BS"D
With Hawks Like This, Who Needs Leftists?
1 Adar, 5780 °°  Feb. 26, '20
Opinion and Perspective,
By Binyomin Feinberg,
FeinbergBinyomin@gmail.com
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To check for updates, on first view of this article, as well as throughout the week, please visit https://saveHischildren.
or/and see updates for month of Shvat '80:
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The Israeli Army recently released a new Five-Year Plan for a major military upgrade, named "Momentum" (https://www.meforum.org/
The cost is projected to be NIS 30 billion ($8.75 Billion) - annually - to bolster Israeli military "air, ground, sea, and cyber capabilities, its intelligence superiority, and technological prowess."
IDF
 Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Aviv Kochavi presented the plan, stressing the 
urgent nature of the threats Israel now faces, saying "they won't wait" 
for Israel to resolve its electoral crisis. Israelis are expected to 
vote at the beginning of March, for the third national election in a 
year, although without much prospect of differing results (perhaps 
illustrating Einstein's famous maxim, regarding repetition of the same 
actions while expecting different results).
It was reported that "Momentum focuses on strengthening the military's war readiness, placing an emphasis on the operational edge of the IDF's elite point units in all corps, upgrading the quantity and quality of the munitions used but the Air Force, and transforming the army into a deadly and multidimensional technological force across all spheres of battle, including cyber and electronic warfare."
"Implementing this plan will make the IDF exponentially faster, more precise, and deadlier," Kochavi was quoted.
It was reported that "Momentum focuses on strengthening the military's war readiness, placing an emphasis on the operational edge of the IDF's elite point units in all corps, upgrading the quantity and quality of the munitions used but the Air Force, and transforming the army into a deadly and multidimensional technological force across all spheres of battle, including cyber and electronic warfare."
"Implementing this plan will make the IDF exponentially faster, more precise, and deadlier," Kochavi was quoted.
However,
 the tough talk bubbling over this ambitious plan appears to contrast a 
bit with another IDF milestone, of sorts. As Michael Peck reported 
in The National Interest (January 28, 2020), in an article titled "The 
Israeli Army Is Unprepared for a Ground War with Iran and Hezbollah" (https://www.meforum.org/
The article opens:
"If
 Israel has to go to war tomorrow against Iran or its Lebanese proxy 
Hezbollah, there's a problem. The Israeli mechanized division that would
 defend Israel's northern border, or enter Syria or Lebanon to eject 
Iranian and pro-Iranian forces, [is] in bad shape.  The 319th Division, 
stationed in northern Israel, is short of equipment such as tanks, and 
the equipment it does have is in poor condition, according to an Israel 
Defense Forces (IDF) audit cited by Israeli news site Ynet.
"According to the audit's findings, 52 percent of combat vehicles are unfit for use and there is a 20 percent shortage of weapons and night-vision equipment for soldiers," Ynet said.
"The auditors found that many armored vehicles were lacking during proper maintenance checks, with 68 of them sitting uncovered and unprotected against the elements. Dozens of other vehicles were found unusable due to faulty tires and broken engines, ...
According to an audit by the IDF itself, 52 percent of the 319th Division's combat vehicles are unfit for use."
"According to the audit's findings, 52 percent of combat vehicles are unfit for use and there is a 20 percent shortage of weapons and night-vision equipment for soldiers," Ynet said.
"The auditors found that many armored vehicles were lacking during proper maintenance checks, with 68 of them sitting uncovered and unprotected against the elements. Dozens of other vehicles were found unusable due to faulty tires and broken engines, ...
According to an audit by the IDF itself, 52 percent of the 319th Division's combat vehicles are unfit for use."
The Ynet expose  sported photos of dilapidated military vehicles, and vehicles unprotected by tarps against the elements.
Auditors identified similar neglect of the 319th Division's support units, as well. "The Northern Command's logistics unit, upon which the 319th Division relies in times of war, has a shortage in communications equipment and vehicles for medical evacuation, and the division's medical unit hasn't had a commanding officer or lieutenant for almost a year."
"One reason for the 319th Division's woes is that there isn't enough equipment to meet both operational and training needs.
Auditors identified similar neglect of the 319th Division's support units, as well. "The Northern Command's logistics unit, upon which the 319th Division relies in times of war, has a shortage in communications equipment and vehicles for medical evacuation, and the division's medical unit hasn't had a commanding officer or lieutenant for almost a year."
"One reason for the 319th Division's woes is that there isn't enough equipment to meet both operational and training needs.
'The
 audit found that about half of the 319th Division's Mark 4 Merkava 
tanks and almost 100 communication devices have been lent to the Armored
 Corps training unit, located more than 350 kilometers [217 miles] from 
their main storage and maintenance areas in the north," Ynet said.
"These tanks are worn out, impairing their emergency and combat capabilities. A high-ranking officer in the IDF Northern Command said that the issue of lending equipment and armored vehicles is a military decision, citing the Mark 4's production lines being incapable of accommodating both the standard and training units."
"These tanks are worn out, impairing their emergency and combat capabilities. A high-ranking officer in the IDF Northern Command said that the issue of lending equipment and armored vehicles is a military decision, citing the Mark 4's production lines being incapable of accommodating both the standard and training units."
Mr. Peck 
cogently provides a broader perspective, adding the observation that 
"the 319th Division's woes reflect a larger pattern in the IDF. In the 
1973 October War, Israeli units hastily mobilized to stem the surprise 
Arab invasion found themselves with shortages of equipment and gear that
 had been poorly maintained."
Mr. Peck doesn't 
address this point, but we'd be amiss to omit the fact that the leftist 
Israeli Establishment was considered criminally negligent in ignoring 
warnings about a serious Arab attack prior to the Yom Kippur war. Arab 
invaders and leftist Jewish arrogance together killed over 2,500 of the 
Israeli Army's best young soldiers, many of whom were killed fighting 
heroically while being massively outnumbered. Reports like these raise 
the question of whether the Israeli government is repeating history.
"In
 the 2006 Israel-Hezbollah War, Israeli troops suffered from shortages 
of basic items, from food and waterto ammunition, as well as poorly 
trained logistics personnel.
"The IDF may have only hours to prepare for battle along Israel's northern border.
"Ironically, the IDF – which prides itself on flexibility to rapidly adapt to the chaos of battle – bases its approach on the mission-oriented tactics of the World War II German army. Yet despite being a virtuoso on the battlefield, the Wehrmacht's logistics skills were often lacking: German troops constantly ran out of fuel, ammunition and food during Operation Barbarossa, the 1941 invasion of the Soviet Union.
"... as this writer learned while observing an Israeli armored brigade on maneuvers along the Golan Heights in February 2019, the IDF may have only hours to prepare for battle along Israel's northern border. Time to fix mistakes is a luxury Israel does not have," the article concludes.
(The author of that article, Michael Peck is a contributing writer for the National Interest, and a Writing Fellow at the Middle East Forum.)
"The IDF may have only hours to prepare for battle along Israel's northern border.
"Ironically, the IDF – which prides itself on flexibility to rapidly adapt to the chaos of battle – bases its approach on the mission-oriented tactics of the World War II German army. Yet despite being a virtuoso on the battlefield, the Wehrmacht's logistics skills were often lacking: German troops constantly ran out of fuel, ammunition and food during Operation Barbarossa, the 1941 invasion of the Soviet Union.
"... as this writer learned while observing an Israeli armored brigade on maneuvers along the Golan Heights in February 2019, the IDF may have only hours to prepare for battle along Israel's northern border. Time to fix mistakes is a luxury Israel does not have," the article concludes.
(The author of that article, Michael Peck is a contributing writer for the National Interest, and a Writing Fellow at the Middle East Forum.)
***
However,
 the exquisitely blended blundering bluster of the Army should be 
measured against the tangible steps the Army has indeed been 
courageously taking in confronting impending national security threats: 
All-Women tank crews.  Last week (at the approach to the consummation of
 the Holy Weeks of Shovavim), it was reported that the Israeli Army is 
introducing all female tank combat crews, apparently to protect the 
country from ISIS attacks in the South, and the like. No, we couldn't 
have made this up: https://www.jns.org/the-idfs-
Apparently,
 the Israeli Army has upgraded the religious standards of their military
 "Equality" crusade. No "Ta'aroves" (gender mixing) in these tanks, R"L,
 nor any need for those pesky mechiztos, like those hanging in some 
Chareidi buses.
Why in the world? Has recent 
exposure of the human-trafficking agenda of the Army's female draft 
prompted Teshuva (repentance) at the highest levels? Has Draft Office 
Commander of Vice Avner Lotati finally been sent to work in Hollywood?  
 Well, if so, why are there an estimated several dozen girls still 
languishing in military prisons Four and Six, wishing to avoid 
conscription into the Mizron Tzahali Paradigm?
Well,
 perhaps, this Army frumming initiative may have been reciprocal in 
nature.  Perhaps this overture is the Army's way of telegraphing 
"hakarat hatov" (a "thank you") in response to recent cooperation by a 
handful of trailblazing frum women, who've lately been spotted providing
 the IDF free headhunter services, by naively sending ostensibly "weak" 
girls into Rayon Dat interrogations.  (Presumably, this is being done 
with the best of intentions - to save the "weak" girls from falling into
 the Army (the latter being the very goal-by-design of the Rayon Dat).)
But
 questions still abound. Will the female tank personnel be provided 
tefillin, to actualize Spiritual Equality with the men? Will there be an
 accompanying Yo'etzet attached to every unit? What about an Ayin-Horah 
lady on call, if fighting ever gets really difficult for these neshei 
chayil? Another major question remaining is: will these 
Equality-showcasing units units be open to heterosexual women as 
well?...
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