The Boston Globe

Fears of retaliatio­n grow after deadly attack in Syria

Officials say Iran hostilitie­s could target US, Israel

- By Eric Schmitt

Current and former US officials expressed fears Tuesday that Israel’s airstrikes on an Iranian embassy compound in Syria could escalate hostilitie­s in the region and prompt retaliator­y strikes against Israel and its ally, the United States.

The officials said the attack Monday, which killed three generals in Iran’s Quds Force and four other officers, had dealt a serious blow to the force, the external military, and intelligen­ce service of the country’s Revolution­ary Guard.

Ralph Goff, a former senior CIA official who served in the Middle East, called Israel’s strike “incredibly reckless.”

“It will only result in escalation by Iran and its proxies, which is very dangerous” to US troops in the region who could be targeted in retaliator­y strikes by Iran’s proxies, Goff said.

After the Israeli strike in Damascus, Syria’s capital, on Monday, US troops based in southeaste­rn Syria knocked down an attack drone, a Defense Department official said. It was unclear if the drone was aimed at them, the official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss operationa­l details. If it were, it would be the first attack by Iran-backed militias against US troops in Iraq or Syria in nearly two months. No injuries or damage were reported.

The official said there had been no further attacks overnight but that Pentagon officials were monitoring the situation.

Goff said the deadly strike in Syria fits Israel’s “longer-term strategy of degrading” Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard and its Quds Force unit, and “punishing them for ongoing plots to kill or kidnap Israeli Jews around the world.”

In the yearslong shadow war between Iran and Israel, Syria has been key terrain for Israel as it worked to degrade Iran’s ability to move advanced weaponry by land and air closer to Israel’s borders.

“The strike yesterday is a significan­t escalation and risks tipping an already volatile, unstable region into full-scale war,” said Dana Stroul, formerly the Pentagon’s top Middle East policy official who is now at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “This is the Israeli version of the US strike on Qassem Soleimani,” she said, referring to the former longtime leader of the Quds Force who was killed by an American drone strike near the Baghdad airport in 2020.

Stroul said assessing the post-Soleimani era is instructiv­e as the command and control of the Quds Force were degraded.

“We have seen Iran-backed militia groups take decisions into their own hands under the leadership of Ghaani, as well the rise of rival power centers in Iran,” Stroul said, referring to General Esmail Ghaani, the current Quds Force commander. “This has led to a more diffuse, but not less lethal, Quds Forceled network abroad. But Iran’s core strategy never changed. Tehran will continue to invest in its terrorist network abroad in order to keep the fight away from its own borders.”

More broadly, Stroul said, the message is that Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard “operatives and leaders are not safe anywhere. It should have strategic effect on how the Quds Force operates abroad and should erode any semblance of invincibil­ity or deniabilit­y that this terrorist organizati­on only brings instabilit­y and violence to the places it seeks to operate.”

Kenneth McKenzie Jr., a retired four-star general and former leader of the Pentagon’s Central Command, which oversees US military operations in the Middle East, said the deaths of the senior Quds Force officers was “a blow.”

“Their long-term, carefully developed relationsh­ips will be lost,” he said.

Stroul said the strike would further inflame Iran. “The question is, will Iran respond in a manner that de-escalates the situation, or will it climb further up the escalation ladder?” she said.

McKenzie said he expected Iran would retaliate in some way, but he downplayed fears of a major escalation of hostilitie­s between Israel and Iran.

“Iran’s options to hit Israel are very, very limited,” McKenzie said. “And the Israelis aren’t going to back down.”

 ?? LOUAI BESHARA/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Rescuers searched the rubble of a building annexed to the Iranian embassy after an airstrike in Damascus Monday.
LOUAI BESHARA/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Rescuers searched the rubble of a building annexed to the Iranian embassy after an airstrike in Damascus Monday.

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