Israel will never change?
It's changing as we write.
How Israel is turning part of the Negev Desert into a cyber-city
BEERSHEBA, Israel — Here in the middle of the Negev Desert, a cyber-city is rising to cement Israel’s place as a major digital power. The new development, an outcropping of glass and steel, will concentrate some of the country’s top talent from the military, academia and business in an area of just a few square miles.
No other country is so purposefully integrating its private, scholarly, government and military cyber-expertise.
Israel is a nation of 8 million people with little in the way of natural resources. But in global private investment into cybersecurity firms, it is second only to the United States, with half a billion dollars flowing to the sector annually. Israel has not only vowed to repel the thousands of daily hack attacks against everything from the electric grid to ATMs, but has promised to build its commercial cyber-sector into an economic powerhouse.
Meanwhile, in muhammedan'istan,
Israel foiled an attempt to smuggle ammonium chloride into Gaza
Four tons of Ammonium Chloride was hidden in a shipment of salt
Israel foiled an attempt to smuggle ammonium chloride into Gaza
A shipment of Ammonium Chloride, used for rocket fuel, intercepted by Customs inspectors at the Nitzana Crossing, on its way into Gaza in April.
A shipment – purportedly containing 40 tons of salt – destined for Gaza reached the Nitzana Crossing, which is used for the transfer of goods between Egypt and Israel.
A comprehensive inspection by customs officers revealed that sacks of ammonium chloride were hidden within the salt. The sacks were found to weigh four tons.
Pal'istanian welfare fraud. Some things never change.