by Uzi Dayan
What is the meaning of 
the chaos unfolding in Iraq? Two day after Mosul was overrun by the 
Salafi terror group the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, Tikrit -- 
the birthplace of former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein and of the 
legendary Saladin -- fell as well. Sunnis are now in control of areas 
stretching from the Iraqi capital of Baghdad to the Syrian city of 
Aleppo; and as the Iraqi military's response falters, Kurdish forces 
have taken over Kirkuk. 
Washington has pledged 
its assistance, Turkey has called for an emergency NATO session, and 
according to media reports, Iran has dispatched a Revolutionary Guards 
force to aid the struggling Iraqi regime. The Middle East, it seems, has
 once again plunged into turmoil. 
This kind of regional 
uncertainty usually calls for exercising two rules: the first, be 
prepared to counter the enemy's capabilities, not his intentions; and 
the second, vigilantly protect your strategic assets, especially your 
defensible borders.
Defensible borders must
 afford Israel basic strategic depth and protection against the threat 
of conventional warfare, as well as the ability to fight terror.
In the southern sector,
 largely thanks to the demilitarization of Sinai, and in the northern 
sector, thanks to Israel's adamant refusal to cede the Golan Heights, 
Israel has defensible borders. The eastern sector however, only has one 
border that meets Israel's security needs -- the one stretching across 
the Jordan Rift Valley.
The distance between 
the Jordan Rift Valley and the Mediterranean Sea is 64 kilometers (40 
miles), making for only minimal strategic depth. The valley, between the
 Jordan River and the hills overlooking it from the west, constitutes an
 irreplaceable defense theater against a potential eastern front. Only 
the valley can serve as a protective buffer against a potential 
terrorist entity in Judea and Samaria.
An outlook for the 
immediate future projects several potential scenarios: jihadist 
terrorism will stretch beyond Syria; Hamas is eyeing a takeover of the 
Palestinian Authority; Iraq's disintegration will continue and it will 
be split between Sunni groups; the Kurds may declare independence (which
 is good for Israel), and the Shiites will join forces with Iran which, 
for its part, will continue to make a mockery of the West as it bolsters
 its nuclear arsenal. 
Facing these realities,
 can those who claim that "topography and territorial control are 
virtually meaningless in a modern, technological world," that "there is 
no 'eastern front' and there never will be," and that "only peace will 
bring security," be certain that taking an uncalculated risk and ceding,
 even if partially, security control over the Jordan Rift Valley, is 
such a good idea? 
The situation in Iraq 
is difficult and confusing but one thing is certain -- only full Israeli
 control over the entire Jordan Rift Valley, as a security zone running 
along the Jordanian border, will afford Israel true security.
Maj. Gen. (res.) Uzi Dayan is a former IDF deputy chief of staff and former head of the National Security Council.
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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