by Yoav Limor
The Eilat Division is responsible for keeping Israel's longest shared border safe • A fence, new technological devices and elite troops all ensure that Israelis and tourists don't have to think about the very real threat • But the calm can be deceptive.
"One
major event here could have grave consequences on the entire city," says IDF
Brig. Gen. Roei Elkabetz
|
Photo credit: Yossi
Zeliger |
In a week that saw the election of Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi
as president of Egypt, the southern border was surprisingly quiet. With the
exception of one instance of drug smuggling, there were no extraordinary
occurrences. Even the jihadist organizations passed on the opportunity to
exploit the election as a pretext to attempt terrorist attacks against Israeli
targets.
Officers in command of Israel Defense Forces troops
stationed in Eilat believe that the major factor contributing to the calm is the
fence that runs along the border between Israel and Egypt, which was finally
completed recently. The army has also been quite efficient in the area from an
operational standpoint.
The fence, initially conceived as an emergency measure
whose aim was to curb the entry of labor migrants from Africa, has paid
unexpected, yet significant dividends in terms of defense and security.
"Migrant infiltration and drug smuggling have always been
a fertile platform for terrorism," said IDF Brig. Gen. Roei Elkabetz, who
commands the Eilat Division. The logic is simple to understand. The precise
route used by a migrant seeking to illegally cross into Israel can also be used
by a terrorist. Every bag of smuggled marijuana could just as easily hold
weapons and explosives.
Fortunately for Israel, when the wave of illegal
infiltrators washed over the south, the jihadist organizations in the south were
still not prepared to take advantage of that yawning, seemingly endless
230-kilometer (140-mile) gap along the border to carry out major terrorist
attacks against targets inside Israel.
With the exception of the terror attack that took place in
August 2011, in which eight Israelis were killed when a gunman opened fire on
vehicles driving along Route 12, all of the attacks perpetrated against Israel
were either aimed toward the fence or over the fence. Overall, 14 attacks were
committed in the last three years, of them 10 were instances of rocket fire
toward Eilat.
The significance of this is that the fence has served as a
real buffer along the border with Egypt. Not only has it stopped terrorism --
or, at the very least, prevented terrorists from physically setting foot in
Israeli territory -- it has almost completely halted the entry of infiltrators.
According to the IDF, 10,455 migrants have entered the country illegally from
Sinai. Since the start of 2014, just seven have managed to enter the country --
and all of them were apprehended.
From the IDF's vantage point, the infiltrators are a
national headache, but an ever-more menacing headache has taken root in recent
years in Sinai -- the Islamist jihadist groups, the most violent of which is the
Ansar Beit al-Maqdis ("Champions of Jerusalem"). This organization is
responsible for most of the attacks perpetrated in recent years against Israel.
It has also been behind attacks on the Egyptian police and military personnel,
exacting deaths which number in the hundreds in recent months.
Death to all
Ansar Beit al-Maqdis began to make significant inroads
during the chaos and anarchy that ensued immediately after the fall of ousted
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. According to Military Intelligence
assessments, it numbers hundreds of operatives, including local Bedouin. The
group's ideology is extremist in nature, and it champions death to all
nonbelievers -- Jews, Christians, and even moderate Muslims.
The threat posed by this organization -- and its much
bigger, more dangerous affiliates in Syria -- is serious enough to prompt the
intelligence authorities to place global jihadist groups on the list of the top
five most significant security challenges faced by the State of Israel in 2014.
While these groups are currently preoccupied with bringing down the respective
regimes in Egypt and Syria, Israel has a good grasp of what these individuals
are thinking -- after Cairo and Damascus, it is on to Jerusalem.
This realization led the IDF to alter its method of
operations on both fronts. A new fence designed to completely seal off the
frontier from infiltrators and terrorists was built. In addition, the
composition of IDF troops stationed along the front was changed. Instead of
reservists manning the scene, the army has instead deployed conscripts and, in
some cases, soldiers from elite commando units together with specialized field
units familiar with the terrain. As part of the upgrade in forces, the IDF
formed two new brigades which were placed under the command of the Eilat
Division.
Police have also seen the changes pay off in terms of its
war on crime. According to IDF statistics, 63 drug smugglers have been arrested
so far this year. Authorities have disrupted drug smuggling operations that have
netted a total of 974 kilograms (2,150 pounds) of illicit substances.
A guided trip that we took earlier this week with the
commander of the Eilat Division gave us an idea of the challenges facing
authorities. Not only do IDF troops need to withstand the oppressive heat (the
recent heat wave pushed temperatures to 48 degrees Celsius, or 118 degrees
Fahrenheit) and the tasks of routine border patrols, but the difficult terrain
also allows for endless ways to reach the fence area.
While it is no easy task to overcome this newly built
barrier, just reaching the border allows terrorists to harm the forces operating
along its route. There are also many sections of the fence that come right up
against hiking trails and drivers used by civilians. In an effort to detect and
thwart any attempts to target civilians in these areas, the army has outfitted
parts of the fence with the most advanced, sophisticated surveillance equipment.
The effectiveness of the system is critical, particularly
in the Eilat theatre. The routes used by infiltrators come very close to
populated areas, and their closure is crucial to preventing terrorist attacks
against a city that draws nearly 3 million tourists every year.
"A tourist who steps out onto the balcony of his hotel
room doesn't realize the amount of effort and energy invested here, or what it
would mean if we fail, God forbid," said Elkabetz. "One major event here could
have grave consequences on the entire city."
As part of the effort to shield Eilat from terrorism, the
IDF has permanently stationed an Iron Dome anti-rocket battery near the town.
The military has also instructed the Navy to be on higher alert. Nonetheless,
the most serious threat comes from land. Authorities are also fretting over the
900,000 tourists -- most of them Israeli -- who travel through Eilat on their
way to Sinai every year in defiance of the travel warnings issued by the
Counterterrorism Bureau.
In praise of Egypt
When considering Israel's situation along its southern
border, officials say that the good news has come from the Egyptian side of the
frontier. The Egyptian army has been engaged in an all-out war against terrorist
organizations in the Sinai. Egypt's efforts to root out Islamist terrorism
reached their peak under the leadership of Sissi, who has declared these radical
elements as Egypt's number one enemy.
"Their efforts are quite impressive, and they've made
significant gains," said Elkabetz of the Egyptian authorities. The Egyptian army
announced that it had eliminated nine of the top 25 most wanted members of Ansar
al-Maqdis, including the organization's leader.
In order to boost the Egyptian military efforts in the
hopes that it would become more effective, Israel allowed Cairo to beef up its
military presence in the peninsula beyond what is stipulated in the
Israeli-Egyptian peace accord. Now, Egyptian commando units backed by tanks and
helicopters are constantly operating in the heart of Sinai.
The division commander said that this arrangement poses no
threat to the border. On the contrary, Israel can only stand to benefit. Egypt's
intense fight against terrorist organizations deep in the heart of the peninsula
pins these groups far from Israel's boundaries, giving us relative quiet.
Nonetheless, Israel's forces on the ground are ready. From
their point of view, the next terror attack is just around the corner, and it
will come as a surprise, with no prior intelligence, in the most challenging
manner imaginable.
"If you ask me what the main threat is, it is a combined
terrorist attack that will come without any prior warning, with terrorists that
act on a number of fronts at the same time," said Elkabetz.
The military's strategy to counter this scenario is to
bolster cooperation within the ranks, particularly when it comes to keeping
alert in this sleepy part of the country. Another aspect of this strategy is to
increase communication with the Egyptian forces. While there are no joint
operations, the two armies do maintain constant contact with one another, as was
demonstrated during the most recent attack in Taba.
A battle of wits
With the Egyptian presidential elections behind us,
Israeli officials are hoping that the newfound stability in Cairo will lead to
even better collaboration between the two militaries and an even more effective
campaign against terrorism. In any event, though, the headache will remain. This
area is too attractive, and whoever has thus far exploited it for their own
purposes -- be they ideological or economic -- will have a difficult time giving
it up.
Despite the fence, drug smugglers from the Bedouin tribes
in the Negev continue to pose a challenge to the IDF. The most recent attempt to
smuggle drugs was made last week. While the drugs did not pass through the
border, the smugglers managed to evade arrest. Sometimes, dealers throw bags of
drugs over the fence wall.
"Sometimes the packages break open as they are thrown onto
the highway," said Mohammed al-Haib, an officer in the IDF trackers unit
operating in the division. "You drive along the route and you smell something,
as if someone near you is smoking drugs."
Al-Haib is a hero. During his service in south Lebanon, he
rescued Maj. Gen. Yair Golan and Maj. Gen. Eyal Eizenberg from certain death.
After the withdrawal from Lebanon, he was deployed to the south. His major
challenge is to wage a battle of wits against the smugglers. His task is to
sniff out smuggling routes, and, just as importantly, prepare the next
generation of trackers to do the same. Al-Haib is pessimistic with regards to
the future of tracking. In five years, there won't be any trackers in the IDF,
he predicted.
Meanwhile, the Eilat Division (which is responsible for
territory stretching from Israel's southern tip to the center of the Dead Sea)
is preparing for its next headache -- the border with Jordan. While the
Hashemite kingdom is quite friendly with Israel, and the security cooperation
with it is better than it is with Egypt, the border that the two countries share
-- which stretches hundreds of kilometers from the Hamat Gader hot springs all
the way to Eilat -- is completely wide open. The nearly 2 million refugees
currently in Jordan after escaping the civil wars that have ravaged Iraq and
Syria are obviously a source of concern to the defense establishment.
The Defense Ministry has already started to plan the
eastern fence in the hopes of preempting terrorism.
"I know it sounds cliché, but it's true," said Elkabetz.
"The quiet here is deceptive, and it could all go south in the blink of an eye.
In this region, there are quite a few elements with the intent and the capacity
to really cause trouble, and it doesn't look like it's going to change anytime
soon."
Yoav Limor
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=17987
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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