Archive for May 28, 2019

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards: ‘We do not fear war with US’ 

May 28, 2019

Source: Iran’s Revolutionary Guards: ‘We do not fear war with US’ – www.israelhayom.com

“The enemy is not more powerful than before,” Revolutionary Guards spokesman says. Government-aligned Dubai newspaper publishes rare front-page editorial criticizing Iran’s role in regional tensions.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard doesn’t fear a possible war with the United State, according to its spokesman Gen. Ramazan Sharif.

The remarks by Sharif come as tensions between Washington and Tehran soared recently after America deploying an aircraft carrier and B-52 bombers to the Persian Gulf in response to a threat from Tehran.

The U.S. also plans to send 900 additional troops to the 600 already in the Middle East and extending their stay.

Sharif told reporters on Tuesday that the paramilitary force doesn’t “support engaging in any war” while at the same time it doesn’t “fear the occurrence of a war.”

Sharif said, “The enemy is not more powerful than before.”

Also on Tuesday, a Dubai-based, government-aligned newspaper has published a rare front-page editorial criticizing Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif amid tensions between Tehran and Washington.

Titled “No thank you, Mr. Zarif,”The Gulf News editorial on Tuesday criticized the Iranian diplomat for his recent offer to form a nonaggression pact with Gulf Arab nations.

The newspaper said Gulf Arab nations are not buying Zarif’s “nice neighbor routine.”

Iran “continues to call for the overthrow of Arab governments, sends its agents to spy and sabotage, aiming at spreading chaos in Gulf countries, such as Bahrain and Kuwait and more recently off Fujairah and in Saudi Arabia.

“Nobody wants war in this region. But Iran should instead focus on its daunting internal problems which cannot be resolved by constantly fomenting aggression against our countries,” according to the piece.

 

Iran’s rulers feel the pain 

May 28, 2019

Source: Iran’s rulers feel the pain – www.israelhayom.com

Iran’s rulers are feeling intense pain from Mr. Trump’s “maximum pressure” campaign, and they are no longer sure they can wait for what they hope will be a more conciliatory occupant of the White House in 2021.

Defenders of the nuclear deal with the Islamic Republic of Iran predicted that President Trump’s sanctions would have little impact unless our European friends joined in. They were dead wrong.

That same crowd is now in a frenzy over President Trump deploying military assets to the Middle East to deter or, if necessary, punish attacks on Americans by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps or its many proxies.

They have been claiming — including in paid advertisements— that Mr. Trump is leading a “march to war.”

What’s really happening is less dramatic but more intriguing: Iran’s rulers are feeling intense pain from Mr. Trump’s “maximum pressure” campaign, and they are no longer sure they can wait for what they hope will be a more conciliatory occupant of the White House in 2021.

So they’ve been floating the possibility of negotiating with the Trump administration. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is soon to visit Switzerland where the fluctuating price of chocolate will not be the main topic of discussion. Swiss diplomats represent the U.S. in Iran.

Javad Zarif, the Islamic Republic’s foreign minister, has proven himself a skilled negotiator. When he sat down at the table with Secretary of State John Kerry, it was like Doc Holliday playing poker with a greenhorn in Dodge City.

The pot Mr. Zarif raked in was the Iran deal, formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, which promised Iran’s rulers sunset clauses, which are patient pathways to nuclear weapons as key restrictions disappear. What if the Islamic Republic remains, as it’s long been, the world’s leading state sponsors of terrorism? It won’t matter.

Mr. Zarif now wants to play a few hands against Mr. Pompeo, but doesn’t want to seem too eager. So he routinely insults Mr. Trump — he recently called him a “terrorist” — and demands that the president show “respect” for Iran’s ruling mullahs before any new talks begin.

What he really wants is for the U.S. to ease restrictions on Iranian oil exports, and lift other sanctions as well – akin to what President Obama did in 2013 after the conclusion of an interim agreement. Following that, Mr. Zarif made no serious concessions. Mr. Kerry made one after another.

I’m hopeful — not confident — that President Trump and Mr. Pompeo won’t repeat their predecessor’s mistakes by rewarding the mullahs for nothing more than sending Mr. Zarif to filibuster and dine in Europe’s finest restaurants. Does that close the door on a new round of diplomacy?

Not necessarily. Mr. Zarif’s negotiating position may not be his fallback position. He may, after a while, agree to attend talks without preconditions. If not, an alternative occurs to me.

Imagine if the Germans, the French and the British, the so-called E3, were to say to Mr. Zarif: “Look, we’ve not just shown you respect – we’ve bent over backwards for you. So talk to us. You claim you don’t have a nuclear weapons program, don’t want one, and – oh yes – threaten to ratchet up your nonexistent nuclear weapons program if you don’t get some cash in your pocket soon. So let’s hammer out some new agreements. We can take those to President Trump and see if, in exchange, we can’t get his Gucci loafers off your throat.”

Such agreements would have to include eliminating the sunset clauses, ending the development of missiles capable of carrying nuclear warheads, allowing international inspectors to seriously verify that illicit research is not being secretly conducted, and prohibiting the production of fissile material for nuclear warheads.

Will that be enough to satisfy President Trump? I’d argue it shouldn’t be. Not at this point in the 40-year-old conflict with the revolutionary theocrats.

A year ago, Mr. Pompeo announced 12 conditions that Iran’s rulers must meet if they want all sanctions lifted and, perhaps, a restoration of diplomatic relations and economic support. Regime sympathizers in the media and think tanks have pronounced those conditions “impossible” and tantamount to “surrender.”

Brian Hook, the U.S. Special Representative for Iran, has repeatedly asked: Is it really impossible for the theocrats to stop sponsoring terrorists, holding hostages, bankrolling mass-murdering dictators and threatening their neighbors? And were they to cease torturing and murdering ethnic and sexual minorities, would that really be waving a white flag?

The Islamic Republic’s enablers are, in effect, arguing that America and Europe should accept such practices as the new normal. Defining deviancy down is never a good idea. At present – with the rulers of North Korea, China, Russia, and a list of non-state jihadi groups watching – it would be particularly ill-advised.

In Japan on Monday, President Trump said he was not “looking for regime change” in Iran. “I just want to make that clear. We are looking for no nuclear weapons.”

Yes but he should insist that the regime change its conduct in line with his administration’s eminently reasonable 12 conditions. To fail to do so would repeat another of President Obama’s most egregious errors: implicitly licensing the regime to continue a range of nefarious activities, including sponsoring terrorism in the Middle East, Europe, Latin America, and the U.S.

Is it possible for such change to come about through a new and improved round of diplomacy? The odds are low but, if that does happen, it will not be because Iran’s rulers are enthusiastic about the benefits détente would bring.

It will be because they have been crippled by American sanctions, deterred by American military might, and daunted by the risks they’ll run should they continue to provoke an American president who is less predictable than the others they’ve encountered over the decades.

 

Who’s afraid of the Gaza Strip?

May 28, 2019

Opinion: Israel has been lurching from round of violence to round of violence with Hamas and the other Palestinian terror groups in the coastal enclave and wasting the goodwill of an international community that for once is firmly behind it

Ron Prosor |Published:  05.28.19 , 15:49

https://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-5516790,00.html

What will the world say? For years this has been the de facto excuse of the Israeli government when it is accused of not really trying to defeat the terrorist organizations in Gaza. But why?


It is not the international community that is stopping Israel from hitting these terror groups hard. After a year of battles of attrition against Hamas and Islamic Jihad, one could easily say that if and when Israel decides to defeat these organizations, there will not exactly be a deafening chorus of condemnation from the international stage – even by the Arab states.

Rocket launches from Gaza towards Israel (Photo: Reuters) (Photo: Reuters)

Rocket launches from Gaza towards Israel (Photo: Reuters)

Towards the end of the last deadly round of violence earlier this month, which claimed the lives of four Israelis, condemnation of the massive rocket barrage launched from Gaza into Israel could be heard from several members of the international community.

One might expect such messages of support from Israel’s friends in Washington, Warsaw and Prague, and indeed they came. But condemnation also came from Paris, Oslo, and even from the European Union’s foreign minister, Federica Mogherini, who could never be accused of being a massive Zionist.

Without condemning the “violence on both sides,” without any attempt to create a false symmetry and without the whitewashed statements we became so used to in the past, Europe stood unequivocally alongside Israel and against Hamas.

IDF troops on the Gaza border during the 2014 war (Photo: Ido Erez)

IDF troops on the Gaza border during the 2014 war (Photo: Ido Erez)

But the Israeli political echelon chooses to shut its ears and its eyes to the declarations of support and the green light to act issued by the international community.

In fact, Israel has chosen to ignore this state of affairs for the past five years, since the end of Operation Protective Edge in 2014.

During those 50 days of fighting in Gaza, Israel did not come under any real pressure from the rest of the world. Intensive and efficient diplomacy meant that the IDF had breathing room of the kind it had not experienced in many years.

But Jerusalem and the military brass did not successfully exploit this, and instead of making real diplomatic gains, were content to return to the same understandings reached two years earlier after Operation Pillar of Defense.

A home in Ashkelon damaged in a Gaza rocket strike (Photo: AP)

A home in Ashkelon damaged in a Gaza rocket strike (Photo: AP)

It would be an exaggeration to say that the world is letting the IDF “win,” but the Israeli government is not really doing this either.

Israel of 2019 has cast aside the country’s fundamental security concept, which always rested on the three legs of deterrence, vigilance and decisiveness.

The first leg was thoroughly eroded, the second weakened and the third is no longer part of the equation. Israel does not aspire to any form of decision-making and prefers to operate from one round of violence to the next.A decision does not have to be military in nature, it can also made on the diplomatic level. But in order to make a decision, one must have targets and objectives. 

Hamas has been doing this successfully for more than a year – on its watch, funds have been transferred from Qatar to the Gaza Strip, the Gaza fishing zone was expanded, additional raw materials were allowed into the Gaza Strip, the electricity supply expanded, and more.

Israel, on the other hand, is motivated by a desire to achieve certain goals but rather out of fear. It is fearful of setting diplomatic targets and of a prolonged confrontation.

The political echelon is afraid to set objectives for one simple reason: if you do not set objectives, you cannot fail to achieve them.

Benjamin Netanyahu and his generals during the fighting with Gaza earlier this month (Photo: GPO)

Benjamin Netanyahu and his generals during the fighting with Gaza earlier this month (Photo: GPO)

The images published of the prime minister at situation assessments during the last few rounds of fighting with Gaza do not show a single other civilian official. And when the only voices in the room are those of the security forces, the decision-makers are working with a partial toolbox and from the outset are solely bound to a military option, which ultimately means going down the familiar path that leads to nowhere.It would not do anyone any harm to recall the famous words of U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt, who told his people that, “the only thing we have to fear is fear itself.”

Ron Prosor, is Israel’s former permanent representative to the United Nations and former ambassador to the Court of St. James’s. He is currently the Abba Eban Chair of International Diplomacy at the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya (IDC).


U.S. to deploy additional forces to confront Iran – TV7 Israel News 27.05.19 

May 28, 2019

 

 

IDF says it bombed Syrian anti-aircraft battery that fired at Israeli jet 

May 28, 2019

Source: IDF says it bombed Syrian anti-aircraft battery that fired at Israeli jet | The Times of Israel

Syria claims Israeli retaliatory strike hit a military position in Quneitra region on Syrian Golan Heights, killing two soldiers

An Israeli F-16. (Hagar Amibar/Israeli Air Force)

The Israeli military said it bombed a Syrian anti-aircraft battery on Monday night that earlier in the day had fired at one of its fighter jets during a routine mission within Israeli airspace.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported that an officer and a soldier were killed in the Israeli retaliatory strike. A military vehicle was also said damaged in the attack.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel would “not tolerate any aggression against us, and we will respond forcefully.”

According to the Israel Defense Forces, earlier in the day, an anti-aircraft shell was fired “at an Israeli fighter jet that was in the midst of a routine flight in the north of the country.”

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PM Netanyahu: “A short while ago the Syrian army attempted to hit an Israeli plane; it did not succeed. In response the air force destroyed the launcher that fired on the plane. Our policy is clear – we will not tolerate any aggression against us, and we will respond forcefully.”

The military said the shell landed inside Syrian territory and did not damage the Israeli plane, whose “mission was completed as planned.”

The earlier incident was not immediately reported by the IDF.

Shortly after 9 p.m., the IDF retaliated to the anti-aircraft attack, bombing the battery that fired it, the military said.

The official Syrian state mouthpiece SANA said the Israeli strike targeted a military post on the Tel al-Sha’ar hilltop, east of Khan Arnabeh, just east of the border.

“The IDF takes seriously any threat to its planes and will act to defend them,” the army said in a statement.

Last Saturday, Syria said its air defenses shot down a number of missiles fired from Israel, a day after the country made a similar claim.

SANA said the Syrian military intercepted “hostile targets coming from the direction of occupied territories.” Syrian state TV said the missiles were shot down over Quneitra and near Damascus.

The night before, Syrian state TV reported sounds of explosions near the capital, and aired footage of what it claimed were air defenses intercepting missiles fired from Israeli jets seen over Quneitra.

“Aerial defenses detected hostile targets coming from the direction of Quneitra and dealt with them,” SANA quoted a military source as saying.

A picture taken on July 26, 2018, near Ein Zivan in the Israeli Golan Heights, shows smoke rising above buildings across the border in Syria during airstrikes backing a government-led offensive in the southern province of Quneitra. (AFP/Jack Guez)

There was no response from the IDF to those reports. Israel rarely comments on individual strikes in Syria.

Toward the start of the Syrian civil war, the Israeli military established a number of “red lines” that if violated would result in a retaliatory strike, including any attacks — intentional or otherwise — against Israel.

They also included Iranian efforts to establish a permanent military presence in Syria and attempts to transfer advanced munitions to the Lebanon-based Hezbollah terrorist group.

In recent years, Israel has acknowledged conducting hundreds of airstrikes in Syria in response to these “red line” violations.