territory,” wrote Israel’s Ambassador to the UN, Gilad Erdan, in an open letter to the body’s Security Council last Thursday.

“On May 30th, another tent was erected next to the first one, 55 meters south of the Blue Line and into Israeli territory. This disturbing development constitutes a gross violation of Israeli sovereignty,” he added.

Despite clear proof of the violation of Israel’s territorial sovereignty, the UN had kept mum regarding Hezbollah’s military build-up along the border.

The UN Security Council “must demand the Lebanese authorities act immediately and without further delay to dismantle and remove these structures,” Erdan urged.

According to Hebrew-language KAN News, the UN’s UNIFIL peacekeeping mission – which has had a presence in southern Lebanon since 1978 – officially admitted that tents and other structures were set up by Hezbollah in Israeli territory.

By forcing UNIFIL to acknowledge the presence of the Hezbollah outpost, Jerusalem is attempting to force the body into clearing the area, thus avoiding a direct confrontation between Israel and Lebanon.

However, based on UNIFIL’s decision to ignore the encroachment for more than a month, it’s unclear if the body will take active steps to remove the camp in the near future.

Should UNIFIL fail to remove the outpost, the IDF may step in, Israeli army officials told KAN.

In March 2023, a Hezbollah-affiliated terrorist slipped across the border by climbing over the fence with a ladder. He then planted a roadside bomb in northern Israel that seriously wounded a motorist and moved freely within Israel for several hours, until he was eventually caught by security forces.

The terrorist was shot and killed.

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Netanyahu pauses Golan wind farm project for Muslim holiday

The move follows violent protests by the Druze community over Israel’s largest renewable energy project, which they say encroaches on their lands.

By JNS

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu informed Druze spiritual leader Sheikh Mowafaq Tarif on Saturday that construction on the Golan Heights wind farm project will be put on hold over the Eid al-Adha holiday.

The decision was made upon the recommendation of Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet) director Ronen Bar and Israel Police Inspector General Yaakov Shabtai, according to an official statement.

“Prime Minister Netanyahu directed that efforts be made over the coming days to resolve the planning and housing problems in the Druze communities on Mt. Carmel and in the Galilee, which affect the entire Druze community, including young discharged soldiers, who contribute to the security of the state,” the statement said.

The move comes after violent protests last week by members of the Druze community over Israel’s largest renewable energy project, which they claim encroaches on their lands.

Druze leaders sent a letter to Netanyahu on June 22 threatening more demonstrations unless work on the project was frozen for the holiday.

“In the state of affairs that has arisen, the heads of the Druze community see it fit that an immediate freeze of the work and the exit of police forces from the construction site be ordered until the end of Eid al-Adha,” the Druze leaders wrote, referring to the holiday observed by Druze and Muslims that this year runs from June 27 until July 1.

“We expect the government to answer in the affirmative to this request and to allow the members of the community to mark the holiday period calmly and peacefully,” they continued.

Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, who opposes the freezing of the project, will meet with Druze leaders in July, it was reported.

The Enlight Renewable Energy company announced the groundbreaking for the $350 million Genesis Wind project in June, which is to include 38 advanced wind turbines.

The company threatened to sue the state for billions of shekels if work on the project does not proceed.

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The Failed Ukraine-Russia March 2022 Peace Negotiations. Evidence of US-NATO Sabotage

Ukrainian negotiators said that under their proposals, Kyiv would agree not to join alliances or host bases of foreign troops. The proposals, which would require a referendum in Ukraine. They have essentially agreed to to reject NATO membership.

The post The Failed Ukraine-Russia March 2022 Peace Negotiations. Evidence of US-NATO Sabotage appeared first on Global Research.

‘You’re turning the victims into attackers’: Israeli officials slammed for calling settlers ‘terrorists’

The attacks by Israelis “contradict every moral and Jewish value and are nationalist terrorism in the full sense of the term.”

By World Israel News Staff

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant (Likud), IDF chief, Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi, Shin Bet head Ronen Bar, and Police Commissioner Kobi Shabtai on Saturday slammed the recent retaliatory attacks by Israeli residents of Judea and Samaria against Palestinians.

Halevi, Bar, and Shabtai in a joint statement on Saturday said the attacks, which were carried out in response to a spate of deadly terror shootings, constituted “nationalist terrorism in the full sense of the term.”

Meanwhile Gallant issued a condemnation of the attacks on Palestinian residents of Umm Safa.

“I strongly condemn the violence perpetrated against residents of the village of Umm Safa, including the burning of houses and vehicles,” he wrote on Twitter.

“This is not our way,” Gallant said.

He added that he has given IDF troops stationed in the area orders “to prevent acts of violence perpetrated by civilians.”

Shmuel Meidad, CEO of Honenu legal aid group, criticized the defense chiefs for their remarks.

“Police Commissioner, IDF Chief of Staff, and Israel Security Agency chief – you failed,” he said. “You are turning the victims into attackers. Your statements now are trying to cover up your failure in the war against the Arab terror which is murdering us.”

In their joint statement, the three officials wrote that the attacks “contradict every moral and Jewish value.” They also claimed that it has the adverse effect of “increasing Palestinian terrorism” as well as the “international legitimacy of Israel’s security forces to fight Palestinian terrorism.”

“It also diverts the security forces from their main mission of operating against Palestinian terrorism,” they wrote.

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Rebel mercenary chief says he ordered his private Russian army to halt march on Moscow and return to Ukraine

Yevgeny Prigozhin turned his mercenaries back to avoid “shedding Russian blood.”

By Associated Press

A rebellious mercenary commander said Saturday he ordered his mercenaries to halt their march on Moscow and retreat to field camps in Ukraine, appearing to defuse a dramatically escalating crisis that represented the most significant challenge to President Vladimir Putin in his more than two decades in power.

Moscow had braced for the arrival of forces from the Wagner Group, a private army led by Yevgeny Prigozhin that has been fighting alongside regular Russian troops in Ukraine, by erecting checkpoints with armored vehicles and troops on the city’s southern edge. Red Square was shut down, and the mayor urged motorists to stay off some roads.

But Prigozhin announced that while his men were just 200 kilometers (120 miles) from Moscow, he decided to turn them back to avoid “shedding Russian blood.”

He did not say whether the Kremlin had responded to his demand to oust Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu. There was no immediate comment from Putin’s government.

The announcement followed a statement from the office of Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko saying he had negotiated a deal with Prigozhin after discussing the issue with Putin. Prigozhin agreed to halt the advance in a proposed settlement including security guarantees for Wagner troops, Lukashenko’s office said, without elaborating.

Putin had vowed harsh consequences for organizers of the armed uprising led by his onetime protege, who brought his forces out of Ukraine, seized a key military facility in southern Russia and advanced toward Moscow.

In a televised speech to the nation, Putin called the rebellion a “betrayal” and “treason.”

“All those who prepared the rebellion will suffer inevitable punishment,” Putin said. “The armed forces and other government agencies have received the necessary orders.”

It wasn’t immediately clear what concessions, if any, Putin may have made to persuade Prigozhin to halt his march.

If he accedes to Prigozhin’s demand to oust Shoigu, Prigozhin would emerge from the crisis as a clear winner in a major blow to Putin’s authority.

If Prigozhin agrees not to press the demand, Putin could award him with more lucrative government contracts like those on which he has built his fortune in the past.

However, it would be awkward and politically damaging for Putin to backtrack after branding Prigozhin a backstabbing traitor.

Some observers speculated that Prigozhin could make concessions such as putting the Wagner Group under federal authority, or he could shift the force’s activities back to Africa, where his mercenaries have been active in recent years.

Early Saturday, Prigozhin’s private army appeared to control the military headquarters in Rostov-on-Don, a city 660 miles (over 1,000 kilometers) south of Moscow that runs Russian operations in Ukraine, Britain’s Ministry of Defense said.

Wagner troops and equipment also were in Lipetsk province, about 360 kilometers (225 miles) south of Moscow, where authorities were “taking all necessary measures to ensure the safety of the population,” said regional Gov. Igor Artamonov, via Telegram.

Authorities declared a “counterterrorist regime” in Moscow and its surrounding region, enhancing security and restricting some movement. On the southern outskirts, troops erected checkpoints, arranged sandbags and set up machine guns. Crews dug up sections of highways to slow the march.

Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin warned that traffic could be restricted in parts of the capital and declared Monday a non-working day for most residents.

The dramatic developments came exactly 16 months after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Europe’s largest conflict since World War II, which has killed tens of thousands, displaced millions and reduced cities to rubble.

Ukrainians hoped the Russian infighting would create opportunities for its army to take back territory seized by Russian forces.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Moscow was suffering “full-scale weakness” and that Kyiv was protecting Europe from “the spread of Russian evil and chaos.”

The Federal Security Service, or FSB, called for Prigozhin’s arrest Friday night after he declared the armed rebellion.

Prigozhin said earlier Saturday that his fighters would not surrender, as “we do not want the country to live on in corruption, deceit and bureaucracy.”

“Regarding the betrayal of the motherland, the president was deeply mistaken. We are patriots of our homeland,” he said in an audio message on his Telegram channel.

Prigozhin said he had 25,000 troops under his command and urged the army not to offer resistance.

He posted video of himself at the military headquarters in Rostov-on-Don and claimed his forces had taken control of the airfield and other military facilities in the city without any deaths or even “a single gunshot.” Other videos on social media showed military vehicles, including tanks, on the streets.

The rebellion came as Russia is “fighting the toughest battle for its future,” Putin said, with the West piling sanctions on Moscow and arming Ukraine.

“The entire military, economic and information machine of the West is waged against us,” Putin said.

State-controlled TV networks led their newscasts with Putin’s statement and reported the tense situation in Rostov-on-Don. Some showed social media videos of residents denouncing Wagner troops.

Broadcasters also carried statements from top officials and lawmakers voicing support for Putin and condemning Prigozhin.

In announcing the rebellion, Prigozhin said he wanted to punish Shoigu after he accused Russian government forces of attacking Wagner field camps in Ukraine with rockets, helicopter gunships and artillery. He claimed that “a huge number of our comrades got killed.”

Prigozhin said his forces shot down a Russian military helicopter that fired on a civilian convoy, but there was no independent confirmation.

He also alleged that Gen. Valery Gerasimov, chief of the General Staff, ordered the attacks following a meeting with Shoigu in Rostov, where they decided to destroy the military contractor.

The Defense Ministry denied attacking the Wagner camps.

The 62-year-old Prigozhin, a former convict, has long ties to the Russian leader and won lucrative Kremlin catering contracts that earned him the nickname “Putin’s chef.”

He gained attention in the U.S. when he and a dozen other Russian nationals were charged with operating a covert social media campaign aimed at fomenting discord ahead of Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential election victory. He formed the Wagner mercenary group, which sent military contractors to Libya, Syria, several African countries and eventually Ukraine.

After Putin’s address, in which he called for unity, officials sought to reiterate their allegiance to the Kremlin and urged Prigozhin to back down.

Vyacheslav Volodin, speaker of the lower house of parliament, said lawmakers “stand for the consolidation of forces″ and support Putin.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova echoed that, saying in a Telegram post that “we have one commander in chief. Not two, not three. One.″

Ramzan Kadyrov, the strongman leader of the Chechnya region who used to side with Prigozhin in his criticism of the military, also expressed his full support of Putin’s “every word.”

“The mutiny needs to be suppressed,” Kadyrov said.

Even with the confrontation seemingly defused, it appeared likely to further hinder Moscow’s war effort as Kyiv’s forces probed Russian defenses in the initial stages of a counteroffensive.

Wagner forces have played a crucial role, capturing the eastern city of Bakhmut, an area where the bloodiest and longest battles have taken place. But Prigozhin has increasingly criticized the military brass, accusing it of incompetence and of starving his troops of munitions.

Prigozhin’s actions could have significant implications for the war. Orysia Lutsevych, the head of the Ukraine Forum at the Chatham House think tank in London, said the infighting could create confusion and potential division among Russian military forces.

“Russian troops in Ukraine may well now be operating in a vacuum, without clear military instructions, and doubts about whom to obey and follow,″ Lutsevych said. “This creates a unique and unprecedented military opportunity for the Ukrainian army.”

Ukrainian soldier Andrii Kvasnytsia, attending a funeral for a comrade, said Prigozhin’s intentions toward Ukraine might be worse than Putin’s, but that the infighting would still benefit the country.

Western countries monitored developments closely. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke with his counterparts in the other G7 countries and the European Union’s foreign affairs representative, his spokesman said, adding that Blinken “reiterated that support by the United States for Ukraine will not change.”

Latvia and Estonia, two NATO countries that border Russia, said they were increasing security at their borders.

The Kremlin said Putin spoke by phone with the leaders of Turkey, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan about the events.

Although there was speculation that Putin had left Moscow, his spokesman Dmitry Peskov denied it.

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