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WAR REPORT
Sinai crisis could spark Egypt-Israel war
by Staff Writers
Cairo (UPI) Aug 23, 2011

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

Israelis and Palestinians are observing an uneasy truce after five days of fighting in southern Sinai but the clashes underlined how a security crisis brewing since Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was toppled Feb. 11 could explode into a wider conflict.

Since the ouster of Mubarak, who actively supported Egypt's historic 1979 peace treaty with Israel, Israelis have watched with alarm as the Muslim Brotherhood and other Islamists have made political gains.

Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, a vast buffer zone between Israel and the Egyptian heartland since that pact and long neglected by Cairo, has become a hotbed of Islamist radicalism.

The Israelis maintain that arms smuggling to Palestinian Hamas militants who rule the Gaza Strip that abuts Sinai has massively increased.

That has destabilized the region where the Egyptians appear to have lost control of restive Bedouin tribes, numbering some 200,000. They're joining migrating jihadists who have built a network there.

Under the 1979 treaty, Egypt demilitarized Sinai. But the military-led interim regime in Cairo, like most Egyptians, objects to the treaty.

If it deploys large numbers of troops into Sinai, sovereign Egyptian territory, without Israel's approval, there will be trouble and that could seriously damage what little is left of the Mideast peace process.

But, analyst Ehud Yaari of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said, "Pre-emptive Israeli operations across the border would certainly trigger a major crisis."

After the treaty, Israel substantially downsized its military forces because it no longer needed to protect its 170-mile Sinai border with Egypt.

With Egypt quiescent after four wars with Israel, the Jewish state's survival was no longer at stake. Its defense budget was slashed from 30 percent of gross national product to 7 percent.

The treaty with the most populous Arab nation, although it brought a cold peace, allowed Israel to make a massive diversion of resources toward social and economic objectives, producing an economic boom in the 1980s.

All that's likely to change with Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu activating large numbers of reservists and allocating funds for defense rather than social reforms. The demand for social reforms set off a recent unprecedented wave of protests.

Barry Rubin, director of Israel's Global Research in International Affairs Center, concluded in March that "Israel is going to have to spend hundreds of millions of dollars to rebuild its defenses along the long border with Egypt.

"Thousands of Israelis will have to spend more time in reserve duty to main the reinforced Southern Command.

"Arguing that Egypt will not provoke or go to war with Israel is based on a Western assessment of Egyptian interests," Rubin observed. "The regime might well decide to interpret those interests its own way.

"No matter how many international or Egyptian assurances are given, Israel cannot depend on what might turn out to be wishful thinking. Hoping for a best-case outcome is one thing; basing one's strategic calculations on it is quite another."

If relations with Egypt deteriorate, Israel would have to deploy at least one division, including its redoubtable Merkava 4 tanks, and possibly more, to counter a possible Egyptian threat.

The largely U.S.-equipped and U.S.-trained Egyptian military is considered to be one of the strongest in the Arab world. It has a standing army of 450,000 men and reserves of around 250,000, 12 ground divisions and around 3,400 tanks and 500 combat aircraft.

But it hasn't seen action since the 1973 war, when it caught Israelis forces that had occupied Sinai since 1967 by surprise with an assault across the Suez Canal. Three weeks later the Israelis defeated them.

Nor has Egypt embraced the so-called Revolution in Military Affairs, adapting the conduct of conflict to new technologies and doctrines. Israel, with a standing army of 176,500 and reserves of 445,000, has.

Yiftah Shapir, of the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv, says that if a shooting war broke out Israel would defeat Egypt in much the same way the Americans hammered Iraq in 2003.

"The American Army in Iraq was not any bigger than Israel's standing army," he noted. "They had only three divisions, one of which came late.

"True their air force was much bigger but it was mainly because of the advantages of RMA that they defeated an army of 21 divisions in two weeks."




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Palestinian militant killed in Israeli raid on Gaza
Gaza City, Palestinian Territories (AFP) Aug 24, 2011 - An Israeli air strike killed a Palestinian militant and wounded another in the Gaza Strip, witnesses and their organisation said Wednesday.

The missile attack on a vehicle in Rafah near the border with Egypt posed a new threat to a truce announced late Sunday following four days of clashes between Israeli forces and Palestinian militants.

The armed branch of the radical Islamic Jihad movement, the Al-Qods Brigade, said the dead man was one of its leaders, Ismael al-Ismar, 34.

An Israeli military spokesman confirmed the strike, saying it had targeted "an activist linked to Islamic Jihad who was implicated in attempted terrorist actions in the Sinai."

An Egyptian-brokered halt to Palestinian rocket fire from the Gaza Strip had appeared to be holding on Tuesday, with the Israeli military saying calm had prevailed along the border overnight.

The truce was announced by a senior official in Hamas, which has ruled the Gaza Strip since 2007, following four days of violence sparked by ambushes near Eilat in southern Israel on Thursday in which eight Israelis died.

Gaza's Popular Resistance Committees (PRC), a grouping of militant organisations, said it would join the truce a day later.

Although four rockets were fired into southern Israel in the following hours, Israel did not respond, with the press attributing it to "small terror groups looking to challenge Hamas and demonstrate their independence."

Defence Minister Ehud Barak, meanwhile, said in televised remarks: "This is a delicate situation and there is a real risk of endangering the (1979 Egyptian-Israeli) peace treaty, which is a precious strategic asset for Israel."

"The whole Middle East is a powder keg and an Israeli action could have consequences for what is happening in Egypt, in Syria and in Libya," army radio cited a high-ranking military official who spoke on condition of anonymity as saying.

The Hamas official for his part had warned that the truce depended on Israel respecting it.

The latest unrest was sparked by a series of shooting ambushes near Eilat on Thursday which killed eight Israelis and was blamed on the PRC.

In the following days, Israeli air strikes killed 15 Palestinians, 12 of whom the military says were militants, and more than 50 people were wounded. Among those killed was PRC chief Kamal al-Nayrab, who died in an Israeli air strike on Rafah, in the south of Gaza.

Palestinians fired more than 100 rockets and mortar shells at Israeli towns and cities in the south, killing one man and injuring more than 20, one critically.

Israel on Tuesday sent a complaint to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, objecting to the lack of Security Council condemnation of the Eilat shooting, according to the foreign ministry.

Lebanon, which currently holds a Security Council seat, on Friday blocked a statement which would have called the deadly attacks in southern Israel terrorism.

The move brought criticism from the United States which said the terrorism label is a "standard" Security Council description after such an attack.

The last ceasefire was agreed on April 10, after another cycle of violence that began when an anti-tank missile slammed into an Israeli school bus.

During that flareup, 18 Palestinians were killed, half of them civilians, and more than 150 rockets and mortar rounds fired into southern Israel.





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WAR REPORT
China urges restraint from all sides in Syria
Beijing (AFP) Aug 23, 2011
China on Tuesday urged all sides in Syria to avoid more violence, as the United Nations called on Damascus to halt a crackdown on dissent that has cost more than 2,200 lives. The comments came after the United Nations ordered an investigation - opposed by both China and Russia - into violations committed by President Bashar al-Assad's regime following claims Syria had used a "shoot-to-kill ... read more


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