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In A Chaotic Market Demand And Prices For Homes In US Soar

The U.S. housing market has gotten out of whack. Demand far outpaces supply. Prices have risen to record levels and roughly half of all U.S. houses are selling for above their list price.

Data from real estate brokerage Redfin shows that two years ago, before the pandemic, just a quarter of homes were selling above the seller’s asking price. The current level is the highest in the decade that Redfin has tracked the data.

On Tuesday, new data further illuminated the red-hot nature of the housing market: Prices rose in March at the fastest pace in more than seven years. The S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller 20-city home price index jumped 13.3% that month compared with a year earlier, the biggest gain since December 2013. That followed a 12% jump in February.

Several factors are driving the seemingly relentless rise in home prices. The pandemic has encouraged more people to seek out the additional space provided by a single-family home. Yet at the same time, COVID-19 has discouraged many homeowners from selling and opening up their homes to would-be buyers. That’s dramatically lowered the number of homes for sale.

And mortgage rates remain at historically low levels, with the average rate on a 30-year mortgage rising slightly last week to 3%. A year ago, the average was nearly 3.25%.

Investors, including individuals buying second houses and wealthy Wall Street firms, are also buying more homes, creating even more competition. They bought 17% of homes in April, up from 10% a year earlier, according to the National Association of Realtors.

The large millennial generation is also increasingly turning toward home-buying.

Daryl Fairweather, chief economist at Redfin, said that demand was outstripping supply even before the pandemic as developers struggled to build enough new homes. Builders now say that shortages of workers and lumber are limiting their ability to build.

New home construction, with supplies and labor in short supply, fell in April after reaching a 15-year high a month earlier.

“All told, there is little, if any, indication that home prices will slow their appreciation anytime soon,” said Matthew Speakman, an economist at real estate website Zillow.

The number of homes for sale fell 21% in April compared with a year earlier, to just 1.16 million, near a record low on records dating back to 1982, according to the National Association of Realtors.

That has pushed buyers into a near-frenzy. Properties were on the market for just 17 days in April, and 88% of homes sold were on the market for less than a month, the NAR said.

The ensuing bidding wars raised the price of the typical, or median, house to $341,600 last month, the NAR said, a record high.

Glenn Kelman, CEO of Redfin, said Tuesday on Twitter that a desperate home buyer in Bethesda, Maryland, offered — perhaps partly tongue-in-cheek — to name her first-born child after the seller. She still lost out to another buyer.

Kelman also noted that there are now more realtors than there are homes listed for sale. According to the Labor Department, 1.7 million Americans were working in real estate in April.

Some of the year-over-year price gain likely reflects slower sales and reduced demand a year ago at the onset of the pandemic. All 20 cities in the Case-Shiller index reported faster price increases in March than in February.

The largest increase was in Phoenix for the 22nd straight month, where prices rose 20% compared with a year ago. San Diego saw the next largest gain, at 19.1%, followed by Seattle, with 18.3%.

Daryl Fairweather said the housing market may cool off in the coming months. With vaccinations spreading and COVID-19 waning, more sellers may be willing to list their homes.

Fairweather also said many Americans are likely to start spending more money on services, such as vacations, dining out, and other entertainment, and focus less on new homes.

The number of people signing contracts to buy homes dropped in May, and fewer people are applying for mortgages.

“At a certain point, buyers just back off and you get more stable price growth,” Fairweather said. “I think this is the peak, but it’s going to be hot for a long time. It’s more like a plateau.”

(Vosizneias).

Rabbi Jonathan Gewirtz – Out on a Limb

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Operation Inspiration

I must have been in 4th or 5th grade when our English Principal, Mrs. B., read us a satirical poem based on the famous poem “Trees” written by Joyce Kilmer. He, you might like to know, was best known for this poem, not just for the rest area on the New Jersey Turnpike named for him, or the fact that he was a man named Joyce.

Since we didn’t really get what she was talking about (and we had no idea what bas-relief was – see Winter Trees by Conrad Dierkman,) she introduced us to the original. I only recall two lines by heart: the opening one, “I think that I shall never see, a poem as lovely as a tree,” and the closing one, “Poems are made by fools like me, but only G-d can make a tree.” These words played in my mind as I walked to shul one Shabbos afternoon.

I had just spoken to a dear friend and neighbor, and mentioned my understanding of a Mishna in Pirkei Avos. The Mishna in Perek Gimel teaches, “R’ Shimon says, one who is walking on the way and ceases from his learning to declare, “How lovely is this tree!” the Torah considers him almost worthy of losing his life.” The basic understanding is that one who interrupts his Torah learning with idle chatter, even to admire the wonders of Hashem, has done something wrong.

I told him that I focus on the word, “Mafsik, ceases.” It can also mean “to separate.” As I explained, if a person is steeped in Torah, then when he sees a tree, he doesn’t differentiate it from Torah. He asks himself, “What is Hashem telling me with this?” Since Hashem used the Torah as a blueprint for the world, that means everything in the world is ALSO Torah.

When I then began my walk, these thoughts swirled through my head and I asked myself that very question: What is Hashem telling us with His creation of trees in the world?

This is something I bet many of you would be really good at answering, since you’re very creative and imaginative. I hope that after reading this you’ll start that discussion, perhaps around your Shabbos table, or while driving down the road with your spouse, children, or friends. Like those games where you see how many words you can make from the letters of a long word, let’s see how many lessons you can find from a tree. Here’s my short list.

  1. Trees are always moving upwards. Not only that, they are taking the things that are low, the water and nutrients in the soil, and using them to create branches and leaves higher up. That’s very much like people who are supposed to uplift the physical and make it spiritual.
  2. I’ve also never seen trees lean over to try to knock each other down. It could happen in a windstorm, but not through any malice on the part of these wooden soldiers. Instead, they focus on growing as high as they can, and don’t worry about how tall the other trees are. Wouldn’t it be a swell idea if we were less competitive with others? We might be envious of someone else’s greatness, but if that serves to make us want to climb higher in our own Avodas Hashem, that’s OK, like the trees.
  3. Many trees beautify themselves with leaves each Spring and Summer, but those leaves provide benefit to the world around them. They transform carbon dioxide into oxygen, and provide soothing shade to keep people cool. Of course, many trees also provide fruit, and some are even willing to sacrifice themselves so people might have wood. Well, now, it seems to me that the best way to adorn ourselves is by helping others and making the world a better place, just as these trees do. I TOLD you these trees had a lot to teach us!
  4. No matter how big the tree is, and in fact, the bigger it is, the more important they are, it all comes down to the roots. The roots keep the tree grounded and connected to its source, and if the roots are damaged or shrivel, it is very easy to topple that tree. As Yidden, we also need to ensure our roots are strong and that we remain grounded. If we forget where we came from, and stop getting nourishment from that Source, we are in grave danger.

I think you get the point by now. Everything in this world, from trees to mountains, tin cans to shopping carts, has a message for us. Everything you see or hear has a special lesson to teach you and if we don’t stop to contemplate it, then we’re as foolish as the fellow who thinks that Torah is Torah and the world is the world and never the twain shall meet.

I hope you’ll think of this the next time you’re on a walk, and you find the Torah in what you see. Think about this: that sefer you were holding just before, wasn’t it made from trees?

 

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Scientists at Chinese flu lab were hospitalized just before the pandemic

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Wall Street Journal report reveals that three scientists from the secretive lab in Wuhan got sick before the pandemic, fueling speculation the coronavirus may have originated there.

By World Israel News Staff

Three researchers from China’s Wuhan Institute of Virology became so sick in November 2019, before the coronavirus pandemic, that they were treated in a hospital, the Wall Street Journal reported Monday.

The information came in a previously undisclosed U.S. intelligence report obtained by the newspaper, adding to previous speculation that the COVID-19 virus that sparked the worldwide coronavirus pandemic may have escaped from the laboratory located in the Chinese city of Wuhan, the apparent original epicenter of infection.

Although a fact sheet released in the final days of the Trump administration claimed that several researchers at the lab became sick in late 2019 “with symptoms consistent with both Covid-19 and common seasonal illness,” the new information confirmed that three scientists were hospitalized a month before China reported the first cases of the virus.

The exposure of the information in the report comes as the World Health Organization prepares to discuss the next stage in the investigation of the pandemic’s origins.

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Scientists at Chinese flu lab were hospitalized just before the pandemic

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Although the coronavirus vaccines have helped Israel get the pandemic under control locally, the virus is still ravaging many countries in the world, such as India, where there have been almost 27 million confirmed cases and 303,720 deaths, as reported Monday by John Hopkins University.

Worldwide, there have been 167 million confirmed cases and 3.5 million deaths attributed to the coronavirus since the beginning of the pandemic.

The newly disclosed report provided additional details on the number of researchers affected, including when they got sick and their hospital visits.

“The information that we had coming from the various sources was of exquisite quality. It was very precise. What it didn’t tell you was exactly why they got sick,” an intelligence source told the Journal, which noted that another source cautioned that the report needed “further investigation and additional corroboration.”

The fact that scientists from the virus laboratory became ill in the same city where the first cases of the coronavirus were reported has given a boost to speculation that the outbreak and the lab might be linked. Chinese scientists and officials have consistently denied that the virus was a result of a leak from the research lab.

China’s foreign ministry spokesman, Zhao Lijian, rejected the claim that three researchers at the lab had been sick with the virus symptoms, calling the allegations “completely untrue.”

“The United States continues to hype up the lab leak theory,” Lijian said in comments reported by Reuters. “Does it care about traceability, or is it just trying to distract attention?”

World Health Organization spokesman Tarik Jasarevic told Reuters that further investigation was needed into both the lab leak hypothesis and theories that the virus originated at animal markets in Wuhan.

 

Blinken condemns anti-Semitic attacks

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US Secretary of State: We have a responsibility to do everything we can to stop hate in all its forms.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Monday condemned the recent anti-Semitic attacks in the US, echoing an earlier statement by President Joe Biden.

“When hateful ideology rises, violence is never far behind. I join President Biden in condemning anti-Semitic attacks at home and around the world. We have a responsibility to do everything we can to stop hate in all its forms,” he tweeted.

Earlier on Monday, Biden condemned the anti-Semitic attacks which have been perpetrated across the United States over the past two weeks.

“The recent attacks on the Jewish community are despicable, and they must stop. I condemn this hateful behavior at home and abroad — it’s up to all of us to give hate no safe harbor,” he tweeted.

A wave of anti-Semitic violence swept across major American cities following the breakout of hostilities between Israel and the Hamas terrorist organization in Gaza. The violence has continued even after a cease-fire went into effect between Israel and Hamas on Friday morning.

On Sunday, a pro-Israel rally held outside of Chicago was crashed by a mob of Arab protesters who attacked the pro-Israel demonstration and called for the slaughter of Jews.

On Thursday, a Jewish man was brutally attacked in Times Square by pro-Palestinian Arab demonstrators.

Last Tuesday, thousands of protestors scuffled during parallel demonstrations in New York City, with police in Manhattan erecting metal barricades between the two groups.

Last week, Arabs violently attacked Jews at a restaurant in Los Angeles, according to reports on social media.

Source: Arutz Sheva

 

 

Do Jewish lives matter?

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A glaring illustration of the tolerance for violence against Jews is the shameful silence of Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer. Op-ed.

No matter how it is spun, in the world at large the Jewish people are stuck in a conundrum that has us determined to win, but not to win by too much.

This debate or conflicted approach to the recent battle between Israel and Hamas has once again the matter of Israel’s strength and military superiority. As absurd as it is on its surface a great deal of the recent debate revolved around the issue as to whether Israel has the right to defend itself.

Is it a viable or credible position of anyone that Israel does not have the right to defend itself?

The most pertinent question relevant to this matter is —how can this be entertained as a legitimate query or even topic for discussion? Under what possible circumstances would it be acceptable or okay for Israel not to defend itself?

When President Biden or Secretary of State Blinken – who is in Israel this week — proclaim that Israel has a right to defend herself, what are they actually saying? It seems that aside from the emptiness of that statement the question is why they feel compelled to acknowledge and even respond to the Bernie Sanders and AOC types in Congress who harbor a distinct hostility not just to Israel but to anything Jewish.

AOC and her extreme left squad maintain a consistent animosity to Israel and Jews for no logical reason. Jew hatred—not just anti-Zionism—is sadly in their DNA. It does not pay to waste time or space to try to explain it.

It is what it is and will remain that way as long as these folks know how to steal the limelight and the media attention. It is the media who makes them what they are and once they lose that spotlight or are voted out of office their position on issues like this will be meaningless.

Bernie Sanders is arguably a different story. The squad and other anti-Israel players tolerate him because he helps to shield them from the assertion that they are anti-Semitic. They are indeed that and even though they hob nob with Sanders it does not diminish or rationalize that reality.

Sanders is a classical self-hating Jew. There is no more simplified way to explain it.

In a sense it is arguable that he is more dangerous than the others by virtue of his Jewishness which is of no value to him or any Jewish community anywhere. For him it is perhaps nothing more than an albatross and a burden.

But for now let us try to examine the idea that one of the most noble and even courageous things an elected official can say these days is that Israel has a right to defend herself.

I believe that no matter who you are—no matter how strong or weak—if someone is going to start or pick a fight with you, you are naturally going to fight back.

The wildest suggestion about all this is that the fight between Israel and Hamas is unfair and unbalanced because Israel is “too strong”. When I hear that – and I heard it quite a few times over the last two weeks – my reaction is : they have to be kidding. That is just not an acceptable response to anything dealing with this latest conflagration.

Those who articulate that position, however, believe they are making an excellent point and have discovered a way that Israel is abusing and perhaps even unfairly pulverizing Gaza and its residents.

As a result of these latest events in the Middle East the action has spilled over to American streets where there are ample Jewish populations. Moslems – especially Palestinian Arabs residing in both New York and Los Angeles – have found a new brazenness that has them popping out of cars and mercilessly beating Jews.

They do that in increasing numbers because they believe that there is a renewed tolerance for these types of assaults that will only be minimally objected to by police and elected officials.

A glaring illustration of the tolerance for violence has manifested itself on many levels, but none more than by the silence of Senator Chuck Schumer, the Senate Majority Leader.

What a shame and embarrassment he has become for all Jewish New Yorkers. His silence as Jews on the streets of New York are beaten is deafening and indeed shocking.

Is it possible that as long as it is “those kinds of Jews” bearing the brunt of these attacks then the silence on the matter is understandable and acceptable?

President Biden has spoken constantly and consistently about what he believes—or his handlers believe—is systemic racism in this country. Last Friday at a joint news conference with South Korean President Moon, he also mentioned how disturbing the anti-Asian assaults have been over these last few months on the streets of our big cities.

Over the last several weeks Jews are being clubbed and beaten at random but the president so far has not found it within himself—like Mr. Schumer—to stand up and condemn these types of hate crimes. Perhaps they will see themselves as being aligned too much with Jews, which may impact on their political standing.

In the Schumer case, it is an open secret that he lives and works in fear of a primary challenge from Congresswoman Cortez when he is up for re-election. AOC and the squad can target Schumer politically here in New York if the senator is too outspoken about his support of Israel.

The result is that Schumer has not been heard from and in virtual hiding waiting for this to pass. What a shameful situation!

Here is something nice that can be said about President Biden—he’s not Barack Obama. Of course the president disappointed his left flank in the Democrat Party when he reiterated that Israel has the right to defend itself against the barrage of rockets fired from Gaza at her innocent pedestrian population.

Unfortunately, like other Democrat Party leaders, Biden is an ardent fan and subscriber to the big lie. He or at least his handlers understand the more a falsehood is repeated the more it becomes ingrained in a distracted people’s psyche and is soon after adapted as reality.

So even though Biden and US officials played a minor supportive role in orchestrating the ceasefire last week, that did not stop Biden from lying about it and taking full credit for arranging the cessation of violence. Last week almost no one believed that. This week we are not so sure.

More than fifty years ago when Jews were being beaten in the streets of New York just for being Jews—as is the case today—that gave rise to the creation of the Jewish Defense league led by Rabbi Meir Kahane.

Unfortunately, other Jews have worked all these years to effectively make the Kahane name synonymous with racism and hate. That was always the furthest thing from the truth but because it was constantly repeated it soon became accepted reality.

One of Rabbi Kahane’s mantras was “Never Again,” a reference to our determination as a people not to become history’s victim. Later Kahane coined another poignant phrase which captured the essence of what he sought to accomplish. That slogan was, “A Jewish Mind With A Jewish Fist.”

In simpler times he organized street patrols in Jewish neighborhoods so as to serve as the eyes and ears of local police. Sometimes his young followers took matters into their own hands when that had to be done.

Of course it is preferable to leave law enforcement to the authorities. But then again, like Biden tried to say last week—Jews have a right to defend themselves.

Last year we learned that black lives matter and that Asian lives matter. America – and its leaders – may have to come to the realization that Jewish lives matter too.

Before you know it we might be back to where we should have been in the first place. And that is that indeed and in fact—all lives should matter.

Larry Gordon is editor in chief of the 5 Towns Jewish Times.

(Arutz 7).

 

Beverly Hills Sunday rally in support of Israel draws 2,000

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On Sunday, a crowd of 2,000 came together in Beverly Hills to show their support for Israel, reported the Jewish Journal.

Those at the rally included Israelis, American Jews, Christians and non-Jews of various backgrounds, including model Sarah Idan, former Miss Universe Iraq, who was forced to flee Iraq after taking a selfie with Miss Israel.

Flying Israeli flags under a banner of “United Against Antisemitism,” the gathering featured well known speakers including Dr. Hillel Newman, Consul General of Israel to the Pacific Southwest.

Newman noted the strong ties between Israel and Los Angeles.

“There now is a bond of blood and persecution that unites Israel and Los Angeles,” he said. “Whether it is in Los Angeles or Hamas in Israel, they are two sides of the same coin.”

“The conflict in Israel with the Palestinians is not about territories, about water or the Temple Mount. It’s about the very existence of the state of Israel.”

The former two-time mayor of Beverly Hills, Lili Bosse, who is the daughter of Holocaust survivors, said that Beverly Hills stands “side by side with Israel.”

“We stand against antisemitism. We stand against Jew-hatred,” she said.

Idan said that she knows the trauma of war.

“It boils my blood that Hamas uses Palestinian kids to push their cause to eradicate Israel,” she said.

“The world has no problem with Muslim countries from Asia to Africa to Europe. I am a Muslim who fights for Jewish rights… In Iraq I never met a single Jew for 24 years until I came to America. There is a reason for that.”

The rally went off without incident. There was a small group of pro-Palestinian demonstrators, but they were forced to stay across the street by police and private security.

(Arutz 7).

Israelis Invent Revolutionary Blood Clot That Heals Chronic Wounds

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ActiGraft is an FDA-cleared regenerative wound solution which uses a patient’s own blood to spur healing of chronic wounds such as diabetic foot ulcers.

The body’s mechanism for healing wounds is quite miraculous.

The wound bleeds. The blood coagulates and forms a clot. The clot sends a biologic signal triggering a cascade of actions that protect against infection and bring blood cells bearing materials to build new tissue in place of the damaged tissue.

Usually, this amazing process happens underneath the scab that forms over a wound and it’s all over pretty quickly.

But many people have chronic, nontraumatic injuries that never heal. These wounds form too gradually to set off the signal and not enough blood flows to the site.

ActiGraft, invented in Israel, is a unique wound-care product – a blood clot that healthcare providers produce in just 12 minutes from a vial of the patient’s whole blood mixed with a special reagent inside a coagulation mold.

Applied on the wound, this newly created blood clot jumpstarts the natural protecting and healing process that failed to begin before.

“ActiGraft tricks the body into thinking this chronic wound is a new wound that it needs to start healing,” says Alon Kushnir, CEO of RedDress, the company he founded to develop this one-of-a-kind device with his father, physician and medical device inventor Dr. IgalKushnir.

The ActiGraft kit, containing everything needed for the bedside treatment, has FDA and CE clearance and is sold in the United States and 15 other countries including Israel.

Healing, Not Amputation

“The first market we got FDA clearance for is untreatable diabetic foot ulcers. All our studies were done on these types of wounds,” Kushnir explains.

“There was one woman whose toes were amputated but the wound wouldn’t heal. She was hospitalized for four months and was scheduled for a further amputation when we stepped in. After less than two and a half months, she walked home.”

RedDress has published studies outlining cases with similar results.

“Our marketing strategy is to ask physicians for the worst wounds they gave up on. Those are the ones we want to treat,” Kushnir says.

“I got a call from a physician in Italy recently about a diabetic ulcer he’d been treating for 12 years. ActiGraft healed it completely in five weeks.”

The treatment can be repeated once a week until the wound heals. Even the first application eases pain and starts the process.

“I was impressed with the … consistent improvement in wound healing week to week with ActiGraft,” said Dr. Claire Shernoff of Melrose Surgical Associates in Massachusetts. “Another benefit was the significant decrease in pain my patients reported early in their treatments.”

Similar testimonials are coming into RedDress from doctors and patients in several countries.

“We solve a problem that cannot be solved by any other technology, and we can teach the procedure to the healthcare provider via Zoom in 20 minutes,” Kushnir tells ISRAEL21c.

He notes that people often die from chronic ulcers because they get infected easily, while amputation decreases life expectancy by an average five years. It’s therefore no exaggeration to say that ActiGraft can save lives.

From Burns to Chronic Wounds

The idea for ActiGraft was originally for treating burns.

“In 2009, my father was managing an eldercare home and came up with a treatment where he’d coagulate a patient’s blood into sheets, freeze it and place it on burns during the first 10 days when you want to reduce pain and the possibility of infection,” Kushnir relates.

“I looked at this from the business side and I saw that burns are a very small market. I said, ‘Maybe your idea can be viable for chronic ulcers.’ So we tried it in a nursing home with Dr. Doron Garfinkel,” a well-known Israeli geriatrician and palliative care physician.

“Within two months, we knew we had something game-changing,” Kushnir says. (Results of this study were published here.)

RedDress was a side gig for the Kushnirs until 2017, supported by investments from friends and family as the father and son tweaked the technology.

“Once we understood what we had, we went to the FDA and that was the trigger to start the company and leave our other work,” he says.

The company will next target nondiabetic chronic wounds, which include venous, pressure and post-surgical ulcers.

“I endorse Actigraft as it uses the body’s own healing cascade to help initiate the wound healing process and has a unique role as a topical dressing in the wound-care space,” said Dr. Bryan Doner of D&P Medical Group in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, a practice specializing in wound care, hyperbaric medicine, clinical research.

In Israel, RedDress expects its products to be available in all four national HMOs by June following successful trials. In countries such as the United States and Germany, reimbursement and insurance coverage are in place for ActiGraft.

(United with Israel).

Hamas official: Ceasefire will last, but Israel has no right to exist

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“We are the owner. This is known as an Islamic area, well known,” Mahmoud al-Zahar said in an exclusive interview with Sky News, adding there was no point even talking about a two-state solution.

A senior Hamas leader who helped found the Iran-backed terror group in Gaza came out of hiding, saying that while he thinks the recent ceasefire will hold, his organization remains totally committed to replacing Israel with a Palestinian state, Sky News reported Monday.

“I think nobody on both sides is looking for escalation,” Mahmoud al-Zahar told Sky News’ Mark Stone, who interviewed the the Hamas co-founder in Gaza after top leaders of the terrorist group emerged from hiding following their rocket attack on Jerusalem May 10 that sparked 11 days of fighting, ending with a ceasefire last week.

Al-Zahar said he expects the ceasefire to continue, but he acknowledged that Hamas purposely targets Israel’s heavily populated centers with its rockets.

“The new element here is the degree of the resistance movement, particularly in Gaza, to attack the Israeli targets in its very important points, including most of the overcrowded area in the (Israeli) civilian society. So for how long the Israeli (sic) will accept that, I think this is the main issue,” al-Zahar said.

Apparently surprised by al-Zahar’s honesty, Stone pointed out that Hamas was also firing the rockets from civilian areas in Gaza and told the Hamas leader, “that’s a war crime.”

Al-Zahar denied it, saying “no single rocket was sent from a civilian area,” but Stone retorted that “we’ve seen video of rockets being fired from within the built-up area of Gaza City at Israeli communities.”

Al-Zahar then tried to switch tracks, saying “this is not against Israeli communities but against Israeli occupation.” Hamas didn’t spend any money on civil defense because they were using the money on a “military ministry to defend themselves – we are here protecting ourselves against Israeli aggression,” he explained.

Asked directly, “does the State of Israel have the right to exist?”, al-Zahar replied bluntly with a “no.”

“We are the owner. This is known as an Islamic area, well known,” al-Zahar said, adding there was no point even talking about a two-state solution because the previous negotiations had failed and Hamas was not interested in “a failed business.”

When given the theoretical question as to whether Hamas would be willing to sit down and talk with U.S. President Joe Biden, Al-Zahar responded affirmatively.

“Why not? Mr. Biden – yes, he is supporting Israel – but I think we have a mission, as a Palestinian people, to speak to him frankly.”

Al-Zahar said that for him, peace means justice. “No peace without justice.”

At the end of the interview, Stone noted that “the prospects for long term peace (are) as elusive as ever.”

(World Israel News).

Israel Appoints Former Operative As New Mossad Spymaster

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced Monday the appointment of David Barnea as the new head of the country’s spy agency, the Mossad.

Barnea, a former longtime Mossad operative, will succeed Yossi Cohen as head of Israel’s intelligence agency on June 1. Cohen has served as Israel’s spymaster since taking office in 2016.

Netanyahu said Barnea’s appointment will allow “the Mossad and the state of Israel to continue in the path of accomplishments to ensure the security of Israel,” adding that the “top mission” is preventing Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons.

Outgoing Mossad chief Cohen has acted as Netanyahu’s close confidant and informal envoy. He helped orchestrate the normalization agreements Israel signed with Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Sudan and Morocco last year.

Earlier this month, Cohen visited Bahrain and met with the heads of the Gulf state’s intelligence agency to discuss regional security.

On his watch, Israel’s storied intelligence agency succeeded in seizing a large archive of Iranian nuclear documents in 2018. Netanyahu claimed they proved that Iranian leaders covered up a nuclear weapons program before signing a deal with world powers in 2015.

Numerous other operations against Iran’s nuclear facilities and scientists have also been attributed to Israel.

At a ceremony Monday, Cohen said the Mossad executes “innumerable operations” that “bring essential intelligence to the state of Israel, thwart unconventional weapons, thwart terrorism and espionage, and blaze new paths to peace and regional cooperation.”

(Vosizneias).

US Airlines Resuming Flights To Israel After Ceasefire

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United, Delta and American said Friday they are resuming flights to Tel Aviv after Israel and Hamas agreed to a cease-fire in violence that had included rockets fired at Ben Gurion International Airport.

Delta Air Lines plans to operate its first flight from New York to Tel Aviv since early last week on Friday night, with the first return trip on Sunday. Delta will “closely monitor the security situation and will make adjustments to our flight schedules as necessary,” spokesman Morgan Durrant said.

United Airlines also said it expects to resume service Friday night, with a flight from Newark, New Jersey, to Tel Aviv. A spokeswoman said the airline plans to also resume flights from Chicago and San Francisco over the weekend. United halted flights from all three U.S. cities to Israel on May 12.

American Airlines said it plans to restart New York-Tel Aviv flights on Monday.

The truce between Israel and the Palestinian terror group Hamas appeared to be holding Friday, after an 11-day war that left more than 250 people dead.

(AP)

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