Post-Assad Syria chaos rattles Israel

Post-Assad Syria chaos rattles Israel

Post-Assad Syria chaos rattles Israel

ISRAEL has implicitly confirmed it carried out an airstrike in Syria last week but the Jewish state’s next step in anticipation of a post-Bashar Assad era remains a mystery.
Defense Minister Ehud Barak told a defense conference in Munich on Sunday that an air raid which Syria said targeted a military complex near its capital was “another proof that when we say something we mean it.”
He stopped short of giving explicit confirmation and there has still been no official comment on the raid from either the Israeli military or the government.
The New York Times, citing a senior US military official, reported Sunday that the airstrike may have damaged Syria’s main research center on biological and chemical weapons.
Barak’s comments came a day after US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said Washington was increasingly concerned that “chaos” in Syria could allow its Lebanese ally Hezbollah to obtain sophisticated weapons from the Damascus regime. “The chaos in Syria has obviously created an environment where the possibility of these weapons, you know, going across the border and falling into the hands of Hezbollah has become a greater concern,” Panetta said.
The Israeli raid on Wednesday targeted surface-to-air missiles and an adjacent military complex believed to house chemical agents, according to a US official who spoke on condition of anonymity. Syria has threatened to retaliate.
In a sign of increased border tensions, Israel has moved three of its Iron Dome missile defense batteries to its north, from where they can cover possible fire from Syria or Lebanon.
Iran’s security chief Saeed Jalili said during a visit to Damascus on Monday that Israel would come to regret its actions.
“Just like it regretted all its wars... the Zionist entity will regret its aggression against Syria,” said Jalili, who heads Iran’s Supreme National Security Council.
Ephraim Halevy, a former head of Mossad, the Israeli foreign intelligence agency, wrote Monday in top-selling daily Yediot Aharonot that his country had no intention of becoming embroiled in Syria’s internal turmoil.
“Israel is not involved in the Syrian civil war or in the Iranian warfare on Syrian soil,” he wrote.
“From all standpoints, it would have preferred that this conflict had not broken out in the first place, and for Israel to continue to enjoy the absolute quiet along the armistice lines drawn between the two states following the (1973) Yom Kippur War.”
“This is the reason that it has displayed restraint both in its actions and in its dearth of official statements,” Halevy added.
The raid “shows how the new security situation in Israel is complex and complicated,” military analyst Avi Issacharof wrote on the news site Walla. “This new year will be decisive for Israel, not only in the context of the Iranian nuclear program.”
Israeli leaders fear a possible transfer of Syrian chemical and biological weapons to Hezbollah, but also that a general destabilization of the country could turn it into a preserve of radical Islamist groups.
“A number of ideologically radical groups affiliated with Al-Qaeda have infiltrated the governmental vacuum (in Syria) that contributes to the chaos,” said Issacharof.
Israeli leaders, particularly Barak, have repeatedly predicted President Assad’s imminent fall and the military is planning its response.
Israel plans to declare a buffer zone inside Syria border to prevent radical groups from getting too close to its territory when the embattled Damascus regime topples, security sources said on Sunday.

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