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Austrian Authorities Arrest Teen Who Planned to Attack Vienna Synagogue

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BERLIN (AP) — A 16-year-old teenager has been arrested for allegedly planning to attack a synagogue in Vienna, Austria’s top security official said Monday.

The teenager, who was arrested Thursday, had announced in online chats that he intended to procure a weapon to attack an unspecified synagogue in Vienna, Interior Minister Gerhard Karner said. He had already obtained the financial means for the attack, Austrian news agency APA reported.

Officials did not identify the suspect. They said he lived near Steyr in northern Austria.

His home was searched and several electronic data carriers were seized, APA reported.

Authorities also found images and video material with instructions for making bombs, weapons, and ammunition, APA said.

Austrian authorities have beefed up security for synagogues and other Jewish institutions following an increase of antisemitic incidents in the wake of the Israel-Hamas war.

Source: Hamodia

Ecuador Discusses Sending Thousands of Agricultural Workers to Israel

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By Pesach Benson • 11 December, 2023

 

Jerusalem, 11 December, 2023 (TPS) — Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen discussed bringing 25,000 workers from Ecuador with the South American country’s incoming Foreign Minister, Gabriela Sommerfeld on Monday, Israel’s Foreign Ministry announced. Cohen, Sommerfeld and other international dignitaries are in Buenos Aires for the inauguration of Argentine President Javier Milei.

Israeli agriculture is facing staggering losses in production and manpower.

Before October 7, Israel had 29,900 foreigner working in agriculture, mostly from Thailand. Farmers also employed 10,000-20,000 Palestinian laborers depending on the season. Since the war, most foreign workers have returned to their home countries, while Palestinian workers are not allowed to enter Israel for security reasons.

Israel’s Ministry of Agriculture recently announced that 500 non-combat soldiers will be assigned to help farmers on a daily basis, to help meet a shortfall of workers. A survey of Israeli farmers found that 72% have experienced disruptions to their workforce, even in areas not near Gaza or the Lebanese border, such as central Israel or the Jordan Valley.

Cohen and Sommerfeld also met with representatives of the families Israeli hostages in Gaza and listened to the stories of Chen Mahlouf, daughter of Michelle Nissenbaum, and Maya Shmiel, cousin of Yair and Eitan Horn, who are being held captive.

Ecuador currently holds the rotating position of President of the UN Security Council.

Cohen also invited Sommerfeld to visit Israel.

“We will work together to quickly promote a framework agreement between the two countries that will bring to Israel 25 thousand workers and interns from Ecuador, in the fields of agriculture and construction,” said Cohen.

“I thanked Sarah for her moral call for the unconditional release of all Israeli abductees,” he added.

Jewish Federations chair to replace UPenn chair

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JFNA Chair Julie Platt was appointed interim chair after the former chair resigned amid backlash from the controversial congressional antisemitism.

Julie Platt, the Chair of the Jewish Federations of North America, has been appointed as interim chair of the University of Pennsylvania Board after the former chair resigned amid backlash from the university president’s controversial congressional testimony on campus antisemitism.

“This evening, following the resignation of University of Pennsylvania Board Chair Scott Bok, the board asked me to serve as interim chair. I made clear that my priority is my role as chair of the Jewish Federations of North America, and, therefore, agreed to do so and lead the process of selecting a new chair by the start of the next semester, which begins in January 2024,” Platt wrote in a statement.

“As Vice Chair of the university’s board these past several months, I have worked hard from the inside to address the rising issues of antisemitism on campus. Unfortunately, we have not made all the progress that we should have and intend to accomplish. In my view, given the opportunity to choose between right and wrong, the three university presidents testifying in the United States House of Representatives failed. The leadership change at the university was, therefore, necessary and appropriate. I will continue as a board member of the university to use my knowledge and experience of Jewish life in North America and at Penn to accelerate this critical work,” she added.

She concluded: “As chair of the Jewish Federations of North America, we are leading the largest mobilization in our history in support of Israel’s right to protect its citizens and against the rise of antisemitism in North America, including staging the largest Jewish rally in American history on the National Mall. We will continue this fight with all our energy.”

Former Chairman of the Board of Trustees at the University of Pennsylvania, Scott Bok, submitted his resignation on Saturday, stating: “Today, following the resignation of the University of Pennsylvania’s President and related Board of Trustee meetings, I submitted my resignation as Chair of the University’s Board of Trustees, effective immediately. While I was asked to remain in that role for the remainder of my term in order to help with the presidential transition, I concluded that, for me, now was the right time to depart.”

His announcement came shortly after the University of Pennsylvania’s President, Liz Magill, voluntarily tendered her resignation in the wake of her controversial congressional testimony on campus antisemitism.

Commenting on Magill’s resignation in his statement, Bok wrote, “Former President Liz Magill last week made a very unfortunate misstep—consistent with that of two peer university leaders sitting alongside her—after five hours of aggressive questioning before a Congressional committee. Following that, it became clear that her position was no longer tenable, and she and I concurrently decided that it was time for her to exit.”

On Tuesday, at a congressional hearing on campus antisemitism, Magill was asked by Rep. Elise Stefanik whether “calling for the genocide of Jews” is against the universities’ respective codes of conduct.

Responding to this, Magill said that “it is a context-dependent decision,” leading Stefanik to reply, “Calling for the genocide of Jews is dependent on the context? That is not bullying or harassment? This is the easiest question to answer ‘yes,’ Ms. Magill.”

 

Source: Arutz 7

Argentinian president wears yarmulka at inauguration, meets with families of Israeli captives

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President Javier Milei meets with Israeli delegation on inauguration day, including families of captives in Gaza.

By World Israel News Staff

Argentina’s new president, Javier Milei, was sworn in Sunday in a ceremony in Buenos Aires, nearly a month after Milei won a runoff election against then-Minister of the Economy Sergio Massa in mid-November, defeating the center-left candidate 56% to 44%.

On inauguration day, Milei held a series of meetings with foreign dignitaries ahead of the swearing-in ceremony, including a meeting with a delegation of Israelis headed by Foreign Minister Eli Cohen (Likud).

The delegation included relatives of some of the over 130 Israelis still held captive by terrorists in the Gaza Strip.

Relatives of the Bibas family – all four of whom were kidnapped on October 7th – were among the Israelis included in the delegation.

President Milei wore a yarmulka during the meeting, and offered his support to Israel in its ongoing war against Hamas.

“I would like to emphasize our complete solidarity with the nation of Israel after the terrorist actions Hamas perpetrated. We condemn them fully and firmly,” Milei said.

“I fully support Israel’s right to defend itself from those terrorist attacks. Additionally, we are considering declaring Hamas a terrorist organization in Argentina.”

After the meeting, Foreign Minister Eli Cohen expressed his appreciation of Milei’s support for Israel, noting that he invited the new president to visit Israel.

“Argentina is a strategic country in South America, and under President Milei, our friendship will strengthen. I thanked the President for his firm stance on Israel’s side in its struggle against terror, his intention to declare Hamas a terrorist organization, and his calls for the unconditional release of all hostages.”

“I invited him to visit Israel and inaugurate the Argentinian embassy in Jerusalem, as the president himself promised to do in his speeches over the past few months.”

Source: World Israel News

Top Jewish White House Cyber Aide Says Recent Iran Hack on Water System Is Call to Tighten Cybersecurity

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WASHINGTON (AP) — A top White House national security official said recent cyber attacks by Iranian hackers on U.S. water authorities — as well as a separate spate of ransomware attacks on the health care industry — should be seen as a call to action by utilities and industry to tighten cybersecurity.

Deputy national security adviser Anne Neuberger said in an interview on Friday that recent attacks on multiple American organizations by the Iranian hacker group “Cyber Av3ngers” were “unsophisticated” and had “minimal impact” on operations. But the attacks, Neuberger said, offered a fresh warning that American companies and operators of critical infrastructure “are facing persistent and capable cyber attacks from hostile countries and criminals” that are not going away.

“Some pretty basic practices would have made a big difference there,” said Neuberger, who serves as a top adviser to President Joe Biden on cyber and emerging technology issues. “We need to be locking our digital doors. There are significant criminal threats, as well as capable countries — but particularly criminal threats — that are costing our economy a lot.”

The hackers, who U.S. and Israeli officials said are tied to Tehran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, breached multiple organizations in several states including a small municipal water authority in the western Pennsylvania town of Aliquippa. The hackers said they were specifically targeting organizations that used programmable logic controllers made by the Israeli company Unitronics, commonly used by water and water treatment utilities.

Matthew Mottes, the chairman of the Municipal Water Authority of Aliquippa, which discovered it had been hacked on Nov. 25, said that federal officials had told him the same group also breached four other utilities and an aquarium.

The Aliquippa hack prompted workers to temporarily halt pumping in a remote station that regulates water pressure for two nearby towns, leading crews to switch to manual operation.

The hacks, which authorities said began on Nov. 22, come as already fraught tensions between the U.S. and Iran have been heightened by the two-month-old Israel-Hamas war. The White House said that Tehran has supported Houthi rebels in Yemen who have carried out attacks on commercial vessels and have threatened U.S. warships in the Red Sea.

Iran is the chief sponsor of both Hamas, the militant group which controls Gaza, as well as the Houthi rebels in Yemen.

The U.S. has said they have uncovered no information that Iran was directly involved in Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel that triggered the massive retaliatory operation by Israeli Defense Forces in Gaza. But the Biden administration is increasingly voicing concern about Iran attempting to broaden the Israeli-Hamas conflict through proxy groups and publicly warned Tehran about the Houthi rebels’ attacks.

“They’re the ones with their finger on the trigger,” White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters earlier this week. “But that gun — the weapons here are being supplied by Iran. And Iran, we believe, is the ultimate party responsible for this.”

Neuberger declined to comment on whether the recent cyber attack by the Iranian hacker group could portend more hacks by Tehran on U.S. infrastructure and companies. Still, she said the moment underscored the need to step up cybersecurity efforts.

The Iranian “Cyber Av3ngers” attack came after a federal appeals court decision in October prompted the EPA to rescind a rule that would have obliged U.S public water systems to include cybersecurity testing in their regular federally mandated audits. The rollback was triggered by a federal appeals court decision in a case brought by Missouri, Arkansas and Iowa, and joined by a water utility trade group.

Neuberger said that measures spelled out in the scrapped rule to beef up cybersecurity for water systems could have “identified vulnerabilities that were targeted in recent weeks.”

The administration, earlier this year, unveiled a wide-ranging cybersecurity plan that called for bolstering protections on critical sectors and making software companies legally liable when their products don’t meet basic standards.

Neuberger also noted recent criminal ransomware attacks that have devastated health care systems, arguing those attacks spotlight the need for government and industry to take steps to tighten cyber security.

A recent attack targeting Ardent Health Services prompted the health care chain that operates 30 hospitals in six states to divert patients from some of its emergency rooms to other hospitals while postponing certain elective procedures. Ardent said it was forced to take its network offline after the Nov. 23 cyberattack.

A recent global study by the cybersecurity firm Sophos found nearly two-thirds of health care organizations were hit by ransomware attacks in the year ending in March, double the rate from two years earlier but dipping slightly from 2022.

“The president’s made it a priority. We’re pushing out actionable information. We’re pushing out advice,” Neuberger said. “And we really need the partnership of state and local governments and of companies who are operating critical services to take and implement that advice quickly.”

Source: VosIzNeias

Cyprus Arrests Iranian Terror Cell Targeting Israelis

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By Pesach Benson • 10 December, 2023

Jerusalem, 10 December, 2023 (TPS) — Cypriot security forces working with Israeli intelligence officials thwarted an Iranian terror cell planning to attack Israelis in Cyprus, the Israeli Prime Minister’s Office announced on Sunday.

Information conveyed to Cyprus by the Mossad, Israel’s intelligence service led to the arrest of two Iranian nationals, both members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), Cypriot media reported.

The cell planned attacks on both Israeli and Jewish interests in Cyprus.

“Since the murderous terrorist attack by Hamas on Saturday, October 7, the Iranian regime has expanded its efforts to promote terrorist activities around the world. Iran does not need any means to achieve its criminal goals,” the Prime Minister’s Office said in a statement.

Israel and Cyprus collaborate on natural gas in the Western Mediterranean, and the island is a popular vacation destination for many Israelis. Other areas of bilateral cooperation include energy, environment, disaster response and cultural collaboration.

Israel’s National Security Headquarters noted that since the outbreak of war, many Israelis have moved to Cyprus.

In recent years, Israeli and Cypriot authorities have thwarted a number of Iranian plots against Israelis.

Netanyahu Calls Putin Amid Worsening Ties With Russia

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By TPS • 10 December, 2023

Jerusalem, 10 December, 2023 (TPS) — Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had a tense phone conversation with President Vladimir Putin on Sunday, the Israeli leader’s office confirmed, amid mounting tensions between Moscow and Jerusalem.

During the phone call, Netanyahu expressed “dismay” about the recent anti-Israel positions taken by Russian representatives at the U.N. and other international fora, according to the Prime Minister’s Office.

Netanyahu said he emphasized that “any country that would suffer a criminal terrorist attack such as Israel experienced would act with no less force than the one with which Israel operates.”

The Israeli leader also strongly criticized the Kremlin’s “dangerous” cooperation with the Iranian regime.

Netanyahu thanked Putin for his successful efforts to free Israeli citizens with dual Russian citizenship held by Hamas in the Gaza Strip, adding that the Jewish state would use “all means, both political and military,” to free the roughly 135 hostages who remain in captivity.

The premier requested that Moscow put pressure on the International Committee of the Red Cross to visit the remaining hostages and provide them with medicine.

Following the leaders’ conversation, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov issued a sharp statement calling it “not acceptable” for Israel to use Hamas’s Oct. 7 attacks as justification for the “collective punishment of the Palestinian people.”

On Oct. 25, Russia vetoed a U.S.-sponsored U.N. Security Council resolution condemning Hamas for its Oct. 7 rampage in the northwestern Negev in which terrorists murdered more than 1,200 persons.

The next day, Israel condemned Russia after it hosted a delegation of Hamas terrorists in Moscow, calling it “an act of support of terrorism.”

The ambassador of Russia to the United Nations has also told a General Assembly special session on the current war that Israel does not have the right to defend itself.

Over the last decade, Israel has carried out hundreds of airstrikes in Syria against Iran and its proxies. Israel and Russia have security coordination to avoid firing on each other, but that arrangement has been strained by the war in Ukraine.

While there is no evidence directly implicating Russia in Hamas’s surprise assault on Israeli communities near Gaza, analysts told the Tazpit Press Service in October that Moscow will exploit the Gaza war to distract the world from its war in Ukraine and spoil Israel-Saudi Arabia peace efforts.

At least 1,200 people were killed in Hamas’s attacks on Israeli communities near the Gaza border on Oct. 7. Hamas currently holds 137 men, women, children, soldiers and foreigners captive in Gaza. Some people remain unaccounted for as Israeli authorities continue to identify bodies and search for human remains.

UPenn loses $100 million gift following president’s refusal to condemn genocide of Jews

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President Liz Magill’s testimony to Congress suggested calling for the genocide of Jews would not necessarily violate her college’s rules.

By Charles Hilu, The Washington Free Beacon

A donor to the University of Pennsylvania withdrew a gift worth around $100 million from the school Thursday, the latest instance of fallout following elite university presidents’ controversial congressional testimony on campus anti-Semitism.

Ross Stevens, an alumnus of the university’s Wharton School of Business and founder and CEO of Stone Ridge Asset Management, cited the college’s response to anti-Semitism, including President Liz Magill’s answers in her Tuesday testimony to Congress, in his decision to withdraw the donation, Axios reported.

“Mr. Stevens and Stone Ridge are appalled by the university’s stance on anti-Semitism on campus,” Stevens’s lawyers wrote in a letter to the university. “Its permissive approach to hate speech calling for violence against Jews and laissez-faire attitude toward harassment and discrimination against Jewish students would violate any policies of rules that prohibit harassment and discrimination based on religion, including those of Stone Ridge.”

The lawyers cited Magill’s testimony to Congress on Tuesday, in which she suggested calling for the genocide of Jews would not necessarily violate her college’s rules regarding bullying and harassment.

“It is a context-dependent decision,” Magill said after Rep. Elise Stefanik (R., N.Y.) asked whether such calls would violate the school’s code of conduct.

Stevens’s lawyers noted that Magill “belatedly acknowledged” that such calls would be harassment “only after her Congressional testimony went viral and demands for her termination amplified.”

Stevens’s withdrawal of the gift is the latest backlash toward the university following Magill’s testimony. Her comments drew a denunciation from Pennsylvania’s political leaders on Wednesday, including Gov. Josh Shapiro (D.), Sen. Bob Casey (D.), and Republican Senate candidate David McCormick. Magill stated on Wednesday clarifying her comments and committing to evaluate the school’s policies in light of the “signs of hate proliferating across our campus and our world in a way not seen in years.”

Presidents Sally Kornbluth of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Claudine Gay of Harvard University testified with Magill and gave similar answers to Stefanik’s question, declining to affirm that calls for genocide would qualify as bullying and harassment.

Gay issued a statement Wednesday claiming “those who threaten our Jewish students will be held to account,” but that did not stop David Wolpe, a visiting scholar at the university’s divinity school, from resigning from Gay’s newly created advisory board dedicated to stopping anti-Semitism. He cited Gay’s “painfully inadequate testimony” and an ideology on campus that “places Jews as oppressors and therefore intrinsically evil,” though he added that he believed Gay “to be both a kind and thoughtful person.”

Source: World Israel News

Terror tunnel, weapons found in Al-Azhar University in Gaza

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Terror tunnel running from university yard to a school 1 kilometer was uncovered along with weapons, explosives, and rockets.

Yesterday (Thursday), IDF troops struck compounds containing terror infrastructure used for Hamas’ military activity in the Al-Azhar University located in Rimal in the Gaza Strip.

Within the university campus, IDF troops located terror infrastructure, including an underground tunnel that ran from the university’s yard and continued to a school one kilometer away. Furthermore, numerous weapons, including explosive devices, rocket parts, launchers, explosive device detonation systems, and several technological assets were located and taken for an intelligence analysis and investigation.

The findings show that Hamas exploited the university’s building for attacks against our forces.

IDF troops conducted a targeted raid on a Hamas observation control room in the area of the Shati Hospital, where 200 communication devices and dozens of cameras were located. In the area of the Hamas observation control room, an operational tunnel shaft, magazines, grenades, a sniper post, military equipment, and firing holes were also located.

Source: Arutz 7

Watch: Washington Marks Start of Chanukah With Lighting of National Menorah

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Hundreds of people braved 40-degree temperatures on Thursday to attend the lighting ceremony of the National Menorah on the Ellipse, just south of the White House, to mark the first night of Chanukah.

American Friends of Lubavitch (Chabad) organized the event, during which Rabbi Levi Shemtov and his father, Rabbi Avraham Shemtov, ascended on a scissor lift to light a 30-foot-tall menorah. The United States Marine Band and a team of cantors performed from below.

U.S. President Joe Biden did not attend. Doug Emhoff, who is Jewish and married to Vice President Kamala Harris, represented the Biden administration. He spoke about confronting antisemitism and dealing with grief in the aftermath of the Oct. 7 Hamas terrorist attacks in Israel.

“Normally, this is a time of celebration and joy,” he said. “I know right now that might seem a little far-fetched to some of you. I know you’re in pain. I’m in pain. I know a lot of us are feeling unmoored and afraid. We’ve not seen anything like this moment.”

“We’re seeing the presidents of some of our most elite universities literally unable to denounce calling for the genocide of Jews as antisemitic. That lack of moral clarity is simply unacceptable,” added Emhoff.

He referred to a recent House hearing with the presidents of Harvard University, the University of Pennsylvania and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

“Let me be clear, when Jews are targeted because of their beliefs or identity, and when Israel is singled out because of anti-Jewish hatred, that is antisemitism, and it must be condemned,” Emhoff said.

He cited Biden’s national strategy to counter antisemitism and his efforts to secure the release of more than 100 hostages held by Hamas, including four Americans, as evidence of the administration’s record on fighting Jew-hatred and supporting Israel.

Also on Thursday, the White House scrubbed reference to CAIR being an adviser on that national strategy, and a spokesman for the White House denounced “shocking, antisemitic statements” from CAIR’s executive director “in the strongest terms.”

New York City Mayor Eric Adams, a Democrat, attended the event but did not speak. JNS

 

Source: Matzav

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