Archive for June 30, 2010

Another Report of Israeli Preparations for Iran Strike

June 30, 2010

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Diagram of Operation Opera, the Israeli strike on Iraqi nuclear facilities in 1981 (Source: Wikimedia Commons)

Now there is a second source claiming Israel is gearing up for a strike on Iranian nuclear facilities.

Unlike the British Times newspaper I mentioned yesterday, I don’t know much about The Daily Mail from Islamabad, Pakistan, so I can’t vouch for its credibility. Yet it is reporting something very similar to the Times article which claims Saudi Arabian sources say Israel has permission to overfly their territory to strike nuclear facilities in Iran.

From Pakistan’s Daily Mail:

THE Daily Mail has learnt that Israel is massing warplanes in the Caucasus for an attack on Iran. Preparations are underway to launch the military attack from Azerbaijan and Georgia, reports Akhbar Al Khaleej, quoting military sources. It has been reported that Israel was, in fact, training pilots in Turkey to launch the strike and was smuggling planes into Georgia using Turkish airspace, according to the sources.

And

Azerbaijan-based intelligence units, working under the cover of technicians, trainers and consultants, have helped with the preparations, the sources have revealed. Military equipment, mostly supplied by the US, was transported to a Georgian port via the Black Sea. Georgian coastguard and Israeli controllers are co-operating to hide the operations from Russian vessels, said the sources. They point out that according to Israel, it will not be in a position to launch a strike on Iran without using bases in Georgia and Azerbaijan due to the limited capabilities of its nuclear submarines stationed near the Iranian coast.

If accurate, could this be a “Plan B” to a planned strike from Israel flying over Saudi Arabia? Could it be a new and different plan, now that the strike across Saudi Arabia has been mentioned in the media? Could it be part of a two-pronged attack that doesn’t put all the eggs in one basket for taking out Iranian nuclear sites?

The Jerusalem Post is a publication I know more about, and I know it is reputable. The Post is also reporting on Israeli activity in Saudi Arabia:

Israel Air Force aircraft dropped off large quantities of military gear at a Saudi Arabian military base a week ago, in preparation for a potential attack on Iran, a number of Iranian and Israeli news outlets have reported.

The unconfirmed report, first published by the semi-official Iranian news agency Fars and the Islam Times Web site, claimed that on June 18 and 19, Israeli helicopters unloaded military equipment and built a base just over 8 km. outside the northwestern city of Tabuk, the closest Saudi city to Israel, located just south of Jordan. All civilian flights into and out of the city were said to have been canceled during the Israeli drop-off, and passengers were reportedly compensated by the Saudi authorities and accommodated in nearby hotels.

The article also mentions something I have seen reported in other media outlets over the past week or two:

Also last week, Egyptian sources told London-based Al- Quds Al-Arabi that an American fleet consisting of 11 frigates and an aircraft carrier, believed to be the nuclearpowered aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman, passed through the Suez Canal from the Mediterranean to the Red Sea. Eyewitnesses told the paper that an Israeli frigate was among the passing ships and that Egyptian authorities had suspended all commercial boat traffic in the canal for several hours to enable the fleet to pass. Thousands of Egyptian soldiers and two helicopters were reportedly deployed to the area during the passage.

All of this adds up to a lot of reported Israeli activity throughout the Middle East. The preponderance of evidence is getting considerable.

Two things are certain: (1) Someone needs to prevent the maniacs in Iran from getting nuclear weapons, and (2) if Israel launches a strike against those nuclear facilities, they had better be sure they get the job done right–because there will be hell to pay afterward.

Is the hell to be paid worth it?  Yes.  But it still won’t be pleasant.

The anatomy of an attack on Iran

June 30, 2010

Asia Times Online :: Middle East News, Iraq, Iran current affairs.

By David Moon

In mid-June, Hugh Tomlinson in the Times of London wrote that the government of Saudi Arabia conferred on Israel the “green light” for use of its airspace for an attack on Iran. This revelation was said to be conventional wisdom inside the Saudi military. Tomlinson also quoted an unnamed United States military source stating to the effect that the US Department of State and the Defense Department had both said “grace” over this arrangement.
The Saudis and Israelis immediately denied the report, while US officials made no specific comments on the subject. The silence and denials nixed further media speculation.

First reported in the Times of London in July 2009 and referred to again in Tomlinson’s recent article is word of a supposed meeting between Israel’s Mossad chief Meir Dagan and unnamed Saudi intelligence leaders to discuss such an arrangement that both governments denied then and now.

Given the apparent regional political status quo, how might the

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Israeli Air Force (IAF) strike Iran undetected on approach and at the very least unacknowledged on return if the decision is made in Jerusalem that the existential threat posed by Iran’s arc of nuclear progress can no longer safely be tolerated?

Although the coordination of logistics and tactics of such a long distance mission – 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers) on the straight line from Tel Aviv to Iran’s uranium enrichment facility in Natanz – is daunting, the strategic or political realities must be defined before all else.

Overflight of Iraq on a direct bearing to Iran is out of the question. Such a path would cause friction between the US, responsible for Iraq’s aerial sovereignty, and the next Iraqi government sure to be of delicate composition. It’s safe to assume that the US views stability in Iraq far higher on the national interest meter than say apartments in east Jerusalem, thus for Israel the straight line over Iraq comes at a price that it can ill afford to pay.

The likely route to Iran, beginning at regional dusk preferably in the dark a new moon, is to fly a great circle around Iraq. Only careful planning carried out with precision timing and execution will ensure success. For this route, almost every applicable IAF logistics and support asset would be utilized.

The first leg for any F-15I and F-16I fighter bombers is a low-level run up the Mediterranean in the area of the Syrian town of Latakin, where up to three KC-707s (aerial tankers) in race track orbit would top up the tanks of the strike group. This tankage is absolutely necessary for the shorter-legged F-16I (range 1,300 miles). Refueling the F-15I (range 2765 miles) is desirable but not a necessity unless intelligence suggests targets beyond eastern Iran.

To skirt Turkish airspace and the ability of the Turkish military to raise an alarm heard throughout the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), the strike group with two pairs of Gulfstream G-550s: one of each outfitted as a network-centric collaborative targeting (NCCT) and one each employing Senior Suter technology must fly low across northern Syria. The G-550 is a small package with the range the speed to accompany the strike group round trip without refueling – therefore up to the challenge.

The NCCT aircraft ferrets out air defense radars. The Suter partner beams a data stream containing, what in computer parlance is called a a “worm”, into air defense radars with the capability of incapacitating an entire air defense network, if such a network is under centralized control.

This technology pioneered by the US Air Force and part of the code named the “Big Safari” program is heady stuff said to work wonders over Syria during the IAF’s strike on Syria’s North Korean-designed nuclear reactor in September 2007. The support of the G-550s will be instrumental every mile of the mission.

Non-networked anti-aircraft artillery (AAA) in states hostile to Israel may necessitate F-16Is in the tried and true AGM-88 high speed anti-radiation missile (HARM) mission.

Yet another application of high technology was the launch on June 11, 2007, of Ofek-7, as noted by Richard B Gasparre, also a source on G-550s in IAF service at airforce-technology.com, is a “… reconnaissance satellite, which gives Israeli intelligence specialists site and system mapping capability of unprecedented accuracy”. Ofek-7 undoubtedly contributed to strike planning for the IAF’s mission to Syria.

These powerful tools will be counted on to enable the strike package to skirt either Turkish or Iraqi airspace for a short jump of 150 or so miles to reach Iranian airspace undetected. The distance on a straight line from Latakin to Tabriz in Iran is 618 miles. The flight is shorter if the Israelis avoid Turkey and cut the Kurdish corner.

At a designated point over northern Iran, the strike group splits into Q and E-flights. Q-Flight flies southeast 348 miles to reach the known uranium-enrichment sites in Qom (under construction) and Natanz (operational). E-Flight homes in on the gas storage development site at Esfahan and the heavy water reactor complex at Arak on a more southerly path of 481 miles.

All the while in Iranian airspace, the G-550 Suter and NCCT aircraft work in tandem and with F-16I aircraft to suppress radars and AAA, while F-15Is designated top cover guard against any air-to-air threat put up by Iran’s air force.

The strike package can count on aid in the form of Popeye Turbo cruise missiles launched by at least one Israeli submarine from the Arabian Sea against targets in Iran designed to shield the Israeli planes, degrade enemy responses and sow confusion among the Iranian military.

At some point, one of the three US Air Force RC-135 Rivet Joint ELINT (electronic intelligence) platforms in the area will “see” Iranian air defense radars and hear an explosion of Iranian voices on open airwaves and quickly piece together events in Iran. This collected product will be immediately passed through Central Command to Washington for dissemination to the principles of the National Security Council, including US President Barack Obama.
Seven hours earlier, at least three IAF KC-707s would have flown the 3,500 miles around the Arabian Peninsula, likely painted up like commercial 707 cargo aircraft, transiting international airspace to a meeting point over the northern Persian Gulf. At this extreme range, each KC-707 carries only an estimated 85,000 lbs of fuel to pass to the hungry F-16Is flying 451 miles from Qom and 350 miles from Esfahan.

Each F-16I will require at least 5,000 lbs of jet fuel for the final leg of nearly 1,000 miles through northern Saudi Arabia then home. Thus, a hinge point in IAF planning; the Israelis must determine the mix of F-16Is and KC-707s committed to the mission.

On and over the Persian Gulf, given the presence of US Navy and Air Force AWACS platforms such as the EC-2 Hawkeye and E-3 Sentry along with SPY-1 radars of US Navy cruisers and destroyers, the Israelis can have no expectation at all that the refueling scrum of the F-16Is will go undetected. During this evolution, any IAF planes too damaged to make it home can ditch close to a US Navy ship with a reasonable expectation of rescue.

Much will depend on what the US does with the information in hand. Does Obama choose to inform Iraqi and Gulf Cooperation Council allies of the situation, or will various US radars simply go into “diagnostic mode”, as if operators cannot believe what they see?

If Obama’s decision is to watch and listen, the strike group can try a run for home across northern Saudi Arabia. Here, the Saudis have a decision. The Saudi Air Force can defend the kingdom’s airspace, possibly taking loses and handing out same, or the Israelis can bet on G-550s tricking out the kingdom’s air defenses in a manner that gives the Saudis an excuse to say they were blinded by the IAF and the non-cooperation of the US.

By flying north, the IAF reaps the benefits of plausible deniability, a political necessity for US and allied Arab states. These states can honestly say they had no prior knowledge of IAF planes winging it to Iran with full racks of missiles and bombs.

Another option is available to the Israelis to increase the IAF’s odds of flying the northern leg undetected. This choice is to strike the “Duchy of Nasrallah” – Hezbollah under Hassan Nasrallah in Lebanon – to create cover and sow confusion. If the IAF is to strike Iran, immediate blowback is to be expected from Iran-supported Hezbollah’s extensive inventory of unguided missiles.

On June 18, the aircraft carrier USS Harry S Truman and task group including the German frigate Hessen in the company of an unidentified Israeli naval vessel made a fast transit of the Suez Canal. The Egyptians not only closed the canal to all traffic, all fishing boats where docked, while the Egyptian military lined the banks of the canal. All facets of this passage rank as extraordinary.

It is readily apparent that the US Department of State and the Pentagon collaborated closely with an Arab country to create a lane of fast transit not only for US Navy assets and an attached NATO ally, but for an Israeli ship.

One more element, the IDF launched their improved Ofek-9 reconnaissance satellite on June 22. Is this a matter of timing or of coincidence?

Tensions are high in the region, yet little could precipitate a full diplomatic meltdown quicker than for Iran to directly challenge Israel’s blockade of Gaza. And this confrontation is in no way limited to Israel and Iran. Such a provocation could easily inflame public opinion in Sunni Arab states, where leaders are weary of Tehran’s grandstanding on the question of Israel. Tehran’s rhetoric of threats toward Israel politically undermines Arab governments seen as less fervent on the subject.

CNN reported on June 24 on Iran’s canceled designs to directly test the Gaza blockade. Hossein Sheikholeslam, secretary general of the International Conference for the Support of the Palestinian Intifada, said, “In order not to give the Zionist regime an excuse, we will send the aid through other routes and without Iran’s name.”

Sheiholeslam’s comment makes little sense, as the point of Iran’s aid exercise was to win the propaganda war against Israel and Arab states. Whatever Iran’s “excuse”, there is reason now to suspect the Tehran regime will back down if decisively confronted by a motivated and unified coalition of area states.

Hezbollah vows to ‘defend Lebanese gas’

June 30, 2010

Hezbollah vows to ‘defend Lebanese gas’ – Israel News, Ynetnews.

In interview with al-Manar television, Hezbollah Deputy Secretary General Sheikh Naim Qassem said that organization will not hesitated to use ‘all means’ in order ‘to exercise Lebanon’s sovereignty over its natural treasures.’ He accuses US of being biased towards Israel

Roee Nahmias

Published: 06.30.10, 15:15 / Israel News
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Hezbollah Deputy Secretary General Sheikh Naim Qassem addressed the new dispute between Israel and Lebanon over the gas field discovered in the Mediterranean Sea. He said his organization will “defend the natural resources and gas fields discovered in Lebanon’s waters.”

Qassem, who gave an interview on the matter to Hezbollah’s television news channel al-Manar, said, “The resistance is prepared and invited to stand against any adventurous and foolish action of the enemy’s government. It is Lebanon’s right to exercise its sovereignty and control over its natural treasures. As such, the resistance is responsible for using all means to help.”

Drilling
Lebanon seeks to approve oil law against Israel / Roee Nahmias
Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri says Israel drilling in his country’s territorial waters
Full story

Ever since the crisis surrounding the gas deposits about a week ago, Lebanon has refused to remove the issue from the agenda. Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri convened a cabinet meeting with his ministers on Tuesday regarding the gas and oil drilling.

Sources in the country estimated that the “oil bill,” meant to organize the drilling and mining of natural resources in Lebanon, will soon be passed by the parliament in Beirut. The said bill was proposed as a response against the local political system after Israeli and international companies announced the discovery of gas fields in the Mediterranean Sea while Israel insists that the fields are well within the bound of its territorial waters.

Qassem also addressed the political situation, accusing Washington in an interview with AP of taking a one-sided, pro-Israeli approach to the Mideast conflict. “We have no need to dialogue with the Americans as long as they don’t change their stance. They support the country that who plays the role of problem starter in the region.”

Contrary to statements made by various Hezbollah figures, Qassem estimated that “no new war is expected with Israel,” but did emphasize that Hezbollah is prepared for another military conflict and “is acting as if it break out tomorrow.”

Israel, China cooperate on response measures to missile war

June 30, 2010

via Israel, China cooperate on response measures to missile war.

TEL AVIV — Israel and China have found another field of cooperation between their two militaries — civil defense.

An Israel military delegation has conducted briefings in China on civil defense measures meant to counter a missile war. The delegation, which visited China in late June, was led by Maj. Gen. Yair Golan, head of the military’s Home Front Command.

“This is another area of non-combat cooperation that serves both our interests and those of China,” a military source said.

During the visit, Golan and his delegation met leading Chinese commanders and defense officials. The source said discussions ranged from civil defense measures to the munitions employed by such adversaries as Hamas, Hizbullah, Iran and Syria, all of which have been reported to acquire military support from Beijing.

The Israeli delegation also briefed the Chinese hosts on the latest nationwide civil defense exercise, Turning Point-4. The exercise had envisioned an Iranian and Syrian missile attack on Israeli cities.

This marked the second Israeli military delegation to China in 2010. In April, Israeli military intelligence chief Maj. Gen. Amos Yadlin and planning director Maj. Gen. Amir Eshel arrived in Beijing and briefed Chinese leaders on the Iranian nuclear threat.

Military sources acknowledged that Israel has sought to improve defense and security cooperation with China. They said the cooperation, closely monitored by the United States, would be restricted to non-combat issues.

Iran: Rumors of war reach fever pitch – UPI.com

June 30, 2010

Iran: Rumors of war reach fever pitch – UPI.com.

BEIRUT, Lebanon, June 30 (UPI) — It’s a conspiracy theorist’s dream. For the last two weeks there has been a crescendo of reports that Israel and the United States are preparing for war against Iran.

On the face of it, they appeared to indicate that war was just around the corner. But they don’t stand up under closer examination.

On June 19, the Arabic language newspaper Al Quds Al-Arabi, published in London, reported that the U.S. Navy battle group headed by the aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman, had sailed south through the Suez Canal into the Red Sea the day before.

On June 22, the Israeli Web site Debkafile, which is reputed to have links with Israeli intelligence and a widely suspected purveyor of disinformation, reported that the carrier group had “secretly” exercised in the Mediterranean off Israel to intercept missile attacks against Israeli and U.S. targets June 10-18.

Debka said the U.S. and Israeli governments didn’t announce these drills, which also involved the Truman’s 60 F/A-18E/F Super Hornet strike jets simulating bombing attacks using the firing range at the sprawling Nevatim Air Base in the Negev Desert.

But such exercises are nothing out of the ordinary, even though the timing may have seemed somewhat sinister.

Then Brig. Gen. Mehdi Moini of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards announced in Tehran, also June 22, that heavy reinforcements were en route to the Caspian Sea region to “repel” what Iran claimed were U.S. and Israeli forces deploying at air bases in Azerbaijan.

Other Iranian sources reported Israel had secretly dispatched warplanes to Azerbaijan via Georgia, while U.S. Special Forces were concentrating in Azerbaijan.

There was no independent confirmation of this and the Baku government made no comment.

The Americans and Israelis have long been reported to maintain electronic intelligence-gathering stations near Azerbaijan’s border with Iran.

But there has been no other report of such military deployments in that region and U.S. and Israeli fighter squadrons, with all their support equipment, are very hard to hide.

The U.S. security consultancy Stratfor, noted these reports may have originated with a June 18 article by a “sensationalist American opinion writer.”

“However rumors of Israel using Georgia as a base for a strike on Iran go back to at least 2008. These rumors have never proved accurate and Stratfor has no credible evidence that the current rumors are any different,” Stratfor said.

Georgia and Azerbaijan “would not be bad locations for basing air power to strike Iran,” Stratfor observed.

But, “there would simply be too much visible activity involved in the run-up to a Caucasus-based air campaign against Iran to keep those preparations secret.”

On June 23, the semi-official Iranian Fars news agency reported Israeli helicopters had landed large amounts of military equipment at Tabuk Air Base in northwestern Saudi Arabia June 18-19 in apparent preparation for an attack on Iran.

The Sunday Times of London reported June 12 that Riyadh had agreed to allow Israeli warplanes to fly through its air space to attack Iran.

That proposition made some sense since both Saudi Arabia and Israel have a common enemy in Iran but the Saudis vehemently denied the report.

And why the Israelis would need to use Tabuk, which is only about 100 miles south of air bases inside the Jewish state, wasn’t explained.

The Iranians may have been seeking to stir things up. However, the Bahraini news outlet Akhbar al-Khaleej claimed the reports about Tabuk, west of Iran, were really Israeli disinformation intended to distract attention from U.S. and Israeli preparations in the Caucasus north of Iran.

On Sunday, the Truman battle group was reported in the Indian Ocean, joining the USS Eisenhower battle group on routine deployment.

The Truman force was east of the Strait of Hormuz, the only gateway to the Persian Gulf . Washington fears Iran will try to close the narrow waterway, through which one-fifth of the world’s oil supplies pass, if the Islamic Republic is attacked.

U.S. officials said the Truman group was replacing the Eisenhower group, which had been on station for five months. Besides, any sustained assault on Iran would require greater naval strength than two carrier groups.

Before the March 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq there were five U.S. carriers gathered in the Persian Gulf region — and their 300 aircraft made up less than one-third of coalition air strength.

Iran declares boycott on Coca Cola, Intel and ‘Zionists’

June 30, 2010

Iran declares boycott on Coca Cola, Intel and ‘Zionists’ – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Ahmadinejad signs law forbidding Iranian broadcast authority from airing advertisements for ‘Zionist’ companies. Black list include American companies owned by Jews and firms that do business with Israel. Nestle, IBM, others in crosshairs

Dudi Cohen

Published: 06.30.10, 17:49 / Israel News
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad signed Wednesday a new amendment to a law in the Islamic Republic that forbids the airing of advertisements for “Zionist companies.” The blacklist of prohibited companies is comprised mainly of international companies, mainly American, owned by Jews or that operate branches in Israel.

Among those on the list are Coca Cola, Nestle, Intel, and IBM.

The boycott is rooted in Iran’s “Palestinian support law,” which acts as a response to assertions that Israel prevented goods from entering the Gaza Strip during its raid on the flotilla.

Coca Cola. In Ahmadinejad’s crosshairs. (Photo: Dana Koppel)

The amendment obligates a number of government ministries to establish a committee to identify and locate products from “Zionist” companies being sold in Iran. In addition, this committee will be charged with finding the names of leading figures in the blacklisted companies so that they may be boycotted as well.

This move is another link in the chain of efforts made by Iran to isolate Israel in the world in accordance with a decision passed in Iranian parliament on the matter. Iran also plans on bringing forth a resolution to boycott Israel in the UN and in other international forums, including the Organization of the Islamic Conference and the Arab League.

The amendment also obligates the Iranian foreign ministry to present annual reports on the progress made in the Israeli boycott.

Beyond wanting to bring harm to Israel, the amendment may also be an indirect response to the new round of sanctions recently imposed on Iran by the West over its nuclear program. The move is intended mainly for internal purposes, in order to increase civilian support of the Palestinians.

Oren: Iran may unleash wave of terrorist violence

June 30, 2010

Oren: Iran may unleash wave of terrorist violence – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Pessimistic Scenario
Photo: AP
Oren. ‘Don’t fall into trap’ Photo: AP

Oren: Iran may unleash wave of terrorist violence

Israeli ambassador to US warns international community that Islamic Republic could respond to tough sanctions by using its connections to Hezbollah, Hamas to attack Israel

Yitzhak Benhorin

Published: 06.30.10, 09:48 / Israel News

WASHINGTON – Israeli Ambassador to the United States Michael Oren warned Tuesday night that Iran might unleash a wave of terrorist violence in the Middle East in retaliation for the tough new sanctions that passed the US Congress last week.

In an interview to the Foreign Policy website, Oren said, “What better way to divert attention from a sanctions regime than by starting another Middle East war?”

Restraint
Mullen: Iran will continue to strive for nukes / Associated Press
Chairman of US Joint Chiefs of Staff says there’s ‘no reason to trust’ Tehran’s assurances that it is only pursuing peaceful nuclear program, but adds he believes Israel understands that military strike will be ‘incredibly destabilizing’ to Middle East
Full story

According to the Israeli envoy, Iran might respond to severe restrictions on its ability to buy gasoline and finance its state-owned companies by returning to the negotiating table, or use its connections to Hezbollah and Hamas to fight back by having those groups attack Israel and perhaps others.

The ambassador added that the international community must take this scenario into account, adding that “the next step is not to fall into that trap,” Oren said, arguing that the world should not be deterred from enforcing the sanctions.

The test of whether the sanctions are having an effect will be if the Iranian regime reacts, either by coming back to the negotiating table or waging a proxy war on Israel or the West, he said.

Addressing the preparations for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s visit to the White House next week, Oren clarified that contrary to the nature of the Israeli leader’s two previous meetings with US President Barack Obama, this time the meeting will be public.

“There will be a big public component of this trip that will remove any perception of snubbery,” Oren said. “There’s going to be a lot of photographers.”

The ambassador said Netanyahu would also meet with Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, but will not be seeing Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who will still be on trip to Europe.

Oren acknowledged that the American administration’s approach had changed since Obama took office, saying that “the Obama administration is not a status-quo administration; it came in with a policy of change. It’s not headed in a direction of abandonment, it’s a shift and our job is to figure where that shift is going and how to adapt.”

Qassam rocket fired from Gaza destroys Negev packing plant

June 30, 2010

Qassam rocket fired from Gaza destroys Negev packing plant – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

Rocket also seriously damages other structures in the Sdot Negev Regional Council; no one hurt.

By Yanir Yagna

A Qassam rocked fired from the Gaza Strip hit the western Negev before dawn Wednesday, seriously damaging a packing plant and other structures in the Sdot Negev Regional Council, but causing no casualties.

A Qassam rocket. A Qassam rocket.
Photo by: Albert Sadiko

“Tonight we took the hit, but the [rocket] fire is constant,” the plant’s manager said. “On the whole, we are a peaceful and quiet community,” he continued. “People got up and went to work and are trying to continue the day’s routines.”

“The biggest problem is that that our houses are not protected [against rocket fire]; I hope [the government] speeds up the fortification work,” he concluded.

The rocket attack comes one day after Israel Defense Forces Brig. Gen. Eitan Dango who oversees civilian operations in the West Bank told the Palestinian Authority that Israel plans to significantly boost the number of aid trucks allowed into the Gaza Strip.