Netanyahu: Israel Faces Double Threat, From ISIS and Iran - Hana Levi Julian - http://www.jewishpress.com/news/breaking-news/netanyahu-israel-faces-double-threat-from-isis-and-iran/2015/07/02/
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu warned Thursday at a news conference in Be'er Sheva that Israel now faces two threats: that of Da'esh, or ISIS - and that of Iran.
Both issues were relevant to the condolences that Netanyahu expressed on behalf of Israel to the Egyptian people over the slaughter of dozens of police officers and Egyptian soldiers in Sinai on Wednesday by ISIS terrorists. An IDF official told media earlier in the evening there is also evidence indicating that Hamas terrorists - who are backed by Iran - were involved in helping the Sinai terrorists who attacked the Egyptian security personnel.
"Up until several months ago, when we said that ISIS was carrying out actions on our borders, people were skeptical," Netanyahu said. "And here we see before our very eyes ISIS operating with unusual brutality on both our northern and southern borders.
"Our hearts are with the Egyptian people and we send our condolences to the Egyptian government and to the families whose loved ones have fallen in the struggle against vicious terrorism.
"The actions that we have seen from ISIS are nothing compared to the capabilities being built by the Iranian regime," the prime minister continued, referencing the current nuclear deal being negotiated with Tehran six world powers.
The terrorist groups aligned against Israel in Gaza and Lebanon, he noted, are also all generously supported by Iran.
"It is clear that nobody in their right mind would give ISIS nuclear weapons. But in the major powers' current talks with Iran they are giving it - this extremist state that is exporting terrorism around the world - the ability to develop an arsenal of nuclear weapons, of very many nuclear bombs along with the means to deliver them - long-range missiles," Netanyahu pointed out.
"Therefore, we now face two threats - from ISIS and from Iran. We need not strengthen one at the expense of the other. We need to weaken both and prevent the aggression and arming of both.
"I tell you that in the face of these forces of darkness, which repress human rights, murder people and hang them up in public squares, against these forces we are moving forward here in Be'er Sheva with the cyber park," Netanyahu went on, describing a new project that has been launched in the southern city.
"We see very great progress here in Be'er Sheva; this is a global revolution. While this revolution gives us considerable economic strength, as well as security and military strength, it requires us to leave behind the usual patterns, move on to other things and set forth a vision.
"The vision of Ben-Gurion was correct. Another vision must be added to it, that of commercial development. When commercial interests are joined to these companies, and they can profit, they come here and create growth that we could not even dream about.
"Here we are receiving all global forces, among them the strongest forces in the global economy, in Be'er Sheva, the Negev and the State of Israel because we created a commercial interest for them. This is a revolution. This will serve all citizens of the State of Israel, all of them without exception.
"The same thing can also be done now with the gas reserves. The gas reserves are a great gift that we have received. A vast quantity of gas is under the seabed. A small part of it has been extracted; a very great part is still in reserves under the sea. We must extract it from there. It is commercial firms that are extracting it.
"We have seen to it that 60% of their profits will enter into state coffers. We are using this, and will use it, for health, social welfare, education and security. We are talking about hundreds of billions of shekels - not hundreds of millions of shekels - but hundreds of billions of shekels in the coming years.
"We need to see to it that these funds reach us, thanks to the gas that reaches us. We proposed an outline, everyone can read it. It is a balanced outline. It is a correct outline. It is an outline that could bring this resource to the State of Israel.
"Therefore, we will continue to advance both the cyber industry here and the extraction of the gas from the sea, both the defense of our borders and cooperation with all countries in the region that want to fend off the darkness and bring about progress."
Inside Israel's Secret War in Syria - http://www.jewishworldreview.com/0615/secret_syrian_israel_pact.php3
It was a random, friendly encounter between a soldier and a convicted terrorist. In February, Sudki al-Makt was driving through the Golan Heights, a mountainous plateau that Israel has occupied since 1973, when he arrived at a military base near the Syrian border. An Israeli soldier came out to ask him to turn around, and the two struck up a conversation.
A resident of the Golan and a supporter of Syria-Israel's longtime enemy-al-Makt, 48, spent more than two decades in prison for plotting to attack Israeli military bases. Three years ago, when he was released, he allegedly intended to help the Iranian-backed Syrian regime in Damascus and its Shiite Lebanese ally, Hezbollah. The Israelis, he believed, were working with Sunni Islamist rebels across the border, and al-Makt allegedly set out to prove it.
The soldier he met that day, Hillal Chalabi, 19, was in his first month of service in the Golan, and he and al-Makt had something in common: They were both Druze, members of a small sect of Islam that exists mainly in Israel, Lebanon and Syria. Most of the 120,000 Druze in Israel are citizens and serve in the military. In the Golan, however, many refuse to accept Israeli citizenship and remain loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
During that brief conversation, al-Makt allegedly turned the young soldier into his informant. He told him Jabhat al-Nusra, Al-Qaeda's militant group in Syria, was threatening Druze on the other side, and that to save them, he needed Chalabi's help. The soldier gave the older man his phone number, and later that day al-Makt called for his first tip. Several injured Syrian rebels, Chalabi allegedly told him, were crossing into Israel for medical treatment-a policy Israel says is purely humanitarian. Chalabi allegedly told him where to wait to film the Israelis transporting injured rebels to a hospital.
That evening, al-Makt came to the lookout point with a video camera and two friends. The footage, which later aired on Syrian TV, was dark and failed to capture anything concrete. But al-Makt and Chalabi allegedly stayed in touch, and nearly a week later they made plans to meet again.
That meeting never happened. Soon afterward, Israeli authorities arrested them, and the details of their relationship are described in an indictment against al-Makt, whose trial opened in Nazareth in June. He is charged with espionage and other security-related offenses for publishing reports on Facebook and YouTube about the Israeli army's activity in the Golan and allegedly contacting Syrian officials with promises of secret information. The trial touches on one of the most sensitive questions in the Middle East today: Is Israel cooperating with the Syrian rebels in the Golan Heights in the war against Assad? And if so, how? Why? And with what groups?
Much of what the indictment calls "secret Israeli army activity" is blacked-out in the document, and al-Makt's lawyer declined to comment. But Yamin Zidan, his former attorney, who wasn't allowed to represent him at the trial because he lacked security clearance, believes the full indictment, if disclosed, would reveal what Israel is really up to in Syria. "The conversations," he says, "show the level of cooperation between Israel and the rebels against Assad."
'50 Shades of Black'
Since the Syrian civil war broke out in 2011, many observers believe Israel has been bombing arms shipments from Iran, Assad's ally, as they've passed through Syria en route to Hezbollah in Lebanon. But Israel denies supporting any side in the brutal conflict.
Since February 2013, however, the Jewish state has provided medical care to injured Syrians. So far, 1,600 of them-most badly injured-have been treated in hospitals in northern Israel. The effort has produced uplifting stories of injured Syrian children saved by Israeli doctors. But the majority of patients have been young men of military age, and as the al-Makt trial shows, their affiliation with the various rebel groups remains shrouded in secrecy.
Since 1974, a United Nations peacekeeping force has been stationed in the Golan Heights to monitor the cease-fire between Israel and Syria. For the past year, most of the peacekeepers have been stationed on the Israeli side after Nusra abducted a U.N. battalion from Fiji in Syria (they were later released). In their latest report to the U.N., the peacekeepers mentioned several meetings along the border between armed Syrian rebels and Israeli soldiers. They saw the Israelis take injured Syrians into their vehicles and load rebel trucks with sacks. What was in those sacks remains unclear, but Israeli sources, speaking in an off-the-record briefing, say the contents included food and blankets for the winter.
The U.N. report doesn't specify which rebel group the Israelis were helping. As in other areas of Syria, figuring out who the rebels are is often a complicated process. The groups that have operated along the border range from secular nationalists such as the Free Syrian Army (FSA) to Islamist radicals like Nusra and its splinter groups. There's also a low-level ISIS presence. But the main force operating in the area, Israeli sources say, is Nusra. "What we have on the other side is 50 shades of black," says an Israeli senior army official recently, on the condition of anonymity, referring to the black flags used by Nusra and other Islamist groups.
What the Israeli military will say on the record is that it is offering medical care to injured Syrians. Over the past year and a half, for instance, Israeli doctors in the Rebecca Sieff Hospital in Safed have treated around 500 of them. "If you ask me whether we are treating Nusra fighters, I can tell you honestly-I don't know," says Dr. Salman Zarka, the hospital's director. "We don't ask them which group they belong to, and if we ask how they got injured, it is to differentiate between a blast injury and a penetrating one. We don't care who our patients are-we just try to save their lives." The Israeli military says it has a kind of "don't ask, don't tell" policy when it comes to the injured fighters and assumes radical Islamists will not feel comfortable getting treated in Israel. The doctors I met say a few rebels demanded to be sent back once they discovered they were in Israel.
Until recently, Zarka was a colonel in the Israeli army and ran a field hospital along the border to treat injured Syrians. He is Druze, the first to be appointed as a hospital director in Israel, and is well-aware of the rumors circulating in the area. "Many in my [Druze] community ask me, 'How can you help the same people who may shoot our brothers across the border?'" he says. "But what should I do, let a man die? Even if there were a Nusra fighter sitting right here, with a bullet in his abdomen, should I shoot him again? Or as a doctor, should I save his life? To me, it's clear, and the fact that Israel is treating its enemies is proof of the country's real humanitarian commitment."
I met four rebels in May on the first floor of the hospital in a room overlooking the Jordan Valley and the Golan Heights. The entrance was closed, and an Israeli soldier kept an eye on who went in and out. One of the young men had pins and screws in both legs and says he was a fighter for the FSA. His legs, he says, were broken and he asked to be taken to an Israeli hospital because local doctors couldn't treat him properly. "I was protecting our village from Assad's forces," he says. "[I] was injured in a bombing from a plane." The young man, who asked that I not use his name, says he was looking forward to returning to the battlefield.
'A Jungle on the Other Side'
After I left the hospital, I drove north along a narrow road to Majdal Shams, a Druze village nearby. The area is mostly dry and mountainous, with a smattering of extinct volcanoes, some of which house Israeli army basis. As I drove, I occasionally heard explosions and saw smoke rising from the ground on the Syrian side. Sometimes, the fields caught fire from the mortars.
As I drew closer to Majdal Shams, the fighting seemed to intensify. Not far from Hader, the Syrian village directly across the border, I heard machine gun fire and saw tracer bullets. The Druze live on both sides of the border, and many of the same families reside in the two villages, separated only by an electronic fence.
Unlike most Druze in Israel, who serve in the army, many of the Druze in Majdal Shams have long been supporters of Assad. But the war has begun to change that, especially among younger villagers. Today, the village is divided between those who support Assad and those who back the rebels. One reason is the regime's brutality. Another is Israeli protection. "Deep down, everyone here knows that they owe their security to Israel," says Dolan Abu-Saleh, the head of the Majdal Shams municipality. Abu-Saleh says Israeli authorities promised they will protect their relatives if Nusra or ISIS attacks Hader. "There is a plan to evict residents of Hader here to Israel, to safety," he says. "There are understandings, and Israel knows how to make sure that Nusra does not attack Hader and the other Druze villages around." To him, this is comforting; he has family on the other side, and in Syria Islamists have kidnapped, killed or forcibly converted Druze.
Saleh Tarif, a Druze leader and former minister in the Israeli government, is also confident Israel will help his fellow Druze in Syria. "I can carefully estimate that Israel is using a dual approach-it has certain understandings with groups like Jabhat al-Nusra, and it also uses its power to threaten it not to take certain actions," he says. "It's a jungle on the other side, and Israel has to do what it can." Israeli officials will not confirm their Druze policy here, but have offered hints. "The [Israeli] alliance with the Druze people does not stop at the border," Major General Amir Eshel, the commander of the air force, recently told a meeting of Druze leaders.
But in mid-June, Nusra fighters killed 20 Druze villagers near Idlib, in northern Syria. And for the first time, the Druze on the Israeli side of the border held demonstrations in the Golan Heights, publicly demanding that Israel protect their Syrian relatives. Not long after the killings, Nusra apologized, saying it regretted the incident.
Which is perhaps why Israel seems content with having radical Islamist militants on yet another border-at least for now: Its enemies-both the Islamists and Assad-are fighting one another, and the Druze who support the Syrian government may soon become unlikely allies of the Jewish state. "Our situation in the northern arena has never been better," General Yair Golan, the Israeli deputy chief of general staff, said in early June. "Throughout Syria and Lebanon, there are international jihadi organizations which do not act against us and are busy fighting Assad, Hezbollah and Iranian forces."
Yet the situation along the border is still in flux. After my visit to Majdal Shams, fighting intensified between the rebels and the Syrian regime. In mid-June, sirens sent thousands of Israelis in the Golan scrambling to shelters, and the rebels-it's not clear which groups-have reportedly surrounded Hader.
As the fighting continues, al-Makt remains behind bars, and the Israeli soldier who allegedly helped him will soon face a military court. The details of both trials will likely remain secret-much like Israel's role in the war on the other side of its northern border.
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