Last
Update: 25/07/2004 04:00
Officials: Jewish extremists may crash
plane on Temple Mount
By Jonathan Lis, Yuval Yoaz and Nadav
Shragai
WWW, 2004 (Archived) - Israeli
security officials have recently become
increasingly concerned that right-wing
extremists might be plotting an attack on
the Temple Mount in Jerusalem to derail
Israel's planned withdrawal from the Gaza
Strip. The Shin Bet security service and the
police are preparing for a number of
possible terror attack scenarios at the
sacred Old City site, Israeli security
sources said on Saturday night.
Speaking on the Channel Two "Meet the
Press" program yesterday, Public
Security Minister Tzachi Hanegbi confirmed
that the security establishment had
identified rising intent among right-wing
extremists to carry out a Temple Mount
attack.
"There is no information about
specific individuals, because the Shin Bet
and police would not let them continue [with
their plot]," said Hanegbi. "But
there are troubling indications of
purposeful thinking, and not detached
philosophy... There is a danger that
[extremists] would make use of the most
explosive site, in the hope that a chain
reaction would bring about the destruction
of the peace process."
Security sources on Saturday night said
possible actions included an attempt to
crash a drone packed with explosives on the
Temple Mount, or a manned suicide attack
with a light aircraft during mass Muslim
worship on the Mount. Other possibilities
include an attempt by right-wing extremists
to assassinate a prominent Temple Mount
Muslim leader, perhaps from the Waqf Islamic
trust.
Israeli security sources speculate that
the assassination scenario might be chosen,
even though it would not cause mass injury
or damage to the Al-Aqsa mosque or the
Golden Dome shrine. The aim of the Temple
Mount attack conspiracy, they said, would be
to carry out a visible provocation that
sparked violent confrontation in the
territories.
Due to stringent security routines at the
Temple Mount, Israeli security officials
said Saturday, right-wing extremists would
find it virtually impossible to use
conventional routes to penetrate the site
with explosives. Hence, the possibility of a
large bomb being planted at one of the
Muslim holy sites is "a lower-level
possibility."
Saturday's disclosures about possible
Temple Mount terror plans were preceded in
recent months by a number of troubling
indications. Nine months ago a suspect in a
Jewish underground terror group affair,
Shahar Dvir-Zeliger, told authorities a
prominent West Bank settler activist had
planned a Temple Mount attack. Zeliger cited
two other names of West Bank settlers,
suggesting the two were involved in the
Temple Mount attack conspiracy.
Last Thursday, the Temple Mount Faithful
group petitioned the High Court, asking to
be given clearance to go up to the Holy Site
for prayers later this week for Tisha B'Av.
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