First they take Damascus, not Jerusalem
There have been no attempts by Syrian rebels to try and harm Israel, but cross-border action is possible, says Northern Command officer
September 17, 2014, 1:13 am
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GOLAN HEIGHTS — The different
rebel groups in the Golan Heights, controlling 90 percent of the Syrian
side of the border region, have not once, in more than three years of
war, fired a shot at or taken other military action against Israel, a
senior Northern Command army officer said Monday.
The
officer, speaking on condition of anonymity, did not rule out the
possibility of Israeli action east of the border, within rebel-held
Syria, should the need arise. But he stressed that for now, despite the
presence of al-Qaeda elements all along the border, “all of the vectors
are [pushing] toward Damascus.”
He described a gradual process of destruction
that led to the rise of the rebel forces and said that once the fighting
has been finished in the villages south and east of Quneitra, in
al-Madeira and Ahmadiyeh, and in the last regime “pocket” on the flanks
of the Hermon, in the Druze village of Khader, the rebels will use the
highway linking the border city of Quneitra to Damascus, a mere
40-kilometer stretch of road, to take the fight to the capital —
swiftly, he predicted — and not to march on Jerusalem, as some have
suggested.
“I am convinced of this,” he said.
Practically speaking, he said, the Israeli
army has not seen a single al-Qaeda-related action against Israel.
“During the entirety of the past four years, we have not seen so much as
a single rebel from this group with the intention or the operational
plan facing in this direction.”
Instead, he said that during the surge in
border violence aimed intentionally at Israel, from December 2013 to
March 2014, the series of attacks along the fence were all carried out
from within the regime-controlled enclaves, and that when mines were
used, they all bore the signature marks of the “Hezbollah-Iran
production house.”
The war in Syria, beginning in March 2011 with
unrest in the southern town of Dara’a, has claimed more than 150,000
lives and forced five million people — roughly a quarter of the
population — to flee. It has become the eye of the storm in the battle
between Sunni and Shi’ite Islam and is being waged, on the Sunni side,
by increasingly radical forces.
In June, Brig. Gen. Itai Brun, the commander
of the Military Intelligence Directorate’s Research Division, said that
80% of the 120,000 men fighting against the regime are Islamist rebels,
sharply changing the face of Syria in the years to come.
Former national security adviser, Maj. Gen.
(ret) Uzi Dayan, said in a phone interview that this reality — and the
way it has taken shape along Israel’s northeastern border — may well
require future Israeli military action on the Syrian side of the Golan.
“I do not rule out the possibility that Israel, in an indirectly
coordinated move, will act to restore the Syrian army to the border,” he
said. “Otherwise, what happened in Gaza can happen in the Golan.”
The officer did not reject the statement out
of hand. Pointing to the tank ramps on an old and seldom used army post
in the central Golan, and the concrete-enforced infantry trenches being
reclaimed by nature, he said that the construction of the post is
evidence of a different era, when Israel’s primary threat was the
standing army of the Assad regime. Today, looking just north to
Quneitra, a large Israeli flag was visible in the stiff wind; opposite
it, on the Syrian side of the border fence, was a bare pole where
Assad’s flag once flew. Syrian sovereignty in this border region, the
closest border to the capital, is nearly as absent as the flag, he said,
noting the total defeat of Syria’s regional southern brigade and the
partial collapse of its northern one.
This has several implications. The United
Nations Disengagement Observer Force (UNDOF), which has presided over
the 1974 armistice agreement, is “unequivocally” in the process of
collapse, he said. The observer posts along the southern half of the
Golan have been abandoned and at present all of the UN peacekeepers are
in Israel, on account of the violence.
This has prompted a sea change in the Israeli
military posture in the Golan Heights. Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz, the
commander of the IDF General Staff, ordered a major shift last fall. He
relieved Division 36, one of the army’s only conscripted armored
divisions, of its duties in the Golan Heights — the threat of a Syrian
ground assault seems to have expired — and assembled, on the sloping
plateau, a newly reconfigured regional division. These troops are
focused not on ground maneuvers and firepower, the ingredients necessary
to win wars, but rather on perimeter security, intelligence gathering,
and careful surveillance.
Nonetheless, the officer said, a spate of
attacks could provoke cross-border action. “If we have to act on the
other side, if we have no choice, we’ll take that action. Will we stay
there? I don’t think we will stay there. We’ll hit whoever is hitting us
and we’ll return.”
For the time being, though, the rebel forces
clearly visible from Post 106 continue their combat operations unabated.
The officer looked down at a nearby Syrian village where the mosque was
charred and the school toppled. He spoke of the Nusra Front and how
they have become the dominant force along the border, buying the loyalty
of villagers with religious schools for the children and food for the
people. Their loyalty, he said, “has nothing to do with ideology.”
The town, for all intents and purposes, has
been transformed into a rebel military base, he said, pointing out a
pick-up truck filled with apparent Islamist rebels; artillery barrages
in the distance produced plumes of smoke and dull explosions. “There is
no such thing as an al-Qaeda member who lives in peace with Israel,” he
said. But for now “what he’s interested in is changing the reality from
here to Iraq.”
The next stage, he allowed, might be Jordan or
Turkey or Israel. “We are developing capabilities not for the day they
take Damascus, but for the day after they take Damascus,” he said.
“We’re preparing the area for a situation in which they turn what they
used against the Syrian army toward us. That’s what interests us. That’s
what we’re preparing for.”
Labels: Al-Qaeda, Civil War, Defence, Islamism, Israel, Security, Syria
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