This
is the zionist view. I would say that the Israeli hawks are very
nervous at the prospect of Syria being able to defend itself against
its aggressive and 'armed-to-the-teeth' neighbour
Assad:
Arab world ready to join fight against Israel
Syrian
president says Russia committed to military deals, claims that
government forces are gaining upper hand in fighting rebels.
31
May, 2013
Syrian
President Bashar Assad told Al-Manar TV on Thursday that “there is
pressure by the people to open a new front on the Golan.”
“Even
among the Arab world there is a clear readiness to join the fight
against Israel,” he added in his interview with the Hezbollah TV
station.
Assad
stated that Hezbollah is involved in fighting the Israeli enemy and
its agents in Syria and Lebanon, according to the text of the
interview on the Al-Manar website. He attributed the failure of the
Syrian opposition to its dependence on outside funding and said that
it failed to create a real rift in the country.
Assad
also said that he sees the balance of power in Syria shifting to the
government’s side. And this despite the fact that the “terrorists”
– how Assad refers to the rebels – are smuggling fighters and
weapons through all of the borders.
In
relation to Israel, he said, “If we want to respond to Israel, the
response must be strategic.”
Earlier
on Thursday, Lebanese newspaper al-Akhbar quoted Assad as saying that
Syria had already received the first shipment of Russian antiaircraft
S-300 rockets.
Speaking
about the delivery of the S-300 to Syria, Assad told Al-Manar that
Russia is “committed to the deal and neither [Prime Minister
Binyamin] Netanyahu’s visit nor the current crisis will influence
the importing of arms.”
“The
contracts with Russia are not linked to the crisis and Russia is
committed to implementing these contracts,” he said. “Everything
we have agreed on with Russia will take place, and part of it has
already taken place.”
More
of the missiles would arrive soon, he was quoted as saying.
A
source close to Russia’s Defense Ministry said there had been a
“bank transfer” in connection with the S-300 transaction, but
that Russian banks were becoming increasingly nervous about dealing
with Assad.
Israel
spoke with Russia on Thursday morning amid reports that Assad’s
forces had received a shipment of S- 300 missiles from Moscow.
Jerusalem
has yet to confirm the arrival of the missiles, which have a 200-km.
range with the capacity to hit planes in northern Israel. It would
create a no-fly zone that would make it impossible for the Israel Air
Force to operate along the Syrian and Lebanese border, precisely at a
moment when both countries are more volatile.
Israel
is investigating the report, while Channels 2 and 10 reported they
did not believe the missiles had arrived.
Netanyahu
personally asked Russian President Vladimir Putin not to deliver the
missiles when he visited Moscow earlier this month.
On
Thursday morning, Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz held a
prearranged meeting with Russian Ambassador to Israel Sergey
Yakovlevich and raised the issue of the S-300s.
Russia
has maintained that the missiles are defensive and are needed by
Assad’s forces in their battle against rebel groups in that
country. On Wednesday, Steinitz said the missiles could also be used
as offensive weapons.
At
the end of Steinitz’s meeting with Yakovlevich, his office said
that the men discussed bilateral and strategic issues in the region.
They agreed that Israel and Russia would “maintain an ongoing
dialogue and cooperate,” his office said.
Steinitz’s
office released the positive message, even though Russia had
announced only on Tuesday that it intended to ship the S- 300 to
Syria.
There
is some speculation that Moscow did so in direct response to the
European Union’s decision on Monday to lift its arms embargo to
Syrian rebel forces.
Earlier
on Thursday, Netanyahu spoke of the dangers facing Israel from
missile attacks from the Syrian, Lebanese and Gazan borders when he
attended a meeting of the Emergency Economy Committee, where they
discussed Tuesday’s national emergency drill.
“We
are deep in the era of missiles that are aimed at civilian population
areas,” Netanyahu said. “We must prepare defensively and
offensively for the new era of warfare. The State of Israel is the
most threatened state in the world. Around us are tens of thousands
of missiles and rockets that could hit our home front.”
Russia’s
sale of the S-300 missiles has not stopped it from working with the
United States to hold an international peace conference in Geneva
that would include representatives from Assad’s government and the
rebel forces.
“On
June 5 in Geneva, US, Russian and UN officials will hold a three-way
meeting to further the preparations for the international conference
on Syria,” a spokesman for UN chief Ban Ki-moon said on Thursday.
US
Sen. Robert Menendez (D-New Jersey), who chairs the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, said he did not understand how Russia could both
arm Assad and work toward a peace conference.
The
S-300 is an offensive weapon, said Menendez, who opposes its shipment
to Assad.
“It
changes the equation,” Menendez said, who visited Israel this week
and spoke with Netanyahu and President Shimon Peres about regional
threats from Syria and Iran.
Menendez
said that he supports sending arms and supplies to the moderate rebel
forces fighting Assad and added that, at this point, the different
groups in Syria were well known and that it was possible to send arms
to specific groups.
It
was his understanding from speaking with the Israelis that they are
not involved in Syria, Menendez said.
But,
he said, Israeli officials led him to believe they would act in
response to a direct threat.
Jonathan
Schanzer, vice president for research at the Foundation for Defense
of Democracies, told The Jerusalem Post from Washington on Thursday
night, “Assad would be off his rocker if he were to start a war
with Israel right now and he knows it.”
Assad
is barely containing the war in his own country and “the idea that
he would add a war with Israel makes no sense,” he said.
This
seems to be more rhetoric, he said adding a caveat that things could
change.
Asked
by the Post about the feeling in Washington over the increasing
tensions in the region over the past couple weeks, Schanzer said that
it has definitely been noticed in the US capital.
“There
is a sense that no good options are left for the US to pursue – a
sense of paralysis,” he added. There seems to be a growing
isolationist tendency in both parties.
He
also said that Hezbollah has a lot to lose if it goes to war with
Israel now, because it is stretched thin as they have 3,000-4,000
fighters in Syria. Schanzer concluded, “If Israel is able to
confirm that they have the S-300 on the ground, I can’t see them
remaining there for more than 24 hours.”
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