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WAR REPORT
Israel should pay Arabs to leave: Lieberman
by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (AFP) Nov 28, 2014


Israel announces new military chief of staff
Jerusalem (AFP) Nov 29, 2014 - Israel's prime minister and defence minister announced on Saturday that the country's next military chief of staff will be Major General Gadi Eisenkot.

Eisenkot, currently deputy chief of staff, will replace Lieutenant General Benny Gantz, whose four-year term ends in February 2015.

The appointment is subject to government approval.

Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon called Eisenkot the best choice to face Israel's "complex security challenges".

Replacing him as new deputy chief of staff will be Major General Yair Golan, currently head of the northern command, Yaalon added.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Eisenkot was "selected from an excellent group of generals" and wished him luck.

The 54-year-old began his military service as an infantryman in the Golani Brigade, rising through the ranks to command it.

He was military secretary to premier and defence minister Ehud Barak between 2009 and 2011, during which Israeli media reported he was involved in negotiations with Syria.

Eisenkot was later appointed commander of the Judea and Samaria division, Israel's term for the West Bank, before becoming head of the operations directorate and eventually northern command chief from 2006 to 2011.

It was during his northern command tenure that he wrote Netanyahu a "personal letter" discouraging an attack thwart Iran's nuclear programme, which Israel fears has a military objective.

According to Haaretz newspaper, Eisenkot warned that such an attack would cause a long war with Iran and its Lebanese-based Hezbollah militia, while also souring relations with the United States.

Haaretz noted that contrary to when Eisenkot wrote the letter, "an Israeli attack on Iran is currently not on the agenda", but it could become relevant again in July 2015, the new deadline for nuclear negotiations between Iran and world powers.

Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman suggested Friday that Israel should offer "economic incentives" to encourage Arab Israelis to leave the country and relocate to a future Palestinian state.

Arab Israelis "who decide their identity is Palestinian can relinquish their Israeli citizenship and become citizens of the future Palestinian state," Lieberman said in manifesto of his Israel Beitenu party.

"The state of Israel should even encourage them to do so with a system of economic incentives," he added.

The text said only a peace "package deal" with Arab states and "land and population swaps of Arab Israelis" will ensure stable peace.

Lieberman has over the years time and again said any comprehensive regional peace plan would have to entail population exchanges to ensure "maximal separation" between Jews and Arabs in Israel.

Israel's 1.7 million Arab citizens, who make up over 20 percent of the population, are Palestinians who remained in the country following the creation of the Jewish state in 1948, along with their descendants.

Lieberman has long professed revoking citizenship from Arab Israelis who are not sufficiently "loyal" to the state, and last month called on Arab MPs to quit the Israeli political system.

His party has over the years advanced a series of laws enabling courts to revoke the citizenship of anyone convicted of treason or preventing people who have not served in the military or civilian service from being members of the parliament, which are seen as targeting Israel's Arab minority.

On Sunday the government endorsed a proposal to enshrine in law the country's status as the national homeland of the Jewish people which faces parliamentary debate and voting.

Critics have said the law will weaken democracy in Israel and could institutionalise discrimination against Israel's Arab citizens.


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