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Al-Ahed Telegram

Ex-officers say "Israelis" should have "rocket rooms"

Ex-officers say
folder_openResistance Ops. access_time16 years ago
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Source: AFP, 04-02-2008
OCCUPIED AL-QUDS: Retired senior officers told "Israelis" on Saturday to prepare "rocket rooms" as protection against a rain of missiles expected to be fired at the Jewish state in any future conflict. Speaking on radio as part of a military propaganda offensive, retired General Udi Shani said: "The next war will see a massive use of ballistic weapons against the whole of "Israeli" territory."
Shani was tasked recently with drawing up a report on the way the military authorities operated during "Israel's" 2006 summer war in Lebanon.
During that conflict thousands of rockets fired by Hizbullah hit "Israel", but were limited to the north of the country from where hundreds of thousands of people were evacuated.
The character of war has changed, said the general.
"Strikes to the rear must now be taken into account - that is what will come and we must prepare in a totally different way for this eventuality," he said.
Another reserve officer, Colonel Yehiel Kuperstein, added: "Protection of civilians must today be assured even inside their homes.
"There is no absolute protection, but the best possible sort is that of a room able to provide shelter" inside houses, he said, evoking the norms in force in "Israel" for several years which envisage each apartment having a room with reinforced walls able to serve as a shelter.
"Today in "Israel" only one third of apartments have such a room able to provide shelter ... they have neither an air filter nor ventilation system enabling anyone to stay there for a long time," Kuperstein said.
At the beginning of 2008 the military command in charge of passive defense began an information campaign to prepare "Israelis" for any future conflict "in the light of lessons drawn from the war in Lebanon."
The authorities have distributed a brochure in six languages with advice on what to do, particularly in the event of missile attacks, as well as launching a campaign on radio and television.
The report of a commission of inquiry into failings in the Lebanon war, which was released Wednesday, highlighted serious errors in the protection of frontline residents.

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