New
Rules of Engagement Announced in Syria; If Israel Hits Syria, They
Get Hit Back -- IN ISRAEL
14 December, 2018
Syria
has adopted a new rule of engagement with Israel now that Russia has
taken a tougher and clearer stance on the conflict between Israel and
its neighbors. Henceforth, Damascus will counter-attack to
any Israeli strike.
If
Israel damages a specific military target, Syria will reply with a
strike against a similar objective in
Israel.
Decision
makers in Damascus said, “Syria will not hesitate to hit an
Israeli airport if Damascus airport is targeted and hit by Israel.
This will be with the consent of the Russian military based in the
Levant.”
This
Syrian political decision is based on the clear position taken
by Russia in Syria following the downing
of its aircraft on
September 18 this year.
In
2015 when the Russian military landed in Syria, it informed the
parties concerned (i.e. Syria, Iran and Israel) that it had no
intention to interfere in the conflict between them and Hezbollah and
that it would not stand in the way of Tel Aviv’s planes bombing
Hezbollah military convoys on their way to Lebanon or Iranian
military warehouses not allocated to the war in Syria.
This
was a commitment to remain an onlooker if Israel hit Iranian military
objectives or Hezbollah convoys transporting arms to Hezbollah from
Syria to Lebanon, within Syrian territory.
Russia also
informed Israel that it would not accept any attacks on its allies
(Syria, Iran, Hezbollah, and their allies) engaged in fighting ISIS,
al-Qaeda and its allies.
Israel
respected the will of Moscow until the beginning of 2018, when it
started to attack Iranian bases and Syrian military warehouses,
though it never attacked a Hezbollah military position. Israel
justified its attack against the Iranian base, a military facility
called T4, by claiming it
had sent drones over Israel.
Tel
Aviv considered violation of its neighbors’ sovereignty
as its exclusive prerogative. Damascus and Iran have responded
with at
least one confirmed shooting down
of an Israeli F-16.
Israel
started to attack Syrian warehouses, mainly where Iranian missiles
were stored. Iran has replaced every single destroyed warehouse
with other more sophisticated precision missiles, capable of hitting
any objective in Israel.
However,
Russia’s neutrality towards Israel in the Levant turned out to be
quite expensive. It has lost more than Iran, especially after the
downing of its IL-20, and with it, 15 officers highly trained to use
the most advanced communication and espionage systems.
Russia
then brought to Syria its
long-awaited advanced S-300 missiles and delivered them to the Syrian
army while maintaining
electronic coordination and radar command.
The S-300 poses a danger to Israeli jets only if these violate Syrian
airspace. Tel Aviv has kept its planes out of Syria since last
September but
launched long range missiles against a couple of targets.
For
many months, Russian President Vladimir Putin refused to receive
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Only through real
harassment by the latter did Putin finally accept to briefly meet
with Netanyahu over lunch or around the dinner table during a large
Summit or meeting of Heads of State, without however accepting any
compromise or reconciliation.
Russia
has now taken a clear position and has no intention of extending its
embrace or pardon to Israel. Russia
felt that its generosity (by closing its eyes to Israel’s
activities in Syria) was neither
recognized nor sufficiently appreciated by Tel Aviv.
This
past week, Moscow agreed to receive an Israeli
military delegation led
by Major-General Aharon Haliva, following Israel’s insistence
on breaking the ice between the two countries. However, Russia’s
position is not expected to change in Syria and no Israeli bombing of
Syrian or Iranian targets will be tolerated.
According
to sources:
“Russia has informed Israel that there are Russian officers present at every Syrian or Iranian military base and that any strike against Syrian or Iranian objectives would hit Russian forces as well. Putin will not allow his soldiers and officers to be struck down by Israel’s direct or indirect bombing”.
Moreover, Russia
has given Syria the green light — said
the sources — to
strike Israel at any time if and when Tel Aviv’s planes launch
raids against
Syrian military targets or launch long-range missiles without flying
over Syria (for fear of the S-300 and to avoid seeing its jets downed
over Syria or Lebanon).
The
sources confirmed that Syria — contrary
to what Israel claims — now
has the most accurate missiles, which can hit any target inside
Israel.
The
Syrian armed forces have received unrevealed long and medium-range
missiles from Iran. These operate on the GLONASS system
– the abbreviation for Globalnaya Navigazionnaya Sputnikovaya
Sistema, the Russian version of the GPS. Thus, the delivery of Iran
and the manufacture of missiles inside Syria (and Lebanon) is now
complete.
Israel,
however, claims it has destroyed Syria’s missile capability,
including that of the missiles delivered by Iran. According to the
source, Damascus controls a very large number of precision missiles,
notwithstanding those destroyed by Israel. “In Iran, the cheapest
and most accessible items are the Sabzi and
the missiles” said the source.
The
new Syrian rule of engagement — according
to the source — is
now as follows: an
airport will be hit if Israel hits an airport, and any attack on a
barracks or command and control center will result in an attack
on similar target in Israel.
It appears that the decision has been taken at the highest level and
a clear “bank of objectives” has now been set in place.
The
rules of engagement are changing and situation in the Levant theater
is becoming more dangerous; regional and international confrontations
are still possible.
The
Middle East will not return to stability unless the Syrian war
ends — a war in which the two superpowers, as well as Europe,
Israel, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, have played essential roles.
The final chapters have not yet been written.
Authored
by Elijah Magnier, Middle East based chief international war
correspondent for Al Rai Media
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.