Donald Trump praises Israel’s racial profiling, calls for same in US: Zio-Watch, June 20, 2016

Ehud Barak speaking during a launch event for the Reporty App in Tel Aviv, March 16, 2016. (Flash90)

Ehud Barak speaking during a launch event for the Reporty App in Tel Aviv, March 16, 2016. (Flash90)

Ehud Barak speaking at a launch event for the Reporty app in Tel Aviv, March 16, 2016. (Flash90)

(JTA) — Former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak said Benjamin Netanyahu’s government is encouraging “budding fascism.”

“A fanatic nucleus of extremist ideology has taken over Likud by using loopholes in the primaries constitution, purging Likud’s leadership of all those who cherished democracy over populism or some fleeting achievement,” Barak, who served as defense minister under Netanyahu until 2013, said Thursday at the Herzliya Conference.

Netanyahu was responsible for this perceived development, Barak said, whether he it allowed it to happen out of weakness or as a “late manifestation” of his own core beliefs.
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Published time: 19 Jun, 2016 23:13

Virginia Raggi, 5-Star Movement candidate for Rome's mayor, casts her vote at the polling station in Rome, Italy June 19, 2016 © Remo Casilli

Virginia Raggi, 5-Star Movement candidate for Rome's mayor, casts her vote at the polling station in Rome, Italy June 19, 2016 © Remo Casilli Virginia Raggi, 5-Star Movement candidate for Rome’s mayor, casts her vote at the polling station in Rome, Italy June 19, 2016 © Remo Casilli / Reuters

Italy’s eurosceptic anti-establishment 5-Star Movement (M5S) is leading in mayoral elections in Rome and Turin, exit polls showed on Sunday. A win would be a massive blow to Prime Minister Matteo Renzi’s center-left Democratic Party (PD).

M5S candidate Virginia Raggi, a popular 37-year-old lawyer, looks likely to win Rome’s run-off round, taking around 62-66 percent of the vote, according to pollster EMG. Meanwhile, her opponent, the center-left’s Roberto Giachetti, is projected to receive only 34-38 percent of the vote.

Raggi ran on a platform focused on fighting corruption and cronyism.
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Published time: 18 Jun, 2016 04:00

© Maksim Blinov

© Maksim Blinov © Maksim Blinov / Sputnik

It definitely wasn’t casual Friday for President Putin, who spoke for hours at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) on the hottest topics on the global agenda, including Russia’s relations with the EU and Washington.

READ MORE: Putin on ban of Russian athletes from Rio Olympics: ‘I think we can find a solution’

When asked about his opinion of the candidates for US president, Putin explained his attitude towards “probably the only superpower,” as the president called it. “America is a great state… We accept it, and we want to and are ready to work with the United States,” he said, adding that no matter who is elected as America’s next leader, Russia will work with him or her. Yet, the Russian President hinted that Donald Trump’s foreign agenda might be more preferable to Moscow, “Mr. Trump has stated that he is ready to restore full format Russia-US relations… We all welcome it.”

© Sergei Savostyanov / TASS

© Sergei Savostyanov / TASS © Sergei Savostyanov / TASS

While saying that such a powerful state could be of benefit to the world, including Russia, Putin noted that the problem with the US is its tendency to interfere in the affairs of other countries.

“We need [the US]. But we don’t need them constantly interfering in our affairs, telling us how to live, and hindering Europe in building relations with us,” he said.

The economic sanctions that Moscow introduced as a response to the West imposing restrictions on Russia after the coup in Kiev have not affected America in any way, but they have done harm to Europe.

“[Sanctions] have zero effect [on US], but Americans tell their partners to endure them,” Putin said, adding that he doesn’t understand why the EU has to suffer.

© Mikhail Metzel / TASS

© Mikhail Metzel / TASS
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Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., addressing supporters via internet live stream. (Screenshot from YouTube)Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., addressing supporters via internet live stream. (Screenshot from YouTube)

 

WASHINGTON (JTA) — Bernie Sanders told his followers that the priority now was defeating Donald Trump and the bigotry he said the presumptive Republican presidential nominee represented. He pledged to work with Hillary Clinton to make sure that happens, although he did not yet withdraw from the race for the Democratic presidential nod.

“The major political task that we face in the next five months is to make certain that Donald Trump is defeated and defeated badly,” Sanders, the Independent senator from Vermont, said in an address live-streamed Thursday evening to his followers marking the end of the primaries campaign. “And I personally intend to begin my role in that process in a very short period of time.”

Sanders, the first Jewish candidate to win major party nominating contests, noted his differences with Clinton on some issues, but, in a shift, emphasized that the greater threat was Trump, the real estate magnate whose securing of the Republican nomination has roiled the presidential race with accusations that his campaign is undergirded by bigotry.

“After centuries of racism, sexism and discrimination of all forms in our country we do not need a major party candidate who makes bigotry the cornerstone of his campaign,” he said. “We cannot have a president who insults Mexicans and Latinos, Muslims, women and African-Americans. We cannot have a president who, in the midst of so much income and wealth inequality, wants to give hundreds of billions of dollars in tax breaks to the very rich. We cannot have a president who, despite all of the scientific evidence, believes that climate change is a hoax.”

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Russian servicemen prepare a Russian Sukhoi Su-30SM fighter jet before departure on a mission at the Hmeimin military base in Latakia province, Syria, on December 16, 2015. ©AFPRussian servicemen prepare a Russian Sukhoi Su-30SM fighter jet before departure on a mission at the Hmeimin military base in Latakia province, Syria, on December 16, 2015. ©AFP
Russian servicemen prepare a Russian Sukhoi Su-30SM fighter jet before departure on a mission at the Hmeimin military base in Latakia province, Syria, on December 16, 2015. ©AFP

Russia says it has reached an agreement with the US to improve coordination between their military operations in Syria where they are backing opposing sides.

Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov also rejected on Sunday the Pentagon’s accusations that it had deliberately targeted US-backed militants in Syria.

He said Russia is pushing the US to help produce a shared map of the positions of fighting forces to avoid incidents.

The Pentagon said on Saturday it had questioned Moscow over Russian airstrikes conducted against US-backed militants last week.

Konashenkov dismissed the allegation, saying the Russian military had warned the US in advance about the planned strike, but the Pentagon had failed to provide coordinates.

The Russian military, he said, had proposed months ago to share information about locations of various forces involved in military action in Syria but the Pentagon hasn’t been forthcoming.
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US Marines assigned to the 13th Marine Corps Expeditionary Unit are seen during operations on the bridge wing of guided-missile destroyer USS Gonzalez (DDG 66), in the Gulf of Aden, April 30, 2016.US Marines assigned to the 13th Marine Corps Expeditionary Unit are seen during operations on the bridge wing of guided-missile destroyer USS Gonzalez (DDG 66), in the Gulf of Aden, April 30, 2016.
US Marines assigned to the 13th Marine Corps Expeditionary Unit are seen during operations on the bridge wing of guided-missile destroyer USS Gonzalez (DDG 66), in the Gulf of Aden, April 30, 2016.

The US reportedly plans to extend its military presence in Yemen by keeping a force of special operations advisers in the war-torn country.

The force, deployed at the request of the Emirati government around the port city of Mukalla back in April, would remain in Yemen for the foreseeable future, The Washington Post reported.

The force, which consists of about a dozen personnel, would help troops from the UAE fight militants from al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), the paper cited unnamed US officials as saying.

In March, forces loyal to former President Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi and Emirati troops overran the city of Mukalla after AQAP militants left the seaport in southeast Yemen.

Early in May, the US military deployed more than 200 US Marines in the port city, which is located in the central province of Hadramout.

Yemen’s southern coast is now under the control of US troops, who are deployed to the region under the pretext of battling AQAP.


The amphibious assault ship USS Boxer (file photo)

The deployment of US troops comes more than a year after the withdrawal of the forces from Yemen.
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Former mayor of London Ken Livingstone at the 2013 Asia Pacific Cities Summit in Kaohsiung, Taiwan. (Flickr Commons)

Former mayor of London Ken Livingstone at the 2013 Asia Pacific Cities Summit in Kaohsiung, Taiwan. (Flickr Commons)

Ken Livingstone, the former mayor of London, at a summit in Kaohsiung, Taiwan. (Flickr Commons)

(JTA) — Former London mayor Ken Livingstone, who was recently suspended from the Labour Party for saying that Adolf Hitler supported Zionism, said he may have Jewish roots.

Livingstone told the London-based Jewish Chronicle newspaper that his maternal grandmother had what he was told was a Jewish last name.

He also said the late Jewish Labour lawmaker Geville Janner used to drive him home from Parliament at night.
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A still from "The Settlers," which premiered Jan. 22 at the Sundance Film Festival. (Courtesy photo)

A still from "The Settlers," which premiered Jan. 22 at the Sundance Film Festival. (Courtesy photo)

A still from “The Settlers,” which premiered Jan. 22 at the Sundance Film Festival. (Courtesy photo)

JERUSALEM (JTA) — Israel’s Cabinet approved an additional $18.6 million for West Bank settlements to help defray the costs of their “unique security situation,” spurring one Palestinian leader to say Israel “openly supports apartheid.”

On Sunday at its weekly meeting, the government approved a budgetary supplement that includes stipends for local councils in the West Bank and aid to improve security at public buildings. There are also allocations for small businesses, to develop tourism and for youth programming.

The assistance plan “involves the work of many ministries on behalf of the residents there,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said.
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Soldiers attending the funeral of Alon Albert Govberg, who was murdered in a terror attack in Jerusalem, Oct. 14, 2015. (Hadas Parush/Flash90)

Soldiers attending the funeral of Alon Albert Govberg, who was murdered in a terror attack in Jerusalem, Oct. 14, 2015. (Hadas Parush/Flash90)

Soldiers attending the funeral of Alon Albert Govberg, who was killed in a terror attack in Jerusalem, Oct. 14, 2015. (Hadas Parush/Flash90)

Dirty, hot and exhausted Israeli soldiers waiting for their bus home from the army base tend, understandably, to be in a hurry to get on board.

But when I was living in Israel during the first intifada, or Palestinian uprising, soldiers didn’t jostle to be first in line. Rather, the most coveted position was second.

That’s because the bus driver had the right – under rules issued by the army and made clear to each armed soldier before she or he left the base – to order any soldier to sit in the front seat and remain alert. And the first one to get on board was the obvious choice.

If you’d just finished three weeks of training with rare interruptions for sleep and were looking forward to a snooze on the long trip home, this was definitely a downer. But it was necessitated by the rash of Palestinian terrorist attacks on bus drivers at the time.
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Former Arkansas Gov. and Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee speaking during a corner stone dedication ceremony for a new Jewish settlement in eastern Jerusalem on January 31, 2011. (Lior Mizrahi/Getty Images)

Former Arkansas Gov. and Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee speaking during a corner stone dedication ceremony for a new Jewish settlement in eastern Jerusalem on January 31, 2011. (Lior Mizrahi/Getty Images)

Mike Huckabee speaking at a cornerstone dedication ceremony for a new Jewish settlement in eastern Jerusalem, Jan. 31, 2011. (Lior Mizrahi/Getty Images)

(JTA) — During a visit to Israel, Mike Huckabee, an ex-governor of Arkansas and former candidate in the U.S. Republican presidential primaries, defended the anti-Muslim rhetoric of presumptive nominee Donald Trump, whom Huckabee said would make a “great president” for the Jewish state.

“It’s not racist. I think a lot of people are acting like what Donald Trump is saying is so unbelievable,” Huckabee told Israel’s Army Radio Thursday in reference to the Republican presidential candidate’s call in December for a “total and complete shutdown” of Muslims entering the United States. “Actually, what he’s saying is what every country on earth does right now.”

“Not all Muslims are terrorists, but virtually all the terrorists who are doing the kind of murders we’re seeing in America are Muslims,” Huckabee said.
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(JTA) — Chelsea Clinton gave birth to her second child with Jewish husband Marc Mezvinsky.

She announced the birth of their son on Saturday in a post on Twitter.

“Marc and I are overwhelmed with gratitude and love as we celebrate the birth of our son, Aidan Clinton Mezvinsky,” the post said.

Marc and I are overwhelmed with gratitude and love as we celebrate the birth of our son, Aidan Clinton Mezvinsky.

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Published time: 17 Jun, 2016 17:19

Italy's Prime Minister Matteo Renzi (L) and Russia's President Vladimir Putin at the 2016 St. Petersburg International Economic Forum, St. Petersburg, Russia, June 17, 2016. © Mikhail Metzel / TASS

Italy's Prime Minister Matteo Renzi (L) and Russia's President Vladimir Putin at the 2016 St. Petersburg International Economic Forum, St. Petersburg, Russia, June 17, 2016. © Mikhail Metzel / TASS Italy’s Prime Minister Matteo Renzi (L) and Russia’s President Vladimir Putin at the 2016 St. Petersburg International Economic Forum, St. Petersburg, Russia, June 17, 2016. © Mikhail Metzel / TASS

Russia could lift the sanctions it has imposed on the EU, but to make such a concession, it would need to be certain that reciprocal measures would follow and that it wouldn’t be “once again deceived” by its Western partners, Russian President Vladimir Putin said.

Speaking at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) on Friday, Putin announced that Moscow might lift the sanctions that were put in place as a counter-measure to anti-Russia restrictions.

We must be sure that these unilateral measures taken by Russia will be followed by reciprocal steps, which won’t be – as one famous classic has said – a one step forward, two steps back,” he added, referring to a well-known phrase coined by Vladimir Lenin.

Putin was speaking at a press-conference following his talks with Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi.

The Italian PM, in turn, has announced that he will urge his European colleagues in the 28-member bloc to thoroughly discuss their next move with regard to anti-Russia sanctions.
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Thomas Mair, 52, said to have ties with extremist organization National Alliance; police searching for motive

June 17, 2016, 11:39 pm

Flowers surrounding a picture of Jo Cox during a vigil in Parliament Square in London, England, June 16, 2016. (JTA/Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)Flowers surrounding a picture of Jo Cox during a vigil in Parliament Square in London, England, June 16, 2016. (JTA/Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

 

The man whom authorities believe killed British lawmaker Jo Cox Thursday is said to have a history of involvement with an American neo-Nazi organization.

The New York Times reported Friday that hate group watchdog the Southern Poverty Law Center, said the suspect, who has been identified by neighbors and family members as Thomas Mair, 52, in 1999 purchased $620 worth of materials from a publishing imprint of then-leading neo-Nazi group the National Alliance.

Cox, 41, was shot and stabbed several times on the street in the northern English town of Birstall on Thursday. A member of Labour, she was a vocal advocate for Britain remaining in the European Union and openly criticized her party’s leadership for not doing enough to fight anti-Semitism within the party.

She was the first sitting member of Parliament to be killed since 1990, according to the Times.

Thomas Mair (YouTube screenshot)Thomas Mair (YouTube screenshot)

Thomas Mair (YouTube screenshot)

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