The Jerusalem Post

IDF to fight short but intensive war in Gaza in any future conflict

Military completes largest drill since Operation Protective Edge

- • By ANNA AHRONHEIM

The next war with terrorist groups in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip will last no longer than Operation Protective Edge and will see the Israeli army deal a massive blow to Hamas and Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad.

The IDF has faced increasing criticism following allegation­s by former military ombudsman Maj.-Gen. (res.) Yitzhak Brick, who warned that the military, especially the ground forces, are not prepared for a large-scale war.

But the military says it has learned the lessons from the over-50-day Operation Protective Edge in 2014 as well as the numerous rounds of violence over the past year. The IDF says it has the capabiliti­es and intelligen­ce to inflict severe damage on terrorist groups in a short amount of time, should a war break out.

The military has also increased the number of Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad and Hamas targets which will be struck in the next campaign.

As one of his first visits as chief of staff, Lt.-Gen. Aviv Kochavi went to the Southern Command and met with senior officers and approved operationa­l plans for war, including setting up a centralize­d administra­tive unit to prepare a list of possible targets in Gaza in case a war should break out.

When Kochavi took office as the top military officer in January, southern Israel and the Gaza Strip became the top priority for the IDF, which has led the military to increase its readiness in the area.

The readiness process involves the cooperatio­n of all bodies in the IDF’s General Staff headed by the Southern Command and focuses on empowering intelligen­ce, linking field units with realtime intelligen­ce, increased

training of troops, and an extensive logistical effort.

While there has not been a war since 2014, in the past year since the “March of Return” protests began along the border fence, there have been 10 rounds of violent conflict between the two sides. The first six months of 2019 alone saw close to 1,000 rockets – the last violent round in May saw the two terrorist groups fire 700 rockets and one rocket-propelled grenade. Five Israeli civilians were killed in that round.

With the understand­ing that the transition from routine to war in the area can occur at a moment’s notice, the Gaza Division’s engineerin­g forces have also continued their work to improve the protection of the home front, including the upgraded barrier with the Strip, which is expected to be completed – both abovegroun­d and undergroun­d – by next summer to remove the threat of cross-border attack tunnels.

Until then, the army is not too

keen on another military operation inside the Hamas-controlled enclave.

Following the death of an Israeli civilian by a Kornet antitank missile fired at his car in May during the last round of violence, the military has also begun to construct large sand berms and planting trees to protect citizens from threats such as anti-tank fire emanating from the Strip.

But anti-tank fire and tunnels are not the only threats that the military is concerned about. The increased use of drones and other small quad-copters by groups to either gather intelligen­ce on troop movements or attack troops is also of major concern.

In the six months since Kochavi entered office and placed Gaza at the top of the priority list, the Southern Command has built a dedicated training program under which unit training has been carried out on the basis of a southern scenario. The plan includes battalion fire drills which are run according to designated battalion combat criteria in the Gaza Strip.

On Wednesday, the military completed the largest drill in the coastal enclave since Operation Protective Edge, which saw the participat­ion of eight brigade commanders, hundreds of reservists and the participat­ion of air and naval forces.

During the four-day drill, key scenarios which the IDF expects to encounter in any future war were practiced, including maritime attacks by terrorist groups in the Strip, evacuation of wounded soldiers, IDF incursions into northern Gaza as well as attacks on civilian communitie­s and the evacuation of communitie­s along the border.

The large-scale exercise was “another significan­t step in improving the IDF’s operationa­l preparedne­ss in the Gaza Strip,” the army said in a statement, adding that the drill was “preplanned as part of the training schedule for 2019.” •

 ?? (Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters) ?? PALESTINIA­NS RUN for cover from Israeli gunfire and tear gas during a June 21 protest at the Israel-Gaza border fence, in the southern Gaza Strip. The IDF has said the next conflict in Gaza will be shorter but more intensive.
(Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters) PALESTINIA­NS RUN for cover from Israeli gunfire and tear gas during a June 21 protest at the Israel-Gaza border fence, in the southern Gaza Strip. The IDF has said the next conflict in Gaza will be shorter but more intensive.

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