Israel
Informs US That Russia Plans To Sell Weapons To Syria
9
May, 2013
We
almost got an entire 24 hour period that did not have news about
imminent war rumblings out of Syria. Almost. Late last night WSJ
reported
about
the civil war torn country (in which the rebels may or may not be
using chemical weapons, but are backed by both Al Qaeda and the US
government) again, this time on a leak by Israel having warned the US
that Russians are "imminently" going to sell advanced
ground-to-air missile systems to Syria "that would significantly
boost the regime's ability to stave off intervention in its civil
war." Supposedly this means that Israel would be unable to
continue its unimpeded military incursions of Syrian sovereign
airspace and blow stuff up at whim just because it feels like it, and
for whatever pretext the Israeli defense forces come up with.
Israel
has warned the U.S. that a Russian deal is imminent to sell advanced
ground-to-air missile systems to Syria, weapons that would
significantly boost the regime's ability to stave off intervention in
its civil war.
The
package includes six launchers and 144 operational missiles, each
with a range of 125 miles, according to the information the Israelis
provided. The first shipment could come over the next three months,
according to the Israelis' information, and be concluded by the end
of the year. Russia is also expected to send two instruction teams to
train Syria's military in operating the missile system, the Israelis
say.
Naturally,
there were no official statements on the matter, meaning
interpretation of events is up to "objective",
"unconflicted" media spin, the same way the US government
is convinced it was the Assad regime using chemical weapons despite
the UN's report claiming just the opposite.
U.S.
officials said on Wednesday that they are analyzing the information
Israel provided, but wouldn't comment on whether they believed the
sale of S-300 missile batteries was near.
Russian
officials didn't immediately return requests to comment. The Russian
Embassy in Washington has said its policy is not to comment on arms
sales or transfers between Russia and other countries.
The
government of President Bashar al-Assad has been seeking to purchase
S-300 missile batteries—which can intercept both manned aircraft
and guided missiles—from Moscow going back to the George W. Bush
administration, U.S. officials said. Western nations have lobbied
President Vladimir Putin's government not to go ahead with the sale.
If Syria were to acquire and deploy the systems, it would make any
international intervention in Syria far more complicated, according
to U.S. and Middle East-based officials.
According
to the information the Israelis provided in recent days, Syria has
been making payments on a 2010 agreement with Moscow to buy four
batteries for $900 million. They cite financial transactions from the
Syrian government, including one made this year through Russia's
foreign-development bank, known as the VEB.
Since
Russia has a naval base in Syria, it probaly should not come as a
huge surprise that Putin is on friendly terms with the current
regime. After all it is not just Israel and the US that have
strategic visions regarding a country that many see as the gateway to
the Israel-Iran conflict.
In
2009, the Russians started upgrading Syria's outdated analog SA-3
surface-to-air missile systems, turning them into the SA-26
Pechora-2M system, which is mobile and digital, equipped with
missiles with an operational range of 17 miles, according to the
assessment.
The
U.S. is particularly worried about another modernized system Moscow
provides—the SA-5. With an operational range of 175 miles, SA-5
missiles could take out U.S. planes flying from Cyprus, a key North
Atlantic Treaty Organization base that was used during Libya
operations and would likely be vital in any Syrian operation.
US
planes flying out of Cyprus carrying Cypriot gold perhaps?
As
for the whole farce surrounding Syria, ok, ok - we get it. By now
even the cheap seat have grasped that Israel wants to not only start
a war with Syria, but to preferably have the US fight it, but not
before alienating public opinion against Russia and soon China.
John
Kerry: "We Would Prefer That Russia Is Not Supplying Assistance
To Syria"
9
May, 2013
Following
up on the earlier report that Israel had warned the US that Russia
was preparing to sell "advanced" military equipment to
Syria (in False Flag Broken Telephone fashion), it was only a matter
of time before the new US Secretary of State voiced his indignation
over a development whereby someone else was providing arms to a
conflict country's government, instead of the US providing its own
weapons to said country's Al Qaeda-assisted rebel forces. Sure
enough, he did: "I think we have made it crystal clear that we
would prefer that Russia is not supplying assistance,"
Mr. Kerry said at a news conference after meeting the new Italian
Foreign Minister Emma Bonino." While there was no immediate
quote substantiating it, there is a rumor that Russian foreign
minister Sergei Lavrov's response was a less than politically correct
phrasing along the lines that he "would prefer that the US not
supply assistance to Syrian rebels."
Secretary
of State John Kerry said the transfer of advanced missile defense
systems from Russia to Syria could potentially destabilize Israel's
security, as he announced new humanitarian aid for Syria.
Mr.
Kerry said the U.S. has expressed concerns about what the S-300
batteries in Syria would mean for Israel's security. He wouldn't
address what the missiles might mean for Syria's civil war.
Speaking
to reporters in Rome Thursday, the secretary of state stressed the
U.S. would prefer Russia not to provide military assistance to Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad. The Wall Street Journal reported that
Russia was preparing to sell the weapons to Mr. Assad's regime,
saying Israel had warned the U.S.
Mr.
Kerry also praised Moscow for helping try to organize peace talks on
Syria.
"I
think we have made it crystal clear that we would prefer that Russia
is not supplying assistance," Mr.
Kerry said at a news conference after meeting the new Italian Foreign
Minister Emma Bonino.
Mr.
Kerry also announced Thursday that the U.S. would provide $100
million in new funds aimed at providing humanitarian aid for Syria.
He said the funds were "another step forward," in helping
support refugees and civilians trapped in the spiral of violence
inside Syria.
And
the reason why America is beloved all over the world:
Mr.
Kerry also reiterated that Mr. Assad cannot be part of any
transitional government in the country. "The foreign minister
will work with us, as they have, to try to bring all the parties to
the table so that we can effect a transition government by mutual
consent on both sides, which clearly means that, in our judgment,
President Assad will not be a
component of that transitional government," he
said.
Or,
in other words, popular opinion abroad is irrelevant if and when the
US has spoken what it believes is best in order to "liberate"
said popular opinion.
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