Politics

http://www.freeimages.com/photo/894105
DECEMBER
24, 2014
The
Bullet in Their Riffles
Fighting ‘Islamic State’ is Not the Israeli Priority
by NICOLA NASSER
Defying
a consensus that it is a priority by the world community comprising
international rivals like the United States, Europe, Russia and China and
regional rivals like Iran, Syria and Saudi Arabia, Israel, like Turkey, does
not eye the U.S. – led war on the IS as its regional priority. Nor fighting
Israel is an IS priority.
The
Israeli top priority is to dictate its terms to Syria to sign a peace treaty
with Israel before withdrawing its forces from the occupied Syrian Golan
Heights, Palestinian territories and Lebanese southern lands.
For
this purpose, Israel is determined to break down the Syria – Iran alliance,
which has been the main obstacle preventing Israel from realising its goals.
Changing the ruling regime in either Damascus or Tehran would be a step
forward. Towards this Israeli strategic goal the IS could not be but an Israeli
asset.
“To
defeat ISIS (The Islamic State in Iraq and Syria as the IS was previously
known) and leave Iran as a threshold nuclear power is to win the battle and lose
the war,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the UN General Assembly last
September.
Therefore,
“it should not come as a surprise that the (Benjamin) Netanyahu government has
not yet taken any immediate steps against IS,” according to Amos Harel, writing
in Foreign Policy on September 15.
However,
information is already surfacing that Israel is “taking steps” in the opposite
direction, to empower the IS and other terrorist groups fighting and infighting
in Syria.
Israeli
daily Haaretz on last October 31 quoted a “senior Northern
Command officer” as saying that the U.S. – led coalition “is making a big
mistake in fighting against ISIS … the United States, Canada and France are on
the same side as Hezbollah, Iran and [Syrian President Bashar al-] Assad. That
does not make sense.”
Regardless,
on September 8 Israeli daily The Jerusalem Post reported that
Israel has provided “satellite imagery and other information” to the coalition.
Three days later Netanyahu said at a conference in Herzliya: “Israel fully
supports President [Barack] Obama’s call for united actions against ISIS … We
are playing our part in this continued effort. Some of the things are known;
some of the things are less known.”
Obama’s
call was the green light for Israel to support Syrian and non- Syrian rebels.
Syrian official statements claim that Israel has been closely coordinating with
the rebels.
Israeli
statements claim theirs is confined to “humanitarian” support to “moderate”
Syrian opposition, which the U.S. has already pledged to train and arm in Saudi
Arabia, Jordan and Turkey. A significant portion of the $64 billion earmarked
for conflicts abroad in the budget legislation signed by Obama on December 19
will go to these “moderates.”
Both
Israel and the U.S. have no headaches about whether the “moderates” would
remain as such after being armed with lethal weapons or whether it remains
appropriate to call them “opposition.”
But
the Israeli “humanitarian” claim is challenged by the fact that Israel is the
only neighbouring country which still closes its doors to Syrian civilian
refugees while keeping its doors wide open to the wounded rebels who are
treated in Israeli hospitals and allowed to return to the battle front after
recovery.
IS
close to Israeli borders
The
Israeli foreign ministry on last September 3 confirmed that the U.S. journalist
Steven Sotloff whom the IS had beheaded was an Israeli citizen as well. In a
speech addressed to Sotloff’s family, Netanyahu condemned the IS as a “branch”
of a “poisonous tree” and a “tentacle” of a “violent Islamist terrorism.”
On
the same day Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon officially outlawed the IS
and anyone associating with it…
Read
more at: http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/12/24/fighting-islamic-state-is-not-the-israeli-priority/
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