July 23, 2008

Deterrence is the only effective tool against east Jerusalem terror

Yaakov Katz , THE JERUSALEM POST

Since January 1, the IDF, Israel Police and Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) have arrested close to 80 Arabs from east Jerusalem on suspicion of involvement in terrorism.

The figure represents a sharp increase over the previous seven years, when only 270 east Jerusalem Arabs were arrested. The numbers, released by the Shin Bet on Tuesday following the second bulldozer attack in Jerusalem, represent a growing terror trend among east Jerusalem Arabs, who, with blue identity cards, benefit from free access to Israel without inspections at checkpoints.

On the other hand, the fact that bulldozers were used in the two most recent attacks in the capital demonstrate the difficulty these terrorists are having in getting their hands on more lethal materials such as explosives, machine guns or other weaponry, so that they resort to what is available - their bulldozers.

While Jerusalem has known the occasional terror stabbing over the past few years, before the shooting attack in the Mercaz Harav Yeshiva in March in which eight students were killed, the last major attack in the capital was in 2004, when two border policemen were killed in a suicide bombing in the French Hill neighborhood.

This has to do with the remarkable job the IDF Central Command and the Shin Bet have done in preventing terror infiltrations into Israeli cities. This is not due to any drop in motivation or attempts - as the rise in arrests in east Jerusalem shows - but has to do with the near-completion of the security barrier, as well as the operational freedom the IDF enjoys throughout the West Bank.

Just two hours before the attack in Jerusalem, Shin Bet chief Yuval Diskin appeared before the Knesset’s Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee to discuss recent trends in Palestinian terrorism.

Diskin portrayed a gloomy picture of the situation in the Gaza Strip, noting the new range of Hamas’s rockets - capable of reaching Kiryat Gat and Ashdod - as well as the work the terror group is doing in laying mines along the border fence.

When asked, however, to discuss the first bulldozer attack in Jerusalem, on July 2, Diskin turned critical, noting that Israel lacked effective deterrence against such attacks, mainly due to the foot-dragging on the demolition of homes belonging to the perpetrators of the Mercaz Harav and first bulldozer attacks.

Considering the dozens of construction sites throughout Jerusalem and the many Arabs who work on them, there is almost no effective way to prevent a lone attacker from deciding to turn his work tool into a killing machine except for deterrence. The failure to demolish or even seal the homes of the previous attackers is a mistake that, according to the Shin Bet, is enabling future attacks.

Another problem the Shin Bet chief noted was the lack of coordination between the police and the IDF vis-à-vis operations in east Jerusalem refugee camps. One example is in Shuafat, where to this day it is unclear who is responsible for performing arrest raids - the Border Police or the IDF.

What is needed, security officials said, is a daily presence of security forces inside these east Jerusalem neighborhoods and refugee camps - another step that would add to Israel’s deterrence and cause a potential terrorist to rethink his plans.

Posted by Ted Belman @ 2:01 am |

4 Comments


  1. Blowing up the Dome of the Rock, getting rid of the Al Aqsa Mosque, transferring Palestinian refugees to Arabia is the best and only solution for world peace.

    Comment by Michael Sunstar — July 23, 2008 @ 2:10 am



  2. An interesting piece from Debkafile today:

    Masses of weapons and explosives are cached in the Palestinian villages and districts of Jerusalem, where three Palestinian terrorist networks are working together to coordinate attacks in the city, according to security-intelligence sources. They decide whether the lone killers use firearms, explosives, knives or mechanical weapons, like the diggers which smashed through Jerusalem’s main streets twice this month. With much of Jerusalem under intense development and Arabs employed at many building sites, police fear a future attack could be carried out by toppling a crane on a densely populated district.

    Shin Bet director Yuval Diskin said Wednesday, even before the second bulldozer attack which injured 29 people, that going into Jerusalem’s Shuafat is more dangerous than the Jenin refugee camp. “A security vacuum encircles Jerusalem,” he said, “through which terrorists are free to enter the capital.”

    Meir Sheetrit, minister of interior, reported after research that the Palestinian family reunion program approved by Israel had been used to plant scores of active terrorists in the West Bank and Jerusalem.

    Shin Bet probes in the Arab districts of Jerusalem have turned up close cooperation between Hamas and the fiercely radical Hizb al-Tahir, which is attracting increasing numbers of Palestinian terrorists to its ranks.

    Hizb al-Tahrir now controls the mosques on Temple Mount and its environs, having pushed out and replaced the Muslim Waqf sentry posts at the shrine and organized them on the lines of a terrorist militia.

    Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah and pro-Jordanian elements, which once ruled Arab sectors of Jerusalem, have lost out to the Islamic fundamentalists.

    According to DEBKAfile’s security sources, the Galilee Liberation Brigades – Imad Mughniyeh fighters, an offshoot of the Lebanese Hizballah among Israeli Arabs, works hand in glove with the Hizb and Hamas.

    Counter-terror experts fear that the police, including the Border Guards, which are in charge of security in Jerusalem, are out of touch.

    According to one official, their methods of operation were adequate for the traditional law and order tasks of yesterday – but cannot cope with the cycle of terror overtaking Jerusalem in the past year. Jerusalem needs young, vigorous police chiefs with special training in combating terror and organized crime - which often overlap - to replace the old school of police officers who still categorize every attack according to outdated criteria which place terrorism and crime in separate boxes. They then complain they are helpless against the new brand of terrorist, the one-wolf killer.

    It seems we need to reconstruct our Police force to face these new terrorist tactics. The destruction of terrorist homes is a must and their expulsion from Israel is a necessity but not to the “west bank” or Gaza they need to be sent as far away as possible…..Antarctica comes to mind, a good place to cool your heels, as it were, and plenty of room.

    Comment by mike packer — July 23, 2008 @ 3:53 am



  3. My apologies for the tongue in cheek post #2, but my country’s government has become a joke with its punishment of terrorists and their families.

    Comment by mike packer — July 23, 2008 @ 3:58 am



  4. Every Arab household has at least one firearm, just go to any Arab wedding or celebration and their guns all come out from their hiding places. Many of them stolen and sold by our ever patriotic soldiers and reservists. They have raided IDF armories, with the possible help of our own and long have everything from rifles to anti tank missiles, to shoulder held ground to air missiles, in short they have to scale in their arsenal just about everything we have. On the black market in any Arab Town or city you can buy any weapon to order and they even have a fluctuating price list according to supply and demand market forces including how easy of difficult we make it for them.

    Don’t anyone here believe half the spin the Israeli politicians and defense heads make. All are screw ups, leftists (world view) and all were appointed by those ea has apersonal debt and all wish to please. All are part of the problem here not their cure!!!

    Comment by yamit82 — July 23, 2008 @ 7:27 am


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