Israeli ‘centrism’ and what it means for Palestinians

With less than two months until Israel holds an election, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu‘s ruling Likud party is maintaining a strong lead in the opinion polls.

His main rival – and currently the only plausible threat to another Likud-dominated government – is former Israeli military chief Benny Gantz and his newly-formed party Hosen L’Yisrael (Israel Resilience).

In his bid to be prime minister, Gantz – whose party is currently predicted to pick up around 19-24 seats in the 120-seat parliament – is branding himself as a ‘centrist’, hoping to replicate (or better) the success of similar such candidates in recent elections.

‘New centrists’

Edo Konrad, deputy editor of +972 Magazine, an independent blog, told Al Jazeera that the dominant form of Israeli centrism today is found in a group of “new centrists” who emerged in the wake of the 2011 social justice protests, including Yesh Atid leader Yair Lapid, Kulanu leader Moshe Kahlon, “and to a certain degree Benny Gantz”.

“They are less keen on dealing with the Palestinian issue and instead want to focus on socioeconomic issues, such as the cost of living,” Konrad added.

Some observers identify a conscious effort by centrist parties and politicians “not to look ‘left’, so they de-emphasise the conflict”, said Dahlia Scheindlin, a public opinion expert who has advised five national campaigns in Israel.

Gantz is also hoping to take advantage of the “anyone but Netanyahu” sentiment among voters. Haaretz correspondent Chemi Shalev, describing Gantz’s maiden speech as a combination of “hawkish militarism…and meaningless platitudes”, pointed out that for many voters, “the one and only measure of a candidate is whether he is theoretically capable of defeating the prime minister”.

For Netanyahu’s critics, as Shalev’s Haaretz colleague Noa Landau pointed out, Gantz’s candidacy is about “a return to statesmanship…the war on corruption, defending state institutions, particularly those dealing with rule of law, defending culture and the media; separation of church and state; and of major importance, modesty and a spirit of optimism instead of foulness and aggressiveness”.

An election campaign billboard in Tel Aviv shows Prime Minister Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump [File: Ariel Schalit/AP]

But what could Gantz’s brand of centrism mean for Palestinians? If his first speech is anything to go by, the answer is a familiar one.

“The Jordan Valley will remain our eastern security border,” Gantz declared. “We will maintain security in the entire Land of Israel, but we will not allow the millions of Palestinians living beyond the separation fence to endanger our security and our identity as a Jewish state.”

Such a vision – one where Israel remains in effective control of the entirety of the occupied West Bank but without granting its Palestinian inhabitants Israeli citizenship – sounds not only similar to the status quo, but also like Netanyahu’s own proposal for a Palestinian “state-minus”.

Differences ‘meaningless for Palestinians’

Gantz’s approach to the Palestinians is also consistent with that of centrist rival Lapid. Mouin Rabbani, a senior fellow at the Institute for Palestine Studies, told Al Jazeera that “from a Palestinian perspective”, the differences between Netanyahu and the likes of Lapid are “meaningless”.

“Lapid is a proponent of a two-state settlement, but his vision of a Palestinian state has little in common with the concept of statehood as generally understood,” Rabbani said, arguing that Lapid sees negotiations with the Palestinians as a “tactical exercise, the purpose of which is to normalise relations with the Arab states”.

Last year, Gantz told an interviewer that West Bank settlements such as the so-called Gush Etzion “bloc”, as well as Ariel, Ofra and Elkana “will remain forever“. On 11 February, Gantz visited Kfar Etzion settlement, hailing it and other colonies as “a strategic, spiritual and settlement asset”.

Gantz’s running mate, former Defence Minister Moshe Ya’alon, has already broadcast a campaign video from a settlement, declaring “our right to settle every part of the Land of Israel”.

Gantz speaks at the official launch of his election campaign in Tel Aviv [File: Oded Balilty/AP]

It comes as no surprise to Palestinian analysts. “If there’s one thing Israeli politicians are agreed on, it is that there will be no independent sovereign Palestinian state,” Nadia Hijab, board president of al-Shabaka, a Palestinian think-tank, told Al Jazeera.

“Moreover, the settler movement is so strong that any Israeli seeking power will support it whatever noises they may make about removing settlements,” she added.

‘Permanent control’

For human rights activists in Israel, the politics of Gantz’s “centrism” is a grim reminder of what B’Tselem director Hagai El-Ad called “a clear truth”: that “there is an across-the-board consensus for Israel to retain control over its Palestinian subjects in the occupied territories”.

While Gantz’s candidacy is mainly being discussed in terms of his likelihood of replacing Netanyahu as prime minister, he may also bring Hosen L’Yisrael into a Likud-led coalition as a senior minister.

According to Scheindlin, such a scenario “is absolutely possible and even likely – Gantz has said as much with his code phrase that he won’t go into coalition with Netanyahu if [subtext: and only if] he is indicted”.

“A new party wants more than anything to enter government, to gain experience and hold ministerial portfolios,” she told Al Jazeera. “It’s exactly what Yair Lapid did in 2013 and makes sense – such a party hopes to be the next in line if Likud ever falls, especially since Gantz is consistently polling second place.”

Konrad made reference to the 2016 talks between then-Labor Party leader Isaac Herzog and Netanyahu over forming a unity government, but also noted how, for now, Netanyahu has indicated that he is not interested in a coalition with Gantz.

For Rabbani, a government led by someone like Gantz would pose a challenge for the Palestinians. “The West will respond as if he has no history and that his previously espoused positions were not serious statements of intent, and embrace him as the messiah and prince of peace,” he said.

“If the Palestinians decide to play along with this charade until it is exposed,” he continued, “much as they did with other Israeli leaders since the early 1990s, they will get nowhere and once again pull the short end of the stick.”

Indeed, vague remarks by Gantz that Israel does not seek to “rule over others” were greeted by an aide to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas with cautious optimism.

“Any attempt by the Palestinian ‘leadership’ to read positive signals on Israeli lips is yet another sign of their bankruptcy,” Hijab told Al Jazeera, “and their powerlessness to achieve their stated goal of an independent Palestinian state.”

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How Does a Straight White Male Democrat Run for President?

Of the nine candidates officially running in the Democratic presidential primary, only one is a heterosexual white man. And that guy, former Rep. John Delaney, generally polls somewhere between zero and 1 percent.

But of the 17 Democrats reportedly still pondering a presidential bid, all but one is a straight white man. It’s hard to chalk that up to coincidence. Clearly, the women and minority candidates sensed that the water is warm for them, and the straight white men appear to be worried that this is just not their year.

Story Continued Below

CNN’s demographic number cruncher Ron Brownstein noted recently that the percentage of the Democratic primary electorate who are women, nonwhite voters and—“the most liberal component” of the party—college-educated white voters are all on the rise. The 2016 Democratic primary electorate was 58 percent women, 38 percent nonwhite voters and 37 percent college-educated white voters, all numbers that could be bigger in 2020, and strongly suggest a hospitable environment for candidates who embody a diverse America.

Does this mean that Democratic Party voters are so obsessed with identity politics that they are shutting straight white men out of the party? No. Who have been the top two candidates in nearly every primary poll? Not just two straight white males, but geriatric ones: Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders are the two oldest straight white men in the lot. In the most recent POLITICO/Morning Consult Democratic presidential primary tracking poll, the straight white male candidates, largely driven by Biden and Sanders, combined to garner 64 percent of the vote. Biden and Sanders are holding the top slots with the help of double-digit support among African-Americans, Latinos and women, showing that it remains possible for a white male Democratic candidate to knit together a diverse coalition.

Still, the straight white men—including Biden and Sanders—are not being irrational by hesitating. Yes, they are risking a loss of media buzz, A-list staff and access to donor networks by allowing others get a head start. But they have good reason to tread carefully. Issues pertaining to race and gender are bound to be prominent in the campaign, and white men do not exactly have the best track record of dealing with them.

Possible independent presidential candidate Howard Schultz sparked a thousand cringes when, after being asked about racist incidents at Starbucks cafes, he unconvincingly insisted, sounding like Stephen Colbert’s old Comedy Central parody of a right-wing TV host, “I honestly don’t see color.” Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, struggling to restore his reputation in the wake of the blackface scandal, stumbled again when he referenced the “first indentured servants from Africa” and received this sharp retort from CBS’ Gayle King: “also known as slavery.” Whatever defense you might want to make for these responses, the fact remains that precise language matters when discussing discrimination and bigotry, and a candidate who comes across as clueless, even if well-intentioned, on such topics is going to fail the test of who can best bring the nation together.

Both Biden and Sanders will have their top-tier status severely put to the test on race and gender issues if they enter the primary. Biden is still dogged by his handling of the Anita Hill hearings. The conservative Washington Examiner has been digging up Biden’s comments from the mid-1970s criticizing the use of busing to desegregate schools. His more recent nostalgia for bipartisanship and compromise, even with “old-fashioned Democratic segregationists,” makes today’s young leftists apoplectic.

Sanders, meanwhile, has periodically betrayed a tin ear on race and gender. He defended his endorsement of an anti-abortion mayoral candidate by admonishing the left, “You just can’t exclude people who disagree with us on one issue.” And he charitably characterized white Floridians who were uncomfortable voting for an African-American gubernatorial candidate as “not necessarily racist.” His answer for why he missed sexual misconduct by his 2016 campaign staffers—“I was a little busy running around the country”—did not position him to win the #MeToo vote.

If you think these statements automatically doom Biden and Sanders, you may be underestimating how forgiving the Democratic electorate can be. Consider that 58 percent of African-Americans in Virginia do not think Northam should resign. Even so, Biden and Sanders have not dealt with these issues as presidential candidates in the 2020 race, when scrutiny will exponentially intensify. They may want to spend a little extra time making sure they know exactly what they want to say on these subjects before they announce.

Most of the straight while male fence-sitters come from the pragmatic corners of the Democratic Party, and they may want to position themselves as less susceptible than the early declared candidates to knee-jerk pandering to the left. Polls show that most Democrats are not inclined to put primary candidates through an obstacle course of purity tests, so there is likely room for such a candidate. But trying to seize the pragmatic mantle comes with a risk, especially for the straight white men. Hectoring others about what’s politically realistic could easily get a candidate tagged as a “mansplainer.” Moreover, any attack by a white man against a woman or a minority—be it from the candidate or from his supporters—would be extremely dangerous to wage, especially if those attacks come from the relative right of the party.

One question that will be particularly tough for any male candidate: Why shouldn’t the next president be a woman? After all, just among the five female members of Congress already in the field, Democratic voters can choose among different ideologies, geographic and demographic backgrounds, and types of experience. With so many qualified choices, shouldn’t the male candidates just get out of the way?

The hard truth is, there is no good answer to this question. The most obvious response, that the candidate feels he is best person for the job, runs the risk of sounding condescending. Magnanimity toward female candidates is fraught as well. Sen. Cory Booker recently fielded a softer yet still tricky question from MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow: whether he would commit to a female vice presidential nominee. While trying to delicately say he wouldn’t make an iron-clad commitment, he felt the need to insist that he isn’t trying to thwart women from becoming president. “I believe there should be a woman president right now, and I worked very hard to get one,” Booker said. He was referring to Hillary Clinton, of course, but the answer leaves dangling why isn’t he working to elect a woman president “right now.”

Certainly no candidate is going to say on the record what one almost-candidate, Michael Avenatti, said last year—that to have the best chance of beating President Donald Trump, the Democratic nominee “better be a white male.” Even implicitly suggesting such a thing would be dangerous, as the straight white man and Southerner John Edwards did in 2008. He defined himself as the “most electable candidate” because he could “go to every corner of America,” implying that the African-American candidate, Barack Obama, and the female candidate, Hillary Clinton, could not.

Not only did Edwards’ argument fail to sway voters in the primary, it was proven wrong by Obama in the general election. Ten years later, a slew of women in swing districts defeated Republican men in several House races to help Democrats take control of the House. There may still be skittish and cynical Democratic voters who worry about Trump defeating another woman, but it’s going to be hard to convince most of them that it’s impossible for a woman to beat Trump.

We don’t need to feel sorry for the straight white male Democrats. Yes, they have challenges to overcome in a Democratic primary. But female and minority candidates still have to face bigotry every day, and they will be pressed to prove how they will overcome such barriers in a campaign against a president who lacks all restraint on the political battlefield. If some of the dozen or so white guys still thinking about running really do feel they are the best person for the job, part of making their case is by showing us how they can unite the party. If they can’t figure out how to do that, then they should stay on the sidelines.

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Macron condemns anti-Semitic abuse at ‘yellow vest’ protest

French President Emmanuel Macron has condemned anti-Semitic abuse directed towards a prominent intellectual by “yellow vest” protesters on Saturday.

“These abuses are the absolute negation of what makes France a great nation. We won’t tolerate them”, Macron said on Twitter.

Alain Finkielkraut was walking on the fringes of a demonstration in central Paris on Saturday when a group of “yellow vests” started insulted him with offensive remarks such as “dirty Zionist” and “France is ours” according to a video broadcast by Yahoo News.

“I felt absolute hatred and, unfortunately, this is not the first time,” the French writer and philosopher told the Sunday newspaper Le Journal du Dimanche. He expressed relief that police intervened.

Finkielkraut has expressed his solidarity and sympathy with the “yellow vest” protesters from the outset but in an interview published Saturday in Le Figaro, he criticised the leaders of the movement, saying “arrogance has changed sides”. 

Les injures antisémites dont il a fait l’objet sont la négation absolue de ce que nous sommes et de ce qui fait de nous une grande nation. Nous ne les tolèrerons pas.https://t.co/WSUTuJmQWX

— Emmanuel Macron (@EmmanuelMacron) February 16, 2019

Saturday’s incident triggered a wave of condemnation and messages of support for the philosopher. 

Interior Minister Christophe Castaner said it was “simply intolerable” while the leader of the Republican opposition party, Laurent Wauquiez, denounced the “abject idiots.”Ian Brossat, chief French Communist Party candidate for the European Parliament, said “We can hate Finkielkraut’s ideas”, but “nothing can justify attacking him as a Jew”. 

🔴Quand les #GiletsJaunes croisent le philosophe Alain #Finkielkraut boulevard du Montparnasse, à #Paris, et l’insultent copieusement.#Acte14 #ActeXIV pic.twitter.com/Rgt8ClrAf3

— Yahoo Actualités (@YahooActuFR) 16 febbraio 2019

Finkielkraut, who is seen as having pro-establishment beliefs, has since January 2016 been a member of the French Academy, the prestigious institution in charge of defining the French language.

Rising anti-semitism in France 

Sebastien Lecornu, the junior foreign minister, pointed the finger at “yellow vest” protesters for the latest offences.

The “yellow vest” protests began three months ago over fuel taxes but quickly grew into a broader anti-government rebellion fuelled by anger at Macron, with some using anti-Semitic tropes to refer to his former job as an investment banker.

“Conspiracy theorists are very present among their ranks,” Lecornu said, before referring to a survey released on Monday.

The Ifop poll said nearly half of the “yellow vests” believed in a worldwide “Zionist plot”, as well as the “Great Replacement” theory, which posits that immigration is being organised deliberately “to replace Europe’s native populations”.

But the rise in anti-Semitic acts in France predates the “yellow vest” demonstrations. A recent spate of anti-Semitic vandalism and graffiti in and around Paris has stoked fresh concerns about an increase in hate crimes against Jews. 

Fourteen political parties on Thursday launched a call for action against anti-Semitism after the interior ministry reported a 74 percent increase in anti-Jewish acts last year.

During the latest episodes, the memorial for Ilan Halimi, a young Jewish man who was kidnapped and killed in 2006, was desecrated when a tree planted in his memory was chopped down.

In addition, mailboxes decorated with portraits of the late Simone Veil, a Holocaust survivor and a European Parliament president who died in 2017, were daubed with swastikas.

The ‘yellow vest’ movement 

The “yellow vests” were protesting for the 14th consecutive Saturday, but according to French media quoting the interior minister, the number of people protesting across the country has decreased.

Around 41,500 protesters nationwide turned out Saturday, some 10,000 less than the previous week, with 5,000 in Paris.

In the capital, tensions mounted as the more than four-hour march ended at Les Invalides, with projectiles thrown at police, some by masked individuals dressed in black, a uniform for the ultra-leftist Black blocs.

Lines of riot police used tear gas and an impressive backup, a special horse brigade and water cannon – apparently not used – to force the agitated crowd to disperse.

The Paris prosecutor’s office said 15 people were detained for questioning, far fewer than the scores detained in earlier, larger demonstrations that degenerated into scattered rioting and destruction.

However, the increasingly divided movement is having trouble maintaining momentum and support from the public that initially massively backed protesters, polls showed.

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Coming Up: Real Madrid vs. Girona

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  3. Bale Rejects Madrid Dinner…Now Known as ‘The Golfer’ 😆

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  4. Madrid Lineup Drops

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Coming Up: Real Madrid vs. Girona

  1. Real Madrid C.F. 🇬🇧🇺🇸 @realmadriden

  2. Coming Up: Real Madrid vs. Girona

    via Bleacher Report

  3. Bale Rejects Madrid Dinner…Now Known as ‘The Golfer’ 😆

    via Bleacher Report

  4. Madrid Lineup Drops

    Real Madrid C.F. 🇬🇧🇺🇸 @realmadriden

    📝 Our starting XI to face @GironaFC! VAMOS! #RMLiga https://t.co/bxb9lo5C6n

  5. Skill Level Off the Charts 💯

    Akin Sawyerr @AkinSawyerr

    Talent is evenly distributed, opportunity isn’t https://t.co/bWvFVLlyHN

  6. footballespana @footballespana_

  7. Dermot Corrigan @dermotmcorrigan

  8. BBC Sport @BBCSport

  9. Dermot Corrigan @dermotmcorrigan

  10. AS English @English_AS

  11. La Liga Lowdown 🧡🇪🇸⚽ @LaLigaLowdown

  12. Dermot Corrigan @dermotmcorrigan

  13. Dermot Corrigan @dermotmcorrigan

  14. footballitalia @footballitalia

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  16. Dermot Corrigan @dermotmcorrigan

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  19. Real Madrid Info @RMadridInfo

  20. Real Madrid C.F. 🇬🇧🇺🇸 @realmadriden

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  22. Lucas Navarrete @LucasNavarreteM

  23. Managing Madrid @managingmadrid

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  30. Real Madrid C.F. 🇬🇧🇺🇸 @realmadriden

  31. Real Madrid Info @RMadridInfo

  32. MARCA in English @MARCAinENGLISH

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  34. CalcioMercato (En) @CmdotCom_En

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Dutch Palestinians remain disappointed after birthplace ruling

The man whose case led to the Netherlands recognising the Gaza Strip and occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, as official birthplaces said he is still dissatisfied because the new ruling avoids the word Palestine, and therefore fails to acknowledge his identity.

Emiel de Bruijne, who was born in East Jerusalem in 1992 and has Dutch citizenship, sued the Netherlands and took his case before the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) seeking his right to register as Palestinian-born, instead of Israeli.

On February 9, in a widely celebrated move, the Dutch government announced it would begin recognising the Gaza Strip and occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, as official birthplaces for Palestinians born in the country from May 15, 1948 onwards, after the establishment of Israel when the British Mandate officially ended.

“This decision means that we are no longer registered as being born in Israel. That is a step in the right direction but by avoiding the word ‘Palestine’, our identity is still denied,” De Bruijne told Al Jazeera.

Israel opens ‘apartheid road’ in occupied West Bank

In the ruling, published by the Dutch Interior Ministry, a footnote maintains the development “is also in agreement with the Dutch position that Israel has no sovereignty over these territories and its position on the non-recognition of the ‘State of Palestine’.”

Raymond Knops, Interior Ministry state secretary, said the new category reflects the Oslo Peace Accords terms signed between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization in the 1990s and later United Nations Security Council resolutions.

De Bruijne, the son of a Dutch father and Palestinian mother, moved with his family to the Netherlands aged nine.

He has been trying to change his registration since 2010 to secure his “right to Palestinian identity.

“Identity is very important to Palestinians. The administrative aspect is therefore a key issue. It says something about how we are seen as Palestinians,” he said, adding he will not be happy until the words “Palestinian Territories” are added added to the Dutch civil registry.

“The term is internationally accepted, and various Dutch government websites already use it,” he said.

De Bruijne lost his appeal in 2018 to the Council of State – which advises the Dutch government and serves as a top administrative court – but the Council nonetheless advised the Interior Ministry to amend the registration.

In spite of repeated requests, the registration was not changed so De Bruijne decided to file the case at the ECHR.

Despite the recent announcement, De Bruijne’s lawyer Tom de Boer told Al Jazeera that he would continue to pursue the case at the ECHR.

Other Dutch Palestinians were also left disappointed.

Ghada Zeidan, De Bruijne’s mother, chairs Palestine Link, an organisation that promotes Palestinian interests in the Netherlands.

Palestinians have fought a decades-long battle for self-determination and recognition [Darren Whiteside/Reuters]

“In our opinion, it’s a bureaucratic solution, completely decoupled from the human interest of the issue. It feels like the Netherlands is setting aside our Palestinian identity,” she said.

She noted that the Netherlands includes other non-recognised areas in the civil registry, such as Western Sahara, Taiwan and the Panama Canal Zone.

Previously, as well as Israel, “unknown” was an option as a birthplace – it was added in 2014 after Palestinians protested against putting “Israel” down.

Dutch activist Ibrahim al-Baz is one of 5,000 Palestinians in Vlaardingen, a city near Rotterdam with the largest Palestinian community.

“My Palestinian nationality means everything to me. It’s my right to self-determination which is now denied,” said al-Baz, a first-generation Palestinian who arrived in the sixties.

More than 130 countries including Bulgaria, India and Nigeria, and the UN General Assembly, recognise Palestine as a sovereign state, but most European Union members do not.

Marcel Brus, professor of public international law at the University of Groningen, said that the Palestinian nationality is still being denied but called the decision to recognise the birthplaces as an “acceptable solution”.

“Although the declaration of the State of Palestine took place in 1989, its recognition as a state according to international law at that time was very controversial. Therefore, I believe that recognising Gaza and the occupied West Bank as birthplace for people born around that time or before it is an acceptable compromise,” he told Al Jazeera.

However, Brus said the recognition of the State of Palestine has advanced since, and that it would be reasonable to give children who are born now the choice to opt for “(occupied) Palestinian Territories” or “Palestine” as their place of birth.

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US planes carrying aid for Venezuela land in Colombia

United States military transport planes carrying humanitarian aid intended for Venezuelans have landed in the Colombian border city of Cucuta.

The food and medicine are being stored there as President Maduro refuses to allow aid to enter the country. 

Saturday’s 180-tonne shipment includes high-energy food products and hygiene kits of soap, toothpaste and other goods for more than 25,000 people.

The US and its allies are sending food as part of an effort meant to undermine socialist President Nicolas Maduro and back his opposition leader Juan Guaido who declared himself interim president last month.

Speaking to a crowd of supporters in eastern Caracas on Saturday, Guaido vowed to form caravans of activists to reach the border and bring aid in the country on February 23.

He also called for people to gather in cities across the country to receive the aid while calling for the armed forces to allow its entry.

Venezuela is in the throes of an economic crisis, amid hyperinflation and shortages of food and medicine.

“This wasn’t the first, and it won’t be the last,” said USAID administrator Mark Green, standing on the tarmac in Cucuta at a ceremony to receive the aid. “More is on the way.”

“We are saving lives with these airplanes,” said Lestor Toledo, an exiled politician who is coordinating the international aid effort for Guaido.

Maduro has been using the military, which remains loyal, to help him block aid from entering Venezuela, describing it as “crumbs” from a US government whose restrictions have stripped his administration of control over many of its most valuable assets.

Critics of Maduro say his re-election last year was fraudulent, making the president’s second term illegitimate.

“They hang us, steal our money and then say ‘here, grab these crumbs’ and make a global show out of it,” Maduro told Associated Press news agency on Thursday. “With dignity we say ‘No to the global show.’ Whoever wants to help Venezuela is welcome, but we have enough capacity to pay for everything that we need.”

His vice president has alleged, without evidence, that the aid packages are contaminated. Green on Saturday called the allegations “absurd”.

Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan said on Saturday that the US used military aircraft to send aid to the Venezuelan border in Colombia because of the urgency of the humanitarian needs.

“It’s a message to Venezuela that we are supporting their humanitarian needs,” Shanahan told reporters.

Many of Venezuela’s neighbours and a host of western countries have recognised Guaido as the legitimate head of state, while Maduro retains the backing of Russia and China and control of Venezuelan state institutions.

The US has placed Venezuela’s US assets, including oil company Citgo, under Guaido’s control and banned financial transactions by Maduro-controlled entities.

Scores of Venezuelan officials also face personal financial sanctions in the US.

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Hamidou Diallo on Potential Zion Williamson Dunk Contest Rematch: ‘Let’s Do It’

CHARLOTTE, NC - FEBRUARY 16: Hamidou Diallo #6 of the Oklahoma City Thunder takes a selfie with the Champion trophy after winning the 2019 AT&T Slam Dunk Contest as part of the State Farm All-Star Saturday Night Challenge during the 2019 NBA All Star Saturday Night on February 16, 2019 at Spectrum Center in Charlotte, North Carolina. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement.  Mandatory Copyright Notice:  Copyright 2019 NBAE (Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images)

Jesse D. Garrabrant/Getty Images

After winning the 2019 NBA Slam Dunk Contest at the Spectrum Center in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Saturday night, Oklahoma City Thunder rookie Hamidou Diallo is all for defending his title next year.

Especially if it allows him to try to exact some revenge.

Back in 2016, Diallo squared off with current Duke Blue Devils phenom Zion Williamson at the Under Armour Elite 24 Dunk Contest. Williamson wound up taking home the trophy that day in New York City, and nearly three years later, Diallo hasn’t forgotten about that defeat.

“Oh that’s tough. Let’s do it,” Diallo said when asked on Saturday if he would be game for a rematch against Williamson in 2020, according to Ben Golliver of the Washington Post.

Here’s a look at that 2016 battle, per Home Team Hoops:

“I won,” Diallo told The Athletic’s Brett Dawson this past week. “I had won. I just didn’t complete the (last) dunk. If I had completed the dunk, I would have won. But basically I won. I did everything to make me a winner up to that point. I just didn’t complete the dunk.”

Well, not only did Diallo complete all of his dunks this time around, but he also created one of the most iconic moments in the event’s history by channeling his inner Vince Carter while going over the 7’1″ Shaquille O’Neal:

Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

DIALLO REALLY DID THE VINCE ELBOW DUNK OVER SHAQ https://t.co/NmH9vUWyFI

That proved to be the best dunk of the night—and it wasn’t even close.

The 6’7″, 285-pound Williamson has been putting together a ridiculous highlight reel of dunks during his freshman season at Duke. Given he is widely viewed to be in the mix to be the No. 1 overall pick come June, it would not be a surprise if he was one-and-done in Durham.

If Williamson does indeed enter the draft this summer, expect there to be no shortage of pressure on him and Diallo to make a rematch happen at the United Center in Chicago in February 2020.    

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Heather Nauert ends bid to be next US ambassador to UN

US President Donald Trump’s choice for ambassador to the United Nations, Heather Nauert, has withdrawn from consideration for the job for family reasons, according to the State Department.

Nauert was State Department spokeswoman when Trump chose her for the UN position; prior to that, she had been a host on the conservative-leaning Fox News Channel. She had been criticised by Democrats for her lack of diplomatic experience.

“The past two months have been grueling for my family and therefore it is in the best interest of my family that I withdraw my name from consideration,” Nauert said in a State Department statement on Saturday.

The statement did not specify the hardship on her family but the Washington Post said Nauert’s husband and children had remained in New York while she was working in Washington, DC.

Meanwhile, Bloomberg News, quoting anonymous sources, said Nauert’s nomination began to falter after a White House background check discovered that Nauert employed a nanny who was legally in the United States but not authorised to work.

Nauert, 49, suggested in the statement that she was leaving government entirely, saying: “Serving in the administration for the past two years has been one of the highest honors of my life.”

Mike Pompeo, Secretary of State, praised Nauert in a statement, saying that he had “great respect” for her “personal” decision to withdraw.

Trump had announced on December 7 he would nominate Nauert for the UN position to replace Nikki Haley, who resigned at the end of 2018. Haley was a former South Carolina governor who also had little experience in world affairs before taking the ambassador position.

Calling Nauert “very talented, very smart, very quick”, Trump said he thought she would be “respected by all”.

In the wake of November elections that strengthened Republican control of the Senate, her confirmation appeared likely, if not easy.

Yet Trump never put Nauert’s name forward with the Senate and no confirmation hearing was scheduled.

The State Department in its statement that Trump would announce a nominee for the UN position “soon”.

Before coming to the State Department, Nauert was a breaking news anchor on Trump’s favourite television show, Fox & Friends. She joined the department as a spokeswoman in April 2017, three months into the Trump administration.

She was named acting undersecretary for public diplomacy and public affairs in early 2018. 

The role of US ambassador to the UN is a highly visible international position.

While Nauert had little diplomatic experience, other nations with veto power on the UN Security Council are represented by ambassadors with decades of foreign policy work.

“She’s clearly not qualified for this job but these days it seems that the most important qualification is that you show up on Donald Trump’s TV screen,” Democratic Senator Chris Murphy said of Nauert on CNN in December.

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Foley defends kicking record after crucial Super Rugby miss denies Tahs

NSW Waratahs five-eighth Bernard Foley will back himself to make the next kick he takes that’s identical to the crucial one he missed in his side’s opening round Super Rugby home loss to the Hurricanes.

With NSW trailing 20-19 and just over a minute to go, Foley pulled the ball wide of the left upright from a position just off centre from little more than 30 metres out.

It was his sole miss in six attempts on a night when he became the franchise’s all-time leading Super Rugby pointscorer.

The Wallabies playmaker rued being unable to capitalise on the good work of the NSW scrum.

“It’s disappointing (not) to reward the front row and the scrum there at the end, they did a great job to win that penalty,” Foley said.

“But it’s process driven, we’re not driven by outcomes so it’s the same with my kicking.

“In terms of just keep trying to stick at it, get consistent, get better at it, and given that shot again, I’ll back myself.”

While disappointed by Saturday’s result, Tahs coach Daryl Gibson identified some positives in their stout defence and the efforts of debutant props Chris Talakai and Rory O’Connor.

While Talakai gave away some penalties, he was also instrumental in securing the one that gave Foley his late opportunity.

“Thrilled for the rookie front row to earn that penalty that gave us the opportunity,” Gibson said.

“I thought they came back well and those guys showing that they can do it at this level, which is a real positive.”

The Hurricanes’ dangerous backs had few attacking chances out wide as the Waratahs defended well.

“It was probably one of the positives that came out of the game, we’ve been doing a lot of work there,” Gibson said.

Both Hurricanes tries came from forwards.

“One was from a maul, one was from a pick and go,” Gibson noted.

“Overall we did an excellent job on their ruck speed, it was pretty slow for them.”

Gibson praised the defensive work of his new centre pairing of veterans Adam Ashley-Cooper and Karmichael Hunt, saying they acquitted themselves well.

Ashley-Cooper and prop Sekope Kepu picked up knocks, but Gibson confirmed playmaker Kurtley Beale would be back for next weekend’s away game against Japan’s Sunwolves after being rested from Saturday’s match.

Meanwhile, Hunt and several other Reds rejects impressed during the Super Rugby opening round, with Quade Cooper and James Slipper also starting brightly for their new teams.

Cooper provided playmaking creativity and direction lacking at the Melbourne Rebels last year, combining well with former Reds and Wallabies teammate Will Genia in the Rebels’ 34-27 win over the Brumbies in Canberra on Friday night.

Former Wallaby Greg Martin rated Cooper’s performance the most commanding from an Australian fly-half in three years and the talent-packed Rebels now look capable of pushing hard for a maiden finals appearance.

Hunt was so impressive in both attack and defence when starting at inside centre for the NSW Waratahs in place of rested Wallabies star Kurtley Beale that it will be hard for coach Daryl Gibson to bench him.

On his last chance in Australian rugby after a second drug-related incident made him unwanted at the Reds, Hunt – like Cooper – showed he could yet force his way back into Michael Cheika’s Wallabies, at least as a back up option, ahead of this year’s World Cup if he can maintain that form.

Test prop Slipper, who fell out of favour at Queensland last year after testing positive for cocaine, played well for the Brumbies when starting ahead of Test incumbent Scott Sio against the Rebels.

The main injury concern in round one was a concussion to star Brumbies and Wallabies backrower David Pocock early in the game in Canberra.

He is is in doubt to play the Chiefs next Saturday night, while wingers Toni Pulu (cheekbone) and Henry Speight (hip) were two other Brumbies casualties.

Elsewhere, the Crusaders started their pursuit of a third straight title with a 24-22 win over a much-improved Blues outfit in Auckland with winger Manasa Mataele crossing twice.

In the other New Zealand derby, the Highlanders beat the Chiefs 30-27 in Hamilton, despite playing with 14 men for the last 15 minutes, after replacement centre Sio Tomkinson was sent off for a dangerous head high tackle on All Black lock Brodie Retallick.

In Pretoria, the Stormers were smashed 40-3 by the Bulls, following a 20-minute delay to the start after the visitors’ bus was caught in traffic.

Flanker Marnus Schoeman bagged a hat-trick of tries in the Lions 25-16 victory over the Jaguares in Buenos Aires and the Sharks crossed six times in a 45-10 victory over the Sunwolves in Singapore.

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