Were Scythians Israelites?

When Jacob built shelters for his cattle in Jordan, he called the place "SUCCOTH" (Hebrew, "Cottages" or "Huts") (Genesis 33:17). When Israel dwelt in Egypt, she named a town "SUCCOTH" (Exodus 12:37). In Palestine, the city of "SUCCOTH" was given to the tribe of Gad (Joshua 13:27). Later, Israel was deported to Media (2 Kings 18:11) which is the same place that Diodorus Siculus says the "SCYTHIANS" had their origin "on the Araxes" River (2:3). Herodotus then says the SCYTHIANS moved "across the Araxes into Cimmeria" (the Crimea) (4:11). In 2 Esdras 13:40-46 we read that Israelites traveled this same route. Herodotus defines SCYTHIA as "On the south the coast of the Black Sea, from the mouth of the Danube to the Palus Meotus; on the east, to the Don or Tanais, to its rise out of the Lake Ivan; on the north, a line drawn from this lake to that out of which the Tyras or Dniester flows; and on the west, a line from thence to the Danube." (Herodotus Book 4). Later, Germany was known as "SCYTHIA" (Nennius' History of the Britons 31,37 & 50). Then Scandinavia was anciently called "SCATHAnavia." Ireland was known as "SCOTIA Major" and Scotland was called "SCOTIA Minor" (Venerable Bede & Nennius). Strabo says, "All the nations toward the northern parts, the ancient Greek writers call SCYTHIANS" (11:507). According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica, "Most writers think the Scythians who troubled Asia were Sacae from the east of the Caspian" (article: "Scythia", 11th ed.). Herodotus says, "SACAE is the name the Persians give to all SCYTHIAN tribes" (7:64). The Caspian area is where Assyrians had settled the ten tribes of Israel whom they had taken captive (see 2 Kings 17:23). The Israelites were named after Isaac (Genesis 48:16) -- from which the name SACAE is derived. That name then became "Saxon" (son of Isaac). These "Saxon" people migrated to northern Germany (Saxony) and southeast England (Sussex, Essex and Middlesex).