by AP and Israel Hayom Staff
Scores killed as Islamic State-linked militants launch coordinated strikes against Egyptian troops in Sinai • Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu: "We must stand up to all the forces of militant Islam, those led by Iran, those led by ISIS."
Smoke rises from fighting in
the Sinai Peninsula, as seen from the southern Israeli kibbutz of Kerem
Shalom, Wednesday
|
Photo credit: AP |
Islamic State-linked militants struck Egyptian
army outposts in the Sinai Peninsula on Wednesday in a coordinated wave
of suicide bombings and battles that underlined the government's
failure to stem an insurgency despite a two-year crackdown. Security
officials said dozens of troops were killed, along with nearly 100
attackers.
After the attack, which took place just across
the border from Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said, "We
send our condolences to the government and people of Egypt, and to the
families of the Egyptians that were slain by this vicious terrorism."
Later on Wednesday, Netanyahu said, "We see
ISIS [Islamic State] at the gates -- across the border in the Golan,
across the border in Egypt. ... We must stand up to all the forces of
militant Islam, those led by Iran, those led by ISIS. We should not
strengthen one or the other. We should weaken both of them."
Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon also commented on the Sinai attack on Wednesday, saying, "Our hearts are with the Egyptian people and the families of the victims."
The Israel Defense Forces closely monitored
Wednesday's events in Sinai. An IDF official said that while the events
were worrying, they posed no imminent concrete threat to Israel. There
is a worry, however, that the situation in Sinai could end up negatively
affecting the security of Israeli towns near the border with Egypt.
The deadliest fighting in Sinai in decades
followed the assassination of Egypt's chief prosecutor and a vow by
President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi to step up the legal battle against
Islamic militants.
Later Wednesday, a special forces team raided a
Cairo apartment and killed nine fugitive members of the outlawed Muslim
Brotherhood, including a former member of parliament, security
officials said.
The Brotherhood responded by calling for a rebellion against el-Sissi, saying the nine were "murdered in cold blood."
Authorities and pro-government media have
blamed Egypt's recent violence on the Brotherhood, which has been
branded a terrorist group, as well as other supporters of ousted
President Mohammed Morsi. The Brotherhood denies involvement.
The new bloodshed also came as Egypt was
marking the second anniversary of the events that led to the July 3,
2013, military-led overthrow of Morsi, although the celebrations were
muted by Monday's killing of Prosecutor General Hisham Barakat and fears
of unrest by the former president's supporters.
Militants in northern Sinai, which borders
Israel and the Gaza Strip, stepped up their attacks following Morsi's
fall. Last year, the main insurgent organization operating in Sinai
pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group, calling itself Sinai
Province.
The coordinated Sinai assault focused on the
town of Sheikh Zuweid and targeted at least six military checkpoints,
security officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because
regulations did not authorize briefing the media.
The militants also took soldiers captive and
seized weapons and several armored vehicles, the officials said. Scores
of militants besieged Sheikh Zuweid's main police station, shelling it
with mortars and rocket-propelled grenades and exchanging fire with
dozens of police inside in an attack that lasted most of the day, they
added.
As fighting raged, an Apache helicopter
gunship destroyed one of the armored carriers captured by the militants,
they said. Warplanes also roared through the skies.
The officials gave a death toll of 64
soldiers, 90 militants and four civilians. It was the biggest battle in
the Sinai since the 1973 Arab-Israeli war. At least 55 soldiers were
wounded, they said.
Other security officials put the number of soldiers killed at more than 50, but did not give a precise figure.
In a statement on state television, the
military said 17 soldiers had died, with 13 wounded, while at least 100
"terrorist supporters" had been killed.
The conflicting totals could not immediately be reconciled, and discrepancies are common following such attacks.
Military spokesman Brig. Gen. Mohammed Samir
said the country's armed forces targeted and destroyed two militant
gatherings in northern Sinai.
The territory, characterized by hardscrabble
towns, desert and mountainous areas suitable for guerrilla operations,
has long been neglected by the government. Local Bedouin tribesmen have
grown to resent Cairo, turning to smuggling, organized crime and, in
some cases, radical Islam.
The sustained attack -- the first of its kind -- suggested the militants have ambitions to seize an entire city.
The Islamic State affiliate that calls itself
Wilayat Sinai ("Sinai Province") claimed its fighters targeted 15 army
and police positions and staged three suicide bombings, two that
targeted checkpoints and one that hit an officers' club in the nearby
city of el-Arish. The authenticity of the claim could not be immediately
verified but it was posted on a Facebook page associated with the
group.
Army checkpoints in the area are routinely staffed by 50 to 60 soldiers.
An Associated Press reporter heard two
explosions from the Egyptian side of the Rafah border crossing with Gaza
and saw smoke rising, though it was not immediately clear what caused
the blasts or if they were linked to the militant assault some 40
kilometers (25 miles) away.
Last week, Islamic State spokesman Abu
Mohammed al-Adnani issued an audio statement calling for massive attacks
during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, now entering its third week.
The United States condemned the assault as a
terrorist attack, with White House National Security Council spokesman
Ned Price saying that the U.S. "stands resolutely" with Egypt and will
continue to work with Cairo to address threats to its security.
The planning and coordinated execution of
Wednesday's attack shows the insurgency in Sinai is growing stronger,
especially since Morsi's ouster and the crackdown on Islamic militants.
They have been battling Egyptian security forces in the northern Sinai
for more than a decade, despite military reinforcements, strict curfews
and the destruction of homes and tunnels along the border with
Hamas-ruled Gaza.
The insurgency also poses a serious threat to
Egypt's security as the military-backed government struggles to restore
stability after years of unrest since the 2011 uprising that ousted
Hosni Mubarak.
"This specific attack is by far the worst
we've ever seen," said Daniel Nisman, CEO for the Levantine Group risk
consultancy. "It's not a hit-and-run -- this is what they used in places
like Syria and Iraq to actually capture and hold territory."
Nisman said the attack revealed the weaknesses
of the military's "scorched earth" operations in the northern Sinai,
which he says have made it difficult for an army that is "very, very
overstretched" from multiple missions and struggles to recruit support
among the local population.
In the Cairo raid, the Interior Ministry said
the nine Brotherhood members who were killed had been plotting attacks
on the police, the judiciary and the media.
Three special forces members were wounded in the operation, the ministry said in a statement.
In addition to weapons, investigators found
43,000 Egyptian pounds ($5,630), along with documents and memory cards,
and the information seized will be used in the investigation into
Monday's killing of Barakat, the prosecutor general.
State TV showed images of the apartment after
the raid, with bloodied bodies on the floor with several Kalashnikov
assault rifles near their hands.
One of the dead was Nasr al-Hafi, a former
deputy in the lower house of parliament for the Brotherhood's Freedom
and Justice party, while the other was a Brotherhood leader,
Abdel-Fattah Mohamed Ibrahim.
The Brotherhood said the men were innocents who supported families of slain and arrested members, calling el-Sissi a "butcher."
"Come out in rebellion and in defense of your
country, yourselves and your children," it said in a statement issued in
English. It called the killings "a turning point that will have its own
repercussions," adding that "it will not be possible to control the
anger of the oppressed."
At Barakat's funeral, el-Sissi had pledged to
bring his killers to justice. He signaled an even tougher campaign
against the Brotherhood.
Since Morsi's ouster, Egypt has arrested thousands of
Islamists and other dissidents, convicting hundreds in collective trials
and issuing mass death sentences, with Barakat overseeing the
prosecution of many of the cases. Morsi is among those condemned to die,
but an appeals process remains ahead of him.
AP and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=26591
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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