Archive for July 11, 2014

The current conflict between Israel and Hamas shatters myths

July 11, 2014

The current conflict between Israel and Hamas shatters myths | JPost | Israel News.

By ALAN DERSHOWITZ

07/10/2014 21:52

The current warfare between Hamas and Israel shatters several myths that have been accepted as gospel by many in the international community and the media.

IDF

Ready for action: IDF troops just outside the southern Gaza Strip, July 6 Photo: AMIR COHEN – REUTERS

The current warfare between Hamas and Israel shatters several myths that have been accepted as gospel by many in the international community and the media.

MYTH 1: The primary cause of the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians is the occupation of the West Bank and Israel’s settlement policy.

Reality: The reality is that Hamas’ rocket attacks against Israeli cities and civilian targets has little to do with Israel’s occupation and settlement policy on the West Bank. Even if Israel were to make peace with the Palestinian Authority, the rocket attacks from Gaza would not stop. These Hamas attacks are incited by the Muslim Brotherhood, Iran, Syria and others opposed to the very concept of the nation state for the Jewish people. The best proof of this reality is that these attacks began as soon as Israel ended its occupation of Gaza and uprooted all the civilian settlements from that area.

Israel left behind agricultural hot houses and other equipment that the residents of Gaza could have used to build a decent society. Moreover, there was no siege of Gaza at that time. Gaza was free to become a Singapore on the Mediterranean. Instead, Hamas engaged in a coup-d’état murdering many members of the Palestinian Authority, seizing control of all of Gaza, and turning it into a militant theocracy. They used the material left behind by the Israelis not to feed their citizens but to build rockets with which to attack Israeli civilians. It was only after these rocket attacks that Israel began a siege of Gaza designed to prevent the importation of rockets and material used to build terrorist kidnap tunnels. There are good reasons why Israel should change its settlement policy on the West Bank and try harder to achieve peace with the Palestinian Authority. But even if that were to be accomplished the rockets from Gaza would continue and Israel would have to take the kind of military steps any democracy would take to prevent its civilians from lethal aggression.

MYTH 2: What is being experienced now is a “cycle of violence”, with equal blame on both sides.

Reality: The reality, of course, is that there is no comparison—legally, morally, diplomatically or by any other criteria—between what Hamas is doing and how Israel is responding. Hamas is willfully and deliberately committing a double war crime by targeting Israeli civilians and using Palestinian civilians as human shields. The deliberate targeting of civilians, as Hamas admits—indeed boasts—it is doing, is a clear war crime. Hamas has specifically aimed its lethal rockets at Beersheba, Tel Aviv, Haifa and Jerusalem. This is a war crime. Moreover, it is firing these rockets from hospitals, schools and houses in densely-populated areas, in order to cause Israel to kill Palestinian civilians. This too is a war crime.

This has been called Hamas’ “dead baby strategy.” It deliberately puts Israel to the tragic choice of attacking the rockets and killing some children who are used as human shields, or refraining from attacking the rockets and thereby placing their own children at risk. Israel has generally chosen the option of refraining from attacking legitimate military targets, but when any human shields are inadvertently killed or injured, Hamas stands ready to cynically parade the dead civilians in front of television cameras, which transmit these gruesome pictures around the world with captions blaming Israel. Hamas has also adamantly refused to build bomb shelters for its civilian population. It has built shelters but has limited access to them to Hamas terrorists.

This is precisely the opposite of what Israel does—building shelters for its civilians and placing its soldiers in harm’s way. Most recently Hamas has forced or encouraged civilians to stand on the rooftops of military targets so as to prevent Israel from attacking these entirely appropriate targets. Indeed a lawsuit is now being brought in Israel, against the Israeli military, urging it to ignore these human shields and to attack the military targets. The argument is that unless the military targets are attacked, Israeli civilians will die, and a democracy has the obligation to prefer the lives of its own civilians over the lives of enemy civilians.

Thus far the Israeli military has refrained from attacking military targets that are protected by human shields. There is absolutely no symmetry between the war crimes committed by Hamas and the entirely appropriate military response by the Israeli Defense Forces.

MYTH 3: Muhammad Abbas is part of the solution, not part of the problem.

Reality: Muhammad Abbas has become part of the problem, especially in recent days. He has supported Hamas in its war crimes against Israeli civilians and has characterized Israel’s self-defense actions as “genocide” against all of the Palestinian people. I have met Abbas and found him to be a decent man who genuinely wants a peaceful solution to the conflict, but he is not a man of courage who is prepared to stand up and tell the Palestinian people the truth about the current conflict. His willingness to join together with Hamas in a governmental partnership demonstrates both his weakness and his willingness to be complicit with evil. He speaks out of two sides of his mouth, one side when he speaks in English to Western media and diplomats, and the other when he speaks in Arabic to the Palestinian street, which he knows contains many supporters of Hamas. His public support for Hamas has made it far more difficult for Israel to arrive at a negotiated solution with the Palestinian Authority. It has also made it more difficult for Hamas to stop the rocket barrage and agree to a cease fire. The entire civilized world should be standing behind Israel as it defends itself against war crimes. That so many continue to support—or remain silent about—those who commit these war crimes tells us something deeply disturbing about their values and prejudices.

Professor Dershowitz’s latest book is Taking the Stand: My Life in the Law

Hamas rockets move north up to Haifa. Katyushas from Lebanon aimed at Metulla. Israeli artillery returns fire

July 11, 2014

Hamas rockets move north up to Haifa. Katyushas from Lebanon aimed at Metulla. Israeli artillery returns fire.

Debka

 

Another half a million Israelis came under Hamas rocket attack before dawn Friday, July 11, as Hamas again expanded its rocket radius to the towns between Hadera and Haifa, 150 km north of the Gaza Strip. A woman of 70 collapsed and died running to a shelter when she heard the Haifa siren.

Metullah, Israel’s northernmost town, was alerted early Friday by two Katyusha missiles from Lebanon. One landed between the Galilee town and Kfar Yuval. The sources of the fire are reported by debkafile’s military sources as two Lebanese villages: Ain Arab, in the Hizballah-ruled Beqaa Valley, and Mari near the southern town of Hatsbaya.

The first failed to take off but, because it was launched from a Hizballah stronghold, it is being taken as a possible first omen of Hizballah preparedness to open a second front against Israel to support Hamas – even though their relations have become strained.

Israeli artillery directed return fire from Mt. Dov against the Hizballah village of Kfar Chouba. Lebanese army sources reported that at Mari, another two rockets were found ready for launching against Israel.

The southern Israeli towns of Netivot, Ofakim, Sderot and Shear Hanegev got their first barrage of the day from Hamas. Iron Dome went into action, intercepting two rockets aimed at Sderot, after knocking out 40 of the 170 Hamas fired Thursday.

For the fourth day, Israeli air strikes continued to hammer the Gaza Strip, hitting 200 targets in the last 24 hours. The air force is seriously restricted in its targeting by deliberately avoiding hitting high-rise residential buildings and hospitals, where Hamas and Jihad Islami have stored their longest-range rockets, as well as being unable to reach the underground bunkers where Hamas keeps its main arsenals and key commanders safely hidden. Nonetheless Palestinian deaths in the four days of Israel’s Operation Protective Edge have climbed to 90 and 660 injured. The option of an IDF ground operation to put a stop to Hamas’s rocket blitz is still on the table.

Obama to Netanyahu: US willing to mediate Israel-Hamas truce

July 11, 2014

Obama to Netanyahu: US willing to mediate Israel-Hamas truce – Israel News, Ynetnews.

( Let’s first see how well he does negotiating a truce with ISIS.  Radical Islam cannot be negotiated with… JW )

US president attempts to deter IDF ground operation in Gaza, offers to negotiate cease-fire agreement.

Yitzhak Benhorin

The US is making every effort to deter an Israeli ground operation in Gaza, with President Barack Obama telling Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday night that Washington is willing to negotiate a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas.

The White House says Obama condemned the rocket attacks and said Israel has the right to self-defense. But Obama also urged both sides not to escalate the crisis and to restore calm.

Obama also relayed concerns about a Palestinian-American teenager who was detained and apparently beaten by Israeli authorities. Obama says Israel has worked to resolve that situation.The two leaders also discussed Iran. Obama says the US won’t accept any deal that doesn’t ensure Iran’s nuclear program is peaceful.

With IDF ground troops amassing on the Gaza border, and Palestinians living near the frontier being told to evacuate their homes, Hamas is seriously worried about the prospects of a ground invasion – but is trying hard to convey an air of nonchalance.

A statement issued by the group’s military wing declared that an Israeli ground operation would be “an opportunity for us to free Palestinian prisoners from Israeli jails. Israel will not be the one to decide when and on what terms the war ends.”

Meanwhile, the US is trying to prevent the same invasion, even as Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas admits that talks have failed.

Speaking at a meeting at the Muqata government compound in Ramallah, Abbas said that, “We don’t want either side to present terms and conditions to restore the calm – the most important thing is to avoid bloodshed. Egypt was in contact with both sides, but unfortunately these talks failed.”

Abbas said that other attempts to end the fighting had also had little effect.

“We talked to the American side, and asked them to stop the Israeli military operation while we in parallel convinced Hamas to stop firing rockets. Unfortunately we were unable to do so.”

“No one wants to see a ground invasion,” State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said earlier Thursday. She said that while Israel is utilizing its right to self-defense, it does not want a ground operation.

The US has made it clear that it is willing to talk to any country that can help and put influence Hamas to stop the rocket fire.

Secretary of State John Kerry said Thursday that while no country could accept such rocket attacks, de-escalating the crisis was ultimately in everyone’s interests.

Kerry said he spoke to Netanyahu and Abbas, and that the goal was to see if there was some way to restore peace.

In his conversation with Abbas, Kerry repeated American concerns over the escalation and expressed US willingness to help in ending the rockets.

Kerry was, according to Psaki, using all of the means at his disposal to stop the rockets.

In a message by the military – wing of Hamas, spokesman Abu Obeida emphasized that the military wing prepared itself for the long struggle. “The enemy has noticed that we have multiplied out attacks in response to its massacres against innocent lives.

“The whole world should know that our people have announced a revolution in the West Bank, in Jerusalem, and in the territories occupied in 1948.”

A correspondent on Hamas’ Al-Aqsa television station responded to the military wing’s statement: “For these acts I must salute the Al-Aqsa Brigade… this is a victory speech.”

Meanwhile, Hamas propaganda efforts in Gaza continued. In videos released by Hamas, aired on Al-Aqsa channel, the Gaza-based terrorist organization threatened Israel. “Our missiles will turn Tel Aviv into a ball of fire.”

According to Palestinian sources, since the beginning of Operation Protective Edge, 85 Palestinians have been killed, including children, and hundreds have been injured.

 

Iron Dome Shoots Down Rockets over Tel Aviv

July 11, 2014

Iron Dome Shoots Down Rockets over Tel Aviv – Defense/Security – News – Arutz Sheva.

Hamas boasts to have shot four M-75 rockets at Ben Gurion airport, targeting the site for the first time.

By Tova Dvorin

 First Publish: 7/11/2014, 10:54 AM / Last Update: 7/11/2014, 11:14 AM

Iron Dome employed against Gaza rocket

Iron Dome employed against Gaza rocket
Flash 90

Sirens sounded Friday morning, at approximately 10:45 am, in the Tel Aviv area.

The “code red” alert sounded in Herzliya, Tel Aviv, Rishon LeTzion, Bnei Brak, Givat Shmuel, Lod, Ben-Gurion Airport, Holon, Kfar Chabad, and most of the Gush Dan area.

Sirens also sounded throughout Ashdod, and several explosions were heard. As of 11:00 am, additional sirens have sounded in the Sha’ar HaNegev area.

The Iron Dome shot down three rockets aimed at Tel Aviv, according to the IDF Spokesperson’s Office.

It is unclear how many rockets landed in open fields, and where; no injuries nor damage have yet been reported.

However, shrapnel from the intercepted rockets has fallen in multiple places throughout the Tel Aviv metropolitan area, including one near a gas station. No injuries or damage have been reported.

Hamas has claimed responsibility for the attack, boasting that this is the first time they have specifically targeted Ben-Gurion Airport, according to Yediot Aharonot. The terror group claimed to have shot four M-75 rockets in that direction.

Hamas has focused its rocket fire heavily on Israel’s most populated areas, having fired at Tel Aviv every day since Tuesday. Twelve rockets were fired at the Gush Dan area on Thursday alone.

Analysis: Israel is looking for the ‘middle ground’ in Gaza

July 11, 2014

Analysis: Israel is looking for the ‘middle ground’ in Gaza | JPost | Israel News.

By HERB KEINON

LAST UPDATED: 07/11/2014 09:52

The security cabinet is trying to determine whether there may be a middle path between totally taking over Gaza, or having to go through what Israel is going through right now every few years.

Reserve soldiers waiting to leave the southern bor

Reserve soldiers waiting to leave the southern bor Photo: REUTERS/Yannis Behrakis

As Operation Protective Edge enters its fourth day, the eight-person security cabinet – which met in a marathon session on Thursday – is faced with a stark strategic choice.

Should Israel retake Gaza, destroy its terrorist infrastructure and then control the Strip for the foreseeable future – paying a price in Israeli casualties that will likely result from both the initial occupation and the cleaning out of the area, and then having to administer Gaza for who knows how long? Or is it better to suffice with delivering Hamas a punishing blow, stopping short of retaking the Strip, but knowing full well that if that is the course of action pursued, than in another few years what is happening now will simply repeat itself? Israel launched Operation Cast Lead in December 2008, an operation that led to the death of 13 Israeli soldiers, and some 1,166 Palestinians, nearly 800 of them defined as combatants. The deterrence achieved in that operation lasted almost five years, until November 2012, when Operation Pillar of Defense was launched, an operation that lead to six Israeli fatalities, and 133 Palestinians, of which 80 were combatants.

That deterrence only lasted a year and a half – until now.

Neither Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu nor Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon have given any indication that they are interested in once again taking over Gaza, but if the pounding the IDF has delivered from the air does not – within a few days – bring about the quiet that is the stated purpose of the operation, then that may change.

Former national security adviser Ya’acov Amidror, in an interview with Israel Radio on Thursday, laid out the options in a very blunt way: Either retake Gaza and stop the fire, or live with a situation where every few years a military operation of this scope will be necessary.

He did not express any personal preference, just laid out the choices. And each option had its price.

“It is possible to completely stop the firing on Israel,” he said.

“They are not firing from Kalkilya onto Israel and did not fire from Gaza until the Oslo agreements.”

The only way to do this, he added, was to control the territory – no one in the world has found a way to stop someone from firing rockets into their territory, unless they control the territory.

The question is not whether Israel could stop the fire, he said. It is rather whether it is willing to pay the price in blood, treasure and difficulties in the international arena to do so.

The price would come in three different stages. The first would be in the loss of IDF soldiers during an operation to take over the 60-km.-long, 5-km.-wide territory.

The second price, also in likely fatalities, would come in “cleaning out the stables” in Gaza, destroying the terrorist infrastructure there – the stockpiled arms as well as the ability to manufacture more arms. The price for this, too, would be the loss of IDF soldiers.

Amidror said this stage would take some six months to a year.

And the third stage would be controlling Gaza, with its 1.5 million inhabitants, after it is retaken. This would have a financial price tag, since Israel would have to administer the area, much as it did before the 1993 Oslo Accords. Amidror said that the price of administering Gaza would likely not be significantly more than the price of Operation Protective Edge-type military operations every couple of years.

If Israel is not willing to pay those prices and retake the Strip, then these types of operations will be necessary every few years. But that option also has a price; namely, that every few years the country will be subjected to what it is going through right now.

The principle behind the current operation is based on the idea that there is a middle path between the two stark options – and that it is possible to create a reality whereby the deterrence created by a major military operation could last beyond just a couple of years.

And one of the reasons for that assumption has to do with the geopolitical changes in the region.

The operation is based on two legs: The first is to pound Hamas, to dismantle as much as possible the organization’s arsenal and weapon making capabilities so that even if they want to fire on Israel, their ability to do so will be severely curtailed. One issue the security cabinet is grappling with right now, is whether this can be achieved without committing ground troops.

And the second leg is deterrence: Pound Hamas so hard, that they will think twice before daring to strike again.

Those two considerations animated Operations Cast Lead and Pillar of Defense, with the deterrence gained from the last operation not lasting too long.

One main difference now, however, is Egypt. Every passing hour and day leads to a diminishing of Hamas’s military capabilities.

But while in the past Hamas could count on being able to quickly smuggle more rockets into its territory through Egypt, arming itself to the teeth for the next round, that situation has changed because of the change of leadership in Cairo.

That new reality is being considered as the security cabinet is trying to determine whether there may be a middle path between totally taking over Gaza, or having to go through what Israel is going through right now every few years.

The ruinous results of restraint

July 11, 2014

Into the Fray: The ruinous results of restraint | JPost | Israel News.

By MARTIN SHERMAN

07/10/2014 23:01

Israel can no longer enable its citizens to “live normal lives” without retaking Gaza. “Restraint” and “proportionality” have so degraded its deterrence that it can no longer dissuade enemies from attacking almost at will.

Gaza

Israeli soldiers stand atop an APC outside the central Gaza Strip Photo: REUTERS

The ultimate test of this agreement will be a test of blood. If it becomes clear that [Palestinians] cannot overcome terror, this will be a temporary accord and… we will have no choice but to abrogate it. And if there is no choice, the IDF will return to the places it is about to leave in the upcoming months.

– Yossi Beilin on the Oslo Accords

Everything is reversible.

– Yitzhak Rabin on the Oslo Accords

Truth be told, I found it difficult to write my column this week. I spent hours staring at my laptop’s keyboard, unable to compose a single sentence, feeling waves of anger, frustration and disbelief wash over me as the news of the bombardment of the country came streaming through the television set beside me.

Depressing déjà vu

It was not that there was a dearth of topics to write about. There was a surplus of issues that could be subject matter for a column relating to the events of the last few days.

For example:

• The “original sin” of Oslo, that made the perverse – and previously scorned – notion of Palestinian statehood the center-piece of Israeli policy, which opened the flood gates of terror across the country, and eventually precipitated the current situation in Gaza;

• The continuous poor judgment by the Israeli leadership over the last two decades as to developments in Gaza and how they should be dealt with;

• The debilitating distortions and ridiculous restrictions imposed on the formulation and conduct of Israeli policy regarding Gaza by the diktats of political correctness;

• The imbecilic idea of abandoning Gaza unilaterally, thus providing the Palestinian- Arab terror organizations a territorial platform in which they could plan operations and prepare infrastructure, and from which they could launch countless attacks against Israeli civilian population centers.

• The ineffectual, albeit pyrotechnically spectacular, methods adopted by the IDF to deal with these attacks and destroy the infrastructures that facilitate them, which have allowed the terror organizations to develop operational capabilities that would have been inconceivable only a few years ago.

Yes, I could have written on any one of these topics – but every time I set out to put pen to paper (or rather fingers to keyboard), I realized that I had already written about it, in some detail, in the past – and a depressing sense of déjà vu descended upon me, sapping any will to explain the obvious and warn of the inevitable once again.

Cataloging the obvious, the inevitable and the imbecilic

Over the last three years, since I began writing the Into the Fray series, I have published numerous columns dealing with the situation in Gaza, prescribing how it ought to be dealt with, and cautioning about the consequences if these caveats were not heeded.

Regrettably, although Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon have both personally informed me that they read my column, there is little indication that its prognoses and prescriptions have had any affect on policy decisions – despite the fact that they have, in large measure, been vindicated by developments.

I should, therefore, like to share with readers my sense of frustration, disappointment and disillusionment, and list the columns I have written on Gaza, together with their dates of publication, and the accompanying subheadlines, which convey the essence of their content and the issues they address: • “The white flag over Gaza…”: “Political correctness has precluded the pursuit of strategic imperatives; Israel can no longer credibly deter terrorists.” (08/25/2011).

• “Predicting Gaza: Rabin, Sharon, the Knesset and… well, me”: “The nation’s leaders have proved bereft of foresight – or hindsight for that matter. Can a dangerous ‘trust deficit’ be avoided?” (03/22/2012)

• “Aargh!!!”: “Despite the deadly display of hi-tech pyro-technics by the IDF, the depressing sense of déjà vu conveyed by the events unfolding in Gaza comprise a devastating indictment of Israel’s past and present political leadership.” (11/15/2012).

• “Israel 2012: Tactical brilliance, strategic imbecility”: “If the current government does not have the diplomatic competence to create the conditions necessary to provide security for its citizens, it should admit it.” (11/22/2012)

• “Israel’s infuriating impotence”: “Last week’s Gaza cease-fire proved the government incapable of delivering the goods militarily; this week’s UN vote proves it cannot deliver the goods diplomatically.”(11/29/2012)

• “Cry havoc! and let slip the dogs of war”: “By adhering to a policy of avoiding confrontations which Israel can win, the government risks leading it into one in which it might lose. It is time for a bold new offensive – before we are overtaken by events.” (07/03/2014)

Defies both reality and logic

A quick reading of these sub-headlines provides a broad synopsis of what has happened, and – equally important – what has not happened, in Israel’s exchanges with the terrorist enclave in the south. It is a synopsis that compels one to a lamentable but indisputable conclusion: Israel’s policy toward Gaza defies both logic and reality.

Indeed, in many ways, it is a policy that constitutes a grave violation of the social contract between government and the electorate, by which the former is obligated to provide the latter with protection of life, limb and property.

The current round of fighting is the third in the last five-and-half years. In all cases, the initiative has largely been with the terror organizations that decide when to engage in combat and when to desist from it. In neither of the two previous campaigns (Cast Lead, 2008/9 and Pillar of Defense, 2012) was the mighty IDF able to force the lightly armed Hamas to cease its fire – despite the heavy damage inflicted on it.

Instead of the fighting ending with a Hamas surrender, and an admission of defeat, the organization could claim – not without justification – that it had achieved strategic victory.

Indeed, what is becoming increasingly clear is that the stated aims of the current campaign, Protective Edge, make it, at best, an exercise in recurring futility – if not one that is largely counter-productive – likely not only to be unable to prevent a future round of fighting, but worse, to ensure our adversaries will begin it with enhanced capabilities.

‘Restoring calm’ as dereliction of duty

The fault in Israel’s declared intentions that it will “answer calm with calm” and that its objective is limited to “restoring calm to the South” is two-fold.

First, by offering to cease fire if Hamas ceases fire, Israel surrenders the initiative to its adversaries and forgoes even the theoretical possibility of defeating them. Whenever Hamas feels it has absorbed, or inflicted, sufficient damage, it can initiate a truce, secure in the knowledge that it can control the cost of its aggression, and ensure it will never be excessive.

Second, the mere “restoration of calm” is an irrational if not counterproductive operational aim. For the periods of inter-bella calm have been consistently used by the Palestinian terror groups to enhance their capabilities – as dramatically illustrated this week.

After all, when Israel left Gaza (2005), the range of the Palestinian rockets was barely 5 km., and the explosive charge they carried about 5 kg., Now their missiles have a range of over 100 km. and warheads of around 100 kg. When Israel left Gaza, only the sparse population in its immediate proximity was threatened by missiles. Now well over 5 million Israelis, well beyond Tel Aviv, are menaced by them.

There is little reason to believe that once Hamas deigns to cease fire, the ensuing calm will not be exploited to achieve further advances/improvements in its ordnance and infrastructures.

No, “restoring calm” will just not cut it. If that is what the Israeli leadership is striving for, it is coming pretty close to dereliction of duty.

The strategic dangers of restraint

Indeed, restraint is not a prudent policy, reflecting judicious cool-headedness. Quite the opposite, it is a policy of evasion, of refusal to recognize reality and of avoiding current confrontations, which can be won (admittedly as a significant cost), while risking later confrontations, which may not be possible to win (at any cost).

The damage inflicted on Hamas in 2008/9 and 2012 (and on Hezbollah in 2006) has not broken, or even perceptibly reduced, their will to fight as the defeat in WWII did with Germany and Japan. At best, it has forced Hamas to regroup, rearm and redeploy.

Clearly then, the damage inflicted on it by the air force and other “standoff” weapon systems, while admittedly grave, is damage it is prepared to absorb, rather than forgo its hostile intentions toward Israel.

Inevitably, if the enemy’s will to fight cannot be diminished, his ability to do so must be eliminated. This cannot be done by standoff weaponry. It requires boots on the ground, physical control of the enemy territory, infrastructure and installations.

Adhering to restraint and refraining from a policy of imposing surrender and inflicting acknowledged defeat on Hamas is far from cost-free. To the contrary, the costs involved in persisting with a policy of restraint are more than likely to outstrip those of the more assertive alternative.

Dangers of restraint (cont.)

The perils of restraint are myriad: On the operational-security level, they afford Hamas, and its more radical spin-offs, the opportunity to improve performance of weaponry and to: • Tighten their counter-intelligence to constrict information on targets; • Improve concealment and hardening of targets, which certainly seems to have been largely accomplished already, with Hamas being able to fire continuous heavy barrages of missiles, despite ferocious air attacks; • Progress toward the establishment of an air defense system to curtail the present largely unrestricted freedom of action of the IAF; • Develop multiple warheads for their rockets (activated by simple spring-release mechanisms already proposed on Pakistani and Chinese sites) and/or coordinate attacks with Hezbollah in the north in order to overwhelm Israel’s anti-missile defenses.

On the civilian level, the prospect of an unending recurrence of missile attacks on towns and villages is likely to result in depopulation of the more vulnerable areas, initially in the South. But with increased range of the enemy rockets, other areas, also afflicted by repeated bombardments, may find their populations denuded.

Moreover now that restraint has managed to bring central Israel (including Greater Tel Aviv) into Hamas’s rocket range, the threat of frequent large-scale disruptions of the socioeconomic routine is likely to have enormous ramifications. The short periods of calm that might have been bearable in the South will not be tolerated in the Center.

Unless a radical and permanent – or at least long-term – solution can be devised, large-scale flight of businesses and population is not an implausible prospect, which advocates of restraint must seriously ponder – and address.

Needed: Another kind of Iron Dome

The events of the last few days lead to an unpalatable but unavoidable conclusion: Israel can no longer enable its citizens to “live normal lives” without retaking Gaza.

Restraint and “proportionality” have so degraded its deterrence that it is no longer able to dissuade its enemies from attacking it almost at will. Israel must therefore destroy their ability to do so by seizing – and holding – the areas from which those attacks are launched.

This will of course involve contending with severe international censure, but this too is a topic I have addressed in several columns – see for example: “If I were prime minister…“: “The first order of business would be to devise and deploy a political ‘Iron Dome’ to protect Israel from the incoming barrages of delegitimization and demonization…” (10/31/2013).

Of course, the difficulties involved in administering a remedy deserves a discussion entirely separate from diagnosing what that remedy should be, and must be therefore deferred for a later occasion.

What is, however, vital to grasp is that although rejecting a policy of restraint is a path fraught with great difficulty, the difficultly cannot obviate the necessity.

Martin Sherman (www.martinsherman.org) is the founder and executive director of the Israel Institute for Strategic Studies. (www.strategic- israel.org) http://www.martinsherman.net

John Kerry to travel to Vienna for more Iran nuclear talks – Telegraph

July 11, 2014

John Kerry to travel to Vienna for more Iran nuclear talks – Telegraph.

US Secretary of State to attend meeting in Austria of six world powers and Iran to try and reach agreement on curbing Tehran’s nuclear program ahead of self-imposed July 20 deadline

Iran's President Hassan Rouhani insisted on Thursday however that a timely deal by the end of July was

Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani has insisted on Thursday that a nuclear deal by the end of July was “very likely”  Photo: 2013 Getty Images

US Secretary of State John Kerry will travel to Vienna this weekend for a meeting of the six powers and Iran as they try to reach a deal that would end sanctions in return for curbs on Tehran’s nuclear program, the State Department said on Thursday.

“The Secretary will gauge the extent of Iran’s willingness to commit to credible and verifiable steps that would back up its public statements about the peaceful nature of its nuclear program,” State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf said in a statement.

Iran and the powers – the United States, France, Germany, Britain, Russia and China – aim to reach a long-term deal to end the decade-old nuclear standoff by a July 20 deadline. Many diplomats and analysts believe an extension may be needed in view of the wide gaps in negotiating positions.

Kerry has scheduled bilateral meetings with fellow ministers on Sunday, a senior Western official told Reuters.

A French diplomatic source said Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius would arrive on Sunday for the talks.

Earlier this week, diplomats close to the talks said the ministers may end up negotiating the terms of an extension while in Vienna.

The talks resumed last week with still no sign of substantive progress on the main sticking points, which include uranium enrichment, the length of any agreement and the speed at which sanctions would be lifted.

The Western official said it was unlikely the ministers were going to Vienna to sign an agreement, given the significant differences between the parties on the acceptable scope of Tehran’s future uranium enrichment programme.

Another Western diplomat said: “Things have been moving but there are still wide gaps and they need to be narrowed down. This is what needs to happen in the next days.”

French officials have said that Mr Fabius was reluctant to go to Vienna until closer to the July 20 deadline unless there was a clear sign of a breakthrough.

“Major differences remain and it was felt that mid-July was too soon as there is still a lot of work, but since the start of the week there has been a desire from some powers to hold a ministerial meeting,” said one official.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry said on Thursday the ongoing round of talks was tough but expressed hope that it was possible to reach a deal by the deadline.

“The discussions are extremely difficult, but on the face of it there is some progress,” Russian spokesman Alexander Lukashevich told a news conference.

“We hope to work out a final text of the agreement – despite all the difficulties – by the July 20 deadline.”

Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said on Tuesday that Iran would need to boost its uranium enrichment capacity in the long term, underlining a gap in positions but possibly signalling some flexibility in the short term.

Edited by Steve Wilson

Katyusha Rocket Fired on Israel from Lebanon

July 11, 2014

Katyusha Rocket Fired on Northern Israel from Lebanon

Amid heavy rocket fire from Gaza, a new front opens as terrorists fire on the very northern tip of Israel;

IDF returns fire.

By Elad Benari, Ari YasharFirst Publish: 7/11/2014, 7:07 AM

via Katyusha Rocket Fired on Israel from Lebanon – Defense/Security – News – Arutz Sheva.

 

Katyusha rocket on Israel from Lebanon (file) Flash 90
 

As the rocket fire from Gaza terrorists continues to pelt southern and central Israel, a new front appears to have opened Friday morning as a Katyusha rocket was fired on the northern tip of Israel, north of Kiryat Shmona.

The rocket landed in open territory in the upper Galillee. Apparently the IDF estimates it was fired by local terror groups supporting Hamas, and not by the Iran-proxy Hezbollah terror group, reports Walla!.

Residents of the region report having heard explosions, although no injuries or damage was reported from the rocket. IDF forces are searching the area to locate the point of contact and rule out further rocket attacks.

“One projectile hit an open space near Kfar Yuval, between Metula and Kiryat Shmona,” a military spokeswoman told AFP, listing two towns near Israel’s northern border.

The IDF returned artillery fire later in the morning, targeting locations in Lebanon suspected of being the source of the rocket fire, reports Yedioth Aharonoth.

On the Gaza front, the rockets continued to pummel Israel, extending their reach ever farther north as rocket sirens were heard in Haifa over Thursday night, making it the first time since the 2006 Second Lebanon War.

Terrorists in Gaza have fired 407 mortars and rockets that hit Israel, with another 118 rockets being shot down by the Iron Dome anti-missile defense system since the start of Operation Protective Edge on Monday, an IDF spokesperson told AFP.

The rocket fire overnight was particularly intense on Israel’s south, and the IDF struck several hundred more terror sites in Gaza, bringing the total number of sites hit by the IDF since the start of the operation to 1,100.

A senior IDF source on Thursday morning said the rate of striking terror sites in Gaza has been one strike every four and a half minutes, and that the IDF intends to continue that pace in coming days.

“We see a picture in which Hamas is trying to create a surprise by any means possible,” said the source. “The moment Hamas and Gaza residents see the great damage to the Strip, they will understand that all the troubles they took in recent years collapsed and were destroyed, and that will speak for itself.”

One who believes is not afraid – YouTube

July 11, 2014

One who believes is not afraid – YouTube.

 Watch and cheer up !

 

Remaining Senate support for PA unity erodes in face of rockets

July 11, 2014

Remaining Senate support for PA unity erodes in face of rockets

Progressive senator says ‘no peace is possible’ with Hamas as partner after closed-door briefing with Israeli ambassador

By Rebecca Shimoni Stoil July 11, 2014, 5:38 am

via Remaining Senate support for PA unity erodes in face of rockets | The Times of Israel.

 

The Senate side of the United States Capitol building in Washington, DC (photo credit: Wikimedia Commons/File)
 

WASHINGTON — As senators submitted a bipartisan resolution in support of Israel’s right to defend its citizens in the face of rocket attacks, a key Democratic senator hosted Israeli Ambassador to the US Ron Dermer and Defense Attaché Major General Yaacob Ayish Thursday for a briefing on the ongoing IDF operations against terror targets in Gaza.

Dermer and Ayish briefed members of US Senate’s Foreign Relations, Armed Services and Intelligence Committees on Operation Protective Edge at the invitation of Senator Tim Kaine (D-VA), Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on Near Eastern and South and Central Asian Affairs.

Kaine, who is considered a progressive Democrat and is on J Street’s list of endorsed candidates, wrote in a statement after the briefing that “the deteriorating situation in Gaza is one of grave concern.”

“I support Israel’s right to defend itself against unprovoked rocket attacks launched by Hamas and other terrorist organizations,” he continued. “I grieve for the Israeli and Palestinian citizens – especially the young – who live and die under constant security threats.”

Kaine added his voice to increasing Congressional criticism of the Hamas-Fatah unity government, asserting that “the decision by [Palestinian Authority] President [Mahmoud] Abbas to pursue a unity government with Hamas was almost certainly destined to reach this moment. For those of us who care about finding a two state solution – a secure state of Israel living peacefully side by side with an independent Palestine – the recent actions by Hamas demonstrate that it has not changed its fundamental denial of Israel’s right to exist. No peace is possible with such a partner.”

The senator called for Hamas to cease the rocket attacks, which he described as “unprovoked” and called for Abbas “to recognize that Hamas will not seek peace” and to “separate the Palestinian Authority from this terrorist organization.”

Kaine was one of only 12 senators who did not sign on to a June letter describing the Palestinian government as a “serious setback to efforts to achieve peace” and calling on President Barack Obama to suspend assistance to the PA until “we have confidence that this new government is in full compliance with the restrictions contained in current law” and to “continue to impress on President Abbas the need for him to cease any alliance with terrorist organizations such as Hamas and to return to the negotiating table with Israel.”

Kaine was a co-sponsor of a Senate resolution “expressing support for the State of Israel as it defends itself against unprovoked attacks from the Hamas terrorist organization” that was introduced Thursday by Senators Kelly Ayotte (R-NH), Lindsey Graham (R-SC), Robert Menendez (D-NJ), and Chuck Schumer (D-NY).

According to a statement issued by the senators, the resolution reaffirms the United States’ support for Israel’s right to defend its citizens and ensure the survival of the State of Israel; condemns the unprovoked rocket fire at Israel; calls on Hamas to immediately cease all rocket and other attacks against Israel; and calls on Abbas to dissolve the unity governing arrangement with Hamas and condemn the attacks on Israel.

“I believe the Senate will speak with one voice in condemning the actions of the terrorist organization Hamas and standing by America’s best friend in the region, the State of Israel,” Graham said, arguing that “there is no moral equivalency between the self-defense actions of Israel and the barbaric actions of Hamas.”

Menendez and Schumer, like Kaine, emphasized that the rocket attacks demonstrated that the Palestinian unity government was untenable.

“Hamas is a terrorist organization that rejects a two-state solution and celebrates the kidnapping and murder of innocent civilians; it cannot be a partner in a Palestinian unity government,” said Menendez.

“This resolution supports Israel as it protects itself in a manner that values the safety of Palestinian civilians even as its own civilians face indiscriminate attacks from terrorists,” Schumer explained, calling on Abbas “to do the right thing and break ties with Hamas.”