Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Industry and Business News .




WAR REPORT
Israel fences itself in with barriers
by Staff Writers
Metulla, Israel (UPI) May 1, 2012


Israel is building a concrete security wall to protect its northernmost border town of Metulla from attacks by Hezbollah, adding to the accelerating fortification of its frontiers with Egypt, Syria and the Palestinians.

It's a defensive mindset that veteran Israeli commentator Alex Fishman suggests belies the threat of strikes against Iran. This obsession with security barriers has become "a national mental illness," he laments.

Metulla sits at the tip of a finger of Israeli territory that juts into southern Lebanon, a Hezbollah stronghold, and is surrounded on three sides by hostile terrain.

The 16-foot-high wall is 1 kilometer -- just more than half a mile -- long. But it's designed to strengthen the 1970s security fence that runs along Israel's entire 50-mile border with Lebanon.

And it symbolizes how, pretty soon, the Jewish state will be enclosed by steel and concrete, adding to its growing international political isolation over its apparent refusal to pull out of Jewish settlements in the West Bank, occupied since June 1967, and make peace with the Palestinians.

East of the Lebanese border security fence, another barrier runs along the heavily mined 1973 war cease-fire line with Syria from the Golan Heights, occupied by Israel since 1967.

It extends south to the border with Jordan to meet Israel's first security fence, built after 1967 to keep out Palestinian marauders. It stretches from the Sea of Galilee to the northern shore of the Dead Sea.

Only the southern border with Jordan between the Dead Sea and the Gulf of Aqaba, an arm of the Red Sea, is without a physical barrier.

But the word is that it, too, will be blocked off in the not-so-distant future because Jordan's monarchy, with which Israel signed a peace treaty in 1996, is looking shaky these days.

Fishman suggests the barrier-building says a lot about the state of Israel and its people amid the turmoil churning the Middle East right now, with the Jewish state facing unprecedented bombardment that by all accounts would makes Hitler's V1 and V2 blitz of London in 1944-45 pale into insignificance.

"We have become a nation that imprisons itself behind fences, which huddles terrified behind defensive shields," Fishman wrote in a bitter commentary in the mass-circulation Yediot Ahronot daily.

"We are again Diaspora Jews in our own country … Who would believe that once upon a time we spoke about integrating into the region? Now we are a tiny state with a large fence. How did this happen to us?...

"Such society, which loses its self-confidence, does not convey deterrence. With all the bombs and advanced aircraft, this is not a society that that conveys a sense of strength.

"The Americans and the Iranians can sleep well; this is not a society that will decide to strike in Iran and pay the price."

The current focus of all this barrier-building is the construction of a 165-mile-long, 16-foot-high electrified fence along the remote desert border with Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, a battleground from 1947-79.

It's made of galvanized steel bars and razor wire and runs northward from the resort of Eilat on the Gulf of Aqaba to the already-fenced off Gaza Strip on the Mediterranean coast.

By the time it's finished in 2013, it will be studded with remote video cameras and electronic sensors to detect intruders, whether they be terrorists or African migrants who are pouring into Israel across Sinai by the thousands looking for sanctuary or work.

Construction was speeded up in August after militants, supposedly linked to al-Qaida, killed eight Israelis, the worst attack on that border in 30 years.

The fence between the Sinai and Negev deserts is part of Israel's stepped up security on its southern flank since peace partner Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was toppled in a pro-democracy uprising.

Since then relations with Egypt have deteriorated to the point that the 1979 peace treaty with Egypt is in jeopardy.

In the occupied West Bank is the most notorious of all Israel's security barriers, 465 miles long, two-thirds built. It snakes across the territory, swallowing up large chunks of Palestinian farmland and lopping off 12 percent of the land Palestinians see as their future state.

The barrier comprises a towering concrete wall 30 feet high or sensor-laced steel fences with wide exclusion zones on either side.

.


Related Links






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








WAR REPORT
Lebanon stops arms headed to Syria rebels: security official
Beirut (AFP) April 28, 2012
The Lebanese navy intercepted three containers of weapons destined for Syrian rebel forces on board a ship originating from Libya, a security official told AFP on Saturday. The cargo of the ship contained heavy machineguns, artillery shells, rockets, rocket launchers and other explosives, a security official said. The 11 members of the crew were arrested pending investigation by a milita ... read more


WAR REPORT
Australian rare earths miner sues Malaysian opponents

NEMA Welcomes Legislation on Federal Helium Policy

Plan to Counter Space Threats Proposed

US Army Awards Lockheed Martin $391 Million for Counterfire Radar Production

WAR REPORT
Fourth Boeing-built WGS Satellite Accepted by USAF

Raytheon to Continue Supporting Coalition Forces' Information-Sharing Computer Network

Northrop Grumman Wins Contract for USAF Command and Control Modernization Program

TacSat-4 Enables Polar Region SatCom Experiment

WAR REPORT
A "mirror image" payload refueling for Arianespace's next Ariane 5 mission

SpaceX test fires rocket ahead of ISS cargo launch

India to ferry heaviest foreign satellite in August

Ariane 5 is provided its "brains" and the "kick" for Arianespace's third mission of 2012

WAR REPORT
China launches two navigation satellites

Astrium built Galileo satellites fit and fully operational in orbit

First payload ready for next batch of Galileo satellites

NASA Tests GPS Monitoring System for Big US Quakes

WAR REPORT
China Eastern to buy 20 Boeing 777-300s

JAL could go public again in July 2012: report

All Nippon Airways boosts profit, sales forecast

Slovenian adventurer ends eco-friendly trip around the world

WAR REPORT
Electric charge disorder: A key to biological order?

With new design, bulk semiconductor proves it can take the heat

Electron politics: Physicists probe organization at the quantum level

X-rays reveal molecular arrangements for better printable electronics

WAR REPORT
NASA Image Gallery Highlights Earth's Changing Face

Risat-1 satellite raised to its final intended orbit

Risat-1 catapults India into a select group of nations

NASA's Landsat Satellites See Texas Crop Circles

WAR REPORT
China says shuts Coke plant after chlorine reports

China's economic growth has pollution cost

Scientists find higher concentrations of heavy metals in post-oil spill oysters from Gulf of Mexico

Green-glowing fish provides new insights into health impacts of pollution




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement