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Caroline Glick: Israel is on its own against Iran – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on August 30, 2022

It now seems all but certain that U.S. President Joe Biden will conclude his deal with Iran. In this scenario, Israel cannot expect any significant assistance from the United States in diminishing its dangers. Israel also cannot expect to change American policy in any substantive way until after a different president is elected. This is regardless of the results of the midterm elections.

Therefore, if concrete measures arent taken during this interim period, Iran will enter the so-called zone of immunity. It will have enough military nuclear capability to operate both directly and through its proxies under a nuclear umbrella. And Israel will face a threat environment it will be hard-pressed to handle.

This is the upshot of a must-see discussion of the current state of play in the Biden administrations nuclear diplomacy on this weeks Mideast News Hour, with Caroline Glick hosting Richard Goldberg, a senior adviser at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.

Goldberg was a senior official in the National Security Council during the Trump administration. Among other things, he was charged with dealing with Iran.

A deal worse than the 2015 JCPOA

Goldberg sets out the known contents of the new deal. He demonstrates how it is categorically differentand worsethan the so-called Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, the nuclear deal that Barack Obama concluded with Iran in 2015.

The analyst explains the weakness of the deals restrictions on Irans nuclear operations. He stresses how the restrictions are inadequate regarding both their duration and substance. He and Glick discuss the mechanisms built into the deal which give Iran power to extort still more concessions, even after the negotiations are over, as well as how the deal minimizes congressional oversight. This includes the ability of Congress to legislate new sanctions against Iran.

Finally, they discuss where this deal leaves Iran vis--vis Israel, and how devastating it is for the survival of the Jewish state.

How Israel views the new agreement

The episode also addresses the ongoing policy debate between the Lapid-Gantz government and opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu, the roots of which are nearly 50 years old and go to the heart of how Israel views Americas commitment to its security.

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Caroline Glick: Israel is on its own against Iran - Cleveland Jewish News

Y-mAbs Therapeutics (YMAB) and Takeda (TAK) Granted Marketing Authorization in Israel for DANYELZA – StreetInsider.com

Posted By on August 30, 2022

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Y-mAbs Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: YMAB) a commercial-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on the development and commercialization of novel, antibody-based therapeutic products for the treatment of cancer and Takeda Israel, a wholly owned subsidiary of Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited (NYSE: TAK), announced today that the Israeli Ministry of Health has approved DANYELZA in Israel for the treatment, in combination with granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), of pediatric patients 1 year of age and older and adult patients with relapsed or refractory high-risk neuroblastoma in the bone or bone marrow who have demonstrated a partial response, minor response, or stable disease to prior therapy.

In Israel, DANYELZA is expected to be commercialized by Takeda Israel, under the exclusive license and distribution agreement entered in 2020 between Takeda Israel and the Company.

The regulatory approval of DANYELZA in Israel represents our first marketing authorization outside of the U.S. and is a milestone for our collaboration with Takeda and more importantly for the pediatric patients we are dedicated to serving, said Thomas Gad, President, and Interim Chief Executive Officer. The approval in Israel further demonstrates our commitment to expanding the reach of our commercial stage products internationally to patients with unmet medical needs.

We are extremely excited by the approval of DANYELZA in Israel, said Arie Kramer, General Manager of Takeda Israel. This registration, following the expedited reimbursement of the product last December by the Israeli Ministry of Health, allowing Takeda and Y-mAbs to offer a new innovative treatment for pediatric neuroblastoma patients in Israel, is in alignment with Takedas vision of Better Health and Brighter Future to every patient in the world.

Researchers at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK) developed DANYELZA, which is exclusively licensed by MSK to Y-mAbs. As a result of this licensing arrangement, MSK has institutional financial interests in the compound.

About DANYELZA (naxitamab-gqgk)

DANYELZA (naxitamab-gqgk) is indicated, in combination with granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), for the treatment of pediatric patients 1 year of age and older and adult patients with relapsed or refractory high-risk neuroblastoma in the bone or bone marrow who have demonstrated a partial response, minor response, or stable disease to prior therapy. This indication was approved under accelerated approval based on overall response rate and duration of response. Continued approval for this indication may be contingent upon verification and description of clinical benefits in a confirmatory trial. DANYELZA includes a Boxed Warning for serious infusion-related reactions, such as cardiac arrest and anaphylaxis, and neurotoxicity, such as severe neuropathic pain and transverse myelitis. See full Prescribing Information for complete Boxed Warning and other important safety information.

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Y-mAbs Therapeutics (YMAB) and Takeda (TAK) Granted Marketing Authorization in Israel for DANYELZA - StreetInsider.com

Stand against Israel’s attack on Palestinian human rights organisations – rabble.ca

Posted By on August 30, 2022

In the early morning of August 18, 2022 Israeli Occupying Forces (IOF) raided the offices of six respected Palestinian human rights organisations.

The organisations were shut down after the raids. These organisations provide legal aid and confidential information was stolen from their premises.

The organizations that were targeted in the raid were

These Palestinian civil society organisations raised the alarm about the coming crackdown one year ago, when the Israeli defence minister designated these six well known West Bank Palestinian human rights organisations as terror organisations. Ireland was one of the few countries to censure Israel over the decision.

These organisations are respected around the world. Now that the people working in these organizations are facing arbitrary arrest, detention or worse for standing up for the rights of Palestinians

Al Haqhas been operating inPalestinesince 1979 and has actually been critical of both Israel and the Palestinian authority at times.

Addameerprovides support to Palestinian prisoners and detainees in Israeli prisons.

Defense for Children Internationalworks to monitor abuses of children and minors and their offices were already raided on July 29, 2021.

The Bisan Center for Research and Developmentstands for the rights of peasants inPalestineas does the Union of Agricultural Work Committees.

TheUnion of Palestinian Womens Committees was formed in 1980 to empower Palestinian women.

Al Haq has been posting all the statements of support which have been sent to date from organisations around the world.One which stood out was byGregg Carlstrom, a writer at The Economist: For Israel political pressure is diplomatic terror, boycotts are economic terror, and now civil society is terror as well. If youre Palestinian and you do anything to resist the occupation, its terrorism.

On November 3, 2021 the the Israeli military commander signed an order that outlawed the six Palestinian civil society organisations within the rest of West Bank as well. This means that the people working with or associated with these respected human rights organisations could be arrested for working with an illegal organisation.According to Al Haq: the military order is grounded in Article 84 of theDefense (Emergency) Regulations of 1945that was issued under the British Mandate and repealed shortly before the end of the Mandate. As Britain has categorically stated, Regulation 119 was already repealed under thePalestine(Revocations) Order-in-Council of 1948 and as such no longer applies.

On November 7, 2021 the Irish Foreign Minister issued a statement stating that Israel had not provided evidence to Ireland or the EU justifying this attack on international human rights. To date, this is the only country which has spoken out to defend the six organisations and human rights defenders inPalestine.

Al Haqis calling on the public to work on the following:

Of course, we must demand that the federal government and other public institutions in Canada take action as well if we have a chance of impacting the Trudeau governments history of turning a blind eye to Israels actions.

Related

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Stand against Israel's attack on Palestinian human rights organisations - rabble.ca

The South African solution will not work in Palestine Mondoweiss – Mondoweiss

Posted By on August 30, 2022

ANTI-COLONIAL RESISTANCE IN SOUTH AFRICA AND ISRAEL/PALESTINEIdentity, Nationalism, and Raceby Ran Greenstein244 pps. Routledge $128

Human rights organizations Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and BTselem have determined Israels rule of Palestinians meets the criteria for the internationally-designated crime of apartheid, a crime against humanity named after the system of laws that enshrined white-minority rule in South Africa between 1948 and 1994.

A new book by South African-Israeli sociologist Ran Greenstein, Anti-Colonial Resistance in South Africa and Israel/Palestine, is a natural source for the similarities and differences that exist between the human rights struggles of Israel/Palestine and South Africa.

Greenstein has previously in his career addressed the history of both the victory for majority rule in South Africa, and the history of anti-colonial resistance in Palestine, including a previous book from 2014, which traces, the small democratic movements overtaken by the momentum of Jewish nation-state nationalism (and the oppression that it required), from the onset of the Zionist project onward.

The purpose of this new book is to observe the differences and similarities in these particular versions of both colonialism and resistance.

One might think these could lead to envisioning how Israel/Palestine could experience a similar transition from an oppressive ethnonational state to democracy, as South Africa did. Yet Greensteins argument is slightly more sobering, concluding that Palestinians do not now have the traction to force a South African solution leading to a peaceful agreement modeled after the framework of majority rule with protections for minorities.

Greenstein explains his reasoning in his concluding chapters (after first taking us through a review of the histories of resistance in South Africa and Palestine). Here, Greenstein critiques the usefulness of settler colonialism as a label and an analytical category when applied to both South Africa and Palestine:

Its strongest point is also its weakest: it is applicable to a great diversity of conditions.

It can be applied to societies in which settlers overwhelmed the indigenous population to the point that it became negligible, no more that 23% of the population in the United States of America (USA), Canada, and Australia [and can be applied to places like] Kenya, Rhodesia, Algeria, Mozambique, and South Africa [where] indigenous people remained the bulk of the population and the main source of labour power.

Greenstein notes that Palestinians are demographically divided into four main groups citizens of Israel, residents of the occupied West Bank and Gaza, neighboring refugees, and the worldwide diaspora of Palestinians all with different priorities and ranges of activity.

In contrast to white South Africa, which was absolutely dependent on the labor of non-whites, Israel needs nothing from Palestinians except that they mostly leave and never return.

Even with the existence of solidarity between those groups, Greenstein argues that the record shows an inability on the part of these disparate communities to seriously threaten the continuation of the Zionist state and its dedication to Jewish control.

In contrast to white South Africa, which was absolutely dependent on the labor of non-whites, Israel needs nothing from Palestinians except that they mostly leave and never return. Labor from the West Bank (and previously, from Gaza) is useful but not essential.

Greenstein asserts that in the South African case, external boycott pressure against apartheid supplemented the robust power of years of organizing the African and colored workforce, together with a broad civil resistance movement led by the African National Congress.

He says that the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) campaign abroad, though admirable and worthwhile, cannot augment missing Palestinian power, and nor can it exert pressure on the Israeli regime on its own.

The Israel/Palestine system meets the definition of apartheid in international law but presents different challenges for the campaign against it than was the case for the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa. The most important of these is the challenge of effecting change from within when the bulk of the forces seeking such change are located without, both physically and conceptually.

In Greensteins opinion, expecting the same results as boycotts of white-ruled South Africa ends up ignoring the most important part of South Africas anti-apartheid strategy: the internal mass struggle to undermine and transform the political system from within.

Greenstein points out that throughout its history, white supremacy in South Africa was a means to ensure white prosperity, using black labour as its foundation. Apartheid was just an institutionalized continuation of that history, and a means of entrenching white domination.

In contrast, Zionist colonization was of the land, not the people.Hebrew labor and the Conquest of the Land were the main slogans during the era of the pre-1948 Yishuv.

Zionist projects meant armed Zionist settlements with Jewish-only workers, Jewish-only enterprises, Jewish-only commercial channels, and Jewish-only land purchases by the Jewish National Fund (ever since 1901) for the Jewish people, all of this being in service of creating a self-sufficient Jewish society that could operate independently of the indigenous Palestinian population, even before the Nakba.

Land bought by the Zionist organization meant tenant farmers were removed. This confirmed the meaning of Zionist immigration to Arabs as dislocation and beggary in their own country, as properties were turned to enterprises, intentionally to the exclusive benefit of Jews.

Understanding the nature of Jewish settlement organized by Zionist organizations makes clear why developing pressure for a resolution by mutual accommodation is elusive, as Zionist doctrines only value Jewish hegemony, as isolated as possible from Arabs, despite PR flim-flam.

Greenstein analyzes the difference as follows:

Israel/Palestine has experienced a different trajectory, producing two distinct ethno-national groups competing over territory and resources, without entering into relations of inter-dependence as was the case in South AfricaPolitical domination was primarily a means to an economic end in South Africa and an end in itself in Israel/Palestine.

There is one function that the population of the West Bank and Gaza serve for Israels biggest new industry world-wide arms and security technology sales. Jeff Halper describes the Palestinians residing there as the test bed for new product development.

The power of Israel to use, at will, a matrix of high-tech surveillance and targeted assasination, is refined and developed when it is used against Palestinian resistance, sumud, and bare human determination, as Mariam Barghouti has reported in her profile of Ibrahim Nabulsi, the lion of Nablus.

Greenstein diagrams the power relations in South Africa and Palestine in the twentieth century that reduced Palestinian resistance to individual martyrs with personal weapons against a technologically modern army, and to various militias that can fire low-grade rockets.

With much of its population exiled from Israel proper in 1947-48, the Palestinian resistance/liberation movement needed to organize in neighboring Arab states. This made the Palestinian resistance beholden to inconstant external allies that Israel had the resources to threaten or co-opt. He wonders if the movement would have done better to have had no support or at least have done no worse.

Outside support ultimately hobbled developing a unified Palestinian-centered front and goals, alternating between Palestinian, pan-Arab nationalist, religious-affiliated, international Communist, and big power politics imperatives.

Fatally, what joint Jewish-Arab organizing that does exist is not a mass movement. Greenstein points out that 100 years ofZionist work forced a rigid Jewish/non-Jewish binary in Palestine, forestalling significant alliances based on other shared interests and identities across that chasm.

A unifying set of articulated goals was one of the strengths of the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa. When the time came for negotiations there was an agreed set that could be forcefully demanded, with thought-through features of universal respect of rights that enabled white acceptance.

The ANC could offer both the credible threat of making apartheid governance impossible using labor actions and mass mobilizations and credible plans for a multi-racial democracy.

The basic thrust of Greensteins thesis is that something will have to change to end Israeli ethnonationalist domination from the river to the sea. This conclusion is not bright and hopeful. The nationalisms of Palestine and Zionist Israel have no overlap that can lead to foreseeing a South African-style negotiated resolution based on a shared identity between dominator and subjugated.

This conclusion has political implications. The project of Israeli settlement beyond the 1949 armistice lines means the time of the internationally-favored two-state solution is over. In fact, it was never really a serious Israeli goal to begin with.

The now many human rights reports that have found Israel guilty of the crime of apartheid have also highlighted how the pressing need for Palestinian freedom and political rights is a direct mirror of the imperative for freedom that animated the anti-apartheid movement int South Africa, including the need to equitably share resources, but without any obvious road to that goal except through bloody cataclysm.

It may seem that Greenstein is indulging in an academic exercise by comparing what South Africa was able to achieve to the struggle of Palestine. But without intoxicating rhetoric and cheer leading, he ventures his consideration of Palestines struggle against its own versions of apartheid and settler colonialism, and whether any common interests can cross the rigid Zionist distinction of Jewish Israeli and Arab Palestinian.

This book is no polemic; it does not aim to argue that the partition in 1947 was wrong, or that the Nakba was a historic crime, or that the occupation is a continuation of that Zionist original sin. Those are all given.

Justice must be accompanied by the exercise of effective pressure in order to realize it. The question then becomes: by what forces?

Rather, the assumption and implicit exploration of the book is that proving the justice of the Palestinian cause will do nothing alone. Justice must be accompanied by the exercise of effective pressure in order to realize it. The question then becomes: by what forces?

One may very well ask at this point what relevance South Africa holds for the future of Palestine? Does Greensteins survey of organizing strategies in both countries matter?

For this author, it seems that the example of South Africa is relevant because it is a case of brutal repression based on race. Concerted pressure and negotiation created a new country based on shared citizenship with multiple identities.

Its worth at least a look at how that happened, considering the suffering built into the alternatives for Israel/Palestine an ugly situation of brutal repression based on ethnicity, and a constant train of martyrs.

This movement needs a newsroom that can cover all of Palestine and the global Palestinian freedom movement.

The Israeli government and its economic, cultural, and political backers here in the U.S. have made a decades-long investment in silencing and delegitimizing Palestinian voices.

Were building a powerful challenge to those mainstream norms, and proving that listening to Palestinians is essential for moving the needle.

Become a donor today and support our critical work.

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The South African solution will not work in Palestine Mondoweiss - Mondoweiss

Heatwave In Israel, Palestine: Residents Hit The Streets To Beat The Heat – Outlook India

Posted By on August 30, 2022

Israel and the Palestinian territories are in the grip of a heat wave this week, with temperatures hitting 40 Celsius in Jerusalem, and 45 Celsius in the Jordan Valley.

Updated: 30 Aug 2022 1:51 pm

A man enjoys a day on the beach with his daughter in Gaza City.

Israelis and Palestinians swim in Ein Haniya spring, in Jerusalem.

Palestinians cool off at a water canal in the West Bank village of al-Auja in the Jordan Valley.

People cool off in a fountain just outside Jerusalem's Old City.

A man rides his horse as the sun sets during a hot day in Mediterranean Sea in Gaza City.

Palestinians cool off at a water canal in the West Bank village of al-Auja in the Jordan Valley.

People cool off in a fountain just outside Jerusalem's Old City.

A Palestinian man jumps into the water to cool off at a water canal in the West Bank village of al-Auja in the Jordan Valley.

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Heatwave In Israel, Palestine: Residents Hit The Streets To Beat The Heat - Outlook India

Palestine bride in her wedding dress arrested by Israel police – Middle East Monitor

Posted By on August 30, 2022

A Palestinian woman has been arrested by Israeli police on the day of her wedding, while still wearing her bridal dress, according to her lawyer.

Shadi Thabbah told local media that his client, who was not named, was detained and led away by Israeli police for questioning, after the wedding was raided in the predominantly Arab city of Arrabat Al-Battuf in northern Israel.

Thabbah added that that police wrongly suspected that the groom, who reportedly had a court order barring him from being in the city, was in the area. The attorney said the police held his client for several hours for "disrupting investigations" but was later released that evening, to be placed under house arrest for the next five days.

"I don't understand which investigation the bride disrupted; the groom was not present and he was not arrested, so what investigations are the police talking about?" Thabbah told Al-Jarmaq News.

Footage has been shared on social media showing the bride being escorted by police officers into a police vehicle, drawing a slew of online criticism.

Israeli broadcaster, KAN, reported that "a bride was arrested for questioning during her wedding when she was wearing a white dress in the town of Araba," adding that "the groom was asked to be interrogated in the past few days and removed from the settlement and, when the police arrived, he fled and they arrested the bride. "

Israel: rights groups appeal against travel ban on Arab citizens

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Palestine bride in her wedding dress arrested by Israel police - Middle East Monitor

A Message to Canadian Leaders: There’s No Room for Vanity in the Struggle for Palestinian Justice – Palestine Chronicle

Posted By on August 30, 2022

Recently two Canadian Members of Parliament (MP), Yaara Saks and Anthony Housefather expressed their strong disapproval of Robin Wettlaufer, Representative of Canada to the Palestinian Authority. Having had a pleasant meeting with him, she described Palestinian official Jibril Rajoub as a friend to Canada.

The tweet itself, from Saks account, reads: Myself and @AHousefather vehemently object to Jibril Rajoub being described as friend of Canada. He has been charged with glorifying terrorism, and is guilty of inciting hatred and violence against Israelis by politicizing sport. He does not share our values as Canadians.

This further reinforced for me the lack of moral leadership in Canada.

Both MPs were quick to condemn Wettlaufer, whose sympathies for Rajoubapart from his personal or political pastwere primarily a reflection of the meeting. For things much worse, however, such as early Augusts bombing of Gaza that took the lives of 49 Palestinians17 of whom were childrenand the assassination of Palestinian journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, they said nothing. And its obvious why: Israel was in both cases the perpetrator.

We cannot expect the Canadian government ever act on behalf of, much less in solidarity, with Palestine so long as they either stay silent on the injustices theyre facing or, like Saks and Housefather, only condemn Palestinians. It amounts to protecting Israel for its crimes against humanity while seizing every opportunity, large or small, to frame Palestinians in a negative and dishonest light.

Over time that has an effect. The public, looking up to these leaders, will believe Palestinians are bad and Israel is good. More specifically it reinforces the myth that Palestinians are terrorists or intent on the destruction of Israel while the violence while the violence the latter perpetuates against them is necessary, to ensure its security.

Particularly troubling is Saks. Not only does she fail to ever condemn Israela priority for any elected official of a liberal democracy. She has also declared herself a proud Zionist.

We need to take this seriously. Zionism is not simply an ideology, belonging only to the realm of ideas or abstractions. If it were, perhaps itd not be objectionable in so far as the idea that Jews are entitled to a homeland has nothing nefarious about it. But Zionismhappening outside the headis nefarious. Its manifested in the criminal brutality Israel commits against the Palestinian people. Moreover, how the culprits here identifyreligiously or otherwiseis irrelevant. All that matters is that Palestinians are being murdered and that those casually responsible be held accountable. Likewise, you are free not to like this article. But for me to attack you as being anti-Italian on account of that is preposterous.

Saks, like other apologists for the Israeli state, has shown no urgent regard for the daily suffering and oppression of the Palestinian people. Instead, they invest great efforts in amplifying what offends them and they deem a threat to the existence of Israel, which in reality are legitimate criticisms of the state of Israel (not the religion it purports to uphold). It smacks of paranoia. Yes, people dont like the actions of Israel but theyve got good reason. Theyre killing innocent Palestinians.

Insisting that Israels existence hangs in the balance is disingenuous. Its aim is to deflect attention away from the ethnic cleansing of Palestine. This distraction gains force when Israeli apologists profess to be committed to various social justice causesthe rights of women, people of color (except for Palestinians), the LGBTQIA community, etc. Its a rather convenient ruse. As this happens people are not thinking about Israel-the-criminal but Israel-the-progressive country. Its an illusion. You can publicly champion all the social justice causes you want. But if you continue to endorse the ethnic cleansing of Palestine, including implicitly when you fail to use your position of power to denounce it, youre up to no good. Youre being a moral fraud.

Upholding human rights is an either/or proposition. You either want them for all or for none. When your actions or words say that you believe in human rights but not Palestinians, you lose all credibility as a person who cares for social justice. Youre doing it so people like you. There are fewer things I can think of as dishonorable.

Social justice can never be a vanity contest.

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A Message to Canadian Leaders: There's No Room for Vanity in the Struggle for Palestinian Justice - Palestine Chronicle

Palestine Muay Thai fighter wins the Victory Road Championships – Middle East Monitor

Posted By on August 30, 2022

The Palestinian Muay Thai fighter, Salah Al-Hajj won the Victory Road Championships held in the Libyan capital, Tripoli.

Organised by businessman, Mohammed Al-Nashar, on Saturday night at the Al-Mina Sports Hall, Salah defeated the Cypriot player, Andreas Foucault, the Lebanese, Mohamed Attia and the Jordanian, Mahdi Awad.

In an Instagram post, Salah expressed appreciation to his coach, Muhammad Al-Gharbi, and all members of his training academy, the Sidah Company.

Moreover, he dedicated his victory to Ibrahim Nabulsi, Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades Commander in Nablus, who Israel assassinated earlier this month.

The occupation forces stormed Nablus from several axes and surrounded a house where Al-Nabulsi was located, firing at it.

He wrote: "I thank all my loved ones and I would like to dedicate this victory to our Palestinian people and to the spirit of the martyr, Ibrahim Al-Nablus."

"I renew my belonging to my country, Palestine," he added.

READ: Algerian silver medallist waves Palestine flag at World Athletics Championships

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Palestine Muay Thai fighter wins the Victory Road Championships - Middle East Monitor

Progressive candidate Maxwell Frost hit by pro-Palestinian group, accused of shifting stance on Israel – Fox News

Posted By on August 30, 2022

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Progressive congressional candidate Maxwell Alejandro Frost is being criticized by a pro-Palestinian group that accused him of lying to them about his stance on Israel.

Frost made national headlines last week when he won the Democratic primary in Florida's 10th district in Orlando and is poised to fill the solid blue seat in the November midterms as Rep. Val Demings hopes to unseat Republican Sen. Marco Rubio. If elected, the 25-year-old activist could make history as the first Gen-Z lawmaker in Congress.

However, Frost's ascendency has fueled outrage from the Florida Palestine Network (FPN), which put out a scathing statement against the candidate on the eve of his primary.

FPN was reacting to a policy paper from the Frost campaign obtained by Jewish Insider which outlined his call for a two-state solution between Israel and the Palestinians, his commitment to supporting foreign aid to the Jewish state and his opposition to the Boycott, Divest and Sanction (BDS) movement, which he says is "extremely problematic and undermines the chances of peace."

KAROLINE LEVITT HOPES TO SHOW YOUNG VOTERS DEMOCRATS' POLICIES ARE TO BLAME FOR OUT-OF-REACH AMERICAN DREAM

Progressive congressional candidate Maxwell Alejandro Frost at a campaign event. Photo courtesy of the Frost For Congress campaign. (Frost For Congress)

In a statement released last week on social media, FPN declared Frost "has already violated his commitments to protecting and fight for human rights for all" with his position paper to the Jewish Insider.

The group alleged that during a March 9 interview with Frost, he "committed to ending military aid to Israel and supporting the grassroots global movement of BDS," adding that he "also promised that no Position Paper will be submitted without working with FPN and the approval of FPN."

TWO MORE NYT PALESTINIAN FREELANCERS CAUGHT PRAISING HITLER, TERRORISTS AFTER PAPER CUTS TIES WITH ANOTHER

"On August 11, 2022, the FPN was shocked to learn of his anti-Palestinian Position Paper via the Jewish Insider Article, where it was revealed Maxwell Frost had lied and deceived his early supporters many of whom were his only supporters early on in his candidacy and built the foundations of his campaign," FPN wrote. "The Florida Palestine Network condemns Maxwell Frost and demands an immediate apology to the members of FPN and Palestinians, accountability, and a recommitment to his pledge to centering Palestinian human rights To use FPN's organizing success as a stepping stool and become anti-Palestinian is disturbing and unacceptable. This is not who we want representing us in the halls of Congress."

In the paper FPN objected to, Frost addressed Palestinian rights, writing, "Our commitmnent [sic] to Israeli security must run parallel to our commitment to ensuring the dignity and humanity of the Palestinian people," he also called for "robust US assistance that benefits the Palestinian people and is in compliance with Taylor Force Act."

Progressive candidate Maxwell Frost could make history as the first Gen-Z lawmaker to be elected to Congress (Photo courtesy of Frost For Congress). (Frost For Congress)

The Frost campaign confirmed to Jewish Insider that the meeting between Frost and FPN took place but the candidate did "not agree with FPNs accounting of the events."

"Maxwell is someone who wants to lean in with different folks on a wide variety of issues," the spokesperson told Jewish Insider. "He believes that a two-state solution, and subsequent policies that lead to it, is the strongest and quickest path toward peace for both Israelis and Palestinians."

NYT SEVERS TIES WITH PALESTINIAN FREELANCER FOLLOWING SOCIAL MEDIA POSTS CALLING TO KILL JEWS

"After many conversations with people of different opinions on the issue over several months," the Frost spokesperson continued, "Maxwell drafted a position paper and then solicited feedback from individuals and organizations that held various perspectives."

The Frost campaign did not immediately respond to Fox News' request for comment.

Democratic candidate Maxwell Frost hopes to fill the congressional seat being left vacant by Rep. Val Demings, who hopes to unseat Marco Rubio in the Senate. (Frost For Congress)

In his policy paper, Frost outlined his support for the Israel Relations Normalization Act building upon the Trump-era Abraham Accords and denounced the "scourge of antisemitism" in the U.S.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Frost also laid out his stance on Iran, saying that the Obama-era Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) "certainly fell short in ways, but it blocked Irans ability to build a nuclear weapon, which was an important success." He expressed support for President Biden to restore the JACPOA but stressed "we must make it longer, stronger, and broader to cover not just the issue of nuclear weapons, but also the full range of destabilizing and threatening actions Iran engages in, like Irans ballistic missile program and the countrys support for terrorist proxies like Hezbollah and Hamas."

Joseph A. Wulfsohn is a media reporter for Fox News Digital. Story tips can be sent to joseph.wulfsohn@fox.com and on Twitter: @JosephWulfsohn.

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Progressive candidate Maxwell Frost hit by pro-Palestinian group, accused of shifting stance on Israel - Fox News

Palestine wants to step up brotherhood ties, in Merdeka message – The Star Online

Posted By on August 30, 2022

KUALA LUMPUR: Palestinian Ambassador to Malaysia Walid Abu Ali (pic) congratulated the government and the people of Malaysia on its 2022 National Day which will be celebrated on Wednesday (Aug 31).

"Praying to Allah the Almighty to bestow Malaysia and its brotherly people with happiness, success, progress and prosperity," he said in a statement on Tuesday (Aug 30).

He reiterated the determination of the Palestinian government and its people to further strengthen and bolster the existing bilateral relations that were based on brotherhood and mutual respect and achieve substantial and tangible progress in every possible avenue of cooperation for the two nations.

Abu Ali noted that Palestinians highly appreciated the unwavering steadfast support of Malaysia towards the Palestinian Just Cause.

After a two-year lapse due to the Covid-19 pandemic restrictions, Malaysia's National Day main celebration will be back on Aug 31 at Dataran Merdeka (Independence Square), here. - Bernama

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Palestine wants to step up brotherhood ties, in Merdeka message - The Star Online


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