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NEWSFLASH; Sunday March 4 - BOMB BLAST IN ISRAELI COASTAL CITY
JERUSALEM (AP - 2:50am ET) - A powerful bomb exploded during morning rush hour
Sunday in a crowded open-air market in the Israeli coastal city of Netanya.
Two people were killed and at least 25 wounded, including two seriously, paramedics
said.  The blast went off at about 8:55 a.m. in the center of Netanya. [Initial
reports indicate 2 Israeli dead, 35 wounded, and the Palestinian who set off
the bomb dead.]


                     ISRAELI ARMY MORE IN CHARGE
         PALESTINIANS TO BE EVEN FURTHER TORTURED INTO SUBMISSION

             "...The need to "make the Palestinian ask
             himself each morning: 'why the hell did
             we start this intifada? What have we
             gained from it?'"

MID-EAST REALITIES © - www.MiddleEast.Org - Washington - 3/04:
   The Arab regimes are far too weak and co-opted to do anything serious.
The Arafat regime is far too corrupt and incompetent to do anything serious.
 The Americans are far too under the thumb of the Israeli/Jewish lobby whose
strength remains overwhelming in the U.S. -- the Arab American groups still
far too confused, innocent, and self-centered to have any significant impact
(a situation their own handlers, the Arab regimes, encourage to stay this way
for their own reasons).
   And so the Palestinian people not only suffer terribly; but the craven world
watches, the long-discredited United Nations orates, the laughable Arab League
gesticulates, and the ridiculously manipulated Muslim groups submit -- all
claiming of course to be so concerned but in reality all collectively doing
little useful and hardly anything serious.
   And now the Israeli army (supplied and backed of course by the American
army), gets ready to clamp down even further until the Palestinians are forced
once again into submission.  These two articles in today's Ha'aretz help set
the new stage:


           IDF DEPLOYS FORCES ALONG W. BANK ROADS
                        By Amos Harel
                  Ha'aretz Military Correspondent

[Ha'aretz 4 March 2001]: Two more terms have been added recently to the
acronym-studded, voluminous lexicon of Israeli rule in the West Bank and
Gaza Strip: Badatz and Tigbatz.

The first refers to blocking off roads to close escape routes for terrorists
after gunfire attacks. The second alludes to beefing-up security deployments
on roads in the territories. Anyone who has traveled recently from Hebron
toward Jerusalem during the afternoon is likely to have observed the policy
for which this second acronym stands: soldiers of the Israel Defense Forces
can be seen at each junction, and there are several armed personnel carriers
parked along roads.

Current Israeli defense tactics in the territories reenact a policy followed
more than a decade ago, when Yitzhak Mordechai served as IDF Central
Commander. As was the case then, makeshift IDF holding posts have sprouted
up in numerous West Bank flash-points. Some ten new IDF posts have appeared
in the Hebron region alone; most have been set-up on the rooftops of
Palestinian houses that are located alongside Route 60, the road which leads
to Jerusalem. The IDF has put up other posts in locales such as the "Tunnel
Road," which runs between Al Hader and the Gilo neighborhood.

The new policy has been implemented in the Ramallah area as well, with an
IDF post newly assembled at the "British Police junction," where a Jewish
resident from the Ateret settlement was wounded about a week ago. The army
has established another three posts, some featuring tanks, on route 433,
which runs between Jerusalem and Modi'in.

The practical security utility of these new roadside posts is questionable.
IDF soldiers stationed at them have themselves become the potential targets
of terror attacks. Yet the IDF is responding to perceived siege conditions,
in which the sense of safety felt by settlers and other Israelis is almost
as important as actual security. Given the current situation, in which
thousands of Israeli citizens feel threatened on the road, the IDF believes
that its new policy is an appropriate and necessary measure.

While the IDF General Staff prepares for various scenarios which might be
realized after the Sharon government takes office, it remains possible that
one major shift in the conditions in the territories could generate a faster
flow of events than top planners are anticipating.

As the Al Aqsa Intifada rages on, IDF commanders in the field are speaking
in an increasingly militant vernacular. These lower level officers have
started to adopt a tougher stance toward the Palestinian Authority.
Possessing considerable power to shape the situation, these IDF officers
could be creating facts which will be impossible to reverse should Israel
and the PA resume talks.

When the violence erupted in October 2000, these brigade commanders came
close to sounding like civil administration officials, voicing
moderately-phrased interpretations of economic and political realities in
the PA. Officers in the territories were often heard expressing such beliefs
as: "A Palestinian who gets up to work in the morning won't go off and throw
rocks."

Five violence-packed months later, the same officers have lost interest in
social-welfare aspects of relations with the Palestinians. Our job, they
say, boils down to one objective: to prevent attacks against Jews.
Originally skeptical that the confrontation was even serious, these officers
have returned to viewing the Palestinians as enemies.

"Our problem is that we started to think too much like politicians," one
high-ranking IDF officer explains. "I don't need to be good to the
Palestinians. That's an option which the political leadership has."

Changing their thinking, other officers now talk about the need to "make the
Palestinian ask himself each morning: 'why the hell did we start this
intifada? What have we gained from it?'"

Fortifying its presence alongside West Bank roads, and planning new
strategies to clamp down on the current intifada, some IDF officers regard
recent PA statements as confirmation that the army has been involved in a
genuine confrontation with the Palestinians all along. They interpret a new
disclosure by PA Telecommunications Minister Imad Faluji in this light -
Faluji said that the PA planned the Al Aqsa Intifada in detail after the
Camp David summit.


          BEN-ELIZER BACKS SHARON'S LINE ON
            END TO VIOLENCE BEFORE TALKS
           By Yossi Verter and Nadav Shragai

[Ha'aretz - 4 March 2001]:
Designated defense minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer promised he would make
every effort to ensure that the Palestinians quickly conclude that the only
battlefield for resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is the
negotiating table. Speaking after his nomination as the Labor Party's
candidate for the defense post, Ben-Eliezer said he supported Prime
Minister-elect Ariel Sharon's position that talks between Israel and the
Palestinians could resume only after a cessation of the current violence.

"There must be rigid and clear rules," Ben-Eliezer said. "I am opposed to
collective punishment because I think that the majority among the
Palestinian nation wants to reach a settlement. There is a need to go after
specific targets - those carrying out the terror strikes and those who send
them. ... The [current] situation, in which they are killing us every day,
cannot continue."

Meretz leader Yossi Sarid said that Ben-Eliezer was the natural choice for
the position of defense minister in Sharon's government. "If a government is
supposed to operate on the basis of complete agreement between the prime
minister and his defense minister, then, from my knowledge of both of them,
there is no doubt that they will find a common [and] militant language."

The head of the Council of Jewish Settlements of Judea, Samaria and the Gaza
District (Yesha), Benny Kashriel, welcomed the choice of Ben-Eliezer as
Labor's nominee for the position of defense minister.

"Minister Ben-Eliezer is an old friend of the settlement enterprise in
Yesha," Kashriel said, adding that the long personal relationship between
himself and Ben-Eliezer was a basis for an understanding on all matters
related to the security of Israel and the settlements.

"The Yesha Council expects Ben-Eliezer and Sharon to bring about the desired
turnaround in Israel's security policy, replacing the soaking up [of
violence] and capitulation [of the outgoing administration] with initiative
and victory," Kashriel said.



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