Halevi at Herziliya conference
Halevi at Herziliya conferenceUdi Cohen Tzedek

The head of the IDF's Intelligence Directorate, Major General Hertzi Halevi, spoke at the Herzliya Conference and addressed the security threats to Israel.

"Terror is here to stay," Halevy said. "ISIS has lost territory and shrunk, but instead of an Islamic Caliphate, we see a virtual Caliphate. There is a clear connection between the pressure on Mosul and al-Raka and the wave of terrorism in Europe."

According to him, the likelihood of an initiated war against Israel is low. "Power-building processes, especially in Gaza and Lebanon, transfer military power into irresponsible hands.Our enemies, who seek to deter Israel, are liable to bring upon themselves the next war."

Today, Halevi said, wars begin and end differently. "These are wars with organizations. They do not start with a decision, but rather with a deterioration between the organizations. They do not end with a unilateral decision by paratroopers at the Western Wall."

The head of Military Intelligence said that Iran, the Assad regime and Hezbollah constitute the main threat to the region, "with global funding and a major danger to the State of Israel. Iran is problematic not only because of the nuclear issue. It is in Iraq, Syria and Yemen."

"We see clearly that Hezbollah is building a military industry with Iranian knowledge, producing weapons and transferring them to southern Lebanon.

He said the terrorist attacks in Europe would continue for the foreseeable future.

Maj. Gen. Halevi said that Iran has been working in the past year to establish an infrastructure for the production of precise weapons in Yemen and in Iraq. "The nuclear agreement prohibits Iran from creating a certain weapon, but it produces other weapons. 20 countries are threatened by the deployment of Iranian Zelzal missiles."

Addressing the recent Iranian missile strikes on ISIS targets, he said: "We saw it from medium range missiles. I think ISIS was hit hard. I ask myself: if Iran is so involved in Syria - why did not they strike from there? If it's a show, it's not clear it was so successful and it's still disturbing."

He also said that Israel has allowed more than seven million tons of construction material into Gaza in the three years since Operation Protective Edge. "How much of this has gone to the benefit of the civilians in Gaza? Do the children in Gaza receive a better education system? The answer is usually no. This is really a dilemma, since Israel has an interest in not having a crisis in Gaza."

"The electricity dilemma reflects this well. On the one hand, the oxygen masks in the hospitals are connected to electricity, but the digging machines in the Hamas tunnels are connected to the same electricity. We have to let Hamas choose. We cannot let Hamas build an army so easily."