Israel Update for November 2007



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While the Middle East media was overflowing during November with conflicting reports about the vapid summit, military tensions remained extremely high between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas group, and also in the north with both Syria and the Lebanese Hizbullah militia.

Near the Gaza Strip, Israeli Defense forces were beefed up in anticipation of a possible major operation into the Hamas-ruled coastal zone, designed to halt continuing Palestinian rocket attacks upon Israeli communities in the area. Meanwhile the Israeli government allowed the resumption of some agricultural shipments to European markets from the area, which were halted when the radical Muslim group seized power in a violent coup against the Palestinian Authority last June.

However at the same time, the government announced that Israeli generated electricity supplies to the zone would be gradually cut back beginning in early December, in response to the ongoing firing of Palestinian Kassam rockets into nearby Israeli population centers, especially into the battered town of Sderot. This came as Israeli Arab leaders joined their Palestinian cousins in declaring that they would never recognize Israel as a Jewish state.

Nuclear Clouds?

Full security alerts were called several times during the month around Israel's Dimona nuclear reactor as Israeli officials picked up unspecified signs that Damascus might be preparing to attempt a destructive missile strike on the Negev Desert facility, potentially releasing deadly radiation that could affect many parts of Israel and beyond.

Israeli media reports said that American-made Patriot missiles batteries were deployed around the reactor in early November in preparation for a possible Syrian Scud D missile attack upon the strategic facility. Built in the 1960's, it is located not far from Israel's fourth largest city, Beersheva, in the Negev Desert. The reports added that red alerts about a possible imminent Syrian strike were put into effect over two dozen times during a seven day period beginning on November 4. Iran has also vowed to target the site if either Israeli or American forces attempt to attack its burgeoning nuclear program.

Military experts say the results of a direct missile strike on the Dimona reactor would be extremely disastrous, releasing deadly radiation into the local atmosphere that could end up fatally poisoning tens or hundreds of thousands of people in the immediate vicinity of the attack, along with residents of nearby Jordan. Deadly radiation would probably also quickly spread into the Arab Gulf countries a few hundred miles to the east, and also to Iraq. Iran itself would probably feel the effects, along with other countries like Afghanistan and Pakistan beyond it, given that the prevailing winds normally flow from the Mediterranean Sea in the west toward the east.

Foreign press reports revealed that Israeli air force jets had successfully knocked out Syria's entire air defense radar system in a strategic missile strike on September 6. The action reportedly came just minutes before IDF warplanes bombed a Syrian nuclear facility that was in the final stages of construction in the eastern desert, not far from Iraq.

Direct American military involvement in the dramatic Israeli operation was reported by several Israeli and US media outlets during the month. United States officials would not publicly comment on the reports. US military sources told me that American air force jets had accompanied the Israeli warplanes during their mission, but had not dropped any bombs on the destroyed site. A well-known Israeli weapons expert said pre-attack satellite pictures taken of the site indicated that Syria had actually been constructing a nuclear weapons factory, not a reactor as was widely reported in the media.

Hizbullah Manuevers

Israeli military forces conducted large-scale ground and air maneuvers in the north of the country in early November to test their readiness to face a possible new round of fighting with Hizbullah and/or Syrian forces. Israeli naval vessels stationed in the Mediterranean Sea also participated in the coordinated exercises.

Several days later, Hizbullah said that it conducted its own massive war maneuvers not far from the Lebanese border with Israel. Although the reported military exercises were apparently carried out under the noses of thousands of international UN peacekeeping soldiers that are supposed to prevent the militia from visibly operating in the area, UN soldiers took no overt action. UN officials claimed they did not see any unusual activity in the area, which may have been due to the fact that the militiamen reportedly carried out their war preparations unarmed. Lebanese press reports said that Hizbullah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah monitored the border exercises on sight, which reportedly involved hundreds of highly trained militia fighters.

The United Nations issued a report the last day of October ominously revealing that the Lebanese Shiite Hizbullah militia had fully rearmed after last year's war with Israel. Released by UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon as required by Resolution 1701 which ended the 2006 war, the report said that the Iranian and Syrian backed force was now fully rearmed with weapons more advanced than those it deployed during the conflict. It revealed that the rogue militia now had rockets capable of striking most parts of Israel, including Tel Aviv. It added that the Lebanese force has three times as many land to sea missiles than it did before the war broke out in July 2006. One such missile struck and largely destroyed an Israeli ship patrolling off the coast of Beirut during the early stages of the 34-day conflict.

Pointing out the obvious, the UN report stated that Hizbullah's post war weapons acquirements had mostly come via illegal smuggling from nearby Syria. Picturing the situation as "grave" and a "threat to Lebanon's fragile stability," Ban Ki-Moon noted that Israel considers the Hizbullah's illegal arms acquisitions as "a strategic threat to its security and the safety of its citizens." In fact, many Israeli military analysts fear that Hizbullah may now have the capability to strike the Dimona nuclear reactor, which the group's Iranian paymasters have already publicly listed as a prime target. They worry that the Shiite regime in Iran may desire to spark off a new Hizbullah-Israel conflict, which could easily involve Syria, in order to deflect a possibly pending American assault on Tehran's outlawed nuclear program.

Despite the fact that it is clearly Hizbullah and Syria that are severely violating a key component of the UN ceasefire accord, the UN report also blasted Israel for what Ban Ki-Moon described as its "continuing violations of Lebanese air space." He charged that such overflights "undermine the credibility of the UN, and damage efforts to reduce tensions, build confidence and stabilize the situation in southern Lebanon." However Israeli analysts pointed out in response that IDF jets would not need to conduct constant surveillance flights over Lebanon if Hizbullah was not overtly smuggling in copious amounts of Syrian and Iranian rockets and other weaponry in obvious preparation for another round of attacks upon northern Israel's civilian population centers.

In a subsequent briefing to the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, the head of the IDF's military intelligence branch warned that Hizbullah is "getting stronger every day" as it "learns how to live with the beefed up UN force" now stationed near Israel's border with Lebanon. Brigadier General Yossi Baidatz also warned that Syria is smuggling in large amounts of state of the art Russian-made anti-aircraft and anti-tank weapons to Hizbullah. He added that Syria is also continuing to "update its Russian-supplied weapons arsenal" while its main Mideast ally Iran moves ever closer to possessing the ultimate weapon-nuclear warheads. He said the latest intelligence assessments predict that Iran will possess the doomsday bomb within a space of just two years, adding that hopes the extremist Shiite regime will be internally overthrown before then are undoubtedly pipe dreams.

With the region moving far more in the direction of a major war than imminent peace, it is reassuring to note that "The Lord has built up Zion, He has appeared in His glory. He has regarded the prayer of the destitute; He has not despised their prayer (Psalm 102:16). CR

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