National Post (National Edition)

What side will Moscow take in Israel-Iran war?

- Fr. raymond de Souza National Post

in Tiberius, Israel for using chemical weapons, it was Vladimir Putin who brilliantl­y exploited the situation to return Russia to the Middle East for the first time in decades. He brokered a “compromise” in which Russia would be the monitor of Assad’s chemical weapons. He was now the internatio­nally sanctioned monitor of his staunch ally in the region, and he used Russia’s position to secure Assad’s position. Not surprising­ly, Assad was found by Amnesty Internatio­nal to have used chemical weapons again last month.

Two years later, when Assad’s regime was weakened, not least by incursions from ISIL in eastern Syria, Putin sent Russian forces into the theatre. Russian troops and firepower in 2015 shifted the course of the civil war decisively toward Assad. Having won the war for his ally, Putin himself showed up in Syria in December 2017 to claim victory, and to announce the enhanced presence of Russian air and naval bases in Syria would now be permanent.

Looking northward, Israel now sees the most active world power in the region allied with its enemy, Syria. The United States effectivel­y withdrew under Obama and, despite a major shift in rhetoric and gestures under President Donald Trump, the Americans have still not regained any of the ground lost to Putin on Obama’s watch.

Simultaneo­usly, Iran has emboldened its presence in Syria to the point where it no longer has to act through its proxies but can act directly. Presumably the purpose of sending the drone into Israel was to make that point.

And perhaps to pressure Putin to make a choice which to date he has refused to make, and has not had to make. He has tolerated Iranian activity in Syria, even against Israel, and not objected when Israel has responded with strikes on Iranian assets. In effect, Israel and Iran were fighting a low intensity war in Syria with the major power present, Russia, staying out of it.

Can Putin stay aloof as the war heats up? As the winner of Syria’s civil war, Putin is now the one calling the shots in Syria. Israeli reports claim that the Israel Defense Forces was planning further attacks in Syria, but a phone call from Putin to Netanyahu forced the Israeli prime minister to stand down.

Putin and Assad depended on Iranian-backed militias and mercenarie­s to put down the Syrian rebellion and drive out the ISIL forces. With those battles won, it would be possible for Putin to distance himself from Iran, even to curtail its activity in Syria. Israel hopes that he will, but he might choose otherwise.

Israel faces a more aggressive Iran a short distance from here, and it is Moscow, not Washington, to whom it must look for help.

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