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Информация о материале
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Автор: Caroline Glick
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Категория: english
Psychological warfare antics are working on Israeli Left, which is exerting
massive pressure on the rudderless Olmert-Livni-Peretz government to force
it to open negotiations with Damascus — negotiations that would lead to
Israel's surrender of the Golan Heights in exchange for a piece of paper
from Iran's Arab colony
Jewish World Review March
16, 2007 / 26 Adar, 5766
This has been a banner week for Syrian diplomacy.
First, together with their big Iranian brothers, the Syrians were given
a place at the table alongside US officials at the conference on Iraqi
security in Baghdad last weekend.
At the same time as their underlings exchanged recriminations with
the US, Syrian dictator Bashar Assad and Iranian Defense Minister Mustafa
Muhammad Najjar merged the Syrian and Iranian militaries at a summit in
Damascus. On Sunday Najjar explained the deal to reporters saying, "We
consider the capability of the Syrian defensive forces as our own and believe
that expansion of defensive ties would ... help deal with the threats of
the enemies."
Najjar added that Iran, "offers all of its defense capabilities to
Syria." The meeting was capped off on Monday when Najjar signed a memorandum
of understanding on military cooperation with his Syrian counterpart Hassan
Turkmeni.
Tuesday, US Assistant Secretary of State for Refugees Ellen Sauerbrey
became the first senior US official to visit Syria since Damascus engineered
former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri's assassination in February
2005.
Following closely on Sauerbrey's heels was the EU's foreign policy
chief Javier Solana. Like Sauerbrey, Solana was the first senior EU official
to step foot in the Syrian capital since Hariri was murdered. Unlike Sauerbrey,
who came and left without making a sound, Solana used the occasion to drop
a diplomatic bomb.
Standing next to Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Moualem Wednesday, Solana
announced, "We would like to work as much as possible to see your country
Syria recuperate the territory taken in 1967."
Israel should be very concerned by Solana's statement. 17 years ago,
an American diplomat made a similar statement to another Arab dictator.
It was swiftly followed by war.
On July 25,1990 then US ambassador to Iraq April Glaspie held a fateful
meeting with Saddam Hussein. It occurred against the backdrop of a massive
Iraqi military build-up along the Kuwaiti border. Glaspie received a cagey
and defensive reply from Saddam when she asked the meaning of the deployment.
According to the protocol of the meeting which she sent that day to Washington,
Glaspie told Saddam that the US took no position on intra-Arab disputes.
At the time, and since, the common view has been that Saddam interpreted
Glaspie's statement as American acquiescence to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait
which took place eight days later.
Solana's statement that Europe supports the reassertion of Syrian control
over the Golan Heights came in the midst of a massive Syrian deployment
of offensive weapons systems close to its border with Israel. Early this
week, Israeli military commanders revealed that since last September, Syria
as deployed between 1,000 and 3,000 missiles and rockets close to its border
with Israel.
This revelation followed the apparent murder of Russian journalist
Ivan Safronov. Safronov, who fell to his death from his fifth floor apartment
window in Moscow on March 2, told his editors at Kommersant newspaper just
before his death that he was working on a story exposing Russian sales
of advanced Iskander missiles to Syria and jetfighters to Iran.
This week, Michael Maples, the director of the US Defense Intelligence
Agency announced that "Syria has a program to develop select biological
agents." Maples explained, "Syria's biotechnical infrastructure is capable
of supporting limited biological agent development." He added that Syria
is seeking to install biological and chemical warheads on its missile arsenal.
Indeed, according to opposition leader Binyamin Netanyahu, over the
past year Syria has increased its military outlays by a factor of ten.
Syria is using the smokescreen of near weekly protestations of interest
in negotiating with Israel to divert attention away from its clear preparations
for war. Rather than see these statements for the psychological warfare
antics they are, Israeli leftists have pounced on them. Led by Ha'aretz
newspaper, the Israeli Left is exerting massive pressure on the rudderless
Olmert-Livni-Peretz government to force it to open negotiations with Damascus
— negotiations that would lead to Israel's surrender of the Golan Heights
in exchange for a piece of paper from Iran's Arab colony.
Due to the government's general incompetence, it is unable to formulate
a coherent policy towards Syria. The Left's calls for surrender talk consequently
dominate the public debate on Syria. This in turn has paralyzed the state
bodies responsible for taking measures to prepare the IDF and the public
for the prospect of war.
The IDF's public assessment of the Syrian threat is evidence of the
confusion. Last month, Military Intelligence chief Maj. Gen. Amos Yadlin
addressed the Syrian threat at the government's intelligence assessment
meeting. Yadlin said, "The chances of a full-scale war initiated by Syria
are low, but the chances of Syria reacting militarily against Israeli military
moves are high."
Yadlin's statement was presented to the public as good news. But it
was not good news. Syria will not initiate a full-scale war against Israel
because it would lose a full-scale war. Syria's comparative advantage against
the IDF is found in the area of low-intensity warfare, and as Yadlin noted,
there is every reason to expect that it is this sort of warfare that Syria
is preparing to initiate.
Over the past several years, Syria has built up massive artillery,
missile and rocket arsenals that are capable of causing extensive damage
to the IDF and to Israeli communities in the Golan Heights and the Galilee.
So too, Syria fields a highly trained commando corps capable of exacting
physical losses and tactical setbacks to the IDF.
Syria has two good reasons to go to war against Israel. Since 1973,
every Arab state and terrorist organization that has gone to war against
Israel has benefited from their aggression. Syria no doubt expects for
the pattern to continue. In all likelihood, if Syria is able to fight Israel
to a stalemate as Hizbullah did last summer, the Israeli Left, the EU and
the US can be expected to increase their pressure for an Israeli surrender
of the Golan Heights.
Moreover, a war with Israel would shore up Assad's dwindling support
at home. Sherko Abbas, a Kurdish-Syrian exile living in the US heads the
Kurdistan National Assembly of Syria. He explains that due to Syria's economic
weakness and the Assad government's profligate corruption, the regime is
widely despised by its Syrian subjects. According to Abbas, the organized
domestic opposition to the regime crosses ethnic lines and includes Kurds,
Druse, Alawites, and even members of Assad's family clan.
Three years ago, regime sponsored Sunni thugs attacked Kurdish soccer
fans in Dayz az Zawr, a Kurdish city along the border with Iraq. The attack
led to three days of Kurdish anti-regime riots. Rioters destroyed regime
monuments and burned government offices. Brutally quelled, the riots left
85 Kurds dead, hundreds wounded and thousands imprisoned.
Numbering between 2.5-3 million, Kurds make up some 15 percent of the
Syrian population. On Monday, hundreds of thousands of Kurds flocked to
cemeteries to publicly commemorate the anniversary of the riots. As Abbas
sees it, the fact that the Kurds were unafraid to publicly commemorate
their uprising is proof of the regime's weakness.
Most Israeli politicians claim that were the regime to be overthrown,
it would be replaced by the Muslim Brotherhood. The specter of an Islamist
government arising in Syria is seen as sufficient reason for the Israeli
government to do nothing to destabilize the Assad regime despite its strategic
partnership with Iran.
Abbas disputes this view. He claims that the Muslim Brotherhood is
a spent force in Syria. "If the Brotherhood were capable of replacing the
regime, it would have overthrown it when there was a chance in 2004," he
argues.
To offset his regime's unpopularity, over the past few years Assad
has imported more than 100,000 "immigrants" from Iran. These new Persian-speaking
Syrians are keen to influence their adopted society. To this end, they
have built new Shiite mosques throughout the country and are paying Syrians
to convert to Shiite Islam.
According to Abbas, the regime has settled its new loyalists in Damascus,
Latakiya, Homs and Aleppo. All these areas - in close proximity to Lebanon
and Israel — are of strategic importance to the regime.
By the same token, repeated press reports from Syria over the past
year indicate that Assad replaced his Syrian security detail with a new
presidential protection force comprised of members of the Iranian Revolutionary
Guards Corps and Hizbullah.
With Syria clearly on war footing, there are several moves Israel must
make right now. Militarily, Israel must prepare for war. The IDF should
be pre-positioning equipment in the Golan Heights; training its reserves
and regular forces for war, and updating its doctrine for fighting in the
Golan Heights. So too, municipal authorities should be readying their bomb
shelters for another war and preparing contingencies to evacuate civilians
from the North.
If Syria does initiate hostilities, the IDF's goal must be to destroy
the Syrian military and avoid a stalemate at all costs.
Diplomatically, Israel must work to cancel the diplomatic gains that
Syria made this week. The goal must be to return Syria to the international
isolation it has been relegated to since it engineered Hariri's murder.
Israel must also identify and assist forces in Syria that are working
to undermine and topple the regime. Last week the Knesset's Foreign Affairs
and Defense Committee invited Syria's US-based agent Ibrahim Suleiman,
who held contacts with the far-left former director general of the Foreign
Ministry Alon Liel to address its members. That invitation should be rescinded.
Rather than Suleiman, the Knesset should invite regime opponents to speak
to its members.
Working with the Kurdish opposition, the US-based Center for Democracy
in the Middle East operates a satellite television station that runs limited
broadcasts into Syria in Kurdish, Arabic and Persian. The station educates
its viewers about the regime's corruption, suppression of human rights
and democracy. It calls for peaceful coexistence with Israel and the rest
of Syria's neighbors. Israel should be helping to fund, expand and run
these broadcasts.
For its part, the regime itself announced this week that it is planning
to launch a satellite television station that will advance the Syrian-Iranian
line to the Arab world. Imagine how refreshing it would be for audiences
to have the opportunity to watch something other than jihad on television.
In all its dealings with Syria, Israel must understand that today Syria
is a clear enemy whose interests are diametrically opposed to the interests
of the Jewish state. As a result, in all arenas and at all times, Israel
should be working to weaken and destabilize the regime. There is much it
can do to advance this purpose.
Unfortunately, until the current government is replaced, it is hard
to imagine how this can happen.
© 2007, Caroline B. Glick
Russian version