Israel
to face Iran's wrath if U.S. attacks Syria
Commander Mohammad Ali Jafari warned that a US strike would trigger "reactions beyond" Syria and would bolster extremism.
Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has said a strike on Syria would be a "disaster" for the region.
Iranian media reported that Zarif also called a dozen European and Arab foreign ministers to "condemn the use of chemical weapons" in Syria, to "criticise the war-mongering (of the US and its allies) and raise concern about the consequences of any military action in the region".
al-Albawaba, (Lebanon)
31
August, 2013
BEIRUT: Israel will
face retaliation if the United States launches a military strike
against Syria, a senior Iranian military official warned, Iran’s
semi-official Fars News Agency reported Saturday.
“Israel
will be hit by retaliatory attacks if the United States launches an
offensive on Syria since
it [the Jewish state] is the first instigator in attacking [Syria],”
Iranian Army Chief of Staff Maj. Gen.
Hassan Firouzabadi said.
Iran staunchly
backs the regime in Damascus and is Hezbollah’s leading supporter
in the region.
Firouzabadi
accused Israel of spearheading efforts to drag Washington into a war
with the government in Damascus.
The U.S. has
stepped up its war rhetoric against Damascus after accusing President
Bashar Assad’s regime of using chemical weapons earlier this month
against opposition strongholds outside Damascus.
The
Syrian government has strongly denied the accusations but vowed to
counter any act of aggression against the country.
The
Iranian military’s top brass also accused Washington of siding with
Al-Qaeda affiliates in Syria, warning of consequences in case of a
U.S. strike against the war-torn country.
"The
U.S., which has invaded countries in the region under the big lie of
battling Al-Qaeda following the September 11 [2001 attacks], is now
fighting in favor of Al-Qaeda in Syria," the Iranian general
said.
Firouzabadi
also warned the U.S. war rhetoric could bring about massive problems
for other powers.
“Regional
countries backing this cruel war will suffer serious losses,” he
said.
Iranian
MPs meet Assad, denounce possible U.S. strike
31
August, 2013
TEHRAN:
Iranian MPs held talks Saturday in Syria with President Bashar
al-Assad and denounced any possible Western attack on that country
over chemical weapons allegations, the head of the delegation said.
Meanwhile,
the head of Iran's powerful Revolutionary Guards warned that a US
strike would trigger "reactions beyond" Syria and would
bolster extremism.
"As
representatives of the Islamic Republic of Iran we declare our
hostility for any attack or war against Syria," IRNA news agency
quoted Allaeddine Boroujerdi, chairman of parliament's influential
foreign policy committee, as saying.
US
President Barack Obama on Friday said he was weighing "limited,
narrow" action against Syria after US intelligence reports said
President Bashar al-Assad's regime had gassed to death hundreds of
women and children.
Boroujerdi
said Iran informed the United States that rebels fighting to topple
Assad have chemical weapons.
"Unfortunately
the United States did not heed our warning," he said after
heading a three-member delegation that met Assad.
Diplomatic
relations between Iran and the United States have been severed since
1980, and the Swiss embassy in Tehran handles US interests there.
Syria's
government has denied using chemical weapons and has pointed the
finger of blame at "terrorists" -- its term for rebels
seeking to topple Assad.
Boroujerdi
said Iran condemns the use of chemical weapons "by terrorist
groups against the Syrian population."
Iran,
Damascus's main regional ally, has issued stern warnings against any
US-led military action targeting Syria, with the latest on Saturday
by the head of the elite Revolutionary Guards.
Commander Mohammad Ali Jafari warned that a US strike would trigger "reactions beyond" Syria and would bolster extremism.
"The
fact that the Americans believe that military intervention will be
limited to within Syrian borders is an illusion; it will provoke
reactions beyond that country," Jafari was quoted as saying by
ISNA news agency.
"Just
as US interventions in the Islamic world (Afghanistan, Iraq) have
bolstered extremism, so will an aggression on Syria reinforce
extremism and, as in Iraq and Afghanistan, its results will be pain,
massacre and the exodus of the innocent population," he added.
Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has said a strike on Syria would be a "disaster" for the region.
And
on Friday, Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif spoke by telephone
with UN special envoy for Syria Lakhdar Brahimi to "warn against
any adventurism that will have serious consequences".
Iranian media reported that Zarif also called a dozen European and Arab foreign ministers to "condemn the use of chemical weapons" in Syria, to "criticise the war-mongering (of the US and its allies) and raise concern about the consequences of any military action in the region".
Contrast that with Saudi Arabia's al-Arabiya. Who is pushing the agenda?
Iran’s
‘payback time’ over Syria
31
August, 2013
Following
the latest announcements by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry on
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and his forces deploying chemical
weapons in an attack that killed hundreds of innocent children and
women, Defense Secretary
Chuck
Hagel indicated that the United States was “ready to go,” with
military action against Syria, where more than 100,000 have been
killed as the country enters the third year of this devastating civil
war. The world, the international community and particularly the
countries of Britain, France, Germany and Australia are awaiting a
decision from the White House.
However,
one of the most intriguing regional and geopolitical issues is the
Islamic Republic of Iran’s reaction to the decision made by many
nations to back a serious military response to Assad’s use of
chemical weapons.
Tehran’s
threats
After
a report was released by the credible international organization
Doctors Without Borders, on both the use of chemical weapons and the
deaths of hundreds of civilians— and following the intensifying
pressure from many nations in the international community upon
Assad’s regime— Iranian senior military generals, commanders,
members of parliament and Iranian lawmakers publicly issued clear
threats and warnings to the United States and its allies on Tuesday.
Iranian leaders reiterated their political position on Syria as a
non-negotiable issue, adding that any military strike on the Syrian
government would not only lead to a retaliatory attack on Tel Aviv,
but would also engulf the entire region.
According to Iranian
leaders, the United States and its allies will encounter “the
flames of outrage” and “perilous consequences” from Tehran and
Damascus if they carry out military strikes against the Syrian
government.
The
Iranian leadership’s latest remarks indicate that Tel Aviv would be
the first casualty in this conflict, as a target of the response to
any American led strike on Syria
Majid
Rafizadeh
The
Iranian leadership’s latest remarks indicate that Tel Aviv would be
the first casualty in this conflict, as a target of the response to
any American led strike on Syria. Afterwards, Iranian leaders would
instigate as much conflict as possible by targeting the Gulf and the
whole region. According to Hussein Sheikholeslam, the director
general of the Iranian parliament’s International Affairs bureau
and a senior Iranian lawmaker, the United States would not dare
attack Syria, but if it does, “the Zionist regime will be the first
victim.” On Monday, Sheikholeslam was quoted on Iran’s state-run
Fars News Agency saying: “No military attack will be waged against
Syria… Yet, if such an incident takes place, which is impossible,
the Zionist regime will be the first victim of a military attack on
Syria.”
Iranian
officials have also warned other Arab states and regional countries
of the negative repercussion that they will encounter if they choose
to join the United States. Mohammad Esmayeeli, a member of the
Iranian Parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy
Commission, cautioned other Arab countries in the region against
allying with the west, claiming that Washington is not ready for a
new military operation. Esmayeeli stated, “the U.S, as well as the
western and Arab states and certain regional countries are beating on
the drums of war, but they should know that this is not to their
benefit.”
More
fundamentally, Iranian Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Abbas
Araghchi solidified Iran’s stance under Hassan Rowhani’s
presidency by emphasizing that Iran is resolved and determined to
defend Syria and Assad’s apparatuses. Araghchi stated in a news
conference in Tehran: “We want to strongly warn against any
military attack in Syria. There will definitely be perilous
consequences for the region,” adding, “these complications and
consequences will not be restricted to Syria. It will engulf the
whole region.” Contrastingly, Mohammad Reza Naqdi, the commander of
the Republican Guards’ elite Basij paramilitary force, shrugged off
any potential Western military response, stating that “[the
Americans] are incapable of starting a new war in the region, because
of their lacking economic capabilities and their lack of morale.”
What
kind of military operations?
Militarily
speaking, the office of the Islamic Republic of Iran’s Supreme
Leaders, Iran’s intelligence Ettela’at, the militia group Basij
and Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps have outlined Iran’s
several capabilities in conducting various operations. Primarily,
Iran can directly launch missiles— including the Shahab ballistic
missiles— on Tel Aviv. Additionally, as the Iranians have provided
Assad’s army with these technologies, missiles, and weapons, they
have the ability to order Assad to strike Israel in the case of an
American strike on Damascus.
Geopolitically, Iran’s Revolutionary
Guards have argued that they can shut the Strait of Hormuz and target
American navy ships and destroyers. Furthermore, Iranian ruling
clerics can target countries that join any military operations
against Assad, aiming to alienate them politically from the region.
Finally, Tehran can make use of Hezbollah as a tool to instigate
violence and conflict in the Levant.
The
more crucial issue, though, is that whether the Islamic Republic of
Iran is realistically and truly intending to strike Tel Aviv and
other regional Arab countries.
By analyzing Tehran’s isolated
geopolitical position in the region and in the international arena,
it becomes more obvious that Iran’s warnings against Israel, the
United States, and other Arab countries are merely political
rhetoric. The key objective of the Iranian ruling cleric is to
maintain their power. Any strike against Israel, the United States
Navy, or Arab countries would be political suicide for Iranian
leaders.
The
latest threats from Tehran have once more reinforced the
international community’s stance on Iran’s nuclear program; that
a nuclear Iran is the red line.
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