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Hamas Torturing Militants In Crackdown On "Unauthorized" Rocket Attacks Against Israel
New Post has been published on http://foursprout.com/wealth/hamas-torturing-militants-in-crackdown-on-unauthorized-rocket-attacks-against-israel/
Hamas Torturing Militants In Crackdown On "Unauthorized" Rocket Attacks Against Israel
The Palestinian militant group Hamas which governs the Gaza Strip has reportedly initiated a crackdown on Salafist fighters within its ranks who are responsible for instances of unauthorized rocket fire into Israel, which has been sporadic in the last two weeks since President Trump’s contentious recognition of Jerusalem as the Israeli capital on December 6th.
The Times of Israel cites Hamas media statements as well as unnamed intelligence sources to report that the group has arrested a growing number of Islamist militants in recent days amidst the crackdown and further that some among them were likely tortured in an effort to clamp down on the attacks, which have invited devastating air and tank counter assaults by Israeli forces on Hamas locations. 
“According to Hamas, among those arrested were operatives responsible for the recent rocket launches. It’s likely that some of these men were tortured by Hamas’ security people,” the report states. Hamas is further signaling to Egyptian intelligence and other regional Arab governments that it wishes to avoid escalation with Israel according to the report.
Hamas militants. Image source: AFP/File
Since protests began across the West Bank, Gaza, and Jerusalem earlier this month which quickly escalated into outbursts of violence, Hamas affiliated factions have launched almost 30 rockets – half of which have entered Israel (others falling short within Gaza territory), with at least two hitting populated areas within southern Israel. Many of the rockets have been successfully intercepted by Israel’s Iron Dome missile defense system, however a number have made it through Israeli defenses.
Meanwhile, Israeli media now tallies about 40 Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) strikes on Hamas positions over the past two weeks. Thus far no Israelis have died while at least eight Palestinians have been killed (including two militants who reportedly died in an accidental blast while transporting explosives). The most recent rocket attacks from Gaza were Sunday night, for which the IDF retaliated on what the Israeli military described as a Hamas training compound in the northern Gaza Strip.
The IDF has repeatedly warned that it would hold Hamas directly responsible for all “hostile activity” and threats coming from Gaza – though Israeli airstrikes on the densely populated Gaza Strip have been notorious for causing mass civilian casualties among the Palestinian population, who often have nowhere to flee outside the confines of the relatively small strip of land that comprises Gaza territory.
But it appears that the political leadership on both sides wishes to avoid a scenario which leads to a repeat of Operation Protective Edge or other similar IDF incursions into Gaza before it. During Operation Protective Edge the United Nations reported that at least 2,104 Palestinians died, which included 1,462 civilians, of whom 495 were children and 253 women. The 2014 Israeli Army incursion into Gaza lasted seven weeks, and 66 Israeli soldiers died during the operation, as well as seven civilians killed in Israel due to rocket fire from Gaza.
Map source: BBC
Past major military conflicts between Israel and Hamas have started precisely through the kind of gradual tit-for-tat strikes and counter-strikes we are seeing now. However, according to Israeli media reports, intelligence assessments see Hamas’ declarations that it will prevent rogue or unaccounted for rocket attacks on Israel as legitimate. 
According to the Times of Israel:
The Israeli intelligence community is sticking to the assessment that Hamas doesn’t seek a conflict with Israel that would deteriorate into a broader war. Still, the fact that Hamas hasn’t stopped the periodic fire for nearly two weeks raises the question of whether the launches stem from Hamas’ inability to enforce quiet or from its security forces’ lack of motivation to do so.
Should reporting of the Hamas internal crackdown be legitimate, there’s still the question of whether broader Palestinian anger will tolerate the potential “moderation” of Hamas leadership, especially as tensions are set to intensify this week with Vice President Mike Pence’s visit to Israel so soon after Trump’s bombshell declaration on the status of Jerusalem. Pence is expected to land in Jerusalem Wednesday, and the trip will include a contested visit to the Western Wall, which administration officials have promised will remain under the sovereignty of the Israeli state in any future agreement. 
The trip will also come after Monday’s UN vote, which pitted the United States against all other members of the UN Security Council in a 14 to 1 decision with the US as the lone veto blocking a resolution calling for the withdrawal of President Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as the Israeli capital. Nikki Haley was reportedly furious over the resolution, calling it an “insult” and saying the US won’t be told where it can put its embassy.
And within Isreal, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is facing harsh criticism from opposition Labor party politicians for perceived inaction against Gaza’s militants as well as the accusation that the country’s “weak” leadership has lost the advantage of “deterrence”.
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foursprout-blog · 6 years
Text
Hamas Torturing Militants In Crackdown On "Unauthorized" Rocket Attacks Against Israel
New Post has been published on http://foursprout.com/wealth/hamas-torturing-militants-in-crackdown-on-unauthorized-rocket-attacks-against-israel/
Hamas Torturing Militants In Crackdown On "Unauthorized" Rocket Attacks Against Israel
The Palestinian militant group Hamas which governs the Gaza Strip has reportedly initiated a crackdown on Salafist fighters within its ranks who are responsible for instances of unauthorized rocket fire into Israel, which has been sporadic in the last two weeks since President Trump’s contentious recognition of Jerusalem as the Israeli capital on December 6th.
The Times of Israel cites Hamas media statements as well as unnamed intelligence sources to report that the group has arrested a growing number of Islamist militants in recent days amidst the crackdown and further that some among them were likely tortured in an effort to clamp down on the attacks, which have invited devastating air and tank counter assaults by Israeli forces on Hamas locations. 
“According to Hamas, among those arrested were operatives responsible for the recent rocket launches. It’s likely that some of these men were tortured by Hamas’ security people,” the report states. Hamas is further signaling to Egyptian intelligence and other regional Arab governments that it wishes to avoid escalation with Israel according to the report.
Hamas militants. Image source: AFP/File
Since protests began across the West Bank, Gaza, and Jerusalem earlier this month which quickly escalated into outbursts of violence, Hamas affiliated factions have launched almost 30 rockets – half of which have entered Israel (others falling short within Gaza territory), with at least two hitting populated areas within southern Israel. Many of the rockets have been successfully intercepted by Israel’s Iron Dome missile defense system, however a number have made it through Israeli defenses.
Meanwhile, Israeli media now tallies about 40 Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) strikes on Hamas positions over the past two weeks. Thus far no Israelis have died while at least eight Palestinians have been killed (including two militants who reportedly died in an accidental blast while transporting explosives). The most recent rocket attacks from Gaza were Sunday night, for which the IDF retaliated on what the Israeli military described as a Hamas training compound in the northern Gaza Strip.
The IDF has repeatedly warned that it would hold Hamas directly responsible for all “hostile activity” and threats coming from Gaza – though Israeli airstrikes on the densely populated Gaza Strip have been notorious for causing mass civilian casualties among the Palestinian population, who often have nowhere to flee outside the confines of the relatively small strip of land that comprises Gaza territory.
But it appears that the political leadership on both sides wishes to avoid a scenario which leads to a repeat of Operation Protective Edge or other similar IDF incursions into Gaza before it. During Operation Protective Edge the United Nations reported that at least 2,104 Palestinians died, which included 1,462 civilians, of whom 495 were children and 253 women. The 2014 Israeli Army incursion into Gaza lasted seven weeks, and 66 Israeli soldiers died during the operation, as well as seven civilians killed in Israel due to rocket fire from Gaza.
Map source: BBC
Past major military conflicts between Israel and Hamas have started precisely through the kind of gradual tit-for-tat strikes and counter-strikes we are seeing now. However, according to Israeli media reports, intelligence assessments see Hamas’ declarations that it will prevent rogue or unaccounted for rocket attacks on Israel as legitimate. 
According to the Times of Israel:
The Israeli intelligence community is sticking to the assessment that Hamas doesn’t seek a conflict with Israel that would deteriorate into a broader war. Still, the fact that Hamas hasn’t stopped the periodic fire for nearly two weeks raises the question of whether the launches stem from Hamas’ inability to enforce quiet or from its security forces’ lack of motivation to do so.
Should reporting of the Hamas internal crackdown be legitimate, there’s still the question of whether broader Palestinian anger will tolerate the potential “moderation” of Hamas leadership, especially as tensions are set to intensify this week with Vice President Mike Pence’s visit to Israel so soon after Trump’s bombshell declaration on the status of Jerusalem. Pence is expected to land in Jerusalem Wednesday, and the trip will include a contested visit to the Western Wall, which administration officials have promised will remain under the sovereignty of the Israeli state in any future agreement. 
The trip will also come after Monday’s UN vote, which pitted the United States against all other members of the UN Security Council in a 14 to 1 decision with the US as the lone veto blocking a resolution calling for the withdrawal of President Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as the Israeli capital. Nikki Haley was reportedly furious over the resolution, calling it an “insult” and saying the US won’t be told where it can put its embassy.
And within Isreal, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is facing harsh criticism from opposition Labor party politicians for perceived inaction against Gaza’s militants as well as the accusation that the country’s “weak” leadership has lost the advantage of “deterrence”.
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By James M. Dorsey / Middle East Soccer.
Optimists see hopeful signs that the Middle East may be exiting from a dark tunnel of violence, civil war, sectarian strife, and debilitating regional rivalries.
The Islamic State (IS) is on the cusp of territorial defeat in Syria and Iraq. Saudi Arabia may be groping for an exit from its devastating military intervention in Yemen. Gulf states are embarking on economic and social reform aimed at preparing for the end of oil.
Haltingly, Gulf states may be forced to find a face-saving solution to their more than three-month-old crisis that has pitted a UAE-Saudi led alliance against Qatar and there may even be an effort to dial down tension between the kingdom and Iran.
Hamas, the Islamist faction that controls Gaza said it was willing to negotiate with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas about joint rule of the strip and move towards long overdue elections.
At first glance, reasons for optimism. But don’t hold your breath. Optimists base their hopes on shifting sands and tentative suggestions that protagonists may be looking for ways out of the malaise.
Yet, none of the indicators involve actions that would tackle root causes of the Middle East multiple conflicts and problems. In fact, some of the solutions tossed around amount to little more than window dressing, while others set the stage for a next phase of conflict and strife.
Talks between the feuding Palestinian factions have repeatedly failed. It was not clear whether Hamas would be ready as part of a deal to put its armed wing under Mr. Abbas’s control – a key demand of the Palestinian president that the Islamists have so far rejected. It also remains to be seen how Israel would respond. Israel together with the United States, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates sees Hamas as a terrorist organization.
Beyond Palestine, the contours of future conflict are already discernible. If Myanmar’s Rohingya are the 21st century’s rallying cry of the Muslim world, the Kurds could be one of its major fault lines.
Disputes over territory, power and resources between and among Sunni Muslims, Shiites and Kurds that fuelled the rise of IS in Iraq are resurfacing with its demise. In a twist of irony, a recent poll showed Sunnis were for the first time more positive about Iraq’s future than the country’s majority Shiites.
Reconstruction of Sunni cities in the north destroyed by the fight against IS is key to maintaining a semblance of Iraqi unity. With no signs of massive reconstruction gaining momentum, old wounds that have driven insurgencies for more than a decade could reignite IS in new forms. “All the writing is on the wall that there will be another ISIS,” said former Iraqi foreign minister and Kurdish politician Hoshyar Zebari, referring to the group by another of its acronyms.
The initial flash in the pan threatens to be the fact that Iraqi Kurds are certain to vote for independence in a unilateral referendum scheduled for September 25. If the independence issue did not provide enough explosives in and of itself, the Kurds’ insistence on including in the referendum the ethnically mixed, oil-rich city of Kirkuk and adjacent areas further fuelled the fire.
The referendum and the dispute over Kirkuk reopen the question of what Iraqi Kurdistan’s borders are even if the Kurds opt not to act immediately on a vote for independence and to remain part of an Iraqi federation for the time being.
The issue could blow a further hole into Iraq’s already fragile existence as a united nation state. Iraqi President Haider al-Abadi has denounced the referendum. His efforts to persuade the Iraqi parliament to fire Kirkuk governor Najmaldin Karim for backing the poll as well as for calls for parliament to withdraw confidence in Iraqi President Fuad Masum and sack ministers and other senior officials of Kurdish descent could push the Kurds over the edge. Iraqi military officials as well as the Iranian-backed Shiite militias that are aligned with the military have vowed to prevent the referendum from being held in Kirkuk. “Kirkuk belongs to Iraq. We would by no means give up on Kirkuk even if this were to cause major bloodshed," said Ayoub Faleh aka Abu Azrael, the commander of Imam Ali Division, an Iran-backed Iraqi Shiite militia.
A possible fight may not be contained to Kirkuk. Kurdish and Iraqi government forces vie for control of areas from which IS has been driven out stretch westwards along the length of northern Iraq. Mr. Al-Abadi warned that he would intervene militarily if the referendum, which he described as unconstitutional, provoked violence.
Add to that, the ganging up on the Kurds by Iran, Turkey and the United States. The US backs the Iraqi government even if it put Kurdistan on course towards independence when it allowed the autonomous enclave to emerge under a protective no-fly zone that kept the forces of Saddam Hussein at bay. Breaking with the US and its Arab allies, Israel has endorsed Kurdish independence.
Turkish intelligence chief Hakan Fidan and Iranian Al Quds force commander Qassem Soleimani have warned the Kurds on visits to Iraqi Kurdistan to back away from the referendum. Iran has threatened to close its borders with the region.
Describing the referendum as “a matter of national security,” Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said that "no one should have doubt that we will take all the necessary steps in this matter.” Turkey fears that Kurdish independence would spur secessionist aspirations among its own Kurds, who account for up to 20 percent of its population and that an independent Kurdistan would harbour Turkish Kurdish insurgents already operating from the region.
Mr. Al-Abadi alluded to possible Turkish and/or Iranian military intervention to prevent the emergence of an independent Kurdistan by suggesting that the referendum would be “a public invitation to the countries in the region to violate Iraqi borders... The Turks are very angry about it because they have a large Kurdish population inside Turkey and they feel that their national security is threatened because it is a huge problem for them. And, of course, the Iranians are on the same line,” Mr. Al-Abadi said.
The Kurdish quest for some form of self-rule is likely to manifest itself in Syria too. The US backs a Syrian Kurdish militia aligned with Turkish Kurdish militants in its fight against IS. The militia that prides itself on its women fighters is among the forces besieging the IS capital of Raqqa. The Kurds are hoping that an end to the war in Syria will leave them with an Iraq-style autonomous region on the Turkish border – an aspiration that Turkey, like in Iraq, vehemently opposes. The target of strikes by the Turkish air force, the Kurds hope to benefit from the force’s shortage of pilots because of mass purges in the wake of last year’s failed coup against President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The air force last month ordered all former fighter pilots flying for Turkish airlines to report for service.
The Kurds may provide the first flashpoint for another round of volatility and violence, but they are not the only ones. Nor are sectarian and other ethnic divisions that are likely to wrack Iraq and Syria once the current round of fighting subsides.
Eager to find a face-saving exit from its ill-fated invasion of Yemen that has pushed the country to the edge of the abyss, Saudi Arabia is will have to cope with a populous country on its border, many of whose citizens harbour deep-seated anger at the devastation and human suffering caused by the Saudis that will take years to reverse.
Similarly, the three-month-old rift between Qatar and an alliance led by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates is likely to leave deep-seated scars that will hamper integration among the six Gulf states that make up the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), the Middle East’s only functioning regional organization prior to the crisis. A failure of talks between Qatar and its detractors, mediated by US President Donald J. Trump, even before they got started, suggested that a resolution to the crisis is nowhere in sight.
Coping with the fallout of the crisis and the Yemen war, simply adds to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s woes as he prepares to at some point succeed his ailing father, King Salman. Prince Mohammed, who is popular among the country’s youth in expectation of economic and social change, has already had to backtrack on some of the promised change. Foreign lenders have moreover indicated a lack of confidence as they head for the exit rather than explore new opportunities.
In addition, Prince Mohammed has signalled concern about opposition to his proposed reforms within the kingdom’s ruling Al Saud family, determination to avoid political change, and willingness to rule with an iron fist. Prominent religious scholars with significant followings and activists have been arrested in recent weeks while dissenting members of the ruling family have been put under house arrest.
The optimistic view may be that the Middle East is six years into an era of political, economic and social change. If historic yardsticks are applicable, that amounts to one third of a process of transition that can take up to quarter of a century to work itself out. There is little reason to believe that the next third will be any less volatile or violent. Dr. James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, co-director of the University of Würzburg’s Institute for Fan Culture, and the author of The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer blog, a book with the same title, Comparative Political Transitions between Southeast Asia and the Middle East and North Africa, co-authored with Dr. Teresita Cruz-Del Rosario and four forthcoming books, Shifting Sands, Essays on Sports and Politics in the Middle East and North Africa as well as The Gulf Crisis: Small States Battle It Out, Creating Frankenstein: The Saudi Export of Ultra-conservatism and China and the Middle East: Venturing into the Maelstrom
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