1. Dueling Weltanschauungs: German Chancellor Angela Merkel is set to arrive in Israel Wednesday evening, for a trip that is already highlighting strained ties between Jerusalem and Berlin, even as the two countries attempt to patch things up.
2. It takes a village: Also on the agenda will be the planned demolition of Bedouin West Bank village Khan al-Ahmar. Haaretz reports that Israel will hold off on evacuating and razing the hamlet while Merkel is in town, “due to diplomatic sensitivities.”
3. On borrowed time: Visiting the village, ToI’s Jacob Magid writes that villagers are trying to maintain a sense of business as usual in the time they have left.
4. Into the danger zone: After Russia on Tuesday said it had completed its delivery of the S-300 missile defense system to Syria, Army Radio reports that the air force will step up its use of F-35 fighter jets over the country in hopes of evading the air defense system.
5. The army, though, may soon have smaller fish to fry. Seemingly ramping up the pressure on Israeli leaders to take a tougher line, Yedioth Ahronoth reports that Gazans are “targeting children” by launching balloons into Israel with both incendiary devices and toys or flashing lights attached to them, seemingly to lure kids in.
6. Liberman-Bennett row slogs on: If Israel Hayom’s editorial choices are any indication of the Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s thinking, though, it is force that is the main focus at this point. After another day that saw ultra-hawkish Education Minister Naftali Bennett and slightly less hawkish Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman sniping at each other over how to deal with Gaza, the paper’s front page features Bennett’s contention that Liberman is pushing “leftist policies” as its main headline.
7. Lost history: Haaretz’s Nir Hasson takes a fascinating look at the mystery surrounding a priceless trove of pictures once held by Jerusalem’s American Colony, which disappeared in looting during the War of Independence.
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