Archive for August 2013

Netanyahu: Syria chemical attack a ‘grievous crime’

August 22, 2013

Netanyahu: Syria chemical attack a ‘grievous crime’ | The Times of Israel.

Reported gas attack ‘proves we cannot allow the world’s most dangerous regimes to acquire the world’s most dangerous weapons’

August 22, 2013, 7:26 pm
Syrian citizens trying to identify dead bodies, after an alleged poisonous gas attack fired by regime forces, according to activists in Syria, Wednesday, August 21, 2013. (photo credit: AP/Local Committee of Arbeen)

Syrian citizens trying to identify dead bodies, after an alleged poisonous gas attack fired by regime forces, according to activists in Syria, Wednesday, August 21, 2013. (photo credit: AP/Local Committee of Arbeen)

The alleged use of chemical weapons against Syrian civilians on Wednesday “proves yet again that we cannot permit the world’s most dangerous regimes to acquire the world’s most dangerous weapons,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Thursday.

On Wednesday, rebel groups in Syria claimed that as many as 1,300 people were killed in a chemical attack in the eastern suburbs of the capital Damascus. The reports were accompanied by a string of grisly photos and videos depicting scores of dead civilians, including children.

The reports “raise the possibility that an extremely grievous crime has been committed by the Syrian regime against its citizens,” Netanyahu said.

“This act adds to the roster of crimes committed by the Syrian regime, with the aid of Iran and Hezbollah, against the Syrian people,” he said.

Netanyahu added that it was “absurd that UN investigators, who are in Damascus right now to investigate the possibility that chemical weapons have been used, are being prevented by the Syrian regime from reaching the affected areas.”

He placed the blame for the continued fighting on Iran.

“Syria has become Iran’s testing ground, and Iran is closely watching whether and how the world responds to the atrocities committed there by its client state Syria and its proxy Hezbollah against innocent civilians in Syria,” he said.

Earlier Thursday, several opposition MKs expressed outrage at the reported carnage in Syria and called on the government to speak out on the issue.

“In a place where babies and children are massacred with gas, the State of Israel must make its position known,” said MK Nachman Shai (Labor), a former IDF spokesman.

“We’re not just another people or another state in the world. We have a moral stance and a recent history that produced the slogan ‘Never again,’” Shai said in a statement Thursday. “The slogan refers to every place and time where a people is murdered and children are massacred. It’s time to make our voices heard clearly. If not, this silence will pursue us for many years to come.”

Fellow Labor MK Isaac Herzog called the images from Syria “horrifying” and said he believed the Syrian situation would “only continue to deteriorate.”

Herzog noted in a statement that he had once expressed support for an American-led “international force that would replace Assad by force. It would have prevented terrible humanitarian suffering, and Syria could have begun a democratic era.”

But that possibility is now gone, Herzog said: “With the passage of years and the entry of jihadist forces into the arena, the situation has become irreparably complicated.”

He nevertheless insisted that Israel speak out on the killing taking place just a handful of kilometers from its borders.

“Israel has a moral voice, and it must make it heard. On a practical level, it must focus on humanitarian aid to Syria’s citizens, and continue to be vigilant in the face of regional developments,” he said.

MK Itzik Shmuli was more laconic, posting to Facebook a photo of children purportedly killed in the Damascus attack. “In wars for justice, children also die,” he wrote under the photograph. The phrase comes from a poem by the Israeli poet Tzruya Lahav titled “Flower,” about a little girl killed in war.

Netanyahu warns Israel will strike back at aggressors

August 22, 2013

Netanyahu warns Israel will strike back at aggressors | The Times of Israel.

Knesset members say rocket attack on Israel’s north was an attempt to divert attention from chemical weapons use in Syria

August 22, 2013, 7:03 pm
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gives a statement in Jerusalem on August 22, 2013. (photo credit: Amos Ben Gershom/GPO/Flash90)

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gives a statement in Jerusalem on August 22, 2013. (photo credit: Amos Ben Gershom/GPO/Flash90)

In the wake of Thursday’s rocket attack on the north, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to safeguard Israelis’ security and said that while Israel’s policy is to “protect and preempt,” anyone who attempts to attack the Jewish state should expect a retaliation.

“A short time ago rockets were fired from Lebanese territory on the western Galilee,” Netanyahu said in a videotaped statement. “We are operating on all fronts, in the north and south, to protect the citizens of Israel from these attacks. We are employing diverse means, both defensive and preemptive, and we are acting responsibly.

“Our policy is clear,” he continued, “to protect and to preempt. Anyone who harms us, or tries to harm us, should know that we will harm them.”

Four rockets were fired from Lebanon into Israel on Thursday afternoon. There were no immediate reports of casualties, but damage was caused to several homes in the Nahariya area. An Israeli Iron Dome battery intercepted one of the rockets. Israeli TV aired footage of minor damage caused by a fragment from the rocket that fell on the outskirts of a town outside Nahariya.

MK Nachman Shai (Labor) said the attack was the work of the Lebanese group Hezbollah, which, in conjunction with its ally Syria, sought to create a distraction in the wake of this week’s alleged chemical weapon attack near Damascus.

The Syrians “acted swiftly and decisively” by having “their allies, Hezbollah, divert international pressure from the gas attack on children in Damascus,” Shai, a former IDF spokesman, said in a statement. “This is an old and ugly trick, but we won’t fall for it. Israel must act cautiously and responsibly.”

MK Yitzhak Herzog (Labor) also said that the attack was designed to divert attention from the “terrible situation” in Syria. Herzog said that he had spoken with several mayors of northern cities, who have “all acted calmly and with restraint.” He also praised the public which, “as usual, performed excellently.”

Transportation Minister Yisrael Katz (Likud), speaking to Channel 2, said that the Lebanese government was ultimately responsible for attacks from inside its territory, warning that “if the Lebanese government and army cannot prevent these attacks, we will have to do so.

“Today it’s a marginal group, but tomorrow it will be a more significant one,” Katz said, adding that “war won’t break out tomorrow but we will not allow this situation to repeat itself… We will not allow these attacks to force residents of the North into bomb shelters and disrupt normal life.”

MK Moti Yogev (Jewish Home), a former IDF commando who attained the rank of colonel, said the army should respond “immediately” to the rocket fire, Israel National News reported. “This is the reality that the other side understands,” he added.

Netanyahu: We will strike anyone who tries to harm us

August 22, 2013

Netanyahu: We will strike anyone who tries to harm us | JPost | Israel News.

( Israel could teach the US a bit about “restraint,” not the other way around.  The whole world now knows now just how empty Obama’s pretense of “morality” is. – JW )

08/22/2013 18:29
In response to rocket fire from southern Lebanon, PM says Israel working to protect citizens; United States condemns rocket fire, but urges “restraint” while right-wing MKs call on government to retaliate.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu makes a statement, August 22, 2013.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu makes a statement, August 22, 2013. Photo: PMO

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu responded to Thursday’s rocket attack from Lebanon by saying Israel was working on all fronts – both with defensive and active preventive measures – to protect Israeli citizens.

“We are deploying a wide range of means,” he said in a statement, “both defensive and preventative. We are acting responsibly. Anyone who attacks us, or tries to attack us, should know that we will get him.”

The United States is calling for “restraint” from both Israel and Lebanon after three rockets, fired from Lebanese territory, hit northern Israeli towns.

“We strongly condemn the firing of rockets from Lebanon toward Israel,” State Department deputy spokeswoman Dina Badawy told The Jerusalem Post. “This was a provocative act that undermines the stability of Lebanon and the security of Israel.”

Badawy called the rocket fire a violation of the Blue Line, as prescribed by UNSCR 1701.

The State Department could not immediately confirm the source of the rocket fire, or details of the incident, Badawy said.

“We again strongly underscore the need for Lebanon to exercise full sovereignty over its territory,” she said.

A fourth rocket was intercepted by Israel’s Iron Dome short-range missile defense system, which has been funded generously by the US.

No group has yet to claim responsibility for the incident, and no casualties were reported.

MK Motti Yogev (Bayit Yehudi), meanwhile called for the government to retaliate to rocket fire in the north Thursday.

According to Yogev, the government cannot leave the attack without a response, “because this is the reality that the other side understands.” “The response must be very strong so that the other side has no desire to continue the escalation,” Yogev added.

The Bayit Yehudi MK, a member of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, pointed out that Hezbollah stockpiled weapons in the seven years since the Second Lebbanon War and has tens of thousands of missiles, which, he said, could lead to a confrontation to ensure the safety of residents of the north.

“Syria acted quickly and determinedly through their allies, Hezbollah, to distract international pressure from the gas attacks and massacres on children in Damascus,” MK Nachman Shai (Labor) stated. “Israel must act carefully and responsibly.”

Syrian Rebel Leader Appeals to Israel, US for Help Fighting Assad Regime Following Chemical Attack

August 22, 2013

Syrian Rebel Leader Appeals to Israel, US for Help Fighting Assad Regime Following Chemical Attack | Jewish & Israel News Algemeiner.com.

August 22, 2013 11:30 am

Free Syrian Army rebels cleaning their AK47s in Aleppo, Syria. Photo: VOA News/Wikimedia Commons.

A Syrian rebel leader on Wednesday said his group was desperate for outside intervention by Israel and the US to stop the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, after 1,300 dead bodies were discovered without wounds, according to reports, signifying a chemical attack, which would be the largest such attack since the Syrian civil war began two and a half years ago, Israel’s Ma’ariv daily reported, in an interview with the chairman of the Association of Rebels in Syria, known only by his nom de guerre, Abu Adnan,

“I appeal to Israel and the U.S. – help us stop the crimes and massacres of the Assad operation,” Abu Adnan said in an emotional telephone interview with the newspaper from a refugee camp on the Turkish border.

“We trust [Israel] and the United States know exactly what creative ways can help us overcome Assad,” Abu Adnan said. ”We believe they know the weak points of the regime and we look forward to qualitative shelling from Israel, just as it did to Assad’s arms caches at Bksion and Latakia. Any delay on the part of Israel and the United States will only strengthen the radical Islamic forces.”

Conflicting reports in July claimed that Israel targeted Russian-made anti-ship cruise missiles at a depot hidden in Latakia, though Israel has refused to comment on the allegations.

“Iran is helping [Assad] now make these chemical attacks, and Hezbollah is helping him,” Abu Adnan said. ”Look the Syrian people in the eye. We just seek freedom, like all people in the world. Turn to peace, and this historic opportunity to achieve peace.”

“The regime began the attack on populated areas at three in the morning.  It shelled about twenty missiles carrying chemical warheads […] Most children were killed in their sleep.” said Abu Adnan. “All this, just when UN inspectors, who came to see if Assad and his people are using chemical weapons, are in the country,” he added.

Ma’ariv cited rebel spokesman, Louis Miqdad,  as saying that the attack took place in ten different locations on the outskirts of Damascus. In contrast, the Assad regime has denied the charges outright, broadcasting on Syrian television: “There are no reports or photographs circulated in the media with any basis in truth.”

Abu Adnan said Syrians have no means of protection from chemical attacks and no awareness of ways to defend themselves against such attacks. “In addition, there’s the drugs and equipment needed to treat victims of an attack,” he added. “We need help at all levels – food, medical supplies and quarters for refugees. [The world] needs to understand that the amount of refugees in Syria is double the amount of refugees fleeing the country.”

Ma’ariv also cited Mendi Safadi, who once served as chief of staff for Israeli Druze politician Ayoob Kara, and now acts as an intermediary between the rebel forces and diplomatic officials in Israel, explaining that in Syria there are about 500 streams of internal opposition to the official Assad regime. The Association of Rebels in Syria got together only a few months ago in an attempt to bridge the gaps between them, and to unite them in an effort to end the civil war.

Israel says world paying ‘lip service’ to alleged Syria gas attack

August 22, 2013
A girl feeding from a bottle, as a man affected by what activists say was a gas attack breathes through oxygen mask, at a medical center in the Damascus suburbs of Saqba, August 21, 2013. — Reuters picA girl feeding from a bottle, as a man affected by what activists say was a gas attack breathes through oxygen mask, at a medical center in the Damascus suburbs of Saqba, August 21, 2013. — Reuters pic – See more at: http://www.themalaymailonline.com/world/article/israel-says-world-paying-lip-service-to-alleged-syria-gas-attack#sthash.LQulOh2h.dpuf

( I’m proud to live in the only truly ethical country on the planet. A “light to the nations.” – JW )

JERUSALEM, Aug 22 — Israel said today it believed Syrian forces had used chemical weapons in the killing of hundreds of people in the rebel-held suburbs of Damascus, and it accused the world of turning a blind eye to such attacks.

“The world condemns, the world investigates, the world pays lip service,” Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz said on Israel Radio.

“Nothing tangible or significant has been done in the past two years to halt (President Bashar al-) Assad’s incessant massacre of his citizens,” he said.

Opposition activists have accused Assad’s forces of gassing hundreds, including women and children, in Yesterday’s attack, allegations which government officials deny.

Echoing remarks made by Israeli Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon yesterday, Steinitz said that according to “Israeli intelligence assessments”, chemical weapons had been used in the rebel-held eastern Damascus suburbs, and “not for the first time” in Syria’s civil war. He did not provide further details.

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said today the international community needed to respond with force if the allegations of a Syrian government chemical attack proved true, although there was no question of sending troops on the ground.

Israeli leaders, while pointing a finger at Assad’s forces over alleged chemical attacks, have stopped short of urging Western military intervention in the Syrian conflict.

Israel has on several occasions taken action of its own, firing into Syria after mortar bombs and shells from battles near the frontier struck inside the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights. Israel captured the Golan from Syria in a 1967 war.

For Israel, the conflict in its northern neighbour is a battle between two evils: Assad — who is allied with two of its most strident foes, Iran and Lebanon’s Hezbollah guerrillas — and Islamic jihadists fighting with rebels to oust him.

In his remarks, Steinitz focused on the Iranian part of the equation, saying Western sanctions already in place over Tehran’s suspected quest for atomic weapons should be strengthened with punitive steps over its support for Assad.

Iran denies that it is seeking nuclear arms and says it is enriching uranium for peaceful purposes.

“If Assad is using chemical weapons and massacring his people, Iran is responsible because Assad is today a total offshoot of Iran. Without Iranian support he would not manage to hold on,” Steinitz said, citing arms supplies and funding.

Yisrael Katz, Israel’s transportation minister, said the alleged horror of gas attacks on Syrians resonated strongly in the Jewish state, founded after the Nazi Holocaust in which many of the six million Jewish dead were killed in gas chambers.

Israel has long conducted a national gas mask distribution programme for the civilian population. It has accused Syria of stockpiling chemical weapons and voiced concern they could be transferred to Hezbollah or other hostile groups.

“Today he (Assad) is murdering his own people, tomorrow he will threaten us and perhaps worse,” Katz told Israel Radio. — Reuters

via Israel says world paying ‘lip service’ to alleged Syria gas attack | World | The Malay Mail Online.

Four rockets fired at northern Israel; IDF retaliates

August 22, 2013

Four rockets fired at northern Israel; IDF retaliates | The Times of Israel.

One projectile falls on outskirts of a residential area, another downed by Iron Dome; some residents treated for shock; northerners told to remain in bomb shelters

August 22, 2013, 4:51 pm
One of four rockets fired from Lebanon into northern Israel, Thursday, August 22, 2013 (photo credit: Channel 2)

One of four rockets fired from Lebanon into northern Israel, Thursday, August 22, 2013 (photo credit: Channel 2)

Four rockets were fired from Lebanon into Israel on Thursday afternoon. There were no immediate reports of casualties or damage. The IDF promptly retaliated, attacking targets in south Lebanon, Lebanese media reported.

The red alert siren sounded in the cities of Nahariya, Acre, and Kiryat Shmona, and residents reported hearing explosions.

One of the rockets fell on the outskirts of a small town near Nahariya. An Israeli Iron Dome battery intercepted a second rocket, Channel 2 reported. It was initially unclear where the two other rockets fell.

Several residents were treated for shock.

Lebanese media reported that two volleys of rockets had been fired from a Palestinian refugee camp near Tyre into Israel. There was an attempt to fire a third volley, but the missiles fell short of the border.

A resident of Kibbutz Evron, near Nahariya, told Ynet that the alarm sounded only after “two booms” were heard, and that the residents quickly moved into bomb shelters.

“I heard booms,” Yan, a resident of Nahariya told Channel 2. “Everyone is in the bomb shelters.”

He said that residents hadn’t heard alarms for seven years — since the 2006 Second Lebanon War.

“I was on the phone to my grandma” when the alarms rang out. “I put down the phone and went down to the shelter,” he said.

There were reports Wednesday in Lebanon that Israeli helicopters had circled in southern Lebanon.

The army said it was looking into the incident and called on northern residents to remain in bomb shelters. It said it was treating the attack as a local incident that wouldn’t lead to a breakout of hostilities.

Damage from a rocket that fell near Nahariya, Thursday, August 22, 2013 (photo credit: Channel 2)

Damage from a rocket that fell near Nahariya, Thursday, August 22, 2013 (photo credit: Channel 2)

Rocket fire is a key tactic of the Lebanese Hezbollah and other terror groups on Israel’s northern and southern borders.

Thousands of rockets fell on Israel during the Second Lebanon War in the summer of 2006, and Hezbollah has since stockpiled tens of thousands of rockets it has said will be launched at Israeli cities in future fighting.

Israel last week deployed a sixth Iron Dome battery north of Tel Aviv, with an eye to the missile threat from the north.

The anti-missile system is a keystone in Israel’s air defense array and successfully intercepted hundreds of short- and medium-range missiles shot at Israeli cities during a brief round of fighting with Gaza in November.

Rockets fall in northern Israel

August 22, 2013

Rockets fall in northern Israel | The Times of Israel.

( 5:28 PM – Update: Homefront command issues the “all clear”. – JW )

Alarms sound in Nahariya, Acre; residents report sounds of explosions; one projectile downed by Iron Dome

August 22, 2013, 4:51 pmSeveral rockets were fired from Lebanon into Israel on Thursday afternoon. There were no immediate reports of casualties nor damage.

The red alert siren sounded in the cities of Nahariya, Acre, and Kiryat Shmona, and residents reported hearing explosions.

One of the rockets fell in a field near the Nahariya.

An Israeli Iron Dome battery intercepted at least one rocket, Channel 2 reported.

The army said that four rockets were fired in all.

Lebanese media reported that two volleys of rockets had been fired from a Palestinian refugee camp near Tyre into Israel.

A resident of Kibbutz Evron, near Nahariya, told Ynet that the alarm sounded only after “two booms” were heard, and that the residents quickly moved into bomb shelters.

There were reports Wednesday in Lebanon that Israeli helicopters had circled in southern Lebanon.

The army said it was looking into the incident and called on northern residents to remain in bomb shelters.

Israel Attacked from Lebanon

August 22, 2013

EMERGNCY

According to channel 2 news, at least 4 rockets fell between Rosh Hanikra and Acre.  They were launched from a location near Tyre.

The ground-based squadron guarding the Syrian

August 22, 2013

The ground-based squadron guarding the Syrian border | The Times of Israel.

With Wednesday’s alleged use by Assad’s forces of chemical weapons plunging the Syrian conflict to a new nadir, the Tammuz missile provides a vital line of defense on the northern frontier

August 22, 2013, 1:19 pm A close-up of the Tammuz missile system, which is equipped with day and night cameras. (photo credit: IDF Spokesperson's Unit)

During the Second Lebanon War, which ended seven years ago this month, an IDF reconnaissance team, entrenched in the ground above Rashef in south Lebanon, was tasked with​ a dual mission – to relay intelligence about the village to the divisional command and, if needed, to call in direct fire on the enemy.

After several days of quiet, the team’s commander spotted Hezbollah activity, including an armed motorcyclist coming and going from what appeared to be a command structure. He radioed the air force, asking for a strike, but was told that the IAF was otherwise engaged. Instead, the special forces officer, who had worked with the air force repeatedly during his years of service in south Lebanon, was put in touch with a standard artillery battalion.

The officer called in the exact coordinates of the structure. The rounds fell in the open. You missed, he reported.

The artillery battery provided more fire. You missed again, he said.

This repeated itself several times until finally the artillery officer told the commander in the field that rounds landing within several hundred meters of the coordinates were considered a direct hit under the circumstances and therefore he had fulfilled his mission and was moving on to other targets.

The special forces officer, who knew that one of the brigades in the division was set to invade the village soon, could do nothing but shrug bitterly and repeat that the structure had not been scratched.

Today, artillery officers say, that kind of scenario is increasingly unlikely. The once belittled artillery corps has swelled in size by 30 percent over the past four years, and today sees itself as far more than just a support mechanism for the frontline troops. Aside from operating the portable, man-launched Skylark UAVs for infantry troops and the see-shoot network of radars, it has switched its focus from pulverizing curved-trajectory shells to guided rockets – a shift that began during the Second Lebanon War and has intensified in the interim.

“The corps is not going through a significant change – it has gone through one,” said Maj. Efi Mizrachi, the head instructor at the Artillery Field School, who spoke to the Times of Israel during a recent drill.

The primary reason for the change is that artillery, which rose to its gruesomely effective peak during the trench warfare of WWI, is ill-suited to the modern Middle Eastern battlefield, where gunmen and rocket squads hide among civilians, and the political leadership of terror organizations like Hamas and Hezbollah leverage every civilian death in the furtherance of their cause.

The chief of the General Staff, Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz, ably summarized the situation in March when, during a speech at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv, he said that, in the past, a commander would circle civilian populations on the map and make sure to keep all combat operations beyond those areas. Today, he said, it is exactly within those circles that the combat operations must be launched. “We no longer have the privilege of not dealing with it,” he stated.

‘If I don’t have precision artillery, I don’t shoot. Maybe they did so in the past, but there are civilians everywhere. This is no place for a statistical weapon’

Gantz has since unveiled a dramatic shift in the IDF’s future plans, focusing on unmanned air-naval-and-land craft and intelligence capacities, along with other advanced systems, while saving on armor and artillery and personnel.

For Israel and the IDF’s artillery corps, the issue of fighting an enemy embedded within a civilian population rose to the surface during the siege of Beirut in 1982, and has become more central with every subsequent conflict. In south Lebanon in April 1996, during Operation Grapes of Wrath, a force under the command of the current Minister of the Economy, Naftali Bennett, called for artillery cover while under fire; four of the rounds landed in a nearby UN base – its proximity serving as a key tactical asset for Hezbollah – and killed 102 civilians and wounded 100 more, including seven UN employees. Israel brought the entire operation to an abrupt halt.

In Gaza, and particularly during Operation Cast Lead in 2008-9, the high civilian death toll threatened not only the operation itself but Israel’s international standing as well.

A senior officer in the Southern Command, peering into the dense urban landscape of Bet Lahiya, told the Times of Israel during a recent tour of the Gaza border that, “If I don’t have precision artillery, I don’t shoot. Maybe they did so in the past, but there are civilians everywhere. This is no place for a statistical weapon.”

The same is true along the Syrian border, where Israel has for more than two years watched the unfolding of the vicious civil war — which reached a new nadir on Wednesday with the alleged use of chemical weapons by regime forces to kill hundreds.

Israel has not been immune to the conflict, and has responded to recent cross-border fire on the Golan Heights on at least four occasions. Each time it has used the Tammuz missile. A GPS-equipped, operator-guided, Non Line of Sight missile, the Tammuz can be mounted on an armed personnel carrier, or even transported by foot into the field. With a maximum range of some 25 kilometers, it is the flagship weapon of the artillery corps — the symbol of the transformation from rear-echelon support to what a company commander in the unit, Captain A, said in a phone interview was, akin to “the air force of the ground troops.”

In fact, Brig. Gen. David Suissa, the former commander of the artillery corps, told Walla news last year that the artillery corps, which numerically is still dominated by the 40-year-old 155mm. M109 cannons but is increasingly moving in the direction of GPS-guided MLRS​ rocket systems and Tammuz missiles, has undergone “a revolution that will be brought to the fore in the next war.” (The Tammuz was used extensively in the Second Lebanon War but the heart of the IDF’s firepower was still the old 155 mm guns.)

The Tammuz, declassified in 2011, was first developed to fight against armored divisions. Colonel Benny “Benga” Beit-Or, an engineer who had served as the head of weapons development for IDF ground forces, conceived of the notion of a division of tank-hunting troops, equipped with long-range missiles able to hit a moving target. The idea was to counteract Syria’s quantitative superiority in armor. The IDF summoned Beit-Or into reserves and upgraded the project to an emergency level of urgency.

Beit-Or chose Rafael Advanced Defense System’s winning design and, in May 1986, named the new division charged with operating the weapon “David’s Slingshot” – a clear indication of how he saw the small, smart weapon and its efficacy against hulking armored opponents. The conscripted unit charged with operating the missiles would be called “Moran” and later “Meitar.”

For five years, the highly classified missiles, known as Spike in English, were not cleared for operational use. That changed in the spring of 1992 when Lt. Gen. Ehud Barak, then the chief of the General Staff, tasked his old friend and unit mate Brig. Gen. Amiram Levin with what IDF special-ops officers often call “a project.” In this case: the assassination of Saddam Hussein.

Levin, who later went on to head the Northern Command and served as deputy director of the Mossad, came up with the idea of using the Tammuz missile for the targeted killing. The plan, as laid out recently on the Uvda news program, was to either wait for, or induce, the death of Saddam Hussein’s beloved uncle, Talfah Hirallah, who was being treated in a hospital in Baghdad. Once he died or approached death, an elite team of commandos would enter Iraq, advance to the Hussein family’s hometown outside of Tikrit, position themselves on the outskirts of the​ local cemetery, and kill Saddam, with a guided Tammuz missile, as he stood motionless over his uncle’s grave.

‘In the General Staff they understood that they had a weapon that knows how to attack in a super accurate way, without causing unintended damage, especially as terror operates within a civilian environment’

The plan backfired on November 5, 1992 when, with a large part of the General Staff in attendance, the soldiers from the elite Sayeret Matkal unit fired a live missile during a dry run and killed five of their fellow commandos.

After that, the missile was shelved for 12 years. Only in 2004, with Gantz serving as the OC Northern Command and Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon as the chief of the General Staff, was the missile taken out of war-time-only use and cleared for operational use once again. In November 2005, in response to a thwarted Hezbollah hostage-taking operation in the northern town of Rajar, the soldiers from Meitar fired the weapon for the first time, taking out two Hezbollah positions. “As far as we were concerned, the dam was broken open, and in the General Staff they understood that they had a weapon that knows how to attack in a super accurate way, without causing unintended damage, especially as terror operates within a civilian environment,” Lt. Col. A, the commander of Meitar, told Walla news.

During the Second Lebanon War (2006), Operation Cast Lead (2008-9), and Operation Pillar of Defense (2012), the Tammuz was fired often and with devastating effect. Corporal A, a soldier in the unit who recently finished his training and has begun operational duty, said in a phone interview that, “from 2006 to 2009, we eliminated the most terrorists of any unit in the IDF, proportionally speaking.”

Interviews with the soldier and a company commander in the unit shed light on the training and operational functionality of this offensive and defensive weapon, which the commander of the unit told Walla was like an attack helicopter “with the only difference being that they have to go up in the air and then push a button and we just have to push the button.”

Cap. A, a company commander in the Meitar unit, which is devoted solely to the Tammuz missile, said that when recruiting he looks for soldiers who are technologically savvy, capable of working well with others under duress, and able to navigate and spend long stretches in the field.

Based on their skills, the soldiers are split into two parallel teams. Cap. A called them a “look-out team” and “missilologists.”

Maj. Doron Campbell, the commander of Operation Bramble – the tongue-in-cheek name given to the aborted Saddam 1992 assassination mission — and, at the time, deputy commander of the elite Sayeret Matkal commando unit, told Omri Osenheim of Uvda that his force was also split into two. The forward team, led by Campbell, was to position itself “100-200″ yards from the cemetery. Heavily camouflaged, they would report back to the team in the rear, clueing them in to Saddam’s position and attire and any other information that could help the operators guide the missile to the target.

Today, according to military sources, the Golan Heights are to a large extent being guarded by Tammuz missile operators, allowing Israel to protect its border with Syria against a sudden tank charge without amassing armor

In the rear, some 12 kilometers from the cemetery, the Tammuz operators would be stationed. They were to carry 10 missiles, and they were to be equipped with screens that displayed camera footage from the tip of the missile. Campbell said that once the missile, which travels along a trapezoidal path, dropped its nose and bore down on the target, the operators, searching for a man-sized target rather than a tank, would have had two seconds to steer it to the desired location.

“Basically there are two parts to the unit,” explained Corporal A, a new immigrant and lone soldier from San Francisco. “The ones who stay clean and the ones who get dirty.”

He referred to the fact that the forward unit, known as the recon company, has to be able to travel long distances on foot, carrying significant amounts of weight, and to be able to remain in the field for as long as necessary. The missile operators need to be technologically savvy, poised under pressure and dexterous. The high cost of the missiles, up to 500,000 shekels each (some $135,000) for the most advanced of the lot, means that the soldiers mostly hone their skills on a simulator that tests them against an array of custom-designed backdrops and evolving scenarios. At times, the proper response, Captain A indicated, is to steer the missile off target and avoid the loss of innocent life.

Today, according to military sources, the Golan Heights are to a large extent being guarded by Tammuz missile operators, allowing Israel to protect its border with Syria against a sudden tank charge without amassing armor, and enabling decision-makers to return fire into Syria without mistakenly hitting the wrong target.

The most recent usage of the Tammuz missile was on Saturday night, August 17, eliminating a Syrian position near the town of Brieka, opposite the central Golan Heights, after several mortars were fired into Israeli territory. For the previous three months, ever since May 21, Israel’s side of the border had been relatively calm, haunted only by the sounds and sights of war. The commander of the unit, though, warned that the quiet could be shattered in seconds, forcing his soldiers to “act surgically against a mass of targets.” Wednesday’s alleged use of chemical weapons by Assad’s forces underlined the conflict’s ongoing potential to surprise and horrify afresh.

Corporal A was not concerned. He described immigrating to Israel and volunteering specifically for Meitar as a result of his admiration for his Israeli camp counselor who had served in the unit. He said that he wanted to do something he believed in rather than “spend a few years in college trying to figure out what to do.”

Rather than dropping a giant bomb on a civilian population, he said, the Tammuz missile allowed the army a precise alternative, which can be delivered to its target through a dense civilian population. “Basically,” he said, “we can do a lot with very little.”

Assad senses West’s weakness

August 22, 2013

Assad senses West’s weakness – Israel Opinion, Ynetnews.

Analysis: Syrian president’s use of chemical weapons against opposition should also concern Israel

Published: 08.22.13, 08:42 / Israel Opinion

The Syrian army’s use of chemical weapons in the Damascus area Wednesday is indicative of self-confidence on the one hand and distress on the other. The self-confidence stems from the army’s operational successes in Homs and Hama, which included massive fire. The distress stems from the army’s inability to seize the rebel’s stronghold in Damascus’ eastern neighborhoods. There are even signs that the rebels, in this case members of the Free Syrian Army, are planning to expand the area in their control and advance towards the center of the capital. The pressured Syrian regime apparently fears such a development and therefore decided to use chemical weapons against civilians in these neighborhoods with the goal of deterring the Free Syrian Army fighters who seek shelter inside residential homes and operate from within them.

According to reports from the field, the Syrian army used missiles equipped with warheads loaded with sarin gas. The missiles were fired indiscriminately with the purpose of causing mass casualties. Eyewitness accounts indicate that the sarin gas was blended with other substances and was therefore not as lethal.

It must be remembered that the chemical weapons are being used as members of a UN delegation are confined to a Damascus hotel but can most likely see the chemical missiles being fired and the smoke billowing.

Even a cruel regime that is fighting for its life, as Assad’s is, would not dare violate international law in such a blatant way without being certain it would not pay a price for such immoral and inhumane conduct.

President Assad knows the American threat to take operative action in response to chemical attacks has dissipated. Obama has declared he does not plan to intervene militarily in Syria, and General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, explained to Congress how difficult it would be for a US-led coalition to intervene in Syria or even impose a no-fly zone in the border areas.

Site of alleged chemical attack near Damascus (Photo: Reuters)
Site of alleged chemical attack near Damascus (Photo: Reuters)

Dempsey says an operation in Syria would require 700 or more sorties and mentions the expected interception of American planes by Syria’s anti-aircraft system, but these are mere excuses meant to give the US legitimacy not to act in Syria. The Syrians sense weakness and are operating accordingly. They are also aware that Russia and China would support them in the Security Council in case the unimaginable happens and the US and Europeans do decide to act.

Thus, the use of chemical weapons has become almost routine in Syria. The regime is using these weapons although it is not in a situation where a sword is being held to its neck. The use of chemical weapons is meant to deter the opposition and the rebels, at times by attacking the non-combatant civilian population. This is a war crime that is taking place without any response from the international community.

Assad has ignored recent attacks attributed to Israel because he fears an Israeli response may put his regime and the entire Alawite sect in jeopardy. Members of the sect, which the Assad family belongs to, hold key positions in the Syrian government and army. The Alawites have found refuge in an isolated enclave, where the army defends them from Sunni rebel attacks. But getting involved in a military confrontation with Israel may dramatically change the balance of power and break the existing status quo in Syria. The regime and the Alawites would suffer most from this.

This is why Assad has ignored the attacks the foreign press says were carried out by Israel and is not even considering attacking the Jewish state with chemical weapons. However, the Assad government is becoming less and less apprehensive about its use of chemical weapons, and should the regime feel that it has nothing to lose it may also use chemical weapons against Israel. For now there are no indications Assad plans to use weapons of mass destruction against Israel, but Jerusalem must remain vigilant and continue to closely monitor the events in Syria.

It appears that the chances of reducing the use of chemical weapons in Syria are slim. Europe is condemning the chemical attacks but is not making any preparations to activate NATO. The US is losing its influence in the Middle East and it will not resolve the crisis either. Therefore, Israel can only trust itself, show restraint and refrain from intervening in the fighting. At the same time, Israel must also institute a policy of deterrence and make it clear that any crossing of the red line on the part of the Assad regime or the rebels will result in a fierce and uncompromising Israeli response.