Cease Fire in the North – Really?

Shalom all.

Like most things in the political divide, one’s perspective concerning the purported “ceasefire” that went into effect at 10:00 a.m. on November 27, 2024, brought a series of mixed responses. Some said it was great, others said that it signaled the defeat of Hezbollah, still others said that it was a joke and a disaster. Those who praised the ceasefire said that it will push-start the stalled negotiations for a ceasefire in Gaza and the return of the hostages. Others said it would cause negotiations with Hamas to be more problematic.

So, what are we talking about? For a birds-eye view of what the “ceasefire agreement” entails, see here.

Glancing at the 13 points listed in the so-called “ceasefire agreement”, the first thing that we notice is that the “agreement” is actually an “announcement” made by the United States and France of a ceasefire deal for the “Cessation of Hostilities and Related Commitments on Enhanced Security Arrangements and Toward the Implementation of UNSCR 1701”. A fancy title with a lot of nice-sounding words, but, essentially, of little practical value. I am writing as a pragmatic realist, making every effort to awaken many who laud the document as a dramatic breakthrough, signaling the beginning of the end of belligerency in the Middle East.

The announcement itself is a statement of “understanding” made by two non-combatant parties (the United States and France), regarding the commitments made by the governments of the Republic of Lebanon and the State of Israel. Are we missing something here? Where is the participation and commitment of the Hezbollah? The Republic of Lebanon is not one of the parties that is involved in the fighting. But, it is making commitments that are intended to curtail the activities of Hezbollah, which is the terrorist organization that renewed its belligerency against Israel on October 8, 2023.

Irrespective of how one wants to view the latest “ceasefire” deal, one cannot escape the conclusion that it is, in very large measure, a re-hashing of the prior deal that resulted in Security Council Resolution 1701 that ended the Second Lebanon War in 2006 – a Resolution that was immediately broken and continues to be violated by the Hezbollah.

Point 2 of the “understandings” says that starting at 04:00 in the morning of November 27, 2024, the Government of Lebanon would act to “prevent Hezbollah and all other armed groups in the territory of Lebanon from carrying out any operations against Israel, and Israel will not carry out any offensive military operations against Lebanese targets, including civilian, military, or other state targets, in the territory of Lebanon by land, air, or sea.” 

The Lebanese army already has a large number of Hezbollah in its ranks. To expect that Lebanese army would actively engage the Hezbollah militarily to prevent it from acting against Israel is like living on Fantasy Island. For the last 18 years, Hezbollah has effectively been in control of Lebanon from a number of perspectives – it functions as a terrorist organization with a sovereign state behind it. And now, because of the pressure exerted by the U.S. and France, Israel has acquiesced and committed itself not to pursue “offensive military operations against Lebanese targets”. For a prior TWTW discussion of UN Resolution 1701, see here.

Point 9 of the “understandings” obligates Israel and Lebanon to act “in co-ordination with UNIFIL, to reformulate and enhance the tripartite mechanism (hereinafter: ‘the Mechanism’) … hosted by UNIFIL, chaired by the US, and including France, [to] monitor, verify, and assist in ensuring enforcement of these commitments.” This provision brings the U.S. and France on board to get involved in helping to ensure enforcement of the commitments. However, these are future undertakings that should have been “in place” prior to the announcement of the ceasefire and the failure to work them out for immediate implementation is a serious omission on the part of the negotiating parties. 

Point 10 of the “understandings’ calls upon Israel and Lebanon to report alleged violations to the Mechanism and UNIFIL, and allows them also “to communicate directly with the UN Security Council.” In the meantime, the “Mechanism” will do its homework in an effort to help facilitate that the commitments will be enforced. This provision is almost ludicrous. To expect that Israel would turn to the U.N. to complain about a violation of round two of efforts to enforce Security Council Resolution 1701 is a pipe dream. Any observer of decisions reached by the U.N. in recent years can almost conclude that the U.N. exists so that it can condemn Israel.

Point 12 of the “undertakings” is probably one of the more serious provisions of the document. It requires Israel to gradually withdraw its forces to a point south of the Blue Line within 60 days from the start of the ceasefire. 

There is also a “Side Letter” of the U.S., the contents of which are not specifically stated in the above Times of Israel article. Nevertheless, the contents are said to affirm Israel’s right to defend itself against renewed threats [from Hezbollah]. Other provisions: The US will provide Israel with intelligence information about violations of the terms of the ceasefire deal, and specifically, of any indication that Hezbollah is attempting to infiltrate the ranks of the Lebanese Army [whose ranks have already been infiltrated]. Israel may be restricted from responding to Hezbollah violations  of the ceasefire beyond southern Lebanon, but would be able to act if the Lebanese Army is unable or unwilling to deal with the violations and only after it notifies the United States, “wherever possible”. And finally, the “Side Letter’ would allow Israel to conduct reconnaissance flights over Lebanon, for purposes of gathering intelligence, provided that Israeli jets do not break the sound barrier. A slow-moving jet is an easy target for ground-to-air defense systems. It is difficult to grasp why Israel would agree to such a provision.

Much can be said about the contents of the “Side Letter”, which can be left for a later date. Nevertheless, even a cursory review of its provisions reveals that Israel is being restricted on paper. Before it can effectively act, it needs to report, to notify and to wait and see whether the Lebanese army would be willing and able to deal with Hezbollah violations of the ceasefire. Another seemingly ridiculous limitation.

There is no doubt that during the last two and a half months Israel dealt a heavy blow to Hezbollah. A ceasefire that prevents the loss of life and injury to body and soul is always a goal to strive for. But, we’ve been in this show before and the last thing we need right now is a repeat of the mistakes that we made back in 2006. Hezbollah is the largest and strongest of Iran’s proxies in the region and the serious damage to this terrorist organization will undoubtedly have an impact upon the regime of the Persian Puppeteer. That impact, however, remains to be seen.

So why did Israel agree to a ceasefire in Lebanon, when, despite the losses of life and limb on the part of the IDF, we were dismantling the terrorist organization, eliminated its leadership cadre, destroyed much of its tunnel infrastructure, as well as a large percentage of its missiles, and captured thousands of Hezbollah weapons of all kinds?

According to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, there were three reasons to pursue a ceasefire, namely: (1) focus on the Iranian threat; (2) replenish our supply of arms, which have been depleted and give the IDF a much-needed rest; and (3) disconnect the Hezbollah from its support of Hamas, leaving the Gaza terrorist organization isolated.

It all sounds good, reasonable and practical. But, what about the fourth, unspecified reason for the ceasefire – the pressure placed upon Israel by the Biden administration and the incoming Trump administration to get done with the wars and bring the hostages home before the end of the present American administration and the beginning of the next one. Biden needs to achieve something positive and Trump doesn’t want to begin with something negative.

This last “reason” is not what you will read about in the multitude of tabloids and media that have applauded the ceasefire during the last week. But, when a special U.S. envoy comes to town and within a short period of time a “ceasefire deal” is announced, we need to open our eyes to see behind the scenes the realities that all of the actors want to publicly deny. 

More than once the U.S. has indicated that it would withhold military supplies if Israel does not toe the line and behave like an obedient child. But, it is not just military supplies. It is the power to stave off resolutions against Israel by the U.N. Security Council, where the U.S. has a veto, which it has exercised many times in the past for Israel’s benefit. That is the real point of persuasion.

And what about the incoming President? Mr. Trump has made it clear that he wants Netanyahu to end the war and bring the hostages home before he takes office on January 20, 2025. If Netanyahu could have done both over the last year, he would have. But, unilateral withdrawal of forces from Gaza does not guarantee the return of all of the hostages, alive or dead. Still, one of the last things that Israel needs is a Security Council Resolution directing the cessation of military action by Israel in Lebanon. Another “last thing” is to disappoint an incoming President of the United States, particularly one that has been a genuine friend of Israel in the past and who, it is hoped, will continue to be a true friend in the future. Are these realistic and pragmatic reasons to commit to a ceasefire? Of course they are. Is it probable that such reasons would not be admitted by the politicians on both sides of the Atlantic? Definitely. So we are left with speculation about the real reasons for entering into a ceasefire in Lebanon at this point.

By the way, the ceasefire was violated almost immediately by the Hezbollah. Israel responded and Hezbollah launched two mortars into Israeli territory earlier this evening. Israel, of course, responded to militarily to the launchings with strikes in southern Lebanon. In the meantime, Trump threatened that “there will be ALL HELL TO PAY in the Middle East and for those in charge who perpetrated these atrocities against Humanity” if the hostages aren’t released by the date that he assumes office as President.

But, back to the “ceasefire agreement” – It leaves Hezbollah in power. There is emphasis on a “buffer zone”, as was originally called for in Security Council Resolution 1701. The residents of the Israel’s northern towns will not be able to return without fear of additional attacks from the Hezbollah neighbors. According to an article by Jonathan Spyer in Middle East Forum, “[Residents] of Israel’s north are indeed set once again to have Hezbollah as their neighbours, though the organisation will be a weakened, chastened version of its former self – at least for a while. This in turn means that a further round of fighting, sooner or later, is a near inevitability. Hezbollah are the owners of Lebanon. Iran is the owner of Hezbollah. The final uprooting of this organisation is unlikely to take place without this salient reality being taken into account.”

One major problem with the “ceasefire” in Lebanon, which, as noted, has already been broken, is that Hezbollah not only survived, but  remains the power behind all national decisions in Lebanon. This is tantamount to continuing the status quo that existed prior to Israel’s actions against the terrorist organization on its home territory during the last two and a half months. The “ceasefire agreement” contains no demand by Israel to dismantle Hezbollah, either as an organization, a military force or a political power.

The by-product of the “ceasefire agreement” in Lebanon is that the negotiations for a potential ceasefire agreement with Hamas in Gaza have been made considerably more difficult. The terms of the Lebanese ceasefire will most likely be treated as a precedent for any deal with Hamas and whatever was “agreed to” up to this point will most likely be reconsidered in light of the “understandings” that also relate to Hezbollah. For Hamas, who ran Gaza with an iron fist, settling for anything less than what Hezbollah achieved would be considered as a “loss of face”, reducing both the image and status of Hamas, as well as being considered weaker than Hezbollah throughout the greater Muslim world. Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon, return of displaced Lebanese citizens to their homes, promises of financial assistance that will enable them to rebuild homes and infrastructures … and tunnels, as well as international supervision of southern Lebanon is deal number one. There is added pressure on the government to conclude deal number two in Gaza. But, there is also considerable opposition to the deal that was made and the one that is on the negotiating table.

So, was the ceasefire deal good or not? Time will tell.

And while we wait, remember:

For the LORD God is a sun and shield: The LORD gives grace and glory: No good thing does He withhold from those that walk uprightly. (Psalm 84:11)

So, bless, be blessed and be a blessing. 

Marvin

Almost a full year later – remembering, and still fighting

Shalom all,

The elimination of Yahya Sinwar, the former head of the military wing of the Hamas terrorist organization and mastermind behind the devastating assault on communities in the Gaza Envelope on October 7th, 2023, came with mixed reactions in the Middle East and in the rest of the world.

Israel – Sinwar’s death is an essential element in the war against Hamas, but the war won’t end until all of the hostages are returned.

Hostage families – this is the most opportune time to reach a deal for the release of the hostages; but there is concern that Sinwar’s death will backfire on the welfare of the hostages.

Gazan residents (some) – rejoiced that Sinwar is dead; he brought catastrophe to the people of Gaza.

Other Gazan residents – Sinwar died as a valiant warrior; Hamas will carry on and intensify its militancy against Israel.

United States – Sinwar’s death should lead to a cease fire in both Gaza (against Hamas) and in Lebanon (against Hezbollah); this is the time to renew negotiations to bring about an end to the fighting.

England – Well done, Israel.

Germany – Time for Hamas to surrender and lay down its weapons to end the suffering of the Gazan people.

Australia – Failed to stop a gathering at Hyde Park, in Sidney, where the paraticipants celebrated the life of the slain Hamas leader. Sky News Australia host Sharri Markson: “These are scenes I never imagined we would see in our safe country … it is racism I never imagined would be tolerated by political leaders.”

The rest of the world – good, bad, very bad and indifferent. 

For many, the events in the Middle East have little or no impact on their daily lives. For some, the events in this part of the world, particularly as they involve and affect Israel, are critical to understanding how events in other parts of the world will be played out. Still for others, who don’t understand the dynamics of the region, the mentality of the players, or the clear facts of history, they offer suggestions and even demand certain behavior on the part of Israel.

Let’s think together for a moment: If Prime Minister Netanyahu and the Israeli leadership had listened to the present leadership of the United States and other world leaders not to pursue Hamas in Rafiah (Rafah), Yahya Sinwar (who was killed there) would still be alive, Hamas would still be in control of Rafiah as well as the Philadelphi Corridor on the border between Gaza and Egypt, from which it would continue to smuggle weapons into Gaza. Even worse, however, is the difficult conclusion that could be drawn from a year’s efforts on the part of the United States leadership to help a little, while seeking to curtail and even prevent Israel from accomplishing its goal to eliminate the ability of Hamas to rear its ugly head against Israel again. The message was, essentially: fight to defend yourselves, but don’t go too far in your self-defense. Their concern, like many in the West, was more for the civilian population in Gaza, who suffered because of their own elected leadership, than for the elimination of an evil terrorist entity, with no moral conscience, that was and remains dedicated to the destruction of Israel. It is difficult to forget Kamala Harris’ statement to ABC News, in March of this year: “We have been clear in multiple conversations and in every way that any major military operation in Rafah would be a huge mistake…Let me tell you something. I have studied the maps. There’s nowhere for those folks to go.” (my emphasis) And what about the murder, and the atrocities committed on October 7th and the over 250 people taken hostage, and the maps of the communities of tens of thousands of Israelis who had to vacate their homes because of the thousands of deadly projectiles launched into southern Israel by the leadership of the people whose welfare was the paramount concern of Biden and Harris? Why the double standard and all the pressure, all the time, on Israel? Raphael Shore, writing for aish.com, aptly captioned his article: “The World Against Israel: A Global Alliance of Hostility Disguised as Human Rights”. Evil thrives on people’s ignorance and prejudices, both revealed and concealed! The West’s response to Israel should not only be, “Well done!”, but also, “We apologize for failing to properly understand the situation and are truly thankful that you didn’t listen to us.” Eating a little humble pie would be good for their foreign policy digestion.

Not to be ignored, the Hezbollah terrorists in Lebanon also reacted to the killing of Sinwar, but with an attitude of defiance, saying that their confrontations against Israel would be escalated. What has long been understood, but not acted upon, is the simple fact that the actions and abilities of terrorist organizations are financed and in this area of the world, they are financed by the Persian Puppeteer, Iran. If the money stops flowing to the terrorists, their operations will eventually diminish and their leadership will be forced to give up lavish lifestyles in countries that accommodate terrorists and bulging bank accounts that defy detection from taxing authorities. The IDF understands the basic concept: cut off the funds, cut off the ability to finance terrorist activity. And so it targeted dozens of financial sites across Lebanon last night and today. “These funds, which Hezbollah used for terror activities, were stored by the Al-Qard al-Hassan Association, which directly funds Hezbollah’s terror activities, including the purchase of weapons and payments to operatives in Hezbollah’s military wing…The Hezbollah terrorist organization stores billions of dollars in the association’s branches, including money that was directly held under the name of the terrorist organization.” Just think of what the interest on that amount of money could do to feed families and provide jobs and infrastructure that will benefit the nation as a whole. Prior to the actions taken by the IDF, measures were taken by it to minimize civilian casualties, including the issuance of advance warnings by various means. Lebanese civilians are heeding the instructions of the IDF, in contrast to the situation in Gaza, where Hamas terrorists prevent civilians from leaving the area of conflict.

It needs to be emphasized again that the IDF’s actions in the north are not intended to be against the Lebanese people, but against the Hezbollah terrorist organization that has effectively taken control over the country. Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said yesterday (Sunday): “Our goal is to completely ‘clean’ the area [of Hezbollah infrastructure] so that Israel’s northern communities may return to their homes and rebuild their lives. I believe that this is very significant—the IDF is conducting operations and we still have missions to complete…We have Hezbollah prisoners who are sharing information. They have informed us of the great fear felt [among Hezbollah terrorists]. Hezbollah is collapsing.” May it be!

And while the IDF pummels terrorist infrastructure in Lebanon, the Hezbollah does not remain silent. In an apparent effort to begin to carry out their threat to attack Haifa and other places in the north of Israel, they activated no fewer than six launches against Haifa yesterday and dozens more throughout the north today. The air rain alarms went off from the rising of the sun until long after its setting. People are wary about traveling long distances by car, so that they won’t be caught out in the open when an air raid siren is activated.

In two days at sunset, Israel will begin the celebration of Shemini Atzeret, the eighth and last day of the Feast of Tabernacles (Leviticus 23:39), when the prayer of Psalm 118:25 would be recited by the priests who would make seven circuits around the altar during Temple times. This day is referred to as “the Great Day of the Feast” in the Newer Testament (John 7:37). It was on this day last year that Hamas broke through the fences separating Gaza from the communities in the southwest of Israel, slaughtered 1,200 people, committed unspeakable atrocities and took the hostages, about 40% of whom are still be held by the organization. How will we relate to that day this year? Joy and sorrow will combine and tears that are still able to be shed will flow throughout the land. As Sinwar acted on Succot and was killed on Succot, so may the hostages who were taken on the Great Day of the Feast be released by that time, as well. This is, after all, still a land of miracles.

May our prayers continue for wisdom for the government (we still have to deal with Iran, as we fight on seven fronts); wisdom, strength, courage and boldness, discernment and precision for the IDF – may everyone who wears the uniform go out in peace and return in peace; for the wounded, physical and emotional, speedy and complete healing and wisdom for the medical teams attending them; for the hostages who are still alive, to remain unharmed and be restored to their families; for the families who lost loved ones and await the return of those taken captive, mercy and comfort, with an abundance of grace.

Behold, He who watches over Israel will neither slumber nor sleep. (Psalm 121:4). He longs to be gracious to us and waits on high to have compassion on us, for the LORD is a God of justice (Isaiah 30:18) and under His wings, we will take refuge (Psalm 57:1).

And so may we bless, be blessed and be a blessing!

Marvin

The Abnormal New Normal?

Shalom all,

The dictionary defines “normal” as usual, customary and expected, along with other terms. Can threats from a neighbor, who wants you to completely leave the neighborhood where you both live, and who carries through with his threats by sending deadly missiles, rockets and armed drones in your direction on a daily basis, be considered “normal”? If we treat this type of belligence as “normal” and fail to do anything about it, then, for us, this “new normal” would definitely be “abnormal”.

This is, to our great regret, becoming our daily reality. This past weekend, Israel celebrated Yom HaKippurim (the “Day of Atonements”), Judaism’s holiest day of the year. And yet, the sounds of silence were broken by the ear-piercing, air-raid sirens and metal rain from 320 Hezbollah rockets that were fired into Israel, the vast majority of which were intercepted by Israel’s Iron Dome Aerial Defense System. 

Last night, a missile and rocket barrage passed over the skies of Haifa. It included an armed drone that managed to sneak into Israeli air space and landed about 20 miles south of us, taking the lives of four young men, all 19 years of age, and caused varying degrees of injuries to a total of some 67 people, seven of whom are seriously wounded. Is this normal? Is it OK to want to attempt to remove Israel by force? If these deadly projectiles were sent into your property every day for more than a year, wouldn’t you act to put an end to it and retaliate, as necessary? Of course you would. So would everyone in his right mind. If your friends and other neighbors tell you to slow down, back off, don’t fight back, wouldn’t you ignore them, particularly if you were the only one being told to “stand down”? Of course you would.

So, when Israel is attacked simply for existing, and exhibits incredible patience, trying to tell our neighbors to cease and desist from their belligerency towards us, why are we told to do what no other civilized nation would do when attacked, namely, “OK, fight back, but not too hard”? It is simply because we ARE Israel, the nation-state of the Jewish people. This tiny stretch of desert sand is where we first settled as a nation. And despite the millenia of dispersion, God has brought us back to our ancient land. We have prospered and established ourselves as a nation that turned the desert green, developed industry, produce, high-tech systems and innovations that have benefitted not just the State of Israel, but the entire world. We help under-developed countries establish clean water systems. We send agricultural experts to countries suffering from famine and instruct them how to plant and reap and develop agro-cultures to feed their people. We export oue scientific discoveries and technologies that have benefitted vast multitudes, including our enemies. And yet, our desire to live in peace is spurned by most of our neighbors, who act out their threats to destroy us a people that the name of Israel would be no more (Psalm 83:4)

And some here have yielded to the threats. Many have seen the death and destruction carried out against our people by our enemies, and decided to pick up and leave for greener pastures, where deafening air-raid sirens and deadly missiles, rockets and armed drones are things made up by Hollywood, but which are far from the normalcy of their new locations. At one time, leaving the country, or doing “yirida” (going down or emigrating) as opposed to making “aliya” (or, going up or immigrating), was frowned upon by most Israelis. But, times have changed and leaving the country for an extended period of time, and even for good, is considered as “relocation”. However, when the numbers of those leaving exceed those coming in, it will obviously have an impact upon Israeli society as a whole.

War is part of life in Israel. Not a wanted part, but a “no choice” part. Extending our hands in peace has been ignored or slapped away by most of our neighbors. Our ideologies are different. Our perspectives are different. Our ways of worship and the God whom we worship, are different. And it is those differences that our unfriendly neighbors view as being unacceptable. God raised up Israel in the midst of a neighborhood that is a sea of Islam. We ARE different. We have a lust for life, which contrasts sharply with the exaltation of death and of those who are willing to martyr themselves to remove us from the neighborhood.

When an air-raid siren blares, Israelis look for secure shelters. When a deadly projectile manages to get through and lands on or near a building, the damage is usually considerable. If people are near, or in, the building, the loss becomes enormous and a price cannot be placed on it. The lives of the young people killed last night were snuffed out by an exploding drone before they had a real chance to live it. They were IDF recruits. There seems to be a never-ending supply of projectiles in the possession of Hezbollah, who have fired over 14,000 missiles and rockets into Israel during the past year. That number boggles the mind. Is it any wonder that Israel finally said, “Enough!” There is still a lot of work to be done to disarm Hezbollah and eliminate its ability to continue to attack Israel. The IDF says that only about one-third of Hezbollah’s missiles still remain. That still leaves them with some 80,000-plus projectiles pointing towards Israel, according to an assessment of the Israeli Alma Research and Education Center, who estimated that only five months ago, Hezbollah then had 250,000 projectiles, including “several thousand precision ones.”

During my time abroad this past August, I was continually asked “How long will the present war last?” It was an all-encompassing question that no individual could properly answer. In various meetings, I pointed out that Israel is fighting on seven fronts. That was before the latest IDF press commenced against the leaders of the Hezbollah and its ground operations in Lebanon. 

We continue to fight against Hezbollah, this time inside Lebanon. We’re on the offensive and that does not find much favor with a lot of people, who continue to tell us not to go further, not to attack the enemy who wants to kill us and who makes no secret of it. The IDF continues to find terror tunnels in southern Lebanon leading to the border with Israel. It also found an extensive 800-meter-long tunnel that served as a command and control center for Hezbollah’s Radwan Forces, who were planning a massive October 7th-style invasion into the northern communities in Israel.

Israel’s responses in Lebanon were not anticipated by the Hezbollah, who boldly threatens that if Israel continues to strike Lebanon, the terrorist group would  intensify its attacks against Haifa, who would be targeted like the northern Israeli cities of Kiryat Shmona and Metula.

So, should we listen to fair-weather friends, who align themselves with the all-weather enemies of Israel and tell us to back off, to slow down, not to hit hard and knock our enemy out? Such a policy shows their ignorance of how countries in this area of the world relate to each other. Backing down is a sign of weakness and even worse, of cowardice.

With the benefit of both hindsight and experience, we can glean words of wisdom and guidance from the only woman Prime Minister of Israel, Golda Meir. Speaking during a closed Cabinet meeting that took place one month after the Yom Kippur War in 1973, she spoke to a group that included the then Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan and several senior generals, and made the following statements:

“Many things will be forgiven, but one thing will not—weakness. The moment we are marked as weak—it is over.” She then related to how she was told by individuals from the United Nations that the Arab countries were exploiting Israel’s concerns for those of her sons who were taken captive, who were “like the apple of your eye.” She clarified that the response of the Arab states to the return of their prisoners was different from that of Israel: “So what, should we stop caring about people? But here we are definitely not equals, and I hope—I will accept that they will rise to our level, but God forbid we fall to theirs. This means that for them, when it is necessary [to make an effort to free prisoners of war], not for humanitarian reasons but for political reasons, they call it ‘face-saving’.”

The 1973 Yom Kippur War exacted a tremendous toll upon the country and upon the daily life of its citizens. Multitudes of families and livelihoods were affected. Despite efforts of our citizens to return to a normal life while thousands of reservists were still at the front lines, Golda reminded them that a time frame could not be given when the soldiers would be able to return to their normal lives in family, employment and education. “I don’t think we can come to the soldiers and tell them ‘One month, two months, six months, a year’…There is no alternative. I know what it means for the large number of people now on the front. And life in the country cannot go on. … But we can’t have both war, and regular life and endurance. Somehow, all of this must come together…The people need to know, and it’s the government’s role to tell the people clearly. We need to see ourselves as mobilized for a time, I don’t know how long. But this is not a matter of days.”  (my emphasis)

The more things change, the more they remain the same. 

May God comfort the families of those who were killed during our on-going fight for existence. May His hand of healing be upon those who were wounded. May His grace be extended to the hostages who remain alive and bring about their release without Israel displaying weakness before her enemies. May we become a people united in purpose and accomplishment. 

As the roar of jet fighters pass over our neighborhood, may they go out and return in peace, after they accomplish their goals.

“When peace comes we will perhaps in time be able to forgive the Arabs for killing our sons, but it will be harder for us to forgive them for having forced us to kill their sons. Peace will come when the Arabs will love their children more than they hate us.” (Golda Meir, A Land of Our Own: An Oral Autobiography)

There’ll be a time I hear tell when all will be well, when God and man will be reconciled.  But until men lose their chains and righteousness reigns, Lord, protect my child.” (Lord Protect My Child”, from the Bootleg Series Volumes 1-3″, recorded by Bob Dylan, Special Rider Music [1983])

Until that time, may our “normal” be to bless, be blessed and be a blessing.

Marvin

Understanding The Times, Doing What We Need To Do

Shalom all,

Events of the last few days necessitate an update, particularly for so many who have said that they don’t get the news properly reported, or reported at all.

On September 27th, in an effort to end the seemingly never-ending missile assaults upon Israel from the terrorist organization Hezbollah, the IDF eliminated the General Secretary of Hezbollah, Hassan Nasrallah, who thought he was secure in his bunker that was built under a residential building. Then the IDF eliminated Nasrallah’s successor, Hashem Safieddine. According to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the successor to Nasrallah’s successor was also eliminated. And, in order to prevent an October 7th-style invasion in the north of Israel, the IDF launched a ground offensive into southern Lebanon last week. Tunnel infrastructures, more sophisticated and better equipped than those in Gaza, that were built under Lebanese towns and villages existing close to the border with Israel, were found and blown up.

Two nights ago, a Hezbollah missile landed a mile from where we live. It severely damaged a kindergarden and shattered windows in an adjacent semi-high-rise building. Five people were injured, none seriously. No lives were lost. 

Yesterday, one year after the atrocities of October 7th, 2023, the forces of evil once again tried to attack us with rockets, missiles and drones. Yet, we pressed on, with memorial services being conducted both by the government and by the families of the hostages and those whose loved ones were killed by the terrorist invasion of Hamas, the “Palestinian” Islamic Jihad, and other Gazans. Testimonies of survivors, of family members, of members of the IDF, of relatives and friends, permeated the air ways on television and radio and in heart-wrenching written accounts in numerous tabloids. We will always remember the day of slaughter, burning, rape and bodily dismemberment, that shocked the State of Israel and most of the world, a day that traumatized and continues to traumatize our our nation, as we yearn for the return of all of the hostages, both those who are still alive and those who are not.

As we begin the second year following the worst disaster perpetrated upon the Jewish people since the Holocaust, the IDF reported that Hezbollah managed to launch 135 missiles today against Haifa and its surrounding communities, as well as against places in the north of Israel. See here. There was property damage and a handful of people were injured. But, on the whole, Israel experienced many miracles during these massive missile barrages. The kindergarten where one of my sisters-in-law works took a direct hit. But, there were no children there at the time, due to the orders of the civil defense establishment. Her neighbour’s house took a hit and was severely damaged. The glass-window barriers of my mother-in-law’s small balcony was shattered by a shock wave of the blast of a missile that landed only a short walking distance from her apartment building. There were minimal injuries. Since the beginning of the ground offensive in Lebanon last week, Hezbollah managed to launch over 3,000 projectiles into Israel. Amazing!

Naim Qassem, one of the few surviving members of Hezbollah’s leadership team, said that the terror group’s military capabilities remained intact, that rocket fire on Israel had increased and, according to a report in The Times of Israel, Hezbollah was “itching for ‘clashes’ with Israeli troops in Lebanon.” That’s a bit difficult to accept, in fact, more than difficult to accept. In a speech that he gave today, Qassem said that the terror group was “agreeing to a cease-fire without preconditions. First, a cease-fire achieved through diplomatic means, and then we will discuss all the details.” We’ve heard that before from the terrorists in Gaza – first stop fighting. Then we’ll see what we’ll do next. Apparently, the Hezbollah terrorist organization that has reigned supreme in this region for the past several decades is now beginning to feel the consequences of Israel’s retaliation against Hezbollah, It is licking its wounds and is not getting its expected backing from the master-terror puppeteer, Iran. It is highly likely that such an announcement would not have been made if Hezbollah wasn’t hurting and if it wasn’t previously discussed with, and agreed to by, the mullahs, who are letting their proxies take the beating while they, themselves, take a minimal role in the conflicts with Israel.

Hezbollah’s misguided Persian patron laid down its “red lines”, warning Israel not to attack either its nuclear facilities, or its energy sites. Such as move by Israel “would have an impact on the kind of response by Iran. Imagine that. After firing about 200 missiles at Israel last Tuesday, which could have caused major damage to our own infrastructures, and after it continues to pursue the development of a nuclear weapon, purportedly for strictly peaceful purposes – as if anyone really would believe that, it is now telling us not to target and go after the greatest threat to Israel today, or to damage its oil assets (which would further the economic difficulties presently facing Iran and probably cause a widespread increase in oil prices).

Iran is struggling to “maintain face” before an ever-increasing, disbelieving population. In an article appearing today in ynet in Hebrew, that was written by Azita, a resident of Teheran who strongly criticizes the Iranian Revolutionary Guards, she said that the government lies and that the population is being deceived about Iran’s so-called successes against Israel.  As she writes (my free translation from Hebrew): 

“Those who live here know that everything is staged…The regime has maybe 20 percent support in the whole country, and after the two attacks in which Iran failed to hit Israel, more and more people are asking if all of this was worth the investment – if Iran even has the ability to hit Israel…They lie to our faces … Then when the information they give about the elimination of Israel is met by the Iranian opposition that shows them to be lying, more and more people automatically stop believing them…Then the citizens see Netanyahu threatening Iran on television, and they ask themselves: ‘If they lied to us about the damage to Israel, maybe they are also lying about how they will protect our lives?’…[People] know it’s propaganda. That Israel struck Iran, in the heart of Tehran, with the elimination of [Ismail] Haniyeh. Iran was not able to repay her. Honor is a very precious currency here, and Iran was unable to maintain its honor and take revenge on Israel.

The regime thinks we are afraid of Israel’s missiles, but the truth is – we are already waiting to see them in the skies of Tehran…Many people thought that Iran would succeed in dragging Israel into a war of attrition with Hamas, the Houthis and Hezbollah…And what they see is that Israel hit back with all its might, dealt a blow to Hamas and Hezbollah, and you ask yourself, okay, who’s next, and you realize you’re next.” (emphasis mine)

Former Israeli Prime Minister, Naftali Bennett, says the time is right to strike Iran’s nuclear facilities. In his post on “X” (Twitter) today, as reported in The Jerusalem Post, he stated, in part: “Now that the main proxies of Iran’s terror, Hezbollah and Hamas, are weakened, Israel finally has an opportunity to strike Iran’s nuclear program…This is a one-time opportunity, and we cannot miss it.” May Israel’s present leadership be granted wisdom, like that which was granted to the Tribe of Issachar, who “understood the times, with knowledge of what Israel should do.” (1 Chronicles 12:32)

We should never allow our enemies to dictate to us what we should do or how we should think. Notwithstanding barrages of rockets and missiles against us, and numerous failed attempts to destroy us as a nation throughout history, we remain a people called to be a blessing to all the families of the earth (Genesis 12:2-3). So, until our enemies learn that God will bless those who bless us and that they will face the consequences of cursing us, let us continue to bless, be blessed and be a blessing.

Marvin

365 Days since October 7th – Where are we now?

Shalom all,

‘Twas a time to remember, of sounds and of lights,

With sirens and booms that kicked off the night.

We gathered in a sealed room, and when an hour had passed,

We were allowed to go out and finished our dinner, at last. (MSK)

My wife and I decided to visit our daughter in Jerusalem and to spend Rosh Hashana (the Feast of Trumpets – Leviticus 23:23-25) with her. The normal 2-hour drive from Haifa to Jerusalem ended up taking 5 hours, as we were stuck in a major traffic jam that resulted from the downing of a Hezbollah missile that landed on the side of the highway. Interestingly enough, my brother-in-law was travelling north along the same highway and got stuck in a traffic jam going in the other direction, but for the same reason.  We arrived in Jerusalem shortly before the air-raid sirens were set off, signaling that missiles were on their way from Iran, which were blown up air by the Iron Dome air-defense system. Amazingly, there were no injuries from the exploding missile, except for one Arab, who was killed instantly when the main body of an exploded ballistic missile fell on him. (See attached video.) 

Sirens and missiles have become the new daily reality. Today rounds out a full year since the brutality and horrors of October 7th. Heart-wrenching stories of the events of that day have filled the tabloids, at least in Israel, with the countdown to a year having begun in earnest about a month ago. The day following the onslaught of the Hamas terrorist organization, that was joined by the “Palestinian” Islamic Jihad, and so-called unafilliated Gazan riff-raff, their cousins in the Hezbollah joined “in sympathy” with Hamas. Missiles began to be launched against Israel from Lebanon, minimal at first, then slowly, but steadily escalating to the point of massive missile barrages, that totaled over 8,000 during the course of the year. What country in the world would permit that for a day or even a week? Tens of thousands of Israelis had to leave their residences in the north because of the never-ending assaults by the Hezbollah against Israel. And then, in one massive strike carried out by the Israeli Air Force that eliminated the leadership of the Hezbollah, in Beirut, the capital of Lebanon, the face of the Middle East suddenly changed. Israel was returning to who she was in the past. The war in the north had to end. The terrorist enemy needed to be defeated. Israel needed to re-establish “deterrence”. And it knew how to accomplish its goals. Hassan Nasrallah, the general secretary of the Hezbollah, was killed when Israel unloaded over 80 tons of bombs on the buildings that were on top of his underground bunker. Israel then proceeded to eliminate Nasrallah’s would-be heir, his cousin, Hashem Seffiadin. Israel followed up with a ground offensive, openly sending soldiers into Lebanon for the first time since the end of the Second Lebanon War in 2006.

The critics of Israel’s actions in Lebanon continue to blindly push for a diplomatic resolution to the war with Hezbollah. In a brilliant article by Lani Kass, entitled “Live by the Sword, Die by the Sword”, which was originally published by Real Clear Wire and re-published in The Gateway Pundit, she makes the obvious explicit, pointing out how the U.S. has failed to understand what has been staring them in the face for decades. Kass stated, in part: 

“The celebrations that erupted across Lebanon, Syria, and Iran in the wake of Nasrallah’s demise demonstrate how misguided the U.S. approach is. Key facts— providing context and clarification—are blithely ignored…The U.S. should rejoice that Israel is avenging them [for Hezbollah’s terrorist activities against the U.S. – my clarification]—something we’ve failed to do, the bounties on Hezbollah leaders notwithstanding…In 2006, Israel went to war to end the then-ongoing Hezbollah barrages. The U.S. and UN orchestrated the ceasefire, urging UNIFIL to enforce it. Current calls for a ceasefire are THE definition of insanity: Doing the same thing repeatedly, naively expecting different results. (emphasis mine)

“Israel is now conducting a multi-phase campaign. Phase 1 destroyed Hezbollah’s command, control, and communications. Phase 2—the air campaign—is ongoing. Both are classic décapitation strikes—akin to the 1967 Six Day War and U.S. Operations Desert Storm, Enduring Freedom, and Iraqi Freedom. If there is a Phase 3—a ground campaign—it will push Hezbollah north of the Litani, per the 2006 UNSCR.”

Notwithstanding the West’s failure to understand the nature of the conflicts in the Middle East, President Joe Biden continues to say that Israel’s response in Lebanon should be proportionate. Apparently, he never watched “The West Wing”, where the President (in the T.V. series) called for a disproportionate response.

Israel was well-aware of Hezbollah’s intentions to carry out an October 7th-style invasion in the north of Israel. Well-equipped, terror tunnels were discovered under Lebanese communities that are close to the border with Israel. Elite units of the IDF were able to enter into Lebanon, discover and destroy most of those tunnels.            

Air strikes, no matter how powerful, cannot completely end terrorist activity. The job must be done on the ground. So, Israel began its ground offensive this past week, quickly engaging and eliminating hundreds of Hezbollah terrorists. But, these early victories have come at a price, with a dozen members of the IDF being killed during the first 5 days of fighting. 

While Israel is fighting multiple fronts, some so-called democratic countries are upset that is taking the initiative and fighting back against terrorism and even call for an arms embargo on Israel. Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, took a strong stance against such a move, stating: “Today, Israel is defending itself on seven fronts against the enemies of civilization…As Israel fights the forces of barbarism led by Iran, all civilized countries should be standing firmly by Israel’s side…Yet President Macron and other Western leaders are now calling for arms embargoes against Israel…Shame on them…[The] axis of terror stands together…But countries who supposedly oppose this terror axis call for an arms embargo on Israel…What a disgrace!” He added that Israel will win against the terror axis “with or without their support…But their shame will continue long after the war is won…Rest assured, Israel will fight until the battle is won – for our sake and for the sake of peace and security in the world.”

The seven fronts that were mentioned by Netanyahu are: Gaza, Lebanon, Judea and Samaria (the “West Bank”), Yemen, Syria, Iraq and, of course, Iran.

With the passage of a year from Hamas’ invasion of communities in southern Israel, an invasion which resulted in the slaughter of 1,200 people and the taking of 251 captives, some 40% of whom are still being held hostage, the big question of the day is: How will Israel respond to the missile attack last week by Iran? Despite the fighting that is taking place on the six other fronts, it is clearly understood that Iran is the one pulling the puppet strings of its proxies. The attack of several hundred ballistic missiles launched against Israel last week cannot pass without a response and Israel has indicated that its response will be severe.

The Jerusalem Post lists various targets: surface-to-surface missile sites; drone launch bases; air defense sites; and economic infrastructure, such as oil facilities. But, an attack on oil facilities could affect the interests of other countries, such as Russia and China, as well as others who are not supportive of Israel. However, an attack on Iran’s nuclear  project is actually the most sensible. Notwithstanding that its nuclear facilities are well protected, Israel has the capability of attacking those sites by stealth fighter jets (F-35s) along with others, as well as a long-range missile strike that would minimize risk to Israeli planes and pilots. Such an attack would have to be massive and do more than just knock out key areas in Iran. It would need to cripple Iran’s military capability to prevent it from effectuating a broad-range response. Destroying Iran’s nuclear program would accomplish a number of important objectives for Israel. First and foremost, it would eliminate, at least for a long time, the most serious threat to Israel. Destruction of both the nuclear facilities as well as Iran’s ability to seriously respond would be a “loss of face” that will have a widespread impact on Iran’s proxies, such as Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis, as well as restore Israel’s deterrence position vis-a-vis Syria, Iraq and the “West Bank”.

The country is anticipating Israel’s response. It could be tonight, possibly tomorrow. A year has passed since October 7th. A year of continuing national trauma, of individual trauma, of the pain and anguish over the loss of loved ones, of deferred hope of seeing hostages returned alive, of life-changing wounds from bone-crushing bullets, of memories that haunt survivors of carnage and war, of car rammings and concerns of fifth-column uprisings, of demonstrations calling on the government to act to return the hostages, when Hamas is unwilling to let them go. 

All this, in the interim period of soul searching between Rosh Hashana (the Feast of Trumpets / Jewish New Year) and Yom Hakipurrim (the Day of Atonement) – the ten days of repentance, prayer and acts of charity. We look forward to a new year, one where Israel will call out to God and our enemies will fear the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.

I will lift up my eyes to the mountains; from where shall my help come? My help comes from the LORD, Who made heaven and earth. He will not allow your foot to slip; He who keeps you will not slumber. Behold, He who keeps Israel will neither slumber nor sleep. The LORD is your keeper; The LORD is your shade on your right hand. The sun will not smite you by day, nor the moon by night. The LORD will protect you from all evil; He will keep your soul. The LORD will guard your going out and your coming in from this time forth and forever. (Psalm 121)

We need to keep our perspective right and our fixed on Him, Who is invisible. Don’t let what you don’t know take away from what you do know.

Bless, be blessed and be a blessing. If you fast on the Day of Atonement, may it be an easy one.

Marvin

p.s.: Just as I was getting ready to send this out, this was another missile attack on Haifa. According to early reports, missiles landed in four places. Some direct hits, one approximately 1.5 kilometers from us. There is property damage, but no immediate reports of wounded.

No Ordinary Terrorist

Shalom all,

During this past week, the skies over northern Israel have been filled with hundreds of missiles, rockets and armed drones, which were launched against us primarily from Lebanon by the terrorist organization Hezbollah. In a few instances, long-range missiles, including ballistic missiles, were fired against locations in Israel by the Houthis, the Iranian-backed terrorist proxy in Yemen, towards targets in the center and south of the country. Israel’s air defense system succeeded to down the vast majority of the projectiles, but a few made it through, causing mostly property damage.

In addition to the cities and communities in the north, who experienced seemingly unending air-raid sirens throughout the days and nights, the City of Haifa, where we live, was also targeted by Hezbollah projectiles. The alarms blared, the explosion of the incoming missiles and drones by the Iron Dome sent shock waves through buildings more than a kilometer away. And the smoke from the explosion remained in the air for close to half an hour.

The events of two days ago put everyone on their heels. The Prime Minister of the State of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, delivered a speech at the United Nations in New York on Friday. He responded to the lies against Israel that were delivered by leaders of other nations from the same podium where he spoke and then he addressed the situation in Gaza in the southwest and the incessant missile attacks from Lebanon, which is the home of the terrorist Hezbollah organization. Then he stated: “Yet Israel has been tolerating this intolerable situation for nearly a year. Well, I’ve come here today to say enough is enough.” That was one of the clearest expressions of “Say what you mean and mean what you say!”

Before the day was over, a massive attack would take place by the Israeli Air Force against the leadership of Hezbollah, located in bunkers under residential buildings in the Dahiya suburb of Beirut, the capital city of Lebanon. In his press release of Saturday, 28th September, the IDF Spokesman, Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari, put the finishing touches on Netanyahu’s above statement. His report does not leave room for doubt that “Enough is enough”. The text of that press release follows.

“Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of the terrorist army Hezbollah, was killed by the Israel Defense Forces in a precise strike in Beirut last night, while he was in Hezbollah’s Central Headquarters commanding more imminent attacks against the people of Israel.
 
For decades, Hezbollah, under the command of Hassan Nasrallah, orchestrated countless attacks against innocent people. Hassan Nasrallah had the blood of thousands of men, women and children on his hands. Israelis. Jews across the world. Lebanese. Americans. British. French. Syrians and other countless victims across the Middle East and beyond. 
 
Hezbollah, under the command of Hassan Nasrallah, joined Hamas in attacking Israel on October 8th…just one day after Hamas‘s massacre on October 7th. 
 
For almost a year, Hezbollah, under the command of Hassan Nasrallah, has been firing thousands of rockets, suicide drones full of explosives, anti-tank missiles and ballistic missiles at Israeli towns and cities. 60,000 Israelis fled their homes in northern Israel. 
  
Hezbollah has openly declared that it has a plan to carry out its own October the 7th massacre on Israel’s northern border, but on an even larger scale. They call this plan “Conquer the Galilee.” Hezbollah has been planning to do in northern Israel what Hamas did in southern Israel on October 7th: invade Israel, infiltrate civilian communities, and massacre innocent civilians. The Israel Defense Forces has a duty to foil their plans. 
 
Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of an evil terrorist organization; the senior terrorists eliminated with him, and the central headquarters they were in, were legitimate military targets under international law. Nasrallah intentionally built Hezbollah’s central headquarters under residential buildings in Dahiya, Beirut—because Hezbollah intentionally uses Lebanese civilians as human shields. While Hezbollah seeks to maximize civilian harm, Israel seeks to minimize it. 
 
Our war is not with the Lebanese people; our war is with Hezbollah. Hezbollah, under the command of Hassan Nasrallah, chose to join the war that Hamas started. 
There are consequences for that decision. 
 
Hezbollah is not just a threat to Israel; Hezbollah is not just a threat to the State of Lebanon; Hezbollah is a threat to the world, backed by the regime in Iran. 
 
As of last night, Hezbollah’s leader, Hassan Nasrallah, will no longer be able to terrorize the world. 
 
For Nasrallah’s many victims over the decades, whether in Israel, Argentina, Bulgaria, Syria, or Lebanon itself, justice has been served. 
 
We warned the world countless times: Hezbollah is dragging the State of Lebanon and the entire region into a wider escalation. Israel does not seek a wider escalation. 
 
We seek 2 things: to bring our hostages home from almost a year in Hamas captivity, and to make sure that our borders are safe and secure for our citizens.

As today’s excellent Editorial in The Jerusalem Post makes clear, Hassan Nasrallah was no ordinary terrorist. For the past 32 years, his ideology “painted the West as the eternal enemy of the Islamic world” and that “Under his leadership, Hezbollah engaged in a relentless campaign of terror against both Israel and Western targets worldwide. From attacks on US Marines in Beirut in the 1980s to support for Hamas’s attacks on Israeli civilians, his actions underscored a broader anti-Western agenda. Nasrallah’s strategy was clear: to undermine Western influence in the Middle East and to promote an Islamist vision in which democracy had no place.” 

Part of the caption of Lee Smith’s brilliant article in Tablet Magazine, is “Israel shows America how to win wars”. Noting that Israel’s elimination of Nasrallah in the heart of suburbs of Beirut marked “a dramatic shift in Israeli strategy“, Smith cogently points out the fallacy of the West’s misguided understanding of modern warfare and, particularly, of the West’s “global consensus that has resolved not to confront terrorists but rather to appease them”. Can Netanyahu’s “Enough is enough” statement be expressed more clearly? Smith’s article should be read by government leaders and policy makers and it should be seen as a “wake-up call” for the West, whose passivity in dealing with terrorism was grounded in a multitude of nice-sounding excuses,  but were far from revealing an understanding that “securing a nation’s peace …means killing your enemies, above all those who advocate and embody the causes that inspire others to exhaust their murderous energies against you. Thus, killing Nasrallah was essential.”  Living in the Middle East, and, particularly, in Israel, requires an awareness of our circumstances, our surroundings and an understanding of who are our neighbors and what their intentions are for themselves, for the region, and specifically, regarding Israel. Smith capsulizes the last three and a half decades of terrorist patronage in this area of the world, pointing out that Nasrallah was the protégé of Iran’s present leadership and was appointed in 1992 to lead Hezbollah. “The Iranians built around Nasrallah not only a network of proxies stretching from the eastern Mediterranean to the Persian Gulf but also a comprehensive worldview—permanent resistance.” No, Hassan Nasrallah was no ordinary terrorist. According to a statement of Prime Minister Netanyahu: “Nasrallah was not a terrorist, he was the terrorist” and his killing was an essential step towards Israel’s goals of returning tens of thousands of displaced residents from the north to their homes.

And now Nasrallah is dead. His corpse was removed today from the ruins of the residential building, under which he established his terrorist headquarters.

The Dry Bones Blog – 29 September, 2024

But, with his death, the question that naturally arises is: Who will replace him as the next terrorist czar of Hezbollah? The fingers are pointing to his cousin, Hashem Safieddine, the head of the organization’s executive council, who also oversees its political affairs. Just for a heads-up: Safieddine was designated as a terrorist by the U.S. State Department in 2017. We should not expect his policies and rhetoric to be much different, if at all, from that of Nasrallah. We’ll probably find out how close they really are before too much time passes.

The nations of the world are not silent about the assassination of Nasrallah. Some are encouraging, others discouraging. Almost everyone has an opinion about it. One news station in Israel rejoiced on the air with the news of Nasrallah’s death. An Arab news anchor in another country openly wept. Lebanon declared three days of mourning for Nasrallah. Sunni Muslims in Syria celebrated in the streets and gave out candy to drivers and passers by. But, Hamas eulogized Nasrallah, stating, in part: “History has shown that whenever leaders of the resistance… die as martyrs, they will be succeeded by a new generation of leaders who are braver, stronger, and more determined to persist in the confrontation with the Zionist enemy until it is defeated and eliminated from our land and our region.”

We are not ignoring Iran and its constant threats against Israel. Not only is Tehran angered over the elimination of their prodegy, Nasrallah, the Mullahs are also vowing revenge for the killing of one of the top Revolutionary Guards who was also killed in the IDF strike in Beirut that took out the Hezbollah terror chief.

And while we still ponder the fallout and consequences of Nasrallah’s removal, missile barrages continue to be fired in the north of Israel. As of this writing, Israel struck the Hodeidah port and power plants in Yemen, following Houthi missile attacks against the south and center of Israel. This should send a strong message to Iran that if we can reach Yemen, which is further away than Iran, we can reach Tehran. The big question is: Is anyone really listening?

Oh, one more thing. The Gaza War is still ongoing. According to a report in Ynetnews, the killing of Nasrallah has caused Hamas leader, Yahya Sinwar, to change his location in Gaza, as well as his security protocols. This war could end in a number of different ways, the two most obvious being: Hamas could surrender, which is highly unlikely. Or, Sinwar will be found and eliminated, which is more likely. Israel’s goal to bring about the return of the hostages is still very much a priority. We will have to see how the elimination of Nasrallah will affect the war in the south that began almost a year ago.

In another three days, Israel will celebrate the Feast of Trumpets (Leviticus 23:23-25), commonly known as Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year. It will also mark the beginning of a period of ten days of prayer, repentance and acts of charity, leading up to Yom HaKippurim, the Day of Atonements (plural), the holiest day of the year. May it also bring with it an end to the present wars.

In light of that, remember: Bless, be blessed and be a blessing.

Shana Tova (may you have a good New Year).

Marvin

Beep, beep, BOOM!

Shalom all,

Without question, the events of this past week have demonstrated Israel’s resilience, in rebounding from the failures of October 7th, and returning to be the Israel, the Mossad, and the IDF, that was able to enter the lion’s den and leave many of the lions dead, lame and wounded. 

Last week, I reported on planned proposal that the safe return of the northern residents to their homes would become an official war goal. This week that goal apparently began to take effect. Fighting a war of attrition with the Hezbollah terrorist organization had been the unstated policy of Israel for a long time. This is most certainly true from October 8, 2023, the day following the infiltration into the communities along the Gaza envelope by Hamas, the Islamic Jihad, and so-called unaffiliated Gazan riff-raff, who pillaged, raped, brutalized, killed and burned alive men, women and children, and took 251 hostages into the Hamas infested tunnel infrastructures that criss-crossed throughout Gaza’s underground world. Hezbollah has consistently maintained that it is assisting the efforts of Hamas and has launched thousands upon thousands of missiles, including anti-tank missiles, mortars and armed drones into Israel terrority. This has resulted in the displacement of over 60,000 northern residents from their homes (according to official reports), deaths of 22 members of the IDF and 26 civilians, massive destruction of property, fields, agriculture and farms and effectively caused an economic disaster throughout the northern areas affected by the displacement. A full eleven months after the beginning of the war that was begun by Hamas and supported by Hezbollah and others, including the main puppeteer, Iran, Israel has had enough and proclaimed, as mentioned above, the return of the northern residents as an official goal of the undeclared, but nevertheless existing, war with Hezbollah. 

Then, interestingly, on Tuesday of this past week, pagers that were used extensively by Hezbollah operatives and carried as general equipment exploded simultaneously after they beeped, leaving about a dozen killed, most members of the Hezbollah, and thousands of others wounded, including Hezbollah commanders.

The following day, Wednesday, similar explosions took place on tactical communication devices held by Hezbollah personnel throughout Lebanon. Another approximately two dozen deaths resulted from this second explosion, along with hundreds more being injured. All told, some 37 members of the Hezbollah were killed with thousands of others being wounded.

In addition to the large number of people who were killed and injured in the pager-beeper and tactical communication devices incidents, those events constituted a HUGE humiliation for the Hezbollah. They directly affected their communication system and, therefore, the terror organization’s ability to operate. Still, Hezbollah was able to respond by intensifying its missile attacks into Israeli territory, which resulted in the deaths of two members of the IDF and about a dozen other people being wounded.

The Secretary General of the Hezbollah, Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, blamed Israel for the explosions of the communication devices, even though Israel has neither confirmed nor denied its involvement. Nevertheless, in a public address, Nasrallah said, in part: “We undoubtedly suffered a major security and humanitarian blow, unprecedented in the conflict and maybe in the history of mankind…We were hit hard, but that’s the situation in war. We understand that the enemy has technological supremacy. Especially since it is supported by the US and the West… When we are in conflict, we bet on Jihad, on attrition. We had many victories until now… We will be ready to overcome all of the threats and attempts in the future…Israel crossed all the red lines by detonating thousands of pagers. This could be called a declaration of war… This is an act of terror, massacre, genocide.”

One has to stop for a moment and reflect on Nasrallah’s statement that Israel’s attack was a “declaration of war, an act terror, massacre, genocide”. For the past eleven months, Hezbollah bombarded Israel with multitudes of deadly projectiles, slowly increasing the number until it began to average over a hundred missiles per day. It is acting in solidarity with another terrorist organization, Hamas, that began a war against Israel on October 7th, perpertrating egregious acts of terrorism, massacring 1,200 people under an ideology that seeks to carry out the elimination of Israel, an act commonly referred to as genocide. Hezbollah was prepared to launch thousands of missiles against Israel all at one time, but its plans were frustrated due to the pre-emptive attack by the Israeli Air Force that destroyed thousands of missile launchers only a few short weeks ago. It was also planning to carry out an October 7th-style invasion of Israel from the north and still has the temerity to say that Israel’s action amounted to a declaration of war! A clear example of the pot calling the kettle “black”.

Then there was the third event, Israel’s action against the Lebanese terrorist organization that took place in the Hezbollah’s back yard, in the heart of Beirut. The bold air strike by the Israeli Air Force killed at least 2 senior commanders and another dozen members of the Hezbollah terrorist organization, including Ibrahim Aqil, the head of Hezbollah’s military operations, acting commander of the elite Radwan Force, who also headed up a plan to attack the northern territory of Israel, which plan was labeled: “The Plan to Conquer the Galilee”.  Also killed in the Israeli strike was Ahmed Wahbi, a former commander of the Radwan Force and the head of Hezbollah’s training unit. The meeting of the senior commanders of the Radwan Force met under a residential building, using civilians as human shields, while coordinating terrorist activities against Israeli civilians. Prior to the A.I.F. strike on the building, the Hezbollah had already launched some 200 missiles into Israel

A point worth noting is that Aqil was on the “most wanted” of the United States for his involvement in the 1983 bombings of the American Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, which killed 63 people, and the US Marines barracks in Beirut that killed 241 people. A bounty of $7 million was placed on Aqil’s head by the United States. I wonder if Israel will make a claim for the bounty.

In the meantime, various media reported that some 500 Hezbollah members lost their eyesight following the explosions of the communication devices. We need to keep in mind that everything relating to Israel needs to be considered from a spiritual perspective. So, it is not surprising that the promise to Abraham (Gen. 12:3) remains in effect today. Hezbollah has attacked “the apple of God’s eye” (Zechariah 2:8) and it should not appear to us as strange that its members would be blinded.

The newspaper The Australian notes, in brief: “Hezbollah’s and Hamas’s masters in Iran should be clear-eyed about the meaning of what appears to have been the latest display of modern technological warfare by a nation fighting for its survival.” 

Amjad Taha, United Arab Emirates expert in Strategic Political Affairs (Middle East), and blogger, posted the following, clear statement on September 18th

“You dared to strike at a smart and courageous nation on October 7th—committing genocide, kidnapping their children, and violating their women. You thought they would fall, but they rose again, returning after 11 months to correct what had only momentarily slipped—their intelligence. Now, they will send you back 1,000 years, to a time without technology, where a ringtone feels like a death knell and a beep is a nightmare. You will be haunted by your own shadow, too afraid to use any technology, cut off from the advanced world. And they will defeat you—not with bullets or tanks, but through the unbreakable will of brave, intelligent people. Over a simple cup of coffee, with one decisive click, they will seal your fate, and the fate of anyone who dares harm their children. This is a nation the world respects. Lebanon—#Hezbollah‘s pager attacks and today’s V82 strike are not merely military victories; they represent a triumph for the Middle East over radicalism—a victory not only for #Israel but for all who stand against terror.”

Should we have anything to say about the post on X of Belgium’s Deputy Prime Minister Petra De Sutter, who described the of pager explosions as a “terror attack [that requires an] international investigation” and that “silence is not an option” regarding the matter? Her comments drew widespread condemnation across social media, one of which was from National Security and Foreign Policy researcher Khaled Hassan: “NOT A SINGLE TWEET condemning Hamas, Hezbollah or the Houthis, and NOW THIS???!!!! With people like you in power in Europe, we don’t even need enemies. Might as well invite Hamas to Europe and beg them to rape and murder all of us.” Need more be said?

So much for striking at the heart of a terrorist organization. But, what is the possibility that the Hezbollah will retaliate in some manner? And if so, how? It could, of course, wait for American mediation efforts to succeed where all prior efforts for the last 11 months have failed. Or, it can continue to launch missiles as a declarative effort to say that it is continuing its war of attrition against Israel that will force Israel’s hand to undertake a ground offensive into Lebanon. Or, it can launch, alone or together with Iran or one or more of the other Iranian proxies, an all-out offensive against Israel. Or even worse: Hezbollah might decide to carry out its threat to attack Haifa and, possibly, points further to the south of us. It hardly needs be mentioned that Hezbollah will not voluntarily agree to move north of the Litani River, giving effect to Security Council Resolution 1701, which ended the Second Lebanon War in 2006. As of this writing, the IDF is attacking multitudes of missile launchers in Lebanon. The IDF Spokesman just added Haifa as an area in the “line of fire” of Hezbollah rockets.

It will take a little while for Hezbollah to re-organize. However, until then, we can continue to expect missile barrages of dozens, if not hundreds, of missiles on an ongoing basis, until the situation completely explodes. Israeli war planes have been flying overhead for the past 2 hours heading towards Lebanon. The ensuing news is not expected to be good.

And how should we respond to the explosions of the pagers and electronic devices? What do you say? There is no lack of responses, some rejoicing, others being a bit more reserved.

There are, of course, the related consequences of cyber warfare that can affect various aspects of life, including, for example, airline travel, where increased security efforts can affect the use of in-flight electrone devices. 

I did not enter into speculation how the pagers and electronic devices were able to be exploded, nor did I deal with the timing of the explosions. Most of the “chatter” are various forms of speculation, some more reasoned than others, but still falling into the realm of “maybe this or maybe that”. At some point, everything will become more clear. For now, we should be thankful that many that have planned the destruction of Israel have been eliminated.

There is a new hostage proposal on the table, offered by Israel: all hostages to return at the same time; Israel will cease military activities in Gaza; Yehya Sinwar (the head of Hamas who organized the massacre of October 7th) will be given a free pass out of Gaza. The decision is now up to Hamas. There are no great expectations.

I am aware that my blog posts reach a multitude of people with widely differing opinions, some of whom have strong opinions concerning the Gaza War and the looming prospects of a regional war. So be it. Israel has extended her hands in peace to her neighbors, time and time again. Some not only slap it away, but also try to cut our hands off. We look forward to the time when our swords shall be beaten into plowshare and our spears into pruning hooks – when “nation will not lift up sword against nation and never again will they learn war” (Isaiah 2:4). Until then, we continue to keep our eyes on Him, Who is invisible.

For now, please pray: For wisdom for the government to know what to do, when to do, and how to do; for the IDF for wisdom, strength, boldness, precision and that every soldier, irrespective of rank, will go out in peace and return in peace; for the hostages who are still alive, that they would be kept alive and return alive and well; for the wounded, that those rendering medical care to them will do so with skill, knowledge and compassion; for the families who lost loved ones and who are waiting for their loved ones to return, comfort and faith that the God of Israel reigns and is able to do exceeding abundantly beyond anything they can ask or think; for the citizens of Israel, that all would call out to Him.

Despite everything that happened and is happening, remember: Bless, be blessed and be a blessing.

Marvin

The Importance of Getting the Facts

Shalom all,

It’s been a while since a full post of The Week That Was went out. This was due to a “working vacation” related to our non-profit society, A Future and A Hope <afutureandahope.org.il> – whose website is presently being re-designed and updated. During the course of a month, my wife and I visited some congregations and Israel prayer groups in the United States and Canada where we met with old friends, as well as made new one. We delivered information regarding the work of the society and the situation in Israel, including an overview of why Israel is the focus of efforts to destroy her. Most of the places were receiving only minimal input about what is really happening here from places that were supposed to be media news outlets. While both of those countries have been loudly expressing concerns about the possibile expansion of Israel’s war against the Hamas and Hezbollah terrorist organizations into a regional conflict, few local television stations in those areas took the time to properly convey factual information about Middle East events. And when it actually was discussed, often it was limited to a passing blip cross the screen with a few words of what was supposed to be “news”. And sometimes, even what was mentioned was lacking in a few important essentials, such as facts. This is a sad commentary on what was once believed to be responsible journalism, which has deteriorated into manufacturing information that is interspersed with expressing opinion, instead of reporting real facts and adding a bit of commentary to them. I discovered that information about Israel was obtained from very limited sources, and taken as gospel truth, although often failing to cite the sources of the information reported and rarely containing explanatory comment or anticipated consequence of what was communicated. Like cold water to a thirsty soul is factual information to a person hungry for truth. 

A lot has happened over the course of a month. One hostage being held by Hamas was found by the IDF and freed, while the bodies of six more hostages were found by the IDF in a tunnel after they were executed by Hamas. Negotiations for the release of the hostages were on again, then off again, then on again. Increasingly larger demonstrations continued in Israel calling for the release of the hostages and pressuring the government to agree to the demands of the terrorists, whatever the cost may be. Demonstrations against Israel continued in places around the world, accusing Israel of every evil under the sun, while ignoring the responsibility of the monstrous evil that is called “Hamas” that prompted the present war. The Israeli air force destroyed thousands of rocket launchers in a pre-emptive attack in Lebanon, which prevented a massive missile attack against Israeli targets. Iranian weapon-manufacturing facilities were destroyed in Syria. Car rammings and car bombs continued in Israel. Fighting in Judea and Samaria (the “West Bank” of the Jordan River) intensified. Missile barrages and weaponized drones continue unabated from the Hezbollah affecting more and more communities in the north of Israel. And Turkey is chomping at the bit to get involved in the present distress of the Middle East. And more…

And while many in the world condemn Israel for its actions on the battlefield, even some of its “fair weathered friends”, others have a more seasoned perspective, noting that Israel’s war with Hamas is justified, but is complicated by the hostage issue. As noted in today’s The Jerusalem Post, a delegation of “high-ranking” foreign, military officials from various countries, seasoned veterans of modern conflicts, visited Israel. They got the facts and “gained rare insight into Israel’s military operations”, which “provided them with a direct understanding of the challenges Israel faces.” The above article quoted a former commander of the British forces in Afghanistan, Colonel Richard Kemp: “There’s no question that this war Israel is fighting in Gaza is probably the most complex battlefield any army has ever fought on…You have to consider the dense population and the extensive preparations Hamas has made over decades, including a vast network of tunnels. The large number of hostages held by Hamas also complicates the situation.” 

Retired Delta Force Lt. Col. Jeff Tiegs reported that they saw some of the Hamas tunnel network and that the IDF was drilling to locate more tunnels. His heart was broken when he saw an area that could have the site of a beautiful hotel, were it not for the devastation of Gaza over the last twenty years. He described the failure to develop Gaza economically as “a crime against humanity”.

Col. Tiegs was clear in expressing his opinion that Israel has to keep the pressure on Hamas until we break through and are able to recover the hostages, but noted that the urgency of saving the hostages has a higher priority than the defeating of Hamas. He added that part of the ruthlessness of Hamas’ strategy of warfare atrocity is “the barbarism of assassinating [the] hostages…It’s like a ‘Sophie’s choice’ for the Israeli army—an impossible decision between two objectives.”  

The conclusion of the group of military veterans could probably best be summarized by the statement of former British Army officer, Maj. Andrew Fox, who now serves as senior lecturer at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst: “The events of October 7 justified the war. But the hostage situation complicates things. It’s an inherent paradox between defeating Hamas and rescuing the hostages. It may come down to choosing one.”(emphasis mine). That’s exactly what I have been contending from the outset of the Gaza War. We cannot exert 100% to both of those efforts. One has to give way to the other. Put another way – Which choice is the one that will be for the greater good of the nation and people of Israel? Defeating a ruthless, totally immoral enemy that is committed to the destruction of Israel, knowing that another one will eventually raise up to take its place, or trying to negotiate for the release of the hostages (Israel’s weak spot) in stages, in the hope of returning all who remain alive (with no guarantee that they will all be returned), in exchange for releasing terrorists, who are serving multiple life sentences for the planning and murder of hundreds of Israels? Both are fraught with danger. The present leader of Hamas was included in the “trade” of over 1,000 prisoners for one Israeli soldier. Israel needs Solomonic wisdom.

The rest of the above article touches on the situation with Hezbollah, as well as the growing violence in the area of the “Palestinian” Authority with “car bombs, IEDs [improvised explosive devices], and weapons” and the concern by the IDF over the possibility of a third Intifada. It is worth the read.

While eyes are focused on Israel and her actions, Iran and its proxies are getting minimal condemnation. Hamas puts the people of Gaza at risk, using them as human shields and placing its weapons, as well as its command centers, in the middle of what are supposed to be humanitarian “safe zones”. The strings to the puppets of the 3-H Club (Hamas, Hezbollah and Houthis) are being pulled by Iran, who is the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism and is, more or less, getting a free pass. Israel is learning, although it took a long time for her to be educated, that slowly slowly, it will end up standing alone against Iran. Our “friends and allies” speak of their support of Israel against terrorism. But, instead of acting against Iran, the greatest terrorist entity in the world, our friend and ally who spoke of an unbreakable bond between Israel and the U.S. is releasing an estimated $100 billion (yes, billion) that will undoubtedly be used to continue its terrorism against Israel, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, as well as the US. There are none so blind as those who will not see. And what about Iran’s fraternal twin brother, Qatar, who is the major financial benefactor of Hamas to the tune of some $6 billion, not to mention its financial involvement in anti-Israel demonstrations on university campuses? It is difficult to explain Israel’s decision to allow Qatar to serve as chief negotiator with Hamas. Qatar’s press releases refer to renewed “cease-fire negotiations”, whereas Israel’s press releases refer to renewed “hostage release negotiations”. Are we not paying attention to the emphasis placed on words? Apparently not. If the U.S. and other militarily-strong countries do not act quickly against Iran and Qatar, just to name a few, we’ll wake up one morning with a nuclear Iran and then we’ll ask each other how we could have missed the writings on the wall. By then, it will be too late. The present Gaza War can end quickly and Hamas will be forced to yield, if the sources of its funding are cut off. This is where Israel’s “friends and allies” can make the greatest contribution to ending the war. As Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) said during his interview on Fox News two weeks ago while speaking about the murder by Hamas of American-Israel Hersh Goldberg-Polin: “He was murdered by Hamas. Hamas [couldn’t] care less about the hostages or the Palestinians. And if you want the hostages home, which we all do, you have to increase the cost to Iran…Iran is the Great Satan here. Hamas is the junior partner. They’re barbaric, religious Nazis, Hamas…They [couldn’t] care less about the Palestinian people. I would urge the Biden administration and Israel to hold Iran accountable for the fate of remaining hostages, and put on the target list oil refineries in Iran if the hostages are not released.” He got it right. Hurt them economically and the fallout will reach Iran’s proxies in the Middle East.

The war in the north continues unabated. Hezbollah has unleashed dozens of missiles throughout the entire day and mushroom clouds were seen even over the Sea of Galilee. Sirens blared in most of the northern cities and towns. Hezbollah’s “support” of Hamas began on October 8th, one day after the Hamas massacre of 1,200 people in the Gaza Envelope and took over 250 people hostage. As a result of the steady bombardment, tens of thousands of residents in northern communities had to vacate their homes and are living in temporary residents. They wonder how long they will continue to be refugees in their own land. According to an article in The Times of Israel today, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “is expected to bring a motion before the security cabinet on Sunday to make their return back home an official war goal.” But, it is not clear whether this “official war goal” is related to the present Gaza War, or the expected land operation against Hezbollah. 

In this latter regard, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, speaking to members of the IDF in the north following an operation simulating ground combat in Lebanon three days ago, said here and here: “The center of gravity is shifting to the north. While we are wrapping up our missions in the South, an important task remains in the North: to restore security and allow residents to return to their homes…In the South, I gave the order to proceed after three weeks. The same will happen here, and you must be ready to execute that mission when the time comes…This arrow is ready to be fired, and we will know when to release it…Use this time wisely to prepare.” And as Israel expresses readiness for a ground operation against Hezbollah, the terrorist organization, that has entered the fray in support of Hamas, is, apparently, now treating that readiness as an “existential” threat. That could well be one of the main reasons why it has launched unrelenting missile attacks to northern Israel throughout the course of the day. There is no doubt that the situation is escalating, not only with words, but with action as well.

Notwithstanding the multi-faceted military engagements that occupy our attention almost a year after October 7th, Israel is still doing what it does best – coming up with ideas, inventions and discoveries that will be of benefit to all mankind. This time it is the development of a system that will extract clean water from the air. You can read briefly here.

There are times when we simply don’t know in which direction to turn or how to deal with situations that are beyond our understanding or control. At such times, our best solution is to remember the words of the Psalmist: 

I will lift up my eyes to the mountains; From where shall my help come?My help comes from the Lord, Who made heaven and earth…He who keeps you will not slumber. Behold, He who keeps Israel will neither slumber nor sleep. The Lord is your keeper…The Lord will protect you from all evil; He will keep your soul. The Lord will guard your going out and your coming in from this time forth and forever. (from Psalm 121)

And above all, remember: Bless, be blessed and be a blessing.

Marvin

Regaining “Deterrence”

Shalom all,

“With the killings of two terror chiefs in the capital cities of two enemy nations in the past few hours, the existential war that began for Israel with Hamas’s invasion and slaughter on October 7 has now entered uncharted territory.”

Fuad Shukr was the #2 man on the list of Hezbollah’s leadership and its most senior military official. But, he was also said to be responsible for the horrendous Hezbollah missile attack last Saturday that killed 12 children in the Israeli Druze of Majdal Shams. Israel said that it would respond. Yesterday, it carried through with its promise and killed Shukr in a strike in Beirut, the capital city of Lebanon.

But, that wasn’t all. At the outset of the war, Prime Minister Netanyahu and Defense Minister, Yoav Galant, said that the Hamas leadership would be reached wherever they are and described them as “dead men walking”. Within a matter of a few hours after eliminating Fuad Shukr, Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh was assassinated in Tehran, Iran, by a missile strike at his residence. While Israel openly admits eliminating Shukr, it has remained quiet regarding the killing of Haniyeh, Hamas’ political chief in exile who was visiting Tehran for the inauguration of the newly elected Iranian president. Nevertheless, Iran promptly accused Israel of his assassination and pledged relaliation for violating Iranian’s territorial sovereignty.

Senior Hamas leader, Khalil al-Hayya accused Israel of striking Lebanon and Iran “to set the region on fire,” but added that Hamas and its allies do not want a “regional war.” At a news conference in Tehran, al-Hayya said that Haniyeh’s killing “sent a clear message: that our only option with this enemy is blood and resistance.”

Yoel Guzansky, a former official on Israel’s National Security Council, now a senior fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv, said “I don’t think it will change the balance of power or the face of the war, but it sends a strong signal to Iran and the axis [of proxy militant groups]…It shows them they cannot be safe anywhere, even in Tehran.”

David Suissa, the Publisher and Editor-in-Chief of Tribe Media/Jewish Journal, simplified the matter, noting in his excellent article yesterday, Israel Just Took Down a Terrorist Who Loves Room Service,: “The most important word in the Middle East is not power or honor or religion. Those are important, but the supreme word is ‘deterrence.’ Deterrence is how sophisticated people say ‘scared sh-tless.’ If your neighbors are scared of you, they’ll behave. If they’re not, you’re in trouble. That’s how Israel has survived for so long– it’s the rule of the jungle. October 7 broke that rule. One of Israel’s sworn enemies said to the all-powerful Israel: ‘We’re not afraid of you. And we’re so not afraid of you that we are invading your country and slaughtering your people.’ In fancy language, Israel lost deterrence.” There is little doubt that the elimination of the top echelon representatives of Hezbollah and Hamas was designed to re-establish that “deterrence”.

Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei vowed “harsh punishment” and revenge against Israel . Officials in Iran said Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei ordered a direct attack on Israel, in response to the assassination of Haniyah on Tehran soil. Iran is considering responding with a combined attack with military targets in Tel Aviv and Haifa, but will target civilian targets. <https://www.timesofisrael.com/khamenei-said-to-order-direct-strike-on-israel-after-haniyeh-killed-in-tehran/> The U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem is taking the Iranian threat seriously and issued a “Security Alert”, noting, among other things:

“The U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem reminds U.S. citizens of the continued need for caution and increased personal security awareness as security incidents often take place without warning.  The security environment remains complex and can change quickly. 

On July 31, we updated the Travel Advisory for Israel, West Bank and Gaza to reflect U.S. government travel restrictions to northern Israel within 2.5 miles of the Lebanese and Syrian borders to Level 4: Do Not Travel – the full text of the Travel Advisory may be found here.  U.S. citizens are encouraged to read the current Travel Advisory and Country Information Page for Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza, that advises U.S. citizens to be aware of the continuing risks of travel to Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza due to the security situation and heightened regional tensions and warns against travel to Gaza. U.S. citizens can find additional information regarding steps to take in case of mortar and rocket fire or unmanned aircraft system (UAS) intrusions in the Country Information Page for Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza: 

Mortar and Rocket Fire or Hostile Aircraft Intrusion:  In the event of mortar or rocket fire or hostile aircraft intrusion, a “red alert” siren may be activated.  Treat all such alerts as real; follow the instructions from local authorities and seek shelter immediately.  Know the location of your closest shelter or protected space.  U.S. government personnel and their family members may be restricted from traveling to areas affected by rocket activity, sirens, and/or the opening of bomb shelters.  For additional information on appropriate action to take upon hearing a siren or explosion, see the Israel Defense Forces Home Front Command website (available on devices within Israel) or view the Preparedness Information PDF.  U.S. citizens may also wish to download the free Israel Defense Forces Home Front Command application on Android or Apple devices to receive real-time security and safety alerts.  Free commercial applications, such as Red Alert: Israel, are also available.” The alert also specified what actions should be taken, including making sure that the families of Americans have our travel documents in order and that they should be “prepared to travel”.

The City of Haifa is also taking the threats seriously., with the Mayor issuing an announcement calling upon all residents of Haifa to stay close to protected areas, adding that Haifa is prepared to accommodate residents in underground parking lots. Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan is not willing to wait on the sidelines. He threw his two cents into the pot and threatened to invade Israel because of the war in Gaza. In reality, however, Erdogan’s desire to attack Israel has very little, if anything, to do with the Gaza war and almost everything to do with his desire to re-establish the Ottoman Empire under an Islamist Caliphate, under his authority, of course.

Daniel Pipes, President of The Middle East Forum, n his clear and incisive article appearing in yesterday’s Wall Street Journal, asserted that the indecision and equivocation of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during the last 10 months between military victory over Hamas and negotiation for the release of the hostages, is over. The assassination of terrorist leaders should be understood as revealing Israel’s intention to achieve victory over Hamas. “The drama and chutzpah of killing Haniyeh on a ceremonial visit to Iran appears to end the indecision. Mr. Netanyahu has thrown down the gauntlet, indicating that Israel intends to crush Hamas and win rather than negotiate with it and permit it to survive.”

Yesterday’s article of the Middle East Forum added the following: “Appearing on Fox News Channel’s “Fox and Friends” this morning, MEF chief editor Jim Hanson – channeling his U.S. Army Ranger background – said that Iran has to retaliate. ‘What kind of terrorist puppet masters are you if, in a twelve-hour period, one of your top Hezbollah guys gets returned to his component molecules, and then you invite the Hamas leader to a party in your own capital city and those pesky Zionists return him to ambient temperature.’ Hanson added that: Israel is ‘fundamentally ready’ to deal with Iran’s proxies throughout the region. Israel’s actions show they ‘are not going to take the path of appeasement that so many are trying to force upon’ them. Instead, they will defeat Hamas and Hezbollah while making the point that ‘both of them are terror proxies of the tyrannical theocracy in Tehran’.”

The IDF is at peak readiness to deal with attacks from the puppeteer and his ha-he-hu (Hamas, Hezbollah and Houthis) cronies. Local authorities are preparing for damage to infrastructures. And now we wait.

LORD, open our eyes that we may see that those who are with us are more than those who are with them, that the mountains of Israel are filled with angelic beings and chariots of fire. (see 2 Kings 6:16-18) and that no weapon formed against us will succeed (Isaiah 54:17).

As this week begins to draw to a close, let us remember not to let what we don’t know to take away from what we do know.

Bless, be blessed and be a blessing.

Marvin

Northern Town Attacked, 12 Children Killed, Israel Preparing for Full-Scale War with Hezbollah

Shalom All,
At least 12 children were killed and dozens were wounded late yesterday afternoon (Saturday) when a Hezbollah rocket struck a soccer field in the Druze town of Majdal Shams, located in the Golan Heights, a short drive from the Lebanese border. Emergency Service Director, Eli Bin, of Magen David Adom (MDA) described the area as looking like “scenes out of a battlefield.” The attack was condemned by Sheikh Mowafaq Tarif, the spiritual leader of the Druze community, “We are in great shock from the horrific massacre in the Druze village, an atrocious and murderous terrorist attack that struck innocent children playing soccer. The sight of the children’s shattered bodies strewn across the grass is indescribable…A civilized country cannot allow the continuous harm to its citizens and residents. This has been the reality for nine months in the northern communities. Tonight, it crossed every possible red line.” The children who were killed ranged in age from 10 to 16. In a televised report, the IDF Spokesman said that the attack was the most severe attack on Israeli citizens since October 7th. The missile that landed in the soccer field was part of a massive barrage of several dozen projectiles launched by the Hezbollah. According to Foreign Minister Israel Katz, this latest attack by Hezbollah is drawing us closer to full-scale war with the Lebanon-based terrorist organization, i.e., the Third Lebanon War.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who was visiting the United States when the attack occurred, expedited his planned return to Israel and landed earlier today. A security forum will decide the nature of Israel’s retaliation.

The big questions last night were: Why wasn’t the rocket downed by the Iron Dome Defense System? Why didn’t the sirens warn of an incoming projectile? According to the IDF’s initial investigation, the failure to intercept the missile was due to a combination of the low altitude of the flight path, as well as the conditions of the terrain in the area of the town. Also, apparently, sirens sounded for a full 20 seconds prior to impact, so there was no validity to the claims that there was only a few seconds’ warning prior to the explosion.

IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi accused Hezbollah of deliberately targeting children. “This is a Hezbollah rocket. And whoever launches such a rocket into a built-up area wants to kill civilians, wants to kill children”. Halevi added that the military is increasing its readiness for “the next stage of fighting in the north.”

No matter how we look at it, the Hezbollah intended to target civilians. It possesses missiles that can be programmed to reach specific targets. If it is argued that the missile was not directed toward the soccer field, then it is just as bad, maybe even worse, as the missile was aimed towards an area with a civilian population. It could have exploded elsewhere, causing considerably greater damage and loss of life. Either way, civilian population was the target. It should be remembered that the Hezbollah terrorist organization is “supportive” of Hamas, but its increased attacks against Israel’s northern region reveals that it has opted to become an active participant in the Gaza War, but from a different direction.

U.S. intelligence confirms the IDF’s claim that the missile was launched by the Hezbollah. There is widespread concern that this attack could be the trigger that will result in full blown war between Israel and Hezbollah.

The ball is, for the moment, in Israel’s court and we are all waiting to see how it is going to be played out. Professor Uzi Rabi, senior researcher and the head of the program for Regional Cooperation at the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African Studies Studies at Tel Aviv University, asserts that Israel needs to change its method of dealing with the Hezbollah.

“Israel needs to adopt an out-of-the-box strategy similar to used in Yemen ,,, referring to the July 20 IAF strike on the Houthi fuel port at Al-Hodeida, which came in response to a deadly Houthi suicide drone strike on Tel Aviv.” He noted that “Hezbollah presents itself as Lebanon’s protector, but a significant disruption could lead to internal dissent and international condemnation of Hezbollah’s actions.” That being the case, he suggested that Israel should target Lebanon’s civilian infrastructure to disrupt daily life, which in turn would pressure the population to turn against Hezbollah. He proposes the following: “What should guide Israel’s actions is to do what it has not yet done, for the simple reason that what it has done so far has not been effective. I do not trivialize the issue of targeted killings or what the IDF has done to Hezbollah, but we must admit that the bottom line is that it did not work…Israel must shift to another mode—I call it the Al-Hodeida mode. To do what was done in Yemen—target the civilian infrastructure in the host country”. By that, he meant that the population should experience disruption to its daily routine in every manner—electricity, water and other vital services. This, in turn, could cause the population to turn on Hezbollah.

My suggestion is slightly different. The civilian infrastructure should be aimed at preventing action by the Hezbollah – roads, air fields large and small, oil and gas depots should be targeted. This is in addition to vital services. The Hezbollah needs to become paralyzed tactically, so that it cannot move combatants and equipment. The likelihood is that it will still have the capability to launch multitudes of missiles. Israel cannot hermetically seal off Lebanon, but it could seriously weaken it and, in a certain sense, send Lebanon back to the Stone Age.

Iran, the puppeteer pulling the strings of the Hezbollah, Hamas and the Houthis, warned Israel against “adventurism”. Iranian Foreign Minister, Nasser Kanaani, issued a statement saying: “Any ignorant action of the Zionist regime can lead to the broadening of the scope of instability, insecurity and war in the region…[adding] that any ‘adventurism’ in Lebanon could lead to ‘unforeseen consequences and reactions’.” The pot is once against calling the kettle black. What needs to be understood is that in THIS REGION, failure to forcefully respond, particularly after a barbarous attack, is seen as a sign of weakness. Hezbollah and its compatriot terrorist cronies work on the principle that “might makes right”, particularly if that “might” is exercised by it. Apparently, it has forgotten the painful lesson that it learned in the Second Lebanon War in 2006.

Media continue to condemn Israel for the number of civilian casualties in Gaza. Despite the gross inaccuracy of the figures, at least Israel was pursuing armed combatants, who use civilians as a shield. That cannot be said of the ongoing attacks of the Hezbollah. Yesterday’s brutal attack by Hezbollah that targeted civilians – children – crossed every red line of military confrontation. Israel must and will respond. At this point, from all reports, Israel is preparing for the Third Lebanon War and an all-out war with Hezbollah. Even if the Gaza War would end today, Israel will have no choice but to retaliate against Hezbollah’s attack on civilians. The terrorist response to Israel’s retaliation will determine whether we will wake up tomorrow or the day after to a devastating war.

My intention was to relate to the speech of Prime Minister Netanyahu before the U.S. Congress and its aftermath. But, more recent events took center stage.

“And I will bless those who bless you, and the one who curses you I will curse.” (Genesis 12:3) God’s promise has never been revoked. Just as He never changes, so His Word will forever remain and He stands behind His Word to perform it.

We can still bless, we can still be blessed and we can still be a blessing.

Marvin

Houthis Attack Israel and Blame Israel for Responding.

Shalom all,

The events of last week inched the Middle East closer to a regional war. The Hezbollah terrorist organization continued to launch barrage after barrage of missiles and armed drones into the north of Israel and into communities largely abandoned shortly after October 7th. Large sections of land have been destroyed by fires caused by the Hezbollah attacks. The easiest way to disprove terrorists’ repeated and historically baseless claims to the land of Israel is by pointing out their willingness to destroy it. This is what is being done in the north by the Hezbollah, what was done in the south by Hamas and what has recently been attempted in Tel Aviv by the Yemenite Houthis.

Whoever heard of the “Houthis” before the barbaric Hamas onslaught that took place 9-1/2 months ago? They seemed almost to come out of the woodwork after October 7th, revealing themselves as one more Iran-funded proxy, to be added to Hamas and Hezbollah – the unholy terrorist triumvirate of the Triple “H” Club (Ha-He-Hou, for short). A terrorist infant, yearning to be weaned and to flex its muscles in an attempt to find its nitch in the world of terrorism, the Houthis joined the attacks against Israel purportedly until Israel ends the fighting in the Gaza Strip.

Since last October, the Houthis have attacked Israel some 200 times, most of them geared towards the southern-most city of Eilat. But, last week, an armed Houthi drone managed to make it through and struck a residential building in Tel Aviv, resulting in the death of one Israeli and injury to at least ten others. Following this attack, Israel finally responded against the Houthi aggression. It sent fighter planes 1,700 kilometers (approximately 1,060 miles) to Yemen and destroyed the oil depot and electrical installations at the Port of Hudaydah (or Hodeidah), the second largest port in Yemen. 

We could try to rationalize why it took Israel so long to respond to the provocations of the Houthis. Two main excuses top the list: the first, that Israel has its hands full with Hamas and Hezbollah and did not want to open up a third “active” front. The second relates to the claim that as long as the Houthi threats did not result in the death of any Israeli, there was no serious need to retaliate. While the first excuse can stand the test of reason and practicality, the second one cannot. Waiting until the threat of harm becomes realized and people are killed and/or seriously wounded is exactly the kind of misguided thinking that allowed the events of October 7th to take place. Up until that time, Hamas tried time and again to inflict major harm to the communities in the Gaza Envelope, but failed to achieve widespread success. As a result, Israel tolerated repeated launches of mortars, missiles and fire balloons from Gaza and did not see the need for substantial retaliation to put an end to the potential threat. As long as multitudes of Israelis were not being killed, Israel was content to strike back with “proportionate responses”. It was part of the failed “concept” that allowed foreign funding, mostly from Qatar, to be poured into Gaza, which was intended to build a civilian infrastructure and improve the lives of the residents in Gaza. But, instead, the money was used by Hamas to build a terrorist infrastructure that Israel ignored until October 7th, when a thousand missiles rained hell and destruction on dozens of communities in the south of Israel, allowed for the assault by 3,000 terrorists from Gaza, resulting in the death of 1,200 Israelis and the capture of 250 who were taken hostage to Gaza. We waited too long. This same failed perspective was in play regarding the Houthis and appears to be part of the considerations regarding the nature of our responses vis-a-vis the Hezbollah.

One death in Tel Aviv from a Houthi projectile resulted in the massive destruction of an essential port in Yemen that was used for military purposes. What about the deaths of civilians and military in the north of Israel resulting from Hezbollah missiles, and the displacement of over 80,000 residents from their homes? This has only resulted in tit-for-tat responses by Israel and verbal warnings that have been ignored. Is the honor of Tel Aviv to be upheld, while the entire region of the north of Israel is being allowed to be sacrificed? The Israeli retaliation against the Port of Hudayda accomplished two necessary goals: First, it was a demonstration of Israel’s ability to reach its enemies, undetected, despite the considerabale distance from the shores of Israel. This was particularly important to show to Iran that it is within the striking distance of Israel (closer to Israel than Yemen). The second is to point out that Israel understands how relationships work – or don’t work – in the Middle East. “Israel’s enemies are deterred by actions, not words. If words had a deterrent power, the country’s North would not still be under a barrage of daily rocket fire from Hezbollah, because Israel’s threats against Hezbollah – with Gallant leading the way – have been many and frequent…Still, Hezbollah has not gotten the message. It’s actions that count, not threats.” The take away from the Israeli retaliation against the Houthis: There is a price to pay for repeated attacks against Israel. At some point, it will be paid and paid in full. Better sooner than later. 

Incredible as it may seem, after the hundreds of attacks against Israel by the Houthis, when Israel finally retaliated, the Houthis accused Israel of “opening a war with the Yemeni people”. A Houthi spokesman, speaking to the Qatari-owned news site Al Jazeera, said: “The conflict with the Israeli enemy will be open, without boundaries or a commitment to rules of engagement…”The threats will continue in Tel Aviv, and the new equation is clear evidence that anyone who defends the enemy fails. The Americans, the British, European nations and Arab agents will not succeed in preventing the threat from reaching Israel. We are pleased to have a direct battle against the Israeli enemy…There are several critical and sensitive targets in Israel that we will strike. We will announce our actions once they are carried out.” The major open question is whether the Houthis will try to recruit other pro-Iranian militias for a coordinated attack on Israel. Israel is preparing for different scenarios.

Israel is actively engaged in two fronts against two of Iran’s proxies: Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon. The latter is usually referred to as a terrorist organization, but it has clearly developed into an unofficial army. Israel cannot wait until Hezbollah succeeds in carrying out major destruction to cities, kibbutzim and moshavim. Hezbollah is not Hamas. It is well trained, well financed, has a tunnel infrastructure better than that of Hamas and has a quarter of a million missiles pointed in our direction. Israel needs to take preventative action to seriously disrupt Lebanese infrastructure and destroy depots storing missiles and military equipment of Hezbollah. Diplomacy doesn’t work with the Hezbollah. Threats against it fall on deaf ears. All that they understand is power and force. Nobody wants an all-out war, but crossing our fingers and hoping that it is not going to happen is wishful thinking. If the Gaza war ends, the conflict with Hezbollah will only be put on hold. It is doubtful that the Houthis will simply walk away and carry on with their terrorism elsewhere. Iran does not pay them to sit around and do nothing.

Needless to say that other Arab countries condemned Israel’s “aggression” against Yemen, expressing concern that Israel’s actions “harm regional security and undermine international efforts to end violence”. Why is there no expression of concern about the attacks upon Israel from the Hezbollah and the Houthis? The simple answer is that Arab communities see each other as members of a broader family, irrespective of where all the family members live. An attack upon one member by Israel is treated as an attack upon the entire family, hence the repeated call for united action against Israel. 

Hostage negotiations are back on the table and the Israeli delegation will be returning to Doha on Thursday, to respond to the 29 Hamas comments to the proposed outline. As will be recalled, the present situation calls for the release of 30 live hostages. The pressure to reach a “deal at any price” is gaining momentum, particularly in light of today’s news that two additional hostages died while in Hamas custody. This latest push, even from members of the security establishment, also includes support from the far religious right, who see the release of the hostages as a matter of pikuach nefesh – the saving of a life. But, their support of making a deal now is related to freeing “all” of the hostages “now”, while Israel is willing to negotiate for 30 now, the rest later. Given the prior track record of unreliability of the Hezbollah, the willingness to enter into piece-meal negotiations only prolongs the agony of the hostages, their families and the division of the nation, half of which wants to force Hamas to surrender and return the hostages, while the other is interested only in the return of the hostages, essentially ignoring the fact that we are at war. And the entire country suffers as a result of the disunity.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is now in the United States and will be delivering a message to the Congress. He is scheduled to meet with President Joe Biden and, undoubtedly, the latter will push for Netanyahu to close the deal with Hamas and end the war, while Biden is still in office. As for the consequences of Biden’s decision not to pursue re-election, that remains a matter of speculation. America will once again soon demonstrate how ugly politics can be, while Israel, who is not a stranger to ugly politicking, is hoping that Biden’s replacement, whoever it is, will be supportive of Israel, not only as a friend, but as an ally.

Finally, if Israel didn’t have enough to worry about, traces of polio virus in the sewage system of the Gaza Strip. There is a concern that it might affect the members of the IDF presently engaged there, who might bring the virus back with them when their tours of duty are over. As a result, the IDF was instructed “to ensure that all soldiers are vaccinated against polio. It is recommended that even those vaccinated in the routine immunization program receive a booster dose due to potential exposure risk, especially in field conditions. Besides protecting the soldiers themselves, it is crucial to prevent them from getting infected and subsequently infecting others, as the virus is excreted in large quantities through the intestines…The [Israeli] Health Ministry’s directive to the IDF also said that ‘the vaccine is recommended for all combat teams currently in Gaza or those about to enter the area. There is no need to vaccinate soldiers who were previously in Gaza’.”

Israel continues to suffer from national trauma. The nation is divided over hostages and war. The drain is evident in all areas, particularly as more deaths of hostages or members of the IDF are announced. We need a spirit of unity. We need wisdom, courage and decisiveness. We need an undergirding of fervent prayer for: the hostages who are still alive; for the families of the hostages; for the soldiers who are wounded; for the families of those who lost loved ones since October 7th; for wisdom to know how to proceed, the boldness to pursue what we know to do and the skill to be able to accomplish what needs to be done.

Elijah was a man with a nature like ours, and he prayed earnestly that it would not rain, and it did not rain on the earth for three years and six months. Then he prayed again, and the sky poured rain and the earth produced its fruit. (James 5:17-18)

Have a healthy and a safe week. And remember: Bless, be blessed and be a blessing. In a world that doesn’t know which end is up, these things are still possible.

Marvin

Pushing Israel to the Brink of War

Shalom all,

“And the rockets’ red glare, the bombs bursting in air…”

Those words from The Star-Spangled Banner, by Francis Scott Key (September 20, 1814) could aptly describe the appearances in the northern skies of Israel on the 4th of July. But, these were not typical fireworks to join in celebrating America’s Independence Day. Nor was it a memorial celebration of the bold, IDF mission that freed 106 passengers, mostly Israelis, who were taken hostage when Arab and German terrorists hijacked a French plane and landed in Entebbe, Uganda. No, these were over 200 rockets and more than 20 armed drones that made their way into Israeli territory on July 4th from our genuinely unfriendly, Hezbollah-terrorist controlled, neighbor. 

While both Lebanon and Israel had expressed that they do not want an all-out war, the massive missile barrages succeeded to generate widespread damage in the north and resulted in the death of an Israeli soldier. Additional rocket barrages and anti-tank missiles were launched against Israel on July 7th, which is nine full months since the Hamas invasion on October 7th, 2023, and again on July 9th. The Hezbollah claimed that its recent missile attacks were in retaliation for Israel killing senior Hezbollah commanders in Lebanon and added that it would expand its targets that Israel “did not imagine would be hit”.

With nine months completed since the devastating Hamas terrorist attack, concerns were, and continue to be, expressed across Israel of continued sexual assaults and possibly forced marriages of the younger female hostages taken on October 7th, and births that could have taken place by now. Israel is still in the dark regarding who is alive, where they are and what they conditions are, physically, medically and psychologically.

The General Secretary of the Hezbollah, Hassan Nasrallah, said that the Hezbollah missile and drone attacks are wearing Israel out. He added that Hamas is conducting negotiations on everyone’s behalf (including Hezbollah) and that the terrorist organization would agree to whatever decision would be reached. He concluded that “we” (Hamas and Hezbollah) accomplished their goals and that Israel would be forced to stop the war. 

Even as this is being written, the Hezbollah is continuing its missile attacks in the Golan Heights.

Yesterday, July 9th, a husband wife were killed in a Hezbollah attack, while they were driving their vehicle on a road not far from one of the military bases in the Golan Heights. They were on their way home to Kibbutz Ortal. They left behind three children .  It should be remembered that tens of thousands of Israelis have been displaced from their homes as a result of the continued missile attacks from the Hezbollah, causing the city of Kiryat Shmoneh to become more like a ghost town, along with other neighboring communities. Following the murder of this couple, Lior Simcha, the General Secretary of the Kibbutz Movement, lambasted the government for its failure to deal with the security situation in the north. He added: “Israel has never seemed so weak and at a loss in the face of its enemies. Two Israelis were murdered on the road in the Golan Heights by Hezbollah fire and we are powerless, leaderless, lacking a plan and public legitimacy … It is time to show leadership and initiative, Whether military or political, put an end to this unbearable situation, it cannot continue like this.”

The Dry Bones Blog – 9th July, 2024

There is cautious optimism on the part of officialdom that this time, the negotiations might be successful. But, the parties are still far apart on some major issues. Even if the renewed hostage negotiations result in a ceasefire, the belligerence from Hezbollah will expand until it comes to an explosive head. We are at the brink of that point now, which will steadily continue and eventually embroil the entire region in war, unless there will be Divine intervention that will prevent it.

Hezbollah published a second drone footage of military sites in northern Israel, particularly in and around the cities of Nahariya, Safed (Tsfat) and Haifa, as well as Mount Dov, which is near the Lebanese border . The drone video, which was approximately 10 minutes in length, showed various military locations, giving longitude and latitude, allowing for pinpointing computer-guided missile attacks.

The threat of all-out war with the Hezbollah is as real as it ever was and it is being taken seriously by the national government, the IDF and local governments as well. One media site states it simply and clearly, as least as the city of Haifa is concerned: 

“Channel 12 reported that Rambam Hospital in Haifa, the largest city in Northern Israel, is preparing for an extreme scenario involving missile attacks every four minutes for 50-60 days. The hospital is establishing a fortified underground facility capable of treating 2,000 patients, including 24 operating rooms. According to the hospital director, the entire medical centre can relocate underground within eight hours. Additionally, a dedicated train will facilitate the transfer of wounded individuals to central Israel hospitals in the event of mass casualties.

“Haifa is also preparing 16 underground parking lots to serve as bomb shelters during a large conflict. The local subway system will be utilized as a massive shelter, and city schools will be converted into temporary housing if residential buildings are struck by missiles.”

While hospital preparedness is necessary, one of the major problems that would result from extended missile attacks is being able to reach the wounded and/or the hospital. Transportation arteries would undoubtedly be affected, making it difficult and, in some cases, impossible to drive to or from the hospital. Ability to “fuel up” would also be affected, as most gasoline companies would most likely not be able deliver.

Israel is not afraid of Hezbollah, but for some reason it is delaying the massive response that is necessary in order to “take the fight” to the area north of the Lebanese border with Israel. A widespread strike against all airports in Lebanon should be the first order of business. Israel needs to also severely damage the infrastructure, take out electric grids and communication centers and turn the highways and byways of Lebanon into rubble, making it impossible for ordinary traffic to travel anywhere. Notwithstanding the existence of a civilian government in Lebanon, the reality is that the Hezbollah controls the country. Its desire is to launch a quarter of a million missiles at Israel and Israel needs to dismantle the terrorists’ ability to act. Only then will Hezbollah be willing to capitulate. Will “innocents” suffer? Yes. But, if you were expecting hundreds of thousands of missiles to be fired in your direction by an enemy who seeks your death – with multitudes being killed and wounded, wouldn’t you want to do what you could to prevent it?

That’s really enough for now. I genuinely solicit your prayers for: wisdom for the government of Israel; a spirit of unity among the politicians; and wisdom, courage, boldness and precision for the IDF. May it be that no weapon that is formed against us would prosper.

One last note: I realize that some of what I write does not find favor with some of the recipients of this blog. Nevertheless, I do not remove them from the mailing list or block them from commenting. Apparently, one recipient is not at all thrilled with these posts and decided to send me some hate mail, which was postmarked from Phoenix, Arizona. No name, no return address. Whoever it is, may he come to his senses. Israel is not going anywhere. Truly, Israel will always be from the [Jordan] River to the [Mediterranean] Sea, and then some. 

May God enable us to bless, even while being cursed. May we be blessed in the process of blessing and help us to be a blessing.

May the rest of your week be healthy, from all perspectives.

Marvin

Winds of War in the North

The war drums are beating on both sides of the Lebanon-Israel border, with each side ramping up the rhetoric of war readiness. At some point, the blustering will stop and the actual conflict will begin. No matter how one may want to paint the picture, it’s going to be a mess. All-out war between Israel and the terrorist organization, Hezbollah, is expected to ignite the entire region of the Middle East, with most of the participants directing their efforts against Israel. Reports, based on U.S. sources, indicate that the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, USS Dwight D. Eisenhower, left the area of the Red Sea where it was deployed since last October, and was redeployed to the Medierranean Sea, “to assist in the operation that is likely to develop between Israel and Lebanon.”

Earlier last week, Hezbollah published a 10-minute video of footgage taken by a  surveillance drone that captured strategic locations, including the city of Haifa and its surroundings. Haifa is home to a naval base, an airport and oil refineries, among other things. Most people who do not live in Israel are unaware of the fact that the distance from Haifa to the Lebanese border is only 17 miles (27 kilometers), which does not allow for a lot of early-warning time.

A spokesman for Hezbollah claimed that no Israeli threat will deter the Hezbollah from continuing its missile assaults on Israel and that the only way that those assaults would stop would be if there was a permanent ceasefire in the Gaza Strip. He added that an Israeli attack on the Hezbollah terrorist organization, that controls Lebanon, would be like attacking Iran itself, who would join in the fighting. This claim received backing from Iran’s UN mission, Israel who reported yesterday (Friday) that if Israel launches a full-scale war against Hezbollah, “an obliterating war will ensure. All options, including the full involvement of all Resistance Fronts, are on the table.” Hassan Nasrallah, the General Secretary of the Hezbollah, in a televised speech on June 19th, said that “no place” in Israel would be safe from the weapons of the Hezbollah and that the organization would fight with “no rules” and “no ceilings”. Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, during his recent visit to Washington, said that while Israel prefers a diplomatic solution to the growing conflict in the north, he warned that in any war with Hezbollah, Lebanon could end up being sent back to the Stone Age. In the meantime, the Municipality of Haifa said that in the event of an attack from Hezbollah, we can expect major interruptions. We’ll be on our own for the first day or so, before essential infrastructure can be repaired. Not exactly the most encouraging of government notices.

It needs to be understood that the accelerating threats on both sides of the Lebanon-Israel divide can explode into all-out war very quickly and the consequences would be devasting for both parties. Hezbollah is not Hamas. It is a well-trained and generousl funded by Iran, with an arsenal of some two hundred thousand missiles, tens of thousands of which are precision missiles. Immediately after October 7th, it began to support Hamas from the sidelines, launching helter-skelter mortar and short-range rocket fire. that increased to massive missile barrages, including armed drones, all of which combined to cause the displacement of some seventy thousand Israelis, who were forced to leave their homes in the north of Israel, with no end in sight or projected time when they can return. 

Hezbollah began as a Shi’ite Moslem terror organization, that grew into a major political force in Lebanon, to the point that it now functions like a state within a state. It is not swayed by threats from Israel. It is clear, however, that its continued attacks upon Israel cannot continue to be tolerated. So, Hezbollah and Israel threaten each other with destruction and the threats are becoming more intense. A fuse leading to war has been ignited and if it is not put out very quickly, we could wake up one morning very soon and find the Middle East on fire, with Iran joining in the fray. And if Iran joins in, the U.S. will most likely be dragged into it militarily, along with other nations that align themselves with one side or another, for their own military-industrial-economic reasons. 

The next war with Lebanon, actually, with Hezbollah, will not be like previous military encounters with Lebanon, which took place almost every decade since the 1970’s: Operation Litani (river) – 1978; First Lebanon War – 1982; Operation Grapes of Wrap – 1996; Second Lebanon War – 2006. While the major players are the same, the weapons of war have become more deadly and far more devastating. The numbers of casualties would be beyond what anyone would want to think at this point. 

If anyone is under the illusion that such a military conflict would be limited to Lebanon and Israel, he should think again. There are other players in the region: The Houthis (who will continue to disrupt shipping in and around the Red Sea); pro-Iranian militias from Iraq and Syria (numbering tens of thousands); an uprising in the area presently controlled by the “Palestinian” Authority in Judea and Samaria. This will most likely be accompanied by cyber attacks affecting not only Israel’s infrastructure, but would be part of massive cyber attacks intended to thwart Israel’s allies (whoever they may be at the time) from coming to its aid. It is also reasonable to presume that coordinated efforts would be made against western targets, both in the area of the Middle East, as well as abroad. 

In such a likely scenario, Israel would pull out all the stops and follow-through with its threat to send Lebanon back to the Stone Age. While involvement in a Middle East war is not exactly what the Biden Admnistration would want to take place only a few months before a national election, it would reluctantly be drawn in to protect its ally. The U.N. is powerless to stop the momentum. World leaders express concern over the outbreak of war between Hezbollah and Israel, but all are too weak to gain the respect of this terrorist organization that is its own authority. Only a strong leader, respected by nations, including terrorist organizations, would need to show up to and help bring about an end to the war. Easier said than done. This is not a far-fetched, sci-fi script. We are dealing with a terror organization that is willing to take on the U.S., Israel, Cyprus, most of the western countries in the European Union. Listen to one of Lebanon’s own, as she reports about the dangers of allowing the country to be led into disaster by Hezbollah, here and here. Then you’ll get a good handle on what Israel has to deal with. Your prayers are genuinely solicited.

May you have a safe, healthy and peaceful week.

In the meantime, remember to bless, so you can be blessed and be a blessing.

Marvin

A Week of “Booms and More Booms”

Shalom all,

As the new week began, the nation continued to express the joy of the rescue of the four hostages, which I reported about last week. It was a joy shared by individuals and politicians alike, both in Israel and abroad, who had a clear understanding of the events of October 7th and of the evil and blind hatred that caused those events and the resulting national trauma experienced by Israel. Still, for those whose understanding is clouded and for those who choose not to see, or worse, who choose to ignore, acts of terrorism, it was easy for them to attempt to further accuse Israel of needlessly adding more casualties in Gaza. Apparently, there are no limits in manufacturing facts, in distorting facts or in making unfounded accusations when it comes to blaming Israel, even for accomplishing what very few, if any, military forces in the world would be able to perform in broad daylight.

And on top of it all, there was the BBC interview of a former IDF Spokesperson where the interviewer suggested that the IDF should have given advance warning of its planned rescue. Hello!?! This was a “rescue” operation, of Israeli hostages, being held captive by armed, Hamas-affiliated “civilians” in a “civilian”-populated area in Gaza. So much for “uninvolved civilians”! Can anyone help find an interview by the BBC, or by any other media outlet, of a Hamas representative where the question was asked of Hamas whether it should have given an early warning of its intended murderous onslaught that took place on October 7th, so as to avoid so many Israeli civilian casualties?  Of course not.

The response of Hamas to the rescue of the four Israeli hostages was reported by Times of Israel: “Hamas terrorist leaders have given standing orders to operatives who are holding hostages saying ‘that if they think Israeli forces are coming, the first thing they should do is shoot the captives,’ according to Israeli officials quoted by The New York Times on Monday.”

The leadership of Hamas has little, if any, genuine concern for the people of Gaza. While the world laments the loss of civilian life since the Hamas bloodfest of October 7th that led to the present war, Yahya Sinwar, the terror chief of Hamas, sees the unconfirmed death toll in Gaza as a means to increase international pressure on Israel.

“Hamas chief Yahya Sinwar has insisted that civilian bloodshed in Gaza is a necessary sacrifice that will lead to the liberation of Palestine, according to a report published late Monday, bolstering accusations that the terror group has intentionally put its people in harm’s way over the last eight months of devastating war in Gaza.  [emphasis mine]

“In dozens of messages sent over several months and acquired by The Wall Street Journal, Sinwar communicated to Hamas compatriots and mediating parties alike that he had no interest in pursuing a ceasefire with Israel, as he believed that the growing civilian death toll would serve to benefit Hamas more than a cessation of fighting would.” Israel is being condemned right, left and center for the high civilian death toll in Gaza, despite everyone’s recognition that the figures supplied by the Hamas-controlled Gaza Health Ministry are unconfirmed. The accusing finger and voice of condemnation should be directed towards Hamas, who doesn’t care even if its own leadership suffers loss as a result of the war. 

Hamas made “amendments” to the latest peace offer, some of which are totally unworkable and non-starters. Israel was pushing its flexibility to its limits to end the war to secure all hostages’ release, but wants a condition that the IDF can resume its campaign against Hamas if the terrorists violate the deal. Many of the difficult terms of Hamas that Israel was willing to accept could end up seriously escalating the conflict in Judea and Samaria (i.e., the “West Bank” of the Jordan River). It was willing to take the risk. However, Hamas has expressed that the ongoing fighting will help it to achieve its strategic goals, including weakening Israel internationally and internally as well as advance its aim of destroying Israel.

The latest “amended demands” of Hamas are designed to secure its power in Gaza, as well as to expand its influence in Judea and Samaria after the war. It wants international guarantees to prevent Israel from resuming the war against it, even if Hamas breaches its obligations towards Israel under any ceasefire deal. Hamas wants to curtail Israel’s ability to prevent smuggling from Sinai into Gaza. It also demands the return and free movement of Gazans back to the north of the strip, without security checks as required by Israel to prevent Hamas gunmen from returning. It is demanding absolute decision making regarding the terrorists in Israeli jails who are to be released as part of the deal, with no Israeli veto regarding any of them. It should be obvious that Hamas plans to use released terrorists to boost their influence in Judea, Samaria, and through the area controlled by the “Palestinian Authority”. In short, the demands of Hamas significantly changed the main and most meaningful parameters of the Israeli agreed-upon proposal. Those changes are intended to achieve an absolute end to the war against it, while the leadership and terrorist capabilities of Hamas remain intact. 

Israel would be out of its mind to agree to any ceasefire deal that includes the above list of demands, among others that are equally unacceptable.

This past Wednesday marked the celebration of the Biblical holiday, “The Feast of Weeks”, also known in Hebrew as “Shavuot” and known worldwide as the “Feast of Pentecost”, which takes place 50 days following the Feast of Passover. It has significance for Jews (the giving of the Torah to Moses on Mt. Sinai) and Christians (the coming of the Holy Spirit) alike. But, on this particular Wednesday, the terrorist organization, Hezbollah, launched massive missile attacks against Israel, firing more than 200 projectiles into northern Israel, the Upper and Western Galilee, the Golan Heights, the Mount Carmel area and the Jezreel Valley, including Haifa, Acco (Acre) and Tiberias (region of the Sea of Galilee). This was followed up on Thursday with over a 100 additional projectiles, causing significant damage.

Attempts are being made to the Israeli public, and maybe the broader international community, that the Hezbollah missile barrages are a proportionate response to the killing of a senior Hezbollah commander on Tuesday of this past week. But, in reality, it is more an attempt to justify, although with little persuasive effect, the present failure of the IDF to retaliate massively in kind against Hezbollah, as is being demanded by the Israeli public, particularly those northern residents who have become refugees in their own country. Keeping in mind that Israel is now facing war on 7 different fronts, the last thing that Israel wants to do is to get embroiled in an all-out, total war with Hezbollah at this particular point in time, with all that is required to maintain such a war, while matters with Hamas remain “unresolved”. 

At some point, however, in the very near future, Israel will need to respond and respond seriously. We should not be surprised if that response will take place during the months of the approaching summer, or if it will be sometime during this coming week. It is difficult to believe that Israel is not aware of Hezbollah’s intentions, which is control over territory in the north of Israel that require Israeli military concessions in the future. As Tony Badran, an FDD (Foundation for the Defense of Democracies) research fellow born and raised in Lebanon, has stated: “Hezbollah, Iran’s terrorist foreign legion, is now more firmly in control of Lebanon than ever before.” And as Carolyn Glick cogently points out: “Under Hezbollah’s control, Lebanon is not an actual country. It is Iran’s forward military base against Israel that happens to have 5.5 million residents. The job of the residents is to deny that they live in an Iranian missile base.” In her above article, Mrs. Glick expresses the vast difference between the strategic approach of Israel and that of the terrorist forces of Hamas and Hezbollah: 

“While Israel prepared for the war it wanted to fight—a low-cost, high-tech war fought mainly from air-conditioned operations centers by remote control—its enemies prepared for the war they wanted to fight. Namely, that is their war to eliminate Israel. Israel trained hackers, and Hamas and Hezbollah trained jihadist terror armies of murderers, rapists and squads to launch missiles, drones and rockets.

“Fighting these armies with Israel’s high-tech force is proving to be extremely difficult. Israel’s assumption of U.S. support has also taken a major hit. To be sure, Washington is willing to support Israel’s efforts to defend itself from aggression along the seven fronts manned by Iran and its proxies. But it opposes Israeli offensive action and has worked actively to undermine Israel’s ability to carry out prolonged offensive operations. Among other things, the United States refuses to share satellite and other intelligence related to offensive objectives, and is placing embargoes or slowwalking the transfer of offensive munitions for Israel’s ground and air forces….

Then she suggests a solution to dealing with the Hezbollah threat: “Then-prime minister Ehud Barak’s decision to surrender the security zone in Southern Lebanon to Hezbollah in May 2000 is the reason that the terror organization was able to build its forces to the point where it poses an existential threat to Israel’s survival. By committing itself to reversing his move, Jerusalem will place itself on the road to victory. The government will steel the public for the road ahead, and provide the General Staff and lower echelons of the IDF with the required guidance for developing and carrying out tactical missions that will advance Israel’s ultimate goal.”

Mrs. Glick’s analysis is very good and worth the few minutes that it will take to read and to get a handle on the situation in the north. As noted above, the situation is volatile and could change quite rapidly.

Finally, this post will close with a return to the subject mentioned at the outset, namely: Israel’s heroic rescue of four hostages held by the Hamas terrorist organization since October 7th. As the week passed, additional details surfaced which make the event itself the material that Hollywood searches for. The only difference is that Hollywood writers adapt, revise and invent facts that draw us in and help us to become visual participants of intrigue and adventure, mixed with drama and tension that is intended to bring us to the edge of our seats. 

But, try as it may, Hollywood can never compete with the drama of real life and the adrenaline burst that occurs when true heroism is met with automatic weapons fire and RPG’s aimed at those who risk their lives, in enemy territory, to save the lives of individuals taken hostage by terrorists and held, not surprisingly, by civilians, who identify with, support and join in the activities of, a heartless and totally immoral, terrorist organization. It would not surprise me if the article of Elon Perry, a journalist and former commando in the Golani Brigade of the IDF, which appeared this week in The Jewish Chronicle, ends up being the basis for a segment in a heart-pounding action movie. The article takes us through the weeks of intelligence work, planning and carrying out of the daring rescue of the four hostages, step by step, under hostile fire. I would recommend clicking on the link and reading the article. It will leave you with a perspective that flies in the face of claims of “uninvolved civilians” and allegations that Hamas doesn’t know which hostages are still alive or where they are and highly inflated figures of “casualties”. I would have been happy to publish the entire article here, but it is protected by copyright. 

The Dry Bones Blog – 9 June, 2024

May the beginning of this new week bring with it good health, strength and safety to all.

Bless, be blessed and be a blessing.

Marvin

War! Terrorist Invasion of Israel – Day 89 of the War.

Shalom all,

The steady increase in the number of IDF deaths since the beginning of the ground offensive has now reached 175. The total number of IDF deaths since October 7th stands at 508.

Despite Israel’s efforts to remain vague regarding yesterday’s assassination of Saleh al-Arouri, it is highly doubtful that any thinking person would have any doubts about who carried it out. Likud party MK, Danny Danon, made this very clear when he tweeted: I congratulate the IDF, the Shin Bet, the Mossad, and the security forces for killing senior Hamas official Saleh Al-Arouri in Beirut. Anyone who was involved in the October 7 massacre should know that we will reach out to them and close an account with them.” 

Al-Arouri is said to be one of the planners of the terrorist invasion of the communities in the “Gaza Envelope”, designated by Hamas as the “Al Aqsa Flood”. In prior speeches and communications, he indicated that Israel would stunned by contemplated actions of Hamas. He became second in command after Hamas political bureau chief, Ismail Haniyeh, after having served 15 years in an Israeli prison and was deported after his release in 2010, shortly before the deal the following year, which saw Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit released by Hamas in exchange for the release of 1,027 prisoners from Israeli jails, one of which was Yahya Sinwar, the present leader of Hamas. Al-Arouri was responsible for Hamas’s terrorism in Judea and Samaria (= the “West Bank”), as well as the abduction and murder of three Israeli youths in 2014 – an event that led to another war between Israel and Hamas that lasted for 51 days. According to Ynetnews, al-Arouri said in a recent interview: “I feel like I have lived too long and exceeded my life expectancy. I praise a martyr’s death.”  I don’t know what everyone is upset about. He knew that he was a marked man and that Israel would probably get to him one day, particularly after October 7th. He wanted to die a martyr’s death and he got his wish.

Obviously, the big question is what will be the response of Hezbollah to the assassination of this senior-level member of Hamas, which took place in Beirut, Lebanon. Hassan Nasrallah, the Secretary-General of the Hezbollah said that it is not afraid to get involved in another war with Israel and that if Israel launches a war against Lebanon, the Hezbollah will respond with “no ceilings” and “no rules”. If anything is, or should be, clear, it is that Israel will not start a war with Lebanon. But, that doesn’t mean that there will not be a Hezbollah response to the assassination of al-Arouri. Hezbollah is not a simple terrorist organization any longer, but a trained militia of tens of thousands of members. Still, Nasrallah’s threats might be clouds without water, as the memories of the Second Lebanon War of 2006 are still fairly fresh, as is the chemical explosion in the port of Beirut that took place in 2020, the responsibility for which was placed at the feet and on the shoulders of Hezbollah. Israel’s threats made earlier in the Gaza War of turning Beirut into a second Gaza are probably also going through Nasarallah’s mind. So, while it would be reasonable to expect a response, it probably would not be an all-out frontal attack. Isra

Germany thinks that the Gaza War will spill over to Lebanon, as a result of al-Arouri’s assassination. The German foreign ministry urged its citizens to leave Lebanon quickly. As it wrote on “X” (formerly known as Twitter): “All German citizens, who are still in Lebanon, are asked to register on the ELEFAND crisis preparedness list and to leave the country as quickly as possible…A further deterioration of the situation and expansion of the conflict cannot be ruled out, especially given the killing of Saleh al-Arouri...This applies above all to the southern part of Lebanon, up to and including the southern urban areas of Beirut.”  It would be interesting to see whether other countries follow Germany’s lead and request their citizens to leave Lebanon in anticipation of a war with Israel.

The ceremony marking the anniversary of the 2020 assassination by the U.S. of the Iranian General, Qassem Soleimani, was marred by two explosions, resulting in a death toll of over 200 people and scores of other people were wounded. At first, reports from Iran claimed that “several gas canisters exploded on the road leading to the cemetery”. But, the deputy governor of Kerman, where the explosions took place, claimed it was a “terrorist attack.”  Let’s wait and see how long it will take for Iran to blame Israel for the explosions. Obviously, the last thing that Israel would plan on doing would be to upset a memorial service in the heart of Iran. But, if Iran is really looking for a war with Israel, it would not be beyond the realm of reason if the event was planned by the Ayatollahs, as an excuse to blame Israel.

Following this post, I am planning to return to the original intention of writing about The Week That Was, rather than The Day That Was. My thanks to all who have written and encouraged and prayed for the daily reports.

Please remember to pray for the leadership in Israel, for the members of the IDF, for the families of those who lost loved ones since October 7th, for the hostages and their families and for the thousands of war wounded, along with their families.

When a man’s ways are pleasing to the Lord, He makes even his enemies to be at peace with him. (Proverbs 16:7).

Bless, be blessed and be a blessing.

Marvin