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BREAKING: U.S. Airstrikes Hit Islamic State Artillery Positions Near Erbil…

August 8, 2014

BREAKING: U.S. Airstrikes Hit Islamic State Artillery Positions Near Erbil…
ZIP | August 8, 2014 8:57 am


(Game on. Finally. I prayed Obama would not let our fellow Christians die at the hands of these ISIS savages.-LS)

WH advisers are predicting a “long, very long campaign.”

Jake Tapper
@jaketapper
Pentagon says US military aircraft have hit ISIS artillery being used to attack Kurd forces defending Erbil, near Americans.

David Wood
@woodwriter
2 FA-18s put 500 pounder on ISIS artillery piece outside Irbil. It begins….

Obama authorizes airstrikes in Iraq to stop genocide

August 8, 2014

Obama authorizes airstrikes in Iraq to stop genocide
David Jackson and Jim Michaels, USA TODAY 10:22 p.m. EDT August 7, 2014


(ISIS must not be ignored. These Islamo-Nazis are asking for a fight and it looks like they’re going to get one (or two), right Israel?-LS)

WASHINGTON — President Obama said Thursday he authorized “targeted airstrikes” if needed to protect U.S. personnel in Iraq, as well as airdrops of food and water to religious minorities in Iraq who are under siege from Islamic militants and trapped on a mountain top.

“Today, America is coming to help,” Obama said.

The president’s announcement Thursday amounts to a significant escalation of involvement in the growing Iraqi crisis, but Obama attempted to assure the American public that it would not lead to U.S. involvement in a ground war there.

The administration has been weighing options for weeks, but the issue has come to a head with a mounting humanitarian crisis and unrelenting progress by Islamic extremists.

The most immediate crisis involved the Yazidis, a small religious minority, who have fled their homes and are trapped on a mountain top surrounded by Islamic militants and are facing dehydration and starvation.

The U.S. military made an initial airdrop of meals and water to thousands of civilians threatened by militants on Thursday. The aircraft that made the drop safely exited the region after conducting a low level flight and staying over the area for 15 minutes.

Three U.S. cargo aircraft delivered 72 bundles of supplies, including food and water, the Pentagon said. The aircraft were escorted by two FA-18 fighter attack jets.

Innocent families face the prospect of “genocide,” Obama said, justifying U.S, military action that could eventually include airstrikes.

The United States “cannot turn a blind eye,” Obama said.

Obama said U.S. aid would turn to airstrikes, which would represent a much deeper involvement in the conflict, in order to prevent militants from reaching Irbil, the capital of the Kurdish region. Irbil is home to a U.S. Consulate and a joint U.S.-Iraqi security base.

On Thursday, The New York Times reported, citing Kurdish sources, that airstrikes had started. Rear Adm. John Kirby, the spokesman for Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, quickly denied those reports.

“Press reports that US has conducted airstrikes in Iraq completely false. No such action taken,” Kirby said in a statement on Twitter.

The plight of the Yazidis in recent days attracted world attention. They were forced to flee their homes when militants attacked Sinjar in northern Iraq. The militants consider the Yazidis as apostates.

Tens of thousands of refugees fled into the mountains, perhaps hoping to reach the Kurdish region in the north, but were trapped because of militant activity between the mountain and the Kurdish area, and are running short on food and water.

The militants, who belong to a group called the Islamic State, have had a string of recent successes in the north.

On Thursday militants attacked a string of Christian villages, worsening an already desperate humanitarian crisis and dealing a blow to the Kurdish forces defending the region.

Christians flee Mosul amid threats to convert or die

Reports from the region also indicated that the militants may have seized Mosul Dam, a massive hydroelectric structure that would give the rebels control of resources and the ability to flood a wide swath of territory.

The Associated Press said the reports were based on residents who live near the dam who asked not to be named.

The militants were also fighting in an effort to seize the Haditha dam in the west. The two facilities would allow rebels to control water flowing south in the Tigris and Euphrates and much of the power supply for Baghdad.

The developments this week were particularly worrying because the militants dealt a blow to the Kurdish forces, called the peshmerga, which have a reputation of being disciplined and well trained forces. The peshmerga were defending Sanjir and the Christian villages that were overrun by militants.

The militants have been pressing the pershmerga all along the border of the Kurdish region, making it hard for the Kurdish forces to concentrate their forces in order to effectively defend towns or to counterattack, said Jessica Lewis, a military analyst with the Institute for the Study of War.

The strategy appears to have worked for the militants. “This tells us (Islamic State) … is a formidable force,” Lewis said.

Breaking News

August 8, 2014


(US military returning to Iraq. Just announced by White House. Humanitarian aid. Air strikes if necessary. Now I hear southern Israel was just hit with two rockets compliments of who else…Hamas – LS)

Alleged mastermind behind kidnapping of three Israeli teens arrested

August 7, 2014

Alleged mastermind behind kidnapping of three Israeli teens arrested
By YONAH JEREMY BOB 05/08/2014 Via The Jerusalem Post


(They caught a rat!-LS)

State prosecutors say Hussam Kawasme confessed to giving orders, collecting weapons, getting funds from Hamas; 2 chief suspects still at large.

Husam al-Qawasmi was the mastermind who gave the mid-June order to Marwan al-Qawasmi and Amir Abu Aisha to kidnap teenagers Gil-Ad Shaer, Eyal Yifrah and Naftali Fraenkel, the state prosecution revealed on Tuesday.

The kidnapping and murder, according to many, was the spark that ignited a rapid deterioration in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict culminating in the Gaza war that has rocked the region this past month.

The UN Security Council went out of its way to condemn the brutal murders.

According to the state, Husam confessed not only that he gave the orders, but also that he collected weapons and raised funding for the attack by the Hamas cell.

In addition, Husam assisted Marwan in concealing the bodies by burying them on land he had bought in recent months.

Husam was attempting to flee the area and disappear across the Jordanian border with false documents subsequent to the bodies being found when he was caught on July 11.

The state said the evidence it had was at the level of a near certainty, having interrogated Husam and collected other evidence.

That said, confessions to police can be withdrawn at trial, and to date, Husam has not been indicted, and may not be for some time.

Marwan and Amir are still at large.

The kidnapping took place when the three teens hitchhiked with their eventual assailants in the Gush Etzion settlement bloc.

The revelations arose in the state’s legal response to the High Court of Justice, justifying its request to demolish the residences of the families of the three suspected terrorists.

The High Court of Justice on Thursday had frozen three IDF demolition orders against those residences.

The knocking down of the family homes were originally scheduled for late Thursday afternoon.

On July 1, the state dropped a self-imposed ban on house demolitions that had been in place since 2005.

Egypt-Hamas animosity casts pall over ceasefire hopes

August 7, 2014

Egypt-Hamas animosity casts pall over ceasefire hopes
By Elhanan Miller August 7, 2014, 10:27 pm Via The Times of Israel


Yemeni boys attend a protest supporting Gaza in front of the Egyptian embassy in Sanaa, Yemen, August 5, 2014 [photo credit: AP/Hani Mohammed]


(Doomed to fail. Besides, it’s not about concessions. Hamas just wants to kill Jews. The rest is bullshit.-LS)

Egypt’s future attitude toward the Gaza Strip, an issue scarcely mentioned as a key point of contention between Israel and Egypt, may cause the shaky 72-hour ceasefire ending Friday morning to collapse, leaks from the talks in Cairo reveal.

“There is no agreement to extend the ceasefire,” Moussa Abu Marzouk, deputy head of Hamas’s political bureau and a participant in the Cairo negotiations, wrote on Facebook late Wednesday night, upping the ante if negotiations failed to address his movement’s list of demands.

A day later, an Egyptian security official said that the Palestinian delegation was refusing to compromise. The Egyptian security official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media, said Thursday that the Palestinian delegation’s stance had hardened after the arrival in Cairo of Hamas and Islamic Jihad leaders from the Gaza Strip. He said Azzam al-Ahmad, the leader of the delegation and the representative of Western-backed Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, had threatened to withdraw from the talks if the two terror groups do not show more “flexibility,” adding that the delegation, which was supposed to leave Cairo on Thursday, would stay through the weekend.

On Thursday evening, Hamas announced that it would resume attacks against Israel on Friday morning if its demand to end the blockade on Gaza was not met.

One key Hamas demand has always been “the opening of crossings,” often used as shorthand for the permanent opening of the Rafah border crossing with Egypt. Rafah, the sole portal from Gaza to the Arab world, has remained largely shuttered since the ouster of Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood president Mohammed Morsi in July 2013. The closure, as well as the chaos and confusion in the terminal during the few erratic hours when it is open, serve as a source of unending anguish for many in Gaza seeking medical treatment, study, or travel abroad.

The Rafah crossing was administered by Israel until the Israeli withdrawal from the Gaza Strip in 2005, when it was handed over to the Palestinian Authority. In June 2007 Hamas took control of the Gaza Strip, ousting the PA from the crossing and prompting EU monitors on location to retreat. On Thursday, the EU proposed reactivating its EUBAM supervision force at Rafah and permanently opening the crossing.

According to Gaza’s Interior Ministry, in past months the crossing was shut for a total of 175 days and open for only 42 days. Data collected by Gisha, and Israeli NGO dealing with freedom of movement in Gaza, is similarly bleak. Crossings between Gaza and Egypt dropped by 84 percent since the fall of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt: from an average of 40,000 crossings per month during the first six months of 2013 to an average of 6,500 since July 2013.

Israel would like to see Gaza rely more significantly on Egypt for its sustenance. The Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT), the IDF branch dealing with Palestinian civil affairs, is displeased with the current Israeli “monopoly” over the entry of commodities and consumer goods into the Strip through Kerem Shalom crossing, The Times of Israel has learned from official sources.

Yet Egypt is reluctant to amend its current policy of closure; nor is it willing to discuss the development of Rafah crossing to allow for commercial use.

Qais Abdul Karim, a member of the Palestinian negotiations team in Cairo for the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP), told the Hamas daily Felesteen on Wednesday that the opening of the Rafah crossing was taken off the agenda in Cairo. Hamas presented the refusal to discuss Rafah as an unfair Egyptian dictate.

Quoting a “knowledgeable source,” Hamas daily Al-Resalah reported on Thursday that Egypt had informed the Palestinian factions in Cairo of its decision to exclude the Rafah crossing from negotiations. “The Egyptian side refused to consider the closure of the crossings as part of the siege imposed on Gaza,” Al-Resalah’s source claimed, adding that Egypt would be willing to reactivate the crossing “as soon as it is handed over to PA President Mahmoud Abbas and the unity government.”

“By refusing to consider the Rafah crossing part of the siege, the Egyptians clearly don’t want to remove the siege completely or partially ” Al-Resalah charged.

Obviously, Egypt doesn’t consider itself part of the solution for the Gaza crisis. When asked on Wednesday about Cairo’s vision for the outcome of talks on Wednesday, Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shukri spoke of the need to rebuild Gaza and provide humanitarian aid to its population, and “for the Israeli authorities to open the crossings and break the siege.”

Except that, unlike Egypt, the Israeli authorities never closed the crossings throughout Operation Protective Edge. Even as mortar shells fell on the northern Erez crossing (used for pedestrian traffic) and the southern Kerem Shalom crossing (used for goods), trucks continued to enter the Strip and passengers continued to pass in and out of the territory. According to COGAT, more than 1,500 trucks loaded with produce and medicine entered the Gaza Strip since July 8, when the operation began, and over 3,000 civilians crossed through Erez in both directions, nearly 1,000 of them for medical reasons.

Gisha, the Israeli NGO, has called on Israel to expand import and export to and from Gaza, and to allow freer passage out of the Strip for civilians. Currently, mostly patients and their family members are able to cross into Israel, constituting less than 1 percent of the traffic prior to September 2000, when the Second Intifada erupted.

But there is clearly a larger issue at play here, namely Egypt’s future relations with Hamas. On its border, Egypt would like to deal exclusively with Abbas and the PA; never with their Islamist rivals.

Asked whether Egypt would consider engaging the Palestinian organization (after having dubbed it a terror organization in March), Egyptian sources told A-Sharq Al-Awsat Thursday that “it is much too early to discuss the matter,” which could negatively impact the ceasefire talks.

Hamas, for its part, seemed fed up with the Egyptian mediation on Thursday, continuing to eye Turkey and Qatar as alternative brokers if talks in Cairo collapsed.

“Despite the Egyptian position, which deals negatively with the demands of the [Palestinian] factions, observers believe that its position could change due to the insistence of Hamas’s representatives on the Palestinian demands; especially considering there are other mediators, Turkey and Qatar, which are prepared to take an alternative role if talks in Cairo fail,” read the article in Al-Resalah, the Hamas newspaper.

Indeed, on Thursday morning Hamas official Moussa Abu Marzouk signaled that his movement was ready to walk away from the table.

“If peace ever had a chance, it was lost with the body parts of our children and the stones of our homes,” he wrote on Facebook. “There is no guarantee for what is agreed upon but the weapons of the resistance. America is no guarantor, since it decided on the siege and provided weapons for the destruction.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Makes You Wonder Why

August 7, 2014

Jihadi Work Accident: Four Hamas Fighters Killed When Explosives Detonate Prematurely…


(With a cease fire in place, why would they be preparing explosives?-LS)

Via Reuters Correspondent Dan Williams August 7, 2014:

“Hamas TV says four of the group’s fighters were killed while preparing explosives today.”

Vladimir Putin’s pointless conflict with Europe leaves it a vassal of China

August 7, 2014

Vladimir Putin’s pointless conflict with Europe leaves it a vassal of China
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard 8:34PM BST 06 Aug 2014


(I know posting this article might seem a bit off topic. However, when you consider that Russia is key to Iran and Syria, I believe it to be quite relevant. According to this article, Russia could be in for another collapse due to Putin’s aggressions and the world would be better for it. While the article is a bit long, it’s well worth studying.-LS)

Russian president Vladimir Putin has been obsessed with an imaginary threat from an ageing, pacifist Europe in slow decline, while throwing his country at the feet of a greater threat – China

The world faces a moment of maximum danger in Ukraine. Vladimir Putin has perhaps 72 hours to decide whether to launch a full invasion of the Donbass, or accept defeat and let the Ukrainian military crush his proxy forces.

Nato officials say Russia has massed 20,000 troops in battle-readiness near the border, backed by Spetsnaz commandos, tanks and aircraft. Vehicles have been marked with peace-keeper labels already. Nato sees every sign that the Kremlin intends to disguise an attack as a “humanitarian mission”.

This is more serious than the Russian invasion of Afghanistan in 1980. That was a “colonial war”. The Soviet Union was a careful, status quo power in its final decades. It held captive nations but did not overrun new borders in Europe. Mr Putin is expansionist, and far less predictable. He is, in any case, captive to the chauvinist fever that he has so successfully stoked.

He has been clear from the outset that he will deploy any means necessary to bring Ukraine back into Russia’s orbit. Only war can now achieve this, since all else has failed, and since he has turned a friendly Ukraine into an enemy by his actions. The awful implications of this are at last starting to hit the markets.

“People thought that Russia was just playing a game of brinkmanship,and that pragmatism would prevail in the end. There is real fear now that this will spin out of control. Nothing cannot be excluded at this point, even a cut-off in oil and gas,” said Chris Weafer, from Macro Advisory in Moscow.

Yields on 10-year rouble bonds have jumped to 9.7pc, up 130 basis points since June. The sanctioned bank VTB is up 180 points in a month. A liquidity crunch is rapidly taking hold across the financial system. “The market is shut. Not a single Russian entity has been able to borrow anything in dollars, euro or yen since early July,” said Mr Weafer.

The Kremlin’s gamble has gone horribly wrong. The eastern regions of Ukraine have failed to rise in mass support for Putin’s front organisations, led by political operatives from Moscow, and patently run by the Russian security apparatus (FSB/GRU) as even Russian newspapers admit. The latest report by the United Nations accuses these units of “eggregious abuses”, carrying out systematic intimidation through torture and execution.

Mr Putin has failed equally to drive a wedge between America and Europe, or to paralyse the EU by playing off one country against another. Germany has not cut a special deal, though its 6,000 companies in Russia are on the frontline. It has gone beyond the EU measures, blocking a €100m export of combat training kit by Rheinmetall.

Cyprus, Bulgaria, Hungary and Austria quietly towed the EU line on “Tier 3” sanctions. None dared to veto measures that shut Russia’s banks out of global finance, and that block technology needed to open up Russia’s oil and gas fields in the Arctic or the shale reserves of the Bazhenov Basin.

President Barack Obama’s slow, methodical escalation suits the complicated chemistry of Europe, the region that will pay the economic price. There would have been a trans-Atlantic crisis if the hotheads in Washington had prevailed.

Mr Putin now faces draconian sanctions from the US, EU, Japan, Canada and Australia together. He can strike back by asymmetric means – perhaps a cyberattack – but tit-for-tat retaliation can achieve nothing. There is no equivalence. Russia’s economy is no bigger than California’s. This is an economic showdown between a $40 trillion power structure, and a $2 trillion producer of raw materials that has hollowed out its industrial core.

The new arsenal of sanctions refined by a cell at the US Treasury – already used with crisp effect against nine countries – is nothing like the blunt toolkit of the 1980s or 1990s. Nor can Russia retreat into Soviet autarky. It is locked into global finance. The International Energy Agency says Russia needs to invest $100bn a year for two decades just to stop its oil and gas output declining.

Russian companies and state bodies owe $610bn in foreign currencies. They must repay $84bn by the end of the year, and $10bn a month thereafter. There is no immediate crisis. Russian companies have $130bn of cash holdings. The central bank has promised to deploy its $470bn of foreign reserves as second line of defence. Russia can muddle through for a while, depending on the pace of capital flight. At best it is slow suffocation.

European officials calculate that Mr Putin will not dare to cut off energy supplies, since to do so would bring the Russian state to its knees within months. But even if he tried – as a shock tactic – it would not achieve much. Oil can be obtained anywhere.

Europe’s gas inventories have risen to 81pc of capacity, up from 46pc in March. Britain is at 94pc. There is a sudden glut of liquefied natural gas in Asia that has caused prices to fall from more than $20 per million BTU earlier this year to $10.50. The LNG is being diverted to Europe, landing in Britain at just $6.50.

Japan has just given the go-ahead for two nuclear reactors to restart in October, with seven likely by the end of the year. Koreans are also firing up closed nuclear reactors. All this frees up LNG.

Whether this is fruit of a co-ordinated strategy, the net effect is that inventories and spare LNG could cover a Russian cut-off for a long time, probably through the winter with rationing. Areas of eastern Europe have no pipeline supply from the West, but “regas” ships could plug some gaps in an emergency. The gas weapon is not what it seems.

The Kremlin is counting on acquiescence from the BRICS quintet as it confronts the West, and counting on capital from China to offset the loss of Western money. This is a pipedream. China’s Xi Jinping drove a brutal bargain in May on a future Gazprom pipeline, securing a price near $350 per 1,000 cubic metres that is barely above Russia’s production costs.

Pieties aside, the two countries are rivals in central Asia, where China is systematically building pipelines that break Russia’s stranglehold. China has large territorial claims on Far Eastern Russia, land seized from the Qing Dynasty in the 19th century.

Even if Mr Putin’s strategy of a Euro-Asia alliance with China succeeds, it will reduce Russia to a vassal state of China, a supplier of commodities with a development model that dooms it to backwardness. “It is a dangerous illusion. We are witnessing the funeral of Russia,” said Aleksandr Kokh, a former top Kremlin official.

Mr Putin is stuck in a Cold War timewarp, deaf to the shifts in world power. He has been obsessed with an imaginary threat from an ageing, pacifist Europe in slow decline, turning manageable differences into needless conflict.

Yet at the same time he is throwing his country at the feet of a rising power that poses a far greater threat in the end, and that will not hesitate to extract the maximum advantage from Russia’s self-inflicted weakness.

Mr Putin has misjudged everything. He has decisive force only on the east Europe’s battlefield. Ukraine is not a member of Nato, and has no Article V protection. The West has already stated that it will not deploy forces if it is invaded. Novorossiya is his for the taking. It is his last lethal card.

Iran to Unveil its Own ‘Iron Dome’ Style Defense System

August 7, 2014

Iran to Unveil its Own ‘Iron Dome’ Style Defense System
By Adam Kredo August 6, 2014 11:40 am


(It’s obvious to me that if Tehran truly has the technology to build such a system, then it stands to reason that they have the technology and the means to build a nuke. Notice I said ‘IF’.-LS)

New missile defense systems set to go online in September

Iranian military leaders announced on Wednesday that Tehran is readying new mid-range and long-range missile defense systems reminiscent of Israel’s Iron Dome system, which destroys rockets in mid-air before they strike the ground.

Brigadier General Farzad Esmayeeli, commander of Iran’s Khatam ol-Anbia Air Defense Base, said on Wednesday that the latest defense systems will go online on September 22, according to comments made Wednesday to Iran’s semi-official Fars News Agency.

The missile defense announcement comes as the successes of Israel’s Iron Dome system are featured prominently in Western media outlets. Israeli officials have hailed the highly advanced system for protecting lives during the most recent conflict with Hamas by knocking many of the terror group’s attacks off course.

Esmayeeli, who did not reveal many technical details about the new equipment, said that the mid-range and long-range defense systems will be connected to Iran’s larger military apparatus.

“These missile systems will include combined systems, artillery, and radar systems, other new systems,” he was quoted as saying by Fars.” The long-range missiles to go on display on September 22 are the ones which have been optimized by Iranian weapons experts and specialists.”

As the Obama administration continues nuclear talks with Iran through November, Tehran’s military forces have continued to build up their cache of advanced weaponry, including drones and sophisticated missiles.

Esmayeeli revealed that the construction of new drones and war planes had been fully authorized and paid for by the Iranian government, which is set to see another $2.8 billion cash infusion over the next several months as part of the deal reached last month to extend talks.

The construction of “new [manned] planes and pilotless drones” also is in the works, according to Esmayeeli.

Michael Rubin, a former Pentagon adviser on Iran and Iraq for the George W. Bush administration, said Iran has made “great strides” in its missile technology, though it is unlikely Tehran could rival the technology employed in Iron Dome.

“Could they build their own Iron Dome? Why not? Espionage goes both way,” Rubin told the Washington Free Beacon. “And even if they seek a completely indigenous system, we often forget that adversaries can learn as much from failed experiments as from successful ones. Time is not on our side. Every month that passes narrows the gap between a resurgent Iran and a stagnant West.”

When it comes to Iran’s ballistic missile system for instance, Tehran has made “great strides,” Rubin said. ”And, when it comes to nuclear weapons, they are on the verge of becoming the next North Korea. Heck, some Iranian negotiators have actually described North Korea as a model to emulate rather than a country to condemn.”

The announcement of these new missile defense systems and other weapons speaks to Iran’s desire to flex its military muscle in region, and even the world, Rubin said.

“No one in the White House should underestimate the Iranian leadership and its determination,” he said. “We may call Iran a ‘regional power’ but in its own rhetoric, Iranian officials describes themselves as a pan-regional power. Some of the regime’s ideologues actually believe they could be a global power and so they seek to match if not better whatever any competitor has.”

Gantz: Hamas leaders are hiding, we will hit them when we want

August 7, 2014

Gantz: Hamas leaders are hiding, we will hit them when we want
by Lilach Shoval and Yoav Limor August 7, 2014


(Gantz stated, “Hamas leaders are hiding in their bunkers. We will hit them when we want to, wherever we want to.” – LS)

“Every single one of Hamas’ infrastructures has been dealt a severe blow,” IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz says • “We spared no effort to warn civilians, but we never lost sight of our primary mission — to protect Israel and its citizens.”

The Israel Defense Forces “has dealt Hamas a severe blow and we will not hesitate to continue our operations to ensure the Israeli public’s safety,” IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz told reporters Wednesday, in a press briefing held in the GOC Southern Command’s Gaza Sector, where he reviewed Operation Protective Edge.

“We are at the end of a long military operation, which began with an extensive aerial campaign and evolved into a significant ground campaign inside the Gaza Strip. This has resulted in severe damage to Hamas and the destruction of its strategic assets, including its infrastructure, its command and control posts, its ability to fire [rockets] and especially its tunnels’ infrastructure,” Gantz said.

“Every single one of Hamas’ infrastructures has been dealt a severe blow. Hamas commanders, who are hiding in bunkers underneath what they consider sensitive sites, will come out — if they come out — and see the devastation they have, unfortunately, brought on the Gaza Strip.

“The IDF has spared no effort to warn [Palestinian] civilians and to pinpoint its actions, but we never lost sight our primary mission — to protect Israel and its citizens.

“Hamas is to blame for the tragic devastation in Gaza. Hamas leaders caused it by operating in populated areas. I truly hope that this lesson will be internalized by the Gazans, because we will not hesitate to continue our operations, to exercise our full force, whenever and wherever necessary, to ensure the Israeli public’s safety.”

Gantz noted that “the troops are redeploying to continue defending the sector, and we are ready to forge on. We are not done and we are ready for whatever order comes next.”

“If [security] incidents take place we will know how to respond. If developments take place on the ground — we have the ability, the determination and the necessary force to go wherever we are needed, for as long as it takes,” Gantz said.

Commenting on the working relations between the military and the government, Gantz said, “Overall, we work closely together. The government directs the military and we translate their directives into operational and strategic instructions, which can be executed well on the ground.”

Addressing the concerns raised by the residents of the Gaza area communities, who were told by the military Wednesday that they could return to their homes, Gantz said, “I’m convinced that the residents can return to their homes and live their lives here as they did before [the Gaza campaign]. Peace and quiet has and will be restored to the area. IDF troops are not going anywhere. We will remain fully deployed, ready for any future challenge. Together with the residents, we will continue to develop the area’s security.”

Asked about the fact that Hamas’ leaders were unharmed during the operation, Gantz stated, “Hamas leaders are hiding in their bunkers. We will hit them when we want to, wherever we want to.”

Commendations, inquests underway

“There’s no doubt about it — we won,” Golani Brigade Commander Col. Rasan Alian, who was wounded in heavy clashes with Hamas and defied doctors orders to return to his troops, told Israel Hayom.

“We accomplished our missions and we would have been more than willing to carry on. The soldiers wanted to go further [into Gaza], to apply more pressure, and had we been given the order, nothing would have been able to stop us,” he said.

Alian, who has become one of the officers most synonymous with the Gaza campaign, led the Golani Brigade through several fateful clashes in Shujaiyya — a Hamas stronghold — during which 16 soldiers were killed.

The Golani Brigade, he said, killed over 100 terrorists and destroyed three major terror tunnels leading from the Gaza Strip into Israel.

Meanwhile, the IDF has released 27,000 of the 82,000 reservists called up ahead of and during Operation Protective Edge. Some 55,000 reservists remain on active duty, but a military source said the IDF would release them “as soon as circumstances allow for it.”

In the coming weeks, the military plans to review the issue of special commendations for soldiers who demonstrated heroism on the battlefield. A military official said that the Givati Brigade’s Lt. Eitan — the officer who pursued the terrorists attempting to abduct the remains of Lt. Hadar Goldin, killed in heavy fighting in Rafah on Aug. 1 — is likely to receive a citation.

The military is also expected to investigate several operational incidents, including the attack on the armored personnel carrier in Shujaiyya, where seven soldiers were killed; the attack on an IDF post near Nahal Oz, where five soldiers were killed; and the tunnel attacks near the kibbutzim of Nir Am and Nahal Oz.

The IDF has already launched an inquiry into the implementation of the Hannibal Protocol — the military directives designed to prevent soldiers’ abductions — during the clash in which Goldin was killed.

The General Staff is also set to debate whether the Gaza campaign was an “operation” or a “war,” since the distinction carries with its significant financial ramifications for both the military and the Gaza vicinity communities.

Among the challenges the military faces outside the battlefield is the growing demand by the international community to investigate the alleged “war crimes” committed during Operation Protective Edge.

The IDF has made sure to investigate operational incidents as they took place, and military sources said the IDF is better prepared to counter any such accusations.

The Results of Our Poll are In.

August 6, 2014

The Results of Our Poll are In.
by Louisiana Steve date August 6, 2014


Thanks to everyone who participated. We had a total of 59 responses. Of these, 7 of you felt the cease fire would only last a day or less. Another 7 gave it 2 days while only 4 gave it another day. The rest, who totaled a whopping 41, voted the cease fire will last for the full term of 72 hours. Clearly a lot of you out there feel the cease fire will hold. Please feel free to share your thoughts by posting a comment to this post. Thanks again. – LS