Archive for March 14, 2012

Netanyahu says ‘Gaza is Iran’ – JPost – Diplomacy & Politics

March 14, 2012

Netanyahu says ‘Gaza is Iran’ – JPost – Diplomacy & Politics.

By JPOST.COM STAFF
03/14/2012 17:48
PM says won’t accept terror-backing Iran getting nukes, blames 2005 Disengagement Plan for Gaza situation.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu in the Knesset By REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun

Iran is the primary actor responsible for escalations in the Gaza Strip, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said Wednesday. “Gaza is Iran,” the prime minister told a special Knesset session in which he was obligated to speak.

Connecting the recent round of violence in Gaza and the Iranian nuclear threat, Netanyahu said he is not prepared to accept a situation in which the country, which backs terrorist groups, becomes a nuclear power.

The prime minister went on to lay blame for Iran’s influence in the Strip on the 2005 Gaza Disengagement Plan and those politicians who supported it. “You inserted Iran into Gaza,” he told members of Knesset.

In general, and regarding the Iranian threat in particular, Netanyahu praised Israel’s alliance with the United States but said Israel’s ability and right to defend itself was even more important .

During his recent trip to Washington, during which he met with US President Barack Obama, Netanyahu paraphrased former prime minister Menachem Begin to explain why he emphasized and reiterated Israel’s right to defend itself.

“Israel has never put its fate in the hands of others and that is my primary responsibility as prime minister,” he said.
__________________________________________________

January 14, 2009

This war is between Israel and Iran.  NOT the Palestinians.

Iron Dome intercepts Grad rocket fired toward Beersheba

March 14, 2012

Iron Dome intercepts Grad rocket fired toward … JPost – Defense.

03/14/2012 19:04
Launche is the most serious breach of an informal cease-fire reached after a violent weekend during which over 200 rockets were fired from Gaza into southern Israel; second rocket reportedly explodes in an empty field.

Gaza air strike By REUTERS/Nir Elias

A Grad rocket was fired at Beersheba from the Gaza Strip Wednesday night, Police spokesman Mickey Rosenfeld said. The IDF confirmed that a rocket had been fired in the direction of Beersheba.

The Iron Dome rocket defense system successfully intercepted the Grad. A second rocket exploded in an empty field, Army Radio reported.

No damage or injuries were reported but several people were being treated for shock.

The rockets come a day after a reported informal cease-fire between Israel and Palestinian terrorist groups in Gaza took effect. A number of rockets and mortars were fired after the cease-fire came into effect, but Wednesday’s launches appeared to be the most serious breach, reaching deep into Israeli territory.

On Tuesday night, terrorists in Gaza fired a Grad rocket into the center of the southern town of Netivot, lightly injuring one man. Eleven others were treated for shock.

Earlier on Tuesday evening two rockets landed in the Ashkelon Coast Regional Council, marking the first such attacks since midday. Previously, Palestinian terrorists fired five mortar shells and two rockets at southern Israel just before noon. No injuries or damage were reported in the attacks.

School was scheduled to be back in session in the South on Wednesday after rocket attacks from Gaza kept students at home for the past three days.

More than 200 rockets have been fired from Gaza into southern Israel during hostilities that began on Friday when the IDF killed two Islamic Jihad terrorists that Israel charged were plotting a cross-border terror attack from Sinai.

The Israel Air Force responded to rocket attacks throughout the period of escalation, killing 26 Palestinians in air strikes, 22 of whom were armed terrorists.

Palestinian media reported on Tuesday afternoon that the IDF shot and injured three Palestinians that approached the Gaza security fence during a funeral procession for two terrorists that were killed in an IAF strike a day earlier. The funeral was for Islamic Jihad members Bassam al-Ejla and Mohammed Daher.

The IDF said that some fifty Palestinians came close to the security fence, and that they fired in order to distance them.

An Egyptian security official told Reuters on Tuesday that both sides had “agreed to end the current operations,” with Israel giving an unusual undertaking to “stop assassinations,” and an overall agreement “to begin a comprehensive and mutual calm.”

“There is an understanding,” Homeland Defense Minister Matan Vilna’i told Army Radio Tuesday morning. “At the moment the direction is toward calm and it appears, unless there are last minute developments, that this round is now behind us.”

Also Tuesday morning, an Islamic Jihad spokesman said the group would respect the quiet as long as Israel stopped assassinations of terrorist leaders, saying it would respond if more assassinations take place.

JPost.com staff contributed to this report.

‘IDF Tested Gaza Terrorists before Attack on Iran’

March 14, 2012

‘IDF Tested Gaza Terrorists before Attack on Iran’ – Defense/Security – News – Israel National News.

Hizbullah and Hamas said IDF strikes on Gaza were a “test” of reactions in advance of an attack on Iran, a Lebanese newspaper reported.
By Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu

First Publish: 3/14/2012, 1:15 PM

 

Hassan Nasrallah video speech at rally

Hassan Nasrallah video speech at rally
Reuters

Hizbullah and Hamas said IDF strikes on Gaza terrorists were a “test” of  reactions in advance of an attack on Iran, a Lebanese newspaper reported. Leaders of Hizbullah and Hamas also reportedly said they are coordinating with Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood in the event of a war  “waged by the Zionist enemy.”

Hizbullah supreme leader Hassan Nasrallah met with the Hamas number two leader in Lebanon, according to the Al-Sapir Arabic-language newspaper.

An alliance between the Iranian-Syrian-Hizbullah axis in the north with Hamas in Gaza and the Muslim Brotherhood would squeeze Israel from both ends of the country.

The meeting between Hizbullah and Hamas’ Dr. Moussa Abu Marzouk focused on the rebellion in Syria and the IDF’s counterterrorist strike on two Gaza terrorist leaders and the retaliation that followed a resumption of Hamas and Islamic Jihad missile attacks on Israel.

Nasrallah and Marzouk met on Monday and charged that “the Israeli enemy is responsible for the recent escalation of Israel’s counterterrorist measures in Gaza, which they said were intended “to pressure the resistance forces” and test their preparations for an Israeli attack on Iran’s nuclear plants.

The newspaper said that Hizbullah and Hamas discussed their relationship with the Muslim Brotherhood in light of the situation in Gaza and the current discussion in the West of intervening in Syria to stop the slaughter of civilians by Syrian President Bashar Assad.

Nasrallah also told Hamas leaders that Assad wants a political solution to the crisis facing his regime.

Hamas said it is holding meetings with other Arab factions in Lebanon and with representatives of the Palestinian Authority for a planned “million-man” march on Israel later this month.

‘Azerbaijan arrests 22 over terror plot against Israel, US’

March 14, 2012

‘Azerbaijan arrests 22 over terror plot … JPost – International.

By JPOST.COM STAFF
03/14/2012 15:05
Azeri National Security Ministry says suspects were cooperating with Iran’s Revolutionary Guards to carry out attacks on Israeli, US embassy, AFP reports; arrests come after Azeri defense minister visits Tehran.

government building in baku, azerbaijan
By Reuters

Officials in Azerbaijan announced the arrest of 22 people suspected of plotting attacks on Israeli and US embassies in the capital Baku on behalf of Iran, AFP reported Wednesday.

“Twenty-two citizens of Azerbaijan were arrested by the national security ministry for cooperating with [Iran],” the Azeri National Security Ministry said according to AFP, connecting the plots to the Iranian Revolutionary Guards.

The arrests mark the second time this year Baku said it made arrests over a foiled terrorist plot involving Iran, the first being in February.

The announcement of these new arrests came a day after Azerbaijani Defense Minister Safar Abiyev met with senior officials in Tehran for talks centered around maintaining good relations, after Tehran expressed dissatisfaction with an arms deal to the tune of $1.6 Baku made with archenemy Israel.

“We will not allow Azerbaijan’s soil to be used against Iran under any conditions,” Abiyev was quoted by the ISNA news agency as saying after meeting his Iranian counterpart Ahmad Vahidi in Tehran, in an apparent attempt to soothe Iranian nerves jittery over neighboring Azerbaijan’s increasingly close ties with Israel.

Iran accused Azerbaijan of allowing Mossad agents to operate from Azeri territory in order to gather intelligence on the Islamic Republic.

On February 21, Baku announced it had arrested a number of people with links to Iran and Lebanese Hezbollah that were planning to attack foreign citizens in the Eurasian nation, though reports did not identify Israeli or US targets.

The state TV report said the suspects had bought weapons including firearms and explosives, and had gathered intelligence on potential targets. The suspects had links to Iran’s intelligence agency and to Lebanese Hezbollah.

According to reports, one of those arrested was an Iranian member of the Quds Force.

Reuters contributed to this report

Iran’s MAD Gambit

March 14, 2012

Iran’s MAD Gambit » Publications » Family Security Matters.

Twice in a span of one month, Israeli government ministers had claimed that Iran was working on an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). First, in early February, deputy prime minister and minister for strategic affairs, Moshe Yaalon said that a blast last November at a missile base of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) hit a system “getting ready to produce a missile with a range of 10,000 kilometers (6000 miles).”
Later that month Israeli Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz said in a CNBC interview that Iran was investing billions of dollars to develop inter-continental ballistic missiles. “We estimate that in 2-3 years they will have the first inter-continental ballistic missiles that can reach the east coast of America.”

Predictably, the New York Times was quick to cite “American officials” as saying they believed the “assertions were at best premature, and at worst badly exaggerated…the officials said that Iran might harbor the ambition of having missiles that could reach the United States, but that it was not close to achieving that goal.”

Accordingly, the Israeli statements were politically motivated. Jerusalem, the Times reported, “was trying to make the point that the Iranian nuclear program is a threat not only to Israel but to other nations.” Yet this is hardly the end of the story.
Even the skeptics are not disputing the information that the Iranians are laboring to manufacture an ICBM. Thus, the questions should be what are Iran’s motives and what are the implications of its effort to acquire such weapons rather than just focusing on how close it is to having an operational ICBM.
Undoubtedly the pursuance of an intercontinental missile capability is meant to boost the Iranian regime’s domestic standing. As well, it is geared to enhance Iran’s regional prestige and political clout. But more importantly, an Iranian ICBM effort provides the telltale sign that Tehran is pursuing nuclear weapons. It is simply inconceivable that Tehran will undertake such a costly and technologically challenging project just to deliver a conventional payload to the American continent. Never mind that such a payload would have to be especially small given the distance the missile would have to travel. An ICBM venture would make no strategic, economic or operational sense unless the Iranians are aiming to equip the missile with an unconventional warhead.
Indeed, the way Iran is going about developing its ICBM is a carbon copy of the route it took in its efforts to acquire nuclear weapons. In the latter case Tehran, while developing missiles capable of reaching Israel, armed its proxy– the Lebanese terror organization Hizballah–with a vast array of rockets aimed at Israeli citiesto provide a makeshift deterrent against an Israeli attack on its nuclear sites. In the words of Yadallah Javani, politburo chief of the IRGC last November “The Islamic Republic of Iranhas some means and possibilities in areas very close to the Zionist regimeand can easily give a response to Israel to make its leaders repent their action.” Not surprisingly, some of the rockets supplied by Iran could reportedly reach Israel’s Dimona nuclear reactor undoubtedly to directly counter any Israeli threat to Iran’s facilities.
Now Iran is acting similarly with regard to developing its intercontinental delivery capability. As in Lebanon, it has created stopgap deterrents that range from the establishment of terror cells in Latin America and Canada to open threats to target U.S. bases and forces deployed in theater in case of conflict. For example last June, Commander of the IRGC Aerospace Force Brigadier General Amir Ali Hajizadeh said that about 70% of the U.S. bases in the Middle East are no farther than 300 to 400 kilometers away from Iran, suggesting all of them are within the scope of the IRGC’s short- and medium-range missiles. “The Americans have reduced our labors,” he told Iran’s Fars News Agency, “Their military bases in the region are in a range of 130, 250 and maximum 700 km in Afghanistan which we can hit with these missiles.” As before, the idea is to assure that Iran’s progress toward acquiring an unmistakably ominous capability is not impeded– in this case by Washington.
Acquisition of an ICBM capability would severely undermine America’s credibility in the region especially the offer made by U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton back in July 2009 to extend a “defensive umbrella” over the Middle East vis-à-vis Tehran. In a word, the possession by Iran of intercontinental missiles would wreck the foundation of America’s regional alliances.
In contrast, the addition of an ICBM component to its strategic weapons mix would enhance the reliability of the nuclear shield Iran is likely to provide its allies– all united by their hatred of America and Israel—once it gets the bomb.Already, Iran’s Navy Commander Rear Admiral Habibollah Sayyari declared in September 2010 that the Iranian Navy’s presence on the high seas and international waters (like its recent sailings into in the Mediterranean) is part of Tehran’s strategy for “defending its interests abroad.”
Iran’s freedom of action is also likely to grow. It could even engage in deliberate provocations in support of its allies. For example, Tehran could stir up trouble on its border with Iraq or in the Gulf in a bid to stretch U.S. forces thin in case of a future North Korean-U.S. crisis. Besides, neutralizing America’s strategic commitment could not but increase the odds of an attack on Israel.
Finally, acquisition of nuclear-armed intercontinental missiles would mean Iran has adopted a Samson-type strategic posture vis-à-vis the U.S.  Doubtlessly hoping to capitalize on their oft-proclaimed penchant for martyrdom, the mullahs are seeking a deterrence posture akin to a poor-man’s Mutual Assured Destruction (or MAD). They aim to put Washington on notice that endangering their political survival would also spell doom for the U.S. (that is at least as long as the U.S. remains vulnerable to even a rogue ICBM attack). After all, if an obscure terrorist organization such as al-Qaeda at the time was able to single-handedly bring the U.S. financial system to the brink of collapse in all of one day, and by employing nothing more than counter-conventional means, a nuclear hit on New York City or Washington D.C. could debase the seat of “world arrogance” for good.
Through its ICBM gambit Iran is thus pursuing a master plan aimed to deal with the two Satans—the Great one (America) and the Little one (Israel)–simultaneously. The new missile capability would enable Tehran to brandish a deterrent –i.e. defensive– strategy globally so as to allow it the prosecution of regional hegemony offensively.

Diplomats: US issued ultimatum to Iran via Russia

March 14, 2012

Diplomats: US issued ultimatum to Iran via Russia – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Russian source says Clinton asked Lavrov to warn Tehran that failure to resolve nuclear crisis peacefully will result in attack before year’s end; ‘Israelis blackmailing Obama,’ he claims

Ynet

The US has asked Moscow to warn Iran that it has one last chance to resolve the nuclear crisis peacefully or face an attack in the coming months, Russian diplomatic sources told the Kommersant daily.

The Russian newspaper quoted one diplomat as saying that the threat was voiced by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton during a meeting with her Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov in New York on Monday.

“The invasion will happen before year’s end. The Israelis are de facto blackmailing (President Barack) Obama. They’ve put him in this interesting position – either he supports the war or loses the support of the Jewish lobby,” the Russian diplomat told the Russian newspaper.

According to the source, Clinton said Iran has to make progress in the negotiations with the P5+1 group, which consists of the five permanent members of the UN Security Council and Germany.

The group is expected to negotiate on Iran’s controversial nuclear program with Iranian officials sometime in April. The negotiators demand clarifications from Iran over the potential militarization of its nuclear program. They also demand access for International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors to a suspected nuclear site in Parchin.

When asked about the reported American ultimatum, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov criticized the “last chance” rhetoric.

“Speaking in this way is unprofessional. There is no such thing as a last chance. It’s an issue of political will, and Russia does everything to foster such will rather than let it wane,” he told Kommersant.

The deputy FM said that the negative trend in the conflict is apparent, suggesting that “those tempted to use military force should restrain themselves and search for a diplomatic solution.”

“A war will not solve any problems, but will create a million new ones,” Ryabkov warned.

The West believes Iran is trying to build a nuclear weapon under the guise of its civilian nuclear program. Tehran denies the allegation, insisting that all its nuclear activities are purely peaceful.

Kommersant’s report was posted on the Russian website RT.

Iran’s new protege

March 14, 2012

Israel Hayom | Iran’s new protege.

In contrast to the Lebanese arena, where Iran has tied itself to and used Hezbollah as its representative and proxy, in the Palestinian arena Tehran has based its strategy on two parallel axes. The first is fostering its relationship with Hamas and providing it with funds to build and establish the organization’s power base in Gaza. The second is strengthening its relationship with the Palestinian Islamic Jihad and cultivating the group as a close and valued protege, even closer to Tehran’s heart than Hamas is.

The Iranians haven’t ignored Hamas’ strength over the years, and in recent months have also invested considerable effort to maintain ties with it, despite the cooling of the relationship between Hamas’ leadership and the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad.

And yet, even during the peak of Iran’s relationship with Hamas, in the days after the organization took control over the Gaza Strip by force, Tehran couldn’t ignore the clear advantages which lay in developing closer ties with the Islamic Jihad.

Firstly, the Islamic Jihad was prepared to get closer to Iran, and not just militarily and diplomatically. It was willing to get closer ideologically as well, and to find a bridge between it, a Sunni group, and the large Shiite power.

Hamas, for its part, chose to tie itself ideologically to Sunni spiritual authorities, such as Sheik Yousef Qaradawi, the Muslim Brotherhood’s spiritual leader, and to the Muslim Brotherhood in general throughout the Arab world, which has never hidden its hostility toward Iran.

Secondly, the Islamic Jihad has never made a claim to dominion and authority. This makes it an uncompromising ally, free of the restrictions that Iran itself must navigate. Hamas, on the other hand, is guided by more complex, usually pragmatic considerations.

Indeed, while Hamas has proceeded to disconnect itself from the Syrian regime under moral claims, the Islamic Jihad remains loyal to Assad. Presently, as the Islamic Jihad leads the current round of fighting against Israel from Gaza, Hamas is playing the game of “realpolitik” as an observer from the sidelines.

Be the results as they may after this round of fighting, what is clear is that the alliance between Tehran and the Islamic Jihad is only getting stronger.

Israeli embassy car blast case: Iranian spies did it, says Delhi Police

March 14, 2012

Israeli embassy car blast case: Iranian spies did it, says Delhi Police – The Economic Times.

NEW DELHI: The Delhi Police has cracked the Israeli embassy car blast case and traced the conspiracy to Iranian secret agents. According to sources privy to the investigation, it has now been ‘conclusively established’ that Syed Mohammad Kazmi, the freelance journalist recently arrested in the case, was in touch with an Iranian intelligence officer and had even visited Iran as part of the conspiracy.

Sources in the security establishment told ET that the breakthrough in the February 13 blast on an Israel diplomat’s car, will be announced by the Delhi Police in a “day or two.” They added that another couple of detentions have been made in the case.

The questioning of these two persons is underway and their arrests will follow soon. A senior official of the security establishment claimed that the Delhi Police had identified the bomber.

Even before the details of the investigation are placed in the public domain, India made it a point to share them with Israel. On Monday, home minister P Chidambaram is said to have briefed the visiting Israeli national security adviser Yaakov Amidror on the alleged breakthrough in the case.

The “breakthrough” comes even as relatives and friends of Kazmi have been protesting against his arrest and claiming that he was framed by the Delhi Police.

Putting its weight behind the Delhi Police, the MHA on Monday said it completely backs their line of investigation. “Wait for the announcement from the Delhi Police, which will unravel the entire conspiracy and the role of each individual and agency in the attack,” a senior home ministry official told ET.

The outcome of the blast probe confirms Israel’s assessment soon after the blast. Israel had claimed that the blast was carried out by Iran or its protA©gA© Hezbollah, given Israel’s stiff opposition to its nuclear ambitions.

While seeking Kazmi’s remand here last week, public prosecutor Rajiv Mohan had told the court that the accused was one of the conspirators involving international terrorism.

“This is a case of international terrorism. It is not necessary that only Indians are involved and there is a possibility that some foreign nationals might also be involved in the case,” he had said adding that the conspiracy was hatched outside India.

Kazmi has been charged with helping the bomber conduct reconnaissance of the Israeli embassy several times and keeping tab on the movement of Israeli diplomats. He allegedly helped terrorist who planted the magnet bomb on the diplomat’s car.

Kazmi, a freelance journalist, is said to be running a feature news agency, Media Star, besides being a part-time worker with an Iranian broadcaster and also a columnist with Persian newspapers in Iran.

Why the IDF felt it had to strike at Zuhair al-Qaissi

March 14, 2012

Why the IDF felt it had to strike at Zuhair al-Qaissi | The Times of Israel.

Fear of a kidnap attempt, a major terror attack, and deeper tensions with Egypt prompted Friday’s hit, even though the IDF knew the rockets would fly

Palestinians gather around the wreckage of Zuhair al-Qaissi's car, targeted in an Israeli airstrike in Gaza City, Friday. (photo credit: AP photo/Hatem Moussa)

Palestinians gather around the wreckage of Zuhair al-Qaissi’s car, targeted in an Israeli airstrike in Gaza City, Friday. (photo credit: AP photo/Hatem Moussa)
I

DF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz knew Friday afternoon, as he sent aircraft into the sky to kill Zuhair al-Qaissi, leader of the Popular Resistance Committees, that one million people would soon be tethered to their safe rooms, hundreds of thousands of children would miss school, buildings and infrastructure would be damaged, the local stock market would dip and, it would have seemed only reasonable, some lives would be lost.

He also knew that wars sometimes start with a single, hurried decision. Blood begets blood. Rockets could have reached Tel Aviv or its outskirts. Ground troops could have been called to the front. The politicians, once the ground troops were inserted, would have demanded a tangible achievement, something to go the polls with, and that, Gantz knew, would not be easily attained in the labyrinthine alleys of Gaza, where all changes seem to point in the same direction — increased extremism.

Yet when word reached him that al-Qaissi had gotten into his blue Opel along with another two combatants, meaning they were out in the open and verifiably not surrounded by family members or other civilians, he authorized the hit. Tuesday morning, speaking before new recruits to the Kfir Brigade, he explained why. “The planned terror attack in the south could have had strategic implications,” he said.

This is vague army talk for game-changing results and, based on previous experience with the PRC and the current situation in Sinai, likely meant a combination of two things: a defensive strike in Egypt, perhaps shedding Egyptian blood and damaging the ever-more brittle peace with our neighbor to the south; and the possibility of a kidnapping, either to Sinai or through the porous border to Gaza.

Both possibilities, in today’s reality in the Sinai, were all too likely.

The 25,000-square-mile peninsula, ruled by Israel from 1967 to 1982, is in the midst of fundamental change. Religion is on the rise among the avowedly Muslim but traditionally impious Bedouin, and the rule of law, ever since the Arab Spring, is on the wane. Ehud Yaari argued in a recent paper for the Washington Institute for Near East Policy that these two phenomena, coupled with Israel’s 2005 withdrawal from Gaza — which Israel hoped would lead to greater Egyptian involvement — have facilitated the unprecedented spread of Hamas political and religious ideology among the Bedouin tribes of the Sinai.

Yaari, an editorial board member of The Times of Israel and commentator for Channel 2 News, quoted a Bedouin blogger, Ashraf al-Anani, who depicted the effects of the withdrawal as “a fireball [that] started rolling into the peninsula.”

Hundreds of tunnels link the northern Sinai to Gaza. Terrorists send arms and operatives in both directions. In the past, the main flow of arms, according to intelligence reports, was from Iran by sea to Sudan and from there to Egypt, across the canal, into the rugged desert region – a haven for smugglers for millennia, and today home to a robust $300 million trade – and underground to Gaza. Over the past year, though, according to experts, much of the weaponry is being stored in Sinai, and terror operatives from Hamas and the PRC are taking the tunnel route in the opposite direction, from Gaza to the mountainous desert.

The Egyptian gas line to Israel has been attacked 10 times over the last year. Heavily armed Bedouin tribesmen have chased Egyptian security personnel from key positions. Rockets have been fired from Sinai to Aqaba and Eilat. But the lens through which Gantz was likely looking, when weighing the strike, was the August 18, 2011, attack.

The attack was led, if not necessarily executed by, the PRC, a Gaza-based, three-pronged organization founded at the start of the al-Aqsa Intifada in 2000. According to Yoni Fighel, a senior researcher at the the IDC’s Institute for Counter-Terrorism and former colonel who served in the IDF’s Intelligence Directorate, it is part of “a consortium of terror groups collectively known as Jaljalat, or rolling thunder.”

The original members were, ironically enough, disgruntled Fatah members who wanted to strike at Israel more openly. Today the organization is comprised of three wings, two of which cooperate with Hamas and are staffed by former Izz a-Din al-Qassam members who, like their Fatah forebears, resent their former organization’s newfound stateliness. The third is more closely affiliated with the global jihad organizations.

Their flag closely resembles Hezbollah’s, according to the Meir Amit Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center website, and above the raised rifle are the words, from a Koranic Sura much beloved by extremists: “Kill them [the infidels] wherever ye shall find them.”

The IDF at first claimed that, in last August’s attack, members of the two Hamas-affiliated wings, under the command of Kamal a-Neirab, snuck out of Gaza and into Sinai and from there to Route 12, north of Eilat, where they sprung the ambush that claimed eight Israeli lives. Fighel, Yaari and other military and Middle East experts dispute that.

The identities of the terrorists were never revealed. Mourning tents were never assembled in Gaza. Rather it seems more likely that experts from Gaza sneaked into Sinai and readied the Bedouin for an attack of unprecedented severity.

“This was a hugely complex attack,” Fighel said. “They would have needed to be briefed, trained, and maybe run through a full model” of the plan. The 12 terrorists, dressed in Egyptian army uniforms, executed a terror attack that included gunfire, grenades, mines, suicide bombers, snipers and, according to Yaari, shoulder-held surface-to-air rockets that, for the first time, were fired at Israeli aircraft. Their goal, according to the Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center, an NGO run by and for Israeli intelligence veterans, was to kidnap an Israeli.

The quick arrival of a Golani Brigade force may have been the only thing that foiled their plans. But the deaths of several Egyptian officials led to a swell of anti-Israel sentiment, an Israeli apology and a near-lynching of security personnel in the Israeli Embassy in Cairo several weeks later.

Yaari calls the situation in the Sinai a “time bomb.” He too believes that the terrorists were aiming to kidnap an Israeli. Furthermore, friction along the border, he writes, does not often contain itself to Israel and the terrorist group within the neighboring state, but rather, as in Jordan and Lebanon, drags the state hosting the terror into the fray.

If looked at in that light, Gantz, who knew a targeted killing would trigger rocket fire on Israel and who remains uncertain that the killing has prevented a terror attack in the south, evidently felt he had little choice but to target Zuhair al-Qassi on Friday afternoon.

Iran May Not Open a Site to Nuclear Inspectors – NYTimes.com

March 14, 2012

Iran May Not Open a Site to Nuclear Inspectors – NYTimes.com.

Iran signaled on Tuesday that it was unwilling to grant a request by international nuclear inspectors for unfettered access to a restricted military complex that they suspect may house a chamber designed to test explosives used in atomic weapons triggers.

In its first public statement on the matter since the leader of the International Atomic Energy Agency expressed irritation last week about Iran’s lack of cooperation, Iran also denied suggestions that it had sought to cleanse the military complex, called Parchin, to eliminate any trace of incriminating activity.

“The site is a military site, and conventional military activities are being carried out in the site,” the Foreign Ministry spokesman, Ramin Mehmanparast, said, according to Iranian news agencies. Ridiculing reports that Iran had tried to clean up the site, he said, “If military nuclear activities are carried out, evidence of them can never be cleaned up, and the issue is mostly propaganda.”

Iran’s unwillingness to grant the inspectors’ request could complicate resumed talks announced last week between Iran and the five permanent United Nations Security Council members plus Germany over Iran’s nuclear energy program, an increasing source of world tension. Iran says the program is peaceful; Western nations and Israel say it is a cover for developing nuclear weapons capacity.

A sprawling desert complex near Tehran, Parchin figured prominently in the atomic agency’s report on Iran’s nuclear activities last November. The report said Iran had constructed a containment vessel there in 2000 that may have been designed to conduct tests on explosives required to set off the type of reaction needed to detonate a nuclear bomb.

On an earlier visit to Parchin, inspectors found nothing, but were not allowed free access. Inspectors were recently twice denied permission to visit the site.

Mr. Mehmanparast said Iran did not oppose a visit but first wanted an agreement on what the inspectors would be allowed to do.