If there is an "Axis of evil" it is the United States and Israel
Israel prepares for wider conflict
Israel prepares for wider conflict
ISRAEL
is said to be considering further attacks in Syria and Lebanon
following the air strikes on a weapons convoy this week, and on
Friday claimed ''the entire axis of evil is coming apart''.
3
February, 2013
Officials
said that the risks of military action to prevent Lebanese militia
Hezbollah obtaining sophisticated weapons outweighed the threats of a
response from either Syria or Iran.
Israel
moved a third battery of its Iron Dome protective missile system up
to the border with Lebanon to prepare for any retaliation from
Hezbollah, following its reported attack on what it claimed were
anti-aircraft missiles being supplied to the militant group by Syria.
Lebanese
government security officials said Israeli jets resumed flights near
the Syrian border on Friday while an Israeli analyst confirmed
further cross-border strikes were likely.
The
deputy director of Israel's Institute of National Security Studies
and a retired intelligence colonel, Ephraim Kam, said the risks posed
by Iran-allied militants such as Hezbollah and Hamas getting their
hands on some of Syria's chemical and advanced weaponry were
considered far greater than the threat of retaliation.
''If
tomorrow the IDF [Israel Defence Forces] sees the movement of this
weaponry, it will and should strike again,'' he said on Friday.
''This week's attack was a kind of warning: 'We are ready and
prepared to do this.'
''Syria
has warned that it might retaliate. Iran has said that attacking
Syria is attacking Iran. But neither will respond. Although we have
to be careful not to rule the possibility out all together, the last
thing the Syrian regime needs is to enter a war with Israel when it
is struggling to survive domestically.''
Israel
has refused to admit the attack on the convoy on Tuesday night and
Wednesday morning. But its military was upbeat about the
consequences, predicting that both Syria and Hezbollah were too weak
to carry out their threats.
The
deputy commander of Israel's northern command, Major General Eyal
Ben-Reuven, said despite the Iron Dome redeployments, he believed
Israel's enemies to its north were toothless.
''The
likelihood of a response in the short term is very low,'' he said.
''The Syrians are weak, they are in distress. Hezbollah is in
distress. The entire axis of evil is coming apart.''
On
her last day as US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Iran had
increased the number and quality of weapons it was sending to Syria's
President, Bashar al-Assad, underscoring a serious challenge facing
her successor, John Kerry. Iran was also aiding Hezbollah.
''We
know the Iranians are all-in for Assad'' and that keeping their
closest ally in the Middle East in power ''is one of their highest
priorities'', she said.
As
tension between Israel and Syria remained high, the Syrian opposition
has announced it is ready for exploratory peace talks after getting
United Nations backing for its position that Mr Assad ''would have no
role'' in a transitional government.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.