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Authors: Patrick Robinson

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“Well,” Morgan said, “the only thing I can imagine is that Ray Kerman had a sudden attack of conscience and went over to the other side.”

“Arnie, I understand that is a possibility. What brings me here is to discuss what we should do in the event he moves on from the Hamas groups fighting in the Holy Land and decides to have a go at the rest of the Western World.”

“Christ. I guess we better find him before he gets that far. But I don’t think anyone would be stupid enough to plan a mass murder of civilians any more. Not after 2001. There’s no doubt the U.S. military scared the hell out of the entire Muslim world when they pulverized Bin Laden’s forces, but we gotta keep our guard right up. Because this Kerman character is, in my view, about ten times more dangerous than Al-Qaeda. And right now he’s only practicing. And I think he might already have grabbed $100 million of our money.”

“That’s what we think. But we don’t know where he’s put it, and we don’t know where he is. So far as I can see, we can only keep a sharp eye on big crimes and bombs in the Holy Land.”

“Well, George. I think we should alert the Mossad and Shin Bet as to our suspicions and fears for the future. They’re pretty good at finding people. Right now I’d be 90 percent certain those robberies were carried out by a military professional of Major Kerman’s caliber. And talking of caliber, I would not be surprised if the bullets that hit the SAS Sergeant were from the same MP5 as the one that hit the alarm system in the Tel Aviv bank. SAS weapons are customized and highly coveted. Once you own one, you’ll never give it up. Maybe they could check.”

“I’ll do that this afternoon, Arnie. Meanwhile, do we let the Brits know we are onto something?”

“Might as well. But they’ll be on the leading edge of this inquiry. The Brits only sound stupid. It’s part of their weird upbringing. But they always know a lot more than you think.”

The two Admirals sat in silence for a few moments. Then George Morris asked, “How do you think a new recruit like Major Kerman would get from a back street in Hebron to running operations for the Hamas?”

“Well, you know they’d be extremely suspicious, right from the get-go. He’s probably on a trial right now, but I guess those robberies proved a point real quick. Kerman’s probably already in touch with the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, which is strong down in the Gaza Strip and has a very moderate agenda, centering on the total destruction of Israel and the immediate creation of a Palestinian State.”

“Nothing serious?” said Admiral Morris, chuckling.

“Hell, no. Just the brink of World War III…. and remember, the Jihad is pretty ruthless in its fight against Israel. They were the guys who killed or injured a hundred people in the shopping mall in Tel Aviv a few years back. It has four main Palestinian factions, and one of them operates up near the Lebanon border with Hezbollah.

“The key, George, may be a guy called Sheik Biud Altmimi. He’s from Hebron and is known to be supported by Iran, Kerman’s homeland. But none of it’s easy. An awful lot of those Fundamentalist military leaders are already in jail, in various countries like Egypt, but especially in Israel.

“A man like Major Kerman would be the best thing that could ever happen to those kind of terrorists. With a leader like this SAS Commander, they could still launch very destructive attacks on the West.”

“Well, right now we can’t do much except to alert everyone to keep a very careful watch on the situation in Israel.”

“Yeah,” said Admiral Morgan. “And stand by for the unexpected. I doubt Major Kerman’s $100 million is sitting idle.”

3

Wednesday, April 27, 2005
The Golan Heights
(Five Miles Inside the Syrian Disengagement Line)

T
HERE’S TENSION UP HERE
, even in the quietest hollows. Even five miles behind the Syrian border patrols, there is always that simmering Arab resentment along the ridges of the looming natural fortress of Golan.

The greatest tank battle the world has ever seen was fought here, in the 1973 Yom Kippur War. Israel won it, leaving behind 1,200 blasted Syrian steel hulks. And amid the debris of war, there was the rage of an ancient nation, the custodians of Damascus, the oldest continuously inhabited city on this earth.

The Golan Heights is a dark and formidable range, a green-and-granite landscape, strewn about with black basalt boulders, possibly placed by the Devil himself, on this centuries-old battleground of the religious faiths.

Doves become hawks up here. For just a very few miles to the west lies the Syrian Disengagement Line. And then, five miles on, across No Man’s Land, there is carved in the mountains, another line, along which the hated Israeli conquerors guard the spoils of
war, vast lands which were once as Arabian as the towering Citadel of Damascus.

Today there were almost 100 armed warriors gathered in an old Syrian military camp. Their fifty-foot-long open-sided tent was new, and it was set beneath new camouflage, netting and brush-wood, in a remote vale between two granite rises, through which the snowcapped crown of Mount Herman could clearly be seen. The old compound was ringed with its original sandbag walls four feet high. Four manned machine gun nests punctuated those walls. There were lookouts in the surrounding hills. Each man had a cell phone and a loaded MP5 carbine at the ready. The place was on a strict war footing, in the tradition of the Golan Heights.

Three unmarked military trucks were parked outside. Beyond them was a rough, wooden building, with a tin chimney jutting from its roof. Outside the rear entrance was a broken-down tanker truck, filled with fresh water. But it was still obvious there were more men here today than those actually living in the compound.

Inside the tent there was a long, trestle table, behind which, supported by two easels, was a large-scale corkboard holding three wide maps and two charts. The assembled armed men sat on ammunition crates, making notes, listening to two Syrian officers, who were lecturing them on the least visible point of entry into No Man’s Land, and into Israel.

Between the two instructors sat the Commanding Officer of the 1st Battalion, Hamas Assault Force—General Ravi Rashood, formerly of D-Squadron SAS, Sandhurst, and Harrow. Promotion had proved to be swift for the best Western officer ever to offer his services to a Third World terrorist group. Major Ray Kerman no longer existed.

Today he wore battle fatigues, and around his head and shoulders was the black-and-white headdress, complete with the two-stranded cord. He looked what he now was, a battle-hardened desert fighter, descended from Bedouins, operating on behalf of an Islamic nation. In his pocket he carried a handwritten note that read in Arabic: “
Dearest Ravi, Please take care of Ahmed. You and he are all I have left now. Allah go with with you both. I love you, Shakira.

The young woman who had saved his life running through those blasted Palestinian streets almost a year ago was now his only personal relationship. She and her brother had hidden him, and then smuggled him north to the isolated little Druze village of Mas’ada, just a few miles from the Hamas compound.

Several weeks later, after Ray Kerman had been accepted into Hamas, it was Shakira who had befriended a senior clerk in the Jerusalem bank and mapped out the floor plan and security system; Shakira who had somehow penetrated A. M. Schwartz National Locksmiths in Hebron and drawn up the diagrams of their most secure gate and door systems.

After that Ray Kerman had made his position clear. He would either take complete command of the operation or it would not happen.

With some reluctance, and a little suspicion, the Hamas commanders decided they had nothing to lose by agreeing. They could always shoot him. But by the evening of December 26, they knew they had a brand-new military leader. And in a dusty cellar hideaway, on the outskirts of Bethlehem, Ray was commissioned in the field, appointed General Rashood, Commander-in-Chief, First Battalion, Hamas Assault Force.

Shakira had been there, and they had sat the night out, huddled together against the stone wall, sharing a blanket, talking through an adrenaline high with the sixteen other Hamas freedom fighters who had hoisted $100 million out of the two banks. Ray found the conversation unusually agreeable. He liked his companions, and he was falling in love with the beautiful Shakira, whose life he had saved, as she had saved his.

When they had all prayed together the following morning, he had felt at home, here in this sandy dungeon. He remembered the words of the Koran, spoken to him long ago by the North London Mullah:

For you were enemies

And He joined your hearts together

And now you are brothers

Burdened by the death of her two young children yet free of the strain of an arranged Muslim marriage to a nice man she had never loved, Shakira now devoted her time to the planning of Hamas attacks on the Israelis. She still wore traditional Arab dress, and she remained a devout Muslim. However, she had taken to arriving for work among the Hamas military wearing boots, jeans, and a combat jacket. Such was her reputation, and so sharp was her mind, no one ever questioned this break with tradition. Shakira of the Desert had become a law unto herself. And she truly worshiped General Rashood, whose word had now become everyone’s law.

On two or three of the less dangerous missions she had insisted on joining the frontline force, once successfully blowing up an empty Israeli tank. And she now assumed she could take part in any mission she wished. And the General mostly shrugged and agreed. However, Shakira was not permitted to join this gathering on the Golan Heights, and she was currently sulking back in Damascus, while the former Major Kerman briefed his troops for tonight’s insertion into Israel.

He was only just back himself from a third mission inside the Israeli border. The operations had been spread over one and a half months, each one lasting seven days and seven nights. Each time Ravi had taken just four men to the observation post he had established on the slopes of the mountain that rises up to the ruined battlements of Nimrod Fortress. This thirteenth-century Syrian castle, which they had once defended against the marauding Crusaders, occupies a select place in the folklore of the nation.

It was a devasting blow when it fell into Israeli hands in the Yom Kippur War. But that’s what happened, and borders were constructed to its east, and there it stood high on the Golan plain, surrounded by the wreckage of a thousand tanks, and several hundred ghosts of Syria’s fighting men.

Nimrod Fortress, located now in Israel, has one of the most commanding views in all of the Middle East, spectacular vistas of the lush farmland of the Northern Galilee. It was from this high garrison in the 1967 war that Syrian forces launched attack after
attack on the Israelis below, blasting shells into the kibbutz communities of Dan, Ashmura, and Shi’ar Yashuv.

On that occasion the Israelis outflanked them, counterattacking behind the defenses, forcing the total surrender, or abject retreat of all Syrian units on the Golan. It was, if anything, worse in 1973, after the Israelis struggled up to the Heights, the odds stacked against them, and with stupendous courage, hurled the attackers back, driving on toward Damascus, before the United Nations demand for peace was heeded.

No Syrian can even think about the Golan Heights, and the annexing of the ancient Nimrod Fortress without a rising sense of rage, frustration, and, in the Arabian ethic, an obdurate, unending desire for revenge.

If that awareness was powerful in 1973, it became obsessive after the end of 2004, because in the final months of that year the Israelis committed the unthinkable. They bulldozed the entire interior of the ancient fortress, and turned it into a high-security prison, constructed with massive granite blocks, inside the old castle ramparts. Behind its towering, gray, five-foot-thick walls, was incarcerated fifty of the most important political prisoners the Israelis had ever captured. It was packed with personnel from Hamas and its sister organization, Hezbollah, along with various other highly influential members of the Islamic Jihad.

Nimrod Jail thus stood as a terrible symbol of Israeli power, constructed, perhaps, in anger at a violent rash of terrorist attacks at the end of 2001, but as inflammatory, in its way, as the division of Jerusalem itself.

On their most recent mission, Ravi Rashood and his team had again watched the place ceaselessly for one week, observing the jail, noting the comings and goings of the guards, observing the change of shifts, counting the minutes of the four-man outside patrols, measuring the distance from the main gate to the lower level of the old rock-built foundation, gauging the precise time it took one guard to walk down there, and then assessing the time that would be needed for other men to make the short journey, some of whom may be weak, or even ill.

Trying to log the timing of the lights in the main courtyard had
proved to be almost impossible from the vantage point of the Hamas recce group, huddled in their hide, close to the top of the escarpment, but still forty feet below the ground level of the jail. After days of observation, General Ravi had finally said, in his now impeccable Arabic, “If it’s not accurate, we don’t need it. We’ll attack in the daylight.”

This last remark had sent a tremor of concern through the four-man team that accompanied the General.
What! Try to storm this Israeli stronghold in broad daylight? No covering darkness? No element of surprise? Risk being seen and obliterated on the steep upward slopes of Nimrod, probably by heavy artillery? Sir, we wouldn’t have a chance!

Above them they could see the evidence of Israel’s defenses on an encircling ridge outside the jail walls. There was obvious artillery, plus machine gun nests, and rocket launchers. The Israelis, whatever else, were not stupid, and they understood the possibility of “some lunatic terrorist group taking a shot at the jail.” But they’d made provisions for that, insuring that no attacking battalion would have a prayer of survival.

General Ravi was thoughtful. He dictated on a slim microphone, directly into his computer, the strength and direction of the fixed artillery positions. He assessed the time it would take for the Israelis, caught unaware only briefly, to turn those killer weapons on to their enemy.

For an hour he had said nothing, listening patiently to the apprehension of his men. But he never stopped making his notes, using his calculator, dictating his responses.

Finally, he had said, quietly, “We’ll attack in the daylight. I have not yet decided time and date.”

Now, back in the Golan compound, direct from the jaws of the Israeli Lion for the third time, he rose to speak to his warriors. And there was not a sound in the long tent as he raised a long polished stick and pointed it at the first map, tapping it on the Syrian Disengagement Line east of the tiny village of Hadar.

“We leave Syrian territory right here,” he said. “And begin our crossing of No Man’s Land, south of the village. It’s about five miles across, and we can safely take the big truck in for a little
over a mile without attracting Israeli attention, maybe a little further, depending on the weather.

“I have marked our entry point into Israel right here, 33.18’ North, 35.40’ East. You will find it is one thousand yards upstream of the nearest Israeli observation post, and we expect a patrol to come by, heading north, every thirty-two minutes, and then returning south, eight minutes later. That gives us a clear insertion window of twenty-four minutes. We will cross the border under cover of darkness, in four-man groups.

“There’s thirty-six of us, which means nine short dashes across the line, one after the other, with two minutes between each start. We regroup, right here, one mile inside Israeli territory, east nor’east of Mas’ada. We will all wear dark combat gear, with black hoods. Each man will carry in addition to his water canteen, a carbine pistol, his MP5 submachine gun, and a combat knife. Team leaders will in addition have a compass, a cell phone, a Global Positioning System, and two hand grenades to distribute among his team. These will only be used in dire circumstances. Questions?”

Sir, any details on the holding area before we make the dash across the line?

“Yes,” replied the General. “The Israeli Disengagement Line runs between two sloping hills. But the ground is flat between them for about sixty yards on their side. On our side, there is a hillside, kind of scooped out like the inside of a spoon. It’s very rocky and provides outstanding cover for all of us until the Israeli patrol comes by heading south. I’m hoping it’s not too dark, because I found the terrain very awkward on the recce. If there’s no moon you’ll walk as swiftly as you can without colliding with the rocks, but once you reach the Israeli line, the ground flattens right out, and if it’s dark you can run like hell, due west to the RV Point.”

Any details about the RV, sir?

“Yes,” said Ravi. “I was there with the second recce team. That means five of us have firsthand knowledge. I will lead the first team across the line, and one man from my original group will run with Groups Three, Six, and Nine. That means everyone will be within two minutes of a little local expertise.

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