Archive for May 10, 2014

Ehud Yaari – An Unprecedented resurgence of al-Qaeda

May 10, 2014

▶ Ehud Yaari – An Unprecedented resurgence of al-Qaeda – YouTube.

Ehud Yaari

Until recently, Israel’s Syrian and Egyptian fronts had been largely quiet since the end of the 1973 Yom Kippur War. Because of the Arab Spring uprisings, however, al-Qaeda-affiliated militias have now emerged on both fronts, in addition to their presence in Lebanon and nascent involvement with Palestinian factions. Never before has Israel faced a situation in which its border towns were in such easy range of al-Qaeda militias. Israel has always been at the core of the organization’s ideology, but not an immediate target or main focus of al-Qaeda attacks.

The question of how to handle these emerging threats has spurred a fierce but quiet debate within the Israeli defense establishment and at the highest political levels. So far, Israel has decided to go with defensive preparations. Two new territorial military divisions have been created on the Sinai and Syrian fronts; fences have been constructed along the Egyptian front; troop deployments have been increased; and new intelligence equipment and resources have been allocated for Sinai and the Golan Heights.

In Syria, Israelis may prefer the devil they do not know (the rebels) to the devil they do know (Bashar al-Assad), but they may end up with both. The portion of the country lying south of Damascus is strategic and may be the key to the war’s outcome. The Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS), a major jihadist group, has not yet penetrated the south, but the officially recognized Syrian branch of al-Qaeda, Jabhat al-Nusra, is already on Israel’s front line. There, JN is mainly a local organization with local characteristics. Unlike in other areas of Syria, many southern militias are headed by young leaders who accept the political authority of their elders. Israel, Jordan, and these local militias have a shared interest in preventing a full jihadist takeover or allowing the Syrian army to recapture this territory.

Against this backdrop, over 800 wounded and sick Syrians have been treated in Israel during the war, including Col. Abdullah al-Bashir, the new commander of the Free Syrian Army. One would not be incorrect in assuming that Israel has a system of coordination and cooperation with at least some rebel militias. Israel is extending significant amounts of humanitarian aid and perhaps other types of aid, but there is a quiet debate on how far to go to ensure that local rebel militias control areas close to the border. Recently, for example, a leader of a local JN group declared that his fighters were now in range of the “Zionist crusader.”

In Sinai, two organizations pose the most significant threat: Ansar Beit al-Maqdis (ABM) and Majlis Shura al-Mujahedin Fi Aknaf Bayt al-Maqdis. Both have ties to the southern Gaza Strip but are also stretching into mainland Egypt. Altogether, these groups include about three to four thousand Bedouin and foreign fighters. This is due to a transformation in Bedouin society in which younger men are abandoning their tribal traditions for a fundamentalist, Salafi jihadist version of Islam. Yet so far al-Qaeda has no official affiliation with ABM.

Meanwhile, Egyptian-Israeli military cooperation is at a level never seen before. Ten Egyptian battalions are now operating in central and eastern Sinai via the Agreed Activities Mechanism (AAM), through which Israel gives its consent for temporary Egyptian deployments in forbidden areas. In fact, Israel wants to see even more Egyptian personnel deployed, with such forces likely becoming a permanent feature in Sinai. In this manner, a de facto revision of the Military Annex to the 1979 peace treaty has been effected.

Currently, Egypt claims to have full control over Sinai, but it does not control the main militant safe havens in Jabal Halal and Wadi Amr. Until it does, militant groups will continue to pose a threat. They are already equipped with antitank and antiaircraft missiles, allowing them to easily threaten shipping in the Gulf of Aqaba and the Suez Canal, as well as commercial airline traffic and Israeli border towns. These groups also have a tacit understanding with Hamas that they can carry out any operations they wish in Sinai but not in Gaza.

Off Topic: Israel vs. al-Qaeda: Emerging Challenges on Two Fronts

May 10, 2014

▶ Israel vs. al-Qaeda: Emerging Challenges on Two Fronts – YouTube.

( Ehud Yaari knows more about Islam and the region than any other commentator I know of.  His analysis here of al Queda must NOT be missed by anyone interested in the subject. – JW )

 

 

al-Qaeda affiliates in Syria and Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula, Israel now faces the prospect of being a frontline state, as jihadist threats on its northern and southern borders compound the longstanding challenge from the Iran-Syria-Hezbollah axis.

To discuss these issues, The Washington Institute is pleased to host a Policy Forum with Ehud Yaari and Michael Morell.

Ehud Yaari, Israel’s leading interpreter of Arab politics, is a Middle East correspondent for Channel Two television and a Lafer International Fellow with The Washington Institute.

Michael Morell, a thirty-three-year veteran of the CIA, retired last year after serving since 2010 as deputy director of central intelligence, with two stints as acting director. He is currently the senior security correspondent for CBS News.

For more on this event, go to:

http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/po…

Israel assails latest allegations of brazen spying on US

May 10, 2014

Israel assails latest allegations of brazen spying on US | JPost | Israel News.

By JPOST.COM STAFF

05/10/2014 17:58

In response to Newsweek report, Strategic Affairs Minister Steinitz accused “someone of trying to maliciously harm relations between Israel and the United States.”

Yuval Steinitz

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu (L) confers with Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz in Jerusalem. Photo: REUTERS

A top government minister on Saturday angrily rejected claims of Israeli spying on the United States for the second time in a week after the American newsmagazine Newsweek once again quoted unnamed US intelligence officials as decrying what they believe to be overly aggressive espionage on the part of the Jewish state.

Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz, who also holds the intelligence portfolio in the Netanyahu government, accused “someone of trying to maliciously and intentionally harm relations between Israel and the United States.”

Just days after Israeli officials denied a report of “unrivaled” Israeli espionage in the United States, a new report has surfaced detailing a US cover-up of Israel spying on then-Vice President Al Gore in 1998.

The report in Newsweek claimed that Secret Service agents caught an Israeli “agent” in an air duct who was in the process of bugging the vice president’s hotel room.

“The Secret Service had secured [Gore’s] room in advance and they all left except for one agent, who decided to take a long, slow time on the pot,” Newsweek quoted a senior former US intelligence operative as saying. “So the room was all quiet and he hears a noise in the vent. And he sees the vent clips being moved from the inside. And then he sees a guy starting to exit the vent into the room. He kind of coughed and the guy went back into the vents.”

Newsweek alleged that the incident “’crossed the line’ of acceptable behavior between friendly intelligence services,” and that “it was quickly hushed up by US officials” because of America’s commitment to Israel.

According to the report, US intelligence officials and congressional sources claim that Israel has been caught carrying out aggressive espionage operations against American targets for decades, but that they are rarely punished.

Steinitz said that in all his meetings with his American counterparts on intelligence matters, he has yet to hear any complaints over supposed Israeli espionage activities. On the contrary, Steinitz said that he has only heard praise from Washington over its close intelligence cooperation with Israel.

“This Tuesday, I will meet the head of the Senate intelligence committee and I will insist that false reports of this kind be repudiated,” said Steinitz.

On Wednesday, Steinitz and other senior Israeli cabinet officials dismissed claims made by Newsweek earlier in the week that “Israel’s espionage activities in America are unrivaled and unseemly.”

Chuck Hagel faces flat resistance to US regional policies in his coming Mid East trip

May 10, 2014

Chuck Hagel faces flat resistance to US regional policies in his coming Mid East trip.

DEBKAfile Exclusive Analysis May 10, 2014, 5:43 PM (IDT)

US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel heads for Mid East

US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel heads for Mid East

US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel arrives in Jeddah next Monday, May 12, to attend a meeting of the Gulf Cooperation Council defense ministers, the first for an American defense chief in six years. This prolonged absence reflected the Obama administration’s military disengagement from Middle East affairs and the political estrangement that ensued between Washington and the region.

Former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak commented in a lecture Thursday, May 8, at the Washington Institute for the Near East: ”The American administration changed its objective from no nuclear military Iran to no nuclear military Iran during the term of this administration.”

The impression received in Middle East capitals is that Barack Obama has adopted the old slogan of, “Apres moi, le deluge!” – intending to leave his White House successor after January 2017 an Iran that is fully capable of manufacturing a nuclear weapon.

It is this proposition that Saudi King Abdullah and Israeli Prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu are on no account ready to accept, because it allows Barack Obama to end his two-term presidency faithful to his ideal of keeping the US unburdened by military involvement.

Disengaging the US military from the Middle East and its troubles leaves Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel free to devote himself to implementing the president’s guidelines for shrinking America’s ground, air and naval forces. The White House  brooks no resistance to this goal.
On April 8, the House Armed Services Committee rejected by a vote of 61:0 the administration’s 2015 budget proposal, because of the sharp reductions in the military spending clauses. The Committee submitted its own draft proposal instead.
In a swift response, Hagel sent the Pentagon spokesman to make things clear “We stand firmly behind the president’s budget as submitted,” he said.

The region’s geopolitical climate has been radically affected in its most sensitive parts as a result of  reduced US military activity and the administration’s refusal to grapple with the most pressing Middle East anxieties.

Only last week, the Revolutionary Guards naval chief boasted that Iran could easily sink a US aircraft carrier in less than a minute. This may not be factually correct, but even this hollow taunt at the expense of the US military could only have come from the certainty that Washington will not rise to the challenge or interfere with Iran’s ascent to nuclear threshold status.
This same certainty gave Syria’s Bashar Assad the chutzpah to use chemical weapons against rebel forces at least 30 times in the nine months since President Obama backed away from his threat to destroy those poisonous weapons by force.

The UN report that 92 percent of the Syrian regime’s chemical substances have been destroyed to date has made the world body a laughing stock. No wonder, Assad had no qualms about calling a presidential election for June 3 and so assuring himself of another seven years in office, in the face of universal condemnation of the atrocities he has committed against his people.
Even the Palestinians found the cheek to put the lid on US Secretary of State John Kerry’s indefatigable effort to bring them to the table for a comprehensive peace with Israel and a state of their own, by going partners with the unrepentant Hamas terrorists.
Al Qaeda, too, after concluding that America was no longer the threat it was, in recent months pumped an estimated 100,000 fighters and terrorists into various corners of the Middle East – fanning out from Syria and Iraqi into Jordan, Sinai, Egypt, Libya and Yemen, the while absorbing increasing numbers of jihadi volunteers from the United States, Canada, Britain, France, Holland, Belgium, Italy and the Palestinians.
The US defense secretary’s mission to Jeddah next week is not to unveil an Obama administration policy reset and assure the Gulf members states that the American shield remains in place. On the contrary, he will try and persuade their leaders to dance to Washington’s tune – with little hope of success.

Hagel in fact received his answer in advance from Saudi Arabia, in the form of the largest military exercise ever seen in the Gulf region, under the title of Operation Saif Abdullah (Sword of Abdullah) with more than 130,000 soldiers.

Around the centerpiece of Chinese-made DF-3 nuclear missiles (NATO-designated CSS-2), commanding officers from all the Gulf emirates except Qatar took part in the war game for the first time, as well another first, Egypt.
This exercise gave Washington three messages: a) The Gulf nations are ready to fight Iran; b) They are prepared for this armed conflict to be nuclear; and c) They no longer rely on America for a military and nuclear shield – only on themselves.
“The Saudi military exercise was a goodbye wave to America,” wrote The National, a leading United Arab Emirates newspaper on May 6 in its story on the exercise.  Washington counts the UAE as one of its most loyal economic and military Gulf allies. Yet this story would not have seen the light of day without being sanctioned by its ruling family.
Jordan’s King Abdullah II is likewise reviewing his military cooperation with the US against Bashar Assad, in the light of al Qaeda’s recent probing raids against his borders from Iraq and Syria.
debkafile’s military sources report that Washington has begun using bases in Jordan for a belated project to train Iraqi army officers and men for future military operations against al Qaeda, which has by now overrun large areas of western and central Iraq.

Even so, the king has suspended for now the joint Jordanian-US project to create a buffer zone in southern Syria for moderate Syrian rebel units to occupy and secure the Jordanian and Israeli borders.
This has left the Israeli Golan border exposed to attacks by Syrian army and Hizballah forces, which are using this opening to gradually advance south.
Hagel, when he visits Amman next week, has little expectation of persuading King Abdullah to go back to fully supporting military operations against Assad from northern Jordan.

After Amman, the defense secretary travels to Jerusalem. He is due to arrive exactly a week after Obama’s National Security Adviser Susan Rice tiptoed out of Israel Friday, May 9. Her two day visit and talks with Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu – mainly on the Iranian nuclear issue – ended without any kind of press statement or even a notice of her departure.

Hagel, too, can expect to find Jerusalem’s resistance to the Washington’s regional policy on a par with that of Riyadh, the Gulf and Amman.

Report: US hushes ‘aggressive Israeli spying’

May 10, 2014

Report: US hushes ‘aggressive Israeli spying’ | i24news – See beyond.

( Interesting isn’t it?  This “report” comes out while Susan Rice is trying to convince Netanyahu not to oppose the soon to be completed Iran-scam deal.  I believe this is the opening salvo in Obama’s plan to de-legitimize Israel’s position with the US public.  I hope we’re ready for the worst… – JW )

Newsweek reports an incident of an Israeli spy lurking in Al Gore’s suite – ignored by Secret Service agents

Newsweek magazine continues reporting on aggressive Israeli espionage tactics conducted against the United States or against US officials around the world, particularly in Israel.

The magazine cites a “senior former US intelligence operative”, who recalls an incident that occurred 16 years ago, in which a Secret Service agent who was alone for a moment in a suite reserved for then-US Vice President Al Gore spotted a man – seemingly, an Israeli intelligence agent – beginning to exit from an air vent in the room.

However, instead of confronting him, the operative confides, the Secret Service agent just coughed lightly, alerting the Israeli agent to his presence – and the would-be burglar quickly disappeared back into the vent.

Additional incidents reportedly include espionage after scientists, space industry officials and senior US Navy officials on shore leave in Israel’s northern port city of Haifa.

Newsweek describes a complicated relationship between Israel and the United States. Though US-Israeli intelligence services are usually on friendly terms, at times incidents such as these may occur – but the US response is to sweep them under the carpet instead of initiating a full-blown scandal.

Also, according to the magazine, when confronted with allegations, Israeli intelligence officials were unmoved by the accusations.

“You can’t embarrass an Israeli,” Newsweek quoted another top intelligence official.

Last week the magazine reported that senior members of the United States intelligence community had told Congress that Israel continues to hold extensive espionage activities in the US, “unrivaled” by those of other closely allied countries.

Most of the alleged espionage focused on industrial and technical secrets.

According to the report, citing current and former intelligence officials, Israel’s efforts to “steal US secrets under the cover of trade missions and joint defense technology contracts have crossed red lines.”

No other country close to the United States continues to cross the line on espionage like the Israelis do,” a former congressional staffer was cited by Newsweek as saying.

Furthermore, it was stated that it is the recommendation of intelligence services that is holding back Israel’s membership from a list of countries whose citizens are exempt from being issued visas before entering the United States.

Originally, it was reported that the denial of a visa waiver is rooted in alleged mistreatment of Palestinian Americans visiting Israel.

The report was denied across the lines by Israeli officials. The Israeli embassy in Washington issued a denial, saying that “Israel does not conduct any spying activities (against the US), and condemns any attempt to tarnish Israel with false allegations.” A senior diplomatic source in Jerusalem told the Ynet web site that Israel would send the US a strong message over the report, even going so far as to argue that parts of it were “tainted with a whiff of anti-Semitism.”

Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman called the report a “malicious” and false accusation.

The report is “made up,” Lieberman told Army Radio. “We categorically reject such an accusation.”

Former Israeli ambassador to the US Michael Oren also slammed the report. “Israel hasn’t spied on the US since the Pollard incident, Israel doesn’t spy against the US, period,” he told Ynet referring to US Navy analyst Jonathan Pollard serving a life sentence for spying for Israel some 30 years ago.

In the newer article, Newsweek cites sources who categorically deny all accusations of anti-Semitism motivating such reports. “There is a small community of ex-CIA, FBI and military people… who are absolutely cheering on this story,” the magazine quoted a former US intelligence operative as saying, “not one of them is anti-Semitic… it has only to do with why Israel gets kid-glove treatment, when if it was (Japan or India)… it would be outrageous.”

According to former intelligence officials cited by Newsweek, the powerful “Israeli lobby” – namely, pro-Zionist, Jewish-American interest groups or powerful single donors – influence Congress decision makers, for example, by protesting security warnings issued against travel to Israel. With Congress having direct control over the budgets of the various “alphabet agencies”, members of the intelligence community reportedly found themselves often facing tough dilemmas when voicing any negative perspective on Israel.