Selasa, 09 April 2019

Israel Elections 2019: Live Updates - The New York Times

• Israelis are voting Tuesday in parliamentary elections that could keep Benjamin Netanyahu, the polarizing, right-wing prime minister, in power, or turn control over to his main rival, Benny Gantz, a newcomer to electoral politics who is seen as a centrist. At stake is the future of both Israel and the Palestinian territories.

[Who is Benny Gantz?]

• The first indication of how the election went is expected after 3 p.m. Eastern Time, when voting ends in Israel and exit polls are released.

• If he wins a fourth consecutive term, Mr. Netanyahu, 69, could make history in a number of ways: In July, he would become Israel’s longest-serving prime minister; he has vowed to annex parts of the West Bank, reversing half a century of policy and setting back prospects for a Palestinian state; and he could also become the first sitting prime minister to be indicted.

• While Mr. Netanyahu has appealed primarily to the right, Mr. Gantz, 59, a retired lieutenant general and former chief of staff of the Israel Defense Forces, has reached out for allies across the political spectrum. He has sought to make Mr. Netanyahu’s expected indictment on corruption charges the main issue.

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Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at a polling station in Jerusalem. He could make history if he wins a fourth consecutive term.CreditAriel Schalit/Associated Press

Voters cast ballots for parties, not candidates. Thirty-nine parties are participating. The percentage of the vote determines a party’s number of seats in the Knesset, or Parliament. Any party needs at least 3.25 percent of the vote for a seat.

Mr. Netanyahu’s Likud party and Mr. Gantz’s Blue and White alliance are expected to gain more seats than any other group. But each will fall far short of achieving a 61-seat majority on its own, meaning that a new government will almost certainly be formed by a multiparty coalition.

[See our guide to the Israeli elections.]

Members of Israel’s military were allowed to vote up to 72 hours in advance. The rest of the country’s 6.3 million eligible voters can cast ballots at more than 10,700 polling stations across the country, including hospitals and prisons, between 7 a.m. and 10 p.m. (midnight to 3 p.m. Eastern).

Except for diplomats posted abroad, Israeli citizens cannot cast absentee ballots. Those who wish to vote must travel to Israel.

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Benny Gantz, the Blue and White leader, after casting his vote in Rosh Ha’Ayin, Israel.CreditDan Balilty for The New York Times

Likud wins the most seats. Mr. Netanyahu’s party might be able to reach a majority with the help of smaller right-wing parties.

Blue and White wins the most seats. Mr. Gantz and his partners might be able to reach a majority with a combination of smaller parties on the left and right.

Unity government of Likud plus Blue and White. While Mr. Gantz has vowed never to serve in a government led by Mr. Netanyahu, there has been speculation that their parties might negotiate to form a unity government if neither can attain the sufficient number of seats. Such a possibility would increase if some smaller parties needed by Mr. Netanyahu and Mr. Gantz fail to make the 3.25 percent threshold.

Any party that wins at least 3.25 percent of the vote gets at least three seats in Parliament, but if parties don’t pass that threshold — and many smaller parties do not — their votes are discarded.

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In Jerusalem, the Jewish settlement of Neve Yaakov, in the foreground, is separated from the Palestinian area of al-Ram by a barrier.CreditAhmad Gharabli/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Mr. Netanyahu has shown a penchant for appealing to anti-Arab racism in the finales of Israeli elections, aimed at whipping up the extreme right to fend off challengers and protect his parliamentary majority.

During the 2015 election, Mr. Netanyahu beseeched right-wing voters to cast ballots after a coalition of Israeli Arab parties announced that early voter participation by its supporters had tripled. He posted a video on his Facebook page expressing alarm that Israeli Arabs were “being bused to the polling stations in droves” by left-wing groups.

In what critics are calling a similar appeal to the right in this election, Mr. Netanyahu unexpectedly promised to begin extending Israeli sovereignty over the occupied West Bank if re-elected. The move would almost certainly doom a two-state solution.

[In seeking re-election, Mr. Netanyahu put the West Bank on the ballot.]

Late Monday, he even trotted out his American pollster to attest to his contention that the small number of Likud voters who fail to cast their ballots on Tuesday could cost him the election.

Israelis have a term for Mr. Netanyahu’s late surprises: the “gevalt campaign,” a reference to the Yiddish term for incredulity.

At lunchtime in Beit Shemesh, west of Jerusalem, Snir Moshe, 25, was still mulling his options.

“On the one hand it’s a country of Jews,” he said, expressing fear that a vote for Mr. Gantz’s centrist Blue and White party could lead to the removal of West Bank settlements territorial withdrawals.

On the other hand, said Mr. Moshe, who voted for Mr. Netanyahu’s conservative Likud party in 2015, “Blue and White could make social change, economic change. So I have a few more hours to decide.”

There was no reliable data on last-minute waverers, but Mr. Moshe was hardly alone.

Some deliberated between Mr. Netanyahu and Mr. Gantz. Others deliberated between a strategic vote for a large party or an ideological vote for a smaller one, but in a neck-and-neck race, many felt they did not have the luxury of voting for a boutique party.

A Hebrew news website, Mako, offered help with an app that quizzed undecided voters about their positions and then offered political guidance.

Miriam Alarkry, 78, had been wavering between Likud and the ultra-Orthodox Shas party, which she usually voted for. In the end she went with Likud, she said, “because it’s the government.”

By 6 p.m. Tuesday, around 52 percent of eligible voters had cast their ballot, with four hours to go before polls closed. Voter turnout was slightly lower than the 2015 election, in which 54.6 percent of eligible voters had cast their ballot by that hour.

Political analysts said the turnout in Arab areas of Israel, where citizens have become disillusioned with Israeli politics and with their own politicians, appeared to be headed for a historic low.

Taking advantage of the public holiday, many Israelis were out enjoying the sunshine, packing beaches and national parks. Mr. Netanyahu turned up at the seaside in Netanya and called on his supporters to go vote and swim later. Some said they would do so after sundown.

One Tel Aviv eatery was offering Election Day specials: a “hamburgantz” dedicated to Benny Gantz, served with Gouda cheese and a fried egg; and “Bibi cigars” — phyllo pastry rolls stuffed with lamb — a reference to the cigars that the police say Mr. Netanyahu accepted as gifts from wealthy businessmen who sought official favors.

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President Reuven Rivlin is tasked with formally asking one of the party leaders to form a government.CreditAbir Sultan/EPA, via Shutterstock

President Reuven Rivlin is responsible for formally asking one of the party leaders to form a government based on the outcome of the vote and strength of the possible coalitions. Even if Mr. Gantz’s alliance is slightly ahead of Mr. Netanyahu’s, the president could still ask Mr. Netanyahu to form a government if Likud’s likely allies would give him a stronger coalition.

This happened in the 2009 election, when Mr. Netanyahu’s Likud had 27 seats but the rival Kadima party had 28. The Kadima leader, Tzipi Livni, could not form a coalition, but Mr. Netanyahu could. He has been prime minister ever since.

It is less certain what Mr. Rivlin would do if Mr. Netanyahu had a numerical advantage in forming a coalition but Likud itself trailed Mr. Gantz’s alliance by four or five seats. Mr. Gantz’s supporters argued that Mr. Rivlin would feel pressure in that case to acknowledge the people’s most popular choice and allow Mr. Gantz the chance to form a government.

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The last elections in Gaza were in 2006.CreditShawn Baldwin for The New York Times

Mohammad al-Saptie, 28, has never voted. He envied Israel’s democratic system, he said in Gaza City, as people a few miles away cast their ballots for the fifth time since the last election in Gaza, in 2006.

Mr. al-Saptie, a deliveryman, daydreamed aloud about what a free election might mean for Gaza and how he might choose a party or a candidate to support.

He thought about his 20-month-old daughter, Warda, and about the three wars he has lived through — not counting the 2007 civil war in which the militant group Hamas, which won the 2006 Palestinian elections but had been prevented from taking power by the rival Fatah faction, seized control in Gaza.

“I would vote for a government that can negotiate, make peace and reach a solution with Israel,” Mr. al-Saptie said, “because we do not want blood, murder, death and destruction.”

Like many Palestinians here, Mr. al-Saptie said he was frustrated by Hamas, whose takeover precipitated the Israeli blockade of Gaza that continues to this day. He said he wished Gaza’s various armed factions could be brought under the control of leaders with stronger public support.

“The differences among the people and among leaders are great, and there is hatred,” he said.

His aspirations, he said, are simple: “Security, safety and jobs. We do not want more than this.”

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/09/world/middleeast/israel-elections-netanyahu-gantz.html

2019-04-09 16:34:21Z
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Iran’s leaders warn the U.S. after it names the Revolutionary Guard a terrorist group - The Washington Post

ISTANBUL — Iran’s leaders on Tuesday warned the United States of serious repercussions after it designated the elite Revolutionary Guard Corps a terrorist organization.

President Trump on Monday announced the decision against the Revolutionary Guard, Iran’s most potent military force, describing the move as a way to “expand the scope and scale of our maximum pressure on the Iranian regime.”

The decision would allow the Trump administration to seek criminal penalties against elements of the Guard, one of the most revered institutions in Iran.

The Revolutionary Guard was established in 1979 to protect the Islamic revolution that had just overthrown the country’s long-ruling monarchy.

Iran’s often-bickering leaders have presented a united front in the face of the U.S. move. On Tuesday, lawmakers in parliament wore olive-green fatigues to demonstrate solidarity with the Guard and opened the session with chants of “Death to America.”

President Hassan Rouhani called the U.S. move a “mistake” and said it would only boost the organization’s popularity, both at home and abroad. “You thought that if you speak against [the Guard], divisions would arise or you could reduce its popularity,” Rouhani said, according to the Mehr News Agency.

He spoke at an event marking National Nuclear Day, during which he also warned that U.S. efforts would not hinder Iran’s “scientific progress.” Iran’s nuclear program, which it says is intended only for peaceful purposes and not for building weapons, has long been of great international concern.

Last year, Trump withdrew the United States from a nuclear deal that Iran struck with world powers in 2015. The pact limited Iran’s nuclear energy program in exchange for widespread sanctions relief.

On Tuesday, Rouhani announced the installation of new centrifuges at the Natanz facility in Isfahan province.

[Trump raises the stakes against Iran, but why?]

The move is not a violation of the nuclear accord, to which Iran is still a party. It allows for the limited production and testing of advanced centrifuges, but without using them to enrich uranium.

But Rouhani signaled Tuesday that Iran may be willing to push the limits.

“If you continue to walk down this road, you will see IR-8 centrifuges in the future,” he said, referring to a more advanced, high-capacity device. “Our patience has a threshold.”

Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, held his own event, speaking to members of the Guard and their families and lauding their role in “defending the country and the revolution.”

He denounced the U.S. decision, saying such “plots” will come back to haunt Trump and his administration, according to a transcript of the remarks posted on Khamenei’s website.

Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, meanwhile, raised the specter of problems in the Persian Gulf, where elements of the Iranian and U.S. navies often confront each other. The waterway carries 20 percent of the world’s oil shipments.

“New incidents may happen,” he said, according to the official Islamic Republic News Agency.

Read more

What is the Revolutionary Guard?

Crazy-rich Iranians face blowback at a time of sanctions and economic stress

Today’s coverage from Post correspondents around the world

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2019-04-09 15:36:54Z
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Israel Elections: How the Country Chooses a Leader and What’s at Stake - The New York Times

Israel’s parliamentary election on Tuesday brings an end to a neck-and-neck campaign that saw Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the veteran politician of the Israeli right and one of the country’s longest-serving leaders, facing the strongest challenge in years.

Mr. Netanyahu’s tenure has been marked by a collapse of peace talks with the Palestinians, confrontation with Iran, armed conflict with Hamas, and hostility toward what he views as plots to isolate and delegitimize the Jewish state.

But Mr. Netanyahu has also overseen an era of healthy economic growth and stability, thawed relations with Sunni Arab leaders and expanded Israeli trade ties in Africa, Latin America and Asia.

[Read more on Mr. Netanyahu’s ties with President Trump that have emboldened him to take policy risks.]

The prime minister is entangled in corruption scandals that could lead to his indictment. And he faces stiff competition from a new rival, Benny Gantz, the leader of a trio of former generals who could end Mr. Netanyahu’s 10 uninterrupted years as prime minister.

But Israeli elections are complicated and unpredictable, with many parties vying for votes and at times forming opportunistic alliances to secure a parliamentary majority.

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The Blue and White alliance is led by Benny Gantz, center, and two other veteran generals. They have teamed up with a centrist party led by Yair Lapid, left, a former television host and finance minister.CreditDan Balilty for The New York Times

Final pre-election polls showed Mr. Gantz’s centrist Blue and White alliance, a coalition named for the colors of the Israeli flag, slightly ahead of Mr. Netanyahu’s Likud party, a dominant force on the Israeli right for decades.

Their policy stances are similar, a reflection of how Israeli politics have moved increasingly to the right under Mr. Netanyahu. But while Mr. Gantz has sought allies from across the spectrum, Mr. Netanyahu has reached out to the far right to strengthen his prospects for a parliamentary majority. He even has promised to begin extending sovereignty over the occupied West Bank, which the Palestinians want for a future state, if he is re-elected.

The Blue and White leaders are drawing on their military backgrounds to counter Mr. Netanyahu’s contention that only he can protect Israel. Mr. Gantz and his colleagues have also focused on the corruption accusations against Mr. Netanyahu, his biggest vulnerability, to press their case that new leadership is needed.

They have attracted backing from smaller centrist parties. And what remains of the left-leaning opposition has thrown its support behind Mr. Gantz for prime minister. The Labor Party would be likely to recommend Mr. Gantz for the premiership after the election.

Mr. Netanyahu could be indicted. Israel’s attorney general announced last month that he planned to bring charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust.

A final decision on charges is likely by year’s end. Under the current law, Mr. Netanyahu, if re-elected, would not have to resign until a final conviction, although new legislation or public pressure could force him to step down. Mr. Netanyahu has described the charges as a baseless partisan witch hunt. But with a first sitting prime minister to be charged, Israel would be entering uncharted legal and political terrain.

The uncertainty has worked against Mr. Netanyahu in the prelude to the vote.

“The attorney general’s report has done something that has never happened in Israel’s 70-year history, and that is that a prime minister is under a legal cloud,” said David Makovsky, an expert at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

The election also is the first time that three former heads of the army, the Israel Defense Forces, have united to run for office. The Blue and White alliance is led by Mr. Gantz and two other veteran generals, Gabi Ashkenazi and Moshe Yaalon.

They have teamed up with a well-known centrist party, Yesh Atid, led by Yair Lapid, a former journalist, television host and finance minister. Mr. Gantz has agreed to hand off the prime minister position to Mr. Lapid after two and a half years if their parties win.

While Mr. Netanyahu has a strong record of defending Israel, the Blue and White alliance’s military credentials have made it more difficult for him to attack Mr. Gantz and his colleagues as weak on security.

“The question is, will it neutralize the advantage that Netanyahu has accrued over his previous four terms of being ‘Mr. Security,’” Mr. Makovsky said. “He’s said the words Israelis want to hear: ‘I’ll keep you safe.’”

Voters cast ballots for parties, not individual candidates, to fill seats in the 120-member Knesset, or Parliament. The seats are divided proportionally based on the percentage of the vote each party receives.

Any party that wins 3.25 percent or more of the vote gets at least one seat. If parties don’t pass that threshold — and many smaller parties do not — their votes won’t be counted. That will raise the share of seats given to the other parties.

If one party were to win at least 61 seats, it would be entitled to form a government. But this has never happened in Israeli politics. So once the seats have been apportioned, parties try to cobble together coalitions that control a majority of seats.

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An election billboard for the New Right party, with which Likud is expected to align.CreditDan Balilty for The New York Times

Polls have suggested that Likud and Blue and White will each get about 30 seats — meaning both will be seeking alliances with smaller parties.

Likud is expected to align with a right-wing party known as the New Right, and with an extreme-right alliance known as the Union of Right-Wing Parties, which includes Jewish Power, widely criticized as an extremist, anti-Arab racist party.

Potential Blue and White coalition partners include the Labor Party and the leftist Meretz Party, among others.

[Read about the Palestinian rapper who is urging Arab citizens not to waste their votes by boycotting the elections.]

Probably not.

The president, Reuven Rivlin, has the discretion to give the party leader with the best chance of forming a majority coalition the first opportunity. Typically, but not always, that opportunity goes to the leader of the party with the most votes, who then has 42 days to try.

If that party leader fails, the president turns to another to attempt to create a coalition. So it could take a few months.

It also is possible that the Likud and the Blue and White coalition would join forces and create a national unity government. In theory, Mr. Rivlin could offer both Mr. Gantz and Mr. Netanyahu this opportunity and they could take turns as prime minister.

Mr. Gantz has rejected that idea, vowing that he will not sit on a government with Mr. Netanyahu, though a leaked recording suggested that he might.

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Ayman Odeh, a leading Arab politician, in Nazareth last month. CreditDan Balilty for The New York Times

They represent nearly a fifth of the country’s 5.8 million eligible voters, which could give the four Israeli Arab parties a potential kingmaker role. But these parties have never joined a governing coalition in Israel.

And some Israeli Arab voters have vowed to boycott the election, partly in protest of a new law pushed by Mr. Netanyahu declaring Israel as the “nation state of the Jewish people.” Critics have called the law racist and undemocratic.

They are not Israeli citizens and cannot vote in the election. About 4.75 million Palestinians fall into this category, according to the Institute for Middle East Understanding, a Palestinian group in the United States.

Still steeped in secrecy, President Trump’s long-anticipated plan to resolve the decades-old conflict between Israel and the Palestinians is not much of an issue in the election. Nevertheless, it could be affected.

Jared Kushner, Mr. Trump’s son-in-law, who has been leading the administration’s efforts to draft the plan, said it would not be made public until after the election.

Many Palestinians already have dismissed the plan — whatever it may contain — because they see Mr. Trump as siding with Israel. But the plan also faces a threat from the parties of the Israeli extreme right, which see any concessions to the Palestinians as unacceptable. If Mr. Netanyahu needs those parties to form a coalition, Mr. Trump’s peace plan may be doomed.

However, if Blue and White wins or forms a national unity government with Likud, that could make way for possible cooperation with the Trump administration on a plan.

David M. Halbfinger, Isabel Kershner and Herbert Buchsbaum contributed reporting.

Read more about the elections in Israel here.

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/09/world/middleeast/elections-israel.html

2019-04-09 15:33:45Z
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Israel election scandal: Netanyahu's party hires 1,200 to secretly film Arabs voting - NBC News

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By Allan Smith

As Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu faces what is likely to be a tough re-election fight Tuesday, his Likud party has confirmed reports that it hired and gave cameras to 1,200 polling station observers in what it said was an effort to expose voter fraud, The Jerusalem Post reported.

The party's admission came after Central Elections Committee chairman Justice Hanan Melcer said earlier Tuesday it was illegal to secretly film voters casting ballots.

Earlier Tuesday, hidden cameras were captured in several Israeli Arab towns in the north and in one in the south. The Post reported a man was caught trying to hide a camera in a location in the southern city of Rahat in an attempt to disqualify a polling station. That incident led to about five people being detained in connection with the hidden cameras, The Post reported.

April 9, 201901:59

The left-wing Hadash Tal and Balad parties criticized the Likud for trying to secretly film voters.

Hadash Tal claimed "the extreme Right understands our power well in overthrowing the government and has crossed every border, using illegal means in an attempt to intervene and prevent Arab citizens from voting — but we, too, understand our strength."

Balad, meanwhile, said it "received a message that right-wing activists are disrupting the electoral process in Arab towns by means of wiretapping and hidden cameras [in order] to deter the Arab public from voting. ... We do not give in to the attempts to delegitimize us."

The incidents come as Netanyahu — seeking a fifth term leading the nation — battles for political survival amid corruption allegations that he has denied. The party led by his main rival Benny Gantz, Hosen L'Yisrael, had a slight edge in final opinion polls. While Gantz, a former military chief, entered Election Day with that lead, Netanyahu is still in a strong position to form a governing coalition, The Washington Post reported.

Israel's attorney general announced in February that he planned to indict the prime minister in three corruption cases on charges of bribery and fraud and breach of trust. If Netanyahu remains in power following Tuesday's election and serves beyond July, he will become Israel's longest-serving prime minister.

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https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/elections/netanyahu-s-party-admits-it-hired-1-200-people-secretly-n992381

2019-04-09 14:05:00Z
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Iranian lawmakers convene with chants of 'Death to America' - Fox News

Iranian lawmakers dressed in paramilitary uniforms chanted "Death to America" as they convened Tuesday for an open session of parliament after the White House designated Iran's Revolutionary Guard a foreign terrorist organization.

President Hassan Rouhani declared that the force's popularity would only surge in the wake of the designation, saying guard members would be dearer "than any other time in the hearts of Iranian nation."

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei praised the guard and said America's "evil designs would not harm" the force.

The move by Washington on Monday was an unprecedented declaration against a foreign government entity — one that could prompt retaliation and make it harder for Americans to work with allies in the region who have contact with members and affiliates of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, or IRGC.

It marks the first time the United States has designated an entire entity of another government as a terrorist organization, placing a powerful and expansive armed force with vast economic resources that answers only to Iran's supreme leader in the same category as al-Qaida and the Islamic State group.

Iran's rival, Saudi Arabia, welcomed the U.S. decision, describing it as a "serious and practical step to combat terrorism." A Foreign Ministry official said the designation "translates Saudi Arabia's repeated demands for the international community to confront terrorism supported by Iran."

Within hours of the Trump administration's declaration, Iran's Supreme National Security Council responded by designating the U.S. Central Command, also known as CENTCOM, and all its forces as terrorist, and labeling the U.S. a "supporter of terrorism."

In Tehran on Tuesday, many of the lawmakers wore the uniform of the guard in a show of support as they convened for a parliament session marking the National Day of the Revolutionary Guard, which follows the lunar calendar. This year it coincides with the April 9 holiday known as Nuclear Day.

Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani denounced the U.S. decision as the "climax of stupidity and ignorance." The Supreme National Security Council's spokesman, Keivan Khosravi, said that going forward, "any unusual move by American forces in the region will be perceived as the behavior by a terrorist group." He did not elaborate.

Iranian newspapers carried reports of the U.S. move along with bellicose commentary on their front pages.

The Guard-affiliated Javan daily said any attack on Revolutionary Guard bases and facilities will be "recognized as a right" for Iran to respond. The hard-line Kayhan newspaper said it gave Iranians "permission" to kill American military personnel.

State-owned IRAN daily went a step further, saying the U.S. move was a "designation of the entire Iranian nation" as terrorist.

The pro-reform Shargh daily described it as "the last card" of President Donald Trump against Iran. Trump last year pulled America out of the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers and re-imposed sanctions on the country, mainly targeting Iran's vital oil sector.

Marking Nuclear Day, Rouhani unveiled dozens of "achievements" in nuclear technology, something he does every year. This time he touted the beginning of an installation of a chain of advanced centrifuges at the uranium enrichment facility in the central town of Natanz as well as an addition at the Fordo underground facility.

He called the Revolutionary Guard a "devoted" force that fought militant groups in Iran as well as in Iraq and Syria. The guard has fought Islamic State group's militants, who view Shiites as heretics, in Syria and has assisted Syrian President Bashar Assad's government forces.

The U.S., Rouhani said, is the "head of global terrorism" and Trump's sanctions have only inspired Iran to make more strides in new missiles and weapons technology. America will not be able to "block Iran's progress," he said.

Khamenei, who has final say on all state matters, met with the Guard on Tuesday, telling them that "Americans imagine they are designing and making trouble against the guard, in fact against the revolution and Iran, but their evil designs will not harm" the force.

China urged countries outside of the Mideast to "promote peace and stability ... and avoid actions that may lead to further escalation of the situation." Beijing is a close economic partner of Tehran and has sided with Russia and its regional ally Iran in the conflict in Syria.

"We oppose power politics and bullying by any countries," China's Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said when asked about the U.S. designation.

On Monday, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the designation of the Revolutionary Guard is intended to increase pressure on Iran, isolating it further and diverting some of the financial resources it uses to fund terrorism and militant activity in the Middle East and beyond.

But, in addition to the potential for Iranian retaliation, it complicates a delicate balance for U.S. personnel in at least two key countries- Iraq and Lebanon. Iraq has prominent Iranian-affiliated Shiite militias and its government has strong ties to Iran. In Lebanon, the Iran-backed Hezbollah militant group is in parliament and the government.

___

Associated Press writers Aya Batrawy in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and Christopher Bodeen in Beijing contributed to this report.

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2019-04-09 12:16:43Z
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Israeli elections to decide Netanyahu’s fate as voters cast ballots - The Washington Post

JERUSALEM — Israelis began casting their votes Tuesday in a fiercely fought election in which Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is battling for political survival after more than a decade in power

Voting sites opened at 7 a.m., with final opinion polls giving an edge to the party led by Netanyahu’s main rival, former military chief Benny Gantz. By noon, the Central Elections Committee released figures showing that less than 24 percent of the population had voted, a slight drop over the same time in the previous elections in 2015. Polls will remain open until 10 p.m.

While the polls suggest that Gantz’s party will win the most seats in parliament, Netanyahu still seems to be in a stronger position to assemble a governing coalition, which is what ultimately matters.

For many Israelis, it boils down to one question: Should Netanyahu stay or go? 

“Let’s make this happen,” said Gantz, as he voted in his hometown of Rosh Haayin, near Tel Aviv.  

In a campaign waged largely over social media, Netanyahu has kept the race tight despite facing corruption allegations. Israel’s attorney general announced in February that he planned to indict the prime minister in three criminal cases, pending a hearing in which Netanyahu can defend himself. 

If he wins a new term and remains in office past July, Netanyahu will become Israel’s longest-serving prime minister, surpassing the 13 years and 127 days of Israel’s founding father, David Ben-Gurion. 

Trying to prevent that is Gantz, a 59-year-old who is making his political debut. In a highly polarized political scene, Gantz has been running on a message of unity, stressing that he is of neither the left nor the right. Netanyahu has branded him a “leftist” from the outset. 

Gantz’s message may have resonated with Israelis who are weary of Netanyahu’s leadership and concerned about questions of impropriety, but the challenger has stumbled in television interviews and has been criticized as wooden, especially in comparison to Netanyahu’s polished performances. 

“To replace or not to replace, that is the question,” veteran Israeli journalist Nahum Barnea wrote in his column in the popular daily Yedioth Ahronoth. “That question, which has become a cliche, is completely accurate; these elections are a referendum on Netanyahu.” 

In the town of Mevasseret Zion, just outside Jerusalem, Michael Livny and his wife, Nili Livny, said they wanted anyone but Netanyahu to win. 

“Hopefully there will be a change today,” said Michael Livny, a doctor. “I don’t really care who comes in his place. I just don’t want a crook as my leader anymore.”

“We also don’t want a right-wing government again, one that appeases the ultra-Orthodox,” said Nili Livny, who manages her husband’s medical clinic. “We feel a tiny glimmer of hope that it might change, but we’ll just have to wait and see.”

Hodaya Khalaf, 25, said she was also hoping for change but wants to see an increase in religious voices and right-wing representation in the government.

“I want people in the government who know that Israel is ours, that are not confused, that don’t care what people are saying about us outside of Israel and who will not let the Arabs do whatever they want here,” said the mother of two, who works as a teacher. 

Khalaf said she was voting for the alliance of right-wing parties, which include the controversial Otzma Yehudit, or Jewish Power, faction. Many view the hard-line group as inspired by Meir Kahane, an ultranationalist American Israeli rabbi who was banned from Israeli politics for racist opinions and whose Kach Party was designated a terrorist organization by the U.S. State Department. 

“If I could have done, I would have voted for Jewish Power on their own,” said Khalaf.

Another voter, Marcel Suissa, dismissed all the other options and said she voted for Netanyahu. 

“There is just no one else who can do what he does for this country,” she said. “That is why I like him.”

Netanyahu has tried to drive home the message that he is capable of leading Israel as no one else can. He takes credit for winning U.S. recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and of Israeli sovereignty over the disputed Golan Heights. He also highlights his close relationship with President Trump and his effort to boost ties with Russian President Vladimir Putin. 

“He has convinced people that he is irreplaceable and that no one else comes even near to him,” said Gideon Rahat, a senior fellow at the Israel Democracy Institute. “That is the secret to his power.” 

Netanyahu has also long sold himself to the Israeli electorate on the basis of his strong record on security. But his rival party this time contains three former military chiefs of staff. 

[Israel’s high-stakes elections: What you need to know as Netanyahu faces his toughest test]

Both Gantz and Netanyahu have ramped up their campaigns as they try to win over the undecided. For Gantz, that means telling supporters that he is on the cusp of victory. Netanyahu’s strategy has been to whip up fears that he might lose. 

“We are one foot away from victory,” Gantz told the crowd gathered in Tel Aviv for his last campaign rally Monday. “We need two more seats, just a few tens of thousands of votes more. Nothing is more important than joining us.” 

Netanyahu made his final pleas in Jerusalem’s market, to chants of his nickname “Bibi” alongside a bit of heckling. 

“It’s not in our pocket,” he warned. “Some of our people are complacent and believe the media, which is trying to put them to sleep.”

In Israel’s fragmented political landscape, with about 40 separate parties fielding candidates, what matters most is who can garner enough support in the 120-seat parliament, or Knesset, to form a majority of at least 61 seats. 

Netanyahu’s warnings that he may be unable to do that are part of what the Israeli media has dubbed his “oy gevalt” campaign, referring to an expression of alarm in Yiddish. He is trying to pull votes away from smaller right-wing parties by telling their supporters that there might not be a right-wing government at all if they don’t vote for his Likud party. 

Netanyahu used the “gevalt” strategy effectively in 2015, when polls had shown him trailing significantly. He turned things around and won by six seats. 

One risk of that strategy is that smaller right-wing parties may fail to pass the necessary vote threshold, potentially depriving Netanyahu of coalition partners.

In a move that was widely read as a bid to win more votes from the right, Netanyahu last week promised to begin to apply Israeli sovereignty to settlements in the West Bank, considered illegal by most of the international community. 

Until then questions related to the peace process with the Palestinians, or lack of it, had been largely absent from the campaign. The West Bank is home to around 450,000 settlers who live among more than 2.5 million Palestinians.  

In 2015 he was also criticized by many Israelis for his last-minute warning on election day that Arabs were “flocking to the polls.” A healthy turnout among Arab Israelis, who make up 20 percent of the population, has the potential to block Netanyahu from being able to form a coalition. 

This time, he’s used a similar strategy from the outset, persistently warning that the only way that Gantz can win is through a coalition with Arab-majority parties. Though they have traditionally abstained from backing any candidate, they could also play a significant role if they choose to recommend Gantz. 

Also tipped as a potential kingmaker is Moshe Feiglin, a libertarian ultranationalist who looks set to make it into the Knesset after gaining popularity with a pledge to legalize marijuana.  

In the days after the election, based on recommendations from parties that have won Knesset seats, Israeli President Reuven Rivlin will nominate the leader of the party with the majority of support to try to form a government. 

A potential complication could arise if Gantz wins a significant majority but does not have enough support from other parties to form a governing coalition. Polls suggest that such a scenario is possible. 

“If Gantz’s party is significantly ahead but can’t make a coalition, then the president faces a conundrum,” said Reuven Hazan, a political science professor at Hebrew University. The president can delay for up to seven days to give him a chance to build support, he said. “But the name of the game is forming a majority.”

Read more

Israel’s election: Netanyahu sees a path to victory. Critics see apartheid.

Israel’s Netanyahu, a political Houdini, is facing his toughest escape act yet.

Under investigation and up for reelection, Netanyahu’s kinship with Trump has never been clearer

Today’s coverage from Post correspondents around the world

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/israeli-elections-to-decide-netanyahus-fateas-voters-head-to-the-polls/2019/04/08/df9859b2-5a18-11e9-98d4-844088d135f2_story.html

2019-04-09 11:45:13Z
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Iranian lawmakers convene with chants of 'Death to America' - Fox News

Iranian lawmakers dressed in paramilitary uniforms chanted "Death to America" as they convened Tuesday for an open session of parliament after the White House designated Iran's Revolutionary Guard a foreign terrorist organization.

President Hassan Rouhani declared that the force's popularity would only surge in the wake of the designation, saying guard members would be dearer "than any other time in the hearts of Iranian nation."

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei praised the guard and said America's "evil designs would not harm" the force.

The move by Washington on Monday was an unprecedented declaration against a foreign government entity — one that could prompt retaliation and make it harder for Americans to work with allies in the region who have contact with members and affiliates of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, or IRGC.

It marks the first time the United States has designated an entire entity of another government as a terrorist organization, placing a powerful and expansive armed force with vast economic resources that answers only to Iran's supreme leader in the same category as al-Qaida and the Islamic State group.

Iran's rival, Saudi Arabia, welcomed the U.S. decision, describing it as a "serious and practical step to combat terrorism." A Foreign Ministry official said the designation "translates Saudi Arabia's repeated demands for the international community to confront terrorism supported by Iran."

Within hours of the Trump administration's declaration, Iran's Supreme National Security Council responded by designating the U.S. Central Command, also known as CENTCOM, and all its forces as terrorist, and labeling the U.S. a "supporter of terrorism."

In Tehran on Tuesday, many of the lawmakers wore the uniform of the guard in a show of support as they convened for a parliament session marking the National Day of the Revolutionary Guard, which follows the lunar calendar. This year it coincides with the April 9 holiday known as Nuclear Day.

Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani denounced the U.S. decision as the "climax of stupidity and ignorance." The Supreme National Security Council's spokesman, Keivan Khosravi, said that going forward, "any unusual move by American forces in the region will be perceived as the behavior by a terrorist group." He did not elaborate.

Iranian newspapers carried reports of the U.S. move along with bellicose commentary on their front pages.

The Guard-affiliated Javan daily said any attack on Revolutionary Guard bases and facilities will be "recognized as a right" for Iran to respond. The hard-line Kayhan newspaper said it gave Iranians "permission" to kill American military personnel.

State-owned IRAN daily went a step further, saying the U.S. move was a "designation of the entire Iranian nation" as terrorist.

The pro-reform Shargh daily described it as "the last card" of President Donald Trump against Iran. Trump last year pulled America out of the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers and re-imposed sanctions on the country, mainly targeting Iran's vital oil sector.

Marking Nuclear Day, Rouhani unveiled dozens of "achievements" in nuclear technology, something he does every year. This time he touted the beginning of an installation of a chain of advanced centrifuges at the uranium enrichment facility in the central town of Natanz as well as an addition at the Fordo underground facility.

He called the Revolutionary Guard a "devoted" force that fought militant groups in Iran as well as in Iraq and Syria. The guard has fought Islamic State group's militants, who view Shiites as heretics, in Syria and has assisted Syrian President Bashar Assad's government forces.

The U.S., Rouhani said, is the "head of global terrorism" and Trump's sanctions have only inspired Iran to make more strides in new missiles and weapons technology. America will not be able to "block Iran's progress," he said.

Khamenei, who has final say on all state matters, met with the Guard on Tuesday, telling them that "Americans imagine they are designing and making trouble against the guard, in fact against the revolution and Iran, but their evil designs will not harm" the force.

China urged countries outside of the Mideast to "promote peace and stability ... and avoid actions that may lead to further escalation of the situation." Beijing is a close economic partner of Tehran and has sided with Russia and its regional ally Iran in the conflict in Syria.

"We oppose power politics and bullying by any countries," China's Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said when asked about the U.S. designation.

On Monday, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the designation of the Revolutionary Guard is intended to increase pressure on Iran, isolating it further and diverting some of the financial resources it uses to fund terrorism and militant activity in the Middle East and beyond.

But, in addition to the potential for Iranian retaliation, it complicates a delicate balance for U.S. personnel in at least two key countries- Iraq and Lebanon. Iraq has prominent Iranian-affiliated Shiite militias and its government has strong ties to Iran. In Lebanon, the Iran-backed Hezbollah militant group is in parliament and the government.

___

Associated Press writers Aya Batrawy in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and Christopher Bodeen in Beijing contributed to this report.

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https://www.foxnews.com/world/iranian-lawmakers-convene-with-chants-of-death-to-america

2019-04-09 11:18:50Z
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