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Hezbollah says doesn't expect war with Israel, but is ready for one

by  Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Published on  03-16-2018 00:00
Last modified: 03-03-2021 12:35
Hezbollah says doesn't expect war with Israel, but is ready for oneAP

Hezbollah fighters stand next to a mock rocket under a poster of leader Hassan Nasrallah | Photo: AP

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Lebanon's powerful Hezbollah group does not expect to fight a war with Israel at this time but is prepared for one, the Shiite terrorist group's deputy leader said Thursday.

As the war in Syria enters its eighth year, Hezbollah deputy leader Naim Qassem also said there was no end in sight to the conflict which would go on for at least two more years, and President Bashar Assad could not be forced out of an eventual settlement.

"There is no solution in Syria under the title of 'excluding President Assad'. On the contrary, the solution in Syria is with President Assad, and he is the mandatory channel for the solution," Qassem said.

The heavily armed Hezbollah joined the war in support of Assad in 2012, and has played a critical part in helping his government defeat Sunni rebels backed by the United States and its regional allies - Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey.

Hezbollah has spearheaded a coalition of Tehran-backed Shiite militias that have deployed to Syria from Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan. Iran's expanding power in Syria has caused deep alarm in neighboring Israel.

Israel has mounted numerous airstrikes in Syria against Hezbollah and Iranian targets.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned last month that Israel would not allow Iran to put a "noose of terror" around its neck and it could act not just against Iran's proxies, but Iran itself.

In Lebanon, where Israel and Hezbollah last fought a major war in 2006, Iran is helping the group build factories to manufacture precision-guided missiles or refit its longer-range missiles with precision guidance systems, Israeli and U.S. officials say.

Asked about the Israeli accusations and warnings, Qassem said he would not comment on Hezbollah's military capabilities, deployments or plans.

"We don't talk about the military details, be it our capabilities or those of our allies, or our deployments, because they are secrets that we retain and we don't want to give a free gift to our enemy," he said.

Hezbollah "is ready to confront the aggression if it happens, if Israel decides to carry out any foolish action", he said. "But it does not appear that the circumstances are for an Israeli decision for war. We have declared repeatedly and frequently that we, as the resistance, work to have permanent readiness and we are ready to confront the Israeli aggression if it happens, and therefore we are ready to defend ourselves by all available means.

"We are working to fortify our front, and to be ready," Qassem said.

Hezbollah deputy leader Sheikh Naim Qassem Reuters

In Syria, however, he said it was possible Israel would conduct further "limited" attacks. "The Syrian regime has taken the decision to respond to this type of attack," he added.

Working closely with the Russian air force and Iran's Revolutionary Guards, Hezbollah has helped turn the tide in the Syrian war which appeared to pose a threat to Assad's rule as recently as 2015.

The conflict passed its seventh anniversary on Thursday, having killed half a million people, driven out 5.8 million as refugees and displaced millions more in the country.

Qassem said Hezbollah would stay in Syria as long as necessary. "If we reach a political solution, of course Hezbollah will return to Lebanon."

Assad and his allies had won the war by defeating what he described as a U.S.-led plot to destroy Syria, he added. "Syria has won the military battle, which will help them to win the political battle," he said.

He added that Islamic State fighters who had sought to make Syria part of their "caliphate" had received a heavy blow and lost territories they held.

While Assad's rule is no longer in danger, large areas of Syria remain outside his control at the borders with Turkey, Iraq, Jordan and Israel.

The United States has deployed forces into northern and eastern Syria where it is allied with Kurdish-led militia known as the Syrian Democratic Forces. Turkey has also sent forces into the northwest.

Qassem said he does not expect the Syria war to lead to a direct confrontation between major powers.

"It is clear that all the parties and their allies view that it is in their interests not to have a direct confrontation between America and Russia, and they have rules of engagement that they have studied together and are abiding by," he said.

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