Archive for April 4, 2019

Putin: Syria helped Russian army find remains of IDF soldier missing since 1982

April 4, 2019

Source: Putin: Syria helped Russian army find remains of IDF soldier missing since 1982 | The Times of Israel

Netanyahu thanks Moscow for its assistance in search for Israeli serviceman Zachary Baumel, who went missing in Battle of Sultan Yacoub

Russian President Vladimir Putin (R) shakes hands with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow on February 27, 2019. (MAXIM SHEMETOV / POOL / AFP)

Russian President Vladimir Putin (R) shakes hands with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow on February 27, 2019. (MAXIM SHEMETOV / POOL / AFP)

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday said his country’s military, with Syrian assistance, retrieved the remains of Israeli tank commander Zachary Baumel, allowing them to be returned to the Jewish state nearly 37 years after he went missing in the First Lebanon War’s Battle of Sultan Yacoub in 1982.

“Russian Army soldiers found the body in coordination with the Syrian military,” Putin said, during a joint press conference with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The Russian defense ministry presented Israel with Sgt. First-Class Baumel’s jumpsuit and military boots in an Israeli flag-covered coffin in a ceremony later in the day.

Netanyahu flew to Moscow early Thursday to meet the Russian leader for discussions on Syria and Iran.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, accompanied by senior defense officials, meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin and his advisers in Moscow on April 4, 2019. (Koby Gideon/GPO)

During the press conference, Netanyahu thanked Putin, saying Russian soldiers had “risked their lives” in order to bring back the remains, confirming the key role Moscow played in the search effort for the remains not only of Baumel but also of two other IDF soldiers missing since the same battle. Until then, Israeli officials were only permitted to say that a “third country” had assisted in the effort, without specifying which.

“Two years ago, I asked you to help us find the bodies of missing Israeli soldiers, and you responded in the affirmative. I want to thank you, my friend, for what you have done,” Netanyahu told Putin.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with Shimon Baumel, the brother of the slain Sgt. First Class Zachary Baumel, in Jerusalem on April 3, 2019 (Haim Zach/GPO)

The prime minister added that Baumel’s family, whom he met with Wednesday night before departing for Moscow, had asked him to pass along their appreciation for the contribution of the Russian military as well.

“When I told them about your decision and the fact that Russian soldiers performed the activities, sometimes while putting themselves at risk, their jaws dropped, and they asked me to express their deep gratitude, which is gratitude from all citizens of Israel,” Netanyahu said.

The Russian president confirmed that the effort to find the remains “was difficult for the special forces.”

In September, the Russian defense ministry said one of its soldiers had been injured in the operation.

“Terrorists suddenly attacked the Russian servicemen involved in the operation. One Russian officer was wounded. Despite that, Russia was willing to carry on with the operation,” Russian defense ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov said.

After a complex and secret operation, dubbed “Bittersweet Song,” Baumel’s remains were returned to Israel on an El Al plane via an unnamed third country earlier this week, a military spokesman said Wednesday.

Missing in Action Israel Defense Forces soldiers Zachary Baumel, Zvi Feldman and Yehuda Katz. (The International Coalition for Missing Israeli Soldiers)

Baumel’s funeral was scheduled for 7 p.m. Thursday at Jerusalem’s Mount Herzl military cemetery, according to the Israel Defense Forces.

The announcement brought to a close a decades-long mission by Baumel’s Jerusalem-based, American-born parents to find their son, which included international pressure campaigns and faint hopes that he may have been captured alive during the brutal Sultan Yacoub tank battle.

Yona Baumel, Zachary’s father, died 10 years ago; his mother Miriam is 90 years old.

Netanyahu told a press conference on Wednesday that Baumel’s remains were recovered along with his tzitzit ritual fringes, and tank jumpsuit.

“This is a repayment of a moral debt to the fallen soldiers of the IDF, a repayment of a moral debt to their families,” said Netanyahu, calling it “one of the most moving moments in all my years as prime minister.”

In 2016, an Israeli tank lost in the battle was also returned to Israel by Russia.

Miriam and Yoni Baumel in 2003 holding a picture of their son Zachary, who has been missing in action since 1982. (photo credit: Flash90)

Miriam and Yoni Baumel in 2003 holding a picture of their son Zachary, who had been missing in action since 1982. (Flash90)

Tank commander Baumel, a Brooklyn-born immigrant, was one of three Israeli soldiers whose bodies were never recovered following the battle of Sultan Yacoub, a skirmish between the Israel Defense Forces and Syrian army in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley, in which 21 Israeli servicemen were killed and more than 30 were injured.

Though Baumel and the other two soldiers — Zvi Feldman and Yehuda Katz — were generally believed to have been killed in the battle, there was also speculation and reports that they were captured by the Syrian military in Sultan Yacoub and brought to Damascus.

The remains of Feldman and Katz were not recovered in Operation Bittersweet Song, though Israeli officials initially thought Feldman’s body might have been among the other remains recovered in the operation, according to the Haaretz newspaper.

The announcement regarding Baumel was delayed until officials could rule out that possibility, Haaretz said.

According to a Channel 13 news report Wednesday, Baumel’s body was returned together with the remains of at least 10 other people.

A commander of a Palestinian terrorist group in Syria said WednesdayBaumel’s remains were uncovered by armed factions at a Palestinian refugee camp outside Damascus.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with Osna Haberman, sister of the slain Sgt. First Class Zachary Baumel, in Jerusalem on April 3, 2019 (Haim Zach/GPO)

Medical examiners at the Abu Kabir Forensic Institute have reportedly examined most of the other bodies brought back, and have concluded that none of them were Feldman or Katz. The Channel 13 report said one body had yet to be ruled out as either of the two Israeli soldiers.

Katz’s sister told Israeli television on Wednesday the family was holding out hope that he is alive.

 

No stone left unturned

April 4, 2019

Source: No stone left unturned – www.israelhayom.com

There are very few countries in the world, if any, who after 37 years would continue searching for their missing soldiers, let alone jeopardize intelligence assets in the process.

In the world of intelligence, the saying goes, reality often exceeds the imagination, and yet – the operation to return Zachary Baumel’s remains to Israel, in a mission that spanned the globe, can easily be considered one of the most impressive in the country’s history.

Israeli officials have long known where Baumel was buried. The matter of our missing soldiers was also raised on many occasions with foreign governments, primarily in the midst of peace talks with Syria and the Palestinians. After the Oslo Accords were signed, Yasser Arafat even transferred one of Baumel’s dog tags to Israel, but nothing more ever materialized. Syria has always said it would agree to resolve the mystery, but only parallel to receiving the Golan Heights in return, as part of a peace agreement between the countries.

A little over a year ago, the issue was again raised by then-Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman. If the reports are true that Russia was involved in the operation, we can assume that Lieberman spoke with his counterpart in the Russian defense ministry, Sergei Shoigu. It appears that this time the response was different, and the Russians agreed to lend a hand. Either way, Israeli officials began working vigorously. In a series of intelligence operations, the Military Intelligence Directorate (Aman) and Mossad pinpointed Baumel’s exact resting place. All the information was gathered into a classified file under the codename “Bittersweet Song.”

According to the reports, we can assume Israel and Russia exploited the fact that Syria was mired in a civil war. Syrian President Bashar Assad, focused almost entirely on his own survival in recent years, couldn’t have prevented Russia from doing as it pleased on Syrian soil – even if he had wanted to – because Moscow had rescued his regime. We can also assume that an operation of this sort is managed at the highest levels on both sides, spearheaded by the respective army chiefs of staff (first Gadi Eizenkot and then Aviv Kochavi in Israel and Valery Gerasimov in Russia). Assuming this was the case, the operation also survived the diplomatic crisis between Israel and Russia following the downing of a Russian military plane last September – for which Russia explicitly blamed Israel.

The Russian defense ministry spokesman confirmed that Russian solider worked on the matter for months. In retrospect it sounds simple, but Russia did something that many countries likely wouldn’t have: put its own people in harm’s way for another country’s humanitarian cause. If this is what happened, it means Russian soldiers were the ones to carry out, over a significant period of time, the physical search for Baumel’s remains. Once the green light was given, the body was flown to a third country and from there – after an IDF team conducted DNA tests – it was flown to Israel aboard an El Al plane.

In Israel on Wednesday, officials stressed that nothing was given in exchange for Baumel’s return. It’s safe to assume that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, during his short visit to Moscow on Thursday, will heap praise on his Russian hosts, although it would be nice if he brought along Lieberman and Eizenkot – the two people who laid the foundations for the momentous operation. Netanyahu should also make further use of the mechanism that has been established – alongside crucial regional issues – to locate the remains of the other soldiers that went missing during the Sultan Yacoub battle, Yehuda Katz and Tzvi Feldman, and IAF navigator Ron Arad, whose remains are believed to still be in Lebanon.

Beyond the enormous operational drama and personal story that has now been closed with Baumel’s return home, this chapter also provides a unique lesson about Israel: There are very few countries in the world, if any, who after 37 years would continue searching for their missing soldiers, let alone jeopardize intelligence assets in the process. Israel proves time and again that it is extraordinary, and doesn’t spare any effort to solve even the most daunting mysteries. This won’t bring the dead back to life, but it will give their families a burial place over which to mourn, and the soldiers currently serving the knowledge that if heaven forbid something were to happen, the country would turn over every stone for them.

 

PM thanks Putin for finding remains of missing IDF soldier

April 4, 2019

Source: PM thanks Putin for finding remains of missing IDF soldier – www.israelhayom.com

The long search for the body of Staff Sgt. Zachary (Zechariah) Baumel was successful because Russian troops “risked their lives,” Israeli leader says, a day after announcing dramatic recovery.

A day after the Israel Defense Forces announced it had recovered remains of Zachary (Zechariah) Baumel, who went missing in a 1982 battle in Lebanon, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu thanked Russian President Vladimir Putin for making it possible.

Speaking at the Kremlin alongside Putin, Netanyahu said Israel “thanks you for taking care of this matter by finding the remains, what you did will not be forgotten by our people.”

Netanyahu said that Baumel’s family members were overwhelmed with emotion after they were informed his remains were found.

“I told them that Russian troops risked their lives to search for his remains and they were left speechless,” Netanyahu said.

Putin responded that “this was not easy for our soldiers.”

Baumel, who immigrated to Israel with his parents from New York in 1970, was 21 when he fought in Israel’s Operation Peace for the Galilee in Lebanon and was declared missing in action (MIA) along with two other soldiers in the Battle of Sultan Yaaqub, in which Israel suffered heavy casualties.

Baumel’s remains were flown to Israel by El Al Israel Airlines several days ago.

The Israel Defense Forces declined to say how or where the body of Baumel, a tank crewman and sergeant, was recovered in what was described as an intelligence operation.

 

Russia hands over to Israel the body of missing soldier Zachary Baumel – an action with strategic import – DEBKAfile

April 4, 2019

Source: Russia hands over to Israel the body of missing soldier Zachary Baumel – an action with strategic import – DEBKAfile

( He was killed in the first war I fought in. – JW )

The remains of Sgt. Maj. Zachary Baumel, who was killed in the battle of Sultan Yaaqub in Lebanon 37 years ago, has been returned to Israel. The IDF spokesman announced the missing soldier’s recovery a day before Prime Minister/ Defense Minister Binyamin flies to Moscow to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin, and six days before Israel’s general election. DEBKAfile reports that it was handed over to Israel by Russian officials.

Baumel was one of six soldiers missing from the Sultan Yaqoub battle in the Lebanese Beqaa Valley that took place on June 11, 1982, during the First Lebanon War against a large Syrian force r. Twenty Israeli soldiers were killed in the battle. Two, Zvi Feldman and Yehuda Katz, are still missing. Baumel’s body was brought to Israel by an El Al flight. He has been positively identified. Zachary and his family migrated to Israel from the United States. His mother and two siblings were informed of the event. His father died some years ago. A military funeral with full honors is being arranged.

DEBKAfile reports that the handover of the missing soldier represents an exceptional gesture of goodwill by President Vladimir Putin towards Israel and its prime minister, and accentuates his intention to give Israel a role in determining Syria’s future. It follows on his decision during a former meeting on Feb. 17, which lasted three hours, to establish a joint committee for dealing with the withdrawal of all foreign troops from Syria. This brought Israel for the first time into the decision-making process regarding an Arab nation. That accord appears to have opened the door for President Donald Trump to recognize Israeli sovereignty in the Golan.

Our sources also reveal that, since 2016, Russian intelligence and special forces officers have been working diligently to uncover the whereabouts of the Israeli soldiers missing from the Battle of Sultan Yaaqub and restore their remains to Israel.

On Sept. 17, 2018, Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu incidentally spoke of Russian soldiers who were injured while searching for Israel MIA’s in Palmyra. He made this reference during a bitter diatribe against Israel whom he accused of responsibility for the downing of the Russian IL-20 spy plane opposite Latakia.

The battle of Sultan Yaaqub in the Lebanese Beqaa Valley was the Israeli army’s only encounter with a Syrian force during the 1982 Lebanon war. The IDF unit was vastly outnumbered in troops and tanks. Baumel, Zvi Feldman and Yehuda Katz, were in the Israeli tank that was hit. On May 29, 2016, Moscow handed the tank to Israel. It is on exhibit at the IDF museum. Syrian’s motive in letting the Russians have the tank was for its engineers to discover the armor and electronic systems developed by Israel.