by Yoav Limor
In an exclusive interview with Israel Hayom, GOC Southern Command Maj. Gen. Sami Turgeman says Israel is preparing for every scenario in Gaza and Egypt • He warns that the turmoil in Sinai may create a new security reality along the southern borders.
| 
                                            GOC Southern Command Maj. 
Gen. Sami Turgeman                                                
                                                 
|Photo credit: Ziv Koren  | 
The growing possibility of a U.S.-led strike 
against Syria over President Bashar Assad's use of chemical weapons 
against civilians has caused the global spotlight to veer from the drama
 taking place in Egypt. The events in Cairo may no longer take center 
stage, but none of the problems plaguing Israel's southern border have 
been resolved. On the contrary.
Egypt seems to have lost what little control 
it had on Sinai, where terror attacks against Cairo's forces now take 
place on a daily basis, and the Gaza Strip-based terror groups continue 
to attack Israel, albeit less tenaciously. 
The Israel Defense Forces is on double duty in
 the southern sector, as it works to both maintain the peace treaty with
 Egypt and deter Gaza's terror groups. The troops deployed in the south 
face three major and constant threats: Gazan rocket fire on Tel Aviv and
 Sinai fire on Eilat; potential terror attacks against civilians and 
security forces along the southern borders; and perhaps the greatest 
threat of all -- the loss of strategic relations with Egypt.
Risk management in the southern sector seems 
endless. In an exclusive interview with Israel Hayom, GOC Southern 
Command Maj. Gen. Sami Turgeman says that Israel is preparing for the 
possibility that the turmoil in Egypt will create a new reality along 
the borders, saying that since 2012's Operation Pillar of Defense, 
Gaza-based terror groups have increased their ability to target central 
Israel. 
"The IDF's main enemy in the south are 
Gaza-based terrorists, from both Hamas and the Islamic Jihad, which are 
just waiting for the day they will be ordered to strike," Turgeman said.
 "Global jihad [whose operatives are based in Sinai] is a disturbing and
 less familiar threat, but it is based in a country with which we have a
 peace deal. We have a partner that is equally threatened by them, so 
it's a mutual interest."
According to IDF data, a staggering 300 terror
 attacks were launched against Egyptian forces in Sinai over the past 
few weeks, the most deadly of which was the Aug. 19 execution of 25 
Egyptian policemen in northern Sinai.
"Sinai is ruled by two major jihadi groups, 
which are supported by the local Bedouin tribes that have become 
religiously fanatic over the past few years. Add radical ideology, a 
plethora of weapons and no governance to the mix and you end up with the
 wild weeds we see overrunning Sinai today," Turgeman said.
He said that the desert peninsula was now home
 to hundreds of terrorists, including radical Muslims from Iraq and 
Yemen, who receive their orders from global jihad leaders and al-Qaida. 
These terrorists' primary goal is Egypt, with Israel ranking a close 
second. 
"As they see it, once they are done taking 
care of Egypt, they'll have time for us, as evident from the recent 
rocket fire on Eilat," Turgeman said.
The Sinai-based terror groups "see Eilat as 
the ultimate symbol of Israeli freedom, prosperity and tourism. 
Disrupting that is a huge success in their book." 
Still, Turgeman stressed that there was no security reason to deter people from visiting the resort city.
"Neither the residents not the tourists have 
anything to worry about. It's our job to make sure life in the city 
continue as usual," he said.
Strategic limits
The 1979 Israel-Egypt peace treaty introduced 
various complex limitations on the IDF's ability to counter the threat 
posed by peninsula's terror groups. Still, several weeks ago foreign 
media sources reported that an Israel Air Force drone had targeted a 
Sinai-based terror cell as it was about to fire rockets at Israel. 
"We are doing everything in our power to 
maintain Egypt's sovereignty and to coordinate our efforts with them, 
including when it comes to concrete threats," Turgeman said. "But at the
 end of the day we are responsible for the area's security. We will 
continue to spare no effort to respect Egypt's sovereignty and to 
bolster our [security] collaboration, because it is a primary interest 
for us, but we must do our job as well." 
As part of Israel's effort to maintain Egypt's
 sovereignty in Sinai, it allowed Egypt to deploy massive military 
forces in the area, including 10 infantry regiments and eight helicopter
 gunships -- far beyond what was stipulated in the peace agreement.
Turgeman said that the measure allowed 
Egyptian security forces to note considerable success in their crackdown
 on terrorists in Sinai, "but this kind of operation requires 
persistence over time to truly be effective." Asked whether Israel 
should allow Cairo to deploy more troops on the ground, he said: "That 
is for the government to decide."
Should the government ask for his 
recommendations in the matter, Turgeman said: "If we see that [Egypt] 
has exhausted its possibilities in Sinai and the problems lies with the 
sheer volume of forces, then in my opinion it is in our mutual interest 
to allow it to a very limited and closely monitored extent." 
The IDF has been monitoring the political 
turmoil in Egypt since the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak in 2011, 
deeming the possibility that Israel's southern neighbor will be overrun 
by radical forces a "strategic alert." 
"Preparing for the unknown is a substantial 
challenge, so the idea is to develop generic capabilities that can be 
adapted to counter [the situation in] Syria as well as other sectors," 
Turgeman said. "What we've done on the Israel-Egypt border is 
unprecedented: building the border fence, dealing with the unrelenting 
influx of refugees and infiltrators, and bolster our intelligence 
capabilities."
The past two years, however, have debunked Egypt's status as Israel's steadfast regional ally. 
"If there's anything we've learned is that the
 Middle East offers no guarantees," Turgeman said. "This volatility 
mandates that we be more cautious in our situation assessments and that 
we prepare for different scenarios, as well as make an effort to 
preserve the peace deal."
'Everything is under control'
Turgeman was named GOC Southern Command 
shortly after the 2012 military campaign in Gaza, which restored 
relative calm to Israel's southern communities. He credits the lasting 
normalcy in part to the animosity between the new Cairo regime and 
Hamas, which has resulted in an unprecedented crackdown on the smuggling
 tunnels running between Sinai and Gaza.
"Egypt sees the tunnels as an infringement on 
its sovereignty, so razing them serves their interests," he said. "So 
far they've razed hundreds of tunnels, but since digging tunnels is not a
 lengthy process, it's a constant battle." 
Hamas' grip on the Gaza Strip has been 
destabilized by the crackdown on the tunnels, which serve as a pipeline 
for goods, funds and weapons to Gaza, and being cut off from Cairo has 
taken its toll on the terror group's rule over the area, Turgeman said. 
"Hamas is troubled because its future seems 
problematic ... losing the support of the Muslim Brotherhood in Cairo, 
the dire economic situation in the Gaza Strip, the renewed 
Israeli-Palestinian peace talks -- all this does not bode well for 
Hamas," he said.
"But still, there is no scenario in the Middle
 East today that spells Hamas' ouster from power. There is no one and 
nothing to take its place in Gaza in the near future." 
Turgeman stressed that since Operation Pillar 
of Defense, Hamas had invested considerable resources in bolstering its 
long-range ballistic capabilities, as well as its rocket stockpiles. 
"In some aspects it has made progress and in others, it hasn't. That's why our deterrence is in place," he said.
As for Hamas' improved aiming capabilities, Turgeman had only one thing to say: "So far, everything is under control." 
Yoav Limor
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=11815
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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