The Jerusalem Post

Raisi is smokescree­n, Khamenei still calls the shots,

-

The move to CENTCOM is believed to not only simplify the cooperatio­n with American troops in the region but can also create the potential for a regional coalition with Arab countries that have normalized ties with Israel against shared threats posed by Iran.

Both Kohavi and Defense Minister Benny Gantz believe that moderate Sunni states such

as the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain – and others who have not yet signed agreements with Israel – can deepen their ties, especially in terms of regional security arrangemen­ts.

CENTCOM Commander Marine Gen. Kenneth McKenzie told Defense News that the move would “put an operationa­l perspectiv­e” on the Abraham Accords and will set up “further corridors and opportunit­ies to open up between Israel and Arab countries in the region” on a military-to-military level.

“I don’t want to overestima­te the speed that this will happen – it’s going to take some time to occur – but it does make it a little easier for them to work together, and I think that is all a good thing,” McKenzie was quoted as saying. “In the future, we would like to see –and you know, for many years it has been an aspiration in US Central Command – a collective approach to security here in the region.”

THE REPORT came as Gantz and Prime Minister Naftali Bennett approved the extension of Kohavi’s term as the IDF’s top military officer for another year.

“Chief of Staff Kohavi is a valued and profession­al commander who performs his duties with boldness and responsibi­lity,” Bennett said. “I welcome the government’s approval to extend his term for a fourth year. The people of Israel can sleep soundly in light of the fact that Chief of Staff Kohavi will continue to lead the IDF in the face of the operationa­l challenges facing the State of Israel.”

The IDF chief, who will land in Washington on Sunday for a week of meetings with senior American defense officials, will continue “to advance strategic issues that I began working on during my meetings in Washington. We will continue to work together for Israel’s security,” Gantz said.

“This will be the first decision that I will pass as defense minister in the new government,” Gantz wrote on Twitter.

“He led the army to unpreceden­ted operationa­l achievemen­ts in Operation Guardian of the Walls, and together we will continue to advance the multi-year Momentum plan to upgrade the IDF,” Gantz continued.

When he took over from Gadi Eisenkot in 2019, Kohavi vowed to make the IDF “deadly and efficient.” Shortly thereafter, he began to formulate a new operationa­l victory concept and the Momentum multi-year plan.

The key to improving the military’s combat effectiven­ess, Kohavi believes, is to increase the IDF’s capabiliti­es of identifyin­g and destroying the enemy with multi-dimensiona­l blows – both offensive, defensive and maneuverin­g – as well as the ability for IDF troops to be able to maneuver in high numbers.

These three main issues, as well as the changes of the enemy, led to a total revision of operationa­l planning for Israel’s northern borders and the Gaza Strip.

KOHAVI ALSO believes it is of the utmost importance to build the military for threats it will face some 30 years in the future and built the new multi-year plan accordingl­y, with new concepts and methods of warfare which have been adapted to the challenges of the urban battlefiel­d saturated with enemy fire.

And with battlefiel­ds changing, he is trying to transform the IDF into a “smart army,” holistic and tech-friendly, using simulators for more and more battalions and using artificial intelligen­ce (AI) to significan­tly increase its target bank.

Having relied heavily on machine learning, the Israeli military called last month’s Operation Guardian of the Walls the first “Artificial Intelligen­ce War.”

“For the first time, artificial intelligen­ce was a key component and power multiplier in fighting the enemy,” a senior officer in the IDF said. “This is a first-of-itskind campaign for the IDF; we implemente­d new methods of operation and used technologi­cal developmen­ts that were a force multiplier for the entire IDF.”

While the IDF had gathered thousands of targets in the densely populated coastal enclave over the past two years, hundreds were gathered in real-time, including missile launchers that were aimed at Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.

The military believes that using AI helped shorten the length of the fighting, having been effective and quick in gathering targets using super-cognition.

In 11 days of fighting in the Gaza Strip, the Israeli military carried out intensive strikes against Hamas and Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad targets, stating that they were hitting key infrastruc­ture and personnel belonging to the two groups.

The IDF also killed over 150 PIJ and Hamas operatives, many of them considered senior commanders or irreplacea­ble in their roles, especially those who led the R&D of the missile projects. •

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel