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Gantz: A future Iran nuclear deal can t have expiration dates

Judah Ari Gross is The Times of Israel s military correspondent. Defense Minister Benny Gantz, left, fist-bumps US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin at the Nevatim Air Base in southern Israel on April 12, 2021. (Ariel Hermoni/Defense Ministry) Defense Minister Benny Gantz on Monday said he told his American counterpart, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, that any future agreement to address Iran’s nuclear program must be “more robust” than the 2015 accord it will replace, without any “expiration dates.” The defense minister expressed Israel’s position on the matter to Austin as the US defense secretary made his first visit to the Jewish state this week. It was also the first visit to Israel by a Biden administration official and one of the first trips abroad by any Biden administration official anywhere in the world.

Fighting on two fronts: His leadership wobbling, Netanyahu faces his prosecutors

Judah Ari Gross is The Times of Israel s military correspondent. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, center, enters a courtroom at the Jerusalem District Court for a hearing in his corruption trial, April 5, 2021. (Oren Ben Hakoon/Pool) “The split screen,” in its Israeli context, originally referred to an infamous, surreal 2002 television broadcast in which news coverage of a deadly terror attack in Jerusalem was aired directly alongside an ongoing Haifa-Kiryat Gat soccer match. But on Monday the term applied to the still surreal, but far less macabre, media coverage of the opening of the evidentiary stage of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s corruption trial, which was intercut with the broadcast of his political allies seeking to convince the president to give him first crack at forming a ruling coalition after last month’s inconclusive elections.

Double drama as Netanyahu arrives in court, Rivlin to consult parties on next PM

Avigdor Liberman’s Yisrael Beytenu recommends that Yesh Atid leader Yair Lapid be tasked with forming the next coalition. But, adds Liberman, “if we see [later on in the coalition-building process] that there’s another candidate who has a better chance, we won’t boycott anyone and we’ll support anyone to prevent a fifth election, it doesn’t matter who it is.” “We won’t support Netanyahu. I think we must end his rule,” adds Liberman. His endorsement brings Lapid’s backers to 39; Netanyahu’s to 46; Bennett’s to 7. Liberman criticizes Netanyahu for Israel’s economic crisis, 6,000 deaths from the pandemic, and political deadlock.

For Israel, endless electoral discord carries perils for ties with Arab world

Lazar Berman is The Times of Israel s diplomatic reporter People walk past an electoral billboard for the Likud party bearing a portrait of its leader Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (L), and opposition Yesh Atid party leader Yair Lapid, in Tel Aviv, on March 12, 2021, ahead of the March 23 general election. (JACK GUEZ / AFP) With four nearly consecutive elections failing to dent two years of Knesset gridlock, the “only democracy in the Middle East” is giving the rest of the region an up-close view of some of the more painful aspects of putting political power in the hands of the people. In the past, it might have been regarded as an oddity, but less than a year after an unprecedented diplomatic opening that saw Israel move toward normalization with four Arab states, the seemingly endless parade of elections and instability that comes along with it may be putting a significant strain on the still-fresh agreements.

As Biden weighs human rights and security in Mideast, some see peril for Israel

As Biden weighs human rights and security in Mideast, some see peril for Israel
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