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Posts Tagged ‘Yaakov Katz’

IDF continues hitting targets in northern Gaza Strip

by Mojambo ( 2 Comments › )
Filed under Egypt, Gaza, Headlines, IDF, Israel, Palestinians at August 20th, 2011 - 7:44 am

We see this every year, Palestinians act like vicious animal, the IDF and IAF smacks them around and then they whine for a ceasefire. Take out their infrastructure such as water, electricity and sewage.

by Yaakov Katz

The IAF struck a number of targets in Gaza Saturday morning and overnight Friday in response to attacks Thursday that claimed the lives of eight people, as well as continued rocket fire from the Strip.

The death toll in Gaza stood at 15, Palestinian news agency Ma’an reported, including at least one minor.

An airstrike hit the northern Gaza Strip Saturday according to Palestinian reports. The IDF Spokesman’s Office had no information on the airstrike.

Two tunnels and one warehouse used for manufacturing weapons in southern Gaza were bombed Friday overnight by IAF aircraft, as well as one site used for terrorist activities in the northern Strip, an IDF Spokesman’s Office statement said.

According to the statement, the tunnels had been used to allow assailants to infiltrate Israel and carry out attacks.

The IAF identified direct hits, and all aircraft returned to Israel safely, the spokesman’s statement added.
[……]

Also on Friday, the IAF launched an air strike against a terrorist cell in the central Gaza Strip after the cell fired a rocket into Israeli territory, the IDF Spokesman’s Office said in a statement. A direct hit was identified in the strike, the statement added.

Minutes earlier, the Iron Dome rocket defense system intercepted a rocket fired from the Gaza Strip toward Ashkelon.

An separate IAF strike in the northern Gaza Strip Friday evening killed Samed Abdul Mu’ty Abed, identified by Israeli media as a senior commander in the Popular Resistance Committees, Palestinian news agency Ma’an reported.

The man was riding a motorcycle at the time of the strike, according to multiple Palestinian reports. Another 22-year-old man was injured in the strike.

Ma’an cited medical sources in Gaza saying that another strike targeted a concrete factory in the northern Strip. The news agency said that 10 Palestinian have been killed by the IDF since Thursday night.

[……]

Israel Air Force aircraft struck four targets in the Gaza Strip on Friday afternoon in response to a series of rockets that hit Israel, one of which left six people injured in Ashdod.

The army said it struck two weapons production facilities, and two other terror targets, one in the north and one in the south of the strip. No injuries were reported.

Earlier on Friday, IAF aircraft struck seven Hamas security installations in Gaza, killing at least one Palestinian, in further retaliation for the three-stage terror attack on Thursday.

Gaza residents said three compounds controlled by Hamas were hit in the overnight raids. Medical officials said a 13-year-old boy in a nearby building was killed and 17 people were wounded.

On Thursday evening the IAF bombed the southern Gaza Strip, killing the leadership of the Popular Resistance Committees who had orchestrated the attacks.

[……]

The PRC members killed in the retaliatory IAF air strike included the head of the terror group Kamal Nirab, who the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) said had personally directed and planned the attack.

Read the rest –  IDF trikes in Northern Gaza Strip, Palestinians say

Israelis kill PRC leadership in Gaza air strike, and Iron Dome works again!

by Mojambo ( 12 Comments › )
Filed under Gaza, Hamas, Headlines, IDF, Israel, Palestinians at August 18th, 2011 - 3:11 pm

They also got two terrorists who were involved in the Gild Shalit kidnapping.

by Yaakov Katz

Israel’s response to the terror attacks from the Sinai Peninsula came swiftly Thursday evening when the Israel Air Force bombed the southern Gaza Strip, killing the leadership of the Popular Resistance Committee (PRC), who had orchestrated the attacks.

[……]

The PRC terrorists killed in the retaliatory IAF airstrike included the head of the terror group Kamal Nirab, who the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) said, personally directed and planned the attack.

Another terrorist killed in the strike was identified as Amas Hamed, commander of the PRC’s military wing and a resident of Rafah. The Shin Bet said that Hamed was involved in the abduction of Gilad Schalit over five years ago and oversaw numerous terror attacks against Israel including suicide bombings and rocket attacks.

Two other known PRC terrorists, including one who was also involved in Schalit’s abduction, were also killed in the airstrike.

“The terrorists were directly involved in the attacks along the Israeli-Egyptian border,” a security official said.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said that Israel would respond forcefully and that the terrorist groups behind the attack would pay a price for their actions.

“I set a principle that when Israeli citizens are hurt we will respond immediately and forcefully,” Netanyahu said. “This principle will also be applied today.”

[……]

“The IDF has already struck the heads of the PRC in Gaza and if there will be a need, the strikes will intensify,” Barak said. “The IDF will use all of the force necessary to protect Israel’s citizens and to enable a normal way of life in the country.”

On Thursday night, a rocket fired from the Gaza Strip landed south of Ashkelon. Defense officials ordered security officers in communities along the border with Gaza to prepare for an escalation in rocket fire. The Iron Dome counter-rocket defense system later intercepted a Grad-model Katyusha rocket fired from the Gaza Strip at Ashkelon.
[……]

Read the rest – Israel kills PRC leadership in Gaza air strike

Thirty years ago this month- Operation Opera, the destruction of the Iraqi nuclear plant at Osirak

by Mojambo ( 118 Comments › )
Filed under Ahmadinejad, History, Iran, Iraq, Israel at July 12th, 2011 - 8:30 am

Menachem Begin was not going to allow Saddam Hussein to develop a nuclear bomb so he ordered the IDF/AF to destroy the nuclear reactor at Osirak.  Menachem Begin did not care what the U.N., France, Britain or The New York Times Editorial Board  felt about him. After the nuclear facility was destroyed on July 7, 1981  the opinions in  the Reagan administration were  mixed. Ronald Reagan first said “Well boys will be boys” when he was informed of the bombing.  Some such as Secretary of State Alexander Haig felt that ultimately we would bless Israel for doing it (and 10 years later during Operation Desert Storm he was proven right), others such as the pro-Arab  Vice President George Herbert Walker Bush wanted to sanction Israel. Fortunately Ronald Reagan ignored George H.W. Bush and settled for a stupid condemnation at the United Nations.  I can only wonder what Bush felt in 1991 when he realized that Saddam did not have a nuclear bomb to threaten our troops!  Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney later acknowledged the great blessing that Israel had bestowed upon the Free World by autographing a photo of him which he sent to former IAF commander (and then Ambassador to the United States) David Ivry when he said (paraphrasing)  “without whose  contributions Operation Desert Storm could never have been launched”. By the way Osirak like Entebbe was a one-shot deal that cannot be done again as the other side (Iran) will not be taken by surprise so stop projecting your wishes as reality because it ain’t gonna happen.

 

by Yaakov Katz

A few months after taking up his post as the IAF’s ninth commander in October 1977, Maj.-Gen. David Ivry was invited to a special meeting.

Sitting around the table were defense minister Ezer Weizman and representatives of the IDF Operations Directorate and the Mossad. The participants were sworn to secrecy as they began speaking about the country’s options in the face of Saddam Hussein’s continued construction of a 70-megawatt, uranium-powered French reactor near Baghdad.

At the time, Israeli efforts were focused on the diplomatic track, getting France to cut off its assistance to Iraq. Israel remained unconvinced by France’s promise that it would retain supervision over the rector and ensure that it was not used to develop a nuclear weapon.

[…]

But to do so, Ivry had to come up with a good excuse for why his staff needed to prepare a bombing mission in Iraq. Luckily for him, around the same time, there were intelligence reports that a Soviet Tupolev 22 supersonic bomber was going to land at Iraq’s Habinia Airfield.

He told his staff that the government was considering attacking the airfield, and to prepare a way to get there.

In the 30 years since Operation Opera – Israel’s bombing of the Osirak reactor on June 7, 1981 – Ivry has given few interviews. In honor of the 30th anniversary of the historic bombing last month, he agreed to sit down with The Jerusalem Post this week and retell the story.

Ivry, 77, is today president of Boeing Israel.

The considerations, debates and military complications in the years leading up to the 1981 operation are similar to those the government and IAF of 2011 face as they consider military options to stop Iran. Throughout the interview, on more than one occasion, there is a sense that Iraq is Iran and Hussein is Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

[…]

A few weeks after being instructed to draw up the plans, Ivry’s staff – despite some members’ claims that it was impossible – presented him with a number of creative ideas how to get IAF Phantom and Skyhawk fighter jets to Iraq. 1979 was spent modifying the midair refueling systems on the IAF’s Hercules transport aircraft so they could service Phantoms, and technology was developed so Skyhawks could refuel one another.

“In general, the plans were not all that attractive because of the refueling problem,” Ivry says.

The real breakthrough came later that year, when US secretary of defense Harold Brown came to Israel. It was a few months after the Islamic Revolution in Iran, and the US had 75 F-16 fighter jets that were on order for the Iranian Air Force but could no longer be delivered. Israel was in negotiations for its own first order of 75 F-16s and was in the middle of ironing out questions about integrating Israeli technology into the planes.

“Weizman called and asked that I join him in the meeting,” Ivry recalls. “I came in, and he asked if the IAF would be interested in receiving the Iranian F-16s. I said yes.”

The answer was not simple, since it meant that Israel would receive planes that did not have its own ingenious technology, but in the back of his mind, Ivry was thinking about Osirak and how the F-16s could solve Israel’s refueling problems.

The first planes arrived in July 1980 – had Israel turned down the offer, it would have begun to receive its order in 1982 – and Ivry immediately ordered his pilots to begin testing the aircraft’s range, and to push them to the max.

In the beginning of 1981, Ivry got the green light from Prime Minister Menachem Begin to move ahead with the attack. The plan was to attack on a Sunday, when the facility would be mostly empty and the French scientists would not be at work. The attack would be at dusk so that if needed, Israel would have a long night to rescue downed pilots.

Ivry presented the plans to the cabinet on a number of occasions. He was aware that he needed to project confidence. As the commander of the IAF, all eyes were on him in the meetings. He had to believe in the plan, convince the chief of General Staff at the time, Raful Eitan, and then explain to the cabinet how it would work.

“If the IAF commander says it’s not possible, then there is no operation,” he explains.

But not all of the country’s defense chiefs were in favor of the strike. The Mossad chief at the time, Yitzhak Hofi – like Meir Dagan, who recently voiced opposition to attacking Iran – was against it, as was the head of Military Intelligence, Maj.-Gen. Yehoshua Sagi.

The major concern was the fallout of the strike – the effect it would have on the peace process with Egypt, how it would impact relations with France and the US, and the assessment that ultimately a strike would only set back Saddam’s nuclear program by two to three years.

Ivry did not spend much time thinking about the philosophy behind the need for the strike. While Begin spoke about preventing a second Holocaust and termed Osirak an existential threat for Israel, Ivry focused on the fine details of the plan, reviewing how the planes would get there, at what angle they would come in for the bombing, and how they would fly back home.

The possibility of nuclear weapons in Saddam’s hands, he explains, was simply a reality with which Israel could not live.

“If you decide that nuclear weapons in Iraq is an existential threat, then there are not a lot of questions that need to be asked,” he says.

The first date given for the bombing was May 10.

Ivry and the pilots flew down to Etzion Air Force Base. The planes were loaded with the bombs, and the pilots were beginning to ignite the engines when Ivry got a call to stop. The head of the opposition at the time, Shimon Peres, was against the bombing, and Begin needed more time.

The next date set was June 7. On Friday, June 4, the commander of the US Navy’s Sixth Fleet was changing command, and Eitan wanted Ivry to fly with him to Naples. They left on Thursday night and returned Friday afternoon. With them on the plane was the US military attaché to Israel, who had caught a ride to the ceremony.

“On the way back, I radioed Tel Aviv and spoke with the head of operations, who gave me the code word that we had a green light for the operation for Sunday,” he says. “After we landed, the attaché went to his weekend, and I went to Jerusalem for one last meeting with Begin, Eitan and [Foreign Minister Yitzhak] Shamir.”

What also helped in preventing the world from realizing what was happening was the international crisis that had evolved following Syria’s deployment of sophisticated surface-to-air missile systems in Lebanon. Begin had promised that Israel would attack if they were not moved.

“Everyone thought we were busy with Lebanon, and this was to our advantage, even though it also insulted some of our allies since they were caught completely off guard,” Ivry says.

The day of the operation, Ivry and Eitan spoke with the pilots. Eitan spoke about the significance of the operation. Ivry focused on the details – the route, the altitude, the way to evade Iraqi air defense systems and what direction to come in and bomb the target.

“We knew that the planes would get there and succeed in bombing the reactor,” Ivry says. “Our biggest concern was about the return flight and whether a plane would be shot down. Since the planes did not have any fuel to spare, they would not have been able to use their thrusters to maneuver if they were intercepted.”

Just after 5:35 p.m., the leader of the eight F-16s that had flown 1,600 km. from the Etzion Air Force Base in the Sinai Peninsula broke radio silence and said the words “Everyone Charlie” – the call that meant all the planes had dropped their bombs and were heading back home.

For Ivry, the Osirak bombing was not the IAF’s greatest aerial achievement under his command.

That title would go to the 1982 bombing of the 17 surface-to-air missile systems that Syria had deployed in Lebanon, without losing a single aircraft – one of the most impressive operations carried out by a Western country to suppress Soviet air defense systems.

The bombing of the reactor resonated more for the deterrence it created for Israel.

“It was a few years after the Entebbe operation and helped show the world that Israel could really go anywhere it needed to,” Ivry explains.

Ten years later, US Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney presented Ivry with a photo of the bombed-out reactor taken by a US satellite after the First Gulf War.

At the bottom of the photo, which hangs in Ivry’s Tel Aviv office as a constant reminder of the threats and challenges that Israel continues to face, Cheney wrote: “With thanks and appreciation for the outstanding job you did on the Iraqi nuclear program in 1981, which made our job much easier in Desert Storm!” When it comes to Iran, one would expect the man who commanded the bombing of Osirak to be more forthcoming. But Ivry is careful with what he says.
[…]

Read the rest: Security and Defense : Looking Back to the future

Israeli Raid on Osiraq Reactor 1981

 

 

The Israeli Astronaut Who Bombed  Saddam – Ilan Ramon

The Godfather of Hamas rocket building imprisoned and under indictment; and Israeli weapons exports top $7.3 billion a year

by Mojambo ( 155 Comments › )
Filed under Gaza, Hamas, Israel, Palestinians at April 6th, 2011 - 3:00 pm

Recently in the Ukraine, the Mossad abducted Dirar Abu Sis an engineer who developed many of Hamas’s rocket and  missiles to the point where the terrorist group was no longer  just a terror band of suicide bombers but rather a fully equipped division.  No doubt he is undergoing rigorous interrogation in Israel and will be singing like a canary to the Shin Bet and it will be fascinating to hear all the information that will be coming out – many of which obviously will be classified. Hopefully after they are through they can trade him for Gilad Shalit.

by Yaakov Katz

Calling him the “rocket godfather” of the Gaza Strip, the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) filed an indictment on Monday against Dirar Abu Sisi, a Palestinian engineer from Gaza, detailing his rise to prominence as Hamas’s leading missile developer.

Abu Sisi, a director of the Gaza Strip’s sole power station, was reportedly abducted by Israel over a month ago as he was traveling on a train in Ukraine and brought to Israel for interrogation. On Monday, mystery continued to surround the details of his capture and how he was transferred to the Jewish state.

According to the indictment, Abu Sisi received his doctorate at the Kharkov Military Engineering Academy and studied under Prof. Konstantin Petrovich, an expert in Scud missile control systems.

During his studies, Abu Sisi acquired extensive knowledge in missile development, control systems, propulsion and rocket stabilization.

After returning to the Gaza Strip and parallel to his work as an engineer for the Gaza electric company, Abu Sisi was secretly recruited into Hamas by the military commander of the terrorist organization at the time, Salah Shehadeh, and began working as one of their leading engineers for short- and long-range missiles.

Abu Sisi not only developed missiles in Gaza but was also, according to the charge sheet, responsible for upgrading thousands of older rockets and increasing their range and penetration capabilities.

According to the indictment, which was filed on Monday in the Beersheba District Court, Abu Sisi was charged with membership in a terrorist organization, conspiracy to commit a crime, the production of illegal weaponry, assistance to an illegal organization, and a variety of other crimes.

During his interrogation, officials said, Abu Sisi provided valuable intelligence information on Hamas’s military wing, its different branches and the decision-making process within the terror group.

In 2002, Abu Sisi met Sheikh Nizar Rayan, a spiritual leader of Hamas’s military wing, who was later assassinated during Operation Cast Lead in 2009. Rayan introduced Abu Sisi to various senior Hamas operatives, including Shehadeh. Due to his education as an engineer, Abu Sisi was asked by Shehadeh to assist in developing weaponry for Hamas.

He later joined a committee that was responsible for the research and development of weaponry, and was tasked with electrical engineering, dealing mostly with developing boosters and fins that stabilized and enhanced the range of Hamas’s arsenal of rockets.

In 2005, the committee asked Abu Sisi to begin working on increasing the range of rockets manufactured domestically in the Gaza Strip. Due to his involvement, Hamas was able to increase the range of the rockets from 6 km. to 9 km., and subsequently to 15 km.

In 2007, Abu Sisi assisted Hamas in increasing the rockets’ range to 22 km. He was then asked to increase the range to between 37 km. and 45 km., and participated in several experiments during which rockets were tested and fired into the Mediterranean.

These attempts did not succeed.

[…]

Read the rest: Shin Bet files indictment against ‘rocket godfather’

It seems as if the Israeli weapons industries has had a record year for export. Primary customer being India but increasingly North and South America as well.

by Ran Dagoni

Israel’s defense exports exceeded $7.3 billion in 2010, according to provisional calculations of new orders from defense companies. The final figure will probably reach $7.4 billion, the all-time high reached in 2009, according to Defense News, quoting Defense Ministry officials on Monday. The officials cautioned, however, that Israel’s defense industries face harder times ahead.

A senior Defense Ministry official told Defense News that the final calculation of new contracts signed by defense companies last year would be completed in April, following thorough checks by SIBAT Ministry of Defense Foreign Defense Assistance and Defense Export Organization and the Israel Export and International Cooperation Institute.

Provisional calculations made in mid-March found that the value of new contracts in 2010 reached $7.3 billion, but that the amount would probably rise to reach the record set in 2009, when the calculations for support and follow-up contracts are completed.

The official said that, for two consecutive years, Israel has passed the $7 billion threshold, and that Israel is very proud to be a member of the premier league of exporters of defense products.

As in previous years, 80% of Israeli defense production was exported. The official said that, for a small country under constant threat, such as Israel, exports were critical for the existence of the industrial establishment, maintaining the strength of the IDF, and creating diplomatic relations through arms sales and defense cooperation.

Israel’s defense exports have been rising for the past five years: from $3.5 billion in new orders in 2005; $4.9 billion in 2006; $5.6 billion in 2007, and $6.6 billion in 2008.

However, Ministry of Defense officials say that this trend will likely stall in the coming years. The reasons include steep budget cuts in Western European countries, a halt in exports to Turkey, continued restrictions on most defense exports to China, and rising competition from US and European defense industries in the Indian market, one of the largest target markets of Israeli defense companies. Another important reason is the erosion of opportunities to supply arms to US and NATO forces in Iraq and Afghanistan, as Western forces reduce their presence in the two arenas.

The senior Defense Ministry official said that, in recent years, India and North America were Israel’s largest defense trading partners. He added that Israel does not expect this to change in 2011 or 2012, but that Israel would have to work harder to keep its market share.
[….]

Read the rest: Israel weapons exports top $7.3 billion