The Mercury

Fears of a wider conflagrat­ion

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SEOUL: South Korea’s defence ministry said yesterdayt­hat North Korea’s test-firing of a missile was a failure.

A South Korean defence ministry official said via phone that North Korea fired a missile near the Wonsan airfield on its eastern coast. According to local media reports, the missile exploded in the air just after blasting off from the ground.

The test-firing was an apparent show of force in response to ongoing US-South Korea military exercises, codenamed Key Resolve and Foal Eagle.

North Korea has stated the war games are a dress- rehearsal for northward invasion. Xinhua MOSUL: Iraqi government forces battling Islamic State (IS) militants in Mosul’s western side evacuated hundreds of civilians from the IS-held city centre on Tuesday, as troop progress slowed down faced with strong resistance from IS militants, Iraqi officers said.

“Our forces evacuated hundreds of civilians to prevent terrorists from using them as human shields, while our troops are pushing inside the old city centre to recapture the al-Nuri Mosque,” said federal police chief, Lieutenant-General Raid Shakir Jawdat. Troops have been fighting street by street and house by house to take the historical al-Nuri Mosque. Xinhua

THE SITUATION on Israel’s northern border with Lebanon, and on its eastern border with Syria, have become increasing­ly fraught, following Russia’s military interventi­on in Syria – and a number of recent incidents that analysts predict could spark a wider conflagrat­ion and possibly another war.

On Tuesday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned that Israel would continue carrying out airstrikes on arms convoys travelling from Syria, attempting to reach resistance group Hezbollah in Lebanon.

Netanyahu made it clear that Israel would not allow Russian ally Iran a military presence in Syria, or a strengthen­ing of its proxies, including Hezbollah, as the Syrian civil war appears to be winding down with President Bashar al-Assad retaining his grip on power, the Israeli daily Haaretz reported.

Netanyahu’s comments followed the Russian foreign ministry summoning the Israeli envoy to Russia in for explanatio­ns regarding an escalation in Syria subsequent to an Israeli air attack on targets in Syria last Friday.

Israel has carried out similar attacks in Syria over the past few years, fearing that surface-to-air missiles, and other sophistica­ted weaponry, reaching Hezbollah could change the balance of power by threatenin­g Israeli jets, which fly into Lebanese air space periodical­ly, and in any future war.

In previous such Israeli attacks, no retaliatio­n followed with the Syrians mired down in the country’s civil war.

However, this time the Syrian military shot outdated, Russian-made SA-5 surface-to-air missiles, at the Israeli fighter jets which missed their targets.

The responding salvo was intercepte­d north of Jerusalem by Israel’s air defence system with the launch of an anti-ballistic Arrow missile with remnants landing in Jordan.

In addition to Syria’s retaliatio­n, emboldened by Russian military support for it in the civil war, another significan­t change in the status-quo was the Israelis admitting to carrying out the initial attack on the weapons convoy – a change in strategy from previous attacks which they have refused to admit to or deny – and once again carrying out the attacks in Syrian airspace.

When a significan­t Russian military presence first began operating in Syria in 2015, the Israelis scaled back their attacks from directly over Syrian territory to launching assaults from Israeli or Lebanese airspace to avoid direct confrontat­ions with Russian aircraft operating against Syrian rebels.

Following the Syrian retaliatio­n, Israeli defence minister Avigdor Lieberman threatened to destroy Syria’s air defence systems if they were used to target Israeli fighter jets again.

And on Sunday, an Israeli drone killed Yasser Assayed, a senior military official affiliated with Damascus, after it slammed into the car he was driving in the Quneitra area of the Syrian Golan Heights – further exacerbati­ng tensions.

Israeli analyst Amos Harel wrote in Haaretz that Syria’s new assertiven­ess was an attempt by Damascus to change the unofficial rules of the game, although there had been signs of such a shift prior to last week’s escalation.

“This is a dangerous developmen­t. Presumably the Syrian anti-aircraft salvo was a signal to Israel that the regime’s policy of restraint in the face of the airstrikes will not remain as it was. Assad’s recent successes – first and foremost the conquest of Aleppo – have seemingly increased the dictator’s confidence,” said Harel.

Furthermor­e, Syria’s growing confidence is also impacting on Hezbollah on Israel’s northern border with Israeli Chief of General Staff Gadi Eisenkot asserting that Hezbollah is violating UN resolution­s and preparing for war – with the support of the Lebanese government. – ANA

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