BLOGGER: Read posts carefully because I smell a rotten rat.
Current events shows on one hand that Israel and the USA are concocting a plan to attack Iran. The USA is supplying the rebels in Syria with weapons fight against the Assad's regime. Egypt has opened the Tunnels and border gates to Gaza and now supplies of food and materials are pouring in to Gaza and Gazans can now visit Egypt . Hamas is now in good relations with Egypt.
On the other hand, we all know that Iran supplies weapons to Syria. Syria passes the weapons over to Hezbollah.
When dots are connected, everything indicates that the operation carried out in Sinai is a Mossad and CIA a false flag operation meant to disturb the relation between Egypt and Hamas (Gaza). So when Israel and/or the USA attack Iran and in the meantime the USA and Israel increase their activities in Syria, Syria will be weakened along with Hezbollah, and then with the isolation of Gaza again, Hamas will be crippled or might suffer one more "Cast Lead" operation.
At the end of the day, the winner will be Israel. The regime in Syria will be toppled, Hezbollah weakened as well as Hamas.
Devilish! Isn't it?! But who will be the sufferers of this concussion? my answer is: Civilians in Syria, Iran, Lebanon, Gaza and Israel itself as well as the American tax payers.
Armed militants attack Egyptian army outpost, try to infiltrate Israel border
Sinai Global Jihad militants attacked Egyptian outpost, killed between 10 and 15, stole armored vehicles; no Israeli casualties reported; all Eshkol Regional Council residents now allowed to leave houses, expect for residents of Halutziot, Kerem Shalom.
By
Avi
Issacharoff, Gili Cohen and Yanir Yagna | Aug.05, 2012 | 10:47 PM
Armed
attackers from Sinai breached Israel's
border last night in an armored personnel carrier stolen in a raid on an
Egyptian police station that killed around 15 Egyptian policemen.
The
Fahd APC was hit in an Israeli air strike, preventing what military officials
said could have been a deadly large-scale terror attack. A second personnel
carrier exploded at the Kerem Shalom border terminal, which connects Israel, Gaza and Egypt,
before the vehicle could enter Israeli territory.
No
Israelis were hurt in the incident, the IDF said.
"IDF
forces, under the command of Maj. Gen. Tal Russo, and on the orders of Chief of
Staff Benny Gantz, and with the assistance of the Shin Bet, showed alertness,
sharpness and purposefulness, and prevented a terror attack that could have
caused many casualties," said Defense Minister Ehud Barak.
"The
way the attackers operated once again raises the necessity of resolute Egyptian
action to impose security and prevent terror in Sinai."
Israel
Defense Forces soldiers fired on an unclear number of attackers seen escaping
from the site. Israelis living in the Kerem Shalom area were ordered to stay
home and lock their doors, with the army fearing that the gunmen would try to
abduct Israelis up to several hours after the APC incursion. They are being
asked to pay attention to directives from the Home Front Command.
"As
of now, we know of no terrorists still in the area," IDF spokeswoman
Avital Leibovich said last night. "There are some Israeli communities
nearby, and residents have been asked to stay in their homes."
Egyptian
security sources said the attackers fired live ammunition at police officers at
the station during the raid.
An
Egyptian security official told the state news agency that some of the
militants were from Sinai and some entered through underground tunnels from the
Gaza Strip.
IDF
spokesman Yoav Mordechai said the attackers may have been a global jihad group,
but said the army had not positively identified the group to which they belonged.
Mordechai said the IDF has been in contact with the Egyptian authorities,
saying they "see eye to eye with us on what happened."
Immediately
after the personnel carrier came through the border terminal, security forces
set up roadblocks to keep the assailants off Route 232, the main road in the
region.
Police
in the area were bolstered by IDF soldiers and the air force "to prevent
additional incidents in the area," said a military source.
As
of press time, the IDF was continuing to search the area.
Egyptian
President Mohammed Morsi called for an urgent meeting with the country's
military council after the attack, the Muslim Brotherhood's party said on its
Facebook page.
The
Counter-Terrorism Bureau urged Israeli tourists in Sinai last week to return to
Israel
immediately because terrorists were planning to abduct Israelis from the
peninsula.
The
government agency said it issued the warning because it had received new
intelligence indicating that Gaza-based Palestinian terror groups and
organizations linked to Al-Qaida in Sinai were planning imminent attacks on
Israeli tourists there. While it has issued similar warnings several times in
the past, many Israelis ignore them, pressing forward with plans to enjoy a
relatively cheap beach vacation.
Hamas,
meanwhile, condemned the killing of Egyptian police officers.
"Hamas
condemns this ugly crime that killed a number of Egyptian soldiers and extends
its deep condolences to the families of the victims and to the leadership and
the people of Egypt,"
the Islamist group said in a statement.
Dozens of rockets hit Negev
after IAF strike
Palestinian
militants fired dozens of rockets and mortar shells on the southern Negev last night. No significant injuries were reported.
In
an Israeli air strike earlier yesterday, a militant riding a motorcycle in the Gaza city of Rafah
was killed and a second was either wounded or killed.
The
IDF said in a statement that the casualties were members of a global jihad
organization. Mordechai said there was no connection between the air strike and
the attempted terror attack later in the day.
The
IDF and Shin Bet said they carried out the attack in which at least one member
of the Salafi wing of the Popular Resistance Committees was killed. The
committees are linked to the global jihad movement operating in the Gaza Strip
and Sinai.
Israeli
and Palestinian sources confirmed that Eyad Nadi Okel, 19, was killed in the
strike. The IDF statement said Ahmed Sayid Ismayil, 22, was also killed, but
Palestinian sources said he was wounded.
The
IDF said Ismayil was involved in a June attack on the Gaza-Israel border in
which an Israeli citizen was killed. The statement said he was planning another
attack against Israeli targets, near the border between Egypt and Israel.
The
strike came during a time of tense quiet along Israel's
border with Gaza,
one that is periodically interrupted by short bouts of fighting. Late last
month, Gaza militants fired four rockets into
southern Israel, with two
landing near the desert town of Sderot.
No injuries or damage were reported.
The
other two exploded in an open area under the jurisdiction of the Eshkol
Regional Council.
Dozens of rockets, mortar shells explode near Gaza, southern Israel
Residents of Kibbutz Kerem Shalom told to stay in their homes; Palestinians report exchanges of fire between Israel, Palestinians; Gaza sources report at least 11 policemen killed in attack on police station in Sinai near Egypt-Israel border.
By
Gili Cohen , Yanir
Yagna, Avi
Issacharoff and Reuters |
Aug.05, 2012 | 8:51 PM
Dozens
of rockets and mortar shells exploded in the Eshkol Regional Council in
southern Israel
on Sunday evening.
Residents
of Kibbutz Kerem Shalom, near the meeting point of the Egypt-Israel-Gaza
borders, were told to stay in their homes, for reasons of safety.
Palestinians
sources in Gaza
reported exchanges of fire in the area of Kerem Shalom, including shells fired
from the Israeli side, and according to the report, Palestinians have been
wounded. Israeli tanks reportedly fired at least 15 shells in the area near
Kerem Shalom. Egyptian state television also reported that an Islamist militant
group was behind the attack.
Palestinian
sources reported that a group of global Jihadi operatives penetrated the
Egyptian army outpost near Kerem Shalom, killing at least 11 soldiers, and
kidnapped a number of other soldiers. Egyptian military sources told the
Palestinian Ma'an news agency that the terror attck was carried against a central
army position near the Kerem Hashalom crossing, which is known by the soldiers
as Tahrir Square.
At
the time of the attack, 20 soldiers were in position. According to the report,
the masked attackers, who were driving all-terrain vehicles with heavy machine
guns, fired RPGs at the military outpost and killed between 11 and 15 soldiers.
Afterward, they kidnapped the remaining soldiers and left the place in an
armored Egyptian vehicle. This is the most severe attack of Global Jihad on the
Egyptian army.
Earlier
on Sunday, An Israel Air Force craft targeted a motorcycle travelling in the Gaza city of Rafah
on Sunday, killing one militant and wounding another.
According
to initial reports, the attack was a surgical strike against a member of the
Popular Resistance Committees militant organization.
An
IDF statement released after the attack said that the assault was a joint
operation by the army and the Shin Bet, adding that militant squad targeted
belonged to a global Jihad organization.
According
to the statement, the two men targeted in the strike were 19-year-old Eyad Nadi
Okel, who was killed in the attack, and 22-year-old Ahmed Sayid Ismayil, who
Palestinian sources said was wounded in the attack, while the IDF claimed was
killed as well.
The
IDF said that Ismayil belonged to the Salafi wing of the Popular Resistance
Committees, which is linked to the global Jihad movement operating in the Strip
and in the Sinai, adding that he was involved in the June attack on the border
with Israel
that killed an Israeli citizen.
In
addition, the IDF statement said that Ismayil and Hijazi were working on
another attack against Israeli targets on the Egypt-Israel border.
The
strike came amid a time of tense quiet along Israel's border with the coastal enclave,
one that is periodically interrupted by short bouts of fighting.
Late
last month, Gaza militants fired four rockets
into southern Israel, with
two of the projectiles landing near the desert town of Sderot. No injuries or damage were reported.
The
other two exploded in an open area in the Eshkol Regional Council. A
28-year-old woman injured her ankle while seeking shelter following the sound
of the alarm and was evacuated to Barzilay
Medical Center
in Ashkelon.
Last
week, the Counter-Terrorism Bureau urged Israeli tourists in Sinai to return to
Israel
immediately because terrorists are planning to abduct Israelis from the
peninsula.
The
agency said it issued the warning because it has received new intelligence
indicating that Gaza-based Palestinian terror groups and organizations linked
to Al-Qaida in Sinai are planning imminent attacks on Israeli tourists there.
The terrorists' primary goal is to kidnap Israelis, the agency added.
While
it has issued similar warnings several times in the past, many Israelis ignore
them, pressing forward with plans to enjoy a relatively cheap beach vacation.
"The
Counter-Terrorism Bureau once again urges all Israelis in Sinai to leave the
region immediately and return to Israel," the Prime Minister's
Office said in a statement on Thursday.
Sinai attack proves Islamist terrorists are targeting Egyptians as well as Israelis
How will the attack affect the ties between Egypt and Israel, in light of the already weak relations with the new Egyptian government.
By
Amos
Harel and Avi Issacharoff |
Aug.06, 2012 | 1:04 AM
Sunday
night's attack of the Egyptian military post and cross-border incursion was the
largest attack carried out in Sinai by Global Jihad operatives against both an
Egyptian target and an Israeli target.
Egyptian
President Mohammed Morsi called for a meeting of the Supreme Military Council
to discuss steps to be taken, following the killing of the Egyptian soldiers.
The
attack took place while the Egyptians were breaking the daily Ramadan fast. Two
armed groups whose members are identified with Al-Qaida raided the post, a few
kilometers from Kibbutz Kerem Shalom, in two off-road vehicles.
They
fired RPG rockets and machine guns at the position, one of the Egyptian army's
key posts on the border. There were an estimated 20 soldiers at the post at the
time of the attack. It is believed th attackers killed approximately 15
soldiers and abducted the others.
On
Sunday morning an Israeli aircraft fired on a motorcycle carrying two activists
from one of the terror groups active in Gaza.
A 22-year-old member of the extremist Salafi sect, Eyad Nadi Okel, was killed
in the attack. Another man, Ahmed Sayid Ismayil, identified with Global Jihad,
was injured.
The
Israel Defense Forces confirmed the attack had taken place and said Ismayil had
been involved in the attack on the Israel-Egypt border about six weeks ago,
which killed an Israeli Defense Ministry contractor, Saeed Fashafshe, 35, from
Haifa.
According
to the IDF, Okel and Ismayil were planning to carry out an attack on the
Israel-Egypt border, together with other Global Jihad operatives in the Gaza
Strip and Sinai.
Despite
the fact that the attack on the motorcycle and the attack in Sinai were close
in terms of time, and that Global Jihad operatives were involved in both,
sources in the IDF denied any connection between the two incidents.
Only
a few days ago, the Counter-Terrorism Bureau in the Prime Minister's Office
issued a warning that terrorists were planning to kidnap Israelis traveling in
Sinai. But Sunday's attack illustrates the motivation of these Jihadist terror
groups to strike not only Israelis, but also Egyptian security forces.
In
recent months there have been almost daily incidents between the Egyptian army
and armed members of Jihadist groups, and there have been repeated reports of
Egyptian soldiers shot by these extremists, who belong to cells identified with
Al-Qaida coming from all over the Middle East.
The
two terrorists responsible for the attack that killed Fashafshe came from Saudi Arabia and Egypt. There are reportedly
Al-Qaida forces in Sinai from Yemen,
Iraq, Syria and other
Arab and Muslim countries. These groups are supported by the local Bedouin and
it cannot be ruled out that Sinai Bedouin took part in planning and executing
Sunday's attack. Meanwhile, various other terror groups in the Gaza Strip are
assisting them and smuggling arms and goods into the Strip.
About
1,000 soldiers belonging to the Egyptian Border Police are currently stationed
in Sinai, as are other Egyptian soldiers, but their focus is on guarding the
strip of coast and the roads leading to the main northern Sinai cities of El
Arish and Rafah. They do not belong to elite units and are not trained to face
terrorists. Their posts are poorly protected and they face Sinai, rather than Israel, out of
fear of attack from Bedouin gangs or Islamicists. In many ways the neglect of
the Egyptian government, which began back in the time of Mubarak, has helped
turn Sinai into a no-man's land controled by Global Jihad groups and armed
Bedouin.
Sunday's
attack was unusual in its daring. It is clear that the group that carried it
out wanted first and foremost to cause mass casualties among Egyptian soldiers,
and apparently, to deter soldiers from serving in the area. Striking Israel
was apparently a secondary goal.
The
challenge facing Israeli and Egyptian security forces is that such attacks may
continue because of the security situation in Sinai, and the almost complete
lack of real obstacles.
The
presence of the Egyptian army is meager, and perhaps because of the fear that
the Egyptian army will be accused of collaborating with Israel, its
commanders are not eager to take aggressive action against Global Jihad groups
in Sinai.
The
question that remains after Sunday night's attack is how ties between Egypt and Israel will be affected by the
incident, in light of the already weak relations with the new Egyptian
government.
Morsi
recently said he did not want there to be an impression of cooperation with Israel; nor did
he want to strengthen security ties, due to the fear that Egyptian public
opinion would be against both those moves.
Morsi,
the leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, may have no choice but to join forces
with the Egyptian military leadership, in order to take on the terror groups in
Sinai, which have become a real threat to Egypt.
It
is unclear how the Egyptian army will respond, and whether it will continue to
avoid engagement with the terrorists. But it seems that Egyptian public opinion
will demand action following the attack in Sinai.
It
also remains to be seen how the attack will impact the security situation
between Gaza and Israel. For now, it does not seem that
Hamas or any other group in the Strip is interested in an escalation with Israel.
Sunday's
incident ended successfully as far as Israel was concerned, without
injuries or the terrorists crossing the border. Yet it is a painful reminder of
the complicated situation Israel
has on its southern border, as well as its northern border, while Israeli
public opinion is preoccupied with Iran.
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