Showing posts with label Security. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Security. Show all posts

03 February 2018

Commanders for Israel's Security: NYT Op-Ed

Source: mass emailing



Cis Logo
Dear Debra V. Wilson,

I would like to bring to your attention a just published NYT op-ed co-authored by former Head of Mossad and member of CIS steering committee, Maj. Gen. (Ret.) Danny Yatom and me. It lays out the security (and other) consequences of reckless, competing annexation schemes floated by members of our governing coalition. Some are already in early phases of Knesset legislation deliberations. [I was astonished to learn that lead Tweeter personalities who tweeted or re-tweeted the op-ed cumulatively have well over 300,000 followers.]

This is but an early note in our aggressive effort to expose the full range of devastating consequences of any of these schemes and reinforce our last year's main message: "No Annexation. Separation!"

As you may have noted, several leading Israeli politicians have recently embraced the separation theme. We intend to encourage them to stick with it (and to develop it further based on our Security First plan), and to challenge others to do likewise.

Thanks for your interest and support.
Best,

Maj. Gen. (Ret.) Amnon Reshef
Chairman


* * *
A Dangerous Course Israel Should Avoid
By DANNY YATOM and AMNON RESHEF



When Vice President Mike Pence spoke to the Knesset on Jan. 22, legislators who oppose a two-state solution sent a clear signal that they have taken President Trump's recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital as a green light to proceed with initiatives to annex portions of the West Bank.

The signal came in two parts: As Mr. Pence reiterated America's commitment to Israeli-Palestinian peace, every member of the governing right-wing coalition stayed silent while opposition legislators rose to applaud. More stunningly, the Knesset's speaker, Yuli Edelstein, declared that Israel will "develop the whole of the country, including Judea and Samaria," referring to the biblical names for the entire West Bank.

But none of the legislative initiatives toward that goal addresses the implications for Israel's security that would come with them. That is a potentially fatal lapse, because what now seems to be under serious consideration would have disastrous consequences for Israel's security and would undermine American interests throughout the Middle East.

It is no accident that none of the proposals suggests annexing the entire West Bank. Even the most zealous legislators realize that absorbing all of the West Bank's 2.7 million Palestinians would threaten Israel's existence as a Jewish and democratic state.

Consequently, those seeking to block prospects for separation from the Palestinians into two states look for a "luxurious annexation": absorb as much of the land, with as little of the population, as possible.

Competing proposals put forward by the end of January included annexing all Jewish settlements in the West Bank without touching areas populated by Palestinians. Another would annex the Gush Etzion and Ariel settlement blocs plus the Jordan Valley. Yet another would create a region called "Greater Jerusalem."

The most popular among annexationists was perhaps the most extreme: Education Minister Naftali Bennett's proposal calling for the annexation of "only" the 60 percent of West Bank land designated Area C (Israel's major settlement blocs now occupy about 7 percent of Area C). The area surrounds 169 "islands" of Palestinian towns (called Area A) and villages (Area B). Spread throughout Area C and in isolation from one another, these disconnected 169 communities, which constitute the remaining 40 percent of West Bank land, would not be annexed.

That's the plan. But how would it work? What would be the fate of the 300,000 Palestinians now living in Area C? Logic dictates that Israel would have to offer them citizenship or a permanent residence status equal to that of Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem. Either status would have to bring free movement throughout Israel.

Even though movement from the West Bank is restricted by a security barrier, a few terrorists even now manage to enter Israel. With Area C annexed, identifying the few bad guys seeking to kill Israelis among the 300,000 new Palestinian Israelis from Area C (who would have unfettered access to Israel) would be difficult and costly.

The physical barriers required to prevent residents of Areas A and B from filtering into Area C en route to Israel would be a security nightmare. The perimeter of each of the 169 Palestinian islands would have to be treated as an international border. To separate the annexed land from the islands they encircle, 1,200 miles of new barriers would be required, along with hundreds of security gates that would allow controlled Palestinian movement from one enclave to another or from their enclaves to land of theirs in Area C (where 75 percent of the land is owned by Palestinians). The cost of building such a barrier system would be about $10 billion, and constructing the gates, along with associated security measures, would cost far more.

Palestinians would view Israeli annexation as a game-changer, foreclosing the option of a viable Palestinian state. The Palestinian Authority would collapse, and Israel would have to impose martial law and provide basic services to all Palestinians in the West Bank. Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman has estimated the annual cost of social security alone for Palestinians at $6 billion. The yearly cost of health, education and other government services could be $5 billion more.

With the collapse of the Palestinian Authority, Palestinian-Israeli security coordination would vanish. Many of the Palestinian troops would turn their weapons on Israelis, and the Palestinian street would most likely explode. This would leave Israel's military and its domestic security agency, Shin Bet, to take full security responsibility not just in the newly annexed Area C, but also for the millions of Palestinians in Areas A and B, where Palestinian security agencies now operate in close coordination with the Israel Defense Forces.

This, in turn, would necessitate an increase in the I.D.F.'s presence throughout the West Bank; the standing army could not do the job alone and a mobilization of reserves would be required. This, too, would tax the Israeli economy and severely diminish military preparedness for other security threats, most directly from Syria, where Iran seeks to establish a presence, and Lebanon, where Hezbollah has become more experienced at combat.

Arab governments might not be able to ignore potentially violent domestic expressions of outrage at Israel's actions. Accordingly, Israel's diplomatic and security relationships with Egypt and Jordan might not survive, and chances for additional relationships would vanish.

Israel's relationship with the American Jewish community would also be jeopardized, with annexation attempts further alienating large numbers of American Jews and accelerating the alarming trend of Jewish youth distancing themselves from Israel — a trend that undermines a major pillar of Israel's long-term national security.

And not only Israel would suffer. All of this would come back to haunt the Trump administration, by undermining its efforts to forge an American-led regional coalition harnessing the resources of Israel and moderate Arab states to check Iran's hegemonic ambitions — a goal that serves the strategic interests of all.

We are both former Israeli generals, but we are not alone in these comments. They are based on the findings of a task force composed of members of a network of over 275 retired generals from all of Israel's security services, who retain the view that an eventual two-state solution is essential to Israel's security, as well as to its Jewish and democratic character.

A two-state solution may not soon be in the cards. But preserving conditions for an eventual separation from the Palestinians must remain a primary Israeli strategic objective. No annexation fantasy can be allowed to undercut it.
It is the height of irresponsibility for Israeli politicians to propose annexation and for Americans, if they care at all about Israel, to egg them on.

Danny Yatom, a retired major general who was the director of the Mossad intelligence agency, is a member of the steering committee of Commanders for Israel's Security. Amnon Reshef, a retired major general who was commanding general of Israel's Armored Corps, is the chairman of the network.


Commanders for Israel's Security
Senior Security Officials Promoting Political-Security Arrangements

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48 Derech Menachem Begin st.
Tel Aviv, 6618003. Israel
Office: +972-77-4347705

Security First - Read







14 October 2017

Bow Group Invitation to Panel Discussion and Dinner - 16Oct2017


Source: mass emailing


Dear Friends,


The Bow Group would like to remind you of our upcoming event.

On Monday 16th October The Bow Group will be hosting a discussion on the topic of 'A Conservative Approach to Defence and Security.'

Our esteemed speakers at this event include

The Baroness Neville-Jones DCMG - Former Chairman of the British Joint Intelligence Committee

Nirj Deva MEP - Conservative MEP for South East England. Co-Ordinator of the Committee on Overseas Development and Cooperation and bureau memeber of the ACP-EU Joint Parliamentary Assembly.

Sir Edward Leigh - Conservative MP for Gainsborough and former Chair of the Public Accounts Committee

Should you wish to purchase a dinner ticket you will enjoy a three course meal at The Carlton Club with all our speakers. 
The discussion will take place in Committee Room 9 in The Houses of Parliament and will run from 7pm-8:30pm. We will then retire for dinner at The Carlton Club.
As the event is being held in the Houses of Parliament, we ask that attendees use the Cromwell Green Entrance to Parliament not the entrance to Portcullis House.
Image may contain: sky and cloud
16th October 2017
Tickets to the Discussion - Free
Tickets to the Discussion and Dinner - £65

Owing to unprecedented interest, tickets to dinner are EXTREMELY LIMITED so please book quickly to avoid disappointment.

Tickets are available from the following link - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/a-conservative-approach-to-defence-and-security-tickets-37967448661

We look forward to seeing you all there!
.













The Bow Group · 1A Heath Hurst Rd · London, United Kingdom NW3 2RU · United Kingdom


18 July 2016

MaCGill Summer School: INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM: HOW CAN WE FACE UP TO THIS AWESOME CHALLENGE?- 20 July 2016, Wednesday

Source:  http://www.macgillsummerschool.com/2016-programme/


4.00 pm (GMT+1)
INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM: HOW CAN WE FACE UP TO THIS AWESOME CHALLENGE?
Terrorism, both national and international, has been a fact of life for a very long time and history is peppered with terrible examples of the use of this kind of violence for political, religious or ideological aims. We have been witness to it here on our own small island and have to this day many shattered lives as witness. In recent times, for most people, the attack on the Twin Towers in New York on September 11th, 2001 stands out as the most dramatic and most murderous even though the litany is long throughout the world, including Europe, of terrorist attacks claiming the lives of innocent people in places where they are simply going about their daily lives and are suddenly caught up in an event which kills or injures them or changes their lives forever. Terrorist atrocities are a fact of life in countries of the Middle East, Syria and Iraq in particular, but also in Europe and most recently on our own doorstep in Spain and France where, last November, 130 people were murdered and hundreds more injured in a Parisian theatre and nearby cafes as they relaxed on a Friday evening. This is today’s version of war and the fact that the perpetrators are from within the societies they want to destroy and are prepared to sacrifice themselves in the process makes of it a very difficult one to win, especially when they have a well funded state, Daesh or Islamic State, behind them. Can we defend ourselves against this new scourge and are the security forces in Europe well enough equipped and, more importantly, well enough co-ordinated, to combat this kind of threat?
Garda Commissioner Noirin O’Sullivan
Rob Wainwright, Director-General, Europol
Dr Paul Gill, Senior Lecturer in Security & Crime, University College London
Moderator: Gerry Foley, Western Correspondent UTV, former Political Editor for ITV at Westminster

12 March 2016

PhD scholarships and Open Evening for crime and security PhDs at UCL - 15 March 2016- 6pm

Source: mass emailing 

PhD scholarships and Open Evening for crime and security PhDs at UCL - March 15th 6pm
UCL Department of Security and Crime Science
UCL

PhD scholarships and Open Evening for UCL Security Science Doctoral Training Centre (UCL SECReT)
     
     
     
Dear colleague,

We would like to invite you to our open evening for crime and security PhDs:

Date: Tuesday, 15 March 2016, 6pm-8pm

Venue:  Sir Ambrose Fleming Lecture Theatre (G06), Roberts Building, Malet Place, London, WC1E 6BT
     
Each year UCL SECReT organises an open evening at which prospective students of the course can come along and learn more about the programme. The open evening includes presentations by programme leaders about the vision and goals of the centre, the modules involved in the course, our areas of research, and the wider activities that students will participate in as part of their four-year training programme, and also the application and scholarship award process.
    

    Students will be able to meet course academics and current students from the programme.
      
Do feel free to let others know about this event.
     
Course details
     
APPLICATIONS ARE NOW OPEN

If you are a student from any of the below disciplines, considering PhD research with an application to security or crime-related areas, we can offer comprehensive academic supervision and a full scholarship:

Chemistry, Computer Science, Biochemical Engineering, Materials, Nanotechnology, Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Civil Engineering, Geomatics And Spatial Analysis, Architecture, Environmental Engineering, Systems Engineering, Forensics, Complexity Science, Medical Imaging, Radiation Physics, Physics, Mathematics, Statistics, Psychology, Cognitive, Perceptual And Brain Sciences, Human-Machine Interaction, Speech, Hearing And Phonetic Sciences, Health Informatics, Computational Finance, Transport Studies, Geography, Environmental Studies, Energy Studies, Crime Science, Archaeology, Genetics And Evolution Studies, Anthropology, Philosophy, History, Laws And Political Science.

This List Is Not Exhaustive. PLEASE SEE OUR WEBSITE FOR ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA.




ARE YOU AN INDUSTRY ORGANISATION LOOKING TO PART-FUND A PHD?

We are currently able to offer a funding arrangement whereby we will cover 66% of the cost of a 4-year phd student if you are able to cover the remaining 33% (approx. £33000).
We will also provide supervision by world-leading academics (UCL was ranked fourth best university in the world in this year's QS ranking), access to UCL's world-class facilities and excellent PhD candidates.
     
Contact us now on:   vaseem.khan@ucl.ac.uk

Join our FACEBOOK page at:
     
      

UCL Department of Security and Crime Science
University College London
35 Tavistock Square, London, WC1H 9EZ

UCL Department of Security and Crime Science

This newsletter uses web beacons, which allow UCL to improve the service provided to our readers. Find out more

30 September 2014

Royal Canadian Mounted Police: The missing peace

Source: http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/gazette/vol76no2/interviews-entrevues/beck-eng.htm?fb
 


The missing peace
Three men pose with combatants at Camp Darapanan.
A/Commr. Randy Beck (back left), poses with ICP members and Moro Islamic Liberation Front combatants at Camp Darapanan, following a consultation for designing a new policing model in the Philippines. Courtesy A/Commr. Randy Beck

RCMP officer brings expertise to Philippines

The southern Philippines has long been plagued by conflict between two religious factions. When a tentative peace deal was struck last year, the Department of Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Canada (DFATD) asked the RCMP’s A/Commr. Randy Beck to chair the Independent Commission on Policing (ICP) for the Bangsamoro region. Beck, who has 35 years of service with the RCMP, spoke with Sigrid Forberg about the experience.
What interested you about this assignment? It was that they were looking at designing a new policing model and wanted recommendations for a democratic and economically emerging country. The fact that they were coming out of a conflict period subject to a cease-fire agreement and the policing model would be a cornerstone to providing a peaceful society in the region called the Bangsamoro, that was appealing.
How has it been going? The very short timeline that we are working under is very challenging, but I’m very optimistic and certain that we’ll be able to deliver the report on time and of the quality that’s expected.
Working here in the Philippines has been a challenge as this is my first international deployment. But I believe the people of the Philippines are the most patient people in the world — they’ve waited so long for this peace. They live that patience out every day; they’re now at a point where they desire peace and everybody’s working to see that through.
What’s been most challenging for you? I think the most challenging part was at the very beginning, coming over here with really no infrastructure and no capacity as a commission. Starting from scratch, starting from the ground up — we didn’t have an office, we didn’t have support staff, we didn’t even have a budget that had been finalized.
Then, Typhoon Yolanda hit, and the disaster was the complete focus of the government of the Philippines and all of the embassies and the people here. Rightfully so, 100 per cent of the focus has to go to the disaster relief and support. But that critically put us behind by four weeks. So the short timeline has forced us to attach a risk management philosophy in our work assessing the highest risk areas that need to be addressed in the short time and identifying some mitigating strategies to reduce the risk of those areas we couldn’t address adequately.
On the other side, what’s been most rewarding? I think seeing and hearing that the people of the Bangsamoro understand that policing is the foundation for lasting peace, that they want armed groups to put their arms down. The rewarding part is just working with people and feeling that they are wanting to give peace a chance and that they want policing to be civilian in nature and work with them in a community policing model.
It’s so very rewarding to be able to apply my 35 years of experience to the work that we’re doing, to the consultations, to the discussions, to the development of a new model for the Philippines. It’s so rewarding to apply my experiences from Canada within the context of the challenges here.
How does Canada and the RCMP benefit from getting involved? I think peace in the Philippines does benefit Canada. I’ve said many times, you can’t police yourself out of a conflict. There’s political and economic solutions that have to occur for peace to last. Then policing can establish a safe and secure community. Canada’s role in this work will enable the economic development to come to the southern Philippines.
I just read in the paper yesterday that there’s been more foreign economic investments in the area of Mindanao in the first month and a half of 2014 than there was in all of 2013. It’s just such community optimism and international interest in wanting to invest in the Philippines and it’s such an emerging economic nation that Canada’s role in providing assistance in developing a policing model for the Bangsamoro will pay dividends in the future, there’s no doubt in my mind.

28 July 2014

Clip of Ami Ayalon in Gatekeepers and The Mosaic Institute:Given the current situation in Israel and Gaza, we are reminded of some of Ami Ayalon's words when he visited the Mosaic Institute in the Winter of 2013.


Ami Ayalon: 040 and 1.11






Given the current situation in Israel and Gaza, we are reminded of some of Ami Ayalon's words when he visited the Mosaic Institute in the Winter of 2013.

http://goo.gl/FIQ7A1
 

Truthdigger of the Week: Yuval Diskin

Source: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/truthdigger_of_the_week_yuval_diskin_20140726?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%253A+Truthdig+Truthdig%253A+Drilling+Beneath+the+Headlines


Truthdigger of the Week

Truthdigger of the Week: Yuval Diskin



 
Posted on Jul 27, 2014


Yuval Diskin speaks during the 10 Years to the Geneva Initiative: Leading the Way to Peace conference in Tel Aviv in 2013. AP/Dan Balilty



By Alexander Reed Kelly
Every week the Truthdig editorial staff selects a Truthdigger of the Week, a group or person worthy of recognition for speaking truth to power, breaking the story or blowing the whistle. It is not a lifetime achievement award. Rather, we’re looking for newsmakers whose actions in a given week are worth celebrating.
Imagine if FBI founder and notoriously malicious snoop J. Edgar Hoover pronounced the views of 1960s antiwar protesters and other dissidents correct. Now set imagination aside and read this July 24 interview with Yuval Diskin, the former director of Israeli internal security service Shin Bet.
At the start of the third week of the Israeli government’s air and ground campaign against Hamas in Gaza, Diskin, who served as the head of Shin Bet from 2005 to 2011, criticized right-wing President Benjamin Netanyahu and his hawkish allies for reacting belligerently to the kidnapping and killing of three Israeli teens in mid June, and more generally, failing to pursue a peaceful relationship with the two-tiered unity government in charge of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
“Israel should have been more sophisticated in the way it reacted,” Diskin told Spiegel Online interviewer Julia Amalia Heyer. “We should have supported the Palestinians because we want to make peace with everybody, not with just two-thirds or half of the Palestinians.”
Netanyahu pronounced Hamas responsible for the abduction of teenagers Naftali Fraenkel, Gilad Shaer and Eyal Yifrah three days after they went missing June 12. The conclusion may have been premature. Hamas denied responsibility for the kidnappings and no evidence came forth from Israeli intelligence to support the claim. (A BBC journalist later tweeted that an Israel police official said Hamas did not direct the attack.)
 
An ongoing insistence on Israeli exceptionalism maintained by force cannot produce long-standing peace between Israelis and Palestinians, Diskin argued. “I would warn against believing that the Palestinians are peaceful due to exhaustion from the occupation,” he told Heyer. “They will never accept the status quo of the Israeli occupation.” Instead, their passion for resistance will increase. “When people lose hope for an improvement of their situation, they radicalize. That is the nature of human beings. The Gaza Strip is the best example of that. All the conditions are there for an explosion,” he said. Later in the interview he added: “Real security can only be achieved through peace. Israel, despite its military strength, has to do everything it can in order to reach peace with its neighbors.”
The point is impossible to miss. In Diskin’s view, his peers in Israeli leadership bear significant responsibility for Palestinian behavior. Recently deceased American political scientist Chalmers Johnson, author of a number of historical studies on the dynamics of imperial power, termed spontaneous and inevitable resistance to indiscriminate applications of state force “blowback.”
Why does the ruling Likud Party persist with policy that is certain never to produce peace? Partly, Diskin answered, because the existence of a common enemy is a source of political power. He believes for example that Iran is not Israel’s “real problem,” and rather than the problem being the Palestinians themselves, he very carefully talks about the “conflict with the Palestinians.” Combined with the occupation of the West Bank, the conflict is “the biggest security risk for the state of Israel,” Diskin argued. But Netanyahu holds steady on a more vague enemy like Iran. “And of course he has derived political profit from it. It is much easier to create consensus about the Iranian existential threat than about an agreement with the Palestinians,” he said. Others in power similarly seek to maintain only their short-term political strength. They “are acting irresponsibly; they are thinking only about their electorate and not in terms of the long-term effects on Israeli society,” Diskin noted. And they are putting their fellow citizens at increasing risk in the process.
Diskin does not absolve Palestinian leaders of blame. For a peaceful resolution to the conflict, he said “we need commitment on the Palestinian side and the acceptance of the Middle East Quartet conditions”—a set of principles of coexistence outlined by the United Nations, the United States, the European Union and Russia and opposed by Hamas. Diskin made his career leading an institution engaged in violent confrontations with people he policed, but his interview gives the impression of a man committed to the safety and well-being of both Israelis and Palestinians. It is a rare and urgently needed display of inclusiveness among the Israeli leadership. And he is not alone. “There are plenty of people within Shin Bet, Mossad and the army who think like I do,” he said. That appears to include 50 reservists who criticized the current operation in Gaza and the military itself in an open letter this week. It also includes all surviving six former leaders of Shin Bet, as was shown in the 2012 documentary “The Gatekeepers.”
But the composition of values in the military and government is moving rightward, becoming more extreme and violent in the direction of exclusive, self-contained jingoism. “[I]n another five years, we will be very lonely people. Because the number of religious Zionists in positions of political power and in the military is continually growing,” Diskin contended.
For representing the old Israel of progressive secular values and speaking up for all sides, we honor Yuval Diskin as our Truthdigger of the Week. Hear him talk in a clip from “The Gatekeepers” below.

Clip of Yuval Diskin from Gatekeepers and SPIEGEL: Ex-Israeli Security Chief Diskin: 'All the Conditions Are There for an Explosion'







Source: http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/interview-with-former-israeli-security-chief-yuval-diskin-a-982094.html

Ex-Israeli Security Chief Diskin: 'All the Conditions Are There for an Explosion'
Interview Conducted by Julia Amalia Heyer
Photo Gallery: The Gaza ConflagrationPhotos
REUTERS
In an interview with SPIEGEL, Yuval Diskin, former director of Israel's internal security service Shin Bet, speaks of the current clash between Israel and the Palestinians, what must be done to achieve peace and the lack of leadership in the Middle East.




03 March 2014

Life in Fragments by khulud khamis

Source: mass emailing


Life in Fragments


Posted: 02 Mar 2014 09:47 PM PST
The call came after midnight. The screen read "private number." On the other line, a gruff voice of a man speaking in Arabic. The dialect was not the local Haifa dialect she spoke. He said her name. When she said yes, he began his monologue. "We've seen you. We know where you work, and we know what kind of a car you own. We know where you live. We have a proposition for you. You will come to