Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Evening Update: Terror Alert In Jerusalem



Terror Alert Declared In Jerusalem


Security forces maintained a state of increased readiness from Tuesday evening late into the night in Jerusalem in response to intelligence received by the Shin Bet security service indicating the possibility of a terror attack in the city.
Magen David Adom ambulance service declared a “Level C” alert, the second-highest level of readiness. Later they raised the alert to the highest level. Local firefighters were also on standby.
A police helicopter was patrolling the skies above the capital, and other units were deployed. There were also roadblocks at entrances to the city, and vehicles leaving nearby Arab villages were being checked.
The fear was of a terror attack, possibly by a suicide bomber, but the alert was “general, rather than specific,” security sources said.
Israeli officials have warned of an upsurge in attacks on Israelis from the West Bank of late. An annual survey released late last month said there had been an increase in the number of terror attacks carried out against Israelis in 2012 compared to 2011, but it was accompanied by a decrease in the number of fatalities.
According to the annual Shin Bet report, the number of terror attacks in the West Bank rose from 320 in 2011 to 578 in 2012, while 282 attacks were carried out in Jerusalem, compared to 191 in 2011.
According to the report, the increase was due in part to a 68% rise in what the Shin Bet refers to as “popular” terror attacks — mainly attacks involving Molotov cocktails. However, the number of attacks involving firearms and explosives also grew by 42% — 37 compared to 26 in 2011.
Ten Israelis were killed as a result of terror attacks in 2012, compared to 22 killed in 2011. Six of the victims were civilians and four were members of the security forces.

























“North Korea conducted its third nuclear test on Tuesday in defiance of U.N. resolutions, drawing condemnation from around the world, including from its only major ally, China, which summoned the North Korean ambassador to protest,”Reuters reports. “North Korea said the test had ‘greater explosive force’ than those it conducted in 2006 and 2009. Its KCNA news agency said it had used a ‘miniaturized’ and lighter nuclear device, indicating it had again used plutonium, which is suitable for use as a missile warhead.”
Outgoing Defense Secretary Leon Panetta called North Korea a “rogue state” whose nuclear weapons program poses a “serious threat” to U.S. national security. “We just saw what North Korea’s done in these last few weeks — a missile test and now a nuclear test,”Panetta said. “They represent a serious threat to the United States of America. We’ve got to be prepared to deal with that.”
Panetta is right. The leadership of the DPRK is off the reservation and highly unstable. We can’t rule out the possibility Pyongyang is building nuclear warheads to attach to ballistic missiles to fire at the U.S., a horrifying scenario like the one I envisioned in my 2008 novel,Dead Heat (in which four U.S. cities are hit with nuclear missiles during a presidential election.)
But there is another disturbing possibility as well: the Iranians may be paying the North Koreans to test nuclear warheads for them, and transferring the data to Tehran to help Iran further accelerate their bid for The Bomb. This strikes me as a more likely scenario, and thus one I wrote about in The Tehran Initiative (and play forward in my forthcoming thriller, Damascus Countdown.)
Unfortunately, what we’re seeing in the headlines today is not the stuff of geopolitical thrillers. It is real and it is dangerous. Today, the Weekly Standard — picking up on a story in the New York Times — notes that “an unnamed ‘senior American official’ suggests that North Korea is not just testing nukes for itself, but also for (and possibly with) the Iranians.”
The New York Times reports:
No country is more interested in the results of the North’s nuclear program, or the Western reaction, than Iran, which is pursuing its own uranium enrichment program. The two countries have long cooperated on missile technology, and many intelligence officials believe they share nuclear knowledge as well, though so far there is no hard evidence.
The Iranians are also pursuing uranium enrichment, and one senior American official said two weeks ago that “it’s very possible that the North Koreans are testing for two countries.” Some believe that the country may have been planning two simultaneous tests, but it could take time to sort out the data.







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