Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Israeli Police Beat 15 year old American Citizen

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Iron Dome, Israel’s antimissile system, changes calculus of fight with Hamas

    By Griff Witte and Ruth Eglash July 14

    ASHKELON, Israel — The roar of sirens echoed across this sun-kissed city Monday afternoon, and in a heartbeat the woman in the pink bikini was out of the pool, shepherding her three young kids to the nearest shelter.

    Up above, the vapor trail of a rocket fired from Gaza, just 10 miles down the coast, ripped the clear blue sky.

    And then, a boom: The rocket had been shot down.

    The kids jumped back in the seaside pool, and their mother returned to her tanning. Through it all, the lifeguard had barely stirred.

    Such is the dichotomous reality this week in southern Israel, where residents live under both the terror of a Hamas rocket barrage and the protection of a highly sophisticated antimissile system that has proved remarkably successful at intercepting the incoming fire.

    The Iron Dome defense

    When Iron Dome works, as it does some 90 percent of the time, the rockets explode overhead, producing a deep boom that Israelis have learned to distinguish from the bang of a direct hit.

    The system is widely credited here with allowing Israel to endure more than 1,000 rocket attacks in the past week without a single fatality as of Monday night. It has also allowed residents across the south to carry on with a measure of normality, despite an unrelenting exchange of fire that has claimed more than 185 lives in nearby Gaza.

    “I can’t even explain with words how great it is,” said Sivan Hadad, 32, who has lived her entire life in Ashkelon and had grown accustomed to staying indoors when the rockets started flying. “Now I can go out. I still get scared, but not like before.”

    To Israeli security officials, the success of Iron Dome is akin to that of the separation barrier between Israel and the West Bank, which they say helped bring an end to an onslaught of suicide bombings in the early 2000s.

    The Iron Dome system has rendered rockets so ineffective that Hamas and its allies have, in recent days, been attempting more-creative ways of attacking Israel. Last week, a Hamas commando unit tried to infiltrate Israel by sea before being cut down on the beach by Israeli fire. On Monday, the Islamist militant group launched a drone that hovered over the southern city of Ashdod.

    The drone launch was believed to have been the first time that the group has sent an unmanned aerial vehicle into Israeli airspace, after the Lebanese Shiite militia Hezbollah did the same last year. Monday’s drone was shot down by a U.S.-supplied Patriot missile.

    “I think they’re getting frustrated,” said Danny Danon, Israel’s deputy minister of defense. “They’re still looking for a success.”
    This video, released by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), shows two methods for warning Palestinian civilians of an upcoming airstrike. The first part of the video features an audio recording of a call made by an IDF representative to a Palestinian citizen, warning them that they should leave the building they are in as it is about to be targeted. The second part shows the Israeli military shooting a small “warning missile” at a building in Palestine designed to warn occupants that the building will soon be destroyed. (Israel Defense Forces)

    Iron Dome may be changing Israel’s tactics and calculus, as well. In Israel’s offensive against Hamas in 2008 and 2009, before Iron Dome was implemented, Israel sent in ground troops, dramatically increasing the death toll on both sides. But in another major operation in late 2012, Iron Dome was deployed for the first time and Israel kept its soldiers out of the strip.

    It has largely done the same this time.

    “If we did not have it and the rockets were falling in Israel, killing people, then the Israeli army would have little choice but to enter Gaza on foot to get rid of the place where the rockets are coming from,” said Amir Peretz, who was defense minister from 2006 to 2007 and is widely seen as the godfather of Iron Dome. “This would mean much more civilian casualties on both sides.”

    But critics say the system also has taken some of the pressure off Israel’s leaders to negotiate a peace agreement with the Palestinians.

    Iron Dome, Peretz said, is no more than a stopgap.

    “In the end, the only thing that will bring true quiet is a diplomatic solution,” he said.

    Such an enduring peace appears remote. And in the meantime, Iron Dome has changed the way Israelis experience war.

    The system uses highly complex algorithms to chart the path of a rocket from the moment it leaves its launch site in Gaza, calculating almost instantly whether the projectile is headed for a populated area.

    If it is, one of the mobile Iron Dome batteries positioned across the country fires and attempts to intercept the rocket. If the rocket is headed toward an open area or toward the sea — as the majority of Hamas’s crudely guided rockets are — Iron Dome lets it pass.

    The system, developed with substantial American assistance, has been improved since Israel’s 2012 fight with Hamas and has been more accurate this time around, Israeli officials say. But there are still occasional misses.

    On Sunday, a 16-year-old boy riding his bike in this city of 135,000 was critically injured by shrapnel after a rocket slipped through. Local emergency officials faulted the boy for not taking cover when the sirens sounded and say they worry that residents are becoming too complacent about the threat because they think Iron Dome will always protect them.

    While some residents of southern Israel have spent the past week shuttling in and out of bomb shelters, others have not seen the need.

    “When the sirens sound, I stay in my apartment. I don’t really feel like sitting in a bomb shelter,” said Adi Dahan, a 28-year-old real estate agent who lives in a gleaming new apartment tower with stunning views of the Mediterranean.

    The building is one of dozens going up in this prosperous city, which is attracting new residents at a clip of up to 500 every month despite its status as a top Hamas target. In the past week alone, at least 65 rockets have sped toward Ashkelon, and 35 have been shot down by Iron Dome. Four have struck.

    Amid the barrage, Dahan said she continues to get calls from people across Israel and from around the world who are eager to move to Ashkelon for the sea views and bargain prices. Because of Iron Dome, the rockets do not seem to worry them much.

    “When I show them the south-facing apartments, they say, ‘Oh, that’s where the rockets are coming from.’ But they’re not really nervous,” she said. “I just tell them, ‘If you’re facing the south, you get more sun.’ ”

    William Booth in Gaza City contributed to this report.
    No, I did not steal that from somebody on Something Awful.

    Comment


    • Hamas' attack on Israel destroys Gaza

      More than 160 Palestinian fatalities have been counted in the first six days of Israel's Operation Protective Edge in the Gaza Strip. According to the Palestinian Gaza-based Ministry of Health, more than two-thirds of the fatalities are civilians, and more than 22 of them are children. The devastation in Gaza is enormous and the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) estimate that they still have a long way to go and that the operation will last for many days to come.

      Hamas rose to power through those in Gaza who wished to better their dire situation, but the movement chose to invest its resources in attacking Israel, ignoring the devastating consequences of its choice on the population.
      Author Shlomi Eldar Posted July 13, 2014
      Translator(s)Simon Pompan

      To date, the Israeli air force attacked over 1,300 targets, including Hamas institutions, mosques, the residences of the organization's militants and, of course, rocket-launching sites. The initial Israeli proposal — namely, "quiet will be met by quiet" — was answered with a salvo of rockets on Tel Aviv. The movement's leaders went underground into fortified bunkers built to protect their lives, while leaving some 1.5 million residents in the Gaza Strip exposed to Israeli air force airstrikes.

      During 5½ years, Gaza has seen three large Israeli military operations that have claimed the lives of some 2,000 people. Thousands were wounded or lost their homes. The devastation to infrastructure in the Gaza Strip was staggering. It took them more than two years to rebuild Gaza after the havoc wreaked during Operation Cast Lead in 2008-2009. The same was true during Operation Pillar of Defense in 2012.

      In conversations I held with acquaintances of mine in the Gaza Strip during this current operation, they described much bigger devastation compared with previous confrontations. Moreover, following the nonstop rocket barrages, as well as Hamas' rejection of every attempt to broker a cease-fire, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has warned that this is only the beginning. The next stage of Operation Protective Edge is to call on the residents of the northern Gaza Strip to evacuate their homes, at which point tons of explosives will be dropped from the air to destroy Hamas' booby-trapped tunnels and long-range rocket launchers.

      In a background briefing for reporters this week, an Israeli military official said that when Hamas leaders rear their heads from the bunkers where they are hiding, they will not believe their eyes. According to him, they will see a Gaza in ruins, and that the residents, who became hostage of their vanity, will be battered.

      Using the slogan of "change and reform," Hamas rose to power following the democratic elections in 2006. The residents of the West Bank and Gaza voted for the organization mainly because they wanted to punish Fatah for the corruption prevalent in the Palestinian Authority from its inception. Instead of rehabilitating the densely populated refugee camps in the Gaza Strip, building schools and hospitals and providing work for the unemployed, Fatah leaders — mainly those who arrived with late PLO leader Yasser Arafat from Tunis — stole much of the money. With other financial resources, donated by various countries, Arafat set up a bloated system of security forces. Battered and bruised, Gaza was left in abject poverty. Thus, it did not take much to fall for Hamas' promises.

      Yet, not only has "change and reform" remained an empty slogan, but Gaza has regressed light years, and the situation of its residents has only worsened. Not having built as much as a single school or a single hospital for the poor residents of the Gaza Strip, Hamas has shown no concern for the residents of the refugee camps from which it rose.

      By and large, the money was invested in building up the movement's power, manufacturing and importing rockets and constructing an elaborate system of underground tunnels. Concrete and iron were poured under the shanty homes of the Jabaliya refugee camp, Beit Hanoun and Beit Lahia to conceal long-range rocket launchers and build fortifications to protect the organization's senior leaders. The houses of the residents remained dilapidated, derelict and exposed. This is the tragedy of Gaza, whose residents feel cheated and betrayed. First, they fell victim to the Arafat government's corruption; now, they have fallen victim to Hamas' ideology.

      Established in the late 1970s on the foundations of Sheikh Ahmed Yassin's Islamic Center, Hamas initially looked after the well-being of the residents of the refugee camps, as well as Gaza's indigents. The movement's charity institutions — the Dawah — handed out pocket money to the needy and distributed food to the hungry. It built community centers for senior citizens, kindergartens and day care centers for small infants, as well as recreation centers for young adults. The Dawah was the apple of Yassin's eye, and ensuring the well-being of the residents was of overriding importance. Since then, the monster has turned against its own maker. Hamas' military wing, which was established during the first intifada, took control of the organization, leading it down its path. Armed Hamas militants struck fear in the organization's leaders — the members of the political wing. And now, more than ever before, they are taking the residents of the Gaza Strip down a path of destruction and doom.

      Israel has clear goals in this current operation: stopping the rocket fire at its southern communities and removing the constant threat to its citizens. What are Hamas' objectives? What is Hamas wishing for when this campaign is over? How can you account for the conduct of the movement's leaders who, with eyes wide open, are inching toward a large-scale military confrontation with Israel, when all the residents of the Gaza Strip know full well who has the upper military hand?

      The leaders of the political wing — Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh, political bureau chief Khaled Meshaal and senior official Mahmoud al-Zahar, as well as the members of the military wing, chiefly Marwan Issa, who succeeded Ahmed Jabari, who was killed by the IDF at the start of Operation Pillar of Defense — are not deluding themselves into thinking that they are a match for Israel's military. Some 40,000 fully geared reservists, who have the most advanced weapons and military materiel, are waiting outside the Gaza Strip as Israeli warplanes buzz overhead. If that's the case, how can you account for Hamas' provocation of Israel and the ongoing fire that appears to be beckoning Israel to engage in a ground operation in the Gaza Strip? How is it that a movement that rose from amid the refugee camps to care for the welfare of the needy residents has changed its spots and is willing to sacrifice many of its followers for its radical objectives?

      The only explanation is that Hamas would rather commit suicide than be humiliated by its opponents as an organization that promised the moon and the earth to its voters but has delivered neither. The organization prefers to be regarded as a martyr than being one that tried to run a civilian rule and failed miserably. Furthermore, it seems that even the residents of Gaza have no logical and cogent answers to these questions.

      Read more: http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/orig...#ixzz37d0VL1Or
      Hamas rose to power through those in Gaza who wished to better their dire situation, but the movement chose to invest its resources in attacking Israel, ignoring the devastating consequences of its choice on the population.
      No, I did not steal that from somebody on Something Awful.

      Comment


      • Hamas' attack on Israel destroys Gaza
        here again we see the shifting of blame, an honest title would be simply:

        Israel destroys Gaza (again)
        "The Christian way has not been tried and found wanting, it has been found to be hard and left untried" - GK Chesterton.

        "The most obvious predicition about the future is that it will be mostly like the past" - Alain de Botton

        Comment


        • When someone holds an entire nation prisoner it's unfair and uncivilized for the imprisoned people to fight back. What nation does not hold the likes of the Maquis, the Arma Krajowa, the Chetniks, Hoger Dansk, the Landelikje Knokploeg, the Forest Brothers, the Dongjiang, the Hukbalahap, the Osvald group, the Satasyel'ski detachment and all their fellow travellers in the highest contempt?
          "I say shoot'em all and let God sort it out in the end!

          Comment


          • Did they build underground fortifications and force their population to stay in place on top of them?

            Hamas is the government there now. With all the responsibility for their actions that implies.
            No, I did not steal that from somebody on Something Awful.

            Comment


            • Are you totally ignorant of history? Do you know nothing of the Warsaw Uprising? Urban resistance movements?
              "I say shoot'em all and let God sort it out in the end!

              Comment


              • These rockets aren't shoot-n-scoots anymore. Since Hamas took over they been using government funds to build covered pits to hold their heavy rocket launchers. They lift the cover, fire a rocket, replace the cover. There are more rockets stored inside, so they can do it repeatedly. If you're in charge of defending the country and know an active fixed site is there, and you leave it be, that would be irresponsible.
                No, I did not steal that from somebody on Something Awful.

                Comment


                • Urban resistance movement? It's the government.
                  No, I did not steal that from somebody on Something Awful.

                  Comment


                  • of a tiny territory under siege.
                    "The Christian way has not been tried and found wanting, it has been found to be hard and left untried" - GK Chesterton.

                    "The most obvious predicition about the future is that it will be mostly like the past" - Alain de Botton

                    Comment


                    • Because it keeps provoking its neighbor.
                      No, I did not steal that from somebody on Something Awful.

                      Comment


                      • yes if only the palestinian provocations would stop then there would be peace. just look at the west bank where peace and harmony reign and the two peoples live in brotherhood.

                        oh, wait a minute...
                        "The Christian way has not been tried and found wanting, it has been found to be hard and left untried" - GK Chesterton.

                        "The most obvious predicition about the future is that it will be mostly like the past" - Alain de Botton

                        Comment


                        • Yes, that wall has worked wonders with keeping down the suicide bombers.
                          No, I did not steal that from somebody on Something Awful.

                          Comment


                          • no concern for those on the other side of the wall then?
                            "The Christian way has not been tried and found wanting, it has been found to be hard and left untried" - GK Chesterton.

                            "The most obvious predicition about the future is that it will be mostly like the past" - Alain de Botton

                            Comment


                            • Sure, I'd love for them to build homes and businesses instead of suicide bombers and rockets.
                              No, I did not steal that from somebody on Something Awful.

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by The Mad Monk View Post
                                I don't. That's nowhere near a national election, and way too little time to set up a diversion of that scale.
                                didn't need an election, just an easy win after getting blown up in Beirut

                                and we can invade a small island in 2 days

                                I'd like to know when the order was given

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X