May 10, 2016
“Many Bases”
Culture and Sports Minister Miri Regev is working on a proposal that would
require all institutions that receive state funds, or whose facilities were
built by the State of Israel, to fly the Israeli flag. This would include
sports centers, soccer fields, cultural institutions and theaters, etc.
Sounds like a no-brainer, does it not? But this is to apply to Jewish
and Arab municipalities, and there remains the lingering possibility that there
might be push-back somewhere along the line. No, let me be honest: there
is a good likelihood of objections being raised somewhere within the Arab
community.
Which is why what Regev is doing is good news. This is an instance
of Israel moving in the right direction.
"It is unfathomable that flying the flag in
cultural institutions and in sports arenas that were built by the state be left
to the discretion of one person or the other," she said. "The
institutions that Israel builds should wave the flag with pride."
Credit: mfa
~~~~~~~~~~
The Shin Bet (Israel’s national security agency or Shabak) has a new head:
Nadav Argaman.
Courtesy Shin
Bet
Having grown up on a kibbutz in the Beit She’an, Argaman joined the Sayeret
Matkal special forces unit of the IDF and from there moved on to Shin Bet.
Most of his career was spent in the most prestigious and highly secretive
“Operations Division.” Notable for me is the fact the he was responsible
for the assassination of “The Engineer,” Yahya Ayyash,
chief bomb-maker for Hamas, and, within that capacity, head of the West Bank
battalion of Hamas’s military wing, Izz ad-Din al-Qassam
Brigades. A terrorist who very much needed
eliminating.
See more:
~~~~~~~~~~
And speaking of the Shin Bet...
It was announced last Thursday that the Shin Bet had, on April 16,
apprehended a Izz ad-Din al-Qassam operative who had slipped into Israel from
Gaza carrying knives. Mahmoud Atauna, 29, confessed
readily enough that he was on a mission to kill whichever Israelis he
encountered. But that was just the beginning of what he revealed to
Israeli security – as he had been involved in tunnel activities;
He spoke about “the physical features of tunnels in
northern Gaza, about techniques used by Hamas in digging them, and about the use
of private homes and institutions by Hamas, from which it digs the
tunnels.
“He also provided information on the means and materials Hamas
uses. During questioning, Atauna pointed to many digging centers, and to
tunnel shafts that are supposed to serve the Nuhba [Hamas’s elite unit]
operatives for attacks during fighting with Israel.”
He provided names of others who worked with him, and information on
hospitals and private homes used for the storage of weapons. His own home
was “a storage center for many weapons, including bombs,
assault rifles, and suicide bomb vests, which he was supposed to distribute
before a large-scale conflict with Israel broke out.”
~~~~~~~~~~
.
It was also on Thursday that the IDF announced another Hamas tunnel had
been discovered emerging from southern Gaza into Israeli territory. It is
28 meters deep and runs close to the tunnel that was discovered last
month.
Credit: IDF
Spokesman
“The IDF considers above and below-ground terror
activity a violation of the State of Israel’s sovereignty and a threat to its
citizens and deems Hamas solely responsible,” a spokesperson said. “It is our
job to locate and destroy them [tunnels in Israel’s territory].”
The IDF spokesperson further indicated that the tunnel was uncovered using
a combination of intelligence, technology and engineering. What I would
say, based on all I’ve read, is that it was the information gleaned from the
Hamas operative that did the trick. Once he provided approximate
parameters of the tunnel, hi-tech equipment enabled its exposure.
~~~~~~~~~~
As a result of IDF attempts to unearth Hamas tunnels, the situation at the
border grew hot last week. Mortar shells were fired at IDF soldiers who
were at work near the border in at least 12 incidents between Tuesday and
Friday. Friday night and early Saturday, two rockets were fired into
Israel.
Israel responded, first by returning fire in response to the mortar
shelling and then via a series of five airstrikes into Gaza aimed at Hamas
targets.
Credit: FT
For a period of time, there was serious speculation as to how much these
hostilities were going to escalate.
~~~~~~~~~~
As I write there is quiet, but it is an uneasy quiet.
Israel has begun dismantling the best offensive weapon Hamas had, which was
being enhanced in preparation for a war some time down the road. Hamas
cannot force the IDF to stop looking for tunnels in Israeli territory (as more
most certainly exist). The IDF is in possession of some stunningly
detailed intelligence now, as well as machinery that utilizes advanced
technology.
As IDF spokesman Peter Lerner said: “The
repeated attacks against the IDF activities to locate and destroy cross-border
tunnels will not be tolerated. Hamas’s diabolical plan to infiltrate
into Israeli communities must be stopped. The IDF has the obligation and
a duty to safeguard the people in southern Israel and the sovereignty of our
borders, we will continue to do so.” (Emphasis
added)
What Hamas could do, however (but apparently chooses not to do at this
point) is continue to fire across the border, inviting retaliation from the IDF
so that an escalation of major proportions takes place.
The only thing to be said now is that the situation is volatile, and that
the dynamic is shifting.
There have been some international suggestions made regarding a “truce,” in
which Hamas would agree to refrain from shooting into Israel in return for
Israel’s agreement to stop searching for tunnels. These
suggestions infuriate me. A truce is in order when there is
aggressive action between two parties. However, Israeli action
against the tunnels that have been dug in Israeli territory is absolutely
legitimate self-defense and does not constitute aggression against
Hamas. We must trust that we can take Lt. Col. Lerner, who is
speaking for the IDF, at his word.
~~~~~~~~~~
The biggest question here, I would imagine, is what Hamas leaders decide is
in their best interest. Before the discovery of the tunnels, and the
capture of Atauna, it did not seem to be the case that they were on the verge of
precipitating another war. That they were preparing to do so down the
road, of course. But our greatly enhanced ability to uncover their tunnels
has to have them furious and frustrated. Will they see it as wiser to
provoke an escalation soon, while there are still tunnels that might be
utilized? Or would they prefer to hold off because they have not completed
other sorts of preparations and they have barely begun to recover from the last
war?
~~~~~~~~~~
All of this echoes enormously because of what broke in the news the other
day: A report on political failures during the 2014 Gaza war by State Controller
Yoseph Shapira was leaked.
Credit: Moti
Milrad
“According to the leaked report, the comptroller first slams Netanyahu,
Ya’alon and former IDF Chief-of Staff Lt. Gen. (res.) Benny Gantz (pictured) for
failing to warn the security cabinet about intelligence they had from the Shin
Bet about the possibility of war with Hamas prior to the start of Operation
Protective Edge...”
Credit: Getty
“Next, the report attacks the trio for failing to hold serious security
meetings about the Hamas tunnel threat...”
Needless to say, the entire situation has been highly politicized.
Netanyahu’s defenders say this was leaked simply to damage him and that the
information was drawn from a draft that is greatly different from the final
document. We will know more in this regard when the final document is
released to the public – which apparently is scheduled to happen soon.
Shapira has called upon Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit to investigate the
source of the leak, as well.
But even if the charges made by those defending Netanyahu et al are true to
a degree, this seems to me a case of “where there’s smoke...” I have my
own memories of realizing after the fact that there had been tunnels in Israeli
territory and that nothing had been done about them until the war started.
It was, in fact, Minister Naftali Bennett, who pushed the issue of the necessity
of an operation against the tunnels at cabinet meetings, to the great irritation
of Defense Minister Ya’alon.
And I remember the wide-scale feeling here that the war had ended
prematurely. There was enormous international pressure, and the incessant
Hamas PR about how Israel – with the most moral military in the world -
was wantonly killing civilians. Huge anti-Israel demonstrations in various
nations. It takes tremendous resolve on the part of our leaders to keep
going in the face of that. But that is what we must demand of our leaders:
spines of steel.
~~~~~~~~~~
Especially now, we need leaders who are strong and proud.
There have been instances of late of some in leadership positions – not all
by any means! – who seem too eager to show the world how tough we can be on our
own and how “nice” to others.
There was the rush in certain quarters to prematurely condemn the soldier
who killed a wounded terrorist in Hevron – before the facts were known.
Chief among these was Ya’alon, who spoke with great harshness, when he should
have simply said that he had confidence that the military courts would see
justice done - that it was a point of pride with the military that justice would
be sought. The soldier, Elor Azaria, is standing trial now and there has been
some discomfiting press about that, as well.
Credit: Flash90
One gets the feeling that there may be a fear that if he is found innocent
of manslaughter – and it is possible that he is innocent of
manslaughter even if his judgment was poor - then the world will accuse us of
going easy on murderers of Arabs. In fairness to the IDF, there seems a
strongly held conviction that he is guilty and must not get away with what he
did. Right now, the court is looking for a plea bargain.
~~~~~~~~~~
And there was Netanyahu’s maddening but unsurprising reversal of his order
– of just weeks previous - not to return bodies of terrorists to their
families. He gave the word to Internal Security Minister Gilad Erdan, who
has authority regarding terror acts inside the Green Line, and to Defense
Minister Moshe Dayan, who oversees the Civil Administration in Judea and
Samaria, that they were free to release bodies at their discretion with the
proviso that the funerals would be very small and quiet affairs. Bad policy, in
my opinion, to have different people making decisions on the same issue in
different areas. (I wrote recently about Harry Truman’s motto that “The
Buck Stops Here,” but I guess Netanyahu missed that.)
Erdan is opposed to release. But Ya’alon wasted no time.
Ahmed Reyad Shehada was shot dead by IDF forces after
ramming his car into a group of soldiers, injuring three, one critically.
Forthwith, his body was returned. And guess what? A huge funeral for him
attended by thousands took place in a suburb of Ramallah.
Credit: Flash 90
This does not serve us well.
~~~~~~~~~~
Within hours, a siren will sound signaling the beginning of Yom HaZikaron,
Israeli Memorial Day. And so I leave off writing now and will in my next
posting look at this most somber day of mourning and the joyous Yom Ha’Atzmaut,
Israeli Independence Day, which follows.
~~~~~~~~~~
I close with Neshama Carlebach singing “Shomer Yisrael” – Guardian of
Israel - a traditional prayer.
The video includes a mix of pictures about Israel.
Guardian of Israel,
protect the remnant of
Israel
Don't let Israel be destroyed
Those who say "Shma
Yisrael"
Guardian of the unique nation
Protect the remnant of
the unique people
Don't let the unique nation be destroyed
Those who
proclaim the oneness of your name;
"Hashem is our G-d, Hashem is
One"
(Guardian of Israel)
Guardian of the holy nation
Protect the remnant of
the holy people
Don't let the holy nation be destroyed
Those who proclaim
three-fold
Sanctifications to the Holy One
(Guardian of Israel)
~~~~~~~~~~
©
Arlene Kushner.
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