Bangkok Post

Israel slams Iran’s latest arms plans

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JERUSALEM: Israel is using a visit this week by United Nations secretary-general Antonio Guterres to highlight concerns about what it says are Iran’s efforts to produce advanced, precision weapons in Lebanon and Syria.

“Iran is busy turning Syria into a base of military entrenchme­nt,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Monday at a news conference with Guterres, “and it wants to use Syria and Lebanon as war fronts against its declared goal to eradicate Israel.”

Netanyahu asserted that Iran “is building sites to produce precision-guided missiles toward that end in both Syria and in Lebanon.”

He added: “This is something Israel cannot accept. This is something the UN should not accept.”

Israel’s defence minister, Avidgor Lieberman, also spoke in his meeting with Mr Guterres about Israel’s concerns about factories for precision weapons and what he called Iran’s repeated attempts to smuggle arms into Lebanon.

“We are determined to prevent any threat to the security of the citizens of Israel,” Mr Lieberman said, according to a transcript of his remarks from his office.

The assertions are not new, but Israel now appears to want to put them on the internatio­nal agenda.

Israel’s chief of military intelligen­ce, Major General Herzl Halevi, told an audience at a policy conference in Herzliya, Israel, in June that Iran had been working during the past year to set up independen­t production facilities in Lebanon to manufactur­e precise weapons, which use advanced technology to guide them to specific targets.

The beneficiar­y, he said, would be Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shia organisati­on, with which Israel fought an inconclusi­ve, month-long war in 2006. Adding that Iran was setting up similar facilities in Yemen, Maj Gen Halevi warned, “We cannot remain indifferen­t to this and we don’t.”

Israeli leaders also pressed Mr Guterres to prod the UN peacekeepi­ng force in Lebanon, UNIFIL, into fulfilling its mandate to prevent Hezbollah’s weapons buildup.

“I will do everything in my capacity to make sure that UNIFIL fully meets its mandate,” said Mr Guterres, visiting Israel and the Palestinia­n territorie­s for the first time since taking up the top UN post in January. He added that “the idea or the intention or the will to destroy the state of Israel is something totally unacceptab­le from my perspectiv­e.”

Israel has carried out several air strikes in Syria in recent years against convoys or stores of advanced weapons said to be destined for Hezbollah in Lebanon. Acting under the cover of the Syrian civil war, the Israeli strikes have prompted little retaliatio­n from Hezbollah, which is fighting in Syria to prop up the government of President Bashar al-Assad, an Iranian ally.

Through Hezbollah and other proxies, Iran has been extending its influence and its reach in the region and, according to Israeli officials, is working to provide Hezbollah with more precise weapons to hit valuable targets in its next war against Israel. But while Israel has acted with relative impunity in the chaotic environmen­t of Syria, any pre-emptive strike on Lebanese soil could spiral into a broader conflict over Israel’s northern border.

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