In addition to building a wall on its northern border.
Tel
Aviv boosts troops at borders with Egypt and Syria
Israel
is to deploy at least 22 reserve battalions on its borders with Egypt
and Syria, claiming the growing instability in the two countries
makes it necessary to be ready for possible external security
threats.
RT,
2
May, 2012
Israel
is to deploy at least 22 reserve battalions on its borders with Egypt
and Syria, claiming the growing instability in the two countries
makes it necessary to be ready for possible external security
threats.
The
Israeli Defense Force (IDF) has been given an approval of a call-up
of additional force by Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee although
they exceed the average. Reservists from six battalions have already
received their orders, even though many of them are soldiers who have
already completed their annual reserve duty.
Israeli
generals say these troops are needed to deal with security threats
which are coming from Israel’s borders with Egypt and Syria, and
also because of growing instability in those countries.
The
situation on the Sinai Peninsula which borders Israel is becoming
unmanageable, RT’s correspondent Paula Slier reports from Israel.
Since the ouster of former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, she
said, Sinai police have been attacked more than 50 times by local
Palestinian jihadist groups, as well as by the local branch of
Al-Qaeda which is operating in the region.
On
April 22, Israeli Minister of Foreign Affairs Avigdor Lieberman said
in a letter to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that he was more
worried by developments along Israel's southern border than by the
Iranian threat. He advises Netanyahu to send three or four divisions
to the area and to prepare for political changes in Egypt.
For
more than a year now has been Cairo facing turmoil following the
ouster of the longtime president. And with just three weeks left
before elections scheduled for May 23-24 the violence continues.
On
Wednesday, clashes between police and civilians saw at least 11
Egyptian protesters killed and more than 160 wounded in front of
Defense Ministry in Cairo. People are protesting against Egypt’s
ruling military body and disqualification of Islamist Salafi leader
Hazem Salah Abu-Ismail from the presidential race.
Army
troops have been deployed in Cairo ready to end the violence.
At
the beginning of April, Egypt reinforced its army in Sinai, with
Israeli permission, with seven battalions to combat terrorism on the
peninsula. But Lieberman believes Egypt is possibly in breach of the
peace treaty and will send more troops into Sinai without Israeli
consent.
The
Egyptian maneuvers came just days after suspected Sinai militants
fired rockets at the residential area in the southern Israeli city of
Eilat.
Meanwhile
in Syria, violence is still continuing despite the ceasefire
implemented on April12 and the observers’ mission on the ground.
The Israeli-Syrian border lies near the Golan Heights, territory
which Israel captured from its neighbor in 1967.
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