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Israel cracks top Palestinian terror cell

Within days of the five-year anniversary of Hamas’ capture of Gilad Shalit, Israeli forces make a significant stride in the fight to keep her citizens and her soldiers safe.

The IDF and Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) have arrested close to two dozen Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) operatives who were running a number of terror cells near Jerusalem and were planning to kidnap soldiers and perpetrate other terror attacks against Israel, it was released for publication on Sunday.

Some of the operatives, the Shin Bet said, were Arabs from east Jerusalem in possession of Israeli identity cards enabling them to travel freely throughout the country.

Over 20 suspects have been arrested in recent weeks, the Shin Bet said, including a number who have significant military experience and have previously served time in Israeli prisons.

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Monday, June 27th, 2011 at 1:22 PM  | David Kuner

Explosion at Chabad House in Santa Monica

Los Angeles Times:

Officers were evacuating a 1-square-block area around the site of an explosion on the property of a Jewish religious facility in Santa Monica. No one was injured in the blast, which was reported about 6:45 a.m. Thursday and occurred in the 1400 block of 17th Street, said Sgt. Darrick Jacob, a watch commander with the Santa Monica Police Department.

Besides the evacuation zone, officers were diverting traffic in a larger area and bomb-sniffing dogs were on the scene to gather evidence and as a precaution in the event there were explosive devices in the vicinity, Jacob said.

Santa Monica police had at least 30 personnel on scene. The bomb squad of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department was also taking part in the investigation and the local fire department was standing by.

Update:

At this time police do not consider the explosion to be a bomb. The local Chabad website wrote that the blast was caused by construction combustibles in a dumpster:

“In response to news reports of a pipe bomb in our facility,” the website says. “During morning services today the police department came to Chabad House in response to a report of an explosion. The men that were praying did not hear or feel anything.  Rabbi Levitansky grabbed one of the new Torah scrolls so they [could] finish services.  Which they did at the corner of 17th and S. Monica.”

“The explosion was from a dumpster where someone trashed some construction combustibles,” the website explained.  ”It exploded and landed on our neighbor’s roof.  We do not know who placed the construction trash there.”

A police spokesperson has since attributed the blast to “mechanical failure.”

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Thursday, April 7th, 2011 at 12:26 PM  | David Kuner

Israeli family stabbed to death in West Bank

A terrorist broke into a West Bank home Friday night and killed five family members. The victims were identified as the Fogel family: Udi, 36, his wife Ruth, 35, and their children Yoav, 11, Elad, 4 and Hadas, 3 months:

Five family members were found murdered in their residence in the West Bank Itamar settlement Friday overnight, after a suspected terrorist broke and entered the house and stabbed the five to death. Two children managed to escape and survived the attack, Army Radio reported.

An emergency team that arrived at the scene at 1:00 a.m. announced a couple, their 11-year old child, 3-year-old toddler, and a one-month baby girl dead from stabbing wounds.

Palestinian media on Saturday reported that a faction of Fatah’s al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade claimed responsibility for the stabbing incident.

Residents of the settlement reported that shots were heard in the area and that the terrorist succeeded in fleeing from the scene.

May God be with all those near and dear to the Fogel family. And may their murderers be brought to justice.

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Sunday, March 13th, 2011 at 6:37 AM  | David Kuner

West Bank violence escalates

Weekly demonstrations in the West Bank against the construction of the security barrier are becoming increasingly violent. Israeli soldiers are being attacked with stones and Molotov cocktails. In recent clashes, two Palestinians were killed when fired upon with rubber-coated bullets by IDF soldiers.

The most troubling aspect of what has been dubbed by Palestinians as the “White Intifada” is the support that it has received from the Palestinian Authority. Israel has responded by arresting the organizers of these demonstrations and expelling foreign national that have participated in these clashes.

It is ironic that while Israel and the US are working together in order facilitate an atmosphere in which both sides can resume negotiations, for their part, the Palestinian Authority has refused to sit down and talk while at the same time they continue to incite violence.

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Thursday, April 15th, 2010 at 7:06 AM  | Amichai Farkas

Jewish ritual item mistaken for bomb causes terror scare

A teenage passenger using Jewish ritual items for prayer prompted a plane’s captain to call the bomb squad and divert a Kentucky-bound plane to Philadelphia on Thursday, Reuters reports.

A 17-year-old boy on US Airways Flight 3079 from New York to Louisville was using phylacteries (in Hebrew, tefillin), which are a pair of small black boxes that hold parchments inscribed with biblical passages that, using attached leather straps, observant men strap to their heads and arm as a part of daily morning prayer, as Deuteronomy 6:8 instructs, “Tie them [these commandments] as symbols on your hands and bind them on your foreheads.”

A passenger saw the boy using the tefillin, mistook them for some sort of device or bomb, and became alarmed.

The plane landed without incident, the passengers and crew were taken off the plane, and no one was arrested or charged with any crime, a spokesman for US Airways said.

Jewish traditions calls for observant men to prayer three times daily in quorums of 10; tefillin are used only during the morning service. This can be problematic during long flights, when men have need to pray in a quorum, but little space to do so. After security was tightened following 9/11 and other plane-related terror incidents, many rabbinic authorities have stated that Jewish men should avoid congregating in quorums on planes — both out of common courtesy for other passengers and out of respect for the airlines’ security measures.

The boy was likely praying in his seat, but nonetheless alarmed a fellow passenger. Apparently, there was no one in the flight crew who was familiar with the items — unusual considering that the flight originated in New York, where thousands of observant Jews fly daily.

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Friday, January 22nd, 2010 at 7:17 AM  | Stand For Israel
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