'Keep
calm and carry on' message to worried Israelis
OCCUPIED JERUSALEM: Israeli
media and officials sought to calm the public on Thursday, as queues
for gas masks lengthened amid expectations of a US-led military
strike against neighbouring Syria.
29
August, 2013
.
"Keep
calm and carry on" was the headline of a front-page analysis in
the Jerusalem Post, echoing a World War II British government slogan.
Most
media on Thursday sought to ease fears of a Syrian backlash against
staunch US ally Israel, which insists it is not a party to events
across its northern border.
"With
(Israeli) military intelligence keeping more eyes and ears open to
enemy activity than ever before, the combination of Israeli's
firepower and accurate intelligence would spell very bad news for the
Assad regime should it choose to target Israel in response to an
attack on Syria by the United States," the Post wrote.
"Defence
officials are quite confident he will not commence hostilities
against Israel," it added. "Doing so would likely sign his
regime's death certificate."
Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's eight-member security cabinet in
Wednesday authorised a limited call-up of reservists but the premier
said in a statement that members of the public had "no reason to
change their routines."
Haaretz
daily said that those to be called up numbered "a few hundred"
personnel considered vital, including members of missile defence, air
force, intelligence and civil defence units.
"We
need to make preparations but also to go about our daily lives,"
Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon told an economic conference in Tel Aviv
on Wednesday.
News
website Ynet reported on Thursday morning that "hundreds"
of people were waiting outside a gas mask distribution centre in
central Tel Aviv before it opened.
Public
radio said that "thousands" of people were queueing at a
distribution site in the northern city of Haifa, about 70 kilometres
(43 miles) from the Syrian border at its closest point.
Maariv
said that a centre in Jerusalem was forced to close on Wednesday
after anxious residents grabbed all the mask kits on the premises, in
a scene the paper described as a "battleground."
Nevertheless,
Maariv reported, "security officials said that the situation
assessment was that the likelihood of an attack on Israel was low."
The
protective kits were first distributed to the Israeli public during
the 1991 Gulf War over Kuwait when Saddam Hussein's Iraq fired 39
Scud missiles at Israel as the US-led coalition launched Operation
Desert Storm.
In
addition to gas masks they contain syringes of the anti-nerve gas
agent atropine for self-injection.
Veteran
Yediot Aharonot diplomatic writer Shimon Shiffer recalled the 1991
attacks, which despite Israeli fears, did not deliver
non-conventional warheads and caused few casualties.
"Yesterday,
against the backdrop of pictures of panicked civilians crowding the
distribution centres for gas mask kits, I remembered something I said
back then:
'There are no chemical weapons and there will be no
chemical weapon attack,'" Shiffer wrote in the top-selling
daily.
"It
seems to me that what was correct then, is correct today too. I dare
to say that no chemical weapon attack is expected on Israeli targets.
We can relax."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.