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7 Bay Area Counties To Reinstate Indoor Mask Mandate After Midnight

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After an increase in COVID-19 transmission in the San Francisco Bay area, local health officials announced Monday that seven counties in the region would revert to a mask mandate for indoor public settings that takes effect for everyone after midnight, regardless of vaccination status.

“The order, announced at a joint news conference, goes into effect at 12:01 a.m. Tuesday,” and “affects more than 7 million residents,” according to the San Francisco Chronicle.

The outlet reported, “Health officers for seven of the nine counties in the region – Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Sonoma –and the city of Berkeley, which has its own health department, brought back the restriction.”

“Indoor masking is a temporary measure that will help us deal with the Delta variant, which is causing a sharp increase in cases, and we know increases in hospitalizations and deaths will follow,” said Dr. Naveena Bobba, San Francisco Acting Health Officer. “When we all wear face coverings indoors, we are protecting our fellow residents and helping our healthcare workers.”

Businesses are required to comply with the updated mandates.

The move comes more than two weeks after officials in Los Angeles County, the most populous county both in California and the nation, similarly modified its health order. Indoor mask requirements are also in effect in Yolo and Sacramento Counties.

The new health orders in the Bay Area “vary slightly by county,” the Chronicle reported, pointing out the Santa Clara County update requires masks at multi-household indoor gatherings in private homes.

According to The Associated Press, the Bay Area “collectively leads the state in vaccination rates, with over 60% of residents fully vaccinated.” Health officials say fully vaccinated people are still spreading the virus, but the vast majority of severe coronavirus cases requiring hospitalization are among the unvaccinated.

More details from the Chronicle:

The Bay Area has been averaging more than 1,400 cases a day over the past several days, surpassing the peak of last year’s summer surge in mid-August.

Regional hospitalizations have not yet reached last summer’s peak but are not far off — 815 people were in the hospital with COVID on July 28 last year, compared with 713 on Sunday. COVID deaths in the Bay Area, however, at about five a day, are well below last summer’s peak of 20 a day.

Last year, no vaccines were available, and the Bay Area was under multiple public health restrictions, including a regional mask mandate, bans on large gatherings, and reduced capacity in most indoor settings. This year, vaccines are widespread and almost all public health measures had been lifted before Monday’s mask announcement.

“It is unfortunate we have to do this at this point in the pandemic,” Dr. George Han, deputy health officer for Santa Clara County, said at the briefing on Monday. “But the virus has changed.”

(Daily Wire).

Israel’s Supreme Court pushes ‘compromise’ to keep Arab squatters in Jerusalem neighborhood

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“The compromise…is a capitulation…at the highest level, to political and ideological pressure from the extreme left,” said Chaim Silberstein, head of the Keep Jerusalem non-profit.

Israel’s Supreme Court on Monday floated what they said was a compromise that would prevent the evictions of dozens of Arabs living in the eastern Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah.

Known as Shimon HaTzadik in Hebrew, the eastern Jerusalem neighborhood was originally home to a sizable Jewish population. Much of its land was owned by Ashkenazi and Sephardic religious cooperatives.

During the 1948 War of Independence, Jewish families were forced out and Arabs from other neighborhoods in Jerusalem, alongside a number of Jordanians, moved into the homes.

University of San Diego School of Law professor Avi Bell recently summarized the dispute as a “controversy … widely misreported as an effort by the State of Israel to evict a number of Palestinian Arab families from their ancestral homes in a purely Palestinian Arab neighborhood of eastern Jerusalem,” JNS reported.

“The eviction orders are in fact the result of a decades-long legal battle by the Jewish owners of private property in Sheikh Jarrah to recover possession of their land from squatters and tenants who have not paid rent for decades; the State of Israel has never been a party to the legal proceedings,” Bell explained.

The cases examined Monday involve four Palestinian families numbering a total of about 70 people.

Lower Israeli courts have approved the evictions of the four families. They ruled that their houses were built on land owned by Jews before Israel was established in 1948.

But weighing a last-ditch appeal from the residents, the court suggested a compromise that would give them “protected” status.

The three-judge panel asked the families to consider an offer by which one member of each family would be granted lifetime protected tenancy on the property in exchange for annual payments of NIS 1,500, The Jerusalem Post reported.

“This is the practical solution,” said Judge Yitzhak Amit, who led most of the proceedings, the Post reported. “We recommend it precisely because… you do not want anyone to be thrown out of their home.”

The deal would protect them from eviction for many years, but leave the question of legal ownership unanswered, said Ahmad Amara, a consultant to the residents’ legal team.

He said the court gave the sides one week to respond.

The Supreme Court had been scheduled to issue a ruling in May, but it delayed its decision after the attorney general requested more time to consider the cases.

The threatened evictions fueled violent Arab protests and clashes in Jerusalem in the run-up to the 11-day Israel-Hamas war in May and afterwards.

“The compromise that was suggested at the Supreme Court hearing today is not really a compromise. It is a capitulation of the respected legal system in Israel, at the highest level, to political and ideological pressure from the extreme left,” Chaim Silberstein, head of Keep Jerusalem, said in a statement.

“It is a sad day when the rule of law, which is judiciously applied against Jews when their eviction is required by the liberal elites, is trampled on by our own elite Judges.”

“This happens at a time when law and morality scream for justice against squatters who build illegally and defiantly refuse to pay rent despite generous offers of compromise from the legal Jewish owners.

“The just and correct result of this court case should be the immediate eviction of illegal squatters from properties they have withheld from their rightful owners for decades,” Silberstein said.

(World Israel News).

Report: UNRWA teachers celebrate deaths of Israelis

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According to a new report by UN Watch, over 100 UNRWA educators and staff have publicly promoted hate content, making the agency complicit in terrorism.

A United Nations agency that runs schools and social services for Palestinians is facing calls to fire employees using social media to celebrate attacks on Israelis and promote anti-Jewish hatred.

Over 100 UNRWA educators and staff have publicly promoted violence and antisemitism on social media, according to a new report published by the non-governmental organization UN Watch, an independent human rights group based in Geneva.

The report, entitled “Beyond the Textbooks,” uncovers 22 recent cases of UNRWA staff incitement which clearly violate the agency’s own rules. They are also in stark contravention of its proclaimed values of zero tolerance for racism, discrimination or antisemitism.

UN Watch is calling on the agency’s major funders — including the U.S., Germany, the UK and the European Union — to hold UNRWA accountable to its own standards and commitments.

As revealed in the report, UNRWA staff stationed in Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon, Syria and Jordan have publicly incited antisemitism and terrorism.

Among the educators who have used their personal social media channels for such propaganda are UNRWA Gaza math teacher Nahed Sharawi, who shared a video of Adolf Hitler with inspirational quotes to “enrich and enlighten your thoughts and minds.”

Husni Masri, an UNRWA teacher in the West Bank, posted antisemitic conspiracy theories according to which Jews control the world, created the coronavirus and seek to destroy Islam.

UN Watch’s report lists a total of 113 cases that it managed to capture from UNRWA employees’ public pages alone, all celebrating and promoting violence, even among young children.

The watchdog group only examined a sample of Facebook users who publicly identified themselves as UNRWA employees, and estimates that the actual number of UNRWA staff who incite violence and hatred includes many more of the agency’s 30,000 staff.

UN Watch further reveals that despite its numerous prior requests and submission of detailed evidence, UNRWA has failed to fire teachers who incite to racism and terrorism, nor has it taken any other meaningful action. UNRWA should therefore be considered complicit in its staff members’ misconduct, says UN Watch.

UN Watch Director, Hillel Neuer: “Around the world, educators who incite hate and violence are removed, yet UNRWA, despite proclaiming zero tolerance for incitement, knowingly and systematically employs purveyors of terror and anti-Jewish hate.

“We call on the governments that fund UNWRA to take action to stop the vicious cycle of generations being taught to hate and violently attack Jews. We demand that UNRWA address the core problem, and demonstrate its genuine commitment to basic norms of education in its schools, by publicly condemning UNWRA employees who incite terrorism and antisemitism, removing them from their positions, and creating an independent and impartial investigation of all of its staff.”

(Arutz 7).

Report: Israel given green light by 3 countries to retaliate against Iran

The U.S., Russia and Britain are said to have given Jerusalem the go-ahead to strike back for the fatal attack on an Israeli ship.

The U.S., Russia and Britain have given Israel tacit approval to retaliate against Iran for a deadly drone strike on an Israeli-operated ship on Thursday.

The report, in Kuwait’s Al-Jarida, quoting unnamed Western intelligence sources, suggested that Israel might target Iranian vessels, the ship from which the drones were launched, or an Iranian port.

Officials in Washington and London said they held Iran responsible for the attack on the Mercer Street, a ship owned by Israel tycoon Eyal Ofer. It was in the Gulf of Oman heading towards the United Arab Emirates when multiple suicide drones struck the ship’s bridge and living quarters.

The Romanian captain and a British security guard were killed. The Mercer Street was able to sail on its power to an undisclosed safe port, escorted by the U.S. Navy.

In a statement issued on Sunday, British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab called the attack, “deliberate, targeted, and a clear violation of international law by Iran,” adding, “The UK is working with our international partners on a concerted response to this unacceptable attack.”

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said there was “no justification for this attack, which follows a pattern of attacks and other belligerent behavior.”

Iran denied responsibility for the strike on the Mercer Street.

Meanwhile, IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Aviv Kochavi spoke with his British counterpart gen. Sir Nick Carter on Sunday. According to unsourced reports in the Hebrew media, Kochavi and Carter agreed to share information and coordinate a response on Iran.

Over the course of 2021, Iran has attacked several Israeli ships in the Gulf of Oman. Israel is widely believed responsible for attacks on an Iranian intelligence-gathering ship in the Red Sea and the Iranian Navy’s largest vessel.

Israel is also said to have carried out attacks on Iranian ships carrying illicit weapons and oil to Syria in 2020.

(World Israel News).

US Employers Ratchet Up The Pressure On The Unvaccinated

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Employers are losing patience with unvaccinated workers.

For months, most employers relied on information campaigns, bonuses and other incentives to encourage their workforces to get the COVID-19 shot. Now, a growing number are imposing rules to make it more onerous for employees to refuse, from outright mandates to requiring the unvaccinated to undergo regular testing.

Among employers getting tougher are the federal government, the state governments of California and New York, tech giants Google and Facebook, the Walt Disney Co. and the NFL.

Some hospitals, universities, restaurants, bars and other entertainment venues have also started requiring vaccines.

But the new measures are unlikely to affect many of the millions of unvaccinated Americans.

Many of the companies that are requiring shots have mostly office workers who are already largely vaccinated and are reluctant to work alongside those who aren’t.

In contrast, major companies that rely on low-income blue-collar workers — food manufacturers, warehouses, supermarkets and other store chains — are shying away from mandates for fear of driving away employees and worsening the labor shortages such businesses are already facing.

Tyson Foods, for instance, said about half of its U.S. workforce — 56,000 employees — has received shots after the meat and poultry processor hosted more than 100 vaccination events since February. But the company said it has no plans to impose a mandate to reach the other half.

Walmart and Amazon, the country’s two largest private employers, have also declined to require its hourly workers to get vaccinated, continuing to rely on strategies such as bonuses and onsite access to shots. But in a potentially powerful signal, Walmart said employees at its headquarters will be required to get vaccinated by Oct. 4.

The biggest precedent so far has come from the federal government, the nation’s largest employer. President Joe Biden announced last week that all federal employees and contractors must get vaccinated or put up with weekly testing and lose privileges such as official travel.

The federal government has said it will cover the costs of the weekly tests. As for other employers, insurance may pay for such testing at some workplaces but not others.

Biden’s decision could embolden other employers by signaling they would be on solid legal ground to impose similar rules, said Brian Kropp, chief of research at consulting firm Gartner’s human resources practice.

But Kropp said some companies face complicated considerations that go beyond legalities, including deep resistance to vaccines in many states where they operate.

Retailers like Walmart might have a hard time justifying vaccine requirements for their workers while allowing shoppers to remain unvaccinated, Kropp added. Stores have mostly avoided vaccine requirements for customers for fear of alienating them and because of the difficulty in trying to verify their status.

In surveys by Gartner, fewer than 10% of employers have said they intend to require all employees to be vaccinated.

But a shift is building amid frustration over plateauing vaccination rates and alarm over the spread of the more contagious delta variant.

On Monday, the U.S. finally reached Biden’s goal of dispensing at least one shot to 70% of American adults — but a month late and amid a fierce surge that is driving hospital caseloads in some places to their highest levels since the outbreak began. The president had hoped to reach his target by the Fourth of July.

The Union Square Hospitality Group, a group of New York City restaurants and bars founded by Danny Meyer, is now requiring employees and customers to be vaccinated by Sept. 7.

The San Francisco Bar Owner Alliance, a group of about 300 bars, made a similar decision following a meeting where “the thing that stood out was anger and frustration” toward vaccine holdouts, said founder Ben Bleiman.

While some companies fear vaccine mandates will drive workers away, the pandemic itself is also causing absenteeism. Bleiman said he recently had to close his bar for a night after his bartender, who was fully vaccinated, tested positive and a replacement couldn’t be found.

Some employers are concluding that requiring vaccines is simpler than trying to come up with different rules on masks and social distancing for the small number of unvaccinated employees.

BlackRock, the global investment manager, is allowing only vaccinated workers into its U.S. offices for now and said people will be free to go maskless, as local health guidelines allow, and sit next to each other and congregate without restrictions. The firm said 85% of its U.S. employees are vaccinated or in the process of getting shots.

Matthew Putman, CEO of New York-based high-tech manufacturing hub Nanotronics, said he agonized over his decision to impose a vaccine mandate on his more than 100 employees. As it turned out, nearly all of them were already vaccinated, though he dreads the prospect of having to fire any holdouts.

“I hate the thought. But if it has to happen it has to happen,” Putman said. “I lost a ton of sleep over this but not as much sleep as I’ve lost over the fear of infection.”

Other mandates could provide a clearer test of the potential for employee backlash.

Hospitals and nursing home chains, for instance, are increasingly requiring the vaccine. So far, such mandates have survived legal challenges. More than 150 employees at a Houston hospital system who refused to get the COVID-19 shot were fired or resigned after a judge dismissed an employee lawsuit over the requirement.

Atria Senior Living, which operates more than 200 senior living communities across the country, was among the first to mandate vaccines for its staff in January.

It worked. Nearly 99% of Atria’s 10,000 employees are vaccinated, and only a tiny fraction quit over the requirement, said CEO and Chairman John Moore.

“Our residents deserve to live in a vaccinated environment. Our staff deserves to work in a vaccinated environment,” Moore said.

((Vosizneias / AP).

Rabbi Jonathan Gewirtz – Jaws of Life

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Operation Inspiration

 

Years ago, I heard a story which I’ve never actually verified. It was said that a fellow from Chabad approached a young filmmaker named Steven Spielberg and asked him for a donation of his maaser money (tithing.) Spielberg’s response was that if the man got him a bracha from the Lubavitcher Rebbe that his next film would be successful, he would give him the maaser from it. The next film he directed was a little project called “Jaws,” a 1975 movie about a man-eating shark which became the highest-grossing film in history up until that time. From then on, Spielberg’s credits only grew, until he became a legend in the film industry.

What makes the story so perfect for urban legend status is that it contains so many of the necessary pieces for a compelling story that you just want to believe. First, you have an underdog rabbi approaching a then-struggling director, who promises something in return for success. The success he achieves is beyond belief, and launches the career of a Hollywood juggernaut. Somehow, even if it’s not true, we’d like to believe it was the blessing of a great rabbi which set this in motion.

Now, it would not be as far-fetched to happen as it sounds. You see, Steven’s mother, the late Leah Adler, actually met the Lubavitcher Rebbe and considered herself a Lubavitcher chosida. For years, she ran a kosher dairy restaurant in Los Angeles called the Milky Way and she would schmooze with her customers as if they were old friends. My father got a special nickname since she had a granddaughter in the same playgroup as my nephew and as two-year-olds, someone jokingly suggested a shidduch. When my father came in, she called him, “Mechutan.”

As I said, I’ve never actually verified the story. However, that story was the reason I watched an interview with Steven Spielberg discussing the making of that hit movie, Jaws. Perhaps I hoped he’d make reference to the Rebbe, but he didn’t. More on that soon. Apparently, much of the premise of the movie depended on an insanely expensive mechanical shark which was supposed to be the terrifying star of the show. I say “supposed to” because that’s not what happened.

What actually happened was that this “shark” suffered all sorts of mechanical difficulties. They couldn’t get it to work properly, it needed to be fixed daily, and it simply wasn’t going to work. Finally, they realized they had to come up with another angle, and that’s exactly what they did. (I am not referring to the new technique invented by a cameraman on set, of placing the camera into a glass-fronted box which was waterproof and allowed them to film sequences at water level which added to the realism for which the film was lauded, but that is worth mentioning as well.)

What happened was that Mr. Spielberg realized the mechanical shark wouldn’t work, and decided instead to merely “suggest” the presence of the shark, through menacing musical scores and views of people being dragged below the waterline. It turns out that people’s imaginations of a terrifying shark attack created more drama than an actual depiction of the shark ever could. Jaws was considered a watershed moment in film history and compared to the classic thrillers of Alfred Hitchcock.

But to me, more exciting than the imagination’s view of a shark, and more thrilling than the story’s potential truth, was what I saw Steven Spielberg say in that interview. Here it is:

He related that when the shark didn’t work out, he realized that G-d had a different plan for him. He acknowledged Divine intervention as having changed his work from a simple horror flick into an artistic masterpiece.(!!!)

Did the story with the Chabad shliach really happen? We may never know. But did someone somehow influence this man who was hailed as a monumental filmmaker to publicly recognize the source of his success? Absolutely. Maybe it was his mother, maybe someone else, but in my mind, Spielberg’s watershed moment was the one when he recognized the hand of Hashem and acquiesced.

He realized he wasn’t going to get his way, having a scary mechanical shark rushing through the water, and he said, “OK. G-d has a plan that’s greater than mine.” If for no other reason than that, Jaws deserved to be a success. And indeed, it was.

If all of us could internalize that lesson, that when things don’t go our way it’s not because Hashem is laughing at us, but because He’s saying, “Psst… I’ve got a better idea,” I think we’d start to see things turn around a lot more. We’d start to see successes we only imagined, or maybe couldn’t even imagine, because we understand that the Director sees things we don’t, and if we trust His vision, the end result will be a masterpiece.

 

© 2021 – All Rights Reserved

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Report: 9 Of The 10 Worst Cities For First-Time Home Buyers Are In California

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A new report reveals that cities in California are among the worst for first-time home buyers.

Using twenty-two metrics related to affordability, real estate market conditions, and quality of life, personal finance company WalletHub revealed that all of the ten worst cities are in Democrat-run states. Nine are in California.

The worst cities are as follows:

Berkeley, California
Oakland, California
San Francisco, California
Santa Monica, California
Los Angeles, California
San Mateo, California
Santa Barbara, California
Glendale, California
Burbank, California
Boston, Massachusetts

Meanwhile, the best cities are:

Chesapeake, Virginia
Gilbert, Arizona
Lincoln, Nebraska
Cape Coral, Florida
Boise, Idaho
Hampton, Virginia
Peoria, Arizona
Virginia Beach, Virginia
Norfolk, Virginia
Surprise, Arizona

California continues to bottom out the rankings even when removing small cities from consideration:

Oakland, California
San Francisco, California
Los Angeles, California
Boston, Massachusetts
New York City, New York
Long Beach, California
New Orleans, Louisiana
Washington, DC
San Jose, California
Honolulu, Hawaii

As The Daily Wire recently reported, high housing costs and other quality-of-life issues are driving Californians to other parts of the country. California State Controller Betty Yee — who analyzed the impact of net migration on tax revenues — found that outmigration has tracked closely with skyrocketing real estate prices.

“The average home price in California is more than double the U.S. average,” she wrote in a June paper. “The high cost of housing in California makes it more difficult for current California renters to strengthen their ties to California by purchasing homes, makes it harder for potential in-migrants to move here, and encourages current homeowners to extract value from their homes by moving to less expensive states.”

California’s crime rate — a key metric used by WalletHub to measure quality of life — skyrocketed in 2020. State Attorney General Rob Bonta revealed that California’s homicide rate rose by 31%, while the aggravated assault rate rose by 8.8%.

The number of law enforcement officers assaulted with a firearm increased by 30.2%; the number assaulted with other dangerous weapons increased by 60.8%. The total number of domestic violence calls for assistance involving a firearm rose by 42%.

Homelessness is an increasingly salient challenge for policymakers in the Golden State. However, officials in San Francisco are creating “safe sleeping villages” that cost nearly $60,000 per tent. In Los Angeles, Sheriff Alex Villanueva faced sharp resistance from citizens and politicians after attempting to remove homeless people who moved to California from out of state.

After the 2020 Census — by which seats in the House of Representatives were reapportioned according to state population data — California lost one seat. New York, Michigan, Illinois, and Pennsylvania also lost representation.

(Daily Wire).

Israeli Gymnast Artem Dolgopyat Makes History with 1st Gold at Tokyo 2020 Games

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By Aryeh Savir/TPS • 1 August, 2021

Jerusalem, 1 August, 2021 (TPS) — Israeli artistic gymnast Artem Dolgopyat made history Sunday when he became the first Israeli to win a gold medal at the Tokyo 2020 games and the first Israeli to win a medal in the Men’s Floor Exercise.

The Hatikva national anthem was played in the gymnastics arena in Tokyo and the flag of Israel flew high as Dolgopyat received the medal.

Dolgopyat, a 24-year-old Ukrainian-born Israeli artistic gymnast, won the gold with a 14.933 score in the men’s floor final, the second Israeli in history to receive a gold medal after Gal Fridman won the gold in the Olympic Windsurfing Discipline of Sailing during the Athens games in 2004.

“Artem you are a champion, you made history today! The State of Israel is proud of you!” tweeted Israeli President Isaac Herzog.

“Thank you Artem! You have made blue-and-white history!” stated Prime Minister Naftali Bennett. “This is a source of enormous pride and great excitement for the entire people of Israel.”

This is Israel’s 12th Olympic medal ever.

Dolgopyat’s outstanding achievement comes after Israel’s mixed team in judo won a bronze medal at the Tokyo Olympics on Saturday.

Avishag Semberg’s taekwondo bronze medal in the women’s 49kg category last week was Israel’s first medal at the Tokyo 2021 games.

The Jewish state is now closely following the Israeli baseball team which recorded a historic debut victory at the Tokyo Olympics by beating Mexico and has so far secured a chance for a medal.

Russian police faked murder of rabbi to nab anti-Semitic gang

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Rabbi fakes his death as part of police operation to break up anti-Semitic gang.

Authorities in southern Russia faked the murder of a rabbi in order to bust members of an anti-Semitic pro-communist group.

According to a report by The Times over the weekend, police in the Krasnodar region of southern Russia near the Black sea arrested two suspects who conspired to have a rabbi murdered.

The two suspects, 60-year-old Alexander Dudarenko and 70-year-old Zoya Malova, are said to be members of the Citizens of the USSR, a pro-communist fringe group which refused to accept the dismantling of the communist regime in the early 1990s.

Undercover police agents infiltrated the group, which has been described as an anti-Semitic “nostalgia cult”.

One officer working on the case posed as a professional hitman, and was hired by the suspects to murder Rabbi Yury Tkach.

The 52-year-old rabbi agreed to cooperate with police, who faked his death in order to convince the suspect’s the hit had indeed been carried out.

Fake blood was used on the rabbi, with pictures taken of him lying in an apartment building stairwell.

In exchange for the ‘hit’, the undercover police agent demanded that the Citizens of the USSR appoint him chief of the KGB in Krasnodar.

 

PM Bennett After Attack: Israel Will ‘Send a Message to Iran in Our Own Way’

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Israel will “send a message to Iran in our own way,” Prime Minister Naftali Bennett warned, following Iran’s attack on an Israeli-owned tanker in the Gulf of Oman last week.

An Iranian suicide drone is believed to have hit the oil tanker Mercer Street on Thursday night, a ship operated by Zodiac Maritime, a company belonging to Israeli tycoon Eyal Ofer, killing a British and Romanian national.

Speaking at the beginning of the Cabinet meeting on Sunday, Bennett said that “the world recently received a reminder of Iranian aggression, this time on the high seas. The Iranians, who attacked the ship ‘Mercer Street’ with unmanned aerial vehicles, intended to attack an Israeli target. Instead, their act of piracy led to the deaths of a British citizen and a Romanian citizen.”

However, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh denied Iran’s involvement in the incident.

Asked about the accusations that Iran was responsible for the attack, he said that “the illegitimate occupying regime must put an end to false accusations against Iran.”

“This is not the first time that the regime [Israel] makes these accusations,” he added. “The officials of the regime must come to sense that they will not achieve anything by using the distractions.”

Responding to the denial, Bennett said that “Iran, in a cowardly manner, is trying to evade responsibility for the event. They are denying this.”

“I determine, with absolute certainty – Iran carried out the attack against the ship. Iran’s thuggishness endangers not only Israel, but also harms global interests, namely freedom of navigation and international trade,” he declared.

“The intelligence evidence for this exists and we expect the international community will make it clear to the Iranian regime that they have made a serious mistake. In any case, we know how to send a message to Iran in our own way,” he stated ominously.

Amos Yadlin, a former general in the Israeli Air Force (IAF) and former head of the IDF Military Intelligence Directorate, explained that the attack “illustrates the Iranian operational weakness in issuing targeted responses in the northern arena,” meaning attacking Israel from Syria or Lebanon.

Iran “shot itself in the foot” by hitting a civilian ship and killing two European civilians, he noted, “demonstrating to the international community that it is a terrorist state that violates shipping freedom and the world economy.”

In recent months, several other Israeli ships have come under apparent Iranian attacks on various maritime routes in the Middle East.

In February, an Israeli-owned ship was hit by an explosion in the sea of Oman. In April, another Israeli ship came under attack off the coast of the United Arad Emirates.

(TPS).

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