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FAIR TARGET? Thousands harass defense minister, family in overnight protest

Several thousand Israelis opposed to the government’s planned judicial overhaul held a loud, all-night demonstration outside the home of Defense Minister Yoav Gallant in the northern community of Amikam, beginning at 10 p.m. Saturday, urging him to raise his voice against the proposed legislation.

The protest outside DefMin Yoav Gallant’s home pic.twitter.com/GYL6w6lVby

— Noga Tarnopolsky נגה טרנופולסקי نوغا ترنوبولسكي (@NTarnopolsky) July 8, 2023

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In New York State, Socialists Have Won a Landmark Victory for Green Jobs and Clean Public Power

This spring, socialists and allies in New York State passed legislation empowering the state to build renewable energy and create tens of thousands of good jobs. It can serve as a model for starting to build the Green New Deal at the state level across the US.

A road runs between wind turbines in Lowville, New York. (Ron Antonelli / Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Four years after Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez introduced the Green New Deal, the New York chapters of Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) and allies took what could be a major step in transforming that policy into reality.

It’s called the Build Public Renewables Act (BPRA), and its passage in the New York state budget puts public power instead of private corporations in the driver’s seat for the transition to renewable energy. The law mandates the state’s public power authority, the New York Power Authority (NYPA), to plan, build, and operate renewable projects to meet New York’s ambitious decarbonization timetable — 70 percent renewable electricity by 2030, 100 percent by 2040 — where the private sector fails to do so on its own.

But the BPRA is more than “just” a climate bill. It is part of an unabashedly socialist vision of how to build a better world. The BPRA turns the renewable energy transition into a tool for empowering labor, materially improving working-class conditions, advancing racial justice, and laying the groundwork for true democratic ownership of our energy systems. It also provides an important model for other states to follow and a demonstration of the power socialists can wield in designing and passing policy.

Power to the Public

Central to the BPRA is the role of public ownership and planning. Unlike other renewable energy legislation that hands the responsibility for a green transition — and resulting profits — to private investment and corporations, the BPRA puts the future in the hands of the public via the New York Power Authority.

Founded in 1931 by then governor Franklin D. Roosevelt with the express purpose of “giving back to the people the waterpower which is theirs,” the agency has become the country’s largest state-owned public utility, generating and transmitting up to a quarter of New York’s electricity, the vast majority of it created via hydropower. Between its extensive history in operating the most affordable and renewable utility system in the state as well as its ability to raise its own funds through AA-rated bonds, the NYPA is an ideal instrument for a renewable transition.

It won’t have to do this alone either. The BPRA allows the agency to maximize funding opportunities from the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) through its “direct pay” provisions, which are predicated on qualities like tax exemption (which the NYPA already has) and meeting prevailing wage and domestic content requirements (which the BPRA mandates). Direct pay gives the NYPA access to clean energy tax credits by allowing the agency to claim the equivalent tax credits in the form of a direct payment from the Internal Revenue Service — essentially, a refund. This opens up the scale and scope of projects that the NYPA can engage in, as accessing those same tax credits pre-IRA would have required an elaborate public-private structure owned by a third party.

Public ownership is only half of the equation. Earlier in the year, Governor Kathy Hochul and interim NYPA CEO Justin Driscoll announced their intent to give Amazon discounts on its energy, and to deploy more than thirty megawatts of solar systems at five upstate prisons. It’s easy to see how the establishment could abuse the public renewable rollout to pick winners and losers, choosing which favored constituency to bless with the benefits of renewable siting, and whom to force a project on without concern for community needs.

This is because while the NYPA is publicly owned, its board and CEO are chosen by the governor, giving the board every incentive to stay on its boss’s good side. This leads to the absurd situation where Driscoll, who testified against the BPRA last year, is now in charge of implementing it — though the successful DSA-led push to have the Senate pull his confirmation vote has thrown his continued employment into limbo.

To combat this, the BPRA requires the NYPA to consult stakeholders like unions, community organizations, and climate and resiliency experts in a strategic planning process to determine where, when, and how it builds new renewables, which it will then formalize into official plans. Each plan requires three public hearings and a sixty-day comment period, with the first to be published no later than January 2025 and every two years afterward, with annual updates and additional hearing and comment periods. These offer organizing opportunities for DSA and its allies to combat the disinformation and astroturfing that so often accompanies renewable siting by mobilizing the public in favor of a socialist vision of a just and complete energy transition.

While the final text of the law fell short of DSA’s more encompassing demands — expanding the NYPA board to include many more seats reserved for labor and environmental justice reps, and democratic control of the hiring and firing of trustees — the BPRA is a meaningful step toward a truly democratic energy system.

Move Fast and Save Things

In 2019, New York passed the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA), which legally binds the state to generating 70 percent of its electricity with renewable energy by 2030 and 100 percent by 2040. But since then, New York has taken no meaningful steps to reach the law’s goals, with elected leaders relying on the market to provide a solution. Under 5 percent of the state’s energy comes from wind and solar generation today — less than a fifth of the wind and solar production of Texas — with few shovel-ready projects on the horizon.

The BPRA changes that: the NYPA is now “authorized and directed” to build the renewable production necessary to meet the timetable of the CLCPA. Effectively, it requires the NYPA to fill in where the private sector has overwhelmingly failed, aggressively building up the state’s wind and solar to supplement the agency’s ample hydropower capabilities. The NYPA would then become New York’s primary renewable producer and provider, ensuring that the state’s energy future is in the hands of the public.

For decades prior to the BPRA, private interests had successfully lobbied to prohibit the NYPA from building and owning new utility-scale renewables. While the BPRA lifts the injunction, it will take time for the agency to build up the necessary expertise and capacity. To ensure that the renewable transition continues apace, the BPRA allows the NYPA to enter into public-private partnerships with developers with expertise in the field.

Here is where socialists writing the law once again makes a difference. Our language ensures that the NYPA can enter such partnerships only if necessary, and that the agency maintain majority ownership of any such project, including of any subsidiaries formed to implement it. In other words, the bill prioritizes public power over the interests of green capital.

Workers Make the World

DSA worked alongside the AFL-CIO to write gold-standard labor provisions to ensure that any job created to build public renewables is a union job, or as good as one in terms of wages, benefits, and protections. Renewable jobs are the fastest growing in the energy sector, but also the most precarious; most green workers chase projects across the country at the mercy of temp agencies for low wages, meager benefits, and minimal job security. This is in no small part due to low union density in the renewable field, especially compared to peers in the fossil fuel industry.

The BPRA requires that all public renewable projects be subject to project labor agreements, including the state’s existing public works and prevailing wage requirements. This puts unions in the driver’s seat for standards on BPRA projects and also raises the floor for green workers across the state. After all, if building public renewables nabs workers a better deal, private developers will have to increase their compensation packages to stay competitive.

The law also helps create pathways for unionization: project labor agreements establish the contracted union as representative for all workers on site, so contractors will get to experience the benefits of being part of a union firsthand — an important step in demonstrating that there is power in a union.

Much has been said about a just transition for fossil fuel workers; the BPRA makes that slogan a reality. The law requires that the NYPA enter into a memorandum of understanding with labor unions representing workers at existing fossil fuel facilities to protect their jobs, salaries, benefits, and titles in the event that their workplaces are phased out, while helping place and train them in new jobs where applicable. The transition is backed by a newly created Office of Just Transition in the Department of Labor, which is funded to the tune of $25 million a year to retrain workers in renewable energy fields. The BPRA is estimated to directly or indirectly create between 28,410 and 51,133 jobs — thousands of them union, many of them sustained.

Climate Justice for the Working Class

BPRA organizers worked with environmental justice organizations and communities to address the environmental injustices wrought by fossil fuels as we seek to build a livable future for all. That starts with closing the peaker plants owned and operated by the NYPA. These highly polluting fossil fuel–powered facilities were designed to operate just once or twice a year to help meet excess demand during peak times. Instead, they run on a regular basis, polluting the predominantly black and brown communities they were built around.

To get a scale of just how poisonous these facilities are, just look to the asthma emergency room visit rate among children from the Mott Haven and Melrose sections of the Bronx: it’s triple the citywide rate. Thanks to the BPRA, the NYPA must shut down all seven peaker plants by 2030.

The law also mandates that the NYPA-built renewable system maintain a reliable supply of electricity, especially in high-need areas served by gas plants. It was a climate-induced heat wave that overwhelmed New York’s decrepit grid in 2019, but it was the for-profit companies operating the system that decided to localize the blackouts to Brooklyn, Queens, and the Bronx — the same working-class neighborhoods that host NYPA peaker plants. The BPRA aims to ensure that something like this doesn’t happen again.

In addition to decarbonization, the BPRA takes a major step forward in making green energy affordable for all. It establishes a program to make electricity cheaper for low-to-moderate-income customers by using money generated by NYPA sales of renewable energy to provide credits to over a million New Yorkers. This is an essential step to keeping heat, air conditioning, and lights on for those most in need as rates and utility debt skyrocket. The program is opt-out, meaning that customers will be automatically enrolled instead of having to jump through hoops like with most means-tested programs.

The Green New Deal Can Start Here

Public power utilities serve over two thousand communities across forty-nine states and five US territories, equivalent to one in every seven Americans. The BPRA provides a ready-made model for socialists and the broader left to transform all public power utilities into vehicles for job creation, labor empowerment, renewable generation, and climate justice.

Winning state-by-state BPRAs can alter the political landscape in favor of government-led climate action. But the true sea change would be using the BPRA as launchpads for a Green New Deal. With popular green public utilities as a beachhead, organizers and activists can advance even more Green New Deal programs like climate-proofing and retrofitting public housing, green public transit, and total public ownership of utilities and the electricity grid — all while creating potentially hundreds of thousands of jobs and materially improving the lives of working-class people.

With the Biden administration largely ineffective or even taking steps backward on climate action and Republicans threatening to take back the White House in 2024, state-level legislation offers the most promising path to enacting a Green New Deal. It took us four years to pass the BPRA in New York — to meet emission-reduction targets, we need to pass similar laws in every state by 2030. Daunting as that may seem, the blueprint is there, and the movement we built has already shown itself robust enough to win a second subsequent victory by whipping up an aggressive campaign to deny interim NYPA CEO Driscoll a confirmation vote. There is work yet to be done. But the decade of the Green New Deal can start now.

Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah calls for ‘armed intifada’ with attacks on Tel Aviv

Military wing of the Palestinian Authority’s ruling Fatah party calls on members to prepare for full-scale conflict with Israel, including indiscriminate attacks on Israeli targets.

By World Israel News Staff

The military wing of the Palestinian Authority’s ruling Fatah party is preparing for an “armed intifada” against Israel, with indiscriminate attacks on Israeli targets, the group announced.

The Al Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades, the armed branch of the Fatah movement, said that it has placed “all of our fighters in the West Bank” on “general alert” status, in preparation for a large-scale conflict with the Jewish state.

In a recently published announcement, the Al Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades told members that the organization has received orders to escalate tensions with Israel, and to prepare for “open warfare.”

“We have received the instructions. We hereby declare the escalation of the general alert situation of all our fighters to the highest level, which is that of open warfare,” the group wrote on Telegram.

“We call on all of our fighters and military cells, in every place in the West Bank, to attack the Zionist enemy and all of its components, including within the fragile heart of the entity, Tel Aviv.

“This is a revolution and an armed intifada which will be ongoing until victory. Mercy to our heroic martyrs, recovery to our heroic injured, and freedom to our heroic prisoners.”

The announcement comes days after the IDF carried out the two-day Operation Home and Garden, the largest counter-terror raid in Samaria since the Second Intifada two decades ago.

Following the launch of the operation, the Palestinian Authority halted security coordination with Israel, and accused the IDF of perpetrating a “massacre” in Jenin.

The operation was launched amid a significant uptick in terrorist activity in Samaria, with a large number of attacks emanating from the Palestinian Authority-administered city of Jenin.

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WATCH: Italian movie producer plans to build ‘mega film studio’ in Israel’s Negev desert

Italian-born entrepreneur Franco Dan Kalonymus hopes to not only build a ‘mega film studio’ in Israel’s south, but also to establish a ‘cyber-park.’

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New policy: Civilians who shoot terrorists will no longer face interrogation, gun seizure

Under a new policy initiative of Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, armed Israeli civilians who thwart terrors attacks will no longer have their weapons confiscated or be interrogated under caution.

By JNS

Israeli civilians who shoot terrorists in the act of committing attacks will no longer have their weapons confiscated or be interrogated under caution, according to a new policy initiative by Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir.

Hebrew-language media reported on Saturday that the minister had agreed with police on the new measures, meant to encourage civilians to arm themselves.

Until now, a civilian who fires at a terrorist generally has their weapon confiscated as part of the ensuing investigation. They are also often summoned for questioning, sometimes under caution of potential criminal acts.

The new policy will only apply to terror attacks in which the shooter acts in self-defense, only harms the perpetrator and stops firing the moment the danger has subsided.

In the event, police will examine the firearm at the scene and then return it to the owner.

Last week, Ben-Gvir hailed the civilian who shot and killed the Palestinian terrorist who wounded seven in Tel Aviv.

“I congratulate the brave citizen who neutralized the terrorist, prevented the continuation of the incident and saved lives. This once again proves the importance and effectiveness of citizens carrying weapons,” said Ben-Gvir.

“I call on those in the public who meet the requirements: Carry firearms with you,” he added.

Earlier this year, Ben-Gvir reiterated his call to make it easier for civilians to obtain a license to carry firearms, describing it as one of his “overarching goals.”

The minister said he sees no reason why Israel Defense Forces combat veterans, for example, should not be allowed to carry weapons. Currently, he noted, many soldiers “absurdly” do not meet the criteria for obtaining a license.

“In the recent [terror] attacks, we saw how critical the response of citizens carrying weapons is,” he said. “This is a critical and life-saving security issue.”

Ben-Gvir noted that in the first four months of the Netanyahu government’s formation, his office had issued 12,000 firearms licenses that had been held up due to what he called bureaucratic complications.

In February, Ben-Gvir vowed to push through a fivefold increase in firearm licenses in the wake of a terrorist attack that killed seven people at a synagogue in Jerusalem.

To this end, he has directed the Firearms Licensing Department to increase the number of new permits issued from roughly 2,000 to 10,000 per month.

Israel has much more stringent gun laws than the United States, despite much of the population being familiar with firearms due to the country’s near-universal compulsory military service.

In most cases, civilians may only carry pistols, and licenses are mainly dependent on completing firearms training. Most individuals can own only a single handgun, and be in possession of a fixed amount of ammunition at any given time.

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Netanyahu: Whoever murders Israelis will end up in prison or dead

IDF chief Herzi Halevi said that Israel’s fight against terrorism continues and did not end with the operation in Jenin.

By JNS

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reiterated on Sunday his government’s policy to combat Palestinian terrorism, saying that whoever murders Israelis “will end up in one of two places: Prison or the grave.”

Netanyahu began his remarks at the weekly Cabinet meeting by extending his condolences to the families of Chief Sgt. David Yehuda Yitzchak, 23, a non-commissioned officer from the Egoz commando unit who was killed last week as Israeli forces withdrew from Jenin following a two-day counterterrorism raid, and Staff Sgt. Shilo Yosef Amir, 22, a member of the Givati Brigade who was shot dead two days later by a Palestinian terrorist seeking to infiltrate the town of Kedumim.

“From the depth of its heart, the people of Israel embrace the families and we all salute the security forces that fight terrorism around the clock,” said Netanyahu.

The government’s policy was being implemented in three ways, he continued.

“First, we settle accounts with the assailants themselves, without exception. Second, we strike those who dispatch terrorists and at terrorist infrastructure. Third, we initiate and use the element of surprise. We determine the timing of our actions, as we did in ‘Operation Shield and Arrow’ against Islamic Jihad in Gaza, and as we did in the operation against terrorists in Jenin. We are changing the equation and so we will continue,” added Netanyahu.

Earlier on Sunday, IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi said that Israel’s fight against terrorism continues and did not end with last week’s operation in Jenin.

He said that the current security situation “obliges us to focus on the mission and the cohesion that supports it, so we will be ready for any challenge in any arena.

“We do not have the luxury given the prevailing reality to not show up for every challenge and task,” Halevi continued, adding: “We have seen both in ‘Operation Shield and Arrow’ [against Palestinian Islamic Jihad in Gaza in May] and in the latest operation in Jenin that the arenas influence each other, and therefore wisdom is required in the use of force.

“The fight against terrorism does not end with one operation; it requires determination and perseverance alongside the resilience of the state and its citizens,” Halevi added.

Last Monday, the IDF began a major counterterror operation in Jenin, including the entry into the Samaria city of significant ground forces. More than 1,000 IDF troops participated in the campaign, which is believed to have been the largest deployment in Judea and Samaria in two decades.

In May, the IDF carried out “Shield and Arrow” in response to incessant rocket fire from the Gaza Strip.

On Sunday, Ichilov Hospital announced that two women seriously wounded in last week’s car-ramming and stabbing attack in Tel Aviv are “out of danger” and in stable condition.

The two women are fully conscious and breathing without the assistance of ventilators, Ichilov, which is part of Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, said in a statement.

“They will continue treatment in the coming weeks,” it added.

One of the women was pregnant and lost her baby while fighting for her life in the hospital.

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Russia said to be mediating Israel-Iran prisoner exchange talks

The deal would secure the release of dual Russian-Israeli citizen Elizabeth Tsurkov in exchange for an Iranian operative captured by the Mossad.

By JNS

Russia is mediating a prisoner exchange between Israel and Iran that would see the release of dual Israeli-Russian citizen Elizabeth Tsurkov, according to a report in Kan News.

The Iran-backed Shi’ite militia Kata’ib Hezbollah is currently holding Tsurkov hostage in Iraq. The Kan News report said that sources in the militia told the Arabic language international newspaper Asharq Al-Awsat that negotiations are taking place for her release.

It was revealed in late June that Israel’s Mossad intelligence agency had captured the Iranian head of a hit squad plotting to kill Israelis in Cyprus. The daring operation took place on Iranian soil and resulted in the abduction of Yusef Shahabazi Abbasalilu and the thwarting of the plot.

Following Abbasalilu’s capture, negotiations began between Israel and Iran, with Russian mediation, for his release in exchange for Tsurkov.

Tsurkov, 36, a Princeton University doctoral candidate and non-resident fellow at the Washington, D.C., think tank New Lines Institute for Strategy and Policy, has been missing for four months.

“Elizabeth Tsurkov is still alive, and we hold Iraq responsible for her safety and well-being,” the office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a statement last week.

“The matter is being handled by the relevant parties in the State of Israel out of concern for Elizabeth Tsurkov’s security,” it added.

Tsurkov had been in Iraq, using her Russian passport, to conduct academic research for her doctorate.

Kata’ib Hezbollah, or the Hezbollah Brigades, is an Iranian-sponsored Shi’ite militia that operates both in Iraq and Syria. As part of the Popular Mobilization Forces, the group has conducted countless attacks on U.S. and coalition forces in Iraq, leading Washington to designate it as a foreign terrorist organization in 2009.

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Israeli ambassador to Ukraine – You want our help but vote against us in the UN

A full 90% of the time, Kyiv supports anti-Israel resolutions in the world body, Amb. Michael Brodsky told a local news site.

By Batya Jerenberg, World Israel News

Israel’s ambassador to Ukraine criticized the country constantly asking for Israel’s help in its fight against an ongoing Russian invasion for not providing Jerusalem with any kind of quid pro quo in the United Nations.

In an interview with the local ZN.UA news site, Ambassador Michael Brodsky said that Kyiv “supports 90% of the anti-Israel resolutions in the UN.” This, he said, “is unusual, considering Kyiv often turns to the Israeli authorities for various requests. If Ukraine sees Israel as a friendly nation and makes requests from it, then it needs to support us in the matters that are important to us just as Israel works with Ukraine on matters important to it.”

In just one example, Ukraine voted for a Palestinian-backed draft resolution in November that denied Jewish ties to the Temple Mount and called for an International Criminal Court advisory opinion on Israel’s settlement activities in Judea and Samaria. After the Foreign Ministry called in Ukrainian Ambassador to Israel Yevgen Korniychuk to protest, President Volodymyr Zelensky’s personal aide said it had been a “grave mistake” and that Kyiv “must at least abstain from such votes.”

Ukraine abstained in the subsequent voted by the full UN General Assembly’s subsequent vote on the issue, which passed easily.

Israel has airlifted hundreds of tons of humanitarian aid to Ukraine, sent a field hospital for several weeks in the early stages of the war, trains Ukrainian trauma specialists, and treats dozens of wounded Ukrainian soldiers, and has backed Ukraine in many votes in the world body.

Foreign Minister Eli Cohen also said in May that Israel is helping Ukraine clear mines from territory its forces have liberated from Russian control.

When Israel doesn’t back Ukraine, Brodsky noted, this is only because Israel has its own security interests to cover, he told the site.

Russia is a key player in Syria, and it is vital that the IDF continue to have its mutual deconfliction mechanism in place so that it can continue to attack military sites belonging to Iran or its proxies in the country without endangering Moscow’s forces or its own during its airstrikes.

Brodsky noted that Israel also sent an early-warning system to Kyiv, and that “specialists from Israel and Ukraine meet, work, and actively do everything to make this system work here as quickly as possible.”

The system can identify where rockets or missiles will fall and calculate how much time residents have to flee to safety.

Korniychuk announced in May that the system had begun operations and “hopefully” his countrymen will be able to “copy-paste it to all major cities,” he said.

Brodsky has criticized anti-Israel remarks made by his host country before, and Israel has summoned Ambassador Korniychuk for a dressing-down more than once for statements made by his government that have accused Israel of “immorality” and worse in supposedly supporting Russia, such as by failing to impose Western-style sanctions on Moscow due to its aggression, or refusing to supply Kyiv with the military equipment it wants.

The last time it did so was less than two weeks ago, after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that one reason why Israel will not provide weapons to Ukraine is the fear that those assets could fall into Iranian hands.

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‘Don’t make us angry’ – Protest leaders threaten gov’t over upcoming judicial reform bill

Futurist Yuval Harari threatened that if government unilaterally passes even “a single one of your regime coup bills, we will oppose you with every non-violent means we have.’

By Lauren Marcus, World Israel News

Leaders of the anti-judicial reform protest pledged to launch unprecedented demonstrations, including disruptions throughout the country, should legislation that would end the “reasonability” clause often cited by the Supreme Court be advanced by the Knesset on Monday.

Some 140,000 demonstrators were estimated to have gathered at the weekly anti-government rally on Saturday evening in Tel Aviv, with smaller rallies occurring in other cities.

Israeli author and futurist Yuval Noah Harari spoke at the demonstration, warning lawmakers not to advance legislation that would spark ire from anti-judicial reform activists.

“We are allowed to and must be angry for what the Netanyahu government is doing to the Israeli dream,” Harari said.

He added that should elected officials continue advancing judicial reform legislation, lawmakers will “will learn what happens when we are angry.”

Harari threatened that “if you unilaterally pass a single one of your regime coup bills, we will oppose you with every non-violent means we have.”

His remarks came shortly after protest groups released a statement pledging to “stop the country from functioning” if the government continues with judicial overhaul proposals.

Simultaneously, members of the Brothers in Arms organization held an all-night protest in front of the home of Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, urging him to stop the legislation.

On Monday evening, the Knesset is scheduled to hold the first of three votes regarding a bill that would end the so-called “reasonability” clause, which would strip the Supreme Court of its power to interfere with laws and government decisions that it deems “unreasonable.”

Also speaking at the Tel Aviv rally, Dr. Hagai Levin said that should the bill advance, the medical system could be crippled by widespread strikes.

“The health system will start operating in a state of emergency — because this is a state of emergency,” Levin said.

In March 2023, the Histadrut labor organization ordered a likely illegal strike that saw hospitals, clinics, schools, businesses, and other institutions in the Jewish State shuttered in order to force judicial reform legislation to a halt.

Former Prime Minister Ehud Barak, a vehement opponent of the judicial overhaul, recently told Channel 12 News that IDF soldiers and reservists should refuse to serve should the bill advance in the Knesset.

“When a law like that passes a first reading [in the Knesset], it is passed in order to prepare it for its second and third [final] readings. That marks the sounding of an alarm, a genuine alarm for the entire country,” he said.

“On that day,” Barak added, “I expect the pilots, the Military Intelligence Special Operations Division, to all repeat their warning: Netanyahu, watch out, the minute you try to turn the first reading into an actual law, we will not serve a dictatorship. Period.”

On Sunday morning, protest groups announced they were “issuing a final call for the government to stop the legislation, and not to bring for a first vote the first dictatorial law, which will give the government a blank check to act with extreme unreasonableness.”

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Eyes in the Sky: How IDF drones played a key role in Operation Home and Garden

Battalion 636 located terrorists in Jenin before operation, warned troops in real time about their approach, and eliminated some directly.

By Batya Jerenberg, World Israel News

A drone battalion in Central Command revealed the crucial role its soldiers played in last week’s Operation Home and Garden in Jenin that destroyed a good portion of the terrorist infrastructure, In an exclusive interview with Walla News Friday.

Battalion 636 commander Lt. Col. G. told the Hebrew language news site that while his drone units take part in “every operation” in the region that the IDF conducts, including being the eyes in the sky for specialized forces on complex, pinpoint arrest raids, this was the largest number of fighters they had to protect at once, as a thousand men went into Jenin for almost two days.

The refugee camp which is part of the city of Jenin is a small but very dense area, he said. “You don’t know where the gunman will come from, from which alley, or aperture of a house, and open fire on the soldiers. That’s why I told my soldiers, emphasize the issue of [looking for] the [terrorist’s] rifle barrel, we have the ability to see it even during the day. We did everything to prevent harm to the soldiers.”

The battalion, which fields four kinds of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), did not only search for potential attackers and warn the ground troops what was happening in real time so they could avoid enemy fire. Some drones, the commander said, “also launched tear gas and stun grenades” to disperse rioters. Others dropped more lethal payloads.

The battalion’s work started well ahead of the operation, he said. For a week before the commandos entered Jenin, his drones followed terrorists’ comings and goings, noting what houses they used as bases, seeing where they placed booby traps, and reporting their locations so they could be destroyed early on in the raid.

“We expanded our preparations to work around the clock. Whole days in a row. Because of the challenge of the alleys and the density of the buildings, the extent of the forces, the duration of the operation, we knew it would not take 24 hours. There were targets inside the camp that we had to follow for very long hours,” he said.

Lt. Col. G. was very proud of his squadrons, who worked so well under new circumstances, as the use of UAVs in such a scope and at such speed, to identify and end immediate threats to life by sending in attack drones “were something we did not know in Judea and Samaria.”

“If you are not sharp – the gunman runs away,” he explained. “He enters a house or an alley. You have lost him. In fields or an open area, you have more time.”

Another very complicated and vital task was to keep an eye on all the different aircraft in the tiny aerial region where the action was taking place – combat helicopters, UAVs, drones of all kinds – allowing each to work without getting in the way of the other, or even crashing into each other. Captain Z., who was in charge of this aspect of the operation, said the number of aircraft in the sky numbered in the “three digits and I can’t go into detail. We handle[d] each one of them with tweezers.”

Not a single drone crashed during the operation, and the extraction of the single critically wounded commando, St. Sgt David Yehuda Yitzhak, who later died, was successful even though Capt. Z. called the evacuation “very difficult.”

“How do you enable a quick evacuation and not harm the [ongoing military] activity?” he said. “In other words, how do we land a helicopter in an area saturated with swarms of drones.”

Battalion 636 worked like “a well-oiled system,” Lt. Col. G. summarized. “We had armed men, disturbances, IEDs and barricades that we identified while moving. The space itself? Was booby-trapped and ready for war from their point of view. We knew it. We have learned from previous operations.”

His squadrons were also the last to leave the scene, he noted, “because as soon as all the [ground] forces left – so did the armed men from the bunkers. We saw them leaving the [Jenin] hospital. We stayed for two hours after the forces left to try to incriminate [terrorists] and upload the [new] information to the systems,” referring to the target bank the IDF constantly updates of terrorist locations.

A hospital, for example, is a civilian center that by international law cannot be used as a military site. Having terrorists operate from one turns it into a legitimate target, albeit one that the IDF would be loathe to attack even in pinpoint fashion due to the automatic condemnation it would receive for doing so.

“When the armed men left the hospital, we had to be very sharp to ‘move’ the data point,” Lt. Col. G. said. “It sounds simple but it’s very complicated, it requires experience.”

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