Is War on the Horizon? A Tale of Two Fronts

Similar documents
Iranian Responses to Growing Tensions with Israel and an Initial Assessment of Their Implications from an Iranian Standpoint. Dr.

Iranian Targets Hit in Syria by the IDF and Responses in Iranian Media

Israeli air strikes against Syria biggest since 1982

U.S. Admits Airstrike in Syria, Meant to Hit ISIS, Killed Syrian Troops

The Strategic Challenges facing Israel

Overview. Tehran continues to deny Israeli reports about Iranian involvement in the clashes last

Regional Issues. Conflicts in the Middle East. Importance of Oil. Growth of Islamism. Oil as source of conflict in Middle East

Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center at the Center for Special Studies (C.S.S)

MINDS ON ACTIVITY SETTING THE STAGE. News in Review January 2013 Teacher Resource Guide EIGHT DAYS: Israel and Hamas

SIMULATION : The Middle East after the territorial elimination of the Islamic state in Iraq and Syria

Overview 1. On June 29, 2014, ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-baghdadi declared the establishment of the

Untangling the Overlapping Conflicts in the Syrian War

Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center at the Center for Special Studies (C.S.S)

Operation Pillar of Defense

ASSESSMENT REPORT. The Shebaa Operation: A Restrained Response from Hezbollah

The Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) leadership recently visited Iran and Lebanon to meet with

The Gaza Strip: A key point in the Israeli- Palestinian conflict

Overview. Iran is keeping a low profile with regards to the Northern Shield operation carried

Is a Sustainable Cease-Fire in Lebanon Realistic? If Not, What is the Alternative?

Security Threats in the Levant Basin

Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center at the Israel Intelligence Heritage & Commemoration Center (IICC)

Oil in the Middle East

November Guidelines for the demilitarization of Gaza and a long-term arrangement in the South. MK Omer Barlev

Overview. As tensions mount between Iran and the United States, the Commander of the Qods

II. From civil war to regional confrontation

"Military action will bring great costs for the region," Rouhani said, and "it is necessary to apply all efforts to prevent it."

Zechariah s Prophecy Comes to Life

Syria's Civil War Explained

IRMO BRIE F IRMO. Main Strategic Considerations of Contemporary Israel. By Yossi Peled. Introduction

A new Gaza crisis? BICOM Briefing. June Key points. Are we heading for a new conflict in Gaza? What is the current situation on the ground?

CUFI BRIEFING HISTORY - IDEOLOGY - TERROR

Syria's Civil War Explained

Turkish Offensive on Islamic State in Syria Caught U.S. Off Gua...

Motives for Israel s Intensified Military Strikes against Syria

March 28, Installation of the camp close to Jabalia, Gaza. March 26, Media command installed prior to the march to host journalists.

The impact of the withdrawal of the American troops from Syria on the campaign against ISIS (Initial Assessment) Overview

The Iranian Modus Operandi

Defeating Terror Promoting Peace

Palestinian Terrorism: Analysis of 2017 and Forecast for 2018

The Islamic State's Fallback

a war with Lebanon s Hezbollah was just a matter of time and that such a conflict would include Syria, most observers dismissed the comment as little

Hamas constructs a buffer zone to secure its border with Egypt in response to a demand from the Egyptian regime.

Overview. Iran is attempting to downplay the involvement of the Qods Force of the Iranian

Assessing ISIS one Year Later

Israel Debates No. 1

GOD REPLACED ARABS EUROPEANS PAST-FUTURE MOSHE SISELSENDER

The United States proposed a UN General Assembly resolution condemning Hamas and other terrorist organizations in the Gaza Strip.

The Islamic State Strikes Back

Syria's idealistic revolution becomes a symbol of 21st century catastrophe

Weekly Conflict Summary

Overview. On December 11, 2018, the IDF exposed a third tunnel crossing the Israeli-Lebanese

Polls. Palestinian Center for POLICY and SURVEY. 9 December Survey Research Unit PRESS RELEASE. Palestinian Public Opinion Poll No (54)

2010 Annual Summary Data and Trends in Terrorism Annual Summary. Data and Trends in Terrorism

Turkey Breaks With Iran and Russia

Special Gaza War Poll 2 September 2014

Changing Borders. UN s 1947 Palestine Partition Plan After the 1949 War After the Six-Day War 1967

Operation Pillar of Defense Update No. 1 (November 15, 1300 Hours)

Bashar al-asad's Moment of Truth

Weekly Conflict Summary

Syria's Civil War Explained

Overview. Diplomatic efforts concerning the settlements of the Syrian war continue: In early

Pray for Israel 20 November 2012

A traditional approach to IS based on maintaining a unified Iraq, while building up the Iraqi Government, the Kurdistan Regional Government

NATO DEFENSE COLLEGE FOUNDATION MASHREQ STRATEGIC TRENDS

To: Date: :15 Subject: Congrats!

Omnibus Poll April 29-30, 2013

Why The U.S. Must Stop Supporting Kurdish Forces In Syria BY POLITICAL INSIGHTSApril 3, 2018

Professor Shibley Telhami,, Principal Investigator

Syria's Civil War Explained

How Did Syria Become a Victim of Regional and International Conflicts?

H. RES. ll IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

Syria's Civil War Explained

Syria and the sub terrain warfare the Hamas connection

INSIGHT FOR INTERCESSORS

Giving Peace a Chance in the Middle East

IRAN is in Ezekiel 38, but why NOT their PROXIES?

Yachad Ministries Israel's News Update July 26, 2018 (14 th of Av, 5778)

Russia s Involvement in the Issue of Syria

News of the Israeli-Palestinian Confrontation

Palestine and the Mideast Crisis. Israel was founded as a Jewish state in 1948, but many Palestinian Arabs refused to recognize it.

Islam and Terrorism. Nov. 28, 2016 Clarity in defining the enemy is essential to waging war.

DIA Alumni Association. The Mess in the Middle East August 19, 2014 Presented by: John Moore

Position Papers. Implications of Downed Russian Jet on Turkey-Russia Relations

ASSESSMENT REPORT. UN Resolution 2254 and the Prospects for a Resolution to the Syrian Crisis

Polls املركز الفلسطيين للبحوث السياسية واملسحية. Palestinian Center for POLICY and SURVEY. 21 March2016. Survey Research Unit PRESS RELEASE

The Jewish view of civilian casualties in war

Overview. Ahead of the summit between the American and Russian presidents in Helsinki, which

Palestinians in the Gaza Strip continue preparing a mass march to the Israeli border ("the great return march"), planned for Land Day, March 30, 2018

Hamas, Dahlan and the Palestinian Unity Government: What Next for the Gaza Strip?

MEMORANDUM. President Obama. Michael Doran and Salman Sheikh. DATE: January 17, BIG BET: The Road Beyond Damascus

The Islamic state (ISIS) and the subterranean warfare

News of Terrorism and the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict. Overview 1

My Study Trip to the Middle East

Implementing the lull arrangement 1 (Updated to June 29, 4 p.m.)

2009 Annual Summary Data and Trends in Palestinian Terrorism Annual Summary. Data and Trends in Palestinian Terrorism

The Continuing Arab-Israeli Conflict: Who has the right to Control Palestine?

2011 AIPAC and the State of Israel

200 dead despite Eid cease-fire in Syria

Hezbollah Handled a Palestinian Squad in Tulkarm, Which Planned Terrorist Attacks

Transcription:

July 29, 2017 17 Av 5778 Is War on the Horizon? A Tale of Two Fronts Over the past few weeks, I have received many concerned calls and messages regarding the recent situation in Gaza and Southern Israel, and most recently the significant escalation in Northern Israel following the downing of the Syrian Jet. Yoav Limor, a friend and a veteran military correspondent, encapsulates the situation and provides interesting analysis of the situation, below. Yoav has been covering the Middle East conflict for the last 25 years. He wrote the best-seller Captives of Lebanon and appears regularly on different media outlets in Israel and around the world. Israel's attention is currently split between the Gaza and Syria borders, as tensions on both may erupt unexpectedly.the Gaza border is highly volatile, and while Hamas proved it can be pressured, Israel will have to be flexible, too. Our own Eddy Azran hosing down the groves near Sderot

Israel found that it had to split its attention this week between its border with Syria, where tensions are high but the risk of escalation is low, and its border with the Gaza Strip, where the potential for escalation is very high, but the threat level is much lower. The number of security incidents on both borders was unusually high, and sometimes resembled an ongoing conflict. The challenge Israel is facing on both borders is maintaining deterrence without actually going to war. While it seems the Gaza border poses a constant headache to the IDF and the government, especially given that the tenuous truce with Hamas collapsed after only four days, Israel remains focused on the northern sector. Israel's concern lies in two circles and in a broader perspective, in three. The first circle is tactical and it is currently being waged in the Golan Heights, where the Syrian army is in the midst of a massive offensive to recapture the border area from rebels. The majority of the territory is already under Syrian President Bashar Assad's control. Some areas surrendered without a fight to avoid being pummeled to the ground. Villages whose residents insist on resisting the Syria army receive the familiar treatment, which over the past seven years has left hundreds of thousands of Syrians dead across the wartorn country. The majority of the fighting is currently being waged between the Syrian army and the Khalid ibn al-walid Army, a Salafi jihadist group affiliated with the Islamic State group. Israel is not a party to this fight. Its rumored ties with Syrian rebel groups are no longer relevant and any effort vis-à-vis the local population is mainly humanitarian. But Israel has no intention of containing the ricochets of the Syrian civil war. IDF policy has always been to retaliate over every case of errant Syrian fire that hit Israeli territory. Now, as the Syrian army's grip on the other side of the border grows stronger that policy is more important than ever. The fighting on the Syrian side of the Golan border challenged the IDF three times this week: The first time was on Monday, when Syrian missiles launched at rebel forces triggered the David's Sling defense system, whose operational debut proved a failure; the second time was on Tuesday, when a Syrian fighter jet inadvertently breached Israeli airspace and was shot down; and the third time was on Thursday, when suspected ISIS rockets fired at Syrian forces hit the Sea of Galilee.

Israel was not the target in either case but retaliated in all three. The rationale for that is simple there are no minor violations of the 1974 cease-fire agreement between Israel and Syria, and Israel will not elasticize its policy on the matter. After all, any sign that Israel's air defenses are less than complete could be exploited by far more hostile elements, such as Iran and Hezbollah. This policy will likely be maintained in the future, but it is doubtful it could trigger a security escalation. The Syrian army is battered and bruised by the relentless civil war and it has no interest in taking on the IDF. This policy also plays an important part in the second circle, which is waged much farther from the northern border and seeks to prevent Iran from entrenching itself militarily in Syria. In this respect, the past week was highly complex... From a military standpoint, the Israeli strikes on Iranian assets in Syria continued, including according to foreign media reports on a major weapons production facility. From a diplomatic standpoint Sergey Lavrov and Chief of Staff Gen. Valery Gerasimov, who visited Israel this week suggested allowing Iranian forces to deploy 100 kilometers (62 miles) from the border an improvement over a prior, 80- kilometer (50-mile) proposal but Israel refused, as this was merely a minor difference that, given their firepower, would have no real impact on the Iranians. It is doubtful that Israel alone could thwart Iran's plans to tighten its grip on Syria. To truly achieve that it needs the United States and Russia, which is why it is taking a great interest in the third, strategic circle, which involves U.S.-Russian talks about Syria's future. It is there and there alone that the question of Iran's presence in Syria will be decided. Israel may be able to disrupt Iran's efforts in Syria in a myriad of ways, but without the help of world powers, it will find it exceedingly difficult to remove Iran from Syria.

Under these circumstances, the northern sector will continue to engage Israel intensively even after the Syrian army completes its takeover of the country's southwest. In the post-war era, the IDF's activity will be more complex, because Assad and his forces will have gained confidence. For this reason, if Israel does not want to wake up to a reality where its hands are tied, it must shape the rules of the game it wishes to apply without delay and make them clear to both Washington and Moscow. The end of optimism Meanwhile, on the Gaza border, Israel's patience is wearing thin. Last weekend's flare-up triggered a massive Israeli strike on Hamas targets and prompted the terrorist group to reach out to Egypt and ask for a cease-fire. This, together with a sharp decrease in Palestinian arson terrorism, gave Israel the impression that calm could be restored to the area without a full-scale military operation. This slight optimism was shattered Wednesday when a Palestinian sniper shot and wounded an IDF officer whose troops were trying to keep a group of Gazan children away from the border. While the gunman was an operative affiliated with one of the smaller, rogue terrorist groups in Gaza, the message this incident sent was both clear and highly problematic, namely that Hamas is either unable or unwilling to enforce the cease-fire, and that the Palestinian terrorists are eager to recreate last weekend's successful slaying of an Israeli soldier. Givati Brigade Staff Sgt. Aviv Levi Many in Israel this week called on the IDF to pummel/crush/topple Hamas. Militarily, Israel has no problem doing that, as the disparity in military might is so dramatic that it would take a great deal of selfflagellation mixed with a fundamental misunderstanding of the situation to conclude that Israel is the one wary of confrontation.

But the question, as always, is bigger than the mere deployment of fighter jets and tanks. This is a matter of policy and Israel, even last week, still had not defined the objectives of a potential war in Gaza, should it be dragged into one. Outline these objectives is crucial precisely because the next clash is right around the corner. These objectives will determine not only the conflict's immediate results in terms of property damage and potential casualties but also and mainly its long-term results and the ability to change Israel's reality vis-à-vis Gaza. For now, things seem to be taking their time. The aid package U.N. Middle East envoy Nickolay Mladenov is trying to put together for Gaza has yet to be completed and even when it is, it would take a great deal of optimism to believe that the Arab countries that pledge their help will stick to their word, especially given that behind the scenes, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas is sparing no effort to undermine these moves, knowing it would lead to war. Israel would be better off running things itself. Contrary to public perception, which can lead one to believe that Israel is constantly dancing to Gaza's tune, the past few weeks have proven that it is Hamas that succumbs to pressure and is wary of a confrontation. This can be used to promote a dialogue that could secure significant achievements, from restoring peace and quiet to the Gaza-vicinity communities, through the return of the remains of two IDF soldiers and the two Israelis held by Hamas, to the potential regulation of the weapon smuggling and production issues. Oron Shaul z"l and Hadar Goldin z"l Missing Israelis Abraham Mengistu and Hisham al-sayed

This would require Israel to keep an open mind and pursue strategic not political thinking, which would prioritize Israel's broader interest while making it clear to the public that there is no such thing as a "good war." Yossi Tanuri JFC-UIA Canada on the Web:www.jewishcanada.org JFC-UIA Canada 02 6202886 Unsubscribe Report spam Sent with ActiveTrail software