Israel army says US CENTCOM chief in Israel to assess security

“The relationship between Israel and the United States is unshakeable.” (Photo/Twitter @CENTCOM)
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Updated 06 August 2024
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Israel army says US CENTCOM chief in Israel to assess security

  • The military said Gallant and Kurilla discussed ways to “expand the international coalition facing aggressive activities by Iran and its proxies against Israel, and destabilising the Middle East”

JERUSALEM: The Israeli military said the head of US Central Command, General Michael Kurilla, arrived in Israel on Monday to assess the security situation as fears grow of a regional war.
Kurilla met Israeli army chief, Lt. General Herzi Halevi, and “held a joint situational assessment on security and strategic issues, as well as joint preparations in the region, as part of the response to threats in the Middle East,” a statement said.
The United States has deployed extra fighter jets and warplanes to the region to support Israel, as Iran and the Lebanese Hezbollah group have vowed to avenge the killings of Hamas political chief Ismail Haniyeh and Hezbollah commander Fuad Shukr last week.
Israel has claimed Shukr’s killing but has remained silent on the assassination of Haniyeh, which Iran has blamed on it.
“Your arrival in Israel at this time is a direct translation of US support for Israel into action,” Israel’s Defense Minister Yoav Gallant told Kurilla during their meeting, according to a military statement.
“The relationship between Israel and the United States is unshakeable.”
The military said Gallant and Kurilla discussed ways to “expand the international coalition facing aggressive activities by Iran and its proxies against Israel, and destabilising the Middle East.”
A European diplomat in Tel Aviv meanwhile said the diplomatic community was anticipating “fairly advanced” coordination in the response from Iran and its proxies.
“That doesn’t mean there will be a simultaneous response from all fronts. But in any case, it will be a coordinated response,” he said, declining to be named as he was not authorized to speak on the issue.
He said efforts were ongoing seeking to tone down the rhetoric and deescalate the situation.
“All the ingredients of a Greek tragedy are present: players who don’t want war but who are carried away by their own dynamics, by their own posture and by their own aggressive rhetoric, on both sides,” he said.
“We’re telling them they have to stop playing with fire, because the risk of flare-ups is higher than at any time since October 7.”

 


Israel defense minister vows to stay in Gaza, establish outposts

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Israel defense minister vows to stay in Gaza, establish outposts

  • His remarks, reported across Israeli media, come as a fragile US-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Hamas holds in Gaza

JERUSALEM: Defense Minister Israel Katz on Tuesday vowed Israel will remain in Gaza and pledged to establish outposts in the north of the Palestinian territory, according to a video of a speech published by Israeli media.
His remarks, reported across Israeli media, come as a fragile US-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Hamas holds in Gaza.
Mediators are pressing for the implementation of the next phases of the truce, which would involve an Israeli withdrawal from the territory.
Speaking at an event in the Israeli settlement of Beit El in the occupied West Bank, Katz said: “We are deep inside Gaza, and we will never leave Gaza — there will be no such thing.”
“We are there to protect, to prevent what happened (from happening again),” he added, according to a video published by Israeli news site Ynet.
Katz also vowed to establish outposts in the north of Gaza in place of settlements that had been evacuated during Israel’s unilateral disengagement from the territory in 2005.
“When the time comes, God willing, we will establish in northern Gaza, Nahal outposts in place of the communities that were uprooted,” Katz said, referring to military-agricultural settlements set up by Israeli soldiers.
“We will do this in the right way and at the appropriate time.”
Katz’s remarks were slammed by former minister and chief of staff Gadi Eisenkot, who accused the government of “acting against the broad national consensus, during a critical period for Israel’s national security.”
“While the government votes with one hand in favor of the Trump plan, with the other hand it sells fables about isolated settlement nuclei in the (Gaza) Strip,” he wrote on X, referring to the Gaza peace plan brokered by US President Donald Trump.
The next phases of Trump’s plan would involve an Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, the establishment of an interim authority to govern the territory in place of Hamas and the deployment of an international stabilization force.
It also envisages the demilitarization of Gaza, including the disarmament of Hamas, which the group has refused.
On Thursday, several Israelis entered the Gaza Strip in defiance of army orders and held a symbolic flag-raising ceremony to call for the reoccupation and resettlement of the Palestinian territory.