Putin,
Israel and the Downed Il-20 --- IMPORTANT UPDATE
the
Saker
21
Septembr, 2017
Yesterday (Sept 19th), I
tried to post a
short commentary suggesting
that before we jump to conclusions about anything, we ought to wait
for the fact to come out. But to no avail. The chorus of “Putin
is a doormat!!”,
“bomb
Israel!!”
and similar inanities is carrying on, louder than ever. Reading that
crazy nonsense, I wanted to toss in a slogan, something like
“Jew-haters
and Putin-haters – unite!”.
But then I realized that it would be futile because they have already
united…
My friend Andrei
Martyanov has tried to bring some logic and sanity into this
pandemonium which I posted here (in
spite of not normally doing reposts). Well, at the risk of being
called a “gatekeeper” or a “cryto-Zionist”, I have decided to
also try once more to bring this discussion into the realm of sanity,
facts and logic.
First, let me start by a
very simple and primitive question:
Seriously, I mean it.
Unless you belong to the type of folks who believe that the Israelis
are exceptionally crafty, smart and quasi infallible (there are such
folks amongst both Jew-lovers and, more surprisingly, Jew-haters),
this is a legitimate question, no?
What do we know for sure
as of right now (Sept 20th)? We know that the Israelis did not give
enough warning time to the Russians, which is in direct violation of
an agreement between Israel and Russia. Do we know that they did
it deliberately? No, we don’t. We really don’t.
and “cluster****” is
something all militaries do on a daily basis.
Furthermore, the Israelis have had terrible screw-ups many, many
times. Just a summary of all the screw-ups of the famous (and much
over-rated) Mossad would take pages and include many outright
embarrassing incidents (for a good laugh, just look at the inept
Israeli attempt at assassinating Khaled Meshal!). So why is everybody
assuming that the Israelis carefully planned the whole thing?
Next, let’s assume that
this is simply the typical case of Israeli arrogance (not a myth!)
and that they decided to inform the Russians as late as possible.
Does that at all entail that the maneuver of the Israeli F-16s pilots
to seek cover from the S-200 missile was something they had planned
in advance? Does anybody bother to look at the actual (as opposed to
Hollywood) record of the Israeli Air Force during past wars when they
were actually challenged by a reasonably capable air defense? There
is a detailed discussion (in Russian) about this here which
can be summarized like this: as soon as the Israelis start losing
aircraft their martial prowess rapidly vanishes. Now please recall
this: the Israelis have had recent losses, some admitted, some
denied, but there is no doubt that they are tense and very concerned.
Bottom line: I would fully expect the Israeli pilots to freak out and
seek cover as soon as they are told by their warning system that they
are being painted by a radar in tracking mode (the S-200 has a
semi-active radar homing guidance system). If that is the case, and I
am not saying
that this is the only possibility, then the fault is of the Israeli
pilots, not of their commanders or the Israeli state as a hole. Yes,
the command responsibility is the one of the state, but not the guilt
for having engaged in such an evasive maneuver (besides, knowing
the price placed by Israeli on goyim lives,
this would be just so typical, would it not…)
At this point, I need to
ask another question: what would the Israelis gain from shooting down
the Il-20? They sure ain’t gonna frighten the Russians (Russian
military don’t scare easy) and the Il-20 will be replaced. Scaring
the Iranians or Hezbollah? Forget it – not happening. Maybe there
was a real lucrative target that they destroyed? Yes, maybe, be so
far we don’t know anything about this. So what would be the point?
Then the “sister
question”: what would the Israelis risk by deliberately shooting
down a Russian EW aircraft? Well, in theory, they would risk having
their aircraft shot down and their airbases engaged with Russian
missiles. That is highly unlikely, I will admit, and the Israelis
probably understand the Russians very well (many of them being from
Russia). But could they be sure that the
local commanders would not order an immediate retaliation (as their
current rules of engagement do authorize them to!)? Let me remind
everybody that this Spring, the USA was not so sure at all, and
following the words of the Russian ambassador that “not only
missiles but their launchers would be destroyed” the USN and
Air Force decided to shoot as little as possible and from as far as
possible. As for the British sub, its captain decided to cancel the
planned missile strike entirely (they were being shadowed by two
Russian subs). Seems to me that the potential risks of that kind of
operation would be pretty high, while the potential rewards rather
unclear.
Those who insist that
this was a deliberate Israeli act need to come up with a halfway
credible explanation not only for how this was done, but
also why this was done.
Now, like many others, I
despise the Israeli racist, genocidal rogue state with all my heart.
But that does not prevent me from being capable of imagining a
scenario in which the Israelis simply screwed-up. Believe it or not,
but my disgust for Zionist ideology does not at all entail a
boundless belief in some Israeli infallibility.
Finally, let look at
this: today (Sept 20th) an IDF delegation led by Air Force Commander
Maj.-Gen. Amikam Norkin is in Moscow. Also participating in the trip
are the Head of the Foreign Relations Division, Brig.-Gen. Erez
Meisel and other officers from the Intelligence, Air Force and
Operations Divisions. Does anybody believe that all these officers
went to Moscow just to thumb their noses at the Russians? Or maybe
they all traveled to Moscow to present some totally non-credible
excuses which will only infuriate the Russians further?
Putin-haters and
Jew-haters (united, of course!) will immediately declare that the
Israelis went to Moscow to pressure Putin into not giving in into the
(very real) public outrage and calls for retaliatory measures. To
this I will very simply reply: rest assured that there is a very
powerful pro-Zionist 5th column in Russia which is already
putting the maximal amount of pressure on the Kremlin and there is no
need at all to send top IDF officials to do that (especially on Yom
Kippur!).
This is probably due to
my messy writing style, but very often when I say “A” some folks
clearly hear “B” (or even “non-A”!), so with them in mind, I
will be very very clear and spell it out: I am not saying
that the Israelis did not deliberately shoot
down the Il-20 and I am not saying that the
Israelis are not responsible for the resulting loss of life and
equipment.
What I am saying is that
Putin, in contrast to the hordes of self-appointed armchair
strategists, does have to look at all
the possible options before deciding what to do next.
Because even if we assume that the Israelis are irresponsible,
arrogant, evil and reckless (which they are), this is not a reason
for the Russians to emulate them or start a war.
If the Russians conclude
that the Israelis did it deliberately, I will support a strike on
Israeli air bases. If the Russians conclude that the Israelis cannot
be trusted to abide by any agreements (which I think is
indisputable), then I think that the Russians should declare an air
exclusion zone over the Russian forces (a 100km radius or so). I also
think that it is high time to keep a pair MiG-31BMs on 24/7 combat
air patrol high over Syria (they can come quite close to replacing a
much more expensive and vulnerable A-50U AWACS).
At this time (Sept
20th 20:37 GMT) all
they have announced is
that “both
sides emphasized the importance of the states’ interests and the
continued implementation of the deconfliction system”.
If that is all that the Russians decide, then I will find it wholly
inadequate and I will predict a further surge in frustration against
not only the government, but against Putin himself. But, for the time
being, we need to wait and see what the Russian investigation will
reveal. Only then can we begin cheering Putin or calling him names.
There is also this
possibility: the Russians would decide on an air exclusion zone and
tell the Israelis, but both sides would decide to keep this secret in
order for Israel to save face (because if the Russians declare an air
exclusion zone, this will create a safe heaven for Hezbollah and all
the other militias which would be a political disaster for Bibi
Netanyahu). So we might never find out.
The S-200 is a pretty old
air defense system. We also know that it does not have a Russian IFF.
However, the Russians have declared several times that the Russian
air defense network and the Syrian one were integrated. This is what
best explains, at least in part, the very high number of US cruise
missiles intercepted in April. The problem is that the way the S-200
(and most modern air defense systems) works is that the S-200 is
fully integrated into a larger air defense network administered by
automated air defense management systems which is operated by a
higher echelon air defense command. This means that the Syrian air
defense crew did not simply detect the incoming missiles and fire off
one of their own. At the very least, this decision was taken by a
higher echelon Syrian air defense command. Now we know that the time
was extremely short and, hence, the Russian air defense personnel
might not have had the time to take protective action, especially not
when dealing with a large, slow and vulnerable moving EW aircraft
(the fact that this aircraft flew un-escorted is definitely a Russian
mistake!). Still, we know that the Russians have many early
warning capabilities which the Syrians do not have (AWACS, space
based, shipborne radars, over-the-horizon radars, etc.) and there is
a pretty decent chance that somebody could have done something to
prevent what happened. True, since the Israelis and Russians had an
agreement, the Russians therefore classified the Israelis as
“non-threat”, but it does not take a genius to understand that
four Israeli F-16 flying towards the Latakia Governorate are up to no
good and that this warrants immediately going on full alert.
So this might be the
reason why Putin spoke of “tragic circumstances”: there might be
more blame to pass around than just piling it all up on the just the
Israelis. By the way, even if true, none of this would in any
way exculpate
the Israelis for the very simple reason that had the Israelis warned
the Russians on time this entire tragedy might have been avoided even
if the prime culprits are cowardly Israeli pilots, less than
competent Syrian air defense crews or too trusting Russians. By
“warning” the Russians just 1 minute before the attack the
Israelis created an environment in which such a tragedy simply had to
happen. This
is why I think that no matter what the Russian investigation find,
anything short of an air exclusion zone over the Russian forces would
constitute an inadequate response: the fundamental Israeli
responsibility is already established. But what is still missing are
the (important) details.
One more thing in
conclusion: the last time the Russians made a deal with the Israelis,
it worked remarkably well, let’s not forget that. The Syrian forces
re-took control of their southern border without the Israelis doing
anything meaningful to stop them. Let also remember that at the
beginning of this war the usual chorus of Putin-haters was already
screaming that “Putin disarmed and betrayed Syria!!” when the
Russians removed the (useless) chemical weapons from Syria (thereby
stopping an imminent US attack). When the Russians then proceeded to
single-handedly save Syria from the “good” and “bad”
terrorists, those who were screaming about betrayal remained silent
and never admitted that they were wrong.
The truth is that no
matter what Putin does, we can expect the chorus of Putin-haters to
bellow at the top of their lungs “Putin betrayed X” (replace “X”
with whatever you want). Yes, they are stupid and tedious, and
nothing will stop them (I also suspect that a lot of that nonsense is
machine generated, at least judging by the kind of repetitive crap
the moderators constantly intercept on my blog). But for the rest of
us, we need to remain critical of both Putin and Russian policies,
but we need to do so by logically processing well-established facts,
not by just waiting for whatever pretext to resume the usual mantra.
UPDATE:
I have listened with great interest to the MoD briefing this morning
and it rather obvious that the Israelis offered no convincing
explanations to the Russians who spoke of “criminal
negligence“,
“misleading
Israel information”
and that “the
blame for the Russian Il-20 aircraft tragedy lies entirely with the
Israeli Air Force“.
The Russian military has concluded that the Israeli actions were “a
clear violation of the 2015 Russian-Israeli agreements”
and that “the
military leadership of Israel either has no appreciation for the
level of relations with Russia, or has no control over individual
commands or commanding officers who understood that their actions
would lead to tragedy“.
There is nothing at all in the MoD briefing which would in any way
excuse the Israelis and, even more importantly, nothing which could
leave any excuse for Putin not to take meaningful action in response.
And, just to make things worse, the Israelis have not only denied
any wrongdoing or mistakes,
but have even added that they
won’t change their policies in Syria (these
guys always double-down).
In summary, we have a
typical case of gross incompetence by the Israelis, followed by their
usual chutzpah when
caught. It will be very interesting and very telling to see what kind
of measures Putin will order next. Personally, I can only repeated
that in my opinion: that, as a bare minimum, Russia ought to declare
an air exclusion zone of about 100km around her forces in Syria and
declare that any Israeli aircraft entering that zone, or firing a
missile into it, will be immediately shot down. Russia also should
increase the number of Su-30SM/Su-35S in Khmeimim and place a pair of
MiG-31BM (possibly based in Iran) on 24/7 combat air patrol high over
Syria. If Putin fails to act this time, this will be the most damning
evidence of the power of the pro-Zionist 5th column in Russia. We
shall soon find out.
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