|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Middle
East
US and Israel maintain menacing silence over air raid on Syria
By Peter Symonds
17 October 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
More than a month after Israeli warplanes attacked a target
in northern Syria, there are few firm facts and a great deal of
conjecture about this unprovoked act of aggression. No official
statements have been made by the Israeli government or the US
administration. Syria has protested the attack but provided scant
information. Earlier this month, Syrian President Bashar Assad
said only that an unused building related to the military
had been bombed on September 6.
The New York Times on Monday added to the speculation
by claiming that the site was a partly constructed nuclear
reactor apparently modelled on one North Korea has used to create
a stockpile of nuclear weapons fuel. Based on information
from unnamed American and foreign officials, the article
provided limited detail, stating that it was still unclear how
much progress had been made on the reactor, what was to have been
the reactors purpose, or what North Koreas role had
been.
The article followed previous leaks in the US press claiming
that Israel had struck a nuclear facility. In particular, former
US ambassador to the UN John Bolton stridently condemned what
he claimed was North Korean-Syrian nuclear collaboration. This
demonstrated, he declared, that Syria should be inscribed in the
Bush administrations axis of evil and that negotiations
with North Korea over its nuclear programs should be ended.
All these allegations, which have been denied by Syria and
North Korea, have to be treated with considerable caution. The
capacity of Israel and the US to spread misinformation and fabricate
lies and half-truths as the pretext for war is well-established.
The latest accusations against Syria recall US and British claims
prior to the 2003 invasion of Iraq that Saddam Hussein had plans
to import uranium from the African country of Niger. As it turned
out, the documents used to prove the case were forgeries.
What is significant is that the New York Times article
establishes that the Bush administration was well aware of the
Israeli plans for an air strike. According to the newspapers
sources, the partly constructed Syrian reactor had been detected
earlier in the year by satellite photographs after being brought
to American attention by Israel. There wasnt a lot
of debate about the evidence, a US official told the newspaper.
There was a lot of debate about how to respond to it.
The story also confirmed that Bolton was acting as the public
mouthpiece for Vice President Dick Cheney and the Bush administrations
hard-line militarist faction. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
and Defence Secretary Robert Gates were particularly concerned
about the ramifications of a pre-emptive strike in the absence
of an urgent threat. Cheney and supporters not only backed
the Israeli attack but insisted that the US had to take a far
tougher stance against both Syria and North Korea.
Behind closed doors, the New York Times explained, Vice
President Dick Cheney and other hawkish members of the administration
have made the case that the same intelligence that prompted Israel
to attack should lead the United States to reconsider delicate
negotiations with North Korea over ending its nuclear program,
as well as Americas diplomatic strategy towards Syria, which
has been invited to join Middle East peace talks in Annapolis,
Md., next month.
The Bush administration undoubtedly gave tacit approval for
the Israeli attack, but its subsequent actions indicate that it
did not regard the Syrian target as a serious threat. The US took
part in six-party talks with North Korea earlier this month, and
reached an agreement with Pyongyang over the disabling of its
nuclear facilities. At the same time, Rice reaffirmed an invitation
to Syria to attend the Middle East talks in Annapolisan
offer that Damascus is unlikely to take up at this stage.
The most striking aspect of the New York Times article
is the most obvious: all factions of the Bush administration,
along with the newspaper itself, accept Israels naked aggression
against Syria as legitimate. In 1981, when Israeli jets attacked
and destroyed Iraqs nuclear reactor at Osirak, even the
right-wing Reagan administration, in response to international
outrage, felt compelled to issue a formal protest. Today, however,
there is not a murmur of opposition from the White House, the
Democrat congressional majority, or the media over Israels
latest act of war.
Even if Syria had been constructing a small nuclear reactor,
its actions would not have been in breach of its obligations under
the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). Signatories are required
to demonstrate that their programs are for peaceful purposes and
to notify the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) when new
facilities are due to be completed and come on line. The IAEA
stated on Monday that it had no evidence of any undeclared atomic
plant in Syria.
Threat to Iran
The real purpose of the raid and the subsequent tight-lipped
official silence was to send a menacing message throughout the
region that the Israeli state can and will strike without warning
against any target as it sees fit. In the wake of its humiliating
military setback last year in southern Lebanon, Israel has been
determined to reassert its military superiority. While refusing
to speak about the nature of the Syrian target, a senior Israeli
official told the New York Times the strike was intended
to reestablish the credibility of our deterrent power.
Moreover, as several analysts have pointed out, the chief target
of the Israeli threat was not so much Syria, but Iran, which has
a far more sophisticated nuclear program. Since the beginning
of the year, the Israeli government has been warning that it will
not tolerate the completion of Irans nuclear facilities.
Like the US, Israel has dismissed Iranian claims that its nuclear
programs are for peaceful purposes. The New York Times
reported in June that Shaul Mofaz, Israels transportation
and former defence minister, told US Secretary of State Rice that
any sanctions regime had to end Irans uranium enrichment
program by the end of the year. If not, he warned, Israel would
have to reassess where we are.
What little information is available about the September 6
raid suggests that the Israeli air force deployed its most advanced
jets, which are capable of striking Iran and returning. The Turkish
military recovered at least one jettisoned long-range fuel tank
inside its territory. An article last month in the Sunday Observer
suggested that the operation was a trial run for an attack on
Iranian nuclear facilities. By probing Syrias defences,
the Israeli air force may have gained important data about Irans
capabilities. Both Syria and Iran bought and installed Russian
air defence systems this year.
More significantly, Israel was able to test the political waters.
Its September 6 attack provoked no criticism from the European
powers or in the Middle East. Since the start of the year, the
Bush administration has been seeking to consolidate a coalition
of so-called moderate Middle Eastern countries against Iranincluding
Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan and the Gulf states. By directly attacking
Syria, Israel, with US support, may have been seeking to weaken
Syrias current alliance with Iran.
What was actually destroyed on September 6 in northern Syria
remains the subject of debate. Efraim Inbar, director of the Begin-Sadat
Centre for Strategic Studies at Bar-Ilan University, told the
Los Angeles Times this week that the site was an unlikely
venue for a project of such significance. The location of
such a site I dont think would be the best place. Its
too close to Turkey and Iraq. I have my doubts, he said.
A Middle Eastern security analyst in Washington told the New
York Times last week that Turkish officials had travelled
to Damascus to present the Syrian government with a dossier on
what was believed to be Syrias nuclear program. The analyst
said Syrian officials had vigorously denied the intelligence and
said the Israelis hit a storage depot for strategic missiles.
US analyst David Albright told Reuters on Monday: A very
real question is whether Syria is technically and financially
able to build such a reactor. It would be hard to justify an air
strike on a facility so early on in construction and, if supplied
by North Korea, unlikely ever to be finished. Israel may have
wanted to send a signal to Iran. The US wants to scare Iran [off
nuclear work] and this air strike might have been a way to do
it, and explain some of Israels secrecy.
Much more significant than the identity of the Syrian target
is the menacing threat of a broader war that could engulf the
region.
See Also:
New Yorker article points to advanced
US preparations for war on Iran
[3 October 2007]
Israels air raid on
Syria: another threat to Iran
[18 September 2007]
Washington and Israel discuss
possible war against Syria
[9 June 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |