CounterPunch/Global Research
by Ben Schreiner
Iran is undermining
the world's stability.
Benjamin Netanyahu
With its air strikes against targets inside Syria last week, Israel
announced its formal entry into the Syrian crisis. The Israeli targeting
of Iran has thus entered the Syrian theater.
According to McClatchy, the Israeli strikes on January 30 targeted
anti-aircraft missiles at a military base outside of Damascus. The
missiles, according to Israeli intelligence sources, were headed for Hezbollah
in Lebanon.
"Israel relies heavily on the strength of our air
force, and its strategic deterrence," an Israeli official explained
to McClatchy. "Weapons systems that make our air force
vulnerable will not be allowed to fall into the hands of terrorist
groups."
Accordingly, Washington reacted to the Israeli assault by
sternly warning Damascus. “Syria,” White House deputy national security
adviser Ben Rhodes warned,
"should not further destabilize the region by transferring weaponry to
Hezbollah."
Washington, in other words, views any effort to curb
Israel's freedom to fly sorties when and where it fancies as a threat to
regional stability. Of course, “stability” in the Washington lexicon is
used to connote unmatched Western military superiority. (Thus, NATO
Patriot batteries deployed along the Turkey-Syria border are championed as a
means to “deescalate tensions.”)
With such “stability” in mind, Time reports that Washington has given a “green
light” to Israel to carry out yet further strikes. And blessed with
such carte blanche, Israel is already planning an escalated level
of intervention.
According to a report in
the Times of London, “Israel is considering creating a buffer zone
reaching up to 10 miles inside Syria.” And to this end, Israel has now reportedly dispatched its third Iron Dome anti-rocket
battery to its northern border. As an Israeli military planner went on to
tell the Times, “If the country [Syria] remains unstable we might
have to stay there for years.”
Meanwhile, the right-wing Debkafile reports that “the Israeli Air Force has in recent days
thrown a round-the-clock blanket over the [Syria-Lebanon] border area.”
“Without going through any formalities,” Debka continues,
“Israel has thus effectively imposed a no-fly regime over a buffer zone straddling
the Syrian-Lebanese border and placed it under the control of its air force.”
The Israeli strike inside Syria was thus clearly not an
isolated affair, but a prelude to a deepening Israeli intervention long in the
making.
Confronting Iran via the Third Option
In a February 2012 New York Times op-ed,
former Mossad chief Efraim Halevy argued that beyond punitive sanctions and
military confrontation, the crisis in Syria created a third option “to rid the
world of the Iranian menace.”
“Ensuring that Iran is evicted from its regional hub in
Damascus would cut off Iran’s access to its proxies (Hezbollah in Lebanon and
Hamas in Gaza) and visibly dent its domestic and international prestige,
possibly forcing a hemorrhaging regime in Tehran to suspend its nuclear
policies,” Halevy argued. “This would be a safer and more rewarding
option than the military one.”
“Once this is achieved,” Halevy continued, “the entire
balance of forces in the region would undergo a sea change. Iranian-sponsored
terrorism would be visibly contained; Hezbollah would lose its vital Syrian
conduit to Iran and Lebanon could revert to long-forgotten normalcy; Hamas fighters
in Gaza would have to contemplate a future without Iranian weaponry and
training; and the Iranian people might once again rise up against the regime
that has brought them such pain and suffering.”
Such notions of a “new Middle East” amenable to the interests of Tel Aviv and
Washington have long held an allure for Western planners. In fact, nearly
seven years have now passed since Israel’s 2006 invasion of Lebanon was cheered
by U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice as “the birth pangs of a new Middle East.”
It's little surprise, then, that the dream of forging a new
Middle East through the destruction of Syria has come to be championed by the U.S. neo-con crowd. But the hope of using the crisis
in Syria to boot Iran from the Arab world more generally is widely shared. Indeed, the marginally more sober have
begun to warm to the idea of intervention into Syria as a means to purge the
“Iranian menace.”
“An inflection point has been reached,” the New York
Times’ Roger Cohen argues in his latest column. “Inaction spurs the progressive
radicalization of Syria, the further disintegration of the state, the
intensification of Assad’s mass killings, and the chances of the conflict
spilling out of Syria in sectarian mayhem. It squanders an opportunity to
weaken Iran. This is not in the West’s interest.”
“It is time to alter the Syrian balance of power enough to
give political compromise a chance and Assad no option but departure,” Cohen
continues. “That means an aggressive program to train and arm the Free
Syrian Army. It also means [Senator John] McCain’s call to use U.S. cruise missiles to destroy
Assad’s aircraft on the runway is daily more persuasive.”
But it really doesn’t take much persuasion to convince U.S.
elites it’s time to fire off another cruise missile. After all, “rocket and bomb diplomacy” has become American
foreign policy orthodoxy.
Stoking the Inferno or Seeking an Endgame?
American dreams of cruise missile justice notwithstanding,
Israel's entry into Syria indeed appears as an inflection point. But why,
we must ask, did Tel Aviv chose now to insert itself into the crisis?
As Nicola Nasser notes, the Israeli raid “coincided with hard to refute
indications that the ‘regime change’ in Syria by force, both by foreign
military intervention and by internal armed rebellion, has failed, driving the
Syrian opposition in exile to opt unwillingly for “negotiations” with the
ruling regime.”
In fact, it was the very day the exiled Syrian opposition first hinted at an openness to dialogue that Israeli jets
were sent to strafe the outskirts of Damascus. But then again, stoking
the Syrian inferno is widely held in Tel Aviv as favorable to Israeli
interests.
As former Israeli Military Intelligence chief Maj. Gen. Amos
Yadlin explained on Monday, “The most significant army along
our borders, the Syrian army, which is an advanced army with a very large
arsenal of long-range missiles and rockets and with Russian-made air defenses
that are among the most advanced in the world, is wearing itself down. Its
operational capability to act against Israel declines every week that goes
by."
"This is a positive development both from the military
aspect, but also from the political aspect," Yadlin continued. "The
radical anti-Israel axis that goes through Tehran, Damascus, Beirut, and Gaza
is falling apart."
Alon Liel, the former director general of the Israeli
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, offered much the same analysis in a weekend
appearance on Al Jazeera English.
“For Israel,” Liel argued, “the weakening of Syria as a result of this war is
of strategic importance because Syria is quite an enemy of Israel. And
the internal battle is also removing the issue of withdrawing from the Golan
Heights from the agenda.”
Whether Israel’s formal intervention into Syria is thus
meant to fan the flames, or whether it is instead intended to hasten an endgame, remains uncertain. At the moment, though, it certainly appears Tel
Aviv is quite content with letting Syria burn.
But whatever the case may be, Israel's ultimate aim is quite
clear. As Halevy argued, “if Mr. Assad goes, Iranian hegemony over Syria
must go with him. Anything less would rob Mr. Assad’s departure of any
significance.”
Yet as planners in Tel Aviv and Washington seek to
impart such significance, a growing Iranian foothold in the Arab world
continues outside the
purview of imperial diktats.
A Resilient Menace
The arrival of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad in
Cairo on Tuesday – the first Iranian leader to touch down in Cairo since the
Islamic revolution in 1979 – offers just the latest evidence of Tehran's
growing regional stature. Cause, of course, for great distress in
Washington.
“While the Egypt’s relations with Iran remains
limited,” the New York Times noted “the scene on the tarmac at the Cairo Airport on
Tuesday — Egypt’s new president, Mohamed Morsi, greeting Mr. Ahmedinejad warmly
in a red-carpet ceremony — would have been unimaginable under Mr. Mubarak, and
seemed likely to alarm the Obama administration.”
Tuesday's historic meeting in Cairo follows on the heels of
Morsi’s visit to Tehran in August for the Sixteenth Summit of Non-Aligned
Movement. At the time, Morsi was widely condemned in both Washington and
Tel Aviv for, as Times columnist Thomas Friedman wrote, taking such a “wrong turn.”
Morsi's continued “wrong turn,” needless to say, bodes ill
for those seeking to sever Tehran presence in Syria. For as Morsi declared Tuesday, “I believe that the Syrian problem could
not be resolved without Iran and Iran’s efforts in this regard are
prioritized.”
“We have no doubt that Iran is sincerely endeavoring to
resolve the problems in Syria and other nations,” Morsi added, “Hence, we
stress cooperation with Iran in this field.”
It appears expunging the “Iranian menace,” then, will
require more than an Israeli triumph on a Syrian battlefield. For rather
than being crippled, the menace appears ever more resilient. Hence the purported
danger is said to remain acute.
Speaking with the Wall Street Journal,
outgoing U.S. Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta recently accused Iran of “an intensified campaign to destabilize the
Middle East.” And as a result, the Journal report continued, “the
U.S. is stepping up efforts to counter the Iranian threat.”
Such efforts will no doubt come to dominate the itinerary of
President Obama’s spring visit to Israel. As the New York Times reports, “on the agenda this trip will be Iran and the
continuing strife in Syria that threatens to descend into a wider regional
conflict.”
Read at CounterPunch and Global Research.
The Zionists of Israel would like nothing better to see Syria burn and self destruct. It can then fully concentrate on the next domino Iran.
ReplyDelete