by Amnon Lord
Hat tip: Dr. Jean-Charles Bensoussan
The IDF has unprecedented intelligence on Hezbollah, and believes that even when the Syrian civil war ends, the Shiite terrorist group is unlikely to provoke hostilities
| 
                                            Hezbollah operatives march 
in Beirut, Lebanon [Archive]                                            
    
                                                 
|Photo credit: AFP  | 
There are assessments in Israel suggesting the
 end to the six-year civil war in Syria is finally in sight. But the 
road to the conflict's end is fraught with risks, and the increase in 
errant fire incidents on the Golan Heights border recently may be part 
of this process. But the IDF believes that things may look worse than 
they really are.
This has allowed IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. 
Gadi Eizenkot to realize his operational perception, which is different 
from that of his predecessors, at least with respect to his fanaticism 
for Israel to "exercise its sovereignty." Eizenkot remembers all too 
well the trauma of losing Israeli sovereignty on the Lebanese border in 
the years before the 2006 Second Lebanon War, the 11th anniversary of 
which will be marked next week.
This is why there is not so much as an inch of
 soil on the Golan Heights border -- or on the Lebanese border for that 
matter -- devoid of IDF presence. As a result, anyone who violates 
Israeli sovereignty is penalized, and contrary to what some 
irresponsible statements by right-wing ministers have suggested, the 
IDF's countermeasures include more forceful measures than in the past.
"There is no such thing as not exercising 
sovereignty to the maximal point," a senior IDF official said, adding 
the IDF does not see recent escalation as necessarily having a potential
 for a full-fledged conflict. Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman has 
been repeating things like this quite recently. 
The struggle to shape the reality in Syria the
 day after the war is underway, as evident from the high-intensity 
fighting around the border province of Quneitra. But the IDF does not 
see the escalation as one that would necessarily evolve into a 
full-fledged conflict, and Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman has made 
several statements in the same vein over the past few weeks.
The concept of "exercising sovereignty" has 
sunk in. According to a former senior defense official, "This is the 
term on the table right now. What does that mean? If an Iranian division
 deploys a mile from the border -- does it infringe on our sovereignty? 
There's great pressure in Israel over where Iranian forces would be 
deployed. This situation calls for more flexible terminology."
The official claims that the Israeli public is
 unaware of the considerations guiding the government's policy with 
regard to the Iranian and Russian presence in Syria.
At the moment, U.S. and Russian efforts to 
reach an agreement of what post-war Syria should look like are treading 
water, and only an agreement between the two superpowers could truly end
 civil war. As for the coordination and understandings between Israel 
and Russia, that has reached the level of having a direct telephone link
 between an Israeli Air Force bases its Russian counterpart in Syria.
The fate of Syria will be decided according to
 territorial control, hence the corridor the Iranians are trying to 
establish en route to the shores of the Mediterranean. While the IDF is 
unable at this time to clearly pinpoint a Shiite territorial contiguity,
 it has identified many areas interrupting it.
In any case, there are other developments that
 seem more serious, such as the weapons factory the Iranians are trying 
to establish in Lebanon, which in reality points to the failure 
experienced by Iran and its regional proxy, Hezbollah. Why a failure? 
Because if Iranian Revolutionary Guard Commander Gen. Ghasem Soleimani 
feels the need to set up a weapons production plant on Lebanese soil, it
 is a sign that all other ways by which he could transfer advanced 
weapons to the Shiite terrorist group via Syria have been blocked.
The IDF believes that its efforts to generate 
deterrence vis-a-vis Hezbollah are working well, with a little help from
 the Syrian civil war. 
Some 50 Hezbollah operatives were killed in 
Syria over the past month alone, and overall, the organization has lost 
over 1,800 operatives since it entered the fighting alongside President 
Bashar Assad's troops. This figure hardly encourages Hezbollah chief 
Hassan Nasrallah to provoke a third campaign against Israel in Lebanon, 
but there is another factor that has become a deterrent, namely the 
increase in Israel's intelligence on Hezbollah. 
Israel currently has an unprecedented 
intelligence image on Lebanon. "If Nasrallah knew what we knew about 
him, he would give up any future intentions to start a war," and IDF 
official said. And Nasrallah understands this, or is at least in a state
 of ambiguity regarding Israel's intelligence presence, and he suffices 
with strong rhetoric. 
A new strategy 
Former National Security Council Adviser Uzi 
Arad, former Mossad Director Efraim Halevy and Professor Ze'ev Tadmor, 
formerly head of the Technion -- Israel Institute of Technology, are 
part of a team of experts currently drafting a unique document is 
defined as "a super-strategy for the State of Israel." The team believes
 that the issues of Russia's return to the Middle East sphere and 
Israel's relations with it are not properly addressed in the public 
discourse in Israel. 
"Russia is becoming increasingly present in 
the Middle East theater," Halevy said, further explaining that Russia is
 no longer a superpower that buys its partners and allies in the region 
as it did during the Cold War -- Russia has simply turned itself into 
one of the forces that make up the regional theater and it did so by 
exploiting the vacuum created by the collapse of the regimes in several 
important Arab states.
The Israeli experts detect a sense of 
superiority in Russia, which now sees itself as being "on the right side
 of history," to use a phrase favored by former U.S. President Barack 
Obama. A Russian official close to Russian President Vladimir Putin, who
 recently visited Israel, said that "democracies are receding." Perhaps 
worse, democratic powers are experiencing crises that are weakening 
them, neutralizing some of their capabilities. According to the Russian 
official, this is demonstrated well by the political turmoil in the 
United States, Britain and France compared to the more stable Russia and
 China, and even the more dangerous and fanatical nations like Iran and 
North Korea.
Where does Israel fit in this equation? Part 
of the super-strategy document deals with precisely this question. One 
of the examples its authors name is that of "a man with vast experience 
in the nuclear issue, who believes that the disruption of the rule of 
law in a country erodes national security far more than any foreign 
threats."
In other words, Arad, Halevy and Tadmor 
believe that the domestic weaknesses in governance, with respect to 
issues of religion and state, and the deterioration in the level of the 
educational system, have strategic implications for Israel's future 
ability to face external dangers.
The debate here is over the question of 
whether the dynamics in Israel are heading in a positive or negative 
direction. The very fact that the strategic document was drafted attests
 to the feelings of anxiety shared by some of its authors, to the extent
 that their analysis of the Israeli economy's mediocre performance is 
controversial. An economy that in recent years has shown a steady annual
 growth of between 4% and 4.5% is not a mediocre achievement.
The per capita gross domestic product in 
Israel, which lagged far behind European countries 35 years ago and even
 eight years ago, is now approaching Germany's GDP per capita -- $37,000
 compared with $42,000, and it's almost the same as in France. This 
development has been noted mainly since 2009, when the economy of many 
Western nations halted or even shrunk over the global recession, while 
the Israeli economy showed extraordinary resilience, weathering the 
financial storm, and quickly returned to growth.
However, the authors of the strategy document 
note a decline in quality, especially in innovation in Israel. But the 
most prominent and worrisome issue is the drop in economic freedom and 
friendliness of doing business in Israel. In 2010, Israel ranked 26th in
 the world on these parameters -- now it is ranked 53rd.
The recent crisis with American Jewry illustrates the existential strategic problem from within. 
"If you want a Jewish majority in the country,
 you can't ignore the question of who is a Jew," Halevy says. "You can't
 segment Jews in a way that would end up turning us into a minority. 
This issue requires a strategy and a decision, which means that the 
issue of conversion is not a religious matter, but a national one." And 
the government has to deal with it. 
This rare, important document is beginning to 
permeate government ministries. While there is no need to make any 
decisions according to the nonbinding document, senior officials and 
ministers should nonetheless study it. Every official, director and 
legal adviser should ask himself how he may have contributed to the 
administration's dysfunction, and how he and his colleagues can break 
the cycle and effect change with regard to the negative trends that 
affect Israel's strength and resilience.
An ocean of opportunities
As far back as the 1930s David Ben-Gurion, who
 would later become Israel's first prime minister, regarded India as an 
extraordinary nation among the gentiles, and argued that in comparison 
to all the nations with which Israel has an interest in cultivating 
friendships, India was special. 
The tragedy was that India was founded on 
pro-Soviet, Third World ideology. Its impressive leader at the time, 
Prime Minister of India Jawaharlal Nehru, believed investing in his 
country's ties with Arab nations and tyrants like then-Egyptian 
President Gamal Abdel Nasser was a wiser course of action.
The only pro-Israel individual in Nehru's 
world was Professor Manohar Lal Sondhi, an intellectual who had no 
official government standing but was very influential nonetheless. This 
week, which demonstrated a bond between Prime Ministers Narendra Modi 
and Benjamin Netanyahu, one must pay homage to Sondhi's work. 
Sondhid was the one who, as far back as Nehru's regime, predicted that India and Israel would become close strategic partners. 
The beginning of those ties can be traced back
 to 1991, when one Israeli was killed and another abducted in a 
terrorist attack in Kashmir. Then-Deputy Director General of the Foreign
 Ministry Moshe Yegar was dispatched to India, and met with Sondhi. The 
latter offered his condolences over the incident, but said it was a 
priceless, historic opportunity to promote the ties between the two 
countries. 
Sondhi organized meeting for Yegar with the 
head of India's intelligence service, and the Israeli diplomat later met
 with the chief of staff at the Indian prime minister's office.
From the late 1990s and on, Sondhi was able to
 position India-Israel relations as an American interest on the one hand
 and a profound Indian interest on the other, in the wake of what were 
then unstable India-U.S. relations. 
Yegar believes that so far, fostering 
bilateral relations with respect to the economic, security, 
technological and strategic dimensions has been excellent yet deficient.
 Netanyahu himself has also alluded to the fact that there is a need to 
cultivate the cultural-spiritual dimension, to further deepen ties.
Ben-Gurion once said that when visiting India, he saw 
the face of scholars even among the most common of people. Israel could 
promote the establishment of Jewish and Hebrew faculties in Indian 
universities, just as it has already done in China and Egypt. The only 
question is, if Israel sends teachers to teach the Indians Hebrew, who 
will teach it to Israelis.
Amnon Lord
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=43675&hp=1
Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.




