DAILY ALERT | Sunday, November 17, 2024 | ||
In-Depth Issues: The IDF's Plans for Security in Gaza without Military Rule - Ron Ben-Yishai (Ynet News) Hamas's demands for a ceasefire in Gaza before even considering any negotiation is delaying the end of the war. While aid trucks enter Gaza from Israel, they face looting on the way to distribution centers, or they are intercepted by Hamas, crime families and profiteers who sell the supplies at inflated prices. Hamas is trying to deflect IDF pressure by circulating reports of mass starvation. Meanwhile, Hamas is recruiting teenagers, aged 14 to 17, to join its ranks as armed operatives. Looking to the future, the IDF plans to maintain an intelligence-operational presence in Gaza - without full occupation, military governance o r direct responsibility for humanitarian distribution. To provide security for Israeli civilians, the IDF intends to maintain control over secure corridors, including the Philadelphi Corridor - to prevent external support to Hamas from Sinai, alongside a security buffer zone approximately a kilometer wide on Gaza's side of the border. These corridors will enable intelligence operations that closely monitor activities within Gaza, aimed at detecting any Hamas attempts to rebuild its military capabilities. The corridors would enable IDF forces to rapidly deploy to any area in Gaza where intelligence identifies renewed weapons production, rocket fire, or preparations for terror attacks and guerrilla operations by Hamas or other groups. IDF Seeks Ceasefire in Lebanon on Its Terms&nb sp;- Ron Ben-Yishai (Ynet News) In Lebanon, the IDF is applying military pressure to advance an agreement for a reinforced UN Resolution 1701 that would reaffirm a demilitarized buffer zone along the border with Israel and throughout southern Lebanon up to the Litani River. The IDF seeks to enforce the terms if the Lebanese army and UNIFIL do not fulfill their roles. Although 80% of Hizbullah's rocket arsenal has been destroyed, its remaining capabilities are still enough to send millions of Israelis daily to shelters. Hizbullah views this tactic as a means to wear down Israel's resolve and push it to relax its demands. On Wednesday, IDF forces began advancing from the line of Lebanese border villages northward, aiming to demonstrate to Hizbullah that each passing day brings greater loss of assets. The IDF is concentrating both ground and air operations on neutralizing launchers for short-range rockets. The IDF's detection and interception capabilities for drones have significantly improved in recent days, with interception rates now nearly 90%. While Hizbullah and Israel Are Fighting, Is Lebanon Imploding? - Col. (ret.) Dr. Jacques Neriah (Jerusalem Center for Foreign Affairs) In September 2024, Israel began an offensive against Hizbullah, which had been attacking Israel with rockets since Oct. 8, 2023. The IDF campaign is designed to enable the return of 80,000 Israelis who had been forced to abandon their homes. Within a few months, Israel had succeeded in decapitating Hizbullah, eliminating most of its field commanders and ki lling its leader, Hassan Nasrallah, and his supposed successor, Hashem Nasr el Din. The restraint that Israel had shown since the end of the Second Lebanon War in 2006 was replaced by intensive bombardments throughout Lebanon and by a ground incursion that erased 29 Lebanese villages, destroyed almost 40,000 apartments, and displaced more than 1.5 million inhabitants of southern Lebanon. Some 400,000 Syrian refugees who had fled to Lebanon with the outbreak of the civil war in Syria returned to Syria. Despite the destruction, parts of the Christian and Sunni parties and most of the Shia community are still siding with Hizbullah. At the same time, Lebanon is struggling to survive as a state. As always, the Lebanese seek foreign intervention and aid to save them from themselves. There is only a slim chance that any ceasefire agreement would be honored because of the unwillingness of an y Lebanese administration to fight Hizbullah. The writer, a special analyst at the Jerusalem Center, was formerly Deputy Head for Assessment of Israeli Military Intelligence. Antisemitism in America: My Campus Tour - Bernard-Henri Levy (Wall Street Journal) How should we respond, a brilliant and distressed student of Ohio University asks me, to professors who tell us that Israel is a "colonial creation"? You need to interrupt them. Impeach them. You need to treat them the way the students of May 1968 treated the most reactionary teachers. Explain to these ignoramuses that half of the Jewish found ers of Israel were indigenous and that, if the others did indeed often come from Europe, they weren't conquerors but refugees - escapees whom Europe regarded as garbage. The writer is a French philosopher, war reporter, documentary-maker, and author of more than 30 books. Interest in Aliyah from North America Spikes despite War - Hanan Greenwood (Israel Hayom) Nefesh B'Nefesh, which supports immigration to Israel by Jews from North America, reported that it has processed 13,000 immigration files from the U.S. and Canada this year, up from 7,500 during the same period in 2023. | News Resources - North America, Europe, and Asia:
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U.S. Air Fo rce Gains Experience Countering Large-Scale Drone Attacks Iran Hamas Observations: Iran Rethinks Strategy amid Trump's Return to Power and Regional Shifts - Aviram Bellaishe (Jerusalem Post)
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