ISRAEL
WILL HIT THE LEVANT AGAIN: AND NASRALLAH, THE “AXIS OF RESISTANCE”
SPOKESPERSON IN SYRIA, WILL RESPOND…AGAIN.
By
Elijah J. Magnier: @ejmalrai
23
May, 2018
Syrian
forces are preparing to liberate areas in southern Syria after having
completely liberated the capital Damascus from al-Qaeda and from ISIS
in Yarmouk, Hajar al-Aswad and its surroundings, as the countryside
of Homs and Hama has become totally free. The Syrian army and its
allies are also preparing to eliminate ISIS south of Deir al-Zour as
the last pocket of this organization in the areas under Syrian
control. However, the Syrian southern city Daraa is assessing its
position regarding Israel, whose greatest fear is the liberation of
the south and a later demand by the central government of Syria for
the return of the Israeli occupied Golan heights. The seven years of
war imposed on Syria helped to form local groups of trained and
experienced fighters who are now part of the “axis of the
Resistance”, the most highly feared by Israel.
This
will prompt Tel Aviv officials – not willing to give back the
occupied territory to Syria – to embark on a new military adventure
to “feel the pulse” and test the reaction of the “axis of
resistance”. This is inevitable- especially after Hezbollah leader
Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah himself announced new rules of engagement
(ROE) laid down after the recent Israeli attack on Syrian army
positions.
Sayyed
Nasrallah’s personal announcement of the new ROE is worth
consideration: it is he who has stated the number, type and quantity
(55) of rockets and missiles launched on the occupied Golan heights
and the Israeli targets launched against them. This has meaningful
connotations because it uses a language understood by Israel, which
has experienced Hezbollah for 36 years of conflict on different
fronts and styles of response. As usual, Sayyed Nasrallah does not
take shortcuts and does not push Israel out of control in his first
response steps: he warns first, means what he says, and hits after
warning.
Israel
has not succeeded in bringing down President Bashar al-Assad, neither
removing the “axis of resistance” from the Syrian borders with
Israel, nor managing to limit or contain the military capability and
arsenal of Hezbollah, which has significantly grown. The repetitive
Israeli air strikes on Hezbollah’s weapon transport unit, and on
the training centres of thousands of Syrian militants under many
names (including “Syrian Hezbollah”) prompted Iran to establish
and develop missile manufacturing plants in Syria instead of
transferring them to its allies in the Levant across countries.
Indeed,
Syria has introduced a new equation (quoted from Lebanon) called “the
army, the people and the resistance” which indicates the harmony
and necessity of full collaboration between the trilogy as national
defence strategy to liberate the entire Syrian territory. The central
government in Damascus has created national defence local forces
present in all Syrian villages and cities, and even on the border
with Israel.
Nevertheless,
Israel did not concede to the reality imposed by the seven years of
war in Syria. It actually went further in the other direction by
bombing Iranian advisors deployed in the depths of the Syrian desert
and supporting the Syrian and Russian forces to prevent the “regime
change”.
Israel
waited for the “Iranian response” which came from Syria and was
announced, in detail, by Hezbollah’s secretary general who imposed
a new rule of engagement on Israel: “Any future strike, according
to its size, will be answered in the Golan Heights, and can hit
beyond the Golan Heights and beyond beyond (twice) the Golan Heights
to reach the heart of the country “. It is a method of speech that
was (and still is) used by Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah during the second
war in 2006 to show his military potentiality and to warn the
Israelis that the next response will be greater if things go too far
and they don’t stop the provocation.
Israel
has tried to soften the new “Golan equation” imposed by the “axis
of the resistance” by minimising the Syrian response (firing 55
rockets and missiles against specific Israeli military targets).
However, the local Israel media said it frankly: “the Golan Heights
were illuminated (by the missiles and rockets falling) like the
Christmas tree”. Indeed, that day, residents of Tiberias, Galilee
and the Haifa coast went to the shelters for the first time in
decades.
There
is no doubt that Israel has the greatest military power in the Middle
East. However, after the Syrian response, it expressed its
unwillingness to be dragged behind a new war, understood Nasrallah’s
message and retreated from its enthusiasm to stop the “progressive
military answer” of the “axis of the resistance”.
In
fact, Israel tried to minimise the effect of the Syrian
rockets-missiles response to its repetitive attacks and its official
version said “only 20 rockets hit the (occupied) Golan”. However,
a rocket launcher appeared on Israeli television with a count-meter,
firing 36 rockets, confirming that the Israel’s official version
was false and had been subjected to military censorship which was
trying to ease the burden. But everyone in Israel – and certainly
the “axis of the resistance” – knows that the readiness for a
war is not a real option when the results are not predictable and the
internal front is not ready to face a massive response, since more
than 2.5 million Israelis do not have shelters and are not immune to
a destructive war.
Thus,
Israel realises today that its repetitive pre-emptive strikes (100
Israeli strikes during the Syrian war) failed to prevent the presence
of the “axis of resistance” on the 1973 cease-fire line. Israel
used to enjoy absolute air and naval power, as well as the ability to
push the United States to support its side in a future war. However,
today Israel is aware that its air force superiority can no longer be
exerted without any risk to go and “picnic” over Syria because of
the anti-missile system deployed in the Levant. Moreover, is its navy
and petroleum platforms are not immune from Russian and Iranian
Advanced surface-to-surface missiles. It also knows that the Israeli
population love prosperity and cannot afford the consequences of a
long war.
The
Israel “battles between wars” strategy – as the military
leadership likes to define it – has failed to:
- prevent the growth of the resistance capability;
- halt the spread of many groups like Hezbollah in Syria;
- separate the Lebanese axis from the Golan Heights;
In
fact Israel was totally panicked by only “twenty rockets” (as its
official version stated) against the Golan.
Israel
has pushed Iran to increase its investments in the military industry
in Syria by manufacturing long range missiles in the Levant.
Israel
has also forced Syria to improve the performance of the National
Defence Forces and the local forces of the Syrian army to become like
Hezbollah and benefit from its long experience in fighting Israel.
The
“axis of the resistance” is developing its skills to keep up to
speed with Israel’s development of its military capability.
However, observers expect Israel to try again to “test the pulse”
and to try to hit Syria again just to see if they will be fired at.
It
seems Israel finds it hard to understand that the project “the new
Middle East” is no longer possible to implement and the one leading
the military response is experienced in its method of reply. Israel
is however aware that Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah is an opponent who
knows how to develop the military, political and psychological
answers.
In
a very few words, Israel has lost the initiative in Syria. All its
attempts to support al-Qaeda and ISIS (the Khaled bin al-Waleed
army), the depletion of Iran in Syria and the strike against the
Syrian army have caused the expansion of the influence of its worst
enemy and the axis he is leading now on the occupied Golan Heights:
Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah.
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