Las Vegas Review-Journal

Iran vs. Israel:

- Thomas Friedman

ESyria-israel border, Golan Heights ver since the Iranian Islamic Revolution in 1979, Iran and Israel have been fighting each other in the shadows — through proxies, assassinat­ion squads and cybervirus attacks, but never as rival armies meeting on the field of battle. That may be about to change, and if it does, it will have vast implicatio­ns for Syria, Lebanon and the whole Middle East.

I’m sure neither side really wants a war. It could be devastatin­g for Israel’s flourishin­g high-tech economy and for Iran’s already collapsing currency. But Iran’s Revolution­ary Guards’ Quds Force seems determined to try to turn Syria into a base from which to pressure Israel, and Israel seems determined to prevent that. And in the past few weeks — for the first time ever — Israel and Iran have begun quietly trading blows directly, not through proxies, in Syria.

They have already gone through two rounds, and Round 3, now pending, could blow Syria sky-high.

Round 1 occurred Feb. 10, when an Iranian drone launched by a Quds Force unit operating out of Syria’s T4 air base, in central Syria, was shot down with a missile from an Israeli Apache helicopter that was following it after it penetrated northern Israel airspace.

Initial reports were that the drone was purely on a reconnaiss­ance mission. But the Israeli army’s spokesman, Brig. Gen. Ronen Manelis, said the flight path and Israel’s analysis of the drone indicated that “the aircraft was carrying explosives” and that its mission was “an act of sabotage in Israeli territory.”

If true, that suggests that the Quds Force — commanded by Iran’s military mastermind Qassem Suleimani — was trying to launch an actual military strike on Israel.

“This is the first time we saw Iran do something against Israel — not by proxy,” a senior Israeli military source told me. “This opened a new period.”

It certainly did, because in Round 2, April 9, Israeli jets launched a missile strike on T4, the drone’s home base — directly targeting, for the first time, an Iranian facility and personnel in Syria. Seven Quds Force members were killed, including Col. Mehdi Dehghan, who led the drone unit.

While the Israeli army spokesman refused to confirm or deny the Israeli raid, Iran’s government unusually highlighte­d it — and Iran’s casualties — and vowed to take revenge.

“The Zionist entity will sooner or later receive the necessary response and will regret its misdeeds,” Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman, Bahram Qasemi, said.

So now the whole neighborho­od is holding its breath: Will there be a Round 3? Israeli defense officials let it be known that if the Iranians strike back, Israel may use the opportunit­y to mount a massive counterstr­ike on Iran’s entire military infrastruc­ture in Syria, where Iran is attempting to establish forward air bases and factories for Gps-guided missiles that could hit targets inside Israel with much greater accuracy — inside a 50-meter radius. Iran also plans to provide the missiles to Hezbollah in Lebanon.

These Israeli defense officials say there is zero chance Israel will make the same mistake it made in Lebanon — letting Hezbollah establish a large missile threat there — by letting Iran do so in Syria.

On Tuesday, to drive home that point, the Israeli government reportedly distribute­d maps to Israeli news organizati­ons showing five Iranian-controlled bases in Syria. All that was missing on them were bull’s-eyes of exactly where Israel will drop its bombs if the Iranians carry out their threats. The message from Israel to the Quds Force was hard to miss: “Beware. We know exactly where to find you.”

As Israel’s defense minister, Avigdor Lieberman, put it to a gathering of Israeli soldiers Monday: “We are facing a new reality — the Lebanese army, in cooperatio­n with Hezbollah, the Syrian army, the Shiite militias in Syria and above them Iran — are all becoming a single front against the state of Israel.”

Iran has legitimate security concerns in the Gulf; it faces a number of hostile, pro-american Sunni Arab powers trying to contain its influence and undermine its Islamic regime. From Iran’s perspectiv­e, these are a threat.

But what is Iran doing in Syria? Tehran’s building of bases and missile factories in Syria, after having helped President Bashar Assad largely crush the uprising against him, appears to be a move by the Quds Force’s Suleimani to extend Iran’s grip on key parts of the Sunni Arab world and advance his position at home in his struggle for power with Hassan Rouhani, Iran’s president. The Quds Force now more or less controls — through proxies — four Arab capitals: Damascus, Beirut, Baghdad and Sanaa.

Indeed, Iran has become the biggest “occupying power” in the Arab world today. But Suleimani may be overplayin­g his hand.

Even before the recent clashes with Israel, many average Iranians were publicly asking: What is Iran doing spending billions of dollars — which were supposed to go to Iranians as a result of the lifting of sanctions from the Iran nuclear deal — fighting wars in Syria, Lebanon and Yemen? That concern is surely one reason Iran, for all its fist-shaking — has not retaliated — yet.

The Israeli airstrike on T4, along with the U.s.-british-french airstrike on the Syrian regime’s suspected chemical weapons facilities, have actually exposed the strategic vulnerabil­ities of both Russia and Iran in Syria. Their forces are very powerful versus the rebels there, but not so powerful versus the Western forces and Israel. Iran, which has to depend

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