Middle East Politics
ISRAEL BOMBS SYRIA: HOW LONG
CAN THIS GO ON?
Posted on 27/02/2020 by Elijah J Magnier
By Elijah J. Magnier: @ejmalrai
Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad and Russia believe the war on terror has priority over and above any
Israeli provocations. Syria and Russia are of necessity avoiding a ‘battle
between wars’, a term used by Israel to sneak in and hit-and-run an enemy target
not sufficiently important to trigger an all-out war. Eliminating jihadists on
the Aleppo-Idlib front is far more critical to Syria than responding to Israeli
attacks on the Syrian army’s military capability and its destruction of
military warehouses. Israel’s military command understands Syria’s priorities
and is taking advantage of the situation. It has carried out hundreds of
attacks in Syria on various targets in different Syrian cities, without
changing the balance of forces and capabilities. But stopping Israel’s arrogant
violations of Syrian sovereignty will become an easy task when Damascus is
ready to direct its guns towards Israel.
In fact, despite over 400
Israeli attacks on Syria since the beginning of the war in 2011, the Syrian
army has now liberated most of Syria, with the exception of the north, occupied
by Turkish and US forces. The Syrian army has moved north, knocking at the
gates of Idlib for a month. Israeli attacks have not undermined a Syrian army
that has shown its competence in fierce battles at Ghouta (east of Damascus),
in Deir-ezzour (north-east) and in the north, clearing a large security
perimeter around Aleppo.
IDF doctrine consists of
specialisation and study of military affairs but does not rely on
battlefield experience. Iran and its allies heavily rely on experience,
education, training and creatively renewing their military doctrine.
In battle after battle, the
Syrian army has demonstrated successful combat experience, obvious superiority
in the battlefield, intense firepower clearing the road for the infantry prior
to any attack, efficient military planning, use of advanced military equipment
and skilful coordination with its partners and the Russian army. The Syrian
army and its allies have defeated ISIS in most parts of Syria. Only in the
north-east did US forces play a role in defeating ISIS; the US did not allow
Damascus’s forces to cross the Euphrates river.
The Syrian army also
defeated al-Qaeda, its many highly trained, well-equipped and ideologically
motivated foreign fighters, and all the other jihadist groups fighting under
different names, mixed with local Syrians (Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, Ansar
al-Sharia, Ahrar al-Sham et al.). The US forces did not engage in any battle
against al-Qaeda and the other jihadist groups in Syria but limited itself to
targeted assassinations via drones. It was left to the Syrian army and its
allies to eliminate al-Qaeda and its jihadist allies in Syria.
Israel has never fought
protracted wars, while Syria, Iran and Hezbollah have lived years of war and
confronted all kinds of enemies using diverse tactics. Syria, Iran and its
allies have fought in the mountains, open spaces, urban warfare, special
operations behind enemy lines- and confronted more than one enemy at the time.
This experience is invaluable and unmatched
Iran brought to Syria
ballistic and cruise missiles along with the adequate technology to manufacture
them locally. Israel believes it has destroyed many of these precision
missiles, as is likely. But Israel did not manage to deprive Syria of all its
precision missiles, it has destroyed only replaceable missiles and armed
drones.
Israeli
missile intercepted over Damascus
Israeli military doctrine
relies mainly on an air force that proved its limited effectiveness in the last
Israeli war on Lebanon in 2006. But its Air Force is easily countered: according
to a high-ranking source within the “Axis of the Resistance”, a simple Rule of
Engagement can ground the Israeli air force forever. Following any Israeli air
attack, Syria and its allies will face it, in due course, with precision
ballistic and cruise missiles with high explosive warheads, enough to
intimidate Israel and create a balance between missile launching and air
attack.
Major General (ret.) Amos
Yaldin, director of INSS, has stated in his yearly assessment that the probability of war is increasing. But the “Axis of the Resistance”
believes war is highly unlikely because all parties are well armed and can
damage each other significantly. The Israel domestic front is fragile and not
accustomed to massive bombing from ballistic missiles with over 700 kg of
explosive, and cruise missiles hitting multiple selective targets with
precision. Although precision missiles reduce civilian casualties when fired
against military targets, they can be launched against highly sensitive
objectives if necessary. Israel no longer has the exclusivity of damaging
neighbouring countries. For the moment, Israel is taking advantage of Syria’s
concentration of its military effort on jihadists to bomb Syria without
suffering significant retaliation. When the time comes and the Syrian north is
liberated, Syrian retaliation will be forthcoming.
The Russian presence in the
Levant will very likely stop any possibility of the conflict becoming a major
war in the region. President Putin is not President Dimitry Medvedev, who in
2011 gave NATO a free hand to destroy Libya. Israel and Russia enjoy good ties,
but Russia will not allow an Israeli-Syrian war to spoil its plans to impose
stability in the region.
Already Russia has suffered
from Israeli attacks and blamed Tel Aviv for downing its Ilyushin IL-20 with 15
officers onboard in September 2018. In response, Russia supplied Syria with S-300
missiles. Moreover, recent reports indicate that Russian Su-35s have pursued Israeli aircraft and forced them to leave Syrian
airspace.
An agreement was reached
between Israel and Russia whereby no Israeli jet would violate Syrian airspace,
at the risk of being downed. Russia is in control of the entire air space over
Syria with the exception of the east of the Euphrates river. This is why Israel
violated Iraqi airspace when it bombed targets (Althiyas Military airbase, also known as T4) east of Homs
under cover of the US military bases in Iraq and the occupied north-east of
Syria. Otherwise, it bombs targets in Syria when flying above the occupied
Golan Heights or Lebanon. Moreover, Russia demands that Israel inform it in
advance of any attack so as to avoid being caught in the crossfire, warn its
partners in Syria to avert severe casualties, and remove sensitive weapons from
their caches.
Iran is continuously arming
Syria and its allies in the Levant. Israel is mindful of this and can do very
little to stop it. Israel is also aware that its attacks over Syria will come
to an end when Syria liberates its territory. It is to Israel’s advantage to cease
its electoral show and bomb non-strategic targets. The Iranian presence in
Syria is a fact that neither the US, Russia or Israel can alter. Syria needs a
country like Iran to stand against the US hegemony and defend the country when
necessary. Iran has expressed its deep relationship with Syria over the nine
years of war and showed its readiness to stand up to the US when needed, as in
the attack on the US military base in Ayn al-Assad. The time will come when
Israel will no longer be able to use its air, sea and infantry forces freely
against Syria. Precision missiles have changed the balance of power and are
imposing radically new rules of engagement.
Proofread by: Maurice
Brasher and C.G.B.
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