Shammu
|
 |
« Reply #1 on: October 25, 2006, 05:47:51 AM » |
|
"Assad is preparing his army for a confrontation with Israel," Yossi Beyditz, head of research for the IDF's intelligence branch told the Israeli cabinet this morning.
"Assad has not returned the army to its pre-Lebanon war positions," Beyditz said.
Bayditz said the estimate so far is that Syria it not preparing to attack but to defend itself against a possible Israeli offensive, which Assad believes is imminent.
"These are artillery cannons, missiles and rockets positioned in forward positions. He is preparing for a defensive and not offensive response. He estimates that Israel would want to attack him," Bayditz said.
He said Assad supports terrorism and the path of violence:
"Assad continues to support Hamas, Islamic Jihad and Hezbollah. We have unequivocal proof on his direct involvement in smuggling weapons to Lebanon. In the past there was no proof," he said.
"Bashar Assad continues his wave of equivocal messages," the officer said. "Once he speaks about sticking with a peace strategy and simultaneously speaks of a confrontation and about us as not ready for a political process, and he, in fact, means both options: a political arrangement according to Assad's known conditions but prepares that army for a confrontation with Israel."
Israel on alert for Syrian attack
Israeli officials here claim the IDF alert level in the Golan Heights has not been raised in response to Assad's statements and to the new Israeli intelligence estimates.
"We have not made any significant changes in the Golan in recent weeks," said an IDF spokeswoman.
But military officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, told WND earlier this month the IDF has fortified its positions in the Golan, including increasing security at checkpoints and the stationing of larger troop numbers at key areas throughout the territory.
Also, the officials said, the IDF has reinforced security fences on the Israeli side of the border.
The IDF has not moved in additional heavy weaponry, tanks or troop divisions for fear of startling Syria, the officials said.
"We are taking Assad's threats very seriously and are cautiously increasing our level of alertness for a possible provocation by Syria," a military official said.
The official said Israel placed troops in the Golan on heightened alert during the 34-day war against Hezbollah in Lebanon that began July 12, but the alert level was raised in recent weeks following militant statements by Assad and Israeli intelligence warnings of indications Syria may be bracing for a conflict.
Jewish residents in the Golan told WND the heightened IDF status was plainly visible. They noted larger troop numbers and improvements made to border installations.
'Damascus prepping public for war'
Security officials here told WND there have been indications the past few weeks Syria is seeking to launch a provocation. Besides Assad's statements, the officials say state-run Syrian media have been broadcasting regular warlike messages unseen since the 1973 Yom Kippur War, in which Syria and Egypt launched invasions from the Golan and the Sinai desert.
"The tone [in Syria] is one of preparing the public for a war," said a senior security official.
He said any Syrian provocation likely would be coordinated with Iran. Tehran and Damascus, which both support Hezbollah and have signed several military pacts.
Reuven Erlich, a Syria expert and director of the Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center at Israel's Center for Special Studies, told WND Assad's threats "are to be taken seriously."
"Assad's support for terrorism, for the insurgency in Iraq, for Hezbollah and his alliance with Iran are all indication of the direction in which Syria is headed. Assad needs to demonstrate he is willing to sue for peace, but everything seems to indicate the opposite. Especially following the war in Lebanon," Erlich said.
Syria to form own Hezbollah?
In July, WND first reported Syria is forming its own Hezbollah-like guerrilla organization to attack Israeli positions in the Golan Heights, according to a senior Baath party official.
The Baath official told WND Syria learned from Hezbollah's military campaign against Israel that "fighting" is more effective than peace negotiations with regard to gaining territory.
Hezbollah claims its goal is to liberate the Shebaa Farms, a small, 12-square-mile bloc situated between Syria, Lebanon and Israel. The cease-fire resolution accepted by Israel to end its military campaign in Lebanon calls for negotiations leading to Israel's relinquishing of the Shebaa Farms.
The official told WND Syria's new Front for the Liberation of the Golan Heights was formed in June and that the group consists of Syrian volunteers, many from the Syrian border with Turkey and from Palestinian refugee camps near Damascus. He said Syria held registration for volunteers to join the Front in June.
One week after the WND article detailing the claimed group was published, state-run Al-Alam Iranian television featured an interview with a man who identified himself as the leader of the new Front for the Liberation of the Golan.
The man, whose features were blocked out, said his new group consists of "hundreds" of fighters who are training for guerrilla-like raids against Israeli positions in and near the Golan. He claimed the Front has opened several training camps inside Syria.
Last month, Amos Yadlin, head of the IDF's intelligence branch, told the Knesset Syria is in the early stages of forming a Hezbollah-like group.
|