Israeli Military Intelligence knew about Hezbollah kidnap
plans
By Haaretz
09/18/06 "Haaretz" -- -- Military Intelligence had clear
information about an impending kidnap attempt by Hezbollah
shortly before the Lebanese group carried out its cross-border
raid on July 12, according to an internal inquiry conducted by
the Israel Defense Forces..
The information - which could, if properly handled, have
prevented the kidnapping of Eldad Regev and Ehud Goldwasser -
was not analyzed and passed on to the troops in time, the report
indicated.
The IDF Spokesman's Office refused to either confirm or deny the
report, saying that the issue is still being investigated by
Military Intelligence (MI) and the Northern Command.
The inquiry into intelligence questions is being conducted by
Brigadier General Avi Ashkenazi, appointed by out-going GOC
Northern Command Udi Adam. Even though his investigation is not
yet completed, he is slated to present his report to Chief of
Staff Dan Halutz and other senior IDF officers this week.
The report will apparently focus solely on the events of July
12, and will not deal with previous, similar kidnapping
incidents that were foiled.
If intelligence information was indeed mishandled, this would
hardly be the first time such an event has ever occurred. Army
sources cited the case of the glider-borne assault on northern
Israel in 1987 when, due to an error by MI's signals
intelligence unit - which misreported a key word as sayara (car
in Arabic) rather than tayara (plane) - troops prepared for an
attack by ground-based rather than aerial vehicles.
Similarly, America's National Security Agency taped crucial
conversations by Al-Qaida members on September 10, 2001, but the
conversations were only translated on September 12 - a day after
Al-Qaida destroyed the World Trade Center towers in New York.
Supporting ground forces at the IAF's expense
Meanwhile, senior Israel Air Force officers warned on Sunday
that an apparent move by the General Staff, the Defense Ministry
and the government to invest more in ground forces at the
expense of the IAF is liable to severely harm the IAF's
preparedness for future wars.
The officers warned that the impending cuts could force the IAF
to cut back on manpower and training, and perhaps even eliminate
entire fighter squadrons.
Halutz, a former IAF commander, has said in the past that he
would rather shut down a tank division than a fighter squadron,
but the officers fear that the public backlash generated by the
war may force him to abandon his prior stance.
According to the officers, the principle threats now facing
Israel are Syria, which could view the outcome of the recent war
as encouragement for attacking Israel in order to regain the
Golan Heights; Iran, should it succeed in obtaining nuclear
weapons; and Egypt, should President Hosni Mubarak be succeeded
by a regime hostile to Israel.
Moreover, they said, Israel could face war on two or all of
these fronts at once, requiring it to be able to shift forces
quickly from one front to another.
The officers also claimed that ground troops might never be
employed at all in wars against any of these countries. However,
they added, if ground forces were employed, air force cover
would be needed to give them freedom to maneuver.
The officers said that for Israel to retain air superiority over
Arab and Muslim states, some of which are now being armed with
the most advanced American weaponry, the IAF needs about 100 new
planes a year.
In the coming decade, the IAF would like to acquire three or
four squadrons of F-35 planes, the successor to the F-16, and a
smaller number of F-22s, successor to the F-15, at a cost which
may reach $200 million per plane.
While the IAF has been preparing for some time to defend Israel
against Syria's network of Scud missiles, it fears that
Hezbollah's success in launching thousands of short-range
rockets - including some of Syrian manufacture - during the
recent war might encourage Syria to make use of this arsenal,
which numbers some 5,000 rockets.
Moreover, since Syria makes some of these rockets itself, it
could replenish its supply even during wartime.
Thus far, Israel has detected no attempts by either Syria or
Iran to replenish Hezbollah's rocket supply, but in such an
event, the IAF would presumably be ordered to attack the
shipments. It might also be ordered to attack Hezbollah leader
Hassan Nasrallah if he emerged from his bunker.
On the first day of the war, the officers said, intelligence
agencies narrowed the search for Nasrallah to four buildings in
Beirut. However, the government elected not to bomb them, for
fear of causing hundreds of casualties and generating
international pressure to stop the war before its goals had been
achieved
© Copyright 2006 Haaretz
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