Jerusalem Post: Yemeni attacks are not a passing incident
Exclusive – Al-Khabar Al-Yemeni:
The Israeli newspaper The Jerusalem Post said that the attack on Ramon Airport, in which Yemeni forces used a single drone and hit the passenger terminal, came after the sirens had stopped warning of a previous drone that had entered the airspace over the Negev desert and announced the end of the state of danger, but suddenly, an explosion was heard at Ramon Airport without warning.
The newspaper said, “This latest attack used complex methods of distraction and surprise to achieve the Houthis’ goals.”
The newspaper added, “A patient adversary tested our habits, waited for the announcement of the end of the danger, and then exploited a gap between vigilance and a return to normalcy. The lesson here is procedural, not just technological.”
The newspaper’s analyst, Seth Frantzman, said that the threat of Yemeni drones had been sporadic, but the attack on Ramon Airport showed that it remained a threat and could become dangerous. He added that the danger lies in the fact that attempts to intercept Yemeni drones are carried out without official announcements or sirens, which could create the dangerous impression that the threat has passed when it is still present.
The newspaper demanded that “Israel” extend the duration of the sirens and not end them immediately after the end of the security event, as there is a high probability of a surprise attack shortly thereafter.
The Jerusalem Post also revealed that regional leaders, referring to the regimes of a number of Arab countries secretly allied with the Israeli occupation, warned Israel of the security gap along the borders between occupied Palestine and Egypt and occupied Palestine and Jordan.
In this regard, the newspaper said that “Israel” must rebalance resources in the southern areas of occupied Palestine by strengthening radar coverage and ready-made interception systems.
The newspaper also revealed that there is a gap between the sirens and the warning messages sent to settlers’ phones, as proven by the strike that hit Ramon Airport in the passenger terminal, which occurred without sirens sounding, while sirens sounded in areas where no attack took place.
The Hebrew newspaper also called for raising the level of coordination between Tel Aviv, Cairo, and Amman, and for calm coordination to close the “radar blind spots” and exchange securing airspace in the Egyptian and Jordanian border areas with “Israel.”