Lights in the sky over Damascus. Another Israeli raid – “daring” of course, in the words of
Israel’s supporters, and the second in two days – on Bashar al-Assad’s weaponry
and military facilities and weapons stores. The story is already familiar: the
Israelis wanted to prevent a shipment of Iranian-made Fateh-110 missiles
reaching Hezbollah in Lebanon; they were being sent by the Syrian
government. According, at least, to a ‘Western intelligence source’. Anonymous,
of course. And it opens the old question: why when the Syrian regime is
fighting for its life would it send advanced missiles out of Syria?
But the Syrians themselves have officially
confirmed that military installations were hit by the Israelis. And not for the
first time during the rebellion. The Fateh-110 – the new version, at least –
has a range of perhaps 250km. And it could indeed reach Tel Aviv from southern
Lebanon. If the Hezbollah has actually acquired any. But why would the Syrians
send them, as US sources were also claiming last night, when the Americans
themselves claimed only last December that the Syrians had used the same
ground-to-ground missiles against rebel forces in Syria.
In other words, the Syrian regime was prepared to
dispense with their rockets to Lebanon when they were already using them in the
brutal war in Syria… Now there are other questions to be asked. If the
Syrian air force can use their MiGs so devastatingly – and at such civilian
cost – against their enemies inside Syria, why couldn’t they have sent their
jets to protect Damascus and attack the Israeli aircraft? Isn’t the Syrian air
force supposed to be guarding Syria from Israel? Or are the MiGs just not
technically able to take on Israel’s state-of-the-art (American) hardware? Or
would that just be a step too far?
Much more important, however, is the salient fact
that Israel has now intervened in the Syrian war. It may say it was only
aiming at weapons destined for the Hezbollah – but these were weapons also
being used against rebel forces in Syria. By diminishing the regime’s
supply of these weapons, it is therefore helping the rebels overthrow Bashar
al-Assad. And since Israel regards itself as a Western nation – best friend and
best US military ally in the Middle East, etc, etc – this means that “we” are
now involved in the war, directly and from the air.
Let’s see if the US and the EU condemn Israel’s
air attacks. I doubt it. Which would mean, if we are silent, that we approve of
them. Silence, to quote Sir Thomas More, gives consent.
So now the Iranians and Hizballah are accused of
intervening in Syria – true, though not to quite extent we are led to believe –
and Qatar and Saudi Arabia funnel weapons to the rebels – true, but not quite
enough weapons, as the Syrian rebels will tell you – and the Israelis have joined
in. We are now militarily involved.
I fear that more Western air power will eventually be brought into the conflict against Assad under the pretext of ending the stalemate and stopping the bloodshed. Only time will tell I suppose.
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