IDF faces oncoming Al Qaeda tide on three Israeli borders: Golan, Lebanon, Sinai
IDF faces oncoming Al Qaeda tide on three Israeli borders: Golan, Lebanon, Sinai.
At the UN Security Council in New York, his words were echoed by Robert Serry, UN Coordinator of the Middle East peace process, who said Syria “is increasingly turning into a big global battleground.”
It is important to note that Gen. Kochavi issued his warning shortly after returning home from meetings in
Washington with senior US military and intelligence officers. He flew to the US on July 17, on the day that hostilities flared between the Israeli and Syrian armies in the southern Golan on a scale which was never released to the public.
That clash marked the bankruptcy of the government and army command’s efforts to stop the tide of violence from reaching Israel’s northern borders by means of a tactic of virtual non-involvement, aside from limited aid to certain Syrian rebel groups, medical care for some of their wounded and certain unreported small-scale operations.
Threats from five separate sources now threaten to swamp those efforts entirely. They are posed by the Syrian army; Hizballah; global jiahdists; armed Syrian rebel militias funded by Saudi Arabia; and Al Qaeda groups bolstered for the first time by the arrival in recent weeks Pakistani Taliban groups of fighters.
Islamist forces are thrusting forward strongly in eastern, northern and western Syria. They murder any non-Islamist rebel chiefs, especial Free Syrian Army commanders, standing in their way and are moving on towards Lebanon and Jordan as well.
What strikes most concern in Jerusalem, are the first signs of a tie-in between al Qaeda in Syria and al Qaeda in Sinai. The intelligence chief’ went to Washington with a report that coordinated terrorist operations against Israel were shaping up for the first time from Syria, Sinai and possibly Lebanon too.
It was suddenly borne in on Israel that its two strikes against Syria’s chemical weapons and the transfer of advanced hardware to Hizballah were wide of the mark. The greatest danger has turned out to be Al Qaeda’s spreading potency. Anyway, chemical warfare has since spread across the Syrian battlefield and Hizballah forces fighting in Syria simply take direct delivery of advanced weapons from the Syrian army, without even trying to transfer them to Lebanon.
The IDF has failed to come to grips with Al Qaeda on the Syrian front no less than the Egyptian army, for different reasons, has succeeded in curbing the jihadist marauders in Sinai.
As the mainstream Syrian rebel movement crumbles, al Qaeda is bolstered by an influx of fighters, weapons and funds from across the Muslim world, including the Persian Gulf. Over the past year, the IDF has had to reconfigure its deployment against Syria – first to contend with the potential of chemical weapons, then Iranian military involvement, followed by Hizballah’s advance towards the Israeli border and now al Qaeda’s inroads.
Gen. Kochavi was not led to expect a sympathetic hearing in Washington for Israel’s concerns.
The Obama administration is up to its neck in its efforts to speed the US military drawdown in Afghanistan and break off contact with the Taliban, whose Pakistani branch has meanwhile turned up in Syria.
The Israeli intelligence chief found Gen. Martin Dempsey, Chairman of the US Chiefs of Staff, fully engaged in phrasing an open letter to senators to rebuff their criticism of President Barack Obama’s decision to stay out of the Syrian conflict:
In his letter, he outlined the five options for involvement with price tags:
1. Training, advising and assisting the opposition;
2. Conducting limited strikes;
3. Establishing a no-fly zone;
4. Creating buffer zones inside Syria;
5. Controlling Damascus’s chemical arms.
Gen Dempsey estimated that the first option would cost about $500m a year, while each of the other four actions would require roughly $1bn a month, i.e., $12bn a year.
The US army chief did not elaborate on the long-term cost to the US treasury of non-involvement in operations to keep al Qaeda at bay as it fights to get a stranglehold on Syria, like in Yemen and North African Sahara.
Israel’s Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon and its chief of staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz are struggling with imperatives to cut down on military outlay at the very moment when they need extra funding too keep the Al Qaeda menace away from Israel’s door. Gen. Dempsey has helped them by calculating costs. But that’s as far as it goes. For the fight, Israel is on its own.
July 24, 2013 at 2:07 PM
OK everybody, raise your hands. who didn’t see this coming. It’s all so sad and predictable; just sift through the sands of time and you’ll see history repeating itself over and over again. Evil is persistent and will not just stop, it must be stopped. Waiting and hoping it will stop is nothing less than suicide
July 24, 2013 at 2:23 PM
John, the islamists didn’t finish to kill each other in Syria, yet. Give them some time to enjoy fighting. There is no reason for Israel to openly intervene in their game. When the time will be right and those jihadists will turn to Israel, their war right now will be a joke in comparison with the blitz they will get. We, here in Israel, are not worried about them. It was something in the past we were worried about and that was Iran – Syria – Hezbollah axis. It seems to us that those jihadists are doing a nice job and they are breaking it. Why should us disturb them? We’ll ”talk” to them after that.
July 24, 2013 at 2:28 PM
Luis,
You maybe correct, but it still sounds a whole bunch of hope to me..
July 24, 2013 at 2:36 PM
That was the plan from the start,I its is very cheap no cost 2 when it is time to intervene its a short distance,
July 24, 2013 at 2:42 PM
Dead on, Justice….
As I’ve commented before, the operative word to describe Israel’s policy on this issue (being careful not to smile) is, “SHHHhhhhh….!”
July 24, 2013 at 2:36 PM
So let it be written; so let it be done….
July 24, 2013 at 3:16 PM
Good point Luis, and might I add that anytime a dispersed enemy concentrates itself in a relatively small area, then it’s a good thing. In other words, while killing each other they are creating a target rich environment.
July 24, 2013 at 3:21 PM
July 24, 2013 at 3:51 PM
Yay Steve !
I wasn’t sure anyone would “get it.”
Cheers!
July 24, 2013 at 4:26 PM
You’ve got to admit JW, it was a great movie. I was living in Houston back in the 70’s and Yul Brenner came to town to perform ‘The King and I”. Early that Sunday morning, I decided to ride my motorcycle downtown. It was a quiet day with virtually no traffic. Up ahead was a big black limo stopped at the approaching intersection. I pulled up along side her and waited for a green light. For no apparent reason I took a quick look at the limo next to me. There he was! Mr. Brenner! He was actually looking back! Before I realized what had happened, the light turned green and the limo sped off. Quite an experience I’ll never forget.
July 24, 2013 at 4:32 PM
IMHO, pharaoh was Yul’s best performance. Chuck Heston’s too.
A grand and glorious film, it is made silly by the invented “love story” that Hollywood felt it had to add on.
There are many other unforgettable quotes from the flick. Perhaps my favorite:
“His God IS God…”
July 24, 2013 at 6:16 PM
Notice tonys gone since i put a link to his wiki page or have youy banned him,myself i would prefer to keep abusing him as i send him hate mail for the last 25 years anyway
July 24, 2013 at 6:21 PM
Justice….
I finally did what I could to stop him by unapproving all his comments.
I became convinced that he was “trolling” the site.
I’m not sure if that was what stopped him, but I thought everyone should know that I tried.
July 24, 2013 at 2:42 PM
;0) ok works for me, I’m officially on the Hope train with the rest of you guys. Hear no evil, see no evil, speak no evil…..
July 24, 2013 at 2:44 PM
A great way to live, no?
July 24, 2013 at 2:52 PM
JW did you received my E-mail.
July 24, 2013 at 2:57 PM
I don’t know Joe, feels a lot like whistling in the dark to me with fingers crossed. But I’m now whistiling away……