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Israeli air raid in Syria heightens Middle East tensions
By Chris Talbot
17 September 2007
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The incursion by Israeli jet fighters into Syrian air space
on September 6 is the most serious provocation the Olmert regime
has carried out since the 34-day attack on Lebanon last summer.
The planes flew deep into Syria and were reportedly engaged by
Syrian air defences at Tall al-Abyad, near the Turkish border.
There are differing explanations about what exactly happened
and considerable secrecy surrounds the event. What is clear is
that the Israeli action is supported by the Bush administration
in the United States.
The incident must be seen as part of the escalation of US military
aggression in the Middle East. It coincides with the news that
the US is building a military base near the Iran-Iraq border and
the decision to deploy more British troops on that same border
(see British troops in Iraq deployed
to Iranian border).
A strike at Irans ally, Syria, under these conditions
of heightened tension has the most ominous implications. Whatever
the precise nature of the operation, it indicates that US plans
for a wider Middle Eastern conflagration, whether launched directly
by the US or by its Israeli allies, are well-advanced.
Some experts have suggested that the Israeli operation was
an attempt to gather intelligence on a new air defence system
that Russia has supplied to the Syrians. Others speculated that
it may have been a mission intended to test a northern route for
bombing missions against Iran. Others have claimed that it was
an attempt to stop Syria from supplying arms to Hezbollah in Lebanon.
However, media speculation in the WestSyria has given
almost no details of the Israeli raid and the Olmert government
has imposed a blanket security blackout on the Israeli mediahas
increasingly settled on the claim that the Israeli jets bombed
a facility housing North Korean-supplied nuclear materials.
Both Syria and North Korea have denied any nuclear exchanges.
The New York Times and the Washington Post have
run reports claiming that North Korea has given Syria nuclear
weapons technology. Andrew Semmel, acting deputy assistant secretary
of state for nuclear non-proliferation policy, was quoted in the
Washington Post as claiming that there are North Koreans
in Syria. There are indicators that they do have something
going on there, he said.
An anonymous US expert claimed that the Israeli raid targeted
an agricultural research facility in northern Syria near the Turkish
border at which the Syrians are allegedly attempting to extract
uranium from phosphates. The attack was linked, the expert claimed,
to the arrival of North Korean ship on September 3 in the Syrian
port of Tartus on the Mediterranean coast.
Other experts in the field of Middle East politics and nuclear
weapons technology are highly sceptical of these allegations.
But former US ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton has
been only too eager to spread the story. Bolton, a public opponent
of US nuclear talks with North Korea and unofficial spokesman
for the faction within the Bush administration, led by Vice President
Dick Cheney, that is pushing for war with Iran, has claimed that
Syria and Iran have become safe havens for Korean
nuclear technology.
The claim that Korea has exported nuclear technology to Syria
bears all the hallmarks of the WMD fabrication that preceded the
invasion of Iraq. The idea that a ship could bring nuclear material
all the way from North Korea to the Mediterranean through waters
bristling with US and other NATO warships is unlikely.
The three media outlets that first promoted the claim of a
Syrian-North Korean nuclear connection are all identified with
those sections of the American ruling elite pressing for military
action against Iran. The Wall Street Journal published
an article a week before the Israeli raid, citing claims by Bolton
that Pyongyang was selling nuclear technology to Damascus. Fox
News Channel then reported US suspicions that North Korea was
secretly transferring technology and equipment for enriching uranium
to Syria. The Washington Post subsequently quoted international
experts who claimed that Israel had targeted a delivery from North
Korea that had arrived three days before the air strike.
The New York Times reported September 16 that supporters
of Vice President Cheney have argued, privately, that the
United States should encourage Israel to consider a military strike
on Irans nuclear facilities.
The article continued: An Israeli airstrike in Syria
last week kicked up speculation in the Iranian press that Israel,
in alliance with the United States, was really trying to send
a message to Iran that it could strike Iranian nuclear facilities
if it chose to do so.
If I were the Iranians, what Id be freaked
out about is that the other Arab states didnt protest
the airstrike, said George Perkovich, vice president for global
security and economic development studies at the Carnegie Endowment
for International Peace. The Arab world nonreaction is a
signal to Iran that Arabs arent happy with Irans power
and influence, so if the Israelis want to go and intimidate and
violate the airspace of another Arab state thats an ally
of Iran, the other Arab states arent going to do anything.
The Israeli operation is a significant shift in its approach.
Only recently, Israel and Syria were insisting that neither had
aggressive intentions towards the other and were engaged in discussions
on the Golan Heights.
Syrias response to the Israeli action was strangely muted.
It made a public protest at the UN, but it did not call on the
Security Council to condemn the violation of its air space. Syrias
cautious response suggests that the Assad regime is unwilling
to inflame the situation and wants an accommodation with Israel
and the US.
A retired Israeli diplomat quoted in Al-Jazeera who has been
negotiating with Syrian officials expressed his concern over the
Israeli operation. Alon Liel said, I see here an Israeli
message that is very aggressive and Im worried.
Whether or not Syria is to be targeted as well as Iran, the
Israeli action was meant to send a clear message that it is vulnerable
and should not attempt to help Iran in the event of a US attack.
See Also:
Washington and Israel discuss
possible war against Syria
[9 June 2007]
Bush administration endorses
anti-Palestinian, anti-Syrian offensive in Lebanon
[25 May 2007]
Israel has plans for nuclear
attack on Iran
[8 January 2007]
The aftermath of the
US-Israeli offensive against Lebanon
[25 August 2006]
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