The Jerusalem Post

PM adviser: Israel has homegrown Islamic State threat in hand

Eitan Ben-David: To our satisfacti­on, the situation is reasonable

- • By DAN WILLIAMS

Israel’s crackdown on Arab citizens trying to join Islamic State in Syria or Iraq or to set up cells at home has prevented the threat reaching the scale seen in the West, an adviser to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a magazine interview.

A rash of defections to Islamic State-held areas of Syria and Iraq and trials of Israeli-Arab citizens for identifyin­g with the jihadist group prompted President Reuven Rivlin to warn in January that “considerab­le radicaliza­tion” was taking root among Israel’s Arab minority.

Eitan Ben-David, head of the Counter-Terrorism Bureau in Netanyahu’s office, told the journal Israel Defense that “more than a few dozen, but not more than 100” Israeli Arabs had joined Islamic State’s ranks – and some might return.

“These foreign fighters can certainly pose a grave danger internally, so the Shin Bet [Israel Security Agency] and all the state system is doing very good work in foiling this threat, which could be a kind of spreading cancer,” Ben-David said.

“To our satisfacti­on, the situation is reasonable. It is not like any European country, nor even America, or places like China or Russia which have had a great number of homegrown ISIS fighters,” he said.

Israel outlawed Islamic State in 2014 and negotiated the repatriati­on for trial of several Arab citizens who had joined or tried to join the insurgents via Turkey or Jordan.

But government policy hardened last year after one Israeli Arab used a para-glider to fly into an Islamic State-controlled part of southern Syria and after another who had served as a volunteer in Israel’s army defected to the insurgents.

Further raising alarm, two video clips surfaced in October in which Islamic State gunmen vowed in Arabic-accented Hebrew to strike Israel. The group’s leader, Abu Bakr Baghdadi, echoed the threat in an audiotape released in December.

But Ben-David sounded circumspec­t about that prospect, citing potentiall­y more pressing dangers from Lebanon’s Hezbollah guerrillas or Palestinia­n fighters.

In an incident on Thursday, a Palestinia­n woman tried to stab an IDF soldier in the West Bank and was shot dead, the military said.

In the last half year, Palestinia­n attacks have killed 28 Israelis and two visiting US citizens. Israeli forces have shot dead at least 196 Palestinia­ns, 134 of whom were assailants. Others were killed in clashes and protests.

“When it comes to Islamic State, we worry about terrorist attacks against Israeli or Jewish targets, including abroad, but we are not a main target right now,” Ben-David said.

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