Suzy V (7
Dec 2012)
"For Israel, double
trouble in Syrian WMDs, jihadis on border"
For Israel,
double trouble in Syrian WMDs, jihadis on border
According to reports, Israel would take part in a joint
military effort against the weapons of mass destruction,
together with armed forces from the U.S., Jordan and Turkey
• Israeli intelligence official: The only thing keeping
Assad in power is the Syrian Air Force, but even this power
is being eroded as rebels down more and more warplanes and
helicopters • Foreign jihadis massing along Golan border.
Yoni Hirsch, Shlomo Cesana, Daniel Siryoti and News Agencies
There is growing concern in Israel that the faltering regime
of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad will use its stockpiles
of chemical weapons as a last resort. According to a report
in The Times of London and Maariv, Israel would take part in a
joint military effort against the weapons of mass
destruction, together with armed forces from the U.S.,
Britain, Jordan and Turkey. The report in The Times said
some 75,000 commandos would take part in a massive ground
operation against the Syrian WMD arsenal.
A senior intelligence official, meanwhile, told Israel's
Channel 2 TV news that Israel's border with Syria on the
Golan Heights could "soon become the most active border we
have, more than Gaza and Egypt." The official added that the only thing keeping Assad
in power was the Syrian Air Force, but that even this
power was being eroded as rebels down more and more
warplanes and helicopters. "The Syrian Air Force is the
only thing standing in the way of rebel victory. Assad's
situation worsens in direct correlation with the situation
of his air force, which is losing one to two planes a day
and it cannot sustain such a rate of attrition. The collapse of the Syrian Air
Force will lead to a certain collapse of the regime in
Damascus. Assad's days are numbered, and in the chaos that
will replace him, extremists will heat up the Golan
border," the official said.
The intelligence official
told Channel 2 TV that global jihad groups have been
preparing near the border with Israel, and are
"stockpiling huge amounts of lethal weapons for a fight
with Israel."
"The main problem is not the local rebel groups but fighters
coming from outside Syria. Hundreds of fighters have begun
streaming into Syria from Jordan and Iraq. They come from
countries like Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Libya, and many other
countries. We're talking about very dangerous people with
experience fighting the U.S. army in Iraq as well as
fighting the regime in Libya. We estimate that there are
between 3,000 to 4,000 rebel fighters belonging to radical
Salafist groups who all belong under the al-Qaida umbrella,"
the official said.
"Some of these fighters are
fighting against the Assad regime, but there are groups
that have begun deploying near our border and are
stockpiling weaponry. There are now several hundred
jihadis deployed along the border with Israel in the area of
Kuneitra, Bir Ajam, Barika, and some other areas. The assessment is that they
possess quantities of weapons that are not being used
against Assad's army and that it will be Israeli soldiers
who will be faced with this weaponry. We are certain that
they have MILAN, Metis-M, and Kornet anti-tank missiles,
as well as shoulder-fired SA-18 anti-aircraft missiles,
which are particularly problematic," the intelligence
official said.
The unusually candid assessment from the intelligence
official continued with him saying that the jihadis were
stockpiling "huge amounts of light arms, bullets, sniper
rifles, and ready-to-use explosives."
"We expect these rebels to
stockpile a large amount of rockets, a situation which
will return the northern Israeli communities into the line
of fire. We assess that once the foreign rebels have
finished fighting Assad's army they will all turn their
attention to the border with Israel. There is no question
about it. Once the Assad regime falls, we will start
seeing incidents on our border. I assess that it will
start with a trickle of incidents, like we see on the
Egyptian border, and further down the line we'll start
seeing the firing of anti-tank missiles at IDF vehicles,
roadside bombs against patrols, and these are only the
incidents I can reveal. I believe we will see much worse
things," the official said.
The official added that there was increasing coordination
between jihadi groups in the Golan Heights, Sinai and the
Gaza Strip, and that Syrian rebels were likely to fire on
Israeli forces along the Golan border to further draw them
into confrontation with the Syrian army.
"It really doesn't matter
who takes over on the day after Assad falls. All the signs
show that the situation is not going in a positive
direction as far as Israel is concerned," the official
said.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Tuesday Israel is
closely tracking developments relating to chemical weapons
in Syria, whose regime has been warned against using them in
the country's uprising.
"Along with the
international community, we are closely following
developments in Syria related to its chemical weapons
stockpiles," Netanyahu said in a statement from his
office.
"I heard President Obama's important remarks on the subject
and we see things the same way," said Netanyahu. "We believe
these weapons must not be used and must not fall into the
hands of terrorist elements."
The White House and its allies are weighing military options
to secure Syria's chemical and biological weapons, after
U.S. intelligence reports show the Syrian regime may be
readying those weapons and may be desperate enough to use
them, U.S. officials said Monday.
U.S. President Barack Obama, in a speech at the National
Defense University on Monday, pointedly warned Assad not to
use the weapons.
"Today I want to make it absolutely clear to Assad and those
under his command: The world is watching," Obama said. "The
use of chemical weapons is and would be totally
unacceptable. And if you make the tragic mistake of using
these weapons, there will be consequences and you will be
held accountable."
NATO allies expressed "grave" concern on Tuesday about
reports that the Syrian government may be preparing to use
its chemical weapons, NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh
Rasmussen said.
The military alliance agreed on Tuesday to deploy Patriot
surface-to-air missiles to Turkey to protect it from any
spillover of the civil war in neighboring Syria.
"The NATO ministers
unanimously expressed grave concern about reports that the
Syrian regime may be considering the use of chemical
weapons," Rasmussen told a news conference. "Any such
action would be completely unacceptable and a clear breach
of international law."
News updated daily www.comingsoonnews.com