It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
In a televised address Wednesday, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant told Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that he must take “tough decisions” to advance non-Hamas governance of Gaza, whatever the personal or political cost, because the gains of the war are being eroded and Israel’s long-term security is at stake.
Gallant warned in his address that he will not consent to Israeli civil or military governance of Gaza, and that governance by non-Hamas Palestinian entities, accompanied by international actors, is in Israel’s interest. Netanyahu, he said, must publicly rule out the notion of ongoing Israeli military or civil rule in the Strip.
The public comments, seen as the most direct political challenge to Netanyahu from within his government since the start of the war, sparked an angry backlash among members of the coalition, who urged Netanyahu to fire the defense minister. Only hours earlier, the premier declared that any discussions of the “day after” in Gaza are meaningless until Hamas is defeated.
Netanyahu himself quickly retorted that he was “not prepared to switch from Hamastan to Fatahstan,” referencing the Fatah-dominated Palestinian Authority.
Gallant’s call echoed complaints long made by the United States and others in the international community for Israel to formulate a viable plan for who will rule Gaza after the war.
I think Gallant is trying to find a way to button all of this up before it snowballs. That’s not me necessarily agreeing with his position more than it’s an attempt to read it.
The ICJ duly ordered Israel in its January 26 orders to “prevent and punish” incitement to genocide, an explicit prohibition of the Genocide Convention.
But Israeli officials have continued to make incendiary comments about operations in Gaza, and the new South African application references fresh, highly problematic comments by ultranationalist Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich who was quoted by Haaretz at the end of April as saying “There are no half-measures. Rafah, Deir al-Balah, Nusseirat – total annihilation.”
Given the urgency with which the court has called the new hearings, it could issue orders on the application as early as next week, Kaplinsky said.
War cabinet minister Benny Gantz comes to Defense Minister Yoav Gallant’s defense, amidst calls for his termination after he challenged Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Gaza policy in a nationally televised address.
“The defense minister speaks the truth, the leadership’s responsibility is to do the right thing for the country, at any cost,” he says in a statement.
originally posted by: Irishhaf
time for israel to govern gaza is long passed, to many years of indoctrination have occurred.
They will have to find someone else to run that snip show.
originally posted by: YourHighness
a reply to: CriticalStinker
I think Gallant is trying to find a way to button all of this up before it snowballs. That’s not me necessarily agreeing with his position more than it’s an attempt to read it.
Makes sense. The political critter in him might also be hedging his bets publicly now, with things taking a new turn at the ICJ.
The ICJ duly ordered Israel in its January 26 orders to “prevent and punish” incitement to genocide, an explicit prohibition of the Genocide Convention.
But Israeli officials have continued to make incendiary comments about operations in Gaza, and the new South African application references fresh, highly problematic comments by ultranationalist Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich who was quoted by Haaretz at the end of April as saying “There are no half-measures. Rafah, Deir al-Balah, Nusseirat – total annihilation.”
Given the urgency with which the court has called the new hearings, it could issue orders on the application as early as next week, Kaplinsky said.
ICJ’s urgent hearings over IDF’s Rafah operation spell more trouble for Israel
A growing rift within the Israeli government over the governance of Gaza after the war has become a 'colossal game of chicken' between rival factions who are each waiting for the other to make a mistake, according to Israeli political commentator Dr Ori Goldberg. He spoke with France 24's Mark Owen and said that Israelis have trouble articulating a critique of Netanyahu's management of the war and that as long as the war continues, Netanyahu continues to be safe in power.