Thursday, June 07, 2007

ISRAEL RECAPTURES JERUSALEM 40 YRS AGO TODAY

ISRAEL WILL BE IN CONTROL OF JERUSALEM, THE SIGN OF THE START OF THE LAST GENERATION.

LUKE 21:24
24 And they shall fall by the edge of the sword, and shall be led away captive into all nations: and Jerusalem shall be trodden down of the Gentiles, until the times of the Gentiles be fulfilled.

ISRAEL CAPTURES JERUSALEM JUNE 5-10 1967. THE FINAL GENERATION COUNTDOWN TO THE END OF THE AGE. (40 YEARS AGO TODAY)

June 6, 2007 - Forty Years


We are now marking the 40th anniversary of the Six Day War. It is a war that is still studied in war colleges. Some -- myself included -- see it as a modern day miracle.In May 1967, Egyptian president Gamel Nasser ordered the UN peacekeeping forces that had been in place in the Sinai since 1956 to withdraw and began to amass Egyptian troops. He closed the Straits of Tiran, in defiance of international law, blocking Israeli exit from the port of Eilat. On May 28, he said, The existence of Israel is in itself an aggression...We will not accept any coexistence with Israel...The war with Israel is in effect since 1948.On June 1, PLO representative Ahmed Shukairy declared, with regard to what would happen to Israelis if there was a war, Those who survive will remain in Palestine. I estimate that none of them will survive.By June 5, Egypt, Syria and Jordan had over 300,000 soldiers poised to wipe out Israel, with promised back-up from other Arab nations.If you are old enough (as I am), you will remember this: the sense of terror for what seemed about to unfold.

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Then the IDF did a lightning pre-emptive attack, demolishing the Egyptian airforce on the ground in a matter of hours. Within six days Israel took eastern Jerusalem (The Temple Mount is in our hands), Judea and Samaria -- the cradle of Jewish heritage, the Gaza Strip, the Golan Heights, and the Sinai.

It should be noted that the IDF wanted to avoid fighting on several fronts at the same time and sent a message to King Hussein of Jordan that if he stayed out of the war, Israel would not attack Jordan. But Nasser misled Hussein into believing the Arabs were winning, and he rushed to join, attacking during the very first day of the war.

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Israel, vulnerable, beleaguered, and threatened, overnight became a victor of astounding proportions. Deterrence power had been established, the narrow boundaries within which she had existed so vulnerably had been extended, areas that were traditionally Jewish had been acquired. The celebrating was joyous, the relief and gratitude beyond measure.

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But the war wasn't actually over in six days. It has gone on for 40 years, and continues now. Still we face Arabs who blatantly declare that they wish to destroy us totally. We face, as well, a Palestinian Arab propaganda war that has turned us into aggressors, so that our astounding victory has in many eyes become a negative. Thus it is that Israel is labeled an occupier. A loaded term, and one used inappropriately here. But it sticks, and it makes the Israelis the bad guys -- we are the people who make all of those poor innocent Palestinians suffer. Our occupation is the cause of that terrorism, which is a fight for freedom. This, most certainly, is the perspective of the British, for example, who are prepared to boycott our institutions.The onus is put on us, rather than where it belongs. People forget that we went to war to prevent our destruction, not to acquire territory. People forget that the Palestinians have had multiple opportunities to have a state, but rejected them because destroying us was higher on their list of priorities. And I say, ENOUGH!

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There is no occupation. Occupation occurs when one sovereign power moves into the land of another sovereign power. This is not the case in Judea and Samaria. The world needs to be reminded. Jews need to be reminded. The Mandate for Palestine gave this land to us for the establishment of a Jewish homeland. The Mandate has never been superseded in international law.

Why was our homeland not established in the first place from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean, if that is what the Mandate gave us? Because the Arabs carried on. And the international community deferred to their protests and suggested dividing Palestine. The notion of dividing Palestine between the river and the sea was actually an outrage, because Palestine had already been divided once. The original Mandate for Palestine included what is today Jordan. Some 70% of the mandated land was lopped off and given by the British to the Hashemites. The Palestinian Arabs had their nation. But -- hey! -- what did the world care about Jewish rights?

And so -- even though the Arabs ultimately declined the offer of half of Palestine between the river and the sea, because they wanted the whole thing -- the Jews accepted the proposal of a nation to be established in less than what had been promised. But according to international law, the remainder of the land -- Mandate land -- was still ours.When Israel declared independence in 1948, the Arabs states attacked immediately. When the war was over in 1949, Israel had boundaries (truce lines) that extended beyond the boundaries that had been in place at the time of independence. But Israel did not have to annex these areas, she simply had to extend civil law to them. This, of itself, is proof of the fact that the land is ours and was accepted as so. The principle in force then continues to pertain today -- nothing has superseded it. When we took Judea and Samaria in 1967, we took our own land.

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There is no occupation of the Palestinian people, either. (I would like to say that there is no Palestinian people -- and historically it's easy to prove this case -- but they have invented themselves so that they believe it and the world believes it, so it's pointless to go in that direction.) At present, the Palestinians manage their own affairs -- schools, press, police, etc. If there are incursions by the IDF into Palestinian cities, it is for security reasons. If there are checkpoints set up by Israel that inhibit the free movement of Palestinians, it is, likewise, for security reasons. If they stopped trying to kill us, they'd be left to do their own thing.NOWHERE it is written that we must give this Palestinian people a state of their own on a portion of our land. Once they stop trying to kill us, we have an obligation to accord them a variety of civil rights, and it would be possible to do so drawing on one of a variety of different paradigms.

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It's time for us to hold our heads high and know who we are. To stop apologizing for our existence and our need to defend ourselves. It's time to remind the world that Israel also has rights! It's also time to remind the world that -- hysterical and manipulative Palestinian propaganda to the contrary -- we are the most humane of people. Look at the concern for civilian life exhibited as we take limited actions against the Kassam attacks. Look at the story of an Israeli hospital treating Palestinian children with heart problems, even as the Palestinians shoot at us. Where else does this sort of thing happen? see my website www.ArlenefromIsrael.info

1-WORLD QUAKES LAST 2 DAYS. 2-Cyclone lashes Oman as Iran battens down. 3-Israel displays rare Old Testament text. 4-Bigotry against Israel. 5-Man tries to jump into popemobile. 6-High-level group writes new-look EU treaty. 7-PA Satisfied With the Clash With Israel. 8-IDF Holds Exercise Simulating War With Syria. 9-

EARTHQUAKES

MATTHEW 24:7-8
7 For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there shall be famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers places.
8 All these are the beginning of sorrows.

MARK 13:8
8 For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom:(ETHNIC GROUP AGAINST ETHNIC GROUP) and there shall be earthquakes in divers places, and there shall be famines and troubles: these are the beginnings of sorrows.

LUKE 21:11
11 And great earthquakes shall be in divers places, and famines, and pestilences; and fearful sights and great signs shall there be from heaven.

WORLD QUAKES LAST 2 DAYS (USGS)

STORMS HURRICANES-TORNADOES

LUKE 21:25-26
25 And there shall be signs in the sun, and in the moon, and in the stars; and upon the earth distress of nations, with perplexity;(MASS CONFUSION) the sea and the waves roaring;(FIERCE WINDS)
26 Men’s hearts failing them for fear, and for looking after those things which are coming on the earth: for the powers of heaven shall be shaken.

Cyclone lashes Oman as Iran battens down by Laith Abou-Ragheb JUN 6,07

MUSCAT (AFP) - Cyclone Gonu lashed Oman on Wednesday as thousands of people were evacuated in the Gulf state and neighbouring Iran for the strongest tropical storm to hit the region in 30 years. As Gonu -- the Maldives word for a bag made of palm fronds -- hit the Omani capital strong winds snapped tree branches and blew over street signs. Roads were flooded and thick fog blanketed out the mountains encircling the city.Heavy rain and wind led to flights being suspended at Muscat airport, but the cyclone has so far not affected shipping in the Strait of Hormuz through which at least a quarter of world oil supplies passes, officials said.

Oil experts said any impact on world oil prices would be temporary provided facilities in the area stayed intact.If shipping is halted through Hormuz, I think there is going to be a panic in world oil markets and prices could shoot to as high as 80 dollars, but of course for a very short period, Kuwaiti oil expert Kamel al-Harami said.The streets of Muscat were almost deserted save for all-terrain vehicles after police asked people to stay indoors and thousands of residents were evacuated, but the storm weakened steadily after making landfall.Omani television showed rising seawater advancing some 500 metres (yards) inland, flooding coastal roads in the Sohar region 200 kilometres (125 miles) northwest of Muscat.

The ministry of transport said the ports of Sohar and Qabus in Muscat were closed.Cyclone Gonu initially packed winds of 260 kilometres (160 miles) an hour but they have now dropped dramatically to some 90 kilometres (50 miles), weather officials said.They said the cyclone was expected to be the strongest to hit the Arabian peninsula since 1977.However OPEC powerhouse Saudi Arabia while lies west of Oman, said it did not expect the storm to affect its oil-producing regions.Maritime activities in the Strait of Hormuz are as usual. We have no indication of any disruption, an Omani transport ministry official told AFP.Iran evacuated residents living on the coast or alongside river banks in its southern provinces as the storm approached, and downpours were already drenching coastal areas. The southern ports of Bandar-e Jask and Chahbahar were set to be the worst affected.

In neighbouring Pakistan, fishermen in the southwest were told to stay ashore for the next 24 hours. Rough seas have already damaged dozens of fishing boats in the southwestern Baluchistan province, officials said.The army, police and civil defence were all mobilised in Oman and police said about 18,000 people been evacuated. There were no reports of any deaths or injuries, although there was some damage.Schools and businesses were ordered to stay shut until Sunday to weather the storm.

A power cut in one Muscat hotel forced guests to huddle in corridors with torches as the storm raged outside. John Watt, a 50-year-old energy consultant from Scotland, said he tried but failed to visit an oil facility on Wednesday. Driving conditions were atrocious. There must have been two to three feet of water on the road, he said. Markus and Bettina Kollman from Germany were stranded with their two children, Alana, 13, and Janik, 10. The family had attempted to drive to Dubai in the neighbouring United Arab Emirates but they were turned back at the border. My daughter is disappointed as she'll miss an appointment to have some henna tattoos. But my son is excited because it means he'll probably miss some schooldays, Bettina Kollman said. High waves also washed the east coast of OPEC member the UAE, official media said. But the meteorology department said it expected the cyclone to have a minimal impact. Yemen, at the southern end of the Arabian peninsula, sent civil defence teams to coastal areas ahead of the storm.

Israel displays rare Old Testament text By BEN HUBBARD, Associated Press Writer June 6, 3:57 PM ET

JERUSALEM - A rare Old Testament manuscript some 1,300 years old is on display for the first time, after making its way from a secret room in a Cairo synagogue to the hands of an American collector. The manuscript, containing the Song of the Sea section of the Old Testament's Book of Exodus and dating to around the seventh century A.D., comes from what scholars call the silent era a span of 600 years between the third and eighth centuries from which almost no Hebrew manuscripts survive.It is now on public display for the first time at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem.

It comes from a period of almost darkness in terms of Hebrew manuscripts, said Stephen Pfann, a textual scholar at the University of the Holy Land in Jerusalem. Scholars have long noted the lack of original biblical manuscripts written between the time of the Dead Sea Scrolls, the latest of which come from the third century, and texts written in the ninth and 10th centuries, Pfann said.Scholars can only piece together scraps of information on the period using translations into Greek and other languages, he said, so to have a piece of the original text from this period is quite remarkable.The parchment is believed to have been left in the Cairo Genizah, a vast depository of medieval Jewish manuscripts discovered in the late 1800s in a previously unknown room at Cairo's ancient Ben Ezra Synagogue. It was in private hands until the late 1970s, when its Lebanese-born American owner turned it over to the Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Special Collections Library at Duke University.

The manuscript is now on extended loan to the Israel Museum and is on display in the museum's Shrine of the Book, which also houses the Dead Sea Scrolls.

Bigotry against Israel June 6,07

Dear Stan,

We want to alert you to a very important Israel-related issue that has arisen—and to tell you how you can play a critical role in addressing it.In 2005, the Association of University Teachers in Britain (AUT) called for a boycott of two leading Israeli universities. And in 2006, another British teachers union, the National Association of Teachers in Further and Higher Education (NATFHE), followed suit.These two unions merged last year—and, as you might expect, the new organization that was formed, the University and College Union (UCU), is a hotbed of anti-Israel activism. Last week, the UCU passed two motions calling for a boycott of all Israeli academics.

Learn how you can send a message to the UCU today.

What is the UCU's problem with Israel? Israel is, after all, a democratic country where access to education and academic freedom flourish. If the UCU were to single out any nation in the Middle East for criticism, one would think it would be one of Israel's neighbors—the Arab and Muslim countries where freedom and access to education are often greatly restricted and, in some cases, nonexistent, especially for women. But the UCU has not called for a boycott of any other nation in the world—not China, Saudi Arabia, Zimbabwe, Iran, Sudan, or any other country where gross violations of human rights occur routinely.While the UCU is silent about oppression in these countries, it has harsh words for democratic Israel. In these motions it maintains that Israel's 40-year occupation has seriously damaged the fabric of Palestinian society. No mention is made of the brutal fighting between rival Palestinian factions that has turned Gaza into a war zone. The UCU also maintains that Israel denies Palestinians educational rights through shootings and arrests of teachers, lecturers and students a scurrilous lie so far removed from reality that it can only be explained by a deep-seated anti-Israel prejudice.

Today, we need you to add your voice to the growing chorus of those speaking out against the outrageous, prejudiced actions of the UCU. Your response can make a difference—we saw this in 2005, when public outcry ultimately led the AUT to drop their call for a boycott. We've made it easy for you to send a message to UCU leadership telling them that Israel's friends will not stand by and see her treated unfairly. Send a message to the UCU today—and take a stand for Israel!

Send message to UCU
https://secure2.convio.net/ifcj/site/Advocacy?JServSessionIdr009=8k8uvm2vj6.app5b&cmd=display&page=UserAction&id=189

With prayers for shalom, peace,

Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein
President International Fellowship of Christians and Jews.

Man tries to jump into popemobile By DANIELA PETROFF, Associated Press Writer JUN 6,07

VATICAN CITY - A German man tried to jump into Pope Benedict XVI's uncovered popemobile as the pontiff began his general audience Wednesday and held onto it for a few seconds before being wrestled to the ground by security officers. The pope was not hurt and didn't even appear to notice that the man — who was between 20 or 30 years old — had jumped over the protective barrier in the square and had grabbed onto the white popemobile as it drove by. The pontiff kept waving to the crowd and didn't even look back.At least eight security officers who were trailing the vehicle as it moved slowly through the square grabbed the man and wrestled him to the ground.The man was a 27-year-old German who showed signs of mental imbalance, said the Rev. Federico Lombardi, the Vatican spokesman.

His aim was not an attempt on the pope's life but to attract attention to himself, Lombardi told reporters.The man, whom Lombardi declined to identify, was interrogated by Vatican police and then taken to a hospital for psyciatric treatment, he said.The man wore a pink T-shirt and dark shorts, a beige baseball cap and sunglasses. He vaulted up and over the barricade from the second or third row back. He got as far as the back of the jeep, holding onto it for a few seconds, before being wrestled to the ground.The jeep kept moving, and the German-born Benedict kept waving, then proceeded with the audience as if nothing had happened. Since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, the Vatican has tightened security in St. Peter's Square when the pope is present. All visitors must pass by police to get into the square, with some walking through metal detectors or being searched with metal- detecting wands.

Nevertheless, virtually anyone can attend the audience. While tickets are required, they can often be obtained at the last minute — particularly in good weather when the audience is held outside in the piazza.When the pope uses the popemobile in St. Peter's, it is usually uncovered; when he travels overseas or outside the Vatican, he usually uses one outfitted with bulletproof glass.The pope is protected by a combination of Swiss Guards, Vatican police and Italian police.On Wednesday, the head of the Swiss Guards, Col. Elmar Maeder, walked along one side of the popemobile while the pontiff's personal bodyguard, Domenico Giani, took the other side. Several plainclothes security officials trailed them.Benedict stood up behind the driver, holding onto a bar to steady himself, with his personal secretary, Monsignor Georg Ganswein, seated behind him.St. Peter's is cordoned off with wooden barriers to create "routes" that the popemobile can drive along to make the pontiff more visible to the crowd, which on Wednesday numbered about 35,000.

From his perch on the jeep, the pope waves and blesses the crowd, and occasionally will bless a baby handed up to him by a security guard. The jeep, though, never stops, with security officials walking or jogging alongside the whole way.Benedict's predecessor, Pope John Paul II, was shot in the abdomen and seriously wounded on May 13, 1981, as he was riding in St. Peter's Square at the start of his general audience. The gunman, Mehmet Ali Agca of Turkey, was caught and served his sentence in Italy before being transferred to his native land.

High-level group writes new-look EU treaty
04.06.2007 - 17:30 CET | By Honor Mahony


EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS - A small group of politicians from around the EU have published a repackaged treaty for the bloc, hoping to feed into the emerging consensus among member states that a simplified treaty has to be extracted from the ashes of the rejected EU constitution.Unofficially known as the Amato Group - it is headed by former Italian prime minister Giuliano Amato - the outfit's contribution comes at a crucial time in negotiations on creating a new-look treaty after the original EU constitution was rejected mid 2005.The 16-strong group, containing several former prime ministers as well as two current European Commissioners, has stripped the rejected constitution of its constitutional elements - including the article on the EU's symbols and the controversial God-less preamble - reduced the charter of fundamental rights to one legally binding article and say they do not mind if the proposed EU foreign minister ends up with another name.Essentially, however, the main elements of the original constitution have been kept in. We do not exclude that you reach the same final result, said Mr Amato at the unveiling of the document on Monday (4 June).

70 articles

The treaty has been reduced to 70 articles (12,800 words) plus two protocols, one containing institutional changes and one containing policy innovations - by contrast the original EU constitution contained 448 articles and around 63,000 words.The chopped down dimensions come from only taking the innovations contained in the third part of the treaty - which essentially ties together former EU treaties - and putting them into additional protocols.Structurally speaking, the two protocols would be attached to the existing Treaty on the European Union and the Treaty Establishing the European Community.The Amato treaty is the latest in a long line of proposals – MEPs and several academics have also been busy on this front – intending to provide the perfect solution for getting the EU out of the political impasse it has been in since French and Dutch voters said no to the EU constitution two years ago.Mr Amato and his co-authors argue the strength of their position lies with being thorough and following through changes in one part of the text, with the technical and legal implications in another part of the text.

A bird in the hand…

Their re-packaged but pared down EU constitution also fits in with the current trend of discussion in member states toward a simplified treaty Pushed by Nicolas Sarkozy, the new French president, and recently given backing by Spain and Italy, the phrase has been much bandied about but so far has only been elaborated on at press conferences.When asked how his treaty differed from Mr Sarkozy's ideas – as it takes up much of what Mr Sarkozy has said is crucial for any new treaty - the former Italian prime minister replied our treaty has been written.Still, it is unclear how it is supposed to fit into the ongoing treaty discussions being run by the German EU presidency. For its part, Berlin is conducting behind-the-scenes negotiations to try and prepare the path ahead of the 21-22 June summit.At the June meeting, they hope to be able to extract a concrete mandate for a new look treaty which will retain as much of the original constitution as possible but introduce enough changes to allow French and Dutch leaders to return to their parliaments with a text that looks different.

PA Satisfied With the Clash With Israel
by Nissan Ratzlav-Katz (INN JUNE 6,07)


The Palestinian Authority is pleased with the course of its current warfare against Israel, according to IDF intelligence. The PA is further convinced that Israel will not send serious ground forces deep into Gaza. Reporting to the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee on Monday, the head of the IDF Intelligence Corps' research division, Brigadier-General Yosef Beiditz, said, The recent escalation began as an internal clash between Hamas and Fatah, with Hamas prevailing.When the Hamas recognized that the clash with Fatah was fomenting dissatisfaction among the Gaza populace, Brig.-Gen. Beiditz explained, the Hamas decided to redirect the violence towards Israel.... They are thus far pleased with the results of the conflict with us. They understand that Israel will not undertake a ground operation deep into Gaza. And they are also pleased with the emptying of the towns in the south [of Israel].

The IDF officer concluded his report on developments in Judea, Samaria and Gaza with a warning that the Hamas is still intent on carrying out a high-quality terrorist attack, such as another kidnapping.

Also present at the committee meeting was Defense Minister Amir Peretz. He said that the IDF operations in Gaza will continue as planned. The Hamas, Peretz declared, would not determine when there will be a ceasefire. We will cease our forces' operations only if we come to the conclusion that the Hamas has ceased using Israel as a the solution to all of its problems.

The Hizbullah is Preparing a Possible Summer Offensive

Regarding the threat from Lebanon's Hizbullah, Brig.-Gen. Beiditz said that the terrorist organization was continuing to improve its physical position and abilities. Armed Hizbullah forces are located in open areas south of the Litani River, according to Beiditz, where they are operating out of sight of United Nations troops stationed in the region. The Hizbullah is preparing itself for a move that may take place in the summer, the Brig.-Gen. said, adding that there is also evidence that Syria is preparing for just such an eventuality. Included in the Syrian preparations, Beiditz suggested, was the possibility of a direct clash with Israel. Syria is increasing weapons purchases and training exercises. While there is no change in the deployment in the Golan Heights, which is a defensive array, [Syria] could improve its positions and deploy offensive capabilities.Defense Minister Peretz noted that the change from defensive to offensive deployment on the Golan can be accomplished within days, not months. ...We are prepared for any eventuality. At the same time, Peretz said that Israel should not shut the door on Syria's intimations that it is prepared to negotiate with the Jewish State.

MK Eitam Calls for an Emergency National Unity Government

At the conclusion of the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee meeting, Knesset Member Effie Eitam (NRP-National Union) suggested that the serious security challenges Israel faces at this time justify an emergency two-year national unity government.Our region is facing a strategic threat in the form of an Iran determinedly proceeding towards a nuclear bomb.... Therefore, Eitam said, I propose a national emergency government for the next two years, due to these regional strategic developments. We are wasting the abilities of the IDF due to political weakness.

IDF Holds Exercise Simulating War With Syria
by Ezra HaLevi (INN) JUNE 6,07


The IDF held a large-scale exercise Tuesday simulating the invasion of Syria in the context of a war with the hostile Arab country to Israels north. Infantry units, tank divisions and the Air Force took part in the exercise. It took place at the Shizafon IDF installation, in the southern Negev. Asked about the exercise by Army Radio, Defense Minister Amir Peretz said that the IDF was indeed preparing for the possibility of war with Syria, but said this does not mean that Israel would initiate such a war. Our preparedness is not an indication of any decision by either us or Syrians to go to war - these are purely defensive measures, he said. IDF Intelligence Chief Maj.-Gen. Amos Yadlin said Syria will not attack Israel and that this upgrading of military and troop movements is merely precautionary. He said Syria saw what happened during the Second Lebanon War and our deterrence became more effective.A similar IDF drill conducted last year was meant to simulate a Gaza invasion which took place on a limited scale soon after when Cpl. Gilad Shalit was kidnapped by Gaza terrorists. This year, IDF Chief of General Staff Lt.-Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi made reference to both Gaza and the northern front in his briefing before the IDF Officers Training School. The IDF is preparing for an escalation on both the Palestinian and the northern fronts, he said. The IDF's goal is to improve its readiness while simultaneously continuing to fight terror.

Syria Confirms: Planning For War

Syrian MP Muhammad Habash told Al-Jazeera Arabic world news satellite television network Tuesday that Syria is indeed actively preparing for war with Israel, and that Syria expects the war will start this summer. He claimed it was Israels government, however, that wants the war, in order to survive politically.

Officials Weigh in on Whether to Negotiate With Syria

Peretz said that he hopes that the upgrading of military preparedness on both sides will not preclude Syria and Israel engaging in negotiations. IDF Chief of Staff Ashkenazi has also reportedly advocated secret negotiations with Syria. Mossad Chief Meir Dagan, however, strongly opposed talk of responding to Bashar Assads public overtures saying they are aimed purely at alleviating pressure on Syria to curb its support for various terrorist groups.

Gaza Warnings

In his briefing of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, Yadlin warned that Israel must prepare for the possibility that Katyusha rockets with a 40 km (25 mile) range will be obtained and used by terror groups in Gaza.

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