Neil Lipken (26
June 2012)
"Excellent report from
Israel on what is going on in the Middle East (U.S.
networks are ignoring many of these stories)-------the
birth pangs continue as we move towards the Rapture"
SHALOM FROM JERUSALEM,
Turmoil continues to intensify in the quaking Middle East, where
Palestinians launched over 150 rockets and mortar shells into
Israel in June as warfare escalated in Syria and the Muslim
Brotherhood won the presidential election in Egypt. We are just
getting news reports that a Syrian army general and other senior
soldiers have defected today to Turkey. The prospect that Israel
could get drawn into the fighting in Syria is growing as the
Iranian-backed Hizbullah militia is reportedly preparing to
transfer SCUD missiles into Lebanon—an action Israel will
probably attempt to interdict. All the details are below. As one
friend of mine put it, "birth pangs are turning into hard
labor."
I was interviewed by CBN news on my roof here in Jerusalem ten
days ago, which is viewable at the link below. I spoke about the
then-impending Egyptian presidential election and the ominous
situation in Syria. We are conducting another interview today,
which will be included in the next program. It is scheduled to
be posted on the same site around the end of June. I have been
invited to speak at a prophecy conference in Wisconsin in early
September, and in the Seattle area in late October. Details are
on my web site, www.ddolan.com
Here is the link for the program Jerusalem Dateline:
http://www.cbn.com/media/player/index.aspx?s=/Archive/News/Jerusalem_
Dateline_061812v2_WS&search=jerusalemdatelineepisodes&p=1&parent
=0&subnav=false
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+++++++++++++++++++
FRESH TURMOIL ROCKS THE MIDDLE EAST
By David Dolan
The tense Middle East continued to quake during June, with
regional violence and turbulence spreading to portions of
southern Israel as fighting escalated in Syria and the Muslim
Brotherhood won a foreboding presidential victory in Egypt.
After several months of relative quiet, a new wave of
Palestinian rocket attacks was launched mid-month aimed mainly
at Israeli civilian centers in the vicinity of the Hamas-ruled
Gaza Strip. Hundreds of thousands of area residents were forced
to take shelter as air raid sirens sounded in several cities and
towns, warning of incoming rockets. School classes were
cancelled along with many public events. Several Israelis were
wounded by Palestinian rocket shrapnel.
IDF military helicopters and jets went into action in response
to the bombardments, killing around 15 Palestinians in the
week-long clashes, including a man they said was behind an
earlier terror attack along Israel’s border with the Sinai
Peninsula. That attack, which left an Arab Israeli worker dead,
sparked off the latest round of conflict. Over 100 rockets and
mortar shells were fired over a three-day period before an
Egyptian-brokered ceasefire was supposed to go into effect.
However over 50 additional rockets were directed at Israeli
cities after that, most likely fired by Iran’s main Palestinian
ally, the Islamic jihad group. Suspecting that Iranian leaders
were trying to goad Israel into another major conflict to
deflect them away from attacking Iranian nuclear targets,
Israeli defense officials nevertheless warned of a possible new
ground offensive in the Gaza Strip if radical Hamas
leaders—whose movement was born in 1988 out of the Egyptian
Muslim Brotherhood group—did not enforce the declared truce.
The Palestinian attacks came as fresh political chaos rocked
neighboring Egypt and warfare escalated in Syria. The
American-trained Egyptian military basically took back the
reigns of governmental power on the eve of the mid-June
presidential election by canceling the results of the earlier
parliamentary vote won by two Muslim fundamentalist parties. The
military leaders also made clear that they, and not any future
parliament, would oversee the drawing up a new Egyptian
constitution. The Islamic parties strongly objected to the
dramatic moves, calling them a virtual military coup. Hundreds
of thousands took to the streets in protest. Days later, both
the Muslim Brotherhood candidate for president, Muhammad Morsi,
and his rival Ahmed Shafik claimed victory in the presidential
race. Israeli officials were said to be extremely concerned when
it was announced that Morsi had defeated Shafik in the election,
significantly moving forward the march of militant Islam in the
quaking region. Hamas supporters danced in the streets of Gaza
City after the election results were announced. Earlier a senior
Muslim Brotherhood official called for Israel’s total
destruction, vowing the militant group would help make that
happen.
To the north, a United Nations official used the term "civil
war" to describe the escalating conflict in Syria. Several mass
civilian killings were blamed on the Assad regime. Human Rights
groups say the death toll in the 16 month-old conflict is now
over 14,000. Syrian dictator Bashar Assad denied his forces were
responsible for the latest atrocities, claiming the horrendous
slaughters of men, women and children were occurring at the
hands of unnamed "enemies of the state."
Officials from NATO countries announced they would hold an
urgent meeting to discuss Syria’s downing of an F-4 Phantom
Turkish warplane off of the northern Syrian coast on June 22.
The Assad regime claimed the jet had strayed into Syrian
airspace near its Latakia seaport, where Russian naval forces
are stationed. The Turkish Muslim government denied this charge
while strongly denouncing the Syrian action. This came after
various Middle East analysts warned that the intensifying
fighting in Syria could spread to other regional countries. More
armed clashes broke out in Lebanon between supporters and
opponents of the embattled Syrian regime. Meanwhile tens of
thousands of Syrian refugees continued to pour into neighboring
Jordan, Turkey and Lebanon. A Syrian air force pilot defected
with his MIG jet to a Jordanian air force base in the north of
the Hashemite kingdom. Several top Assad government officials
were said to be preparing to defect to the rebel side of the
mushrooming civil war.
The possibility that Israel could get drawn into the Syrian
conflict was highlighted by news reports saying Israeli
officials have warned they would not allow the Shiite Lebanese
Hizbullah militia to transfer SCUD missiles from Syria into
Lebanon. Hizbullah leaders are apparently concerned that the
SCUDS could fall into the hands of mainly Sunni Muslim forces
fighting the Assad regime. A rebel military-style attack was
launched earlier in the month against a Syrian air force base
near the border with Jordan, not far from the Golan Heights.
Israeli military forces were placed on full war alert in the
north as the internal fighting in Syria ominously spread to the
border area.
The brutal Syrian regime denied Iranian media reports claiming
that a massive war exercise would soon be held in Syria
involving Russian, Chinese and Iranian military forces. The
Kremlin also denied the reports, which came just before Russian
President Vladimir Putin arrived in Israel for a short visit.
American and European leaders made clear during June that they
might be compelled to enter the conflict if mass civilian
slaughters continue. Press reports said the CIA is helping to
smuggle weapons to the "Free Syrian Army" from Turkey. Meanwhile
UN monitors operating in the crumbling country were ordered back
to their bases after armed attacks were launched against them.
The UN said civilian thugs working for the Assad regime were
most likely behind the assaults, along with at least most of the
mass slaughters. Russia denied American government claims that
it was sending new defense helicopters to the besieged Assad
regime. However the Kremlin later announced that additional
Russian warships were en route to two Syrian Mediterranean ports
to supposedly "protect" Russian citizens working in the war-torn
country
With the headlines dominated by the jarring news from Egypt,
Syria and the fresh Palestinian rocket attacks, the crisis with
Iran continued to simmer on the back burner. A new round of
international talks, this time in Moscow, failed once again to
persuade the defiant Iranian clerical government to halt its
apparent rush towards developing nuclear weapons. It was not
even clear if any further meetings would be held. Israeli
officials again warned that the defiant Shiite Muslim regime is
simply using the talks as a cover while racing to reach its goal
to be in a position to quickly produce nuclear weapons. Media
reports in late June said American military forces were being
beefed up in several Arab Gulf states opposite Iran.
Two other domestic news items received extensive coverage in
Israel during the month. One was the government’s decision to
begin deporting some of the African migrants that have entered
the country illegally over the past six years. Officials say at
least 60,000 migrants, mostly young men, have entered the
country, with some estimates reaching double that number. While
some Israeli groups opposed the deportation moves, surveys
showed that a large majority of Israelis support the action,
especially in light of a growing crime wave involving some of
the migrants who are mostly living in south Tel Aviv. The second
item was a serious riot in the center of Tel Aviv, which took
place after police stopped leftwing "social justice" Israeli
protestors from setting up a new tent camp in the center of the
city. Hundreds of protestors responded one day later by smashing
windows in three city banks and shutting down the main Ayalon
freeway for half an hour. Unrest then spread to Jerusalem where
protestors held an unlicensed demonstration in the heart of
city, blocking light rail trains from running on Jaffa Road.
Analysts warned that additional violent encounters between
anarchist protestors and security forces were likely this
summer.
ATTACKS ON THE BORDERS
An Israeli soldier was killed by a Palestinian who infiltrated
from the Gaza Strip on the first day of June, setting off a
month of intense violence in the area. Sergeant Nethanel
Mushyashvili from Ashkelon was shot dead by an armed terrorist
who broke through Israel’s security fence. The soldier, 21, was
a member of the Golani brigade. The attacker was then killed by
other Golani troops patrolling in the area. Israel tanks and
helicopters were sent into action, entering territory near the
site of the attack and also in the southern portion of the Gaza
Strip where it was believed the infiltrator had come from.
Israelis living in nearby communities were ordered to stay
indoors near their bomb shelters in case the Palestinians
responded with rocket attacks. Some reports said the infiltrator
had hoped to take at least one soldier hostage.
Early in the morning on June 18, Arab Muslim terrorists attacked
two Israeli work crews constructing the new security fence along
Israel’s porous Sinai border with Egypt. The attackers, later
identified as Egyptian and Saudi citizens, fired
rocket-propelled grenades and other explosive devices at the
civilian workers, killing Saed Phashpashe, an Arab Israeli from
Haifa, and wounding several others. Israeli army units rushed to
the scene and entered into armed combat with the Muslim squad.
The army later announced that "several terrorists" were killed
in the encounter. The next day, an Arab group calling itself the
"Shura Council of the Mujahideen in the Holy Land" said it had
carried out the terrorist attack. Israeli security sources said
the group, probably linked to Al Qaida, is based in the southern
Gaza Strip.
In response to the unprovoked attack, Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak ordered the
air force into action against several targets in the Gaza Strip.
This came after the Premier issued a statement saying the
terrorist assault would not halt work on the border fence. "This
barrier is meant both to prevent terrorism and also to prevent
the entrance of infiltrators. Its construction is of supreme
national interest." Officials say the security fence should be
fully constructed by the end of this year. The term
"infiltrators" is used by the government to describe the illegal
African migrants—most of them Muslims—that have crossed into
Israel in recent years.
Israeli aircraft struck several targets in the southern Gaza
Strip soon after the border terrorist attack, killing a number
of Palestinians. When the Palestinians responded by firing
rockets and mortar shells at Israeli civilian centers around the
coastal zone, the IDF launched further air force strikes,
killing or wounding a number of Palestinians the army spokesman
said were members of various terrorist cells. The spokesman said
one of the planners of the Sinai border assault named Aleb
Armilat was among the dead. His superior, identified as Muhammad
Rashdan, was reportedly seriously wounded in the strike.
Palestinian groups, especially Islamic Jihad, then stepped up
rocket attacks, many of them aimed at the nearby Israeli coastal
city of Ashkelon. This was followed by the firing of a more
powerful, longer-range Iranian-supplied Grad rocket at the Negev
Desert city of Beersheva. The Israeli Iron Dome anti-rocket
system was put into action two days after a rocket struck a
border police base in Ashkelon, wounding four Israeli border
policemen working there, one of them seriously. The system
successfully destroyed a rocket that advanced Iron Dome computer
projections showed was heading to a built up area of the coastal
city. The system was deployed again later in the week,
destroying ten more rockets in flight. However another rocket
struck a factory in the hard-hit town of Sderot, seriously
wounding a male Israeli worker.
HAMAS OWNS UP
The Hamas movement, which usually claims its forces are not
involved in rocket attacks, took "credit" for some of the
firings. Probably emboldened by developments in neighboring
Egypt, it was the first time the ruling Palestinian group had
done so since April 2011. This admission prompted further IDF
air strikes on Hamas militia positions. The IDF spokesman said
several Palestinian were killed as they were preparing to fire
rockets or mortar shells, or in some cases right after they had
done so. On the morning of June 19, military helicopters spotted
a group of militiamen planting roadside bombs just inside of the
Gaza border security fence, apparently in anticipation of a
possible IDF military move into the area. Several more
Palestinian men were killed or wounded in that encounter. Later
several non-combatants died when a wall collapsed after the IDF
struck a nearby rocket launcher. Defense Minister Barak and
other senior government officials made clear Israel was not
afraid to launch a full-scale ground operation into the Gaza
Strip if necessary. Vice Premier Silvan Shalom of the Likud
party warned that "The more things deteriorate, the closer we
come to a decision we don't want to make."
On the evening of June 20—a day which saw over 60 rockets
directed at Israel—the so-called "military wing" of Hamas
announced it had agreed to accept an Egyptian proposal to halt
its fire if Israel would also do so. A statement posted on the
Hamas web site said "Responding to the Egyptian efforts, we and
the armed resistance announce our commitment to stop this round
of confrontation as long as the occupation stops its
aggression." Of course, it was a terror attack on unarmed
civilian workers, planned by militant Palestinian Muslims in the
southern Gaza Strip, which set in motion the so-called Israeli
"aggression." As usual, IDF military strikes were directed at
carefully pinpointed terrorist targets while Hamas and its
cronies deliberately lobbed most of their rockets and mortar
shells at Israeli civilian communities.
The IDF spokesman’s office said the weapons arsenal under
overall Hamas control includes many Iranian-produced Fajr-3 Grad
rockets featuring more powerful explosive heads and longer
ranges than older Palestinian-made Kassam rockets. The office
added that longer range Katyusha and Grad rockets are being
smuggled all the time into the Gaza Strip from Egypt, along with
new anti-tank missiles and heavy mortars. Some of the weaponry
is thought to be coming from the large arsenal once controlled
by slain Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi. The office reported
that during the past six years, rocket fire from the
Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip has killed 44 Israeli civilians and
injured nearly 1,700 others, some of them children.
Several Israeli commentators noted that the latest rocket
barrage was barely reported by the international media, being
especially ignored by television and radio networks like the BBC
and CNN which are viewed all over the world. Some opined that if
Israeli leaders feel forced to respond to continuing rocket fire
by sending ground forces once again into the Gaza Strip—an
option they are hardly pining for—that story would be heavily
reported. In New York, Israel’s Ambassador to the United
Nations, Ron Prosor, handed a letter to UN Secretary-General Ban
Ki-Moon, noting that "the lives of about a million Israelis are
being paralyzed" by the ongoing Palestinian rocket and mortar
fire.
TROUBLE ALL AROUND
While focused on the rocket attacks from the Gaza Strip, Israeli
officials were also closely monitoring the jarring developments
in neighboring Syria and Egypt during June. Military analysts
noted that while the dramatic news coming out of Cairo has very
grave implications for the future, the expanding civil war
inside of Syria has the potential to directly involve Israel in
a new military conflict at virtually any moment. Israel’s
Channel 10 network reported on June 16 that concern is mounting
that the Lebanese Shiite Hizbullah militia might be preparing to
try to move advanced weaponry, including SCUD missiles, into
Lebanon from Syria. It added that the move would come in order
to protect the weapons from falling into Sunni Muslim hands if
the Assad regime is overthrown, as many predict will eventually
occur. Veteran military reporter Alon Ben-David narrated the
news story as video pictures showed some SCUDS being recently
moved from the Syrian capital Damascus to undisclosed locations.
It was not revealed how Channel 10 obtained the footage. Other
reports said the missiles were moved to two air force bases
outside of the city. Analysts said the SCUDS are actually owned
by Hizbullah, which reportedly purchased them from the Syrian
regime using Iranian money two years ago. An attempt to smuggle
them into Lebanon at that time was met by public Israeli
warnings that such transfers would not be allowed to take place.
Analysts warn that any fresh Hizbullah attempts to smuggle heavy
weapons into Lebanon could easily spark off another round of
conflict with the Muslim militia, which has received copious
amounts of new weaponry since the 2006 war in clear violation of
the UN-backed ceasefire which ended that conflict. Some say
extremist Hizbullah leaders might not be terribly worried about
any IDF interdiction since the militant group could then blame
Israel for starting any subsequent full-scale conflict. This is
precisely what occurred when the Israeli government ordered a
first strike in 1967 after Egypt blockaded the southern port
city of Eilat and moved troops into the Sinai Peninsula after
signing a war alliance with Syria, both then backed by the
powerful Soviet Union
The disturbing Channel 10 report came just a few weeks after
regional media outlets said Sunni Muslim rebel forces brazenly
attacked a Syrian air force base known as As Suwayda. It is
located near the city of Daraa some ten miles east of the Golan
Heights on the Syrian border with Jordan. The main highway from
Damascus to Amman runs through the city. Thousands of refugees
continue to pour through Daraa every week on their way to seek
refuge in Jordan. Arab media reports said that on the morning of
June 3, heavily armed rebel forces fired mortar shells at the
air force base, setting scores of warplanes and assault
helicopters on fire. They also reportedly managed to destroy
some of the aircraft runways at the base. Israeli analysts say
the strategic base is extremely important to the besieged Assad
regime, being the closest to Israeli military forces stationed
on the nearby Golan Heights. The attack came just days before
Israeli Armed Forces Chief Benny Gantz expressed concern that
Sunni Muslim terrorists might take advantage of the chaos in
Syria to aim their weapons at IDF troops in the area. "We may
face terrorist attacks on the Golan border fence," he told
reporters while visiting the area.
The armed rebel assault near Daraa was significant for another
reason. The Syrian uprising against the Assad regime actually
began in the city in early March 2011. Syrian security forces
arrested a number of children, all belonging to the same family,
after some of them wrote anti-Assad slogans on a local school
wall. When government officials refused to release the children,
who ranged in ages from 9 to 15, anti-regime protests began
outside a neighborhood mosque, calling for government reforms
and an end to corruption. Syrian forces opened fire on the
protestors, leaving four dead. Anti-Assad demonstrations and
deadly government suppressions of them have continued in the
city almost every day since then, as they have all over the
fracturing country, leaving an average of 100 Syrians dead now
every day.
HORRIBLE SLAUGHTERS
Just a few days before the reported rebel action in the south of
Syria—apparently conducted by military defectors—over 100
civilians were slaughtered in several villages near the town of
Houla, north of the city of Homs in western Syria. The UN said
among the dead were 49 children and 34 women. A UN probe
concluded that the victims had been "summarily executed in two
separate incidents." They added that survivors of the massacre
testified the perpetrators were members of a pro-Assad group
popularly known as the Shabiha, which is an Arabic word that
roughly translates as "thugs." Like Hitler’s "brown shirts,"
they are known to be doing the dirty work of the regime. The
Syrian dictator claimed the attack was part of an "external war
using domestic tools," which analysts said was probably a
reference to some Al Qaida members thought to be fighting with
the rebel Muslim forces. For the first time since the Syrian
revolt began in March last year, PM Netanyahu condemned the
Assad regime over the slaughters, calling for "the international
community to act in the light of continuous Syrian atrocities."
Several other mass killings took place in the war torn country
during June; the largest in the city of Hama where the UN said
70 people were murdered. Admitting his peace plan had totally
fallen apart, UN and Arab League special envoy Kofi Annan
warned, "If the situation doesn’t change, Syria faces all-out
civil war." Others said it is now evident that such a conflict
is already well underway. This seemed to be confirmed when UN
monitors attempting to check on the Hama slaughter came under
armed attack as they approached the city, prompting the UN
mission chief to order all his monitors back to their bases
until further notice. He added that the situation does indeed
now appear to have escalated into a full-blown civil war.
American Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warned the Russian
government during June that its refusal to sanction UN action
against Syria would add explosive fuel the conflict, which she
added "could morph into a proxy war in the region." She also
accused Moscow of supplying the embattled Assad regime with
arms, including attack helicopters. Russian Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov denied the allegation, claiming his country was
only sending back older Syrian helicopters that had been
refurbished in Russia. Later in the month, the Kremlin announced
it was sending more warships and military personnel to two naval
bases it operates out of on the Syrian Mediterranean coast.
Military analysts said while they were officially being
dispatched in order to prepare to evacuate Russian citizens
working in Syria, they would obviously act as a major deterrence
to any Sunni Arab, NATO, or other foreign intervention in the
conflict. This came after regional media outlets claimed that US
President Barrack Hussein Obama had vetoed a French-Saudi
proposal to bomb Assad’s palace in order to either kill him or
drive him from power.
Meanwhile the British newspaper Daily Telegraph reported on June
21 that unnamed "senior Syrian government officials" are quietly
preparing to defect to the country's opposition if rebel forces
manage to destabilize the Assad regime. "We are seeing members
of Bashar Assad’s inner circle make plans to leave," an unnamed
senior American official told the newspaper. The report said the
Syrian officials have already been in contact with opposition
leaders, while quietly transferring their private money to
overseas banks.
With regional birth pangs becoming stronger and more frequent
with every passing day, we can only look to the Holy One of
Israel who promised long ago that a day will come when "Violence
will not be heard again in your land, nor devastation or
destruction within your borders. But you will call your walls
salvation, and your gates praise (Isaiah 60:18).
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
DAVID DOLANis a Jerusalem-based author and journalist who has
lived and worked in Israel since 1980. His latest book, a novel
titled MILLENNIUM: THE LORD REIGNS is available for purchase at
his web site, www.ddolan.com in both printed and electronic
versions at special introductory prices. His first novel, THE
END OF DAYS, which is a companion work to the new novel, is
available for a very low price of just $5.00.
HOLY WAR FOR THE PROMISED LAND (Broadman & Holman), his
latest book, is
an overview of the history of the Israel and of the bitter
Arab-Israeli conflict that rages there, plus some
autobiographical details about the author’s experiences living
in the land since 1980. It especially examines the important
role that militant Islam plays in the conflict.
ISRAEL IN CRISIS: WHAT LIES AHEAD? (Baker/Revell), which
examines the political and biblical prospects for a regional
attack upon Israel, settlement in the disputed territories, and
related topics, is also available for purchase, along with an
updated edition of his popular end-time novel, THE END OF DAYS
(21st Century Press).
You may order these books at a special discount price by
visiting his web site at www.ddolan.com, or by phoning toll free
888-890-6938 in North America, or by e mail at:
resources@yourisraelconnection.org
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