Here is a conventonal, pro-Israeli opinion piece
Israel’s Huge Airstrike On Damascus Is As Much About Iran As It Is Syria
6
May, 2013
Early
Sunday Israeli jets targeted
the Syrian military’s fortress on
Qasioun Mountain, Damascus, causing the most powerful explosions near
the capital in more than two years of fighting.
The
strike on key command and control structures of the regime lifted the
spirits of Syrian rebels, who have recently been pummelled
by a regime counteroffensive,
but experts believe the move has more to do with the shadow war
between Israel and Iran.
“This
shouldn’t be seen as Israel intervening on behalf of the rebels or
against [Syrian President Bashar al-Assad],” said Jonathan Spyer, a
senior research fellow at the Interdisciplinary centre in Israel,
told The Times. “This is an escalation in a conflict we know about,
and that is the conflict between Israel and Iran, the long shadow
war, as people call it. This is an incident in that war.”
The
bold move, the second Israeli airstrike in Syria in two days and
the third
this year,
appears to have mostly targeted Iranian missiles suspected of being
transferred the Lebanese militant group Hezoballah.
“In
last night’s attack, as in the previous one, what was attacked were
stores of Fateh-110 missiles that were in transit from Iran to
Hezbollah,” a Western intelligence source told Reuters.
The
Associated Press notes that the Fateh-110 has
a range of about 185 miles and is more accurate than anything
Hezbollah is currently known to possess. That means that the Iranian
proxy would have almost
all of Israel in range,
and the Fatah’s precision guidance system would threaten Israeli
infrastructure and military installations.
“For
Israel, it is very important that the front group for Iran, which is
in Lebanon, needs to be stopped,” Israeli lawmaker Shaul
Mofaz told Israeli
Army Radio. ”Everything that goes into the hands of Hezbollah
is not directly related to the rebels. … [At the same time,]
Hezbollah helps the Iranians navigate against the rebels.”
Late
Thursday Israel reportedly bombed a warehouse holding missiles at
Damascus International Airport. In January Israel bombed the
Jamraya military research facility near Damascus.
According
to residents and activists, Sunday’s strike hit about 10 targets
including the mountain headquarters of the army’s Fourth
Division, the elite and feared unit run by the
president’s brother Maher,
the command of the the government’s elite Republican Guard, and the
Jamraya military research facility.
“The
sky was red all night. We didn’t sleep a single second,” one man
told Reuters from Hameh, less than a mile from Jamraya. “The
explosions started after midnight and continued through the night.”
Syrian
Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal al Mekdad said that
the attack represented “declaration of war” and proved that
Israel was acting “in
support of terrorism and Al-Qaeda.”
An
unnamed senior Israeli official told The Times that he doesn’t
expect Syria or Hezxbollah to respond, saying that Assad “has his
own problems” and Hezbollah “has no intention of opening a war in
Israel.”
Nevertheless
Spyer said that “one has to ask oneself about Israel’s calculus”
because obviously “there is a risk in that at a certain point, a
response becomes more likely.”
Some precautions have
been taken by Israel as airspace over northern Israel and Haifa area
closed off to civilian flights.
Lebanese
media quoted Seyed
Hassan Firouzabadi, the chief of staff of the Iranian armed forces,
as saying: “Resistance forces will respond to the Israeli
aggression… Iran will not allow to Israel destabilize the region.”
Professor
Eyal Zisser of Tel Aviv University summed it up to the Times like
this: “Israel is still not involved in the war in Syria, but it is
getting closer.”
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