Israeli
Foreign Minister Barak has said that Israel
may rely on US 'scalpels' to contain Iran, Now this from
Netanyahu.
Israeli
Officials Meet, Threaten Syria Attack
Israel
warns of attack on Syrian chemical weapons
Israel
could launch a pre-emptive strike to stop Syria's chemical weapons
from reaching Lebanon's Hezbollah or al-Qaida inspired groups,
officials said Sunday.
28
January, 2013
Israel
could launch a pre-emptive strike to stop Syria's chemical weapons
from reaching Lebanon's Hezbollah or al-Qaida inspired groups,
officials said Sunday.
The
warning came as the military moved a rocket defense system to a main
northern city, and Israel's premier warned of dangers from both Syria
and Iran.
Israel
has long expressed concerns that Syrian President Bashar Assad,
clinging to power during a 22-month civil war, could lose control
over his chemical weapons.
Vice
Prime Minister Silvan Shalom said Sunday that Israel's top security
officials held a special meeting last week to discuss Syria's
chemical weapons arsenal. The fact of the meeting, held the morning
after a national election, had not been made public before.
Shalom
told the Army Radio station that the transfer of weapons to violent
groups, particularly the Iranian-backed Lebanese Hezbollah, would be
a game changer.
"It
would be crossing a line that would demand a different approach,
including even action," he said. Asked whether this might mean a
pre-emptive attack, he said: "We will have to make the
decisions."
Israel
has kept out of the civil war that has engulfed Syria and killed more
than 60,000 people, but it is concerned that violence could spill
over from its northern border into Israel.
Israel
deployed its Iron Dome rocket defense system in the northern city of
Haifa on Sunday. The city was battered by Hezbollah rocket fire
during a war in the summer of 2006. The military called the
deployment "routine."
Iron
Dome, an Israel-developed system that shoots down incoming
short-range rockets, was used to defend Israeli cities during a round
of hostilities with Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip, on Israel's
southern flank, last November.
Yisrael
Hasson, a lawmaker and former deputy head of Israel's Shin Bet
intelligence agency, said Israel was closely following developments
in Syria to make sure chemical weapons don't "fall into the
wrong hands."
"Syria
has a massive amount of chemical weapons, and if they fall into hands
even more extreme than Syria like Hezbollah or global jihad groups it
would completely transform the map of threats," Hasson told Army
Radio.
"Global
jihad" is the term Israel uses for forces influenced by
al-Qaida. Syria's rebels include al-Qaida-allied groups.
Syria
has rarely acknowledged possessing chemical weapons.
Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu referred to threats from Syria and Iran
at a Cabinet meeting Sunday. Iran is Syria's main regional ally.
"We
must look around us, at what is happening in Iran and its proxies and
at what is happening in other areas, with the deadly weapons in
Syria, which is increasingly coming apart," he said.
Israel
views Iran as an existential threat because of its nuclear and
missile programs and support for violent anti-Israeli groups in
Lebanon and Gaza, as well as repeated references by Iranian leaders
to Israel's destruction. Iran denies it is seeking to build atomic
weapons, insisting its nuclear program is for civilian purposes.
On
Friday, Israeli Channel 2 TV broadcast an interview with a former
Iranian diplomat who defected to the West in 2010. He warned that if
Tehran gets nuclear weapons, it would use them against Israel. He did
not provide evidence.
Part
of Mohammad Reza Heydari's job was to draft foreign scientists to
work on Tehran's nuclear program and he brought many from North Korea
into Iran, the report said.
Heydari
spoke from Oslo, where he has received political asylum.
Israeli
officials held a secret meeting last week in which they discussed the
possibility of a pre-emptive attack on war-torn Syria, according to
Vice Premier Silvan Shalom.
Shalom
said the meeting was held the morning after Tuesday’s election. It
had not been made public before today, but he insisted the focus was
Syria’s chemical weapons and whether Israel ought to attack to
avoid them falling into the hands of either Hezbollah or “al-Qaeda
inspired groups,” apparently a euphemism for the Western-backed
rebels.
The
decision officials came to was that Israel
will attack Syria at
the first sign of any transfer of any portion of its chemical weapons
arsenal, or at the first sign that the Assad government might be
losing control over those weapons.
“The
concept, in principle, is that this must not happen,” Shalom said.
Israeli military officials confirmed the report but insisted there
was no specific situation to lead anyone to believe such a risk was
imminent.
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