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Posts Tagged ‘Yaakov Katz’

IDF: Air Force kills Gazan involved in Sinai border attack

by Mojambo ( 2 Comments › )
Filed under Gaza, Headlines, IDF, Israel, Palestinians at June 20th, 2012 - 10:54 am

Keep wiping them out.

by Yaakov Katz, Yaakov Lappin

The Israeli Air Force attacked and killed a global jihad terrorist in the southern Gaza Strip city of Rafah on Wednesday. The IDF said the man was involved in the terrorist attack that emanated from the Sinai Peninsula on Monday. One of the central planners of the attack was seriously injured.

The air strike was a joint operation of the Air Force and the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency), who said the killing was a confirmation of the declaration of responsibility issued Tuesday by the previously unknown global jihad organization.

Mohammed Rashuan was seriously injured in the airstrike. Rashuan, 26 of Rafah, was one of the central players in the border attack Monday, the IDF said. He was involved in attacks on Israeli citizens and IDF soldiers for a number of years.

Rashuan was involved in the procurement of weapons, providing explosives to terror operatives, the firing of projectiles into Israel, sniper attacks, and the smuggling of terror operatives in and out of the Gaza Strip.

A second man, Ghalib Rmelat, a deputy of Rashuan, was killed in the airstrike. Hamas identified him as an operative in Islamic Jihad’s Al Quds Brigades.

Moments before the airstrike, Hamas fired six rockets from the Gaza Strip into the Eshkol region of southern Israel. Four of the rockets landed inside a farming village and two exploded in an open field. Hamas’s military wing, the Izzadin a-Kassam Brigades, claimed responsibility for the rocket fire and said in a video it released that the fire was in response to the killing of Palestinians by the IDF.

Police said that no one was injured. Three omen were suffering shock from the rocket and that the rocket caused damage to buildings and sparked a fire.

Since midnight Wednesday morning, Palestinians have fired 19 rockets into southern Israel. Seventeen of the rockets landed int he Negev region and two in Lachish, police said.

Earlier Wednesday morning, Palestinian terror groups fired a Grad rocket into Israeli territory that exploded in the Bnei Shimon region near Beersheba. The rocket exploded in an open area, causing no injuries or damage. Shortly after, three Kassam rockets exploded in open areas in the Eshkol region.

Late Tuesday night, four Border Policemen in the Ashkelon Coast area were injured by shrapnel, one moderately, when a Kassam rocket directly struck a building, after nearly 50 rockets and mortar shells pounded southern Israel.

IAF aircraft struck seven terror targets in the Gaza Strip overnight Tuesday in response to the continued rocket and mortar fire into southern Israel, according to the IDF Spokesman’s Office. Palestinians did not immediately report any injuries or deaths resulting from the IAF strikes although at least six were killed in strikes since Monday.

 

 

 

The war between wars

by Mojambo ( 54 Comments › )
Filed under Egypt, IDF, Iran, Israel, Lebanon, Sudan and South Sudan, Syria at May 14th, 2012 - 5:00 pm

There are so many battles being waged in Israel’s covert war against Iran, Hezbollah and Hamas that never see the light of  newspapers.

by Yaakov Katz

‘The war between wars.” This is the term that IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Benny Gantz uses to describe the covert operations that the military’s special forces carry out during times of apparent quiet.

This war is fought by anonymous commandos whose missions mostly remain unknown to the public, as well as by large parts of the Israeli defense establishment. Once in a while, Israelis get a taste of what this so-called war entails.
[……..]

Last March, a similar operation succeeded. Commandos from the Shayetet, intercepted a cargo ship called Victoria that was carrying some 50 tons of weaponry – including radar-guided anti-ship missiles – and was on its way to Egypt. The arms were believed to be intended for terrorist organizations in the Gaza Strip.

But these are just two examples. A few months ago, The Jerusalem Post revealed that overseas covert operations conducted by the IDF have doubled over the past year, an indication of the growing threats Israel faces in the region.

Most of the details about these operations are classified, including the exact number, but according to foreign reports, the IDF has operated in places such as Sudan, Lebanon and Iran.

The increase in operations is not without purpose and, according to senior officers intimately familiar with the activity, the man responsible for the increase is Gantz, who believes that the IDF cannot sit idly by as its enemies – particularly Hezbollah, Hamas and Islamic Jihad – build up militarily.

“He puts a major emphasis on this so-called war between wars,” a senior member of the IDF General Staff explained recently. “Not only do these operations provide tangible results but they also send a message to our adversaries and boost deterrence.”

Currently, the IDF has three main units that make up its elite commando force – the navy’s Shayetet, the General Staff Reconnaissance Unit – better known as Sayeret Matkal – and the Israel Air Force’s Shaldag Unit, which reportedly conducts target designation for IAF fighter jets behind enemy lines.

After almost a decade of consideration, Gantz finally decided in December to consolidate the elite units under a new formation called the Depth Corps. To lead the corps, Gantz brought out of retirement Maj.-Gen. Shai Avital, a former commander of Sayeret Matkal, who also happens to be a close friend of Defense Minister Ehud Barak.

Avital has spent the months since the corps’ establishment hiring officers to fill its growing ranks.

 

[…….]
The corps’ job is split into two categories.

While Israel’s special forces have had some spectacular successes in recent years, there has been a feeling within the General Staff already since the Second Lebanon War that the units could do more if they worked together more closely.

As yet, there are no plans to establish new units and the current situation, under which the IAF is in command of Shaldag, Military Intelligence is in command of Sayeret Matkal and the navy in command of the Shayetet, will remain for purposes of training.

What will change is that the operations from now will be directed by Avital, who will be directly subordinate to Gantz. This will mean that the units will be activated by a single command who will know best how to integrate their various capabilities with the objective of bringing out the best result possible depending on the mission.

In addition, another possibility under consideration is to beef up Shaldag which, while considered one of the most elite units in the military, is relatively small in manpower in comparison to the other two units – Sayeret Matkal and Shayetet.

The command’s second role is overseeing larger-scale military operations deep in enemy territory like Lebanon or Syria.

While each of these fronts has a regional command responsible for it, the Northern Command is set up to operate until a certain line in Lebanon and Syria and not further.

The same is the case with the Southern Command along the Sinai border.

The problem is that in a future war, due, for example, to Hezbollah’s new long-range missiles, the war will need to be fought not just in the villages of Southern Lebanon like in 2006 but also deeper inside Lebanon.

With the increase in the rate of operations and the bolstering of its special forces, the IDF is now looking at new platforms for how to transport the units to their destinations.

Currently, these units are mostly flown by Sikorsky CH-53 and Black Hawk helicopters, but the threat to these aircraft has grown with the proliferation of surface-to-air missile systems throughout the region.

This was demonstrated last August in the attacks along the Egyptian border when terrorists fired a missile at an Israeli attack helicopter. The missile, which missed the target, is believed to have originated in Libya where it was smuggled into the Sinai Peninsula as well as the Gaza Strip.

As a result, the IAF is pushing hard to receive a budget to purchase a number of V-22 Ospreys, the only tiltrotor aircraft in the world today that can take off and hover like a helicopter and then fly at speeds and altitudes like an airplane.

[……..]

Read the rest – Security and Defense -: The war between wars

 

Dozens of West Bank-based Hamas members arrested by the Shin Bet

by Mojambo ( 1 Comment › )
Filed under Hamas, Headlines, IDF, Israel, Palestinians at September 9th, 2011 - 5:53 pm

Hamas is trying to reconstruct itself in the West Bank and the Shin Bet/IDF are breaking up their cells daily.

by Yaakov Katz

Hamas is working to boost its military capabilities in the West Bank, the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) warned on Wednesday, revealing that in recent months it had arrested dozens of Hamas terror suspects who belonged to 13 different terror cells operating in the West Bank and Jerusalem.

The cells were planning a number of attacks against Israel, including the abduction of an IDF soldier and a suicide bombing in Jerusalem which was thwarted two weeks ago with the arrest of the suicide bomber and the seizure of the bomb he had planned to use in the attack.

The target was supposed to be an IDF base, mall or bus in the Pisgat Ze’ev neighborhood in northern Jerusalem.

The cell that was plotting the suicide attack was behind the bombing on March 23 outside the Jerusalem Central Bus Station which killed a British tourist and injured 47 others.

The Shin Bet investigation revealed that Hamas command centers in Syria and Saudi Arabia were behind the financing of the attacks. In addition, Hamas terrorists serving sentences in Israeli prisons were also instrumental in recruiting members of the cell from among Palestinian prisoners ahead of their release, as well as providing them with theoretical military training while still in prison.

The Shin Bet noted that Hamas also operated in Turkey, where it recruited operatives, but that the Hamas branch in Turkey was not involved in operations with these cells.

The cell plotting the attack in Jerusalem was based in Hebron and had manufactured two explosive devices using fire extinguishers loaded with six kilograms of explosives and wrapped in a sheet of metal balls to increase collateral damage upon explosion.

The suicide attack was scheduled to be carried out on August 21 and the cell was also in the advanced stages of plotting the abduction of an Israeli soldier from the Gush Etzion settlement bloc, south of the capital. On August 21, the Israel Police closed off all entrances to Jerusalem in search of the bomber and the explosive device, causing major traffic jams.

The Shin Bet and police captured two explosive devices: One in the home of Azhak Arfa, a 23-year-old resident of Ras al-Amud in east Jerusalem, and the holder of an Israeli blue identity card.

Prior to his arrest, Arfa worked in a Jerusalem wedding hall near the Central Bus Station and was recruited into the cell by Hassin Kussama, a 36-year-old resident of Hebron and known Hamas operative and explosives expert, who served as the “engineer” for the cell. A second device was discovered in Kussama’s home in Hebron.

“We see from these cases that Hamas is trying to boost its military capabilities in the West Bank,” a senior Shin Bet official said on Wednesday.

According to the Shin Bet, the cell was funded by Hamas’s political bureau in Damascus run by Khaled Mashaal, which also has branches in other parts of the world, including China, Turkey and Saudi Arabia.

During the investigation, the Shin Bet arrested Iman Aladam, a 39-year-old Jordanian who served as a senior operative in Hamas headquarters in Damascus and was active in various Hamas operations throughout the world.

Read the rest –  Shin Bet nabs dozens of West Bank-based Hamas members

Israeli Air Force kills two islamic Jihad terrorists as rockets continue to fly

by Mojambo ( 4 Comments › )
Filed under Egypt, Gaza, Headlines, IDF, Israel, Palestinians at August 25th, 2011 - 3:25 pm

How’s that “cease fire” holding up?

by Yaakov Lappin and Yaakov Katz

The IAF struck targets in northern and southern Gaza overnight Wednesday in response to rocket fire from terrorists in the Strip, the IDF Spokesman’s Office announced in a statement.

“During a night air assault a storage site in northern Gaza and tunnel used for smuggling and weapons manufacturing in the southern Gaza Strip” were struck, the statement said, adding that direct hits were identified.

Palestinian sources claimed an Israeli air strike targeted an Islamic Jihad sports facility, and killed two people there.

Earlier, the Iron Dome missile defense system intercepted a rocket that was fired toward Beersheba and two rockets that were fired toward Ashkelon.

A nine-month-old baby was lightly wounded in the hand when a Grad-type rocket scored a direct hit on an empty car south of Ashkelon.

[…..]

The late evening salvo of more than 10 rockets came after three days of quiet, since Hamas declared Gazan groups would stop launching rockets at Israel on Sunday night.

Earlier Wednesday, at least seven rockets hit near Ashkelon and in Ofakim. The rockets were believed to be fired by Islamic Jihad, supposedly in response to an Israel Air Force air strike earlier in the day that killed a senior operative who the IDF said was planning attacks against Israel from the Sinai Peninsula.

Four rockets struck in the Eshkol Regional Council and another two hit open land near Ofakim shortly after another rocket fell in an open field north of the Gaza Strip near Ashkelon. No one was injured in the strikes.

The IDF had prepared for the rocket fire following the air strike against the Islamic Jihad operative and canceled the Briza Festival in Ashkelon that was scheduled for Wednesday night.

In what appeared to be part of an IDF response to the renewed rocket fire, the IAF bombed an Islamic Jihad rocket cell in Gaza City. Palestinians reported one dead and several wounded.

Later in the day, two more terrorists were killed in air strikes against rocket cells.

Palestinian news agency Ma’an said the first man killed was Ismail al-Asmar, a field commander in the Al-Quds Brigade, the Islamic Jihad’s “military wing.” A spokesman for a medical service run by Hamas said two other people were wounded in the strike.

[…..]

Defense officials said that the IDF would continue to strike at terror cells that it spotted preparing to fire rockets into Israel, and against terrorists who it knew, according to intelligence information, were in the midst of planning attacks against Israel, as it did on Wednesday morning.

“This could lead to another escalation in rocket fire, but the IDF will not stand by as Israelis are attacked,” one official said.

Also Wednesday, IDF Chief of General Staff Lt.- Gen. Benny Gantz instituted new defensive measures along the border with Egypt on Wednesday, out of fear indicating that Palestinians were planning more attacks.

Gantz’s orders went into effect in the afternoon and included a stronger emphasis on the collection of intelligence by the IDF in the Gaza Strip and Sinai in an effort to locate and track terrorists who may be planning attacks against Israel.
[…..]

A military probe into the incident, presented earlier this week to the Egyptians by OC Planning Directorate Maj.-Gen. Amir Eshel, discovered that three Egyptians, including an escaped convict, had participated in the attack alongside PRC operatives from the Gaza Strip.

The results of the investigation were presented to the Egyptians to prove the IDF did not intentionally shoot at Egyptian policemen who were killed in the crossfire between Israeli soldiers and terrorists on the Egyptian side of the border.

Eshel played audio tapes for the Egyptians in which OC Southern Command Maj.-Gen. Tal Russo is heard warning soldiers and attack helicopters to be careful not to hit the Egyptian policemen.

Gantz’s decisions regarding the border also pertained to the operational doctrine of the Navy Command Center in Eilat, which is responsible for protecting the South from threats originating in the Red Sea.

“These are important changes that come in response to the serious threat that Israel faces today from the Sinai Peninsula,” a military source said.

The IDF said Gantz was also looking into ways to complete the construction of another 100 km. of fence along the Sinai border by the end of the year.

Since construction began in late 2010, the Defense Ministry has completed the construction of 30 km.

Read the rest – IDF strikes targets in Gaza in response to rocket fire