Showing posts with label Katyusha. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Katyusha. Show all posts

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Scuds in Lebanon: Israel’s Déjà Vu, Again and Again

Israel cannot minimize the threat. The threats of Iraqi Scuds and Egyptian anti-aircraft missiles were once minimized, too.
A version of this article appeared in Pajamas Media

Sitting on my desk is a mangled chunk of steel, a large piece of shrapnel from a Scud missile that hit a Tel Aviv community center in 1991. It serves to remind me of the terror of the Gulf War, when Saddam Hussein fired 39 long-range Scuds at the Tel Aviv and Haifa regions over a six-week period.

Earlier this month, Arab, American, and Israeli sources all confirmed that Syria transferred Scud missiles to Hizbullah forces in Lebanon. Immediately, several commentators and analysts minimized the Scuds’ dangers.

From Time : Scuds can be easily tracked and destroyed by the Israeli air force before launching.

The Los Angeles Times editorialized: [The] large 1950s-era missiles are inaccurate, and Israel has the capacity to intercept them.

The Kuwaiti paper Al-Rai reported: Hizbullah sources confirmed Thursday that the terror group received a shipment of Scud missiles from Syria. … The missiles were claimed to be old and unusable.

American officials hemmed and hawed: maybe the Syrians just “intended” to provide them. The officials "had doubts about whether the missiles were delivered fully assembled or had actually been transferred to Lebanon."

Déjà vu

The media apparently has long-term memory loss and is incapable of remembering the 1991 Gulf War Scuds crashing down on Israel. But what excuse is there to forget the barrages of Hamas’ Kassam and Katyusha rockets that set off the 2009 Gaza conflagration?

Over a period of
eight years, analysts and reporters described the thousands of Kassam rockets fired at Israeli civilians as primitive, inaccurate, homemade, and relatively harmless. They minimized the threats to Israeli citizens, as Jewish children in their playgrounds scurried to bomb shelters or families cowered in “safe rooms” while Kassams — and later, the bigger Katyushas — crashed into their towns.

The “primitive” missiles killed and wounded Israelis.

When Israel’s army finally responded, Israel was condemned with unprecedented opprobrium by governments, the media, the UN, J Street Jews, the self-righteous left, and the bigoted on the right.

A recommendation to Israel: Assume the Scuds are in place and in the hands of a terrorist organization. Take the threat seriously.

Déjà vu, again

Every adult Israeli remembers lugging gas masks everywhere during the 1991 Gulf War. Many sat in long lines of cars leaving Israel’s coastal towns in the late afternoon to ferry families to the relatively safer Jerusalem or Eilat areas. Hearing an ambulance siren today still triggers for many Israelis the memory of the dreaded air raid sirens, scurrying to shelters, and squeezing their smallest children into sealed plastic coops with purified air.

The Scud missiles were supposed to be inaccurate, but at least six hit residential areas in Israel, and their one ton explosive warheads left swaths of devastation. Thousands of homes and businesses were damaged. The lethality of the missile was seen in one case in Saudi Arabia, where a Scud killed 28 U.S. soldiers in Dhahran and wounded more than 100. Moreover, if the Hizbullah Scuds are the “D model” in Syria’s arsenal, then their accuracy is supposed to be pretty good — within 50 meters of the target.

But Scuds do not have to be accurate to be effective. They just need to explode.

They are terror weapons (may one use the word “terror” today?), intended to panic Israel’s civilian population and shut down Israel’s economy. And for several years now, American intelligence has been warning that “a portion” of the hundreds of Syria’s Scuds “may have chemical warheads.”

As Iran’s proxy on the Mediterranean, Hizbullah works closely with Syria and the Iranian Revolutionary Guard. Hizbullah caught the Israeli navy off-guard during the 2006 war, shooting a sophisticated Iranian-produced missile at an Israeli missile boat and killing four IDF sailors. Israeli defenders were also caught by surprise when Hizbullah unmanned aerial vehicles flew over northern Galilee. In any future combat, the Israeli air force may find itself flying through a thicket of sophisticated anti-aircraft missiles provided to Hizbullah by Iran, or covering Lebanon’s airspace while based within Syria’s adjacent territory.

Since the Gulf War, Israel developed the Arrow anti-missile system to intercept weapons such as the Scud or Iran’s more advanced Shehab missile, but a massive barrage of missiles could possibly overwhelm Israel’s defenses. The new Israeli “Iron Dome” system is supposed to block Katyusha missiles such as the ones Hamas and Hizbullah rained down on Israel, but it’s not battle-tested. The United States has provided a high-powered X-band radar station to provide early warning of long-range missile launches.

But who wants to rely on such defensive systems to shoot down missiles falling on your head? Israel must have the ability to preempt.

Lebanon’s army commander, Jean Kahwaji, argued this week that it was impossible that Scuds could have been introduced into the country:

"Scud rockets are not like Katyushas that are carried on the shoulder and transferred from one area to another. The rockets are 30 meters long, are carried on large vehicles, and need 40 minutes to prepare for launch."

Considering that Hizbullah has been incorporated into the Lebanese army (some claim the army was integrated into Hizbullah), no one should be surprised by his declaration of innocence. But the Scud missile is 11-12 meters long, not 30 as Kahwaji states.
Moreover, Hizbullah smuggled 16-meter-long Zelzal missiles and their launchers into Lebanon in 2006.

In the first days of the 2006 war in Lebanon, the Israeli air force succeeded in destroying 54 of Hizbullah’s mid-range Zelzal missile launchers (approximately half the range and half the warhead of the Scuds). Many of the Zelzals were deployed in civilian neighborhoods.

But the Israeli army and air force could not stop the constant bombardment of other missiles and rockets. Almost 3,800 rockets were launched against Israel, with some 900 hitting Israeli towns, killing 42 civilians and wounding more than 4,200. Today, Hizbullah is reported to possess 40,000 rockets, four times the number it held in 2006. “We are at a point now,” Secretary of Defense Robert Gates warned this week, “where Hizbullah has far more rockets and missiles than most governments in the world.”

Presumably, Hizbullah will hide the Scud launchers better than it concealed the Zelzal launchers.

A recommendation to Israel: Be prepared. Consider preemption. Take the threat seriously.

Déjà vu, once more

Prior to the 1991 war, the Americans promised Israel that in the event of a Scud attack, U.S. aircraft would concentrate on knocking out the Scuds within the first 48 hours. However, as explained by Moshe Arens, who served as Israel’s defense minister at the time:

"The problem of hitting mobile launchers was far more difficult than the U.S. had envisioned. Although there was intensive aerial activity directed at hitting the Scud launchers, not a single Scud launcher was hit or immobilized during the five weeks of the Gulf War. Then the Americans sent over the Patriots. The Patriot was probably the most advanced anti-aircraft missile around at the time, and was advertised as also having anti-missile capability. As it turned out, the Patriot missiles in Israel did not succeed in intercepting a single Scud missile."

Today, senior American officials are not promising to destroy Hizbullah Scuds; they are denying that they’re in Lebanon.

After all, such a deployment would be a serious violation of UN Security Council Resolution 1701 which prohibits the “supply of weapons to any entity in Lebanon without the consent of the Government of Lebanon.” (This raises the question of whether Lebanon’s government, cowering before a resurgent Syria, agreed to the Scud deployment. If so, that makes Lebanon, its military, and infrastructure complicit and fair game in the event of another war.)

But as far as Syria is concerned, the U.S. appears to be rewarding the Assad regime despite the transfer of the Scuds. Washington still intends to send a U.S. ambassador to Damascus as part of the commitment to “engage” Syria.

Denial of th
e deployment of missiles is an old American tactic in the Middle East. After negotiating a cease-fire along the Suez Canal between Israel and Egypt in 1970, American officials rejected Israeli claims that Egypt was moving anti-aircraft missile batteries to the Canal. This was in violation of the agreement that forbade either side from “changing the military status quo within zones extending 50 kilometers to the east and west of the cease-fire line.” Within weeks, however, Egypt had deployed more than 100 batteries along the Canal, anti-aircraft weaponry that would provide cover for the Egyptian attack on Israeli lines during the October 1973 Yom Kippur War.

Israel was furious about the Egyptian violation. Henry Kissinger reported (The White House Years, Volume 1, page 587) that Israel’s Prime Minister Golda Meir sent a demarche via Ambassador Yitzhak Rabin with evidence of Egypt’s violations and deployment of missile batteries. Rabin was brought into President Nixon to show him the evidence and to “complain bitterly about the reluctance of our intelligence community to accept Israeli evidence.”

Kissinger continued with words that echo true 40 years later whether applied t
o the Iranian, Syrian, or Palestinian front:

“There was some merit,” Kissinger wrote, “in Rabin’s complaint of the reluctance of the U.S. intelligence community to find violations. As I explained to the president:


‘Israel, with her survival at stake, cannot afford to take chances. … The nature of the Israelis’ situation is bound to influence their interpretation of ambiguous events. We, on the other hand, have an incentive to minimize such evidence, since the consequences of finding violations are so unpleasant. Violations force us to choose between doing something about them and thus risk the blowup of our initiative; or doing nothing and thus renege on our promises to Israel, posing the threat of her taking military action. Accordingly, we tend to lean over backwards to avoid the conclusion that the Arabs are violating the ceasefire unless the evidence is unambiguous.’”
A recommendation to Israel: Don’t trust U.S. assurances. Take the threat seriously.

Déjà vu, once again

Despite the failure to destroy Iraq’s Scuds in 1991, “the United States was very eager that Israel not intervene in any way.” Moshe Arens recently related. He continued:

"So, despite the previous U.S. assurance that Israel would be free to take action if the missile threat could not be eliminated within 48 hours, after 72 hours President Bush called Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir and Jim Baker called me, insisting that we not take any action, that we not in any way 'spoil' the operation that was underway."

“Keeping Israel out of the conflict [was] a central strategic concern of our diplomacy,” says Secretary of State James Baker, according to a 1999 study on U.S.-Israel relations during the Gulf War. The study continued:

"The prevailing conventional wisdom among American policymakers was that any direct Israeli action against Iraq or indirect participation with U.S.-led forces would likely fray the multinational coalition. If Israel took military action against Iraq, Arab members of the coalition … would withdraw. This would have both strategic political and military implications for the United States, and also hinder Washington’s operational capabilities in the Gulf."

Compare American policy under Baker 20 years ago with the present, with the American reaction to the looming threats to Israel of a nuclear Iran and Scuds in Lebanon. The U.S. administration is again warning Israel — perhaps even threatening — against undermining their fantasy policy world. Like James Baker, they fear that Israeli actions such as building in a Jewish neighborhood of Jerusalem, attacking Hizbullah Scuds, or taking action against Iran’s nuclear threat will have strategic political implications for the United States.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on April 15: "The Israeli-Palestinian conflict has assumed a role in the global geostrategic environment that carries great weight. … Comprehensive peace is critical, not just to Israel and not just to the Palestinians and not just to the United States, but to the future of this world we share."

President Obama expressed a similar theme at the Nuclear Security Summit on April 14: "I think that the need for peace between Israelis and Palestinians and the Arab states remains as critical as ever. … It is a vital national security interest of the United States to reduce these conflicts because whether we like it or not, we remain a dominant military superpower, and when conflicts break out, one way or another we get pulled into them. And that ends up costing us significantly in terms of both blood and treasure."

Years ago, a New York senator complained about a president’s “even-handed” policy in the Middle East. “Even-handedness,” he complained, “means the palm of the hand to the Arabs and the back of the hand to the Israelis.”

It appears that for now the U.S. administration recognizes that it went too far with the back of its hand and has publicly rolled back some of the pressure on Israel. Speakers from the president on down have recently praised U.S.-Israeli strategic cooperation. But the harm has been done. Confidence in the relationship has been shaken, and the Arabs and Iranians probably believe that United States support for Israel has lessened.

Here’s a recommendation to Israel. Déjà vu is not only hindsight. Use it for 20-20 foresight. Take all threats seriously.

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Thursday, January 1, 2009

Israel Is Also Facing Iran across the Gaza Border --
What's at Stake

Those 40 km missiles Hamas is unleashing against Israeli cities are certainly not the “amateur rockets…nagging the residents” of Israeli cities, as a Palestinian journalist recently wrote in a Washington Post op-ed. And Hamas may still surprise Israel with longer-range missiles.

The press calls the rockets “Grads” or “Katyushas,” the Russian name given several generations ago to the original Soviet-made surface-to-surface missiles. Today, it would be more correct to label some of the missiles by their real name, the “Arash,” the name given to them by their Iranian manufacturers. The long-range 120 mm mortars (pictured) raining down on Israel are also Iranian in origin. The mortars are equipped with auxiliary motors to increase their range from six to ten kilometers, reports the IICC think tank.

The Jerusalem Post reports today that the longest range Grads were manufactured in China and that some of them were smuggled to Hamas via Iran. Visitors to Sderot's rocket heap (like Mr. Obama above) can view Iranian-made weapons.

Earlier this year both the Iranian Arashes and mortars were fired from Gaza with deadly results. In February 2008 the mortars were fired at Kibbutz Sa’ad; in June the mortars were used against Kibbutz Nirim, killing one and wounding four, and in November, eight soldiers were wounded by such a mortar at Nahal Oz. The Arash missiles were fired against Ashkelon on several occasions during 2008.

The Long History of Palestinian-Iranian Cooperation

The Islamic Republic worked closely with Yasser Arafat for decades, particularly after the Oslo agreements granted Arafat a foothold in the Palestinian territories. Arafat’s relationship with Ayatollah Khomeini predates the 1979 Iranian revolution.

Former CIA senior officer Robert Baer details the Iranian-Palestinian relationship in See No Evil, The True Story of a Ground Soldier in the CIA’s War on Terrorism. “Arafat had put his entire worldwide terrorist network at Iran’s disposal,” Baer pointed out. “Having been forced out of Beirut in 1982 by the Israelis, he had handed it over lock, stock, and barrel to the Iranians for safekeeping.”

The liaison between Arafat and Iran was maintained by none other than master terrorist Imad Mughniyeh, a former member of Arafat’s Force 17, the mastermind of anti-American bombings in Lebanon, the man behind the bombings of Israeli and Jewish institutions in Argentina, and the alleged chief planner for the 2006 Hizbullah war against Israel. Mughniyeh met a just end when he was killed in his car by a bomb in a Damascus suburb in February 2008.

Iran undertook a major operation to supply weapons to the Palestinians. Click to see the massive inventory of the Santorini and Karine-A ships captured by Israel in 2001 and 2002, including dozens of Arash missiles and hundreds of 120 mm mortars. After the capture of the ships, it can be assumed that Iran dispatched new arms shipments which made their way to Gaza through the Sinai tunnels and other seaborne smuggling efforts. Shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles and the anti-tank Saggers were also captured on the ships, and they too are presumably now in the Palestinian arsenal and will be used against Israeli aircraft and tanks.

Was the Islamic University in Gaza also an Iranian Base?

When Israeli air force jets bombed the Islamic University in the Gaza, the BBC declared that “a significant cultural symbol for Hamas” had been hit. It is evident that the university was also a major part of Hamas’ weapons development and storage network.

“The Islamic University was used as a base for Hamas gunmen,” a Fatah [Fatah, not Israeli!] spokesman told the New York Times in February 2008. “We didn’t attack the university because it was a university, but because gunmen were firing from there.”

A year earlier, Fatah-affiliated security officers captured an Iranian general at the school. They claimed he was “supervising the manufacturing weapons and explosives for Hamas,” according to Yediot Ahranot. “The source told Ynet that the expert was in charge of several labs in the university, mainly chemistry labs in which he trained Hamas activists, most of them women, manufacturing the explosives. At least five Iranian citizens were arrested during a raid at the Islamic University, a Hamas stronghold in Gaza City. Hundreds of weapons and a lathe for the production of Qassam rockets were seized in the raid. The Palestinian source added that at least 20 women, some of them students, were arrested in the labs supervised by the Iranian expert, who was mainly involved in developing shells and rockets, but also explosives. “

The Islamic University in Gaza was also a center for Hamas recruitment and training, according to other accounts.

If and when Israeli ground troops enter Gaza they will encounter extensive Hamas bunker and tunnel systems. Hundreds of Hamas tunnels from the Sinai keep Gaza armed and fed. Two years ago tunnels were used to attack an IDF unit and capture Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit. But it should be recalled that the use of tunnels and extensive bunkers were tactics taught by Hizbullah and the Iranians. In July 2006, a garrulous officer in the Iranian Revolutionary Guard revealed to the Arabic publication Sharq al Awsat that Iranian diplomats smuggled North Korean experts into Lebanon under the guise of "domestic workers." They joined "hundreds of Iranian engineers and technicians… to build a 25 kilometer [!] tunnel." The officer did not reveal the location but bragged "each opening in this [tunnel] measures 12 to 18 square meters, and has a mobile floor and a semi-mobile ceiling. Each four openings are connected by a passage that allows fighters to pass easily [from one opening] to the other."

Israel is not facing a ragtag band of Palestinian thugs. (One silly analyst actually rejected the Israeli claim of “self-defense.” The Gaza war is the confrontation of “a state and a networked organization,” she wrote, “like the US Army fighting the Salvation Army.”)

No, this confrontation is yet another round of Israel versus Iran and its proxies. It is a lengthy war fought in the open in Gaza and Lebanon and fought in the shadows in attacks against Israeli and Jewish institutions in Buenos Aires, or against the weapons supply routes between Iran, Syria and Hizbullah, or in the assassination of a master terrorist in Damascus. In such a war, cease-fires can only be a temporary respite, at best, not a basis for peace.

Michael Young, the editorial editor at the Beirut Daily Star, provides this perspective from his precarious perch:

"What we see developing in the Middle East is an accelerating counterattack by non-state actors such as Hamas, Hizbullah and the Islamic Jihad, all backed by a rising Iran, against the majority of Arab states committed to a negotiated peace with Israel. Manipulating the emotions that the fate of the Palestinians invariably release among Arabs, Tehran above all, but also the militant Islamist groups, are attempting to redraw the regional balance of power through a normalization of the armed struggle against Israel and a delegitimization of Arab states opposed to this."

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Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Israel Agrees to Renew Shipments to Gaza --
Make Them Pay

Collective punishment is also carried out against Israel’s civilians every time Hamas fires a Qassam or Katyusha rocket at Sderot or Ashkelon. Yes, Israel should open the passageways into Gaza but only so that it could trade an oil tanker or a food shipment for every ton of explosives, unfired Katyusha, or 100 RPGs turned over by Hamas for destruction. That would guarantee Gaza thousands of supply trucks.

See Gaza "Blackout" and the Laws of War by J. Peter Pham. "... Notwithstanding the outraged howls from the external enablers of Hamas, there is no basis in international humanitarian law for claiming any belligerent is obliged to supply energy to territory occupied by the enemy, conventional or otherwise."

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Thursday, January 3, 2008

Analysis: That’s Not Rain Falling on Ashkelon Heads
Will Israeli Government Respond to Katyusha Fire from Gaza?

A 122-mm Katyusha rocket was fired from Gaza this morning and fell in a residential neighborhood north of Ashkelon some 16 kms (10 miles) from the Gaza border. While no one was hurt, the ramifications for the region on the eve of President Bush’s visit could be immense.

For seven years Israel’s governments have been insensitive and obtuse to the plight of Israeli citizens of Sderot and environs who have suffered from the terror of the smaller Qassam rockets and mortars flying out of Gaza. But when 30-kilo Katyusha warheads fall on the heads of 100,000 Ashkelon residents and strategic targets such as a critical power plant and a port, maybe even Ehud Olmert will take note.




[Google Earth provides a satellite glimpse of the proximity between Ashkelon and Gaza. A map available at the University of Texas map collection online is a good reference for current and future events in and around the Gaza Strip.]



Not long after Yasser Arafat’s arrival in Gaza in 1994, Ariel Sharon told me that the Palestinians had succeeded in smuggling Katyusha rockets into Gaza. They were held under the Palestinian Authority’s lock and key. When Gaza fell to Hamas last summer so did the rockets. Subsequently, the several dozen Katyushas were supplemented by scores more that were smuggled into Gaza from Egypt through the infamous tunnels.

Clearly, the rockets are coveted by the Palestinians. Exactly six years ago to the day the PA’s Karine A ship was intercepted with its 50 tons of Iranian-supplied weaponry, including 50 Katyushas.

Today’s Katyusha was not the first fired from Gaza. In March 2006 a Katyusha was fired and fell harmlessly near a kibbutz. But today’s Katyusha fell in a populated area, and its launch crew may have been trained in Iran. These rockets are assembly line weapons; not Qassam rockets made in some Gazan back-alley workshop. While Hamas now has tons of high quality explosives to improve the Qassam lethality, they can’t approach the Katyusha’s 22 km (14 mile) range. (Note the pictures: The Katyusha requires two men to carry; the Qassam only one.)

There are tens of thousands of Katyushas available on the black market around the world or being manufactured by “Axis of Evil” countries. A couple of years ago I photographed hundreds of the rockets stacked pell-mell at a supply base in an eastern European country. The base’s security was almost non-existent, and no inventory measures had been taken to indicate whether weapons were missing.

Hamas clearly seeks to replicate Hizbullah’s tactics and successes against Israel. Both are funded and trained by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard. Long-range indiscriminate rocket fire and tunnels (see Mining for Trouble in Lebanon ) are their trademarks. Israel’s northern residents evacuated their cities and towns when they suffered Katyusha barrages in previous attacks. A large percentage of Sderot’s citizens have left because of the Qassams. Will Ashkelon be next?

No doubt, Syria and Iran want to disrupt Bush’s visit any way they can.

Lebanon, beware.




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