By Daniel J. Levy
February 10, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - In his final days as
the Israel Defense Forces’ Chief of Staff,
Lieutenant General
Gadi Eisenkot confirmed, on the record, that
Israel had directly supported anti-Assad
Syrian rebel factions in the
Golan Heights by
arming them.
This
revelation marks a direct break from Israel’s
previous media policy on such matters. Until now,
Israel has insisted it has only provided
humanitarian aid to civilians (through field
hospitals on the Golan Heights and in permanent
healthcare facilities in northern Israel), and has
consistently denied or refused to comment on any
other assistance.
In short, none other than Israel’s most (until
recently) senior serving soldier has admitted that
up until his statement, his country’s officially
stated position on the Syrian civil war was built on
the lie of non-intervention.
As uncomfortable as this may initially seem,
though, it is unsurprising. Israel has a long
history of conducting unconventional warfare. That
form of combat is defined by the U.S. government’s
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2016 as "activities conducted to enable a
resistance movement or insurgency to coerce, disrupt
or overthrow an occupying power or government by
operating through or with an underground, auxiliary
or guerrilla force in a denied area" in the pursuit
of various security-related strategic objectives.
While the United States and
Iran are both practitioners of unconventional
warfare par excellence, they primarily tend to do so
with obvious and longer-term strategic allies, i.e.
the
anti-Taliban Northern Alliance fighters in
Afghanistan, and various
Shia militias in post-2003 Iraq.
In contrast, Israel has always shown a remarkable
willingness to form short-term tactical partnerships
with forces and entities explicitly hostile to its
very existence, as long as that alliance is able to
offer some kind of security-related benefits.
The best example of this is Israel’s decision to
arm Tehran during the Iran-Iraq War, despite the
Islamic Republic of Iran’s strong anti-Zionist
rhetoric and foreign policy. During the 1980s, Iraq
remained Jerusalem’s primary conventional (and
arguably existential) military threat. Aiding Tehran
to continue fighting an attritional war against
Baghdad reduced the risk the latter posed against
Israel.
Similarly, throughout the civil war in Yemen in
the 1960s, Israel covertly supported the royalist
Houthi forces fighting Egyptian-backed republicans.
Given Egypt’s very heavy military footprint in Yemen
at the time (as many as a third of all Egyptian
troops were deployed to the country during this
period), Israelis reasoned that this military
attrition would undermine their fighting capacity
closer to home, which was arguably proven by Egypt’s
lacklustre performance in the Six Day War.
Although technically not unconventional warfare,
Israel long and openly backed the South Lebanon
Army, giving it years of experience in arming,
training, and mentoring a partner indigenous force.
More recently, though, Israel’s policy of
supporting certain anti-Assad rebel groups remains
consistent with past precedents of with whom and why
it engages in unconventional warfare. Israel’s most
pressing strategic concern and potential threat in
Syria is an Iranian encroachment onto its northern
border, either directly, or through an experienced
and dangerous proxy such as Hezbollah, key to the
Assad regime’s survival.
For a number of reasons, Israel committing troops
to overt large-scale operations in Syria to prevent
this is simply unfeasible. To this end, identifying
and subsequently supporting a local partner capable
of helping Israel achieve this strategic goal is far
more sensible, and realistic.
Open source details of Israel’s project to
support anti-Assad rebel groups are sparse, and have
been since the outbreak of the Syrian civil war.
Reports of this first arose towards the end of
2014, and one described how United Nations officials
had witnessed Syrian rebels transferring injured
patients to Israel, as well as "IDF soldiers on the
Israeli side
handing over two boxes to armed Syrian
opposition members on the Syrian side." The same
report also stated that UN observers said they saw
"two IDF soldiers on the eastern side of the border
fence opening the gate and letting two people enter
Israel."
Since then, a steady stream of similar reports
continued to detail Israeli contacts with the Syrian
rebels, with the best being written and researched
by Elizabeth Tsurkov. In February, 2014 she wrote an
outstanding
feature for War On The Rocks, where she
identified Liwaa’ Fursan al-Jolan and Firqat Ahrar
Nawa as two groups benefiting from Israeli support,
named Iyad Moro as "Israel’s contact person in Beit
Jann," and stated that weaponry, munitions, and cash
were Israel’s main form of military aid.
She also describes how Israel has supported its
allied groups in fighting local affiliates of
Islamic State with drone strikes and high-precision
missile attacks, strongly suggesting, in my view,
the presence of embedded Israeli liaison officers of
some kind.
A 2017 report published by the United Nations
describes how IDF personnel were observed
passing supplies over the Syrian border to
unidentified armed individuals approaching them with
convoys of mules, and although Israel claims that
these engagements were humanitarian in nature, this
fails to explain the presence of weaponry amongst
the unidentified individuals receiving supplies from
them.
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Writing for Foreign Policy in September
2018, Tsurkov again detailed how
Israel was supporting the Syrian rebel
factions, stating that material support came
in the form of "assault rifles, machine
guns, mortar launchers and transport
vehicles," which were delivered "through
three gates connecting the Israeli-occupied
Golan Heights to Syria - the same crossings
Israel used to deliver humanitarian aid to
residents of southern Syria suffering from
years of civil war." She also dates this
support to have begun way back in 2013.
The one part of Israel’s involvement in the
Syrian Civil War which has been enthusiastically
publicised, though, has been its ongoing
humanitarian operations in the Golan. Dubbed "Operation
Good Neighbor," this was established in June
2016, and its
stated aim is to "provide humanitarian aid to as
many people as possible while maintaining Israel’s
policy of non-involvement in the conflict."
Quite clearly, this is - at least in parts - a
lie, as even since before its official commencement,
Israel was seemingly engaging with and supporting
various anti-Assad factions.
Although Operation Good Neighbor patently did
undertake
significant humanitarian efforts in southern
Syria for desperate Syrian civilians (including
providing free medical treatment, infrastructure
support, and civilian aid such as food and fuel), it
has long been my personal belief that it was
primarily a smokescreen for Israel’s covert
unconventional warfare efforts in the country.
Although it may be argued that deniability was
initially necessary to protect Israel’s Syrian
beneficiaries who could not be seen to be working
with Jerusalem for any number of reasons (such as
the likely detrimental impact this would have on
their local reputation if not lives), this does not
justify Israel’s outright lying on the subject.
Instead, it could have mimicked the altogether more
sensible approach of the British government towards
United Kingdom Special Forces, which is simply to
restate their position of not commenting,
confirming, or denying any potentially relevant
information or assertions.
Israel is generous in its provision of
humanitarian aid to the less fortunate, but I find
it impossible to believe that its efforts in Syria
were primarily guided by altruism when a strategic
objective as important as preventing Iran and its
proxies gaining a toehold on its northern border was
at stake.
Its timing is interesting and telling as well.
Operation Good Neighbor was formally put in place
just months after the Assad regime began its
Russian-backed counter-offensive against the rebel
factions, and ceased when the rebels were pushed out
of southern Syria in September 2018.
But it’s not as if that September there were no
longer civilians who could benefit from Israeli
humanitarian aid, but an absence of partners to whom
Israel could feasibly directly dispatch arms and
other supplies. Although Israel did participate in
the rescue of a number of White Helmets, this was
done in a relatively passive manner (allowing their
convoy to drive to Jordan through Israeli
territory), and also artfully avoided escalating any
kind of conflict with the Assad’s forces and
associated foreign allies.
Popular opinion - both
in Israel and
amongst Diaspora Jews - was loud and clear about
the ethical necessity of protecting Syrian civilians
(especially from historically-resonant gas attacks).
But it’s unlikely this pressure swung Israel to
intervene in Syria. Israel already had a strong
interest in keeping Iran and its proxies out
southern Syria, and that would have remained the
case, irrespective of gas attacks against civilians.
Although Israel has gone to great lengths to
conceal its efforts at unconventional warfare within
the Syrian civil war, it need not have. Its
activities are consistent with its previous efforts
at promoting strategic objectives through sometimes
unlikely, if not counter-intuitive, regional
partners.
Perhaps the reason why Eisenkot admitted that
this support was taking place was because he knew
that it could not be concealed forever, not least
since the fall of the smokescreen provided by
Operation Good Neighbor. But the manner in which
Israel operated may have longer-term consequences.
Israel is unlikely to change how it operates in
the future, but may very well find future potential
tactical partners less than willing to cooperate
with it. In both southern Lebanon and now Syria,
Israel’s former partners have found themselves
exposed to dangers borne out of collaboration, and
seemingly abandoned.
With that kind of history and record, it is
likely that unless they find themselves in desperate
straits, future potential partners will think twice
before accepting support from, and working with,
Israel.
For years, Israel has religiously adhered to the
official party line that the country’s policy was
non-intervention, and this has now been exposed as a
lie. Such a loss of public credibility may
significantly inhibit its abilities to conduct
influence operations in the future.
Daniel J. Levy is a graduate of the
Universities of Leeds and Oxford, where his academic
research focused on Iranian proxies in Syria,
Lebanon, Iraq and Palestine. He lives in the UK and
is the Founding Director of The Ortakoy Security
Group. Twitter:
@danielhalevy
This article was
published by "Haaretz"
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==See Also==
Iraqi leader:
CIA controls Iraqi gov't branch, Israel arming
protesters.:
Inside Israel’s Secret
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Israel armed and funded at least 12
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fighters, paying each one about $75 a month