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Israel's
Attack on Syria is a Lethal Step
Towards
War in Middle East
by
Robert Fisk
October
6, 2003
Israel
received the Green Light. It came from what is called the Syria Accountability
Act, moving through the United States Congress with the help of Israel's
supporters, that will impose sanctions on Damascus for its supposed enthusiasm
for "terrorism" and occupation of Lebanon.
Speaker
after speaker in the past week has been warning that Syria is the new -- or
old, or non-existent -- threat previously represented by Iraq: that it has
weapons of mass destruction, that it has biological warheads, that it received
Iraq's non-existent weapons of mass destruction just before we began our
illegal invasion of Iraq in March.
The
Israeli lie about "thousands" of Iranian Revolutionary Guards in the Bekaa
Valley in Lebanon has been uncloaked yet again. In reality, there hasn't been
an Iranian militant in Lebanon for 20 years. But who cares? The dictatorial
Syrian regime -- and dictatorial it most decidedly is -- has to be struck after
a Jenin woman lawyer, who has probably never visited Damascus in her life,
blows herself and 19 innocent Israelis up in Haifa.
And
why not? If America can strike Afghanistan for the international crimes against
humanity of 11 September 2001, when 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudis, and if
America can invade Iraq, which had absolutely nothing to do with 11 September,
why shouldn't Israel strike Syria?
Yes,
Syria does support Hamas and Islamic Jihad. But in Iraq is based the Mujahideen
Khalq, which bombs Iran, and the Americans have not bombed them. In Jerusalem
exists a government that openly threatens the life of Yasser Arafat but no one
suggests action should be taken against the Israeli administration.
In
Jerusalem lives a prime minister, Ariel Sharon, who was adjudicated to be "personally
responsible" by Israel's own Kahane commission of enquiry for the massacre
of up to 1,700 Palestinian civilians at the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps in
Beirut in 1982. But he is not going on trial for war crimes.
Of
course, Syria is going to take the air strikes on the 'training base" of Islamic
Jihad to the United Nations. Much good will it do Damascus. When the United
States cannot bring itself to support a resolution condemning Israel's threat
to murder Arafat, when it will not stop the Israelis building 600 more houses -
for Jews and Jews only - on Palestinian land, air raids on Syria simply don't
matter.
Perhaps
Lebanon will benefit. Perhaps Lebanon can now be spared Israel's retaliation
for Palestinian violence - unless, of course, Israel decides to strike a
Palestinian "training base" in Lebanon.
No
one asks what these "training bases" are. Do Palestinian suicide
bombers really need to practice suicide bombing? Does turning a switch need
that much training? Surely the death of a brother or a cousin by the Israeli
army is all the practice that is needed.
But
no. Yesterday, we took another little lethal step along the road to Middle East
war, establishing facts on the ground, proving that it's permissible to bomb
the territory of Syria in the "war against terror", which President
Bush has himself declared now includes Gaza.
And
the precedents are there if we need them. Back in 1983, when President Reagan
thought he was fighting a "war on terror" in the Middle East, he ordered
his air force to bomb the Syrian army in the Lebanese Bekaa Valley, losing a
pilot and allowing the Syrians to capture his co-pilot, who was only returned
after a prolonged and politically embarrassing negotiation by Jesse Jackson. In
an era when America is ready to threaten the invasion of Syria and Iran - part
of that infamous "axis of evil" - this may seem small beer. But Syria
itself has seen what has happened to America's army in Iraq, and is emboldened
by its humiliation to avenge the attacks of Israel or America, whatever the
cost.
If
America cannot control Iraq, why should Syria fear Israel?
Robert Fisk is an award winning foreign
correspondent for The Independent
(UK), where this article first appeared. He is the author of Pity Thy
Nation: The Abduction of Lebanon (The Nation Books, 2002 edition). Posted
with author’s permission.
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