Archive for February 15, 2012

Iran increases presence in Syria

February 15, 2012

Iran increases presence in Syria – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Revolutionary Guards, Hezbollah operatives aiding Assad’s brutal crackdown on protesters now number in the hundreds

Ron Ben-Yishai

Iran has significantly increased its involvement in Syria over the past few days, Ynet learned Monday.

The presence of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards and Hezbollah operatives assisting Syrian President Bashar Assad‘s in his brutal crackdown of protesters now number in the high hundreds; while the Arab League said that it will not supply the rebels with arms unless the bloodshed comes to a halt.An Arab diplomat said that the Arab League “Will offer the Opposition funding and diplomatic assistance at first, but if the regime’s killing continues, we must help the citizens protect themselves… The decision grants the Arab nations the possibility to defend the Syrian people.”

  The majority of Iranian and Hezbollah operatives in Syria supply Assad’s army with intelligence and train the Damascus forces on weapons’ maintenance and reconnaissance. A smaller group of operatives is involved in the actual fighting.  

Tehran has also increased the financial assistance it lends Damascus. It also maintains regular flights to the Syrian capital – a practice Arab League members have suspended due to the escalating violence.

Iran‘s financial aid is one of Assad’s lifelines, as it keeps the middle class in Damascus and Halab (Aleppo) from rising against him as well.

The Islamic Republic’s decision to bolster ties with Syria at a time when Tehran has to deal with growing international sanctions, imposed on it over its refusal to suspend its nuclear program, indicates that the ayatollah’s regime believes Assad and his government can survive the uprising.

The rebels have long claimed that Iran is helping Assad – an assessment backed by Britain and the United States.

Meanwhile, the Arab League is preparing a draft on a UN Security Councilresolution on Syria. The draft coincides with a recent decision passed by the pan-Arab organization, which urges its members to “lend any political and monetary assistance possible” to the Opposition.

Analysis: Israeli-Iranian war now out of shadows

February 15, 2012

Analysis: Israeli-Iranian war now out of shado… JPost – Defense.

By YAAKOV KATZ 02/14/2012 23:29
The three recent plots are a demonstration of a determined Iranian effort to attack Israel at almost all costs.

Thai police investigate site of bombing in Bangkok By REUTERS

If there was any doubt, the capture of two Iranian nationals in Bangkok on Tuesday – just hours after the home they were renting exploded in a work accident – shows that the Israeli-Iranian war has now moved out of the shadows.

Iran is out to strike at Israel and appears to be panicking as it tries. The three recent plots, including the relatively successful bombing in New Delhi on Monday, are a demonstration of a determined Iranian effort to attack Israel at almost all costs.

But there is something to be said about Iran’s and Hezbollah’s failure so far to succeed fully in their attacks.

This could be evidence of what Israeli defense officials have claimed since 2008: that replacing Imad Mughniyeh, the Lebanese group’s military commander and terror mastermind assassinated that year in Damascus, was nearly impossible, and his loss was a huge blow to the terrorist group.

Mughniyeh oversaw Hezbollah’s operations overseas in the 1990s and 2000s and is believed to have orchestrated the 1992 bombing of the Israeli Embassy in Buenos Aires and of the AMIA Jewish community center there two years later.

On the other hand, while his loss has been a blow to Hezbollah, Israel has moved in the other direction and has improved its intelligence reach overseas in recent years, mainly by opening itself up to cooperating with foreign intelligence agencies.

An example of this cooperation came last month, when Thai officials described how Israel had tipped them off – once in late December and again in early January – about Hezbollah operative Hussein Atris’s movements, with exact details of when and where the attack he was plotting would take place.

What Iran is likely trying to do is hit Israel hard enough to inflict pain, but not so hard as to give Israel justification to retaliate, possibly even militarily.

In the meantime – and as long as the attacks are not successful – Israel is going to try and use the spate of attacks to its benefit, and specifically garner international support against Iran’s nuclear program.

Israeli intelligence agencies are now working to try and connect the dots among the three recent terror plots – in New Delhi, Tbilisi and Bangkok – in an effort to be able to portray Iran as what Israel claims it is: the greatest state sponsor of terrorism in the world.

The goal will be to show this Iranian violation of United Nations Security Council resolutions and try to get the world to impose tougher sanctions on the regime. The sanctions would not help in stopping the overseas terror, but could have a greater impact on Iran’s nuclear program.

The attack in New Delhi, for example, could be instrumental in getting India to cut its economic ties with Iran, from which it currently buys approximately 12 percent of its oil.

Israel is also using the attacks to explain to the world the danger of a nuclear Iran. If Iran is carrying out these attacks today, just wait until the ayatollahs have a nuclear bomb, some officials are saying.

But this all depends on the Iranians. If the attacks continue and one of them succeeds, Israel will need to consider how to respond.

For the time being, Israel is focused on the diplomatic track, but one bomb could change everything.