Wednesday 4 June 2014

Israel, Seeing the Writing on the Wall, Plans to Quadruple Air Strength.

"Allah made the Jews leave their homes by terrorising them so that you killed some & made many captive. And He made you inherit their lands, their homes & their wealth. He gave you a country you had not traversed before." So says Allah, speaking to Mohammed, recorded in the book that has rested for all time in heaven, the Koran, in verse 33:26. From the earliest days of Islam, Muslims have been terrorising, killing & dispossessing Jews. Allah has commanded them to do so.

It has never stopped, & don't be fooled by plaintive bleating about the 'plight' of the 'Palestinians'. Arabs are the sole source of Arab suffering. Muslims hate Israel because it is Jewish, not the other way around. There never was any stolen land or expulsion of Arabs, the myth is merely perpetuated in order to continue the 14-century-long war on the Jews.

Now, a major conflagration (the final conflagration?) is in sight: Syria is absolutely lawless, Iran is growing in confidence, Hamas is stockpiling a massive arsenal of rockets in Gaza & the present occupant of the White House is... whatever he is. (Obama could end up inspiring more conspiracy theories than Kennedy ever did, & that's without getting shot.)

Israel has seen the writing on the wall & she knows that she is alone, every other nation on Earth – fellow liberal democracies – have prostituted themselves to Saudi Arabian oil & the insanity of multiculturalism. Israel has been here before & knows she will have to be ruthless if she is to stave off the genocide planned for her by the forces of Islam. This is why she is quadrupling the size of her Air Force, as reported by the World Tribune on Monday (hat-tip to GENUG @GENUG):

Israel quadruples Air Force capability to 'strike thousands of terror targets' per day

Israel's military has been preparing to significantly improve air combat capabilities.

The Israel Air Force expects to quadruple offensive capabilities by 2015. Military sources said the Air Force was preparing its fighter-jet and attack helicopter fleets to strike thousands of targets per day.

"In a single day, Israeli planes can strike thousands of terror targets and exceed the IDF's [Israel Defense Forces] achievements during extended operations," the military said.

[On June 2, Israel and Syria exchanged fire along the Golan Heights. There were no reports of injuries.]

In mid-May, Israel Air Force commander Maj. Gen. Amir Eshel said the military service was only second to the United States. Eshel told a security conference that Air Force capabilities rose drastically over the last two years.

"I believe our capabilities are only second to the United States from both an offensive and defensive standpoint," Eshel said. "We have an unprecedented offensive capability, which allows us to accurately strike thousands of targets in one day. We have doubled our abilities twice in the past two years."

Eshel said his assessment was based on an Air Force study as well as talks with representatives of foreign militaries. He said the increasing firepower of the Air Force would enable Israel to defeat adversaries within days.

"The Air Force at the end of 2014, in less than 24 hours, can do what it did in three days during the Second Lebanon War [in 2006], and can do in 12 hours what it did in a week during Operation Pillar of Defense [in 2008],"Eshel said. "Israel cannot afford lengthy attacks. We need to win quickly. A short time, in my opinion, is a few days. I do not believe in conducting long wars."

The sources said the Air Force also improved interoperability and firepower accuracy. They said the military service was also implementing a doctrine on how to control and limit the pace of war.

"What characterizes [our] air power is our ability to control its impact, and this is very important during incidents of combat between wars," Eshel said. "Everything is flexible and subject to change. This is the advantage of the Air Force: the ability to take the hammer that was made for wars and use it in a more limited capacity."

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