http://www.fresh.co.il/vBulletin/showthread.php?t=216147
Mideast Crisis To Drive Future Needs
By BARBARA OPALL-ROME, TEL AVIV,  Defense News,  15 August 2006
 
Israel Wants More Active Defenses, Better Intel
 
 
While the final chapters of the 2006 Lebanon war have yet to be written,
far-reaching lessons are already evident to one member of Israel's high
command who authored the first draft of the nearly five-week-long work in
progress.
 
For example, Israel needs to better defend its civilians against rocket
attack, while its troops need better armor and active defenses against
anti-tank missiles, and systems to detect and destroy tunnels.
 
What has come as a surprise to many here and abroad is what appears to be a
faltering, underwhelming display of Israel's reputed military might.
 
That's because Israel's war against the Syrian- and Iranian-supported
Hizbollah is not being executed as originally planned, Maj.  Gen.  Benjamin
Gantz, commander of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) Army Headquarters, told
Defense News in an exclusive interview.
 
According to Gantz, broader "legitimate and reasonable" considerations by
Israeli political leaders  served to alter the timing  in which the four
planned phases of the war have been executed.  The former paratrooper
stressed the psychological and societal factors underlying the government's
reluctance  to re-enter the Lebanese quagmire, Israel's own version of
America's Vietnam.
 
Instead of the rolling, sequential campaign initially conceived - up to a
week of standoff air-land battle,  a three- or four-day intensive ground
control assault,  more than a month of what he called "cleansing" operations
and another two to three weeks to return to the border - IDF ground forces
still have not begun full-strength ground maneuvers, Gantz said Aug. 10.
 
"We planned for a bullet train,  but what we got was an urban bus with
several stops,"
 
he said of the planned nine- to 10-week operation which should have driven
down the rocket threat to Israel's homefront  within two to three weeks.
 
While unstated,  Gantz seemed to blame himself and the system  for the huge
disconnect between war planning and reality.  
 
"The concept I described was divorced almost completely from other
[political] considerations, which were perfectly legitimate, but not
necessarily operationally correct,"
 
he said
 
The government of Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert launched its offensive
July 12 after the Shiite militia attacked an Israeli outpost on the Lebanese
border, killing eight soldiers and abducting two.
 
At press time, more than 80 Israeli troops had died in fighting, most at the
hands of a highly trained and motivated enemy using sophisticated anti-tank
weapons, good communications, knowledge of the local terrain and a network
of tunnels.  Forty Israeli civilians have perished under a barrage of more
than 3,500 rockets and missiles fired by Hizbollah.
 
Hundreds of civilians in Lebanon have been killed in the course of Israel's
bombing campaign across the country to destroy Hizbollah and its store of
rockets.  Israel claims it has killed nearly 400 Hizbollah fighters, a count
that the Shiite militia refutes.  Few have been captured, said Reserve Brig.
Gen. Shuki Schacur, deputy commander of the Northern Command, "because they
fight to the death."
 
It remains unclear how much longer Israel has to press its offensive as
diplomats at the United Nations race to halt the fighting and station
multinational peacekeepers to calm the region in hopes of fostering a
long-term settlement.
 
 
'Introspection and Debate'
 
As the commander of the special liaison unit  operating in south Lebanon
with the IDF's own Lebanese Christian proxies, Gantz and his men  were the
last Israeli troops to vacate the war-torn country in 2000  after a costly
and publicly divisive  22-year occupation. For the past five years, as corps
commander  and then top boss of Israel's entire Northern Command,  Gantz had
been studying the enemy, managing periodic eruptions and planning for the
war against Hizbollah now unfolding.
 
While many in Israel,  including those in leadership positions, had
arrogantly dismissed Hizbollah  as a terrorist gang, Gantz was one of the
few who eyed the enemy with professional respect.
 
"When we started this planning,  I said I didn't want to deploy a single
soldier there,"
 
he said.  
 
"My force was the last to leave  and I couldn't stomach the thought of going
back.  But after months of careful study, I understood that if we didn't put
in three divisions, we wouldn't get out of the situation with any meaningful
advantage."
 
Gantz firmly refutes those  who faulted Lt. Gen.  Dan Halutz, IDF chief of
staff and former Air Force commander,  for a misplaced reliance on the air
campaign.
 
"There was absolutely no one in any military leadership position  who
claimed airpower alone  could deliver the goods,"
 
he said.  
 
"But the political level  wanted to maximize the standoff firepower  and the
air campaign and, if there wasn't any other choice,  to implement the ground
war.
 
"From the aspect of building and fortifying [domestic] legitimacy,  I
recognize this kind of introspection and debate [leading up to the Aug. 9
Cabinet decision for a large-scale ground offensive]  had to be done,
despite my professional military opinion  that it should have been done
three weeks ago,"
 
 Gantz said.  
 
"But now that we have the domestic legitimacy, we need to get on with the
big offensive©  All the rest will have to wait for serious evaluation when
it's all over."
 
Immediate Lessons Learned
 
What is painfully clear  is the need to defend against high-trajectory
rockets and short-range missiles, said Gantz, who now is entrusted with
designing, training and equipping Israel's land combat force.
 
"Now we have no active defense against Katyushas and short-range rockets,
and we will need to invest in this area,"
 
he said.  Gantz and others, like Uzi Eilam, a retired IDF general and former
military research-and-development director, acknowledge that even the most
capable system will be unable to defend completely  against the type of
salvos that have terrorized Israeli citizenry over the past month.
 
Nor, they say, will Israel be able to afford enough systems  to completely
cover broad areas.
 
"But at a minimum, we need to have a robust, deployable capability to defend
highly populated  and strategically sensitive areas,"
 
Gantz said.
 
Eilam admits that Israeli decision-makers within the General Staff and
Israel's Ministry of Defense, himself included, "didn't give proper respect
for this threat."
 
He said Israel's defense establishment will be forced to include new
parameters in the cost-benefit calculations driving military development
decisions.
 
"This war surely has taught us that we need to start calculating all those
nonconcrete benchmarks, such as damage to morale and deterrence,"
 
Eilam said.
 
Another huge lesson that Gantz said will require extensive assessment  is
the desired balance between airpower and other precision, stand-off strike
systems and ground-maneuver capabilities.
 
Citing the U.S. military's campaign  to remove Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein,
 
"The Americans fired 40 Tomahawks and delivered an awesome air offensive,
but in the end, it was the guy on the ground who pulled Saddam out of the
ground,"
 
he said.
 
Gantz also said the General Staff will have to rethink  its traditional
tendency to target reserve force training  for the first hit  when
confronted with difficult funding priority decisions.  Likewise, he said,
training for active-duty forces should not suffer as much during
budget-cutting exercises.
 
"In the beginning of this war,  we took a battalion [Givati infantry] from
Gaza  and moved them north,  into an entirely different doctrinal,
technological, threat-driven theater,"
 
Gantz said.  
 
"We pounced on them  and equipped them with all the tools they needed  in a
matter of hours.  And even though they performed superbly when they got into
the war,  it shouldn't have to be done this way."  
 
 
Lesson on Reserves
 
Another immediate lesson  drawn directly from the fight  is Israel's need
for more war reserves.
 
"This is an entire field onto itself, and engineers and statisticians will
have to figure out what are our optimum requirements. The emphasis here is
not on quality, which we have, but on quantity,"
 
he said.
 
As for new weaponry, Gantz agreed with many former defense officials that
the MoD should expedite development of an active protection system to defend
tanks and armored vehicles  from the type of anti-tank missiles and rounds
used so effectively by Hizbollah forces.  Gantz also said Israel will have
to give higher priority  for armored heavy mechanized forces  and other
ground vehicles.
 
Israel's MoD has developed and tested  the Trophy active protection system,
developed by Rafael, and another system, the Iron Fist, by Israel Military
Industries, but funding constraints  have slowed the transition to
procurement.
 
Referring to Trophy,  the more advanced of the two systems, Shmuel Yachin, a
retired brigadier general and former military research and development
chief, said,
 
"If we would have had a budget decision in time, we could have had a few
dozens of tanks with this system fighting up north."
 
Finally,  Gantz acknowledged a priority to develop capabilities for
detecting and destroying tunnels, a threat that has confounded Israeli
troops in the north and in Gaza.  And while the threat differs in the two
theaters, Gantz said more efforts will be needed to determine a mix of
capabilities needed to deny the enemy this effective underground warfare
capability.  
 
 
New Systems Deployed
 
The greatest achievement, said Gantz, is the Northern Command's ability to
quickly equip brigade and below echelons with the IDF's new Tzayad, or
Hunter, digitized command-and-control system.  He noted that Northern
Command's brigades were not scheduled to begin receiving these capabilities
until the end of this year.
 
"It's unbelievable, but we went from zero to five, almost six digitized
brigades during the war fighting,"
 
he said.  Gantz said results were immediately discernable in the ability of
the digitized brigades to apply firepower "much smarter and more
effectively."
 
He credited technical representatives of Elbit Systems and other industries,
who were deployed just inside Israel's fighting front, for working around
with the IDF to integrate these needed capabilities.
 
Another Elbit system, the Skylark tactical unmanned aerial vehicle, saw
operational fighting for the first time.  Imagery from the Skylark was used
to actually locate and destroy many Hizbollah launchers, Gantz said.
 
"Our ground forces had their own independent overhead imagery, which gave
them a capability they never had before,"
 
he said.
 


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