Will Israel be in close combat with Al-Qaida in 2014?
Original Thinking from Barry Shaw.
U.S. servicemen are being photographed holding signs to hide
their faces. This new form of Anonymous protest is addressed to their President.
“I didn’t join the army to fight for Al-Qaida in Syria.”
They know that Al-Qaida has become a leading force in the
anti-Assad opposition.
In Lebanon, Al-Qaida is poised to overthrow Hezbollah as the
Lebanese turn against the “Party of God” for their intervention in Syria
on behalf of Assad.
In Sinai, Al-Qaida cells are consolidating their hold and
are preparing for future action.
Will we wake up to Israel-v-Al-Qaida in in
close combat in 2014 ?
While the world's attention is on Syria, Al-Qaida prepares to
take over power in Lebanon, on Israel's northern border.
The Abdullah Azzam Brigade launched a rocket attack against
Israel on August 22, 2013. Initially, Israel thought this was yet another
Hezbollah attack. It turned out that this new terror group was responsible. The
Abdullah Azzam Brigade was founded by Saleh bin Abdallah al Qaraawi, a
Saudi-Arabian operative of Al-Qaida. He fought in Iraq, and was badly wounded
by an American missile in Afghanistan. Though no longer a fighter, he is still
stirring up serious interference by forming Al-Qaida cells close to Israel.
The group is named after a Palestinian Arab, Abdullah Yussef
Azzam, who was assassinated in Pakistan in 1989, but whose ideology was adopted
by Osama bin Laden and Al-Qaida. The brigade has a branch in Lebanon located
inside the Palestinian refugee camps, mainly Ein al-Hilweh near Sidon.
The Lebanese branch also goes by the name of Ziyad al-Jarrah
Companies, and its mission is to launch attacks against Israel from its
positions within Lebanon. It recently announced a jihad against UN peacekeeping
forces in Lebanon. Ziyad al-Jarrah may be a familiar name to American
intelligence as he was one of the nineteen terrorists responsible for the September
11 World Trade Center bombing in 2001.
With Hezbollah in disarray in Lebanon, the Abdullah Azzam
Brigade killed a leading Hezbollah leader near the Lebanon-Syria border in
July. A month prior to that, it released a statement condemning Hezbollah for
its involvement in Syria. This Al-Qaida affiliate will become one of the leading
players in Lebanon’s domestic conflict that will surely spill over onto the
Israel side of their border.
On September 1, Egyptian forces arrested Muhammed Ibrahim,
the leader of Al-Qaida in the Sinai Peninsula, in a bloody battle in which he
attemted to explode two hand grenades while resisting arrest.
Egypt had previously arrested Ibrahim for the 2005 attack on
the Egyptian resort town of Sharm al-Sheikh which killed eighty eight people.
Ibrahim managed to escape in a planned major breakout from four Egyptian jails
in March, 2011, which was part of the 2011 revolution against the Mubarak
regime. Many Al-Qaida operatives, including Ibrahim, managed to escape capture
and return to the Sinai. Ibrahim is also accused of planning the Sinai attack
in 2012 which killed 25 Egyptian soldiers.
Lawlessness has increased in the Sinai since the removal from
power of the Muslim Brotherhood President Morsi. Terrorists continue to
infiltrate the Sinai and join up with rival groups with Al-Qaida being the most
prominent.
Israel is happy to have the Egyptian army do battle with
them but it knows that, eventually, Israel will be the prime target for a
consolidated Sinai-based Al-Qaida. There is little doubt that the terror group
is itching to have a go at Israel and an IDF intervention may only be a matter
of time.
Despite efforts on the Iraq-Syria border, hundreds of
Al-Qaida trained terrorists, and trucks filled with heavy and light weapons,
have been flooding into Syria in a repeat of the Libyan scenario. One Iraqi official
said that the ancient towns of Nineveh and Anbar have become “landbridges
for the transportation of weapons and ammunition from Al-Qaida’s huge arsenal
built up over its years of existence in Iraq.”
The funding of the Al-Qaida operations in Syria comes from
Saudi Arabia and the Persian Gulf state who are increasingly disillusioned with
America’s lack of leadership on Syria.
The Turkish military are training Syrian rebels many of whom
are Al-Qaida operatives. Turkey is also providing heavy weaponry including
anti-tank and anti-aircraft rockets, mortars, and heavy machine-guns.
Al-Qaida leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri, openly urged “the
free people of Syria and its mujahidin” to overthrow Assad “the leader
of criminal gangs.”
Western impotence is allowing Al-Qaida to play an
affirmative role in the Syrian opposition to Assad. It is increasingly clear
that any victory over the Assad’s Alawite coalition will be led by Al-Qaida
forces that will not then go silently into the night but will remain in Syria
as a spoiler for other conflicts in the region, the prime target of which will
be Israel just over the border on the Golan Heights.Faced with the mounting evidence of Al-Qaida successes in
the region can anyone deny that Israel will not be forced to confront Al-Qaida
across its borders, or even within Israel, in 2014?
Barry Shaw is the author of ‘Israel Reclaiming the
Narrative.’ www.israelnarrative.com He is also the Special Consultant on
Delegitimization Issues to the Strategic Dialogue Center at Netanya Academic
College.
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