To: Eleutheria5
I wonder whose air space Israeli used to attack Sudan. I am suspicious of the validity of this report.
![](http://images.virtualjerusalem.com/mideastmap.gif)
9 posted on
12/25/2011 10:10:04 AM PST by
kabar
To: kabar
If the group that was struck was an Iranian influenced group, would the Saudis look the other way?
That or the IAF was invisible to any country they flew over.
13 posted on
12/25/2011 10:28:39 AM PST by
csvset
To: kabar
They could have gone straight over the Red Sea via Eilat and violated nobody’s air space.
16 posted on
12/25/2011 11:14:02 AM PST by
Eleutheria5
(Diplomacy is war by other means.)
To: kabar
That’s what I was wondering.
They don’t exactly have the ability to sneak that stuff without the muzzies tipping off the bad guys.
17 posted on
12/25/2011 11:44:34 AM PST by
VanDeKoik
(1 million in stimulus dollars paid for this tagline!)
To: kabar
Is it an airspace violation if they are never detected? :-)
Go Israel!!
18 posted on
12/25/2011 12:06:38 PM PST by
Teacher317
('Tis time to fear when tyrants seem to kiss.)
To: kabar
Actually, they could fly along the Gulf of Aqaba out over the Red Sea. Although Saudi Arabia or Egypt might claim that air space. Don't know.
![](http://www.worldatlas.com/aatlas/infopage/gulfaqba.gif)
To: kabar
Yes, though it is in range they did have to use tankers.
34 posted on
12/26/2011 7:33:00 AM PST by
Sequoyah101
(Half the people are below average.)
To: kabar
"I wonder whose air space Israeli used to attack Sudan. I am suspicious of the validity of this report. " The same route El Al uses when it flies to Nairobi.
IDF jets routinely fly training missions over the Red Sea, accessed via the Gulf of Aqaba. Military aircraft flying that route would not raise any suspicions, because they happen all the time....and that's one of the reasons for Israel repeatedly flying those missions.
35 posted on
12/26/2011 8:15:43 AM PST by
cookcounty
(2012 choice: It's the Tea Party or the Slumber Party.)
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