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Home Analysis

Syrian terrorist attacks abroad likely in lieu of direct clash with ‎Israel

by  Assaf Golan
Published on  07-24-2018 00:00
Last modified: 07-24-2018 00:00
Syrian terrorist attacks abroad likely in lieu of direct clash with ‎Israel

Syrian President Bashar Assad

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If you believe Syrian media reports, earlier this week Israel struck a ‎military compound where chemical weapons were being developed. ‎The strike, in which Syrian scientists, Iranian troops and Hezbollah ‎operatives were killed is, in and of itself, nothing new, as over the ‎past few years the foreign media has often attributed similar strikes ‎to the Israeli Air Force.‎

Now that President Bashar Assad, backed by Russia, Iran and ‎Hezbollah, is reclaiming control of the Syrian Golan Heights, the ‎threat he poses Israel has resurfaced to the point of potentially ‎jeopardizing the 1974 cease-fire agreement between Israel and ‎Syria.‎

The Israeli Air Force has enjoyed considerable operational leeway in ‎the northern sector during the seven-year civil war in Syria but now ‎that it is waning, this latitude may be curbed. If that is the case, ‎what are the chances that the next time Israel eliminates a threat ‎on Syrian soil, Assad would retaliate? ‎

According to Dr. Yehuda Blanga, an expert on Middle East politics ‎from Bar-Ilan University, Assad, like his father before him, is likely ‎to opt for indirect retaliation, targeting Israeli assets overseas or ‎tasking Hezbollah with doing his bidding.‎

‎"This has been Syria's way of retaliating without risking a direct ‎military conflict with Israel," he explained.‎

Blanga said that right now, Assad and his allies are "up to their ‎necks" in efforts to re-establish the regime's grip on the war-torn ‎country, meaning that retaliating against Israel is not a priority for them. ‎

The Syrian president is likely to reassess the situation once he feels ‎his rules is stable but even then, he may choose not to risk a ‎conflict with Israel or use Hezbollah against it. Instead, Assad will ‎probably call on Iranian terrorist cell abroad to carry out attacks ‎against Israel.‎

‎"This way, Assad will be able to bolster his image as Syria's ‎defender and while we will know who was behind the attack, we ‎won't be able to target them directly," he said. ‎

Middle East expert Dr. Mordechai Kedar said that one of the main ‎unknowns in this equation is how fast, and to what extent, ‎the Syrian army would be rehabilitated. ‎

‎"If Assad's army has anti-aircraft missiles that can hit our jets Israel ‎wouldn't rush to strike [Syrian soil] because no one sends their ‎fighter jets on a one-way mission," he said.‎

According to Kedar, another issue is the question of Assad's ‎confidence and the extent of the influence Russia wields over ‎his regime. ‎

‎"Unfortunately for Assad, Israel is backed by the U.S. – the Trump ‎administration backs [Israeli] strikes in Syria – and Prime Minister ‎Benjamin Netanyahu is well-coordinated with [Russian President ‎Vladimir] Putin. Right now, the Kremlin doesn't seem to care about ‎these strikes and it's unlikely that Assad would risk defying it."‎

Professor Efraim Inbar, who heads the Jerusalem Institute for ‎Strategic Studies, believes Russia will be able to stabilize the Syrian ‎sector, including setting red lines for Assad. ‎

Israel and Russia are maintaining close coordination with regards to ‎IAF strikes on threats in Syria and the issue will not become a ‎problem unless Moscow decides Jerusalem's actions are ‎jeopardizing its regional interests, he explained. ‎

According to Inbar, even if Assad is able to reinforce his army, he ‎will never be in a position to dictate terms to Russia, for the mere ‎reason it would leave him completely vulnerable to Iran.‎

‎"Assad doesn't want to be an Iranian puppet and he needs Russia ‎to prevent that from happening. Israel need not worry."‎

Dr. Daniel Schueftan, chairman of the National Security Studies ‎Center at the University of Haifa, also believes that until such time ‎as Assad feels he has completely re-established his regime, he is ‎unlikely to retaliate against Israel.‎

According to Schueftan, regardless of his hold on power, the Syrian ‎president would be wary of crossing Israel's red lines. ‎

‎"Even if Assad will be motivated to strike back – he will think twice. ‎He knows Israel would be willing to risk Hezbollah missile salvos on ‎its citizens to protect its interests and if need be, it will go to war in ‎the northern sector," he said.‎

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