Wednesday, October 23, 2024

An Israeli minister threatened to kill Syria’s Assad, a Putin ally, as war looms with Iran over missile threat

May 7, 2018 by  
Filed under Choosing Lingerie

Comments Off


Israel could kill Syrian President Bashar Assad if the creep of Iranian military forces and missiles through the Levant towards Israel’s borders don’t stop, a security cabinet minister said on Monday.

“If Assad allows Iran to turn Syria into a military vanguard against us, to attack us from Syrian territory, he should know that would be the end of him, the end of his regime,” Yuval Steinitz told Israeli news site Ynetnews.

The statement follows reports that Iran is preparing a massive missile attack against Israel on Sunday.

Iran has an estimated 70,000 fighters in Syria and likely more than 100,000 missiles and rockets in the region. The US holds that Iran is preparing to attack the Jewish state and establish a land bridge from Tehran to Lebanon, where Hezbollah, an Israeli and US-designated terror organization, recently strengthened its position in parliament.

Israel has repeatedly said it will not allow Iran’s dominance to spread to its borders, and has carried out more than 100 airstrikes in Syria to halt its progress. Israel considers Hezbollah an extension of Iran, which has vowed to destroy the Jewish state.

But most recently, the airstrikes threatened to escalate. After an armed Iranian drone reportedly flew into Israeli airspace, Israel shot down the drone and responded with a massive storm of strikes that it says took out half of Syria’s air defenses.

Later, a mysterious airstrike reportedly killed seven Iranian military servicemen at the base where the Iranian drone took off. Another strike appeared to take out a munitions depot in a massive explosion that registered as an earthquake. Israel is suspected to be behind both attacks.

“The month of May will be very volatile,” former Israeli Defense Force intelligence chief Amos Yadlin previously told JPost, implying Iran would want revenge for the humiliating strikes.

Israel vs. Syria may turn into Russia vs. US

The Aviationist

Iran has long supported Syria’s Assad in his seven-year long civil war, but Assad has another, more powerful backer: Russia.

Russian air defenses protect Assad in Damascus, though they have never activated in response to Israeli airstrikes against targets in Syria, despite Syrian military assets sometimes being hit in the strikes.

But, if Israel directly tries to kill Syria’s president, Russia, which has staked its credibility in the region on its ability to defend Assad, may have to respond. Israel has a very capable air force and stealth jets at its disposal, but Russia’s air defenses in Syria are rumored to be among the best.

Additionally, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on a recent trip to meet Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the US was “deeply concerned about Iran’s dangerous escalation of threats to Israel and the region, and Iran’s ambition to dominate the Middle East.”

“The United States is with Israel in this fight, and we strongly support Israel’s sovereign right to defend itself,” Pompeo added.

Syria has long been fraught geopolitically, and the US and Russia have frequently found themselves backing different sides in the fight. So far no serious conflict has taken place between the two Cold War foes that control most of the world’s nuclear weapons.

But while the US and Russia have proven cautious about engaging each other, Israel has shown itself very willing to bomb any target it considers a threat.

Benjamin Netanyahu is due to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday.

Share and Enjoy

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • LinkedIn
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS

As Putin Begins 4th Term, Inauguration Highlights His Vast Power

May 7, 2018 by  
Filed under Choosing Lingerie

Comments Off

“The symbolic Putin is omnipotent, like St. George slaying the Western dragon, but the flesh-and-bones Putin is barely capable of solving Russians’ everyday problems or preventing tragedies,” Andrei Kolesnikov, an associate at the Carnegie Moscow Center, wrote in a commentary on Mr. Putin’s continued popularity despite the economic slump. “The president answers for the symbolic renaissance of feelings of belonging to a great world power, while it is mayors, regional heads, and ministers who answer for fires and rubbish dumps.”

European election observers with the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe wrote that his recent re-election, “took place in an overly controlled legal and political environment marked by continued pressure on critical voices.”

Underscoring that point, two days before the inauguration, the police arrested about 1,600 people at protest actions called “He is not our czar.” Demonstrators wore paper crowns to mock Mr. Putin’s long rule, now running longer than any Russian leader since Stalin.

The arrests added images of swinging nightsticks and shoving matches with the police to the inaugural events. “A Spoiled Party,” read a headline on Monday in Vedomosti, a business newspaper.

The violence included a seeming throwback to an era of crowd-control tactics in Russia. Men wearing Cossack uniforms and carrying a type of traditional leather whip known as a nagaika had mingled in the crowd, occasionally lashing out. The Echo of Moscow radio station reported Monday that the Cossack group had won municipal contracts to train for and help with crowd control, though it remained unclear whether they acted in an official capacity on Saturday.

Mr. Putin first became president on Dec. 31, 1999, when Boris Yeltsin, ailing from heart troubles, resigned. Mr. Putin was then elected in 2000 and served twice, the constitutional limit for successive terms. He then became prime minister for one term, before returning to the presidency in 2012. For his third and now fourth spells as president, the term was extended to six years from four.

While not short on pomp, the ceremony on Monday was less elaborate than his inauguration in 2012.

In 2012, the police cordoned off much of the city center to allow Mr. Putin’s motorcade to glide through quiet streets toward the Kremlin. Eerie images of the leader in an empty city sparked criticism that Mr. Putin had lost touch with the people.

Share and Enjoy

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • LinkedIn
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS