Texarkana Gazette

Israel sees Iran war looming as Mideast tinderbox awaits spark

- By David Wainer, Donna Abu-Nasr and Henry Meyer

TEL AVIV, Israel—There have been coups and revolution­s, external invasions and proxy conflicts, but the Middle East hasn’t seen a headto-head war between major regional powers since the 1980s.

There’s a growing risk that one is about to break out in Syria, pitting Israel against Iran.

The Islamic Republic’s forces are entrenchin­g there, after joining the fight to prop up President Bashar Assad. The Jewish state, perceiving a direct threat on its border, is subjecting them to an escalating barrage of airstrikes. Nobody expects those strikes to go unanswered.

The path to escalation is clear, and the rhetoric is apocalypti­c. “We will demolish every site where we see an Iranian attempt to position itself,” Israel’s Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman told the London-based Saudi newspaper Elaph, adding that the Iranian regime is “living its final days.”

In Tehran, Hossein Salami, deputy commander of the Revolution­ary Guards, said that “100,000 missiles are ready to fly” in Israel’s direction, and warned they could bring about its “annihilati­on and collapse.”

Iran and Israel have been exchanging threats for decades. What’s different now is that Syria’s civil war, which sucked in both countries, provides a potential battlespac­e—one that’s much closer to Jerusalem than to Tehran.

Israeli officials say there are 80,000 fighters in Syria who take orders from Iran. As they help Assad recapture territory, militiamen from Hezbollah have deployed within a few kilometers of the Golan Heights on Israel’s border. Iran has vowed to avenge its citizens killed by the Israeli airstrikes, and it has plenty of options for doing so.

It’s a tinderbox, says Ofer Shelach, a member of the foreign affairs and defense committee in Israel’s parliament. “I’m worried about the possibilit­y that a match ignited in the Golan will light up a war going all the way to the sea.”

Even more troubling is the absence of firefighte­rs.

Israelis lament that Washington has become a bit-part player, unable to impose a Syrian settlement that would guarantee its ally’s security. Absent that, “we can only represent our interests through force,” Shelach says.

Far from tamping down tensions, President Donald Trump—egged on by Israel—has been ramping them up. By threatenin­g to withdraw next week from the internatio­nal agreement to curb Iran’s nuclear program, he’s added another volatile element to the regional mix.

The only power with channels open to both sides, and the clout to play mediator, is Russia.

President Vladimir Putin’s interventi­on in 2015 to shore up Assad has left Russia as the strongest actor in Syria. Putin is seeking to impose a peace that would lock in his political gains, so he has every interest in averting any spread of the war.

But that doesn’t mean he’s able or willing to rein in Iran. While Russia has cordial ties with Israel, they’re likely outweighed by the confluence of interests with the Islamic Republic, whose ground forces were crucial to the success of Putin’s Syrian gambit. Repeatedly threatened with attack or regime-change by its enemies, Iran sees the sympatheti­c government­s in Damascus and Beirut as providing strategic depth.

Now, the Iranians in Syria have graduated from helping Assad to “building their strategic presence against Israel,” said Paul Salem, senior vice president at the Middle East Institute in Washington. “It appears that neither the Russians nor the Assad regime are in control or can limit these things,” he said. “The situation is highly unstable and highly unmanaged.”

One test of Russia’s ability to manage it may come in southern Syria, where Islamic State and other jihadists and rebels still hold territory near Israel’s border—enclaves that are among the likely next targets for Assad’s advancing army.

“Before they do that, the Russians need to have an arrangemen­t with the Israelis,” said Yuri Barmin, a Middle East expert at the Russian Internatio­nal Affairs Council, which advises the Kremlin. Russia is “willing to negotiate on the issue of Iran and Iran’s presence” in those regions, he said.

‘IT’S SHORTSIGHT­ED’

That may not be enough to meet Israeli concerns, which extend far beyond the border.

Earlier in the Syrian conflict, Israel’s airstrikes typically aimed to destroy weapons convoys bound for Hezbollah in Lebanon. There’s been a significan­t change. Two strikes in the past month —widely attributed to Israel, though the Jewish state doesn’t comment on such matters—targeted permanent infrastruc­ture used by Iran’s forces. Both took place deep inside Syrian territory.

“It’s shortsight­ed to look at it in terms of how many kilometers from the border Iran is sitting,” said Amos Gilad, who recently stepped down as director of political-military affairs at Israel’s Defense Ministry. “Iran cannot be allowed to base themselves militarily in Syria. And Israel is fully determined to prevent that.”

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