Archive for July 2012

Israeli bus comes under fire near Eilat

July 22, 2012

Jerusalem Post – Breaking News.

(Right near my home. – JW)

Soldiers’ bus traveling close to Israel-Egypt border comes under Sinai terrorist fire. None injured; Security forces are canvassing the area

Yoav Zitun

Published: 07.22.12, 15:19 / Israel News

An Israeli bus traveling on a road near Mount Sagi, close to the Israel-Egypt border, came under terrorist fire Tuesday.

No injuries were reported, but the bus sustained damaged. Security forces are canvassing the area.

It is believed that the fire came from across the border, by terrorists hiding among the Sinai dunes.

Military Intelligence Major-General Aviv Kochavi revealed recently that the IDF has been able to thwart over 10 terror attacks by cells based in the Sinai Peninsula,

Kochavi said that the IDF currently has multiple would-be terror infrastructures under surveillance.

Deployment in the sector was increased following the deadly terror attack by an Islamic Jihad terror cell on a bus traveling on Highway 10, in the summer of 2011. Nine Israelis were killed.

Several week ago, following an attack on construction crews building the new Israel-Egypt border fence, IDF Chief of Staff Benny Gantz said that Israel “Expects the Egyptians to exercise their sovereignty” over Sinai.

Gantz said that the construction of the fence is progressing very as planned: “The operational problem is a different issue, a more significant issue is what goes on in Sinai, where terror bases continue to form. We expect the Egyptians to exercise their sovereignty in Sinai,” he said.

Syrian rebels say fight for country’s largest city has begun

July 22, 2012

Syrian rebels say fight for country’s largest city has begun | Fox News.

 

  • Mideast Syria_Pata(14).jpg

    July 19, 2012: In this photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, Syrian President Bashar Assad, left, meets with Fahd Jassem al-Freij, Syria’s new Defense Minister, in Damascus, Syria. (AP2012)

Syrian rebels have launched an offensive to “liberate” the country’s largest city of Aleppo, an opposition commander said Sunday, while in Damascus government troops backed by helicopter gunships wrested back control of rebel-held neighborhoods.

The fighting showed that even as President Bashar Assad’s forces appeared close to regaining control of Damascus after days of intense street battles, the rebels could still mount a new operation in Aleppo, Syria’s commercial hub and bedrock of support for the regime.

With Syria’s civil war moving from the countryside and smaller cities into the country’s two main urban centers, an activist group said the death toll had risen to more than 19,000 since the uprising began in March 2011. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights also said July is shaping up to be the deadliest month in the conflict so far, with 2,752 people killed in the first three weeks.

The bloodshed has escalated as the rebels have taken the fight to the government with a week of fighting in Damascus, including a bombing that struck at Assad’s inner circle and killed four senior regime officials. In a bid to seize the momentum, the opposition has also taken control of four border crossings with Iraq and Turkey, most recently the Bab al-Salamah post on the Turkish frontier.

A video posted online by activists Sunday showed about a dozen gunmen standing in front of the Bab al-Salamah crossing as they raised the Syrian opposition flag.

In a sign that the regime may be striking back, Gen. Qassim al-Dulaimi, commander of Iraq’s forces around the border region of al-Qaim, reported the sounds of fighting at the Bukamal crossing, suggesting Assad’s troops are trying to retake that frontier post.

The fighting in Damascus and Aleppo has shaken the government’s once seemingly iron grip on the two cities, which are both home to elites who have benefited from close ties to Assad’s regime, as well as merchant classes and minority groups who worry their status will suffer if Assad falls.

Col. Abdul-Jabbar Mohammed Aqidi, the commander of rebel forces in Aleppo province, said “we gave the orders for the march into Aleppo with the aim of liberating it.”

“We urge the residents of Aleppo to stay in their homes until the city is liberated,” he said in a video posted by activists on YouTube. He added that rebels were fighting inside the city while others were moving in from the outskirts.

Aqidi called on government troops to defect and join the opposition, and said rebels will protect members of President Bashar Assad’s Alawite minority sect, an off-shoot of Shiite Islam, saying “our war is not with you but with the Assad family.”

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and Aleppo-based activist Mohammed Saeed said the fighting is concentrated in several neighborhoods.

Saeed said rebels are in full control of the central Salaheddine district and the nearby Sakhour area. He added that thousands of residents have fled tense quarters of the city for safer neighborhoods and the suburbs.

“Aleppo is witnessing serious street battles” and many shops are closed, Saeed said.

He said there were fierce clashes on the road leading to the city’s international airport, known as Nairab, as rebels tried to surround the airfield to prevent the regime from sending reinforcements.

In the capital of Damascus, the Observatory also reported attacks by government forces in the neighborhoods of Mazzeh and Barzeh that had once been held by rebels. It said that troops used helicopters gunships in the attack, causing heavy casualties.

Maj. Gen. Nabil Zughaib, described as a missile expert, was also shot dead along with his wife and a son in the Damascus neighborhood of Bab Touma, according to the Observatory.

Syrian state TV denied government forces were using helicopter gunships in Damascus, and said the capital was calm and special forces were just mopping up the remnants of the “terrorists” in cooperation with residents. The government refers to those trying to overthrow Assad’s regime as “terrorists.”

Television also showed images of calm streets in Damascus and workmen cleaning up rubble in the once-rebel held Midan neighborhood, in effort to portray a capital where everything has returned to normal.

Assad, meanwhile, appeared on state TV receiving Gen. Ali Ayyoub, the new army chief of staff, whose predecessor replaced the defense minister slain in the bombing. It was only Assad’s second appearance since the attack.

Despite the regime’s efforts to present an image of calm in the capital, Malaysia’s government said it was shuttering its embassy in Damascus and evacuating more than 130 students and diplomats because of the deteriorating situation.

The escalating bloodshed and increasing chaos in Syria also has put the country’s neighbors on edge, particularly Israel.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday that Israel was closely monitoring the violence in Syria for signs the regime’s chemical weapons or missiles might make their way into the hands of anti-Israeli militants.

Over the weekend, Israel’s defense minister, Ehud Barak, said the Jewish state was preparing for a possible attack to prevent that from happening.

The increasingly precarious situation of the Assad regime is stoking Israeli fears that, should the Syrian government collapse, militants affiliated with Lebanon’s Hezbollah or Al Qaeda could raid Syrian military arsenals for chemicals weapons or sophisticated missiles that could strike Israeli territory.

For his part, King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia has announced the start of a “national campaign to collect donations to support our brothers in Syria,” suggesting the oil-rich kingdom may be looking to boost its financial support for the rebels, which they are already believed to be funding.

“Logistics Will Continue Functioning Under Fire”

July 22, 2012

Israel Defense | “Logistics Will Continue Functioning Under Fire”.

Brigadier General Ofer Wolf, director of the IDF’s Technology and Logistics Branch, reveals how the branch will function during a heavy missile and rocket attack
Brigadier General Ofer Wolf (Photo: Meir Azulay) Brigadier General Ofer Wolf (Photo: Meir Azulay)

One of the most disconcerting issues facing the IDF is the possibility of heavy rocket and missile barrages that are expected in Israel’s next war.

Since the Second Lebanon War in 2006, Hezbollah has increased its rocket and missile arsenal by 500% (most estimates put the number at no less than 50,000 projectiles). Syria and the Palestinian organizations in the Gaza Strip have also stockpiled vast quantities of weapons.

“We are aware of the significance of the threat. The need to guarantee operational continuity under intense fire is a key factor in our strategic planning, just as training and replenishment are,” says Brigadier General Ofer Wolf, head of the IDF’s Technology and Logistics Branch.

Wolf began his career in the IDF as an officer in the elite Sayeret Matkal reconnaissance unit. After studying engineering, he entered the field of logistics.

“Our task is to maintain an emergency logistics layout so that the IDF can continue to function under any condition,” states Wolf. “Military logistics is the art of moving material and forces. This includes the transportation of supplies and troops, medical evacuations, hospitalizations, weapons maintenance, construction, and infrastructures – all vital elements in combat scenarios.

What practical preparations have been made to guarantee the continuous functioning of the logistics layout under fire?

“First, it is important to disperse the inventory and not to put all our eggs in one basket. Until a few years ago, we tended to stockpile equipment in a central warehouse. Today, certain equipment, such as spare parts for tanks and vehicles, is dispersed throughout the country.

“Another principle that we’re working on is redundancy. For every logistics line, we have an alternative solution, some of them based on civilian resources that the IDF mobilizes in an emergency. Redundancy enables functional continuity if any of the logistics centers are temporarily paralyzed.

“Another modus operandi is enhanced protection – especially for military bases that have to operate 24/7.

“Maintaining underground structures is also an area that has to be advanced. I believe that a certain percentage of our material, and even part of our production layout, has to be kept in underground bunkers in case of an emergency. The ideal scenario is for a vehicle to enter the underground warehouse, load up with equipment or ammunition, and continue on with its assignment. Many armies work like this. We’ve drawn up a plan for underground. It now depends on getting the necessary budget in the next multiyear plan.

“Other elements that guarantee continued functioning are improved personal protection for logistics forces in the field and, above all, strong morale and units that are trained to operate under fire.”

Lessons from Lebanon 

Wolf explains that in every war scenario, the IDF relies on both military and national stockpiles. “These are reserves of aviation fuel, gasoline, diesel fuel, and food. We keep only enough for a certain number of days of combat. In an emergency, the IDF will mobilize all civilian vehicles, trucks, and motorcycles, and even cargo ships.”

In the beginning of the Second Lebanon War, the supplies sank below today’s red line. How would you assess the IDF’s current emergency stockpiles?

“One of the many lessons from the war was the need to bolster our reserve supplies. After exhaustive work, I can say that today, in the first of half of 2012, the IDF is in the best position it has ever been in from the point of view of logistics supplies.”

Does this imply that the reserves could deplete again?

“Unless the necessary funds for maintaining the reserves are forthcoming, then yes. It takes five or six years to build a stockpile; to deplete it takes only half a year. Improving the situation of an individual item, such as a tank motor, takes at least two years from the moment you define the need until the day the item arrives.

“If the situation on the eve of the Second Lebanon War is repeated, we’ve already defined the red lines. Dropping below the emergency level of a critical item requires approval by an officer with the rank of brigadier general or higher.”

The US Congress announced that the US plans to increase the value of its emergency stockpile in Israel from $800 million to $1.2 billion. Is Israel also relying on this emergency equipment?

“In an emergency we depend on every reserve supply. Our partners in the US understand our needs. They can inform us of what is available, how we can receive the supplies, and how to convert the equipment that is already in Israel.”

Is the Technology and Logistics Branch taking into account the possibility that the southwestern front (Egypt) could remain a military threat in the wake of the recent revolution? Wouldn’t fighting in Sinai demand very long supply lines?

“We are examining the implications of all the regional developments,” Wolf concludes.

An Israeli Assault on Iran: The Options

July 22, 2012

Israel Defense | An Israeli Assault on Iran: The Options.

Following a study on US-Israel understandings regarding Iran, the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies (BESA) says that the chances the US will attack Iran’s nuclear program are high. What exactly do these understandings say about Israel’s alleged nuclear capability
An Israeli Assault on Iran: The Options

 

The Iranian nuclear project is one of the main issues in the strategic dialogue between Jerusalem and Washington, which, according to US Ambassador to Israel, Dan Shapiro, has become “more coordinated than ever.” This dialogue, which began in the early 1990s, focuses on intelligence and political affairs. In the field of intelligence, senior members of Israel’s security branches (the IDF, Directorate of Military Intelligence, and Mossad) meet regularly with their US counterparts for exchanges and updates.

Diplomats, military personnel, intelligence officers, and foreign affairs specialists attend the quarterly Joint Politico-Military Forum (JPMG) to share ideas on various aspects of Iran’s nuclear program. These types of strategic forums help to tighten intelligence cooperation and establish a base for joint policy. At the political level, the talks seem to be aimed at hammering out a strategic response in accordance with the parties’ intentions and capabilities. This dialogue, which takes place at the highest level of leadership between senior advisors, allegedly discusses the possibility of attacking Iran’s nuclear sites and determines the red lines that could trigger a military operation.

Timetable for the Iranian bomb

US and Israeli intelligence services nearly agree on the timetable for an Iranian bomb. According to the Israeli estimate, Iran is one year away from a bomb, and according to US estimates, Iran is a year and a half away from producing the necessary material for a nuclear warhead. The global debate over Iran revolves around the question of when to intervene. Israel believes that Iran intends to produce up to 250 kg of 20% enriched uranium – the amount needed for one bomb.

The Islamic regime currently has 120 kg of 20% enriched uranium. The shift from 20% enrichment to the 90% level required to produce a bomb is only a matter of time, not of knowledge and technology. The rate of enrichment at the 20% level is 10-20 kg a month. With Iran’s ten thousand centrifuges, only two to three months are necessary to upgrade the enrichment level to 90%.

According to assessments regarding Iran’s strategy, the Iranians could produce enough 20% enriched uranium for one or more bombs, halt production, and become a “threshold state” on the verge of military nuclear capability. The short transition to upgraded (90% enriched) uranium could be made whenever it suits them – secretly and rapidly – to stymie efforts at thwarting their nuclear program. The Israeli position, as its leaders have stated, is that Iran must be stopped before it reaches the threshold level, since afterwards, it will only take a few weeks to produce a bomb. An additional reason is that Iran could conceal the accelerated upgrading to 90% from UN monitors.

The US holds the position that their military capabilities (including strategic bombers and deadly bombs) are more powerful than Israel’s. They say that even if Iran reaches threshold status, Israel can trust the US to intercede. Obama explicitly stated this in his March 2012 speech when he said, “You can trust us. We’re committed to preventing the Iranians from crossing the threshold and producing a bomb.” But can Israel rely on the US? In short, this is the dilemma facing Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, Minister of Defense Ehud Barak, Minister of Strategic Affairs Moshe Ya’alon, and the rest of Israel’s Political-Security Cabinet. These are the people that will ultimately decide whether to attack Iran.

Options regarding a nuclear Iran

The US-Israeli discourse has given birth to diverse opinions on the nuclear issue that could affect relations between Jerusalem and Washington. A political simulation game (Iran: A Strategic Simulation) held at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv in January 2012 found that an independent Israeli attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities would damage Israel’s relations with the US.

Given this potential response, it is important to understand the leeway for response present in the dialogue between both countries. This is where the following initiatory response possibilities may be pointed out:

Diplomacy and Sanctions: The EU’s decision to cut off oil trade with Iran is a powerful expression of US policy. A key factor in the Iranian economy, oil sanctions could effectively pressure Tehran to abandon its nuclear plans. However, the problem with such a move is that it demands a broad multi-national consensus that the US – the leader of anti-Iranian policy – could find hard to muster. China and Russia, who are permanent members of the UN Security Council, oppose the crippling sanctions against Iran. Moreover, the European Union agreed to comply with US-led sanctions only after considerable hesitation and dissension. The difficulty in defining and agreeing on tough sanctions causes Israel to regard this move with suspicion and apprehension. Minister of Defense Ehud Barak declared, “If the sanctions fail to halt Iran’s nuclear program, action will have to be taken.”

Semi-Military Move: The US decision to dispatch an aircraft carrier to the Strait of Hormuz, despite Iran’s threat to blockade the strait if sanctions are enforced, is an example of a semi-military response. This move is designed to reinforce US policy that holds that the closure of the strait is crossing a red line that Washington will not tolerate. The use of military power as a deterrent is effective in that it also strengthens the deterring force’s credibility. The downside of such a step is that the situation could deteriorate and develop into a military confrontation that the US wants to avoid. If Washington backed down, its threats would prove to be merely the roar of a paper tiger.

Thus, Iran’s policy of brinkmanship, such as deploying naval vessels or even firing on US or Western forces, could weaken Washington’s credibility regarding its intention to guarantee freedom of passage through the strait.

A military attack: Israel’s position, the US’s position

The big question is whether Israel will attack Iran. The simulation research examined this issue from various angles (Israel’s capabilities, flight paths, chances of success, etc.) and drew the conclusion that such an operation would run counter to US policy, and if realized, would have a devastating impact on countries involved.

At the same time, senior US officials, such as Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, believe that Israel will attack Iran’s nuclear installations in 2012. While these officials are quick to point out that this is their personal assessment, their opinion nevertheless strengthens the credibility of Israel’s threat. Announcing Israel’s intentions to bomb Iran could exert pressure on the international community to implement a more rigorous policy against Iran. In other words, the community’s interest in averting a military action could mobilize joint international action to enforce harsher sanctions that might postpone, or even cancel, an unwanted Israeli move. US recognition of Israel’s intentions proves that the threat is a key element in the dialogue between the two countries.

However, there is a gap between American and Israeli perspectives concerning the use of force for attaining common political goals, along with Israel’s implementation of this threat. In view of all the ramifications and variables, how would a military attack impact US interests in the Middle East, Israel’s security interests, and bilateral relations? Indeed, this is a very complex, multifaceted issue.

It may be assumed that most of the statements emanating from the two parties are closely coordinated, but the statements also reflect a basic discrepancy. This is at least, how they appear.

The options and likelihood of realization

If the sanctions and a semi-military move prove futile, the question of whether or not to carry out a military strike will rise to the top of the agenda. According to most Western assessments, a military operation will not destroy Iran’s nuclear program – it will only delay it. In the best-case scenario, if the attack is executed perfectly, Iran’s program will be set back no more than five years. However, considering that its nuclear facilities are dispersed throughout the country (1,648,000 square km), most analysts believe that a military attack would postpone Iran’s attainment of nuclear capability by two to three years at most, and even this is uncertain. The targets of the attack would include the enrichment facilities, the production sites of the detonators that trigger the nuclear chain reaction, and surface-to-surface missiles that deliver the bombs or warheads. According to foreign reports, a number of attacks (mysterious explosions around the country) were carried out between 2008 and 2012 against targets linked to Iran’s nuclear project. Several Iranian nuclear scientists were assassinated in operations attributed to Western intelligence agencies and the Mossad. There was also the case of an anonymous cyber-attack by the Stuxnet worm (allegedly produced by Israel) which caused heavy damage to Iran’s centrifuges, which have since been repaired. What options do Israel and the West have in the spring of 2012 as Iran approaches the nuclear threshold?

1. Israel could execute a military attack without informing the US. Reasons in favor: According to assessments in foreign publications, Israel has the capabilities (air and ground weapons, an elite air force, air refueling, long-range communications, and real-time intelligence gathering) to hit key targets in Iran. Israel also has the reputation of a country that boldly assumes responsibility for its own fate in matters of survival, as it did in the bombing of the Osirak reactor in Iraq in 1981. In addition, Netanyahu and Barak are believed to be preparing Israel for an attack and have the clout to get the Political-Security Cabinet to approve. Reasons against: An attack will cause only limited damage and incur heavy retaliation from Iran and its allies, including Hezbollah in Lebanon. If the attack is implemented without American consent, and US forces in the Persian Gulf are targeted by Iran, then US-Israel relations could be severely damaged. Likelihood of this scenario: medium to high.

2. Israel attacks Iran only after informing and coordinating with the US. Reasons in favor: Israel prefers to coordinate every operation with the US in order to preserve its strategic relationship. Reasons against: Full coordination will make the US an accomplice, and it is unlikely that the US wants this responsibility. Likelihood of this scenario: low.

3. Israel foregoes an attack and accepts the fact that Iran possesses a bomb. Reasons in favor: For decades, the US and Russia waged a cold war. Israel is aware of its military limitations and fears a strategic reversal in its relationship with the US. Therefore, Israel could eventually decide to accept the notion of a nuclear Iran and forego an attack, even while knowing that the US will not attack in its place. Reasons against: Theoretically, mutual deterrence doesn’t hold in Iran’s case given the regime’s messianic ideology. From Israel’s point of view, a situation in which Iran unabashedly proclaims its intention to destroy Israel, and at the same time possesses a nuclear warhead, is as bad as the price Israel would incur by attacking. An Iranian bomb will immediately limit Israel’s ability to retaliate against parties linked to Iran, such as Hezbollah in Lebanon and Palestinian Islamic Jihad in the Gaza Strip. Likelihood of this scenario: medium.

4. The demilitarization of the Middle East, including Israel. Reasons in favor: A scenario in which Israel agrees to be supervised by international forces in exchange for Iran relinquishing its nuclear project could neutralize the Iranian nuclear threat without needing to pay a high price. Reasons against: It is unrealistic to expect that Israel and Iran would place their trust in bilateral demilitarization or that Israel would reverse its policy of nuclear ambiguity. Likelihood of the scenario: low

5. A US attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities. Reasons in favor: The US is interested in stopping a nuclear bomb that threatens its allies, including Israel and countries such as Saudi Arabia and Kuwait (the world’s leading oil suppliers). An Iranian bomb will motivate other Arab countries to attain nuclear capability. In addition, Minister of Strategic Affairs, Moshe Ya’alon, revealed that Iran is striving to obtain missiles with ranges of 10,000 km that could reach the US. The US has demonstrated that when its security and political interests are threatened, it doesn’t hesitate to engage militarily anywhere in the world. Therefore, if sanctions against the regime prove ineffective, the US might declare war on Iran or carry out a strategic attack. Reasons against: In 2012, the US is in the midst of a campaign in Afghanistan and still nursing its wounds from the war in Iraq. America’s economic weakness and domestic politics (2012 is an election year, and several months will pass afterwards until a new administration settles in) could prevent an attack on Iran. Likelihood of such a scenario: high.

Bulgaria hunting for bomber’s accomplice

July 22, 2012

Bulgaria hunting for bomber’s accomplice – Israel News, Ynetnews.

According to local media, man was captured on airport cameras in Varna, another popular vacation destination for Israeli tourists, at end of June. Bulgarian police suspect that he hasn’t left the country

Omri Efraim

Published: 07.22.12, 12:22 / Israel News

 

The identity of the Burgas suicide bomber is still unknown, as is the identity of his accomplice, although police are closing in on the person who helped the bomber detonate himself on a tourist bus, killing five Israelis and one Bulgarian.

The Bulgarian media reported Sunday morning that an autopsy conducted on the bomber’s remains bore out the theory that he had help. The pathologist told one television station that “The bomber had light skin, light eyes, and brown hair” – a description that supports witness’ reports of another individual, described as “short, Arab-looking.”

Police suspect that the accomplice has not left Bulgaria.
האוטובוס שבו פוצץ עצמו המחבל בבורגס (צילום: AP)

The bombed-out bus in Burgas (Photo: AP)

According to reports, the bomber was assisted by a person who had been seen in the resort town of Varna, another popular tourist destination for Israelis. He reportedly had documents that identified him as a US citizen named “David Jefferson,” and a composite sketch has already been made public. Unconfirmed reports say that the man was captured on camera at the Varna airport at the end of June.

The current theory is that the accomplice, not the bomber, was the one who tried to rent a car to go the airport, since the person spotted was considerably shorter than the bomber himself.

On Saturday, the Bulgarian Foreign Ministry denied claims by a group calling itself Qaedat al-Jihad that it was responsible for the Burgas bombing, coming in line with Israeli and American assessments that the terror attack was carried out by Hezbollahand not any organization affiliated with the global Jihad.

Turkey closes Syrian border crossing after rebels plunder 30 trucks carrying food, medicine

July 22, 2012

Turkey closes Syrian border crossing after rebels plunder 30 trucks carrying food, medicine – Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said he is sending an envoy to Syria to assess the situation there, as government forces and rebels fight for control of key cities in the country.

By DPA | Jul.21, 2012 | 9:41 PM | 1
Burnt trucks are seen on July 20, 2012 at the Syrian border crossing.

After Syrian rebels allegedly robbed 30 trucks carrying goods from Turkey into Syria, Turkish officials announced the closure Saturday of a Syrian-Turkish border crossing.

The crossing at Cilvegozu would be shuttered in response to the attack, said Celalettin Lekesiz, governor of the Turkish state of Hatay. He said it was unclear when the crossing would reopen.

Nine trucks were set on fire in the attack. Food and medicine were stolen from other trucks, the drivers of which had been waiting days at the crossing.

Syria’s rebels have been making advances in recent days, taking control of multiple border crossings between Syria and Iraq, Turkey and Jordan.

Meanwhile, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said he is sending an envoy to Syria to assess the situation there, as government forces and rebels fight for control of key cities in the country.

Ban said he will send Undersecretary General for Peacekeeping Operations Herve Ladsous to Syria to assess the situation. Ladsous would be accompanied by the top UN military adviser, General Babacar Gaye, to lead the United Nations Supervision Mission in Syria in this critical phase.

“We continue to push for a peaceful solution. And I am in contact with regional and international leaders, and I am working closely with the joint special envoy, Kofi Annan,” Ban told a press conference in Croatia.

His statement comes one day after the United Nations Security Council voted unanimously to extend an observers’ mission by 30 days. The team’s mandate was extended with the understanding that the observers would assist a transition in Damascus or pull out if no political solution is found to end the 17-month conflict.

Ban’s statements also come after Russia and China vetoed a resolution to impose further sanctions on the government of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

Iranian assets in United States mosques, universities activated for potential terrorist attacks

July 22, 2012

Iranian assets in United States mosques, universities activated for potential terrorist attacks | The Daily Caller.

 

Emirati police and other officials inspect a boat docked in a fishing harbor in the Jumeirah district of Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Monday, July 16, 2012.

Iranian assets positioned in the United States have been activated and are actively working to acquire intelligence and equipment that might be useful in terror attacks, according to a former member of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards.

The information comes after a bus carrying Israeli youths exploded Wednesday in a Black Sea resort in Bulgaria, killing six and injuring 30 others. Fire engulfed the bus after the attack, which occurred as the bus was on its way back to the youths’ hotel.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu blamed Iran and vowed to retaliate.

Ominously, the attack took place on the anniversary of the Jewish Community Center bombing in Buenos Aires, Argentina that killed 85 and injured more than 100 in 1994. Several Iranian officials were implicated in that attack, including the current Iranian defense minister, Ahmad Vahidi, who has been red-flagged by Interpol.

Assets of the regime have attacked Israeli officials and interests unsuccessfully before, such as in India, Bangkok, Azerbaijan and other places. However, as reported in March, the Islamic regime had warned America and Israel that the next terror attacks would be much more complex and devastating.

A source who served in the Revolutionary Guards’ intelligence unit and has now defected to a European country warned in April that the Islamic regime’s terror cells were on high alert, which includes for attacks in the U.S.

According to him and another source in the U.S., the regime’s assets have long infiltrated America and are coordinating operations out of mosques and Islamic centers, such as Imam Ali Mosques and the Iman Islamic Center. Also, hundreds of the families of the regime officials who are present in America and Canada, in collaboration with the Iranian Embassy in Canada and Interests Section of The Islamic Republic of Iran out of the Pakistani Embassy in Washington, D.C., are actively recruiting assets and gathering intelligence.

The relatives routinely travel back and forth to Iran, making it easy to pass on information and transfer cash from Iran to the U.S.

Iran’s intelligence apparatus is specifically wooing Americans who convert to Islam. These individuals are approached with offers of a trip to the city of Qom, the hotbed of seminaries in Iran and the center of Shia theology, where they are brainwashed and then approached for collaboration against the infidels.

Hassan Abassi, a former intelligence commander of the Guards and the current strategist of the regime, has stated that Iranian assets in America who would conduct terrorism are not necessarily Iranian and that many are American, Mexican and of Latin American origin.

The source indicated that the recruiters and the regime’s intelligence officers often gather at mosques and Islamic centers. They identify individuals within the Islamic student associations and others who might sympathize with the Islamic regime and try to recruit them.

The regime’s Islamic foundations, such as Al-Ghadir and AhlulBayt, have set up branches throughout the world, including in America, funding mosques and Islamic centers that gather intelligence, recruit and transfer of cash to the regime’s cells.

Many other assets are already working at high-tech companies in the U.S., according to the source. These assets seek to gain access on communications by Iranians who are active in America in opposing the regime and also to gain technological secrets, which then are passed on to the regime.

Others have been placed in universities across the U.S. to gain critical knowledge to help with Iran’s nuclear arms program, while others promote better ties with Iran through various organizations and think tanks, which also provide the Islamic regime with analyses on the state of American public opinion.

Some assets are used to purchase spare parts that, due to the sanctions, the regime is unable to obtain. Many have been arrested trying to export airplane parts, parts for fighter jets and helicopters and other military and commercial parts.

With the Islamic regime refusing to halt its nuclear program and its looming confrontation with the West, the regime strategy calls for further terrorist attacks by its assets to send a signal to the West that an attack on its nuclear facilities will bear dire consequences, said the source in Europe.

“They are closing in on getting the bomb,” he said. “At that time it will be too late to stop this regime.”

Reza Kahlili is a pseudonym for a former CIA operative in Iran’s Revolutionary Guards and the author of the award winning book, A Time to Betray. He is a senior Fellow with EMPact America, a member of the Task Force on National and Homeland Security and teaches at the U.S. Department of Defense’s Joint Counterintelligence Training Academy (JCITA).

Report: US urges Israel against seizing Syrian WMDs

July 22, 2012

Report: US urges Israel against seizing Syrian WMDs – Israel News, Ynetnews.

As concerns over Syria’s unconventional weapons’ stockpiles grow, US reportedly ‘trying to persuade’ Israel not to attack facilities

Yitzhak Benhorin, AP

Published: 07.22.12, 09:52 / Israel News

WASHINGTON – Concerns over the fate of Syria‘s unconventional weapons’ stockpiles are growing, as the West is perplexed by conflicting reports regarding their position and security.

Some media reports suggest that Syrian President Bashar Assad has begun moving the stockpiles; others say he may have used them against rebel forces; while others still say that Syria’s cache of chemical weapons – considered the largest in the world – is still under the regime’s tights hold.

Israel is following the situation carefully, as the defense establishment is concerned Syria will try to transfer advanced weapons to Hezbollah, and in fact, may have already begun to do so.

Defense official Amos Gilad said Sunday that at this time, Syria remains in control of its chemical weapons arsenals.

In an interview with Army Radio Gilad said that Israel is concerned that Syria’s chemical stocks could be seized by Lebanese militants, Al-Qaeda-affiliated radicals or other unspecified “irresponsible elements” operating in Syria.

“Right now, they (the Syrians) are protecting these arsenals as best as they can,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Sunday Telegraph reported that US officials said that the US is closely monitoring the movements of part of the arsenal from storage bunkers to more secure sites earlier this month.

It is thought that Damascus shares Washington’s anxieties about the stocks falling into the hands. “The US is also trying to persuade the Israelis not to invade or bomb Syria in an effort to destroy the stockpiles,” the British newspaper said.

“We believe Syria’s chemical weapons stockpile remains under Syrian government control,” said White House spokesman Tommy Vietor. But he added: “Given the escalation of violence in Syria and the regime’s increasing attacks on their people, we remain very concerned about these weapons.”

‘Iran ‘zone of immunity’ resonating with world’

July 22, 2012

‘Iran ‘zone of immunity’ resonating with world… JPost – Defense.

By JPOST.COM STAFF
03/19/2012 14:53
Barak: Recent IAEA report overcame reservations of previous reports, clarified beyond any doubt that Iran wants nukes.

Defense Minister Ehud Barak

Photo: Marc Israel Sellem

The international community is starting to accept the idea that Iran’s nuclear weapons program is approaching a “zone of immunity” Defense Minister Ehud Barak told the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee on Monday.

The “zone of immunity” refers to the point at which Iran’s nuclear facilities would be immune from any potential Israeli military strike because all the necessary components for developing a nuclear weapon would have been moved further underground, rendering Israeli weapons ineffective.

Barak remarked that the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) report issued last month overcame the reservations of previous reports and clarified beyond any doubt that Iran has a clandestine program to pursue nuclear weapons.

International opinion has also evolved, according to the defense minister, as countries realize how much Iran is destabilizing the Middle East and that it will continue to do so if no action is taken.

In discussing the recent round of sanctions against Iran, Barak said they showed movement in a positive direction, but that much harsher sanctions would be necessary. He also noted that Iran continues to be a central player in financing and supporting terror throughout the region and globally.

The defense minister cited Iran as the greatest security challenge confronting the country. He stated that 2012 would be a critical year in addressing the Iranian threat.

Moving on from Iran, Barak said that there has recently been an uptick in Hezbollah terror attacks abroad. He stated that he expected these attacks to continue.

At the same time, “Hezbollah continues to increase the volume, range and destructive power of its rockets. The defense establishment must respond and prepare appropriately for Hezbollah’s increased capacity,” said Barak.

Despite these threats posed by Hezbollah, he told the committee that as a general matter, Israel’s policy of deterrence is still effective in preventing Hezbollah from risking a greater or more direct confrontation currently. Barak’s remarks also included a survey of issues relating to other Middle Eastern countries, the relationship with the US and a number of other issues.

Assad rebuilds fighting command, retaliates against Turkey

July 22, 2012

Assad rebuilds fighting command, retaliates against Turkey.

DEBKAfile Exclusive Report July 22, 2012, 8:53 AM (GMT+02:00)

 

Syrian tanks in Damascus
Syrian tanks in Damascus

President Bashar Assad quickly recovered from the blow he suffered with the loss of his four top allies last Wednesday, July 18. Within 24 hours, he had put in place a new command for fighting the rebels headed by his younger brother Gen. Maher Assad, commander of the 4th Division, debkafile’s military and intelligence sources report exclusively. He also appointed Gen. Ali Mamloukh to head the General Security Service; Gen. Hafez Makhlouf, military commander of Damascus; and Gen. Ali Hassan, new chief of the Alawite Shabiha militia.
Gen. Fahad Jassim al-Freij was sworn in as Defense Minister Thursday.
Despite a wave of desertions, the Syrian army was soon back on the job, showing no signs of shock or wavering at the command level.
Within 48 hours the army had driven the rebels out of the Maidan district of Damascus. And while some media focused on the rebels’ capture of two Syrian-Iraqi crossings Saturday, our sources report that Assad and his new command had already moved on and were busy with a tactical move in retaliation against Turkey for the assassinations at the top of Assad’s inner circle: They opened the door to an influx of rebels of the Turkish PKK (Kurdistan Workers Party) from Iraq into Syria’s northern Kurdish regions, with permission to set up bases of operation along the Turkish border.

This step had three immediate consequences:

1.  By giving the armed Turkish Kurds’ separatist movement bases of attack against Ankara, the Assad regime was able to pacify Syria’s own 2-3 million-strong Kurdish minority (ten percent of the population) and make sure their towns in the north did not join the Syrian uprising.
2.  By guaranteeing his own Kurdish minority’s loyalty, Assad released the troops posted there to fight Syrian rebels on other fronts.
3.  While acting as hosts for the rebel Free Syrian Army commands which are campaigning against Damascus, Turkey is itself exposed to a new strategic threat from its southern border with Syria.
debkafile’s military sources report that the flow of Turkish Kurdish fighters into northern Syria has advanced the local Kurdish separatist drive led by the Syrian Democratic Union Party. Friday, July 20, PYD and PKK fighters from Iraq joined forces to seize control of two Syrian-Turkish border towns, Afrin and Ayn-al Arab.
Assad calculated that semi-autonomous status achieved by Syrian Kurds in Syria would act as a shot in the arm for the PKK on the other side of the border and encourage their raids on Turkish government and military targets in support of their demand for like status in Turkey.
Assad has therefore begun exacting revenge on Turkey for the assassinations which cut down his inner circle.