Keep Us Strong WikiLeaks logo

Currently released so far... 64621 / 251,287

Articles

Browse latest releases

Browse by creation date

Browse by origin

A B C D F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Y Z

Browse by tag

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Browse by classification

Community resources

courage is contagious

Viewing cable 08TELAVIV279, ISRAEL MEDIA REACTION

If you are new to these pages, please read an introduction on the structure of a cable as well as how to discuss them with others. See also the FAQs

Understanding cables
Every cable message consists of three parts:
  • The top box shows each cables unique reference number, when and by whom it originally was sent, and what its initial classification was.
  • The middle box contains the header information that is associated with the cable. It includes information about the receiver(s) as well as a general subject.
  • The bottom box presents the body of the cable. The opening can contain a more specific subject, references to other cables (browse by origin to find them) or additional comment. This is followed by the main contents of the cable: a summary, a collection of specific topics and a comment section.
To understand the justification used for the classification of each cable, please use this WikiSource article as reference.

Discussing cables
If you find meaningful or important information in a cable, please link directly to its unique reference number. Linking to a specific paragraph in the body of a cable is also possible by copying the appropriate link (to be found at theparagraph symbol). Please mark messages for social networking services like Twitter with the hash tags #cablegate and a hash containing the reference ID e.g. #08TELAVIV279.
Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
08TELAVIV279 2008-02-06 05:28 2011-08-24 01:00 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Tel Aviv
VZCZCXYZ0000
PP RUEHWEB

DE RUEHTV #0279/01 0370528
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 060528Z FEB 08
FM AMEMBASSY TEL AVIV
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 5272
RHEHAAA/WHITE HOUSE WASHDC PRIORITY
RHEHNSC/WHITE HOUSE NSC WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEAHQA/HQ USAF WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUEADWD/DA WASHDC PRIORITY
RHMFIUU/CNO WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RHEFDIA/DIA WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUEKJCS/JOINT STAFF WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEHAD/AMEMBASSY ABU DHABI PRIORITY 3363
RUEHAS/AMEMBASSY ALGIERS PRIORITY 0019
RUEHAM/AMEMBASSY AMMAN PRIORITY 3577
RUEHAK/AMEMBASSY ANKARA PRIORITY 4128
RUEHLB/AMEMBASSY BEIRUT PRIORITY 3386
RUEHEG/AMEMBASSY CAIRO PRIORITY 1549
RUEHDM/AMEMBASSY DAMASCUS PRIORITY 4124
RUEHLO/AMEMBASSY LONDON PRIORITY 0967
RUEHFR/AMEMBASSY PARIS PRIORITY 1441
RUEHRB/AMEMBASSY RABAT PRIORITY 8001
RUEHRO/AMEMBASSY ROME PRIORITY 5473
RUEHRH/AMEMBASSY RIYADH PRIORITY 0387
RUEHTU/AMEMBASSY TUNIS PRIORITY 4513
RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK PRIORITY 6462
RUEHJM/AMCONSUL JERUSALEM PRIORITY 8995
RHMFISS/CDR USCENTCOM MACDILL AFB FL PRIORITY
RHMFISS/COMSOCEUR VAIHINGEN GE PRIORITY
RHMFIUU/COMSIXTHFLT  PRIORITY
UNCLAS TEL AVIV 000279 
 
SIPDIS 
 
STATE FOR NEA, NEA/IPA, NEA/PPD 
 
WHITE HOUSE FOR PRESS OFFICE, SIT ROOM 
NSC FOR NEA STAFF 
 
SECDEF WASHDC FOR USDP/ASD-PA/ASD-ISA 
HQ USAF FOR XOXX 
DA WASHDC FOR SASA 
JOINT STAFF WASHDC FOR PA 
CDR USCENTCOM MACDILL AFB FL FOR POLAD/USIA ADVISOR 
COMSOCEUR VAIHINGEN GE FOR PAO/POLAD 
COMSIXTHFLT FOR 019 
 
JERUSALEM ALSO ICD 
LONDON ALSO FOR HKANONA AND POL 
PARIS ALSO FOR POL 
ROME FOR MFO 
 
SIPDIS 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: OPRC KMDR IS
 
SUBJECT: ISRAEL MEDIA REACTION 
 
 
-------------------------------- 
SUBJECTS COVERED IN THIS REPORT: 
-------------------------------- 
 
1.  Mideast 
 
2.  U.S.-Israel Relations 
 
------------------------- 
Key stories in the media: 
------------------------- 
 
All media bannered Monday's suicide bombing in Dimona, in which a 
woman was killed and 48 others wounded.  The media reported that the 
IDF fears that the terrorists may have infiltrated Israel through 
the Sinai following the Gaza border breach two weeks ago.  However, 
leading media quoted defense officials as saying that there is a 
growing consensus that the two terrorists had come from the West 
Bank, entering the Negev via a 26-km gap in the southern section of 
the West Bank security fence.  Major media quoted Hamas's armed wing 
as claiming responsibility for the attack and that the bombers came 
from Hebron.  Yediot quoted Hamas as saying that the target was 
chosen because of its proximity to Israel's nuclear reactor.  Maariv 
noted that this was Hamas's first bombing since August 2004. 
Speaking on Israel Radio this morning, Tzachi Hanegbi, the Chairman 
of the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, said that 
the Hamas leadership should be targeted. 
 
Ha'aretz reported that the Foreign Ministry is recommending that 
Egypt double the number of soldiers it has stationed along its 
borders with Israel and Gaza -- something that Cairo has long wanted 
to do, but that Jerusalem has hitherto vetoed.  Since the 
Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty strictly limits the forces that Egypt 
can deploy, any increase would require Israel's consent.  The 
Defense Ministry and the IDF oppose any effort reopen the treaty, 
saying it would set a dangerous precedent. 
 
The media reported that on Monday evening the Knesset approved PM 
Ehud Olmert's speech in response to the final Winograd report.  The 
speech was approved in a non-binding, purely symbolic vote, by a 
majority of 59 to 53.  One Knesset members abstained from voting. 
The statement was approved despite the fact that six coalition MKs 
-- Ophir Pines-Paz (Labor), Shelly Yachimovich (Labor), Eitan Cabel 
(Labor), Danny Yatom (Labor), Avigdor Yizhaki (Kadima) and Marina 
Solodkin (Kadima) -- voted against the statement.  Four Arab MKs 
were absent, as was former Defense Minister Amir Peretz.  Opposition 
leader Binyamin Netanyahu likened Olmert to the "captain of the 
Titanic."  Yediot reported that Defense Minister Ehud Barak did not 
bother to listen to Olmert's speech and later said it was cynical. 
A commotion broke out in the Knesset before the vote, after bereaved 
parents began screaming at Olmert during the speech.  During his 
speech, Olmert said he "carries the full responsibilities of the 
failures" of the war, although he defended the decision to go to war 
against Hizbullah. 
 
Yediot quoted Ofer Dekel, Israel's chief negotiator for securing the 
release of abducted soldiers, as sayng that the publication of a 
letter by Gilad Shalit jeopardizes the deal to bring him back home. 
Leading media reported that Germany was instrumental in obtaining a 
sign of life from Shalit. 
 
Ha'aretz reported that on Monday IDF troops killed a senior 
operative of the Popular Resistance Committees in the northern Gaza 
Strip and two armed Palestinians in Qabatiyeh near Jenin.  Israel 
Radio reported that this morning Qassam rockets fell on two 
factories in the Sderot area. 
 
Leading media reported on Iran's inauguration of its Space Research 
Center.  Yediot quoted Israeli experts as saying that the center is 
a diversion for the development of advanced missiles.  Maariv 
reported that Mossad Director Meir Dagan told the Knesset's Foreign 
Affairs and Defense Committee on Monday that Iran will have nuclear 
weapons in three years.  The Jerusalem Post reported that Israel is 
expected to press Austrian FM Ursula Plassnik for greater 
cooperation on meaningful economic sanctions against Iran.  Israel 
Radio reported that Iran complained to India for launching an 
Israeli spy satellite. 
 
Ha'aretz reported that on Monday the Lebanese government decided to 
lodge a complaint with the UN Security Council for a cross-border 
incident that killed one Lebanese man and wounded another. 
 
Yediot quoted two American citizens in Israel -- the Democrat Dan 
Cook (phon.) and the Republican Mark Zell -- as saying that it is 
important for the 100,000 Americans living in Israel to cast votes 
in the presidential election. 
 
Yediot reported that Tal Zilberstein, an Israeli political 
consultant who in the past worked for Ehud Barak and Ehud Olmert, 
was part of the American-Israeli team GPS that helped Serbian 
President Boris Tadic get re-elected. 
Ha'aretz reported that the U.S. Consulate General in Jerusalem will 
relocate from East Jerusalem to the neighborhood of Arnona later 
this year, a move expected to improve services and slightly decrease 
the long wait times to register births of American citizens.  The 
Jerusalem Post reported that on Monday the Consulate General 
announced that it was entertaining a number of options to address 
the problem. 
 
The Jerusalem Post printed a special op-ed article by Republican 
presidential contender Mike Huckabee, who says that the U.S. and 
Israel must jointly "defeat Islamofascism." 
 
Ha'aretz reported that the Israeli airline Israir plans to operate 
regular flights to Miami and Las Vegas.  New York is presently its 
only U.S. destination. 
 
Yediot reported that the American actor Denzel Washington will make 
his first visit to Israel around Israel's 60th anniversary. 
 
------------ 
1.  Mideast: 
------------ 
 
Summary: 
-------- 
 
The independent, left-leaning Ha'aretz editorialized: "Times of 
emergency sometimes demand emergency steps, and the current threat 
of terror demands more courageous cooperation with Egypt." 
 
The conservative, independent Jerusalem Post editorialized: "Israel 
should actually do what Egypt anyway accuses Israel of doing: press 
the U.S. to treat Egypt like Syria so long as Cairo acts like 
Damascus." 
 
Correspondent Shahar Ginossar wrote in the mass-circulation, 
pluralist Yediot Aharonot: "Legitimate domestic criticism of the 
management of the [Second Lebanon] War gives encouragement to the 
Tehran-Beirut axis and provides Hizbullah with everlasting evidence 
to justify its violent approach." 
 
Senior columnist and longtime dove Yoel Marcus wrote in Ha'aretz: 
"The most important thing at the moment is political stability. 
Barak and Olmert need to work together." 
 
Columnist and former IDF Intelligence chief Shlomo Gazit wrote in 
the popular, pluralist Maariv: "[Barak] made a decision without any 
commitment by Olmert.  This will be an erroneous decision without a 
commitment about peace." 
 
Block Quotes: 
------------- 
 
I.  "Common to Dimona and Cairo" 
 
The independent, left-leaning Ha'aretz editorialized (2/5): 
"According to Hamas's announcement last night, the two terrorists 
responsible for Monday morning's attack in Dimona set out from 
Hebron.  At the same time, the original and reasonable assumption 
that the bombers had moved from Gaza, via Sinai, to the Negev was 
based on the profusion of intelligence warnings that had multiplied 
following the breach of the border between Gaza and Egypt.  These 
warnings are still current, and continue to concern the security 
establishment.  This situation was created by the helplessness of 
Egypt, which did not hasten to close the breaches, and the 
permission it gave to Gaza civilians to enter its territory.  But it 
was also caused by carelessness, or at least excessive complacence 
on the part of Israel, which for years has not bothered to build a 
real fence along its long border with Egypt.... Times of emergency 
sometimes demand emergency steps, and the current threat of terror 
demands more courageous cooperation with Egypt.  In the past, Egypt 
proved its determination to fight terror even if, like Israel, it 
has not always succeeded in eliminating it.  This is currently 
another difficult test of Egypt's determination and its commonality 
of interests with Israel, a commonality that rests on peace 
agreements between the two countries." 
 
II.  "Seal the Borders" 
 
The conservative, independent Jerusalem Post editorialized (2/5): 
"The urgent task is both for Israel to complete the missing sections 
of the West Bank security fence and seal its border with Egypt and, 
critically too, for Egypt to seal its border with Gaza.  We cannot 
go back to the status quo ante, where weapons and money flowed into 
and terrorists flowed into and out of Gaza courtesy of Egypt's blind 
eye.  It is completely irresponsible for Egypt to allow Hamas to 
strengthen itself in Gaza, even aside from Israel's interests and 
Egypt's responsibilities toward the peace process that the U.S. has 
been trying to launch.  Hamas, after all, is allied to the Muslim 
Brotherhood, which Egypt has ruthlessly suppressed for years. 
Evidently, the Egyptian government feels little external or internal 
pressure to take serious steps to cut off Hamas's weapons lifeline. 
 
The fault for this lack of pressure lies with the U.S., but first 
and foremost, with Israel.  The U.S. has quietly and ineffectively 
raised the issue with Egypt for years.  But it is understandable 
that the U.S. government cannot get itself more exercised about the 
problem than Israel is.  And it is seems that Olmert places his 
relationship with President Hosni Mubarak above the emphatic, 
insistent pursuit of the demand that Egypt shut down the weapons 
flow to Gaza.  This must change.... [Among other things], Israel 
should actually do what Egypt anyway accuses Israel of doing: press 
the U.S. to treat Egypt like Syria so long as Cairo acts like 
Damascus." 
 
III.  "Nasrallah's Victory" 
 
Correspondent Shahar Ginossar wrote in the mass-circulation, 
pluralist Yediot Aharonot (2/5): "The turning a blind eye to the 
debate in the Arab world by members of the Winograd Commission is 
causing tremendous harm to Israel.  The report ... should have taken 
into account the fact that legitimate domestic criticism of the 
management of the [Second Lebanon] War gives encouragement to the 
Tehran-Beirut axis and provides Hizbullah with everlasting evidence 
to justify its violent approach.... Assuming that the Winograd 
Commission had expected this, it should have acted accordingly.  For 
instance, during its press conference it should have conveyed an 
additional, pointed, and clear message to the hundreds of millions 
of Muslims who were watching it live -- words to the rejectionist 
camp that initiated the war, which, as is well-known, caused a 
greater disaster to them than to the residents of northern Israel." 
 
IV.  "The Man Who Saved Olmert" 
 
Senior columnist and longtime dove Yoel Marcus wrote in Ha'aretz 
(2/5): "The good of the country, getting the army back on its feet 
and making diplomatic headway are more important than a promise [to 
quit the government] made [by Ehud Barak] under different 
circumstances -- all the more so, when there are no fabulous 
alternatives lining up that would make going to the polls 
worthwhile.  The most important thing at the moment is political 
stability.  Barak and Olmert need to work together.  They need to 
establish mutual trust and pay no attention to provocations. 
Formally, it may have been necessary to rap Olmert on the knuckles 
and insist that he take ministerial responsibility as head of the 
system, but the good of the country comes first.  You don't switch 
horses in midstream.  Toying with the idea of early elections will 
only turn Ehud and Ehud into lame ducks at the least desirable 
moment." 
 
V.  "No Resignation and No Peace" 
 
Columnist and former IDF Intelligence chief Shlomo Gazit wrote in 
the popular, pluralist Maariv (2/5): "[If I were Ehud Barak, I would 
ask Ehud Olmert]: 'How do you propose to face Palestinian demands on 
the core issues, and how you intend to secure a political majority 
in Israel for an agreement?  How Olmert will succeed in surmounting 
those obstacles is unclear.  It is doubtful whether he believes in 
his own pronouncement -- they are no more than a polite answer to 
Washington's expectations and a lever for obtaining popular support 
in Israel.  As far as is known, Barak has not asked Olmert.  He made 
a decision without any commitment by Olmert.  This will be an 
erroneous decision without a commitment about peace." 
 
-------------------------- 
2.  U.S.-Israel Relations: 
-------------------------- 
 
Summary: 
-------- 
 
Chief Economic Editor Sever Plotker opined in the mass-circulation, 
pluralist Yediot Aharonot: "As a 'slightly pro-Israeli' Democratic 
president, Obama is 'worth' much more to Israel than a 'very' 
pro-Israeli Republican president like John McCain.... [But] I wish 
for [Hillary Clinton's] victory." 
 
Block Quotes: 
------------- 
 
"Good for the Jews" 
 
Chief Economic Editor Sever Plotker opined in the mass-circulation, 
pluralist Yediot Aharonot (2/5): "Obama ... may turn out to be an 
unexpected asset for Israel.  He is good for the Jews, because he 
enjoys great popularity among those segments of American and world 
public opinion that are secretly or openly hostile to Israel.  He is 
their new oracle.  If he tells them -- as he has -- that Israel has 
the right to exist forever as a Jewish state, and that the 
Palestinians can subsequently forget about the right return, his 
statements will have an influence and an echo among publics that 
Israeli public relations do not touch.  As a 'slightly pro-Israeli' 
Democratic president, Obama is 'worth' much more to Israel than a