In-Depth Issues:
Fierce Competition for Supremacy in Northeast Syria - Jonathan Spyer ( Jerusalem Post) Eight separate armed forces may be discerned in northeast Syria. There is the Kurdish-dominated Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), the U.S. Army, the Turkish Army, the Turkish-associated Sunni Islamists of the Syrian National Army (SNA), the Syrian government army (SAA), the Russians, the IRGC-supported Shia militias, and the Sunni jihadis of Islamic State. South of SDF and U.S. forces, the Iranians have carved out an area of de facto control in the area just west of the Euphrates. At the Albu Kamal border crossing, the Imam Ali base with its tunnel system for storing missiles and heavy weaponry, and in the villages around Mayadin, the Syrian government is nowhere to be found. The IRGC and its militia allies, including Lebanese Hizbullah, are the de facto ruling force there. This area has been a particular focus for air activity attributed to Israel, including an air raid on Wednesday. The good news for Israel is that it is not currently faced with a potent, focused and united enemy camp in Syria or in the region generally. Iran is a powerful enemy, Turkey a determined adversary, but both are beset by other problems requiring their urgent attention. The writer is director of the Middle East Center for Reporting and Analysis.
Japan to Send Warship, Aircraft to Middle East to Protect Shipping - Kiyoshi Takenaka ( Reuters) Japan will send a helicopter-equipped destroyer and two P-3C patrol planes to protect Japanese ships in the Middle East, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga, Japan's top government spokesman, said on Friday. "It is very important to make sure Japan-related ships can sail safely in the Middle East, the world's major source of energy," he said. In May and June, there were several attacks on international merchant vessels in the region, including the Japanese-owned tanker Kokuka Courageous, which the U.S. blamed on Iran. If there are any emergencies, a special order would be issued by the Japanese defense minister to allow the forces to use weapons to protect ships in danger. Japan, which has maintained friendly ties with Iran, opted to launch its own operation rather than join a U.S.-led mission to protect shipping in the region. A European operation to ensure safe shipping in the Gulf will also get underway next month, when a French warship starts patrolling there.
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250,000 Immigrants to Israel in Past Decade ( Globes) More than 250,000 immigrants reached Israel from 150 countries in the past decade, the Jewish Agency reported, with 34,000 coming in 2019. Over the past decade, 130,000 came from the countries of the former Soviet Union. 55,000 came from other European countries, including 38,000 from France. 32,000 came from the U.S. and 3,800 from Canada. 13,420 came from Latin America, including 4,320 from Brazil and 3,150 from Argentina. 10,500 came from Ethiopia and 2,560 from South Africa. 1,950 came from Australia and New Zealand. 1,180 came from India. 3,040 immigrants came from Middle Eastern countries with which Israel has no diplomatic relations. 60% of the immigrants were younger than 45.
British Report: Amnesty International Is Institutionally Biased Against Israel - David Collier ( Jewish Chronicle-UK) Amnesty International has an institutional hostility towards Israel that borders on obsession, visibly at tacking Israel more frequently and with far more energy than it does any other nation. It is as if Amnesty has declared war on Israel. In research commissioned by Jewish Human Rights Watch, I found that an Amnesty media manager advised Palestinian terror groups like Hamas not to publicly identify their martyrs if they were lost in an action, but rather have the West believe the fallen were innocent civilians. An Amnesty consultant tweeted an image of two Islamic Jihad terrorists, with a love heart - and she wrote the word "heroes" above the images. A deputy regional director at Amnesty was once a Palestinian activist who had Leila Khaled, the PFLP hijacker, as his Facebook profile picture. Amnesty eagerly employs people with a history of anti-Israel activism, then sends them in as "unbiased human rights workers" to report on what is happening. Their biased accounts then provide the motivations for c onstructing far larger Amnesty campaigns against Israel. Amnesty used to have a rule that prevented people from working on issues where a conflict of interest may have occurred, but they dropped this in the early 2000s. See also Report: Amnesty International - from Bias to Obsession - David Collier ( Jewish Human Rights Watch)
Jerusalem-Tel Aviv Fast Train Begins Operations ( Globes) The new high-speed electrified railway between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv was inaugurated on Saturday night. Tr avel time on the new route is 30 minutes, compared with 90 minutes on the old Jerusalem-Tel Aviv railway line winding through the Judean hills. The new 56-km. route includes an 11.6-km. tunnel, the longest in Israel; a 1.25-km. bridge, the longest in Israel; and a 90-meter high bridge, the highest in Israel. The Yitzhak Navon railway station in Jerusalem is 80 meters underground, the deepest railway station in Israel and one of the deepest in the world.
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| News Resources - North America, Europe, and Asia: - Congress Passes Eastern Mediterranean Security and Energy Partnership Act Supporting Links with Cyprus, Greece and Israel - Menelaos Hadjicos tis
The U.S. Congress approved the bipartisan Eastern Mediterranean Security and Energy Partnership Act on Dec. 19. Cyprus Foreign Minister Nikos Christodoulides said it sends out "significant diplomatic and political messages" about how the U.S. perceives a growing energy partnership between Cyprus, Greece and Israel. Senators Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) and Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), who co-authored the bill, called the legislation "a comprehensive re-calibration of American diplomatic, military, and economic policy towards the Eastern Mediterranean and a strong and prosperous alliance between the United States, Greece, Israel, and Cyprus." "Our vision for the region is to see all states together, without excluding anyone, even Turkey," said Christodoulides. Turkey doesn't recognize EU-member Cyprus as a state and says that part of the waters where the divided island nation has exclusive economic rights fall within its own continental shelf. Only Turkey recognizes the Tur kish Republic of Northern Cyprus in the island's northern third and keeps 35,000 troops there. Ankara also strongly objects to the Cypriot government's gas search and has dispatched warship-escorted vessels to carry out exploratory drilling off Cyprus, including in areas where energy companies such as Italy's Eni and France's Total are licensed to drill. The EU has condemned Turkey's actions and has prepared sanctions against it. (AP) - Turkey to Send Troops to Libya at Tripoli's Request, Erdogan Says - Ece Toksabay
Turkey will send troops to Libya at the request of Tripoli as soon as next month, President Erdogan said on Thursday. Libya's Government of National Accord (GNA) in Tripoli has bee n struggling to fend off Gen. Khalifa Haftar's forces, which have been supported by Russia, Egypt, the UAE, and Jordan. Erdogan said 2,000 mercenaries from the Kremlin-linked Wagner group were supporting Haftar, together with 5,000 fighters from Sudan. Haftar's forces, which are based in eastern Libya, have made small gains in recent weeks in some southern suburbs of Tripoli with the help of Russian and Sudanese fighters, as well as drones from the UAE, diplomats say. The Chinese-made drones have given Haftar "local air superiority" as they can carry over eight times the explosives of the drones given to the GNA by Turkey and can also cover the whole of Libya. (Reuters)
News Resources - Israel and the Mideast: - Gaza Border Protests Suspended for 3 Months - Khaled Abu Toameh
The organizers of the Great March of Return demonstrations near the border with Israel on Thursday suspended the protests until the end of March 2020. Palestinian political analysts said the decision was linked to ceasefire understandings reached between Israel and Hamas. Yusri Darwish, from the group organizing the protests, said that when the demonstrations resume on March 30, they will take place monthly rather than weekly. Darwish said this year's last protest is slated for Friday, Dec. 27. "Thursday's announcement is an admission of failure," a Palestinian journalist in Gaza said. "The protests failed to achieve their two declared goals: ending the blockade on Gaza and achieving the right of return for Palestinian refugees to their former homes inside Israel." A Palest inian human rights activist in Gaza said "fatigue" was also behind the decision. "People are tired, and the organizers know that very well. In recent months we've seen a significant decrease in the number of people participating in the Friday demonstrations." (Jerusalem Post) - Iran Is at the Top of the Mossad's Priorities
At an awards ceremony honoring the outstanding employees of Israel's national intelligence agency, Mossad head Yossi Cohen said Iran is "at the top of the Mossad's work priorities. All Iranian nuclear, long-range missile and precision missile activities, its regional spread, and its support for terrorist organizations are a challenge to the security of the State of Israel and its citizens." The ceremony was hosted by President Reuven Rivlin, who said, "In t he Mossad's dictionary, you will not find the word 'impossible.' For the Mossad, excellence is not a luxury, it is the only way to survive." Rivlin said Israel's enemies "are frustrated by their failure to harm us, and never stop searching for a way to catch us unawares. To protect ourselves in the neighborhood we live in, we have no option but to be sharper and much better." (Ynet News)
Global Commentary and Think-Tank Analysis: Observations:
- Omri Ohayon, one of the Israeli soldiers who was fighting in Gaza during 2014 war, an event that the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court wants to investigate, said, "You cannot compare the only democracy in the Middle East with a terror organization like Hamas."
- Ohayon served in the Israel Defense For ces' Yahalom unit, responsible for spotting and eliminating tunnels used by Hamas to infiltrate Israeli territory to kidnap and murder Israelis.
- In 2014 Ohayon's team found 11 such tunnels. Our goal "was to find and destroy tunnels as well as to protect Israel from militants' infiltrations, not to harass Palestinians or kill civilians. This is not what we were ordered to do by our commanders, and this is not what we did on the ground," he explained.
- "If the ICC claims to be objective, equal and unbiased, why don't they investigate regimes where human rights are breached, and civilians are massacred, including in Syria, Iran, North Korea or even the Palestinian Authority that knows little about such rights as freedom of speech?"
- "I can testify that in many cases shelling of civilian buildings was called off simply because we found out that there were civilians inside. At times we were too cautious, and it would cost us our soldiers' lives," he said, recalling an incident when a Hamas militant attacked his squad while hiding behind civilians.
- Ohayon says his conscience is clear. "I know my commanders, and I know my soldiers. War crimes were not committed. Even more so, we did everything in our power to save human lives and avoid unnecessary casualties."
See also Israel, Gaza and Humanitarian Law: Efforts to Limit Civilian Casualties in the 2014 Gaza War - Lt.-Col. (res.) David Benjamin The writer served in the IDF Military Advocate General's Corps (MAG) as Chief Legal Advisor for the Gaza Strip and as Director of the Strategic and International Branch in the International Law Department. (Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs)
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