Archive for October 24, 2012

Five hurt as Gaza rockets pummel Israel’s south

October 24, 2012

Israel Hayom | Five hurt as Gaza rockets pummel Israel’s south.

IAF strikes kill four Gaza terrorists as 72 rockets fired into Israel on Wednesday alone • Iron Dome missile defense system intercepts seven Grad rockets headed for populated areas • Seven houses hit, schools in communities near Gaza border closed.

News Agencies and Israel Hayom Staff
Rocket damage to a home in southern Israel on Wednesday morning.

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Photo credit: AFP

Israel halts war games to deploy troops, resources in escalating Gaza sector

October 24, 2012

Israel halts war games to deploy troops, resources in escalating Gaza sector.

DEBKAfile Special Report October 24, 2012, 1:59 PM (GMT+02:00)

 

Palestinian rocket explodes in Ashkelon

Defense minister Ehud Barak and Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz decided Wednesday, Oct. 24, that the heavy Palestinian missile assault from the Gaza Strip, which escalated to 60 rockets on Israeli civilian locations, in a few hours, must be stopped.

The bulk of the personnel taking part in the joint Israeli-US war game Austere Challenge 12 and the Turning Point 6 home front exercise were ordered to pull out, together with anti-missile interceptors and other resources, and redeploy in southern Israel across from the Gaza Strip.
Following this decision, another 13 rockets were fired at Ashkelon early Wednesday afternoon.
debkafile’s military sources report that the two exercises were effectively halted – “reduced” according to the official communiqué – after a wide range of towns and villages within range of the Gaza Strip, including Ashkelon, took a heavy beating from round after round of rockets, including Grads.
Two Thais working in the fields of the Eshkol district were flown to hospital in critical condition. Several properties were seriously damaged and local schools and work places remained closed.

The concentrated assault on Ashkelon, against which 7 rockets were intercepted by Iron Dome batteries, is taken by Israel’s top commanders as the opening shot of a major Hamas offensive, with worse to come.
Our sources report that officials in Washington and Jerusalem are in tense discussions over what to do with the 1,000 US troops, the American Patriots and the US warship standing by with an Aegis anti-missile battery, assigned to the three-week joint exercise which started Sunday.
On the one hand, the joint exercise’s mission was to practice the defense of Israel against potential Iranian, Syrian, Hizballah and Hamas missile attack. The current Hamas assault would seem to be an appropriate operational pitch for the American soldiers to practice tactics in real combat.
But the last thing President Barack Obama wants at this time is direct US military involvement in any Middle East war arena, certainly before the Nov. 6 vote. Using the Gaza scene for practice holds the potential of drawing US soldiers at some point into spiraling combat against the Palestinian Hamas and ultimately the Lebanese Hizballah.

In September, the two terrorist organizations signed mutual defense pacts under Iran’s aegis, obligating Hizballah to open a second front against northern Israel if Hamas comes under Israel attack in Gaza. The defense minister warned Wednesday that while Israel is not eager for ground action in the Gaza Strip, its army is committed to doing everything necessary to restore calm and security to southern Israel.
President Shimon Peres was the first statesman to connect the rising Hamas aggression to the visit of Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani of Qatar in Gaza City Tuesday with a fat check for “development constructon”.

No sooner had he departed, than the Islamist group ruling Gaza let loose with salvoes of rockets against Israel.

Peres commented WEdnesday said that it is intolerable for the rulers of Gaza to receive millions of dollars form the Emir of Qatar and shoot rockets. Nowhere in the world, whether London or New York, would it be acceptable for money awarded for building materials to be spent on rockets. Israel cannot put up with any more of this, said the president. “It is up to Gaza to choose between development and terror and murder.”

The Qatari ruler’s motives in his visit were not exactly constructive, debkafile reported on Oct. 22. He came to extend the regional ambitions which found expression in his intervention in the Libyan revolt and the Syrian conflict. Now, he is bidding to shore Hamas up as a force for reining in Salafi and al Qaeda lawlessness in Sinai before it cuts into Qatari influence in Libya. Israel may find itself not only up against Islamist terrorists but their Qatari sponsor too.
Our military sources predicted then that his visit would encourage Hamas to flex its muscles against Israel to impress its new patron.

The Gaza terrorist crisis ties in with a parallel alert declared by Israeli, US, Egyptian and Jordanian counterterrorism agencies for the coming Eid al Adha festival starting Oct. 25. Our sources revealed that Salafi and al Qaeda cells in Egyptian Sinai are poised to unleash coordinated terrorist attacks on US and Egyptian targets in Sinai and in Israel to avenge Israel’s targeted killing of two senior commanders of the Salafi-al Qaeda Sinai-Gaza network. Perpetrators of the Benghazi murders of 4 US diplomats are among the jihadi reinforcements coming in from Libya.

Three foreign workers injured by Gaza rocket fire, houses in Eshkol region suffer direct hits

October 24, 2012

Three foreign workers injured by Gaza rocket fire, houses in Eshkol region suffer direct hits | The Times of Israel.

IAF strikes terrorist targets, at least three Palestinians killed; dozens of rockets fired from Gaza, Iron Dome intercepts seven

October 23, 2012, 10:30 pm Updated: October 24, 2012, 9:03 am 6
Bloodied clothes left behind in an Eshkol region chicken coop after a rocket attack injured three workers Wednesday, Oct. 24 (photo credit: IDF Spokesperson's office)

Bloodied clothes left behind in an Eshkol region chicken coop after a rocket attack injured three workers Wednesday, Oct. 24 (photo credit: IDF Spokesperson’s office)

Three people were injured by rockets fired from Gaza into southern Israel, Wednesday morning. The men were hurt when a rocket landed on the chicken coop they were working in, in the Eshkol region. The three, reportedly foreign workers, were taken to hospital, two of them in critical condition.

Seven houses in the region suffered hits as tension between Israel and Gaza terror organizations increased after a night of terrorist rocket fire and military air strikes. One woman suffered minor injuries after she stumbled in her rush to reach a protected area. Several people were treated for shock.

Workers clear rubble out of a house in the Eshkol region that was hit by a rocket fired from Gaza on Wednesday, Oct. 24 (photo credit: IDF Spokesman's Office)

Workers clear rubble out of a house in the Eshkol region that was hit by a rocket fired from Gaza on Wednesday, Oct. 24 (photo credit: IDF Spokesman’s Office)

Dozens of rockets were fired towards southern Israel Wednesday morning, landing in the Eshkol, Shaar Hanegev and Hof Ashkelon regional councils.

The Iron Dome anti-missile system reportedly intercepted seven rockets fired towards the city of Ashkelon.

School was canceled in communities in the three regional councils. Citizens were instructed to remain in bomb shelters.

The military branches of Hamas and the Popular Resistance Committees took responsibility for the rocket fire. Hamas officials said security forces have been ordered to evacuate their bases, fearing Israeli retaliation.

Israel responded to the morning fire by striking terrorist targets in the Gaza strip, utilizing both air and ground forces.

“If things in the south seem bleak, I promise you that it’s worse in Gaza,” said IDF Spokesman Yoav Mordechai.

Mordechai said that Israel held Hamas responsible for all rocket fire out of Gaza and assessed that the terror group was not interested in a major escalation ahead of the Eid al-Adha holiday that begins Thursday.

“Hamas is under stress. It is both a terror organization and a governing sovereign body. It wants to show that it is still active in its resistance to Israel, but would like to contain the violence too,” Moredchai explained. “Any additional fire will be met with a determined response by the IDF. If we see that things calm down, we will respond accordingly,” he added.

Eshkol Regional Council head Haim Yelin called on the government to do everything in its power to bring an end to the fire from Gaza. He urged either a full ground assault or alternatively signing a peace deal with Hamas. He also demanded more fortification to the communities surrounding Gaza.

Israeli fighter planes struck terror cells in the northern Gaza strip three separate times on Tuesday night, the Israel Defense Forces said, killing a total of three Palestinians. The airstrikes came in response to the firing of several rockets and mortars that slammed into open areas in southern Israel on Tuesday.

The army said it carried out a targeted attack against a cell in Beit Lahia planning to launch a rocket. One Palestinian was killed and four were injured, according to Hamas-run television. Later, in a second airstrike, two Palestinians were killed while preparing to fire rockets, the IDF said. Those killed were all reported to be Hamas fighters. A third strike was carried out before dawn on Wednesday. IDF tanks also fired towards rocket launching squads.

Earlier this month, reports from the Strip indicated that terrorists in Gaza were beginning to use rocket launchers that can fire several projectiles at once.

The rockets fired at Israel came hours after the Emir of Qatar became the first foreign leader to visit the Strip since Hamas took over the territory in 2007. Hamas’s spokesman said Israel was embarrassed by the emir’s visit, which he said shattered Israel’s blockade of Gaza, and wished to avenge Hamas’s victory in the political arena.

Earlier on Tuesday, Captain Ziv Shilon was seriously wounded, losing an arm, when a roadside bomb exploded next to his patrol on the border with Gaza.

On Monday Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to protect Israel from missile fire by striking at terrorists and preventing them from rearming, in a response to ongoing rocket fire from the Gaza Strip.

US-Iran talks waste of time

October 24, 2012

US-Iran talks waste of time – Israel Opinion, Ynetnews.

Op-ed: Washington giving Tehran time it needs to complete development of nuclear bomb

Eldad Beck

Published: 10.24.12, 00:03 / Israel Opinion

At the beginning of the last decade the Europeans – headed by Germany Britain and France – initiated talks with Tehran in an effort to prevent the Ayatollah regime from moving forward with its nuclear program. It was a time when few people around the world knew who Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was and the regime in Tehran was in the hands of reformist mullahs.

The “great success” of this “critical dialogue” with Iran produced a sad joke: During the negotiations, the Europeans and Iranians would criticize the United States, together. The joke may be funny, but the result of this dialogue was not amusing at all.

Meanwhile, the reformist regime in Tehran was replaced by an extremist movement headed by Ahmadinejad, and in the US a Democratic president replaced the “belligerent” George W. Bush.

Under Obama, the US sent Tehran numerous signals indicating that it seeks reconciliation. An American representative even joined the talks between Europe and Iran. But this round of negotiations failed as well.

Everyone remembers Obama’s famous “New beginning” speech in Cairo just after he took office. Now, as Obama’s first term draws to a close, we are informed that Washington and Tehran may launch direct negotiations.

The American administration has turned itself into a joke. The US will give Iran the time it needs to complete the development of a nuclear bomb, after which it will be able to conduct negotiations from a position of power – and Israeli and American threats of an attack won’t help.

All of the Obama administration’s overtures to the Arab and Muslim world have not yielded any results. The American president and his government do not understand the Middle East and are causing irreparable damage.

This failed policy is bolstering the extremists and reduces the chances of a peaceful resolution. We can only hope for a different American administration, one that will terminate this absurd plan before it becomes irreversible.

Palestinians fire 50 rockets, mortars into Israel; 3 hurt

October 24, 2012

Palestinians fire 50 rockets, mortars into Isr… JPost – Defense.

By BEN HARTMAN, JPOST.COM STAFF
LAST UPDATED: 10/24/2012 08:30
IAF strikes rocket-launching terror squads in south, north Gaza Strip, killing 3 Hamas members, injuring 5; 67 rockets fired since evening; southern municipalities cancel school amid escalation.

House damaged in rocket attack.

Photo: IDF Spokesman’s Office

Palestinian terrorists fired 50 rockets and mortars into southern Israel Wednesday morning, injuring five and sending local residents fleeing for cover. IAF strikes targeting Palestinian rocket-launching squads killed three Hamas operatives but did little to stem the flow of rockets at Israel’s south.

Of the projectiles fired by the terrorists, 22 landed in the Eshkol region while 21 landed in the Lachish region, according to the Israel Police. The Iron Dome intercepted seven rockets, according to an IDF spokesman. The barrage follows 10 rockets fired on Tuesday evening, for a total of 67.

Two of he victims, foreign workers, suffered critical injuries and were evacuated via helicopter to Soroka Medical Center. Two more victims were lightly hurt, and one was being treated for shock, according to MDA.

IDF Home Front command instructed residents living within 10 km of Gaza to remain indoors and take shelter.

Air raid sirens went off during the attacks and local residents fled for cover. Southern municipalities canceled schools amid the ongoing escalation. Police have heightened patrols around Gaza in the south, including bomb sappers to deal with the heightened threat.

The IAF struck three rocket-launching cells in the northern and southern Gaza Strip overnight. Hamas said that three of its operatives were killed in the strikes, and another three were injured.

On Tuesday, Palestinian terrorists detonated an explosive on the Gaza-Israel border, seriously injuring an IDF company commander.

The explosive was placed on a gate in the Kissufim region, near Kibbutz Ein Hashlosha.

Army paramedics provided first aid to the officer, before airlifting him, in very serious condition, to the Soroka University Medical Center in Beersheba. Doctors battled to stabilize him.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu warned that Israel’s response to the bomb attack would be “very hard,” while Defense Minister Ehud Barak characterized the attack as a “severe incident.”

The Kissufim region, which borders central Gaza, has become a daily combat zone between Hamas and its affiliated terror groups and the IDF.

Palestinian factions regularly plant bombs along the border, fire mortars at army positions, and terrorize Israeli farmers with rocket attacks.

Earlier this year, St.-Sgt. Natanel Moshiashvili was killed in a gunbattle with Palestinian terrorists who infiltrated Israel from Gaza.

Last week saw an escalation in hostilities on the Gaza front, with dozens of rockets falling on southern Israel and the IAF striking centers of terror activity in response.

Yaakov Lappin and Herb Keinon contributed to this report

Benghazi killers among terrorists poised to strike US targets, Israel and Egypt

October 24, 2012

Benghazi killers among terrorists poised to strike US targets, Israel and Egypt.

DEBKAfile Special Report October 23, 2012, 7:53 PM (GMT+02:00)

 

Salafist funeral in Gaza
Salafist funeral in Gaza

The counterterrorism forces of Israel, the US, Egypt and Jordan have gone on elevated terror alert ahead of the three-day Muslim festival of Eid al Adha starting Thursday night, Oct. 25, debkafile reports.
They are acting on word received in the last ten days of preparations by Salafi and al Qaeda cells in Egyptian Sinai to unleash coordinated terrorist attacks on US and Egyptian targets in Sinai and across the border in Israel. The jihadis are bent on revenge for Israel’s targeted killing on Oct. 13 of Hisham Saidni and Abdullah al-Ashqar, two senior commanders of their Sinai-Gaza network, the Majlis Shura Al-Mujahideen
Israel’s IDF Sagi-512 Brigade and Shin Bet units are on guard around the Gaza Strip and Egyptian border; Egypt’s military, Interior Ministry and security forces are on high alert in Sinai; and the Multinational Force of mostly US units are on the ready at both its Sinai bases –  Al-Gora near El Arish in the north and Sharm el-Sheikh in the south.
The US special forces unit posted last month on Jordan’s Syrian border was hurriedly transferred to the Red Sea port of Aqaba with a fleet of helicopters, in case the MFO comes under attack.

The Majlis Shura Al-Mujahideen is a roof organization of some 6,000 Egyptian, local Bedouin, Palestinian, Jordanian, Saudi, Yemeni and Libyan terrorists who subscribe to Al Qaeda’s jihadist philosophy. From their strongholds in central and southern Sinai, they have carried out most of the most recent spate of attacks on Israel and on Egyptian military targets in the peninsula.
After their combined assault of July 18 on Egyptian and Israeli military targets, in the course of which they massacred 18 Egyptian troops, Cairo announced the launch of a major offensive to root the terrorists out of their Sinai lairs. But four months on, the jihadis remain in control of large tracts of the rugged Sinai desert. And last week, they received a large increment from Libya. The Libyan reinforcements were discovered on their arrival in Sinai Oct. 15 with a large quantity of weapons including missiles, ready for the forthcoming Eid offensive.
Among them were some of the perpetrators of the murderous attack in Benghazi on Sept. 11which killed four Americans at the US consulate.
On the day they arrived, Al Qaeda’s Shumoukh Al-Islam website ran a eulogy for Hisham Saidni with a warning: “The blood of the Muslim heroes is not cheap, nor is it shed in vain. The Jews will pay dearly for every drop they spill and Israel should expect a devastating response.”

At the beginning of the week, intelligence watchers picked up the sudden disappearance of thousands of jihadis from their Sinai posts as though the earth had swallowed them up. It is suspected they have regrouped in locations close their targets ready to move.

This incoming intelligence prompted the US Statement Department’s travel advisory of Tuesday, Oct. 23, for US citizens visiting Sinai and Israel’s Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz’s warning that coordinated terrorist attacks may be in store from Sinai and its northern borders with Lebanon and Syria.

America’s Credibility Problem with Iran

October 24, 2012

America’s Credibility Problem with Iran | Jewish & Israel News Algemeiner.com.

In recent weeks, Iran has been ratcheting up pressure on the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), accusing its inspectors of spying and sabotage, and threatening to further restrict the agency’s access to its nuclear facilities. The target of the regime’s finger pointing has typically been Israel and the United States. Its new focus on the IAEA likely reflects a continuation of its current strategy, namely, to keep stalling for time as unending diplomatic rounds continue, all the while continuing to expand its nuclear program.

Much of Tehran’s decision to focus on the IAEA appears as a response to the agency’s latest report, which reveals that Iran has doubled down on its uranium enrichment activities in recent months, doubling the number of centrifuges at its Fordo nuclear site while blocking the agency’s access to the Parchin military installation where nuclear-related experiments were believed to be carried out.

Meanwhile, Tehran’s nuclear enrichment activities have proceeded apace. According to Hossein Mousavian, former head of the Foreign Relations Committee of Iran’s National Security Council, when the P5+1 talks were taking place in Moscow in June, Iran had not only mastered enrichment to the 20 percent level, but it had domestically produced fuel rods for use in the Tehran reactor, about 10,000 centrifuges, more than 6,000 kilograms of low-enriched uranium (LEU), and 150 kilograms of 20 percent enriched uranium.

With diplomatic efforts to bring Iran’s nuclear program to heel continuing to fail, American policy toward the Islamic Republic remains problematic. For the first two years of Barack Obama’s term as president, U.S. policy sought
to reverse Iran’s nuclear progress through open dialogue—Obama’s outstretched hand and diplomatic engagement based on mutual respect and mutual interests. As it became clear that the U.S. and Iran have divergent interests with respect to their nuclear program, the White House jettisoned that approach and imposed economic sanctions. But with the mixed messaging coming out of Washington and partially enforced economic sanctions, Iran’s leaders remain unconvinced that the U.S. would resort to military force so they’re pressing ahead.

Mixed Messages from Washington

Although the purpose of the economic sanctions leveled at Iran is to provide more time for diplomacy to work, the Obama administration has sent contradictory messages to the regime that serve to undermine that very effort. In fact, the U.S. currently has no clear policy objectives for Iran’s nuclear program. While President Obama has said that Iran will not be allowed to have nuclear weapons, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton stated that U.S. policy “is to prevent Iran from having nuclear weapons capability.” The key word is capability. The difference is not mere semantics; it is significant because Obama’s policy would allow Iran to enrich and stockpile weapons-grade uranium. The last step necessary to make a nuclear weapon from that point can be carried out secretly and quickly.

National Intelligence Director James Clapper also weighed in earlier this year telling the Senate that “Iran has the scientific, technical, and industrial capacity to eventually produce nuclear weapons, making the central issue its political will to do so.” Adding to the administration’s messaging mess are the frequent comments made by senior U.S. officials stressing that there is no clear evidence that Iran has decided to make a nuclear weapon. How, then, does the current administration measure nuclear capability? If the administration believes that Iran has not yet decided to build a nuclear weapon, is Iran’s nuclear program even seen as a problem?

All of this should be seen in a context where the United States used to accept zero percent enrichment from Iran and previously worked to pass six United Nations Security Council resolutions calling for it to suspend its nuclear enrichment program in toto. Despite those UN resolutions, Western powers appear ready to grant Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, the right to enrich uranium to 5 percent. According to Olli Heinonen, former deputy director of the IAEA, enrichment to 5 percent would put Iran two-thirds of the way toward making weapons-grade uranium. If the West draws a new enrichment red line at 20 percent, it would leave Iran with 13,000 pounds of LEU, which is enough to make five nuclear weapons. Tehran would then be free to process its 5 percent stockpile and continue its centrifuge development. The regime would also be able pursue nuclear arms development through several easily concealable and compartmented programs. And it could do so without any formal weapons program. The key is not playing with enrichment percentages; it is preventing Iran’s production of centrifuges.

America’s Credibility Gap

Each red line offered by this administration has been pink and the Iranian regime has yet to be presented with the kind of repercussions that would induce a lasting change in behavior. This creates a credibility problem for the U.S. when it claims that there will be consequences for continued Iranian intransigence.

Indeed, President Obama’s crossed signals extend not just to Iran but to Israel as well. Following reports in the media would lead one to believe that U.S. and Israeli objectives vis-à-vis Iran are different, as the lion’s share of U.S. messaging is devoted to preventing Israel from attacking Iran’s nuclear facilities, rather than preventing Iran from gaining a nuclear weapons capability. President Obama’s formulation, where “all options are on the table,” or Leon Panetta’s formulation, where if Iran develops a nuclear weapon, Washington would “take whatever steps necessary to stop it” are not credible when both Panetta and Joint Chiefs Chairman General Martin Dempsy publicly state how problematic a U.S. attack on Iran would be, let alone an Israeli attack. The U.S. military deterrent is further compromised when Defense Secretary Panetta emphasizes that a military attack would be “really destabilizing” and “of greater concern to me are the unintended consequences.”

The truth, however, is that setting a red line is a tool of diplomacy that can create stability and avoid possible conflicts. It provides a context for negotiations. Yet Barack Obama’s insistence that “time is not unlimited” while publicly pleading for Israel’s patience is a far cry from a red line. From Iran’s perspective, the threat of military force is not credible when Mr. Obama’s red lines are not fixed and his administration disparages the effectiveness of a military strike, while belittling Israel’s security concerns by likening its unease to “noise.”

A Focus on Sanctions

The core of President Obama’s effort to sanction Iran is the Comprehensive Iran Sanctions, Accountability and Divestment Act of 2010 (CISADA), which expanded the scope of existing sanctions to cover refined petroleum products, a wide range of financial transactions, and abuses of human rights. The White House followed the move with several Executive Branch orders and Treasury Department designations targeting Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, prohibiting international financial institutions from conducting transactions with Iran’s central bank, and taking aim at Iran’s petrochemical sector.

In March 2012, American and European pressure led the Society of Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) to blacklist scores of Iranian banks, essentially cutting the country off most international commerce. Also in mid-2012, the European Union went ahead with its ban on importing Iranian oil, which until then accounted for almost a fifth of Iran’s crude exports. Collectively, the sanctions have impacted Iran’s economy.

President Obama is fond of proclaiming that his administration passed “the toughest sanctions ever imposed on the Iranian government.” But while they are extensive, they remain under-enforced and are only crippling the Iranian people—not the regime.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s fiscal policies have also greatly exacerbated Iran’s already dire economic situation. Iranian currency has been dropping like a stone since September 2010, losing more than 80 percent of its value. As Patrick Clawson of the Washington Institute of Near East Policy explained, the official consumer price index in August saw a dramatic 23.9 percent increase over the previous year with the sharpest rise associated with food products, such as a 74 percent increase for both chicken and fresh fruit, and an 81 percent increase for vegetables. But it would be a mistake for Washington to claim credit for Iran’s financial woes. As Iran’s Majlis speaker, Ali Larijani, revealed in July, “The country’s economic problems are only 20 percent due to sanctions. Unfortunately, the main origin of inflation comes from the maladroit application of the plan to suppress subsidies.”

However one applies blame, there are both external and internal reasons for Iran’s economic crisis and relying on economic sanctions alone to affect the regime’s thinking when it comes to its nuclear program would be foolhardy. Given Tehran’s crushing response to the thousands that gathered in 2009 to protest the fraudulent presidential elections, it is clear that the well-being of the Iranian people is far less a consideration than maintaining the stability of the regime—a position that it views as greatly enhanced and insulated from foreign threats if it possesses nuclear weapons.

Yet despite the centrality of economic sanctions to the White House’s effort to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons, the full arsenal of U.S. economic sanctions has yet to be brought to bear against the threat from Iran. China, Singapore, Japan, and 10 European countries including France, Germany, Italy, and Belgium have been extended waivers. Meanwhile, the Obama administration has been reluctant to enforce the sanctions against foreign companies that do business with Iran, despite the wide and bipartisan room Congress has granted the president to maneuver. That reluctance is because successive administrations have demonstrated a preference for trade over international security. Ilan Berman, Vice President of the American Foreign Policy Council explains:

“As a result, they have repeatedly shied away from truly imposing harsh economic penalties on Iran’s trading partners. The countries and companies that serve as Iran’s economic lifeline thus haven’t truly been asked to choose between their dealings with Iran and their relationship with the United States. And because they haven’t, these entities continue to harbor a “business as usual” approach to the Islamic Republic… Instead, leery of roiling relations with vital international trade partners and worried about imperiling America’s fragile economic recovery, the Obama administration has shied away from seriously harnessing the economic tools at its disposal… The end result is a U.S. sanctions regime that, while robust on paper, is flimsy in practice—systematically underutilized by an Executive skittish over its potential adverse consequences.”

The Need for an Iran Strategy

The structural problem in America’s current Iran policy persists in that the Obama administration often confuses tactics for strategy. Sanctions are a tactic; they are not a strategy in and of themself. For sanctions to be effective in modifying the behavior of the Iranian regime they have to be combined with other tactics such as military, messaging, and ideological components. Moreover, most evidence suggests that sanctions grow less effective over time. The only way they could succeed is if the people in Iran rise up to depose the regime. And that will require a different approach than the policy President Obama promulgated in 2009, when he stood by as the Iranian regime brutally crushed the opposition.

With a non-credible military threat, confused messaging, and a growing credibility gap, under-enforced economic sanctions have become the centerpiece of the Obama administration’s deterrent strategy. And that will likely leave the Iranian regime undeterred.

Matthew RJ Brodsky is the Director of Policy at the Jewish Policy Center and Editor of inFOCUS Quarterly.

United States, Israel conduct Austere Challenge anti-missile exercise – UPI.com

October 24, 2012

United States, Israel conduct Austere Challenge anti-missile exercise – UPI.com.

U.S. forces and Israeli’s military have launched an exercise that officials say is the largest missile-defense drill staged by the allies.

 

 

Israeli soldiers stand near the Iron Dome, a new anti-rocket system, stationed near the southern city of Beersheba, Israel, March 27, 2011. The Israeli Defense Force deployed the $200 million Iron Dome system in response to dozens of rockets fired by Palestinian militants from Gaza in the past weeks. The Iron Dome is meant to protect Israeli towns from rockets fired from Gaza. UPI/Debbie Hill

License photo

 

Published: Oct. 23, 2012 at 2:33 PM

 

TEL AVIV, Israel, Oct. 23 (UPI) — Amid rising tensions in the Persian Gulf and war in Syria, U.S. forces and Israeli’s military have launched a joint exercise dubbed Austere Challenge 2012 that officials say is the largest missile-defense drill staged by the two allies.

The three-week exercise will test Rafael Advanced Defense Systems’ much-vaunted Iron Dome counter-rocket system, which has seen action against Palestinian militants, the high-altitude Arrow weapon developed by Israel Aerospace Industries and Boeing of the United States and the latest version of the Patriot missile built by Raytheon.

Israel’s emerging air-defense shield, which includes Arrow and Iron Dome, will be integrated with the U.S. Ballistic Missile Defense system through Aegis-class cruisers armed with anti-missile systems.

The exercise, which began Sunday, is the sixth in a series of large-scale missile defense exercises in recent years. It involves some 3,500 U.S. military personnel, 1,000 of them in Israel and the rest with the U.S. 6th Fleet in the Mediterranean Sea or with the U.S. Europe Command. Some 1,000 Israeli troops are taking part across the Jewish state.

Officials say the exercises will consolidate U.S.-Israeli military cooperation but there are clearly strains within this alliance.

Austere Challenge 2012 was scheduled for last spring but the Pentagon postponed it, supposedly at Israel’s request.

Some 5,000 U.S. personnel had been slated to participate but Washington downsized the U.S. involvement in August, cutting the number of personnel to 3,500 and deploying one Aegis cruiser rather than the two originally planned.

The Americans said this was for logistical reasons. But the move came several days after U.S. Army Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, declared that he wouldn’t be “complicit” in any threatened Israeli pre-emptive strikes against Iran’s nuclear facilities.

Israeli leaders were angered by the U.S. decision.

“Short of standing in front of the camera and specifically telling Israel’s prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, ‘do not attack Iran,’ an unthinkable act so close to the Nov. 6 U.S. elections, this is the clearest message Barack Obama could have sent,” columnist Anshel Pfeffer wrote Sept. 1 in the liberal daily Haaretz.

But political sensibilities apart, Austere Challenge will enhance U.S.-Israeli cooperation in the event of a major missile attack on the Jewish state.

The topmost political and military echelons in Israel clearly fear that if Iran’s nuclear infrastructure is attacked, Tehran, and probably its allies in Syria, Lebanon and the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip, will retaliate with a massive missile bombardment that could last weeks, with wide-scale destruction and heavy civilian casualties.

The United States is locked in a confrontation with Iran in the Persian Gulf and tensions in the Middle East have been running high.

Austere Challenge will largely involve simulated missile attacks, with one actual launch to test the unified defenses.

A key part of these defenses is a high-powered U.S. X-band radar, an AN/TPY-2 system built by Raytheon at its Andover, Mass., air-defense facility. That, too, has caused friction.

The Americans installed one of the systems, linked to two 1,300-foot towers, at Nevatim Air Base in the Negev Desert near the Dimona nuclear reactor, in 2008, reportedly at the request of Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barack.

Not all Israelis were happy with this, since the radar allows the Americans to closely monitor Israeli air space and the Israeli military will only receive whatever data the United States deems Israel will need for operational purposes — like a direct attack on the Jewish state.

The X-band can detect ballistic missiles, as well as aircraft, up to 1,500 miles away, track trajectories and provide ground-based missiles such as Arrow -2 with targeting data. That would give the Israelis an extra 60-70 seconds to react if Iran, for instance, launched missiles. Israel’s own radars have much shorter ranges.

The $89 million radar is manned by 120 U.S. technicians and security guards, the only foreign forces based in Israel.

The facility is integrated with the U.S. regional ballistic missile defense system and the multi-layered missile defense shield the Israelis are putting together.

The Israeli military recently reorganized its air defenses, combining the air force and anti-missile systems run by a central computerized interception management center that will coordinate aircraft and interceptor missiles.

This includes counter-strike missions by the air force and Jericho-2 ballistic missiles.

Read more: http://www.upi.com/Business_News/Security-Industry/2012/10/23/Biggest-anti-missile-drill-for-Israel-US/UPI-88561351017201/#ixzz2ABeEqyTr

Hezbollah Prepares for a Wider War Than It May Want – Bloomberg

October 24, 2012

Hezbollah Prepares for a Wider War Than It May Want – Bloomberg.

Hezbollah War

Illustration by Clay Hickson

Hezbollah’s launching of a pilotless spy plane, which was shot down by Israel’s air force in the southern part of the country in early October, has been seen as more evidence that the Lebanese militia is preparing for war.

Israelis assume that the drone was gathering visual intelligence to help Hezbollah in its goal of bombarding distant targets with long-range surface-to-surface missiles.

No doubt it was collecting information in case of another confrontation with Israel, but whether the terrorist group is seeking a full-blown war is a more complicated question that may depend less on what Hezbollah wants than on the heat it is getting from its patrons.

The group’s possession of so sophisticated a craft (which was assembled from Iranian-made parts) is further evidence that Hezbollah is the most advanced and best-equipped militia of its kind the world has ever seen.

Ever since it forced the Israelis’ panicky retreat from Lebanon in 2000, Hezbollah has been building up an immense military force, with firepower that 90 percent of the world’s countries don’t possess, according to Meir Dagan, the former director of the Mossad, Israel’s intelligence agency.

The militia’s war doctrine is based on the assumption that Israel is hypersensitive to civilian casualties, that it cannot wage a protracted war and that it will always aim for the quickest possible clear-cut victory. With this in mind, Hezbollah has constructed a complex network of underground bunkers with the goal of assuring survivability, redundancy and an ability to maintain a prolonged missile barrage against Israeli cities.

Successful Strategy

The doctrine proved itself in the war between the two sides in 2006, when Israel failed in its attempt to liquidate Hezbollah and was once again forced to withdraw from Lebanon, bruised and bleeding.

Hezbollah’s approach to combat came from Iran. The organization was founded in 1983 by Iran’s revolutionary guards as part of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini’s plan to export his revolution. Over the years, with Iranian funding and encouragement, the group has become the most important political and military player in Lebanon.

In recent years, Hezbollah has taken on an additional role, serving as an effective bargaining chip in the balance of fear between Iran and Israel, deterring the latter from going ahead with any mission to attack Iran’s nuclear installations. One reason that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has held back is Hezbollah’s ability to wreak havoc in Israel with its huge stockpile of some 70,000 missiles and rockets, the most powerful of which is the Scud D, with a range of 700 kilometers (about 435 miles). Were it not for Hezbollah’s missiles, a top Israeli defense official told me, Israel would have struck Iran’s sites long ago.

That said, one shouldn’t draw conclusions based only on Hezbollah’s past and potential successes. The organization is at a crossroads. Syria, its second-most-important ally, is going through upheaval and faces fundamental changes. The munitions from Iran to Hezbollah are transported through Syria. The regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has also supplied large weapons to Hezbollah, as well as provided access to launching sites — “the strategic bases,” as Mossad calls them — for its missile barrages against Israel.

Any regime that takes over from Assad will remember who supported him as he slaughtered thousands of civilians. Being cut off from Syria is a nightmare for Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah.

Lebanon’s Role

No less menacing is the possibility, which is by no means far-fetched, that the Arab Spring will reach Lebanon, a prospect that might include a rebellion against Hezbollah’s state within a state. Even the regime in Iran is far from rock solid, and changes there could significantly worsen Hezbollah’s relations with its patron.

With the perspective of time, what appeared to be a victory over Israel in 2006 takes on a more complex cast. The war began when Hezbollah abducted two Israeli soldiers in a cross-border raid. Israel’s massive response came as a surprise to Nasrallah, and he admitted publicly that he hadn’t expected it. Although Hezbollah survived and was seen to have won that round, Lebanon as a whole sustained heavy damage and many Lebanese blamed Nasrallah for precipitating it.

Nasrallah is aware that the next confrontation with Israel will look different. The Israelis have invested in vast intelligence operations since 2006. Hezbollah believes that these efforts were evident in the February 2008 killing in Damascus of Imad Moughniyeh, the group’s military commander, with a booby-trapped headrest in his car, as well in mysterious explosions at some of its illicit missile depots in Lebanon.

More important, Israel has already declared several times that if and when war breaks out again, it will hold the Lebanese government responsible and will destroy government targets.

The 2006 war created a mutual deterrence: the Israelis refrain from an open pre-emptive assault against Hezbollah’s missile stockpiles, while the militia is compelled to moderate its responses. Instead, it has tried to avenge Mughniyeh’s assassination and other suspected Israeli actions by attacking Israeli tourists and diplomats in far-flung locations, outside of the Middle East, from New Delhi, and Baku, Azerbaijan, to Bangkok.

Nasrallah’s predicament springs chiefly from his dual role as Iran’s proxy and an authentic Lebanese leader who would like to be seen as leader of all the Arabs, not only of the Shiites. It was on behalf of the Iranians, senior Israeli intelligence officials told me, that Hezbollah operatives attacked Israeli tourists in the Bulgarian resort of Burgas on July 18, killing six people.

Iran’s Power

This was seen as revenge for the assassination of Iranian nuclear scientists for which Iran blames Israel. And it is for Iran’s benefit that Hezbollah has made such intense preparations for war, including the recent drone reconnaissance mission. Iran, in the event of an Israeli assault on its territory, will demand that Hezbollah wreak vengeance on its behalf, and Nasrallah, the Lebanese politician, is aware that this could lead to devastation in his country, for which he will be blamed.

Yet it is doubtful that Nasrallah, who owes everything he possesses to Iran, could say no to such an order from his patrons. Israeli intelligence sources reckon that he may well select a middle path — a barrage that is limited in both the number of missiles launched and in time, so that Israel won’t feel obligated to launch a full-scale military attack in response. This would be a dangerous gamble.

As Nasrallah has learned, it is not always possible to know what to expect from the other side, especially when it comes to the Israelis. Even a limited engagement could deteriorate into a war.

(Ronen Bergman is a senior correspondent for military and intelligence affairs for Yedioth Ahronoth, an Israeli daily, and a contributing writer for the New York Times Magazine. The opinions expressed are his own.)

Obama, Netanyahu Curb Iran Feud to Avoid Election Boomerang

October 24, 2012

Obama, Netanyahu Curb Iran Feud to Avoid Election Boomerang – SFGate.

Oct. 23 (Bloomberg) — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu advised President Barack Obama last month to back off, saying the U.S. had “no moral right” to stop Israel from attacking Iran in a bid to cripple its nuclear program.

In turn, Obama decided not to meet the Israeli leader on his next visit to the U.S. The president compounded the snub when he said in a “60 Minutes” interview that he would “block out the noise” if Netanyahu kept pushing for military action.

What a difference a month makes when both Obama and Netanyahu are fighting for re-election. Heeding advisers who said the nasty exchanges were hurting them both, Netanyahu pushed his horizon for an assault against Iranian nuclear facilities from October to next spring while speaking at the United Nations Sept. 27. Obama issued a press release the next day saying the two chatted by phone and were in “full agreement” on Iran, easing the confrontation between them.

“There’s a great feeling of relief that Netanyahu switched gears,” David Makovsky, an Israel-watcher at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said in a telephone interview. “The only people who win when the U.S. and Israel are squabbling are the Iranians.”

Israel is the world’s biggest recipient of U.S. foreign aid, collecting more than $3 billion a year. While 78 percent of American Jews voted for Obama in 2008, Israelis are less enthusiastic. A poll released June 15 showed 38 percent had a positive attitude toward the U.S. leader, the same number were neutral and 23 percent had negative views.

Support for Attack

If diplomatic efforts fail, two-thirds of the Israelis said they would support a military strike against Iran. The survey of 540 Israeli Jews, sponsored by Bar-Ilan University near Tel Aviv and the Anti-Defamation League, had a margin of error of 4.5 percentage points.

Obama, a Democrat, and Republican Mitt Romney competed at last night’s presidential debate in Boca Raton, Florida, to show who was the bigger supporter of Israel.

Romney faulted the president for failing to visit the Jewish state during his term in office, saying Obama would “create daylight between ourselves and Israel.” Obama said his administration has developed “unprecedented military and intelligence cooperation” with Netanyahu’s government, noting that he visited Israel in 2008 during his campaign for president.

Joint Exercise

With both nations eager again to play up their alliance, the Pentagon announced that the U.S. and Israel will begin the largest joint air and missile defense exercise, which started this week. The war-games — billed as “another milestone in the strategic relationship” by Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs Andrew Shapiro — involve some 3,500 U.S. personnel performing exercises on mock battlefields and at sea with 1,000 Israeli soldiers.

The two countries also signed an agreement last week tearing down a trade barrier between them on quality testing for the sale of telecommunications equipment, according to the office of U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk.

The Obama administration has publicly disagreed with Netanyahu on how to halt Iran’s nuclear capability and the timing of any military strikes. Iran’s leaders say the nuclear program is just for civilian purposes.

‘Red Lines’

Netanyahu has called for setting “red lines” for military action if Iran continues to enrich uranium. Obama responded that setting deadlines would only limit his options, saying pressure should be applied through economic sanctions.

“For several weeks, there was weekly, almost daily criticism from the Israeli government as to how the U.S. administration is handling Iran,” Isaac Herzog, a parliamentary representative from the opposition Labor party, said in an interview today at Bloomberg’s Tel Aviv office. “The most sensitive matters should be dealt with in intimate close quarters between the Oval Office and Jerusalem.”

The policy disagreement on Iran follows earlier clashes with Netanyahu over settlement construction in the West Bank and the collapse of U.S.-backed peace talks with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. Tensions were on clear display when Netanyahu was unceremoniously ushered from the White House in March 2010 without joint press statements, photo sessions or the usual trappings of such visits.

“The personal dislike of Obama for Netanyahu is almost an established fact,” Avraham Diskin, a political scientist at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, said in a phone interview. “We know the background, we can read the body language.”

Developing a close relationship between U.S. and Israeli leaders is not necessary to working together on sensitive diplomatic issues, former President Jimmy Carter said.

‘Warm Relationship’

“I didn’t have a particularly warm relationship with” former Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, “but we managed to work together,” Carter said yesterday at a press conference in east Jerusalem after speaking with Israeli and Palestinian leaders.

Carter brokered the 1978 Camp David Accords that led Begin and former Egyptian President Anwar Sadat to sign a peace treaty six months later, the first between Israel and an Arab state.

The strains between Netanyahu and Obama only increased during the U.S. presidential campaign when Romney came to Jerusalem, met with the prime minister, and raised $1 million during a breakfast with contributors.

Netanyahu Tribute

A month later at the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Florida, he accused Obama of having “thrown Israel under the bus.” Romney was accompanied to Jerusalem by his biggest contributor, casino owner Sheldon Adelson, chairman of Las Vegas Sands Corp. and publisher of a pro-Netanyahu daily newspaper in Israel, Yisrael Hayom.

Obama campaign officials condemned an anti-Obama campaign commercial produced last month by the “Secure America Now” super-PAC that features a Netanyahu speech calling for united action against Iran. Netanyahu aides said permission to use the speech was never requested and pointed to Obama’s own campaign video that features a tribute from the prime minister, which he also didn’t authorize.

Netanyahu may also have decided to bury the hatchet with Obama because he was “persuaded that the Iran issue is real but maybe it’s not as urgent as he made it out to be,” said Mark Heller, principal research fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies at Tel Aviv University.

Corporate Advisers

That may have included “new intelligence information or political advice that he can afford to wait,” Heller said.

Netanyahu and Romney said during the Republican candidate’s trip that they have known each other since 1976 when both worked for the Boston Consulting Group as corporate advisers.

Tensions between the U.S. and Israel have repeatedly surfaced since the Jewish state was founded six decades ago, without ending the alliance. Netanyahu’s military commanders and Defense Minister Ehud Barak played a part in smoothing the latest fracas, emphasizing the close security ties between the two nations, Makovsky said.

“Each side has lowered its tone,” he said. “They’re trying to find quiet ways to work things out.”

–With assistance from Calev Ben-David in Jerusalem. Editors: Ben Holland, Karl Maier, Andrew J. Barden
To contact the reporter on this story: Jonathan Ferziger in Tel Aviv at jferziger@bloomberg.net

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/business/bloomberg/article/Obama-Netanyahu-Curb-Iran-Feud-to-Avoid-Election-3974093.php#ixzz2ABdDyfyK