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Hinting at Syria strikes, Gallant says Israel will ‘expand the campaign’ against Hezbollah – The Times of Israel

Posted By on March 30, 2024

Hinting at Israels alleged overnight airstrike in Syria, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant says the military will expand the campaign [against Hezbollah] and increase the rate of attacks in the north.

Israel is turning from defending to pursuing Hezbollah, we will reach wherever the organization operates, in Beirut, Damascus and in more distant places, Gallant says following an assessment at the IDF Northern Command in Safed.

In the past day, a top Hezbollah commander was killed in an IDF drone strike in southern Lebanon, and five other Hezbollah terrorists were among 38 dead in alleged Israeli airstrikes in Syrias Aleppo.

Gallant says he observed the strike on Ali Naim, the deputy commander of Hezbollahs rocket unit, this morning.

The one responsible for the serious damage in Lebanon is Hezbollah and the one responsible for the many casualties in the Hezbollah group is [Hassan] Nasrallah personally. They have over 320 terrorists killed, and we will exact a price for any action that comes out of Lebanon, he says.

Wherever we need to act, we will act, Gallant adds.

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Hinting at Syria strikes, Gallant says Israel will 'expand the campaign' against Hezbollah - The Times of Israel

Biden administration said to approve transfer of over 2000 bombs, 25 F-35s to Israel – The Times of Israel

Posted By on March 30, 2024

The United States in recent days authorized the transfer of billions of dollars worth of bombs and fighter jets to Israel even as it publicly expresses concerns about an anticipated military offensive in Rafah, The Washington Post reports.

Citing Pentagon and State Department officials, the American daily says the new arms package includes 1,800 MK-84 2,000-pound bombs and 500 MK-82 500-pound bombs, along with 25 F-35s that were initially approved as part of a larger package by Congress in 2008. Israel requested the third squadron of 25 F-35s last July, which when delivered will bring the total size of the fleet to 75.

Washington gives $3.8 billion in annual military assistance to Israel, its longtime ally. The US has been rushing air defenses and munitions to Israel as it fights against Hamas in Gaza, but some Democrats and Arab American groups have criticized the Biden administrations steadfast support of Israel, and called for leveraging military aid.

We have continued to support Israels right to defend itself, a White House official tells The Washington Post. Conditioning aid has not been our policy.

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Biden administration said to approve transfer of over 2000 bombs, 25 F-35s to Israel - The Times of Israel

Perspective | Van Hollen pushes Israel for more Gaza aid and against ‘war crimes’ – The Washington Post

Posted By on March 30, 2024

Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) isnt known as a Capitol Hill bomb-thrower, making grandiose statements for the publicity.

So its especially noteworthy when he describes Israels blocking of food for children in Gaza as a war crime.

His genial personality hasnt mitigated his fierce, persistent push for Israel to allow Gaza more humanitarian aid and for Washington, Israels chief military supplier, to act decisively if it doesnt.

Van Hollens steady stream of statements on the Mideast conflict and his behind-the-scenes White House discussions have been informed and fueled by his January trip to the Rafah crossing from Egypt to Israel. There, he visited a warehouse with necessities that Israel stopped from going into Gaza, including maternity kits, water purifier pills, water filtration devices and solar-powered desalinization units.

United Nations officials have warned that about one-quarter of Gazas population faces imminent famine and that almost everyone there suffers from woefully inadequate humanitarian food assistance to survive. Israels retaliation against Gaza has killed more than 32,000 people. Thats about 27 times the number who died Oct. 7 when Hamas attackers killed 1,200 people in Israel and kidnapped about 250, including around 100 who remain captive. Van Hollens sharp criticism of Israel does not include accusations of genocide.

The Federal Insider talked with Van Hollen last week about the conflict in his Hart Senate Office Building suite, which was bathed in natural light even on a cool, cloudy day. Here are edited excerpts from that interview.

In a Senate speech last month, you said kids in Gaza are now dying from the deliberate withholding of food that is a war crime. It is a textbook war crime. That makes those who orchestrate it war criminals. Are you accusing Israel of war crimes? Were you saying Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is a war criminal?

Im saying that those who are involved in deliberately restricting humanitarian assistance into Gaza are violating international humanitarian law. And you have to go through a process to determine which individuals. But I can assure you that people like [National Security Minister Itamar] Ben-Gvir and [Finance Minister Bezalel] Smotrich, who are some of the most extreme-right members of the government, have said that Israel should stop delivering humanitarian assistance, and they themselves have taken themselves, have taken actions to prevent the flow of humanitarian assistance into Gaza.

Is the United States complicit in a war crime because it continues to provide the arms that are bombing Gaza?

I think the United States needs to be very careful, not to be caught up in that. Which is why I continue to encourage the administration to take stronger and bolder action. The Biden administration and the president have actively been trying to improve the situation with respect to access to humanitarian assistance. Theyve been trying. My point is that theyve only been marginally successful, and therefore we need to use more levers of our influence to accomplish our goals.

The March 11 letter to President Biden from you and other senators said the Netanyahu government is in violation of the Foreign Assistance Act, which says, No assistance shall be furnished to any country when it is made known to the President that the government of such country prohibits or otherwise restricts, directly or indirectly, the transport or delivery of United States humanitarian assistance. Isnt it the U.S. government that is in violation of the law because it is Washington that provides the aid?

What we said was, the way that the Netanyahu government was restricting humanitarian aid into Gaza and within Gaza, violating the terms of U.S. law. Youre absolutely right, its up to the U.S. government to apply American law. And we wrote to the president saying, Youre aware of this humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza. Theres a current law on the books. Its title is the Humanitarian Aid Corridor Act, and it needs to be applied under these circumstances.

You were directly involved in crafting President Bidens National Security Memorandum/NSM-20, which requires nations receiving U.S. military aid to act in a manner consistent with international humanitarian law. The Washington Post reported that Israel provided written assurances that its use of U.S.-supplied defense equipment does not violate international humanitarian or U.S. human rights law. Do you believe those assurances?

With respect specifically to the obligations to allow access to humanitarian assistance, I dont believe that the Netanyahu government is in compliance with the requirements of National Security Memorandum 20.

Do you think the United States should stop military aid to Israel, except for the air defense mechanisms that youve supported?

The purpose of the National Security Memorandum 20 is not to cut off all assistance, but its purpose is to use our influence to achieve our goals. So, if that means pausing the delivery of bombs to be used in Gaza until the Netanyahu government meets the terms of NSM-20 and allows more humanitarian assistance in Gaza, yes, I think we should use our leverage to make sure more people dont starve to death in Gaza.

The president is clearly trying to limit civilian casualties. Hes trying to get more assistance in. So the question becomes, if youre unsuccessful at achieving those goals, at what point do you no longer provide the bombs that are being used in Gaza?

Do you think were at that point?

We do need to use our leverage when it comes to military support, nondefensive military support, to prevent more people from starving to death in Gaza. Yes. I think we do need to do that.

According to two recent polls, about 80 percent of Jewish Israelis say Israel should not take into consideration the suffering of the Palestinians as long as hostages are held in Gaza. Doesnt that bolster Netanyahu and make the course you advocate harder.

I think that right now, Prime Minister Netanyahus overriding interest is his own political ambition and not the interests of the people of Israel. As Ive said, the war against Hamas is just in the sense that Israel, of course, is within its rights and I would say has a duty to defend its people after the horrific October 7th attacks. But a just war nevertheless must be fought justly. Among the many obstacles to peace is Netanyahu specifically because Netanyahu has very publicly rebuffed President Bidens call for creating some light at the end of this dark tunnel with a two-state solution.

How do you characterize the Biden administrations approach to this conflict?

The Biden administration has not made the most effective use of the tools that we have in order to implement the presidents own request. In other words, the president has repeatedly requested that the Netanyahu government take certain actions. And unfortunately, the Biden administration, for the most part, has been rebuffed. And so my view is that the credibility of the Biden administration and the United States requires that we back up our requests with real action.

And real action would be pausing military assistance until aid is allowed freely into Gaza?

[Pausing] offensive military assistance, like bombs. Again, the goal is not to cut off military assistance. The goal is to ensure that people dont die of starvation in Gaza.

The White House and the Israeli Embassy did not respond to Van Hollens statements about military assistance.

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Perspective | Van Hollen pushes Israel for more Gaza aid and against 'war crimes' - The Washington Post

Israeli arrested in Malaysia for attempts to assassinate another Israeli – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on March 30, 2024

An Israeli citizen was arrested on Wednesday in Malaysia on the grounds that he entered the country to carry out an assassination, with a police report saying that the man admitted that his goal was to assassinate another Israeli, Walla reported on Thursday, citing Malaysian media reports.

According to reports in Malaysia, the detainee's identity is Shalom Avitan, at least 36 years old, from Bnei Brak.

The Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem has been notified about the arrest, but no further details were provided.

Israelis are prohibited from entering Malaysia, and the investigation revealed that he entered the country using a French passport and only presented his Israeli passport during his questioning. Avitan entered the country two weeks prior, on March 12, through the capital's Kuala Lumpur International Airport on a flight via the United Arab Emirates.

The man was also caught in possession of six guns and 200 bullets, and the background of the attempted assassination is reportedly a family dispute. Three of the guns were loaded.

Malaysian authorities insist that this is not purely a criminal incident and that the circumstances differ.

"We don't buy his story," a Malaysian police commissioner said at a press conference, emphasizing that the security of key figures in Malaysia, such as the prime minister and king, had increased. "What's worse here is that the arrest took place during the ongoing conflict between Palestine and Israel, and we are vigilant about the security of the government, the king, and other non-governmental organizations, whose security we have to take into account." He said that the weapons and ammunition were purchased by the Israelis using cryptocurrency and that investigations are ongoing to locate the recipient of the payment.

The Federal Police in Malaysia reported that they made the arrest at a hotel in the prestigious Jalan Ampang district in the country's capital, Kuala Lumpur and that they seized the weapons intended for the assassination. The police also added that in the days leading up to the arrest, Avitan changed hotels three times, and this was already the fourth hotel he stayed at, according to the Walla report.

"We believe that the suspect did not act alone and has a local connection here whose identity we have not yet ascertained," the Malaysian police commissioner also said, adding that the police are assisting at the French embassy.

When local media asked if the police do not rule out the possibility of the suspect belonging to Israeli intelligence, the commissioner said that "the ongoing investigations are also leading in this direction."

Malaysian media also reported that the Prime Minister, Anwar Ibrahim, condemned the "atrocities of Israel towards Palestine."

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Israeli arrested in Malaysia for attempts to assassinate another Israeli - The Jerusalem Post

Opinion | Imagining a Different Gaza War – The New York Times

Posted By on March 30, 2024

There seems to be a broad consensus atop the Democratic Party about the war in Gaza, structured around two propositions. First, after the attacks of Oct. 7, Israel has the right to defend itself and defeat Hamas. Second, the way Israel is doing this is over the top, in President Bidens words. The vast numbers of dead and starving children are gut wrenching, the devastation is overwhelming, and its hard not to see it all as indiscriminate.

Which leads to an obvious question: If the current Israeli military approach is inhumane, whats the alternative? Is there a better military strategy Israel can use to defeat Hamas without a civilian blood bath? In recent weeks, Ive been talking with security and urban warfare experts and others studying Israels approach to the conflict and scouring foreign policy and security journals in search of such ideas.

The thorniest reality that comes up is that this war is like few others because the crucial theater is underground. Before the war, Israelis estimated Hamas had dug around 100 miles of tunnels. Hamas leaders claimed they had a much more expansive network, and it turns out they were telling the truth. The current Israeli estimates range from 350 to about 500 miles of tunnels. The tunnel network, according to Israel, is where Hamas lives, holds hostages, stores weapons, builds missiles and moves from place to place. By some Israeli estimates, building these tunnels cost the Gazan people about a billion dollars, which could have gone to building schools and starting companies.

Hamas built many of its most important military and strategic facilities under hospitals, schools and so on. Its server farm, for example, was built under the offices of the U.N. relief agency in Gaza City, according to the Israeli military.

Daphne Richemond-Barak, the author of Underground Warfare, writes in Foreign Policy magazine: Never in the history of tunnel warfare has a defender been able to spend months in such confined spaces. The digging itself, the innovative ways Hamas has made use of the tunnels and the groups survival underground for this long have been unprecedented.

In other words, in this war, Hamas is often underground, the Israelis are often aboveground, and Hamas seeks to position civilians directly between them. As Barry Posen, a professor at the security studies program at M.I.T., has written, Hamass strategy could be described as human camouflage and more ruthlessly as human ammunition. Hamass goal is to maximize the number of Palestinians who die and in that way build international pressure until Israel is forced to end the war before Hamas is wiped out. Hamass survival depends on support in the court of international opinion and on making this war as bloody as possible for civilians, until Israel relents.

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Opinion | Imagining a Different Gaza War - The New York Times

Days After U.N. Cease-Fire Resolution, Has Anything Changed in Gaza? – The New York Times

Posted By on March 30, 2024

Although the United Nations Security Council passed a resolution on Monday that demands an immediate cease-fire in the Gaza Strip, it remains to be seen whether it will have a concrete effect on the war or prove merely to be a political statement.

The measure, Resolution 2728, followed three previous attempts that the United States had blocked. It passed by 14 votes, after the United States abstained from voting and did not employ its veto.

The resolution also calls for the unconditional release of all hostages and the end to barriers to humanitarian aid.

Israels government condemned the vote, and early indications are that the U.N.s action has changed little on the ground or spurred diplomatic progress.

Days after the vote, heres a look at what has changed and what might happen next:

Senior Israeli officials said that they would ignore the call for a cease-fire, arguing that it was imperative to pursue the war until it has dismantled the military wing of Hamas, the militant group that led the Oct. 7 attack on Israel.

Since Monday, there has been no apparent shift in the military campaign. Israels air force continues to pound Gaza with strikes, and Hamas is still launching attacks.

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Days After U.N. Cease-Fire Resolution, Has Anything Changed in Gaza? - The New York Times

Ireland to Intervene in South Africa’s Genocide Case Against Israel at the World Court – The New York Times

Posted By on March 30, 2024

Ireland plans to file an argument in South Africas genocide case against Israel at the International Court of Justice, according to the Irish government, making the move as the country has strongly condemned Israels actions against civilians in Gaza.

South Africa has brought a case against Israel in the I.C.J., the United Nations highest court, arguing that Israel is committing genocide, a claim Israel has denied. Ireland did not outline the argument it planned to advance, but the countrys lawmakers have made repeated calls to prioritize the protection of civilians in Gaza.

The United Nations allows countries to intervene in proceedings if they are parties to the United Nations 1948 Genocide Convention. Michel Martin, the Republic of Irelands foreign minister and deputy leader, said that officials were working on a declaration of intervention in the case that, if approved by the Irish government, would be filed with the court, in The Hague.

It is for the court to determine whether genocide is being committed, Mr. Martin said on Wednesday. But I want to be clear in reiterating what I have said many times in the last few months: What we saw on 7 October in Israel, and what we are seeing in Gaza now, represents the blatant violation of international humanitarian law on a mass scale.

He urged Israel to call a cease-fire, and then listed a number of pressing issues, including the purposeful withholding of humanitarian assistance to civilians, the targeting of civilians and of civilian infrastructure and the collective punishment of an entire population.

The list goes on, he said. It has to stop. The view of the international community is clear. Enough is enough.

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Ireland to Intervene in South Africa's Genocide Case Against Israel at the World Court - The New York Times

Commando killed, 16 other soldiers wounded during fighting in southern Gaza – The Times of Israel

Posted By on March 30, 2024

The Israel Defense Forces announces the death of a soldier killed during fighting against Hamas in the Khan Younis area of the southern Gaza Strip earlier today.

He is named as Sgt. First Class Alon Kudriashov, 21, of the Commando Brigades Egoz unit, from Modiin.

His death brings the toll of slain troops in the ground offensive against Hamas to 254.

Kudriashov was killed and 16 other troops of the Egoz unit were wounded, including six seriously, after a Hamas operative fired an RPG at a building used as an encampment near Nasser Hospital, according to an IDF probe.

Hamas published footage of the Friday morning incident, showing it launching an RPG at the building where the Egoz troops were.

All of the wounded troops have been taken to hospitals.

Egoz troops had killed a Hamas gunman near their encampment a few hours before the RPG fire, according to the IDF.

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Commando killed, 16 other soldiers wounded during fighting in southern Gaza - The Times of Israel

Biden-Netanyahu Tensions Over U.N. Abstention and Rafah Offensive Roil U.S.-Israel Ties – Foreign Policy

Posted By on March 30, 2024

Welcome back to Foreign Policys SitRep.

Heres whats on tap for the day: U.S.-Israel relations hit a low point over Gaza, another shake-up in Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskys cabinet, and Washington gets another cyber wake-up callthis time from Chinese hackers targeting U.S. critical infrastructure.

If youve been paying scant attention to news on the U.S.-Israel relationship in the past week, you might be confused. If youve been paying close attention, youre probably just as confused.

This week, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was set to send a delegation of top Israeli officials to visit the White House, at U.S. President Joe Bidens request, to discuss U.S. concerns over Israels planned invasion of Rafah, a city in the Gaza Strip where more than 1.5 million Palestinians have fled during the war.

On Monday, Netanyahu abruptly canceled that visit after the United States abstained from a United Nations Security Council vote calling for an immediate cease-fire in Gaza. Netanyahu castigated the U.S. decision to abstain, calling it a retreat from the consistent American position since the beginning of the war.

This was all while Yoav Gallant, Israels defense minister, was in Washington seeking (and mostly failing) to present a business-as-usual atmosphere in meetings with Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and CIA Director Bill Burns.

Then, Netanyahu un-canceled the meeting he had just canceled.

In all, it was a head-spinning week for ties between Washington and its most important partner in the Middle East, all while the Israel-Hamas war continues to inflame tensions across the region and the humanitarian crisis in Gaza worsens.

Lets find the signal amid all of this noise. Here are three trend lines weve picked up on.

Defiance. First, Netanyahu seems to have decided that he overplayed his hand by canceling his aides visit to Washington, where Biden officials were already frustrated by the Israeli leaders intransigence.

But beyond this, Netanyahu is not bowing muchif at allto U.S. pressure to address the massive humanitarian crisis in Gaza and table his plans for an invasion of Rafah.

In addition to canceling the delegations planned trip to Washington, Israel recalled its negotiating team from talks in Qatar after Hamas rejected the latest proposal for a roughly six-week cease-fire, during which Israel would release around 700 Palestinian prisoners in exchange for 40 Israeli hostages held in Gaza.

Netanyahu blamed Washingtons U.N. Security Council vote abstention for Hamass rebuffing of the deal. (The U.S. State Department rejected Netanyahus claim.)

Frustration. Second, the Biden team is deeply frustrated with Netanyahu, but theres a floor to how far that frustration goes, primarily because the U.S. commander in chiefs support for Israel is embedded in his foreign-policy DNA.

Biden is taking heat domestically and abroad over his continued support for Israel in the war, particularly from the progressive flank of his Democratic Party during a high-stakes election year. A majority of Americans now disapprove of Israels actions in Gaza, according to recent polls. Even former U.S. President Donald Trump publicly urged Netanyahu to finish up the Gaza operation this week.

Yet the U.S. president has kept most of his thoughts on the rupture with Netanyahu private. (Biden told Sen. Michael Bennet after the State of the Union address that he and Netanyahu would have to have a come to Jesus meeting, but that was an apparently accidental hot mic moment.)

Biden has also ignored calls to cut the supply of U.S. weapons to Israel and has so far refused to put conditions on the military aidwith many officials fearing such actions could leave the White House open to the charge that it is leaving Israel defenseless.

Doubt. The last takeaway is that theres growing doubt, and real fear, among Biden officials and experts that Israels military campaign in Gaza to defeat Hamas once and for all wont work.

Hamas has proved resilient in the face of the Israeli offensive, even moving back into Gazas Al-Shifa Hospital after a massive Israeli battle to rid the medical complex of Hamas last year.

This is leading to mounting fears that Israel will face a long insurgency from Hamas after conventional military operations wrap up.

If anything, the parallel Im most fearing is the mission accomplished banner moment in the Iraq War, when we toppled Saddams Baathist government, but thats when the real war began, said Jonathan Lord of the Center for a New American Security.

This is all to say nothing of the plight of embattled civilians in Gaza, where theres a looming risk of famine. On Tuesday, 12 Palestinians drowned off Gazas coast trying to get to airdropped aid packages that landed in the sea.

Republican Rep. John Moolenaar will take over as chairman of the House China committee after the current chairman, Mike Gallagher, announced his early retirement. (Read more on what that influential committee has been up to here.)

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has fired Oleksiy Danilov as head of Ukraines National Security and Defense Council and replaced him with Oleksandr Lytvynenko. Lytvynenko had previously been the chief of Ukraines foreign intelligence service.

U.N. Undersecretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Martin Griffiths will leave his post in June after three years on the job, he announced on X (formerly Twitter) on Monday.

Annelle Sheline has stepped down from her State Department appointment as a foreign affairs officer in the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor in protest of the Biden administrations support for Israel in its war in Gaza.

What should be high on your radar, if it isnt already.

Washington gets another cyber wake-up call. Sanctions and criminal charges brought by the United States and United Kingdom against a Chinese state-linked hacking group this week are a stark reminder of the need to upgrade U.S. critical infrastructure systems, the countrys top cyberdefense official told our FP colleague Rishi Iyengar in an interview.

Chinese cyber actors are very sophisticated; they are well-resourced, said Jen Easterly, director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. But they are getting into our critical infrastructure because of defects in our technologies.

Shot to the heart. Ukraine is trying to compensate for a dearth of Western ammunition and aid by using long-range drone strikes to target Russian oildespite reported opposition from the Biden administration. Ukraine has conducted a dozen attacks on Russian oil refineries, which has hurt the Kremlins ability to process crude oil, experts tell our FP colleague Keith Johnson.

Ukraine courts India. Ukraines foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, is visiting New Delhi this week to meet with his Indian counterpart, S. Jaishankar. Its another example of Ukraines effort to shore up support from the global south, but Indias long-standing relationship with Russia will serve as heavy baggage on the trip.

Kuleba is undeterred. Every conversation we are having is built on the idea that countries will be aligned more with us rather than with Russia, he said in response to a question from Rishi at a pre-visit briefing. He called Ukraine and India two big democracies who essentially share some very fundamental approaches to understanding security and the way the world should function.

Russian Emergency Situations Ministry cadets lay flowers at a makeshift memorial in front of the burnt-out Crocus City Hall concert venue where Islamic State-affiliated gunmen killed more than 140 people, outside Moscow, on March 26.Natalia Kolesnikova/AFP

Thursday, March 28: Poland and Ukraine continue to hold talks on the agricultural dispute between the two allied countries.

Sunday, March 31: Turkey holds local elections.

Tuesday, April 2: Senegalese President Macky Salls mandate is set to expire.

Wednesday, April 3: NATO foreign ministers begin a two-day meeting in Brussels.

Thursday, April 4: NATO celebrates the 75th anniversary of its founding. Kuwait holds its general election.

If thats the case, what the hell is the point of the U.N.?

Matt Lee, diplomatic reporter for The Associated Press, asks the State Departments spokesperson, Matthew Miller, why the Biden administration is downplaying the impact of the U.N. resolution calling for a cease-fire in Gaza from which the United States abstained.

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Biden-Netanyahu Tensions Over U.N. Abstention and Rafah Offensive Roil U.S.-Israel Ties - Foreign Policy

Williamsburg Israeli restaurant Mesiba lives up to its name, which means ‘party’ in Hebrew – JTA News – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on March 30, 2024

(New York Jewish Week) When Eli Buliskeria opened an Israeli restaurant in Williamsburg last March, he had some idea what next year had in store for him with a new restaurant and a new baby, he knew he was going to be busy. But an unexpected war in his home country presented more challenges and also opportunity.

Its definitely been the most exciting project that Ive ever done and the most exciting year Ive ever had, Buliskeria, 33, told the New York Jewish Week. Everything together is very emotional.

Buliskeria is the head chef at Mesiba, opening the restaurant after seven years as a chef in New York, including stints working at Tamam Falafel, a vegan falafel counter on the Upper East Side, and Bustan, an upscale Israeli restaurant on the Upper West Side. Before moving to New York, he was the sous chef at Herbert Samuel Restaurant at the Ritz Carlton in Herzliya.

I really think its a milestone in my career, he said of Mesiba, which just celebrated its one-year anniversary. Im taking it very seriously.

Found inside Williamsburgs Moxy Hotel on Bedford and South 4th St., Mesiba certainly lives up to its name, which means party in Hebrew. Music flows through the low-lit Bauhaus-inspired dining room, which is filled with large tables and comfortable booths that can accommodate large groups. The restaurant often hosts Israeli DJs and musicians, and it is attached to several venues where the party can continue: Jolene, a popular, retro-themed sound room, as well as Bar Bedford, a cocktail bar with a garden, and Lillistar, a rooftop bar.

This combination of the good music, good food and drinks makes people come and feel the party energy, Buliskeria told the New York Jewish Week. The food is meant to be shared, no one is sitting there having his dish and thats it. The idea is that its all together, its sharing together, singing together and showing up together.

Mesiba is owned by the Miami-based hospitality group Bar Lab, known for its upscale Broken Shaker cocktail bars in Miami, Manhattan and elsewhere.

In my opinion, the best place in the world to have a restaurant is in New York, so I was very proud about it, Elad Zvi, one of Bar Labs founders, said of Mesiba, which is the groups first signature restaurant in New York. Doing this project, I was scared a Miami guy doing a restaurant in New York sounds like it could be bad. Seeing the success of the restaurant is such a proud moment for me and for the team.

Zvi said he knew he wanted to hire an Israeli chef for the job and had been hearing about Buliskeria for years through mutual friends and colleagues. From our first meeting, before even tasting his food, I was already sold, Zvi said of Buliskeria. Hes a really nice guy, hes a family guy, hes honest, hes sweet, he gets it hes worked for the best chefs in Israel.

Mesibas cuisine is Tel Avivian, according to Zvi, who is Israeli. Its a melting pot theres a lot of elements of Ashkenazi Jews and a lot of elements of Palestinian and Syrian food, he said. Its a love letter to the Levant region.

This diversity is found throughout Mesibas menu, with sections demarcated by Hebrew words, including nishnushim, or small bites, and gadol, meaning big. Dishes include fluffy frena, a Moroccan focaccia-like flatbread; kreplach, or Eastern European dumplings, and musakhan chicken, a Palestinian dish.

Buliskeria said the inspiration for his menu is rooted in his childhood growing up in Holon, a city just outside of Tel Aviv, which was also a melting pot of sorts. My menu is my childhood, he said. Its the food that I was sharing with my friends and family, the food that I grew up on.

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As a child, Id have lunch at my Polish friends house and then at my Yemenite friends house. I grew up in an eight-floor building and each floor had a different smell of food. Just walking up and down the stairs, you could smell what each house was making. It was so beautiful, with all the strong smells coming out from the door, he said.

Buliskeria is passionate about bringing his love of Jewish holidays to the restaurant, too. During Hanukkah, he developed a mobile latke cart, complete with elaborate fixings of lox, zaatar and caviar; the chef wheeled it around the dining room and prepared the potato pancakes tableside. More recently, for Purim, Buliskeria hosted a hamantaschen-baking class at the restaurant, in addition to a party featuring specialty food and cocktail items, free hamantaschen and a DJ.

Mesiba also recently launched a Shabbat dinner series, in which Buliskeria partners up with Jewish and Israeli chefs to create a prix-fixe Shabbat menu. This month, Buliskeria worked with Eden Grinshpan, the Israeli-Canadian host of Top Chef Canada, to highlight dishes from her cookbook.

The Shabbat with Grinshpan was the thing Im most proud of so far, Zvi said. It was amazing music. Everybody had cocktails, there was a bunch of food on the table, the vibe was so good. It was the first time I realized, wow, we created a really special restaurant.

The Shabbat dinners are for everyone and anyone, Buliskeria said. I hope people take away a memorable feeling from the food, the music, the environment and connecting with the people around them. I want them to have a positive feeling around the experience as more than just a meal.

In Israel, everybody is very focused on Shabbat what youre making for dinner and who you are seeing, he continued. To have Fridays come and to make everything about Shabbat and to have guests coming for Shabbat, it always takes me back home. I love it.

Of course, not everything in the past year has been easy, especially for an Israeli ahem, Tel Avivian restaurant. When Hamas invaded Israel last October, it was hard to convince peopleto go out and enjoy a restaurant whose name is literally party amidst so much devastation.

A lot of people were coming in and asking how we were doing. So the support was there. At the same time, Israeli people didnt really feel like celebrating. It was hard days, Buliskeria said. We didnt have the right name and the right timing. As some time has passed now, they feel like they can celebrate a little bit more and they can come and show support little by little.

For Zvi, who had a policy in his professional life to avoid discussing his political and personal views, Oct. 7 has changed that.

Since Oct. 7, it was very, very important for me to highlight the fact that, yes, this is an Israeli restaurant, with Israeli music and food, he said. Its not that I was hiding it before I cannot hide it from it, my name is Israeli and so is the restaurants. But it is even more important for me now.

According to Zvi, embracing their Jewish and Israeli identities has meant inviting Israeli DJs to play sets and encouraging holiday and Shabbat specials with Israeli chefs. Theres a fundraising component, too: Zvi said some of the proceeds of Grinshpans dinner went to Beit HaLochem, an organization supporting wounded veterans in Israel.

Still, Zvi said he doesnt talk about politics in his restaurant, and added that Mesiba has not experienced the type of harassment faced by other Israeli establishments across the city. The reaction Ive gotten from people since Oct. 7 is zero reaction because I dont open this door. Somebody will start to talk with me about it, but I dont give them the energy, he said.

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While Bar Lab manages over 20 establishments across the country, Zvi admitted Mesiba has been one of his favorite projects so far. There are so many creative people. Thats what I really, really love about this place, he said, naming the latke cart, the DJ sets and the Shabbat dinner series as the most exciting, innovating elements.

Its very dynamic. Its always moving, he said. Just like every good party should.

See the original post here:

Williamsburg Israeli restaurant Mesiba lives up to its name, which means 'party' in Hebrew - JTA News - Jewish Telegraphic Agency


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