Hillel Fendel
Defense Minister Ehud Barak tells IDF officers in the Shomron that without Israeli control of Judea and Samaria, more terrorism can be expected. His party has long demanded a withdrawal from these areas. "There are too many terrorists," Barak said during his visit to the Central Division in the Shomron (Samaria), "and too much desire on their part to carry out terrorist attacks. Without intelligence control and without physical control of the area, and without operative effectiveness, we will see more attacks like the one in which Ido Zoldan was murdered [this past November] and like the one this past Friday in which First Sgt. David Rubin and Corp. Achikam Amichai were murdered."
Back in August 2006, General Security Services (Shabak) chief Yuval Diskin told the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, “Northern Samaria has turned into Islamic Jihad-land due to the lack of a permanent military presence there.”
19 shells, one Kassam rocket have been fired at the Negev in the last two days.
Minister Barak said, however, that the IDF must concentrate its efforts on Hamas and Islamic Jihad - as opposed, it would seem, to Fatah terrorists. This, despite the fact that two Fatah para-military policemen were responsible for the roadside shooting killing of Zoldan.
Later on Tuesday, Barak visited the A-Ram checkpoint in northern Jerusalem and said that checkpoints in Judea and Samaria will remain in place. Though the checkpoints are often mentioned by US and Palestinian Authority leaders as "obstacles to peace," Barak said they are a proven and necessary tool in fighting terrorist attacks “There is no way to fight terrorism without practical, day-to-day control of the territory,” Barak said.
Government at Fault
Barak said Monday that the responsibility for the mistakes of the Second Lebanon War are not only those of the army, but rather of the entire government. Despite this, he will apparently not lead his Labor Party out of the government, in contrast to his promise of six months ago.
Opposition leader Binyamin Netanyahu welcomed Barak's remarks about the government's responsibility, and called on him to back up his words with actions. "I call upon him to stand by his words and quit the government when the final Winograd Commission report is issued," Netanyahu said.
The two were present at the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee session at which a committee report was presented finding fault with the army's performance during the war. Netanyahu agreed with Barak that not all the blame must be placed on the army. "The Prime Minister [Ehud Olmert] does not understand what the reservists are saying loud and clear: Take responsibility! The only one who refuses to take responsibility is the one standing at the top," Netanyahu said.
20 Shells Fired at Negev
One Kassam rocket and 19 mortar shells were fired from Gaza at the western Negev on Monday and Tuesday, causing no damage.
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