Relative lull in terror as Israelis  absorb first shock and gear up for the next round - http://www.debka.com/article/24948/Relative-lull-in-terror-as-Israelis-absorb-first-shock-and-gear-up-for-the-next-round
Israelis  have absorbed the first shock of the wave of Palestinian terror unleashed in the  last two weeks. The Palestinians are likely absorbing the package of tough  penalties for terror and deterrents the Netanyahu government began putting  together Tuesday night. Wednesday, Oct. 14, saw relative calm after the deadly  violence reached a new peak Tuesday with the first Palestinian shooting attack  on a Jerusalem bus - this time by adults.
The  relative lull is expected to last only until the Palestinians and their Israeli  Arab supporters take stock, before inevitably launching their next round of  terror.
Meanwhile,  Jerusalem saw "only" two stabbing attacks. In the first, a terrorist wearing  army fatigues tried to stab a Border Guardsman at Nablus Gate in Jerusalem, and  was shot and killed by policemen and visitors. Two hours later, another  terrorist attacked a woman bus passenger at the city's central station. A police  special ops officer ran after him up and shot him dead.
One  of the counter-terror measures that went into effect Wednesday morning was the  Knesset Foreign Affairs and Security Committee's approval of Emergency Order 8  authorizing the mobilization of an additional 600 Border Guards combatants from  the reserves, over and above the 800 already called up.
debkafile's  military experts note that the rapid processing of this new intake with  equipment and operational orders will reduce the need to detach from their  regular duties the 500 IDF soldiers allocated for manning the streets of  Jerusalem.
That  is all to the good, because managing police officers and soldiers in harness is  bound to be problematic.
Israel  is not the first country to inject military strength into its capital to fight  terror. The British and French governments have been known to deploy paratroops  and armed personnel carriers into the streets of London and Paris when they were  beset by a rising level of terror. This deployment never lasted more than a few  days - just enough to calm a terrified citizenry.
 But  Jerusalem is different. The state of security is such that soldiers once in  place may face a long-term stay in the capital to contend with a long-running  security threat.
Another  difficulty is that the soldiers assigned to this mission have been pulled out of  tank, artillery and engineering courses with no training for combating urban  terror. Those who come from outside the city will furthermore need to  familiarize themselves with a new environment and its rhythms.
The  Jerusalem Police are special. They must cope with complex, demanding and  multi-tasking challenges to the town's security. More than one terror attack may  take place at different parts of the city. Unlike ordinary soldiers, they are  trained and have the experience to quickly spot and take action against a  terrorist in ordinary clothes who may pop up suddenly from among a large crowd  to sow death.
A  seasoned police officer can judge when to cut the assailant down to save lives  and when to arrest him.
 But  the IDF servicemen to be recruited for anti-terror duties in support of security  forces are much younger than the average policeman - on average around nineteen  years old. Their firearms and kits are designed for conventional warfare on the  Golan in the north or the Gaza Strip in the south - not for securing civilian  buses or heavy vehicular and pedestrian traffic in a crowded city  center.
That  Border Guards reservists were hastily mobilized at the same time as the military  units indicates that someone had the sense to understand that the presence of  IDF troops on the streets and buses was good psychological first aid for people  jumping at shadows for fear of a lone terrorist, but hardly an effective  operational arm for the war on terror.
Tensions over Temple Mount called ticking bomb in  Jerusalem - http://www.wtol.com/story/30242724/tensions-over-temple-mount-called-ticking-bomb-in-jerusalem
Israeli  forces are intensifying patrols on the streets of Jerusalem after a series of  stabbing attacks on Monday. This follows a weekend of attacks and clashes  between Palestinians and Israelis.
It's  arguably the most sensitive real estate on earth: The Temple Mount, the Haram  al-Sharif as it's known to Muslims, is the epicenter of the long, bitter  struggle between Israelis and Palestinians. 
In  September 2000, then Israeli opposition leader Ariel Sharon went there under  heavy security. "I came here to the holiest place of the Jewish people," said  Ariel Sharon, the former Israeli prime minister. 
His  visit sparked violent clashes, which marked the beginning of the second  Intifada, known to Palestinians as the Aqsa Intifada, after the Aqsa Mosque  located on the Temple Mount. 
And  once again, tensions there are fueling more violence, say young protesters in  the West Bank.
Why  are you here today? "Because the Aqsa Mosque we need for us. The Aqsa is for us.  We will never for, give up," said a Palestinian activist. 
It  is here that Jews believe their Holiest of Holies, the Temple of Solomon, once  stood.  For Muslims the Aqsa Mosque, which sits within the compound, is  where they believe the Prophet Mohamed made a miraculous night journey from  Mecca, before ascending to heaven.
When  Israel conquered Jerusalem in 1967, then Defense Minister Moshe Dayan pledged to  maintain a strict separation, barring Jews from worshiping on the Temple Mount  in what became known as the status quo. 
There  are few places more emotive to Palestinians and Israelis, says former Jerusalem  Deputy Mayor Meron Benvenisti. 
"Because  it's the focal point of the conflicting views or ideologies or narratives of  both national movements," Benvenisti said. 
Yusif  Natshe works for the Islamic Waqf, or endowment, that oversees the Haram  al-Sharif. Underneath the anger over perceived changes to the status quo is a  deeper issue.
"It  is the occupation which causes the frustration which causes really the unrest of  the Palestinians. And to imagine that some young people are ready to die for  such a cause," said Yusif Natshe, Islamic Waqf.
But  the status quo is eroding. In recent years Israeli authorities have allowed a  growing number of Jews to tour the area, and right wing Israeli politicians have  insisted on the right of Jews to pray there. 
In  July, an Israeli cabinet minister called for the building of the third temple on  the Temple Mount. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who leads a shaky coalition  dominated by hardliners, insists the status quo remains in place, and recently  barred Israeli politicians and officials from going to the Temple  Mount.
Palestinian  President Mahmoud Abbas has called for a non-violent protest against perceived  Israeli attempts to change the status quo.
And  as leaders on both sides exchange accusations, more, and even greater violence  around the site, is inevitable, warns Benvenisti.  "This is something that  is a ticking bomb. The question is how long you can postpone the explosion? And  for that you need realistic, smart politicians, and I'm afraid I don't find  them,"  Benvenisti said. 
If  this is the ticking bomb, what will the explosion look like?
Looking beyond the 'third  intifada' - By Louis Rene Beres -
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Looking-beyond-the-third-intifada-423861 
Unseen  implications of Palestinian statehood for regional nuclear war.
"It's  farewell to the drawing-room's civilized cry, The professor's sensible whereto  and why, The frock-coated diplomat's social aplomb, Now matters are settled with  gas and with bomb." - W.H. Auden, Danse Macabre
With  apparent suddenness, and a very deliberate brutality, Palestinian terrorists are  launching a new wave of indiscriminate assaults they proudly hail as a "third  intifada."
But  behind the protective veneer of language, where homicide is conveniently  transfigured into revolution, these latest Arab attacks remain what they have  always been - that is, crudely camouflaged expressions of rampant  criminality.
Jurisprudentially,  this is all perfectly obvious. Prima facie, under all pertinent international  law, calculated assaults on mostly women and children can never be sanitized or  justified. Always, rather, they represent codified crimes of war and crimes  against humanity.
Always,  such crimes are unpardonable.
Oddly  enough, even after the painfully long history of egregious Palestinian crimes  carried out against noncombatant populations, a sizable portion of the  "international community" still seeks to encourage Palestinian statehood.  Self-righteously, of course, and with ritualistic indignation directed against  Israeli "intransigence," the "civilized community of nations" remains willing to  rip a 23rd Arab state from the still-living body of Israel. Even now, as the  Palestinians remain rigorously segmented into barbarously warring factions -  into opponents who enthusiastically maim and torture each other, all while  cooperating in doing the same to their commonly despised Israeli victims - world  public opinion calls naively for Palestinian "self-determination."
Even  now, when any new Palestinian state could quickly come to resemble an  already-fractured Syria, the United Nations and its secretary- general seem much  more concerned with comforting the markedly unheroic Palestinian criminals than  with protecting fully innocent Israeli civilians.
Unapologetically,  and whatever their unhindered and ongoing excesses, Fatah, Hamas and Islamic  Jihad are easily able to incite followers to inflict and then celebrate  incessant harms upon Israel.
At  some point, it is likely that such harms, joyously imposed with a reassuring  impunity, could involve diverse weapons of mega-terrorism, including assorted  chemical, biological, or even nuclear agents.
In  this last category of insidious choice, Palestine, after formalizing its  sought-after condition of statehood or sovereignty, could be placed in an  optimal position to assault Israel's Dimona nuclear reactor.
This  plainly sensitive facility was previously attacked, in both 1991 and again in  2014. Those earlier missile and rocket barrages, which produced no ascertainably  injurious damages to the critical reactor core, had originated with Iraqi and  Hamas aggressions, respectively.
About  expected Palestinian state intentions, there is little real mystery to fathom.  It should already be widely understood that any new state of Palestine could  provide a ready platform for launching endlessly renewable war and terrorism  against Israel. Significantly, not a single warring Palestinian faction has ever  even bothered to deny such overtly criminal intent. On the contrary, aggressive  intent has always been openly embraced, fervently cheered as a distinctly sacred  "national" incantation.
A  September 2015 poll by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey research -  the leading social research organization in the Palestinian territories - found  that a majority of Palestinians unhesitatingly reject a two-state  solution.
When  asked, as a corollary question, about any preferred or alternate ways to  establish an independent Palestinian state, 42 percent called for "armed  action."
Only  29% favored "negotiation," or some sort of peaceful resolution.
Not  much mystery here.
On  all currently official Hamas and Palestinian Authority (PA ) maps of  "Palestine," Israel has been removed altogether, or identified exclusively as  "occupied Palestine."
By  these revealingly forthright and vengeful depictions, Israel has already been  forced to suffer a "cartographic genocide." Unambiguously, from the standpoint  of any prospective Palestinian state policies toward Israel, such incendiary  maps are portentous, predictive and possibly even prophetic.
What  is not generally recognized is that a Palestinian state, any Palestinian state,  could play a determinedly serious role in bringing some form of nuclear conflict  to the Middle East. Palestine, of course, would itself be non-nuclear; but  that's not the issue. There would remain several other ways in which the new  state's predictable infringements of Israeli security could make the Jewish  state more vulnerable to an eventual nuclear attack from Iran, or, in the even  more distant future, from a newly-nuclear Arab state.
This  second prospect would likely have its core origins in understandable reactions  to the plainly impotent Vienna pact with Iran.
Following  the July 14, 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA ), several Sunni  states in the region, most plausibly Egypt and/ or Saudi Arabia, will likely  feel compelled to "go nuclear."
In  essence, any such considered Sunni Arab nuclear proliferation would represent a  more-or-less coherent "self-defense" reaction against expectedly escalating  perils, once still-avoidable dangers now issuing from the reciprocally fearful  Shi'ite world.
There  is also more to expect from the Sunni side. Here, in actions that would have no  apparent connection to expected Iranian nuclearization, Islamic State (IS) could  begin an avowedly destructive march westward, across Jordan, and all the way to  the borders of West Bank (Judea/Samaria). There, should a Palestinian state  already be established and functional, dedicated Sunni terrorist cadres would  likely make quick work of any deployed Palestinian army. In the event that a new  Arab state had not yet been suitably declared - that is, in a fashion consistent  with codifying Montevideo Convention (1934) expectations - invading IS forces  (not Israel) will have become the principal impediment to Palestinian  independence.
Credo  quia absurdum - "I believe because it is absurd." In either case, any such IS or  IS-related conquest could create another available platform for launching  relentless terrorist attacks across the region.
In  time, of course, most of these murderous attacks would be aimed precisely at  Israel.
IS,  as everyone can see, is on the move. It has already expanded well beyond Iraq  and Syria, notably into Yemen, Libya, Egypt and Somalia.
Although  Hamas leaders generally deny any IS presence in Gaza, that terrorist group's  black flag is now seen more and more regularly in that expressly Palestinian  space.
In  principle, at least, Israel could sometime find itself forced to cooperate with  Hamas against IS, but any reciprocal willingness from the Islamic Resistance  Movement, whether glaringly conspicuous or beneath the radar, is  implausible.
Additionally,  Egypt regards Hamas as part of the much wider Muslim Brotherhood, and  prospectively, just as dangerous as IS.
In  any event, after Palestine, and even in the absence of any takeover of the new  Arab state by IS forces, Israel's physical survival would require increasing  self-reliance in existential military matters.
Such  expansions, in turn, would demand: 1) an appropriately revised nuclear strategy,  involving deterrence, defense, preemption and warfighting capabilities; and 2) a  corollary conventional strategy.
Significantly,  however, the birth of Palestine could impact these strategies in several  disruptive ways.
Most  ominously, a Palestinian state could render most of Israel's conventional  capabilities substantially more problematic. It could thereby heighten certain  eventual chances of a regional nuclear war.
Credo  quia absurdum. A nuclear war in the Middle East is not out of the question. At  some point, such a conflict could arrive in Israel not only as a  "bolt-from-the-blue" surprise missile attack, but also as a result, whether  intended or inadvertent, of escalation.
If,  for example, certain enemy states were to begin "only" with conventional and/or  biological attacks upon Israel, Jerusalem might then respond, sooner or later,  with nuclear reprisals. Or if these enemy states were to begin hostilities with  certain conventional attacks upon Israel, Jerusalem's own conventional reprisals  might then be met, at least in the future, with enemy nuclear  counterstrikes.
For  now, this second scenario could become possible only if Iran were to continue  its evident advance toward an independent nuclear capability. It follows that a  persuasive Israeli conventional deterrent, at least to the extent that it could  prevent enemy state conventional, and/or biological attacks, would substantially  reduce Israel's risk of any escalatory exposure to a nuclear war. Israel will  need to maintain its capacity for "escalation dominance," but Palestinian  statehood, on its face, could still impair this overriding strategic  obligation.
A  subsidiary question comes to mind. Why should Israel need a conventional  deterrent at all? Israel, after all, seemingly maintains a capable nuclear  arsenal and corollary doctrine, even though both still remain "deliberately  ambiguous."
And  there arises a still further query. Even after "Palestine," wouldn't enemy  states desist from launching conventional and/or biological attacks upon Israel,  here, out of an entirely reasonable and prudent fear of suffering a nuclear  retaliation? Not necessarily. Aware that Israel would cross the nuclear  threshold only in certain extraordinary circumstances, these enemy states could  be convinced - rightly or wrongly - that so long as their attacks were to remain  non-nuclear, Israel would respond only in kind. Faced with such probable  calculations, Israel's ordinary security would still need to be sustained by  conventional deterrent threats.
A  strong conventional capability will still be needed by Israel to deter or to  preempt conventional attacks - attacks that could, if undertaken, lead quickly,  via escalation, to various conceivable forms of unconventional war.
Credo  quia absurdum. It is still not sufficiently understood that Palestine could have  serious effects on power and peace in the Middle East. As the creation of yet  another enemy Arab state would need to arise from the intentional dismemberment  of Israel, the Jewish state's strategic depth would inevitably be diminished.  Over time, therefore, Israel's conventional capacity to ward off assorted enemy  attacks could be correspondingly reduced.
Paradoxically,  if enemy states were to perceive Israel's own sense of expanding weakness and  desperation, this could strengthen Israel's nuclear deterrent. If, however,  pertinent enemy states did not perceive such a "sense" among Israel's  decision-makers (a far more likely scenario), these states, now animated by  Israel's conventional force deterioration, could then be encouraged to attack.  The cumulative result, spawned by Israel's post-Palestine incapacity to maintain  strong conventional deterrence, could become: 1) defeat of Israel in a  conventional war; 2) defeat of Israel in an unconventional  chemical/biological/nuclear war; 3) defeat of Israel in a combined  conventional/unconventional war; or 4) defeat of Arab/Islamic state enemies by  Israel in an unconventional war.
For  Israel, a country less than half the size of Lake Michigan, even the  "successful" fourth possibility could prove intolerable. The tangible  consequences of a nuclear war, or even a "merely" chemical/ biological war,  could be calamitous for the victor as well as the vanquished.
Under  such exceptional conditions of belligerency, the traditional notions of  "victory" and "defeat" would likely lose all serious meaning.
Although  a meaningful risk of regional nuclear war in the Middle East must exist  independently of any Palestinian state, this uniquely serious threat would be  still greater if a new Arab terrorist state were authoritatively  declared.
Palestine,  it has increasingly been argued, could sometime become vulnerable to overthrow  by even more militant jihadist Arab forces, a violent transfer of power that  could then confront Israel with an even broader range of regional  perils.
In  this connection, IS, again, could find itself at the outer gates of "Palestine."  In such a scenario, it is plausible that the IS fighters would make fast work of  any residual Palestinian defense force, PA and/ or Hamas, and then absorb  Palestine itself into a rapidly expanding Islamic "caliphate."
Before  anything remotely decent could be born from such a determined theocracy, a very  capable sort of gravedigger would have to wield the forceps.
The  "third intifada" is just another legitimizing term for remorseless Palestinian  terrorism. Should it transform the always fratricidal Palestinian territories  into another corrupted Arab state, Palestine, either by itself, or as a  newly-incorporated part of a still-growing IS "caliphate," would become another  Syria. Even more significantly, Palestine could bring specifically nuclear-based  harms to the broader region.
Then,  quite predictably, all pertinent "matters" would be settled "with gas and with  bomb."
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