Israel: America’s Mad Dog
in Syria
By Tony Cartalucci
March 20, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "NEO"
- Israel has
played an increasingly provocative role
in the destructive conflict unfolding
within and along Syria’s borders since
2011. To many observers, it appears
Israeli policy borders between
opportunistic and unilateral aggression.
In reality, Israel’s role in the Syrian
conflict fits a much larger and
long-term pattern with Anglo-American
plans not only for Syria but for the
entire region.
A more recent row between
Israel and Syria was the reported
incursion of Israeli warplanes into
Syrian airspace, including attacks near
the eastern Syrian city of Palmyra.
Palmyra hosts an ongoing battle between
Syrian forces and the self-proclaimed
“Islamic State” (ISIS) terrorist
organization. Israeli airstrikes against
Syrian forces – then – would have
facilitated ISIS operations in the
region.
Israel is a State Sponsor
of Terror, Not a Champion Against it
Israel has existed as a
nation-sized, defacto forward operating
base for Anglo-American interests since
its creation in the 20th century. It has
pursued aggressive regional policies
that have intentionally pitted itself
against its neighbors as a means of
maintaining a Western foothold and point
of leverage in North Africa and the
Middle East for decades.
Ongoing conflicts between
Israel and Palestine are fueled by an
orchestrated strategy of tension between
a manipulated Israeli population and
controlled opposition – Hamas –
politically backed, armed, and funded by
Israel’s own regional collaborators
including Saudi Arabia and Qatar.
When proxy military
operations began against the Syrian
state in 2011 under the cover of the
US-engineered “Arab Spring,” Israel
along with Jordan and Turkey, played a
direct role in backing militants and
undermining Damascus.
While Jordan has played a
more passive role, and Turkey a more
direct role in facilitating proxy
militant forces, Israel has played the
role of “unilateral provocateur.” While
Turkish, US, and other “coalition”
forces are unable to directly attack
Syrian forces, Israel – posing as a
unilateral regional player – can and has
done so regularly since 2012.
CNN in its article, “Israeli
jets strike inside Syria; military site
near Palmyra reportedly targeted,”
would note:
In November 2012, Israel fired
warning shots toward Syria after a
mortar shell hit an Israeli military
post, the first time Israel had
fired on Syria across the Golan
Heights since the 1973 Yom Kippur
War.
Israeli jets have been striking
targets in Syria since at least
2013, when US officials told CNN
they believed IDF jets had hit
targets inside Syrian territory.
CNN would also report:
Israeli strikes may have gone as far
inside Syria as the capital. In
2014, the Syrian government and an
opposition group both said an IDF
strike had hit Damascus’ suburbs and
airport.
And while Israeli
politicians and military officials claim
their aggression seeks to stop the
transfer of weapons to terrorist
organizations, organizations they deem
as “terrorist” are in fact the sole
forces within Syria fighting actual,
internationally recognized terrorist
organizations including Al Qaeda, its
various subsidiaries and affiliates, as
well as the Islamic State itself.
Paradoxically, these
genuinely terrorist organizations have
existed along Israel’s border enjoying
defacto protection from Israeli forces
from Syrian military operations.
Israel’s Role as
America’s “Mad Dog” is No Secret
Israel’s geopolitical
role as “unilateral mad dog” has been a
matter of stated US policy since at
least the 1980s – and in specific
reference to America’s repeated attempts
to undermine and overthrow the Syrian
state amid much larger objectives aimed
at Iran and the region as a whole.
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A 1983 document – part of a deluge of
recently declassified papers released to
the public – signed by former CIA
officer Graham Fuller titled, “Bringing
Real Muscle to Bear Against Syria” (PDF),
states (their emphasis):
Syria at present has a hammerlock on
US interests both in Lebanon and in
the Gulf — through closure of Iraq’s
pipeline thereby threatening Iraqi
internationalization of the
[Iran-Iraq] war. The US should
consider sharply
escalating the pressures against
Assad [Sr.] through covertly
orchestrating simultaneous
military threats against Syria from
three border states hostile to
Syria: Iraq, Israel and Turkey.
The report also states:
If Israel were to increase tensions
against Syria simultaneously with an
Iraqi initiative, the pressures on
Assad would escalate rapidly. A
Turkish move would psychologically
press him further.
In 2009, US corporate-financier funded
policy think tank, the Brookings
Institution, would publish a lengthy
paper titled, “Which
Path to Persia?: Options for a New
American Strategy toward Iran” (PDF),
in which, once again, the use of Israel
as an apparently “unilateral aggressor”
was discussed in detail.
Of course, a US policy
paper describing planned Israeli
aggression as part of a larger US-driven
conspiracy to attack, undermine, and
ultimately overthrow the Iranian state
reveals there is nothing “unilateral” at
all about Israel’s regional policy or
its military operations.
In 2012, the Brookings Institution would
publish another paper titled, “”Saving
Syria: Assessing Options for Regime
Change” (PDF),
which stated:
Some voices in Washington and
Jerusalem are exploring whether
Israel could contribute to coercing
Syrian elites to remove Asad.
The report continues by
explaining:
Israel could posture forces on or
near the Golan Heights and, in so
doing, might divert regime forces
from suppressing the opposition.
This posture may conjure fears in
the Asad regime of a multi-front
war, particularly if Turkey is
willing to do the same on its border
and if the Syrian opposition is
being fed a steady diet of arms and
training. Such a mobilization could
perhaps persuade Syria’s military
leadership to oust Asad in order to
preserve itself.
Once again, the use of
Israel as one of several regional
provocateurs executing policy as part of
a larger US-orchestrated conspiracy is
openly discussed.
As each Israeli incursion
into Syria unfolds – regardless of the
details, claims, and counterclaims made
regarding each incursion – it should be
analyzed within the context of US
interests, not “Israeli” interests. And
regardless of the details of each
incursion, the ultimate purpose is to
escalate the conflict continuously until
Syria and its allies react and provoke a
much larger, direct military conflict
the US and others amid its axis of
aggression can openly participate in.
It should be noted that
in Brookings’ 2009 paper, “Which Path to
Persia?,” using Israeli attacks to
provoke an Iranian response and thus
justify direct US military intervention
involving everything from an air
campaign against Tehran to a full-scale
US invasion and occupation were among
the centerpieces of the policy paper.
It is clear that an
identical policy is now being pursued
against Syria. Unveiling the true nature
of Israel’s incursions into Syria and
resisting the temptation to escalate the
conflict further is key to confounding
US designs and rendering the
provocations of its proxies – including
Israel and Turkey – moot.
Tony Cartalucci,
Bangkok-based geopolitical researcher
and writer, especially for the online
magazine “New
Eastern Outlook”.