Israel appears determined to stick to a shaky truce, rockets or not, and with 'mosquitoes' swatted, may soon be shaking hands with new bestie Hamas

After Operation Black Belt, some ask if Israel should have swept the leg of an enemy of dubious importance at the cost of two days of terror; at least Hamas stayed off the mat

Kids try to make sense of rockets, explosions and missed birthdays, while adults gauge whether Hamas will turn the fighting into a war or Gantz will turn it into a government

As right and left debate whether |DF elimination of PIJ leader was politically motivated, most agree the strike all but put to bed chance of a Gantz-led minority government

Netanyahu and Gantz almost touch, but unity remains elusive in the political arena, in the national memory and in a Bnei Brak wedding

Liberman's ultimatum and Bennett's appointment shows Likud is in a squeeze, or perhaps shows Liberman is in trouble, or maybe we are all in a hole

Tehran resuming uranium enrichment ramps up concern in Israel, overshadowing scandal involving Netanyahu's justice minister who appears to have knowingly broke the law

Amir Ohana's breaking of a gag order covering up allegations of misconduct draws anger, though whether it's directed at the minister or police depends on the media's own prejudices

PM's supporters are up in arms over latest revelations of police misconduct in interrogation of key witness, but opponents are not convinced news will cause case to fall apart

A report on alleged pressure tactic used by police is discussed extensively but only circuitously, though some details, and hypocrisy, still leak out

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