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Netanyahu Says Iran's Presence in Syria Won't Be Tolerated

by Jamie Dettmer

   Israel won't allow Iran to entrench itself militarily in Syria, Israeli
   Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed Sunday.

   His remarks, in a taped message to a forum in Washington, came just a
   day after Israeli aircraft attacked a suspected Iranian base outside
   Damascus and could suggest the Middle East is entering a new volatile
   phase in a confrontation between Israel and Iran.

   "Let me reiterate Israel's policy," Netanyahu said. "We will not allow
   a regime hell bent on the annihilation of the Jewish state to acquire
   nuclear weapons. We will not allow that regime to entrench itself
   militarily in Syria, as it seeks to do, for the express purpose of
   eradicating our state," he told the Saban Forum, an annual gathering of
   American and Israeli leaders in Washington hosted by the Brookings
   Institution.

   Citing Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who recently described
   Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei as "the new Hitler of the
   Middle East," Netanyahu likened Iran to Nazi Germany, arguing they
   share in common, "a ruthless commitment to impose tyranny and terror"
   as well as "a ruthless commitment to murder Jews."

   Some cooperation

   His criticism comes amid growing rumors a covert relationship is
   developing between Israel and Saudi Arabia, united in opposition to
   Iran and its growing clout in the region. Saudi Arabian officials have
   denied the claims. Saudi foreign minister Adel Jubeir told an Egyptian
   television station recently, "There are no relations between Saudi
   Arabia and Israel."

   But CIA director Mike Pompeo said Saturday Saudi Arabia has been
   working directly with Israel and Sunni Arab nations in the fight
   against terrorism.

   "We've seen them work with the Israelis to push back against terrorism
   throughout the Middle East," Pompeo told a security forum in
   California.

   Last month, a senior Israeli minister, Yuval Steinitz, acknowledged
   publicly that joint enmity for Iran has pushed Israel and Saudi Arabia
   closer and that the two states, which do not enjoy formal diplomatic
   relations, had established "partly secret" ties to counter Iran's
   influence in the region. It was the first disclosure by a senior
   Israeli figure of long-rumored secret cooperation between the Jewish
   state and the Gulf Kingdom, although a top Israeli general had earlier
   said Israel stood ready to exchange intelligence about Iran with Saudi
   Arabia or any "moderate" Arab countries.

   Israel sending message

   On Saturday, Israeli warplanes flying over neighboring Lebanon fired
   several missiles at a military base Iran is said to be building in
   Syria close to the country's capital, Damascus, according to a
   state-run Syrian news agency and foreign media. The Israeli military
   has not commented on the missile strike targeting a military area near
   the southern suburb of Kiswah.

   Sana, Syria's news agency, claimed Syrian air defenses had shot down
   two of the Israeli missiles. Other Syrian media said the airstrike
   killed a dozen Iranian revolutionary guardsmen.

   As the Syrian civil war has drawn Iran deeper into the conflict to
   shore up its ally, President Bashar al-Assad, Israel has conducted
   airstrikes against convoys and bases in Syria in a bid, officials say,
   to prevent Syria and Iran, from transferring sophisticated weapons to
   Tehran ally Hezbollah, the radical Lebanese Shi'ite movement, which is
   also fighting in Syria in support of the Assad government.

   Some analysts question why Israel decided to strike the base at Kiswah
   now. For more than a year, there have been claims Iran has been
   constructing permanent military bases in Syria. On November 10 the BBC
   broadcast three satellite images taken over several months showing new
   buildings being erected and other construction work at the site 50
   kilometers from Israeli installations on the Golan Heights.

   The Israeli airstrike appears to have upped the ante regarding Iran's
   military presence in Syria. Last week Israeli media reported that
   Netanyahu had sent a stark warning to President Assad, via a third
   party, warning Israel would target his regime if he grants Iran a
   permanent presence in his country.

   The airstrike, say analysts, is to show Israel's willingness to enforce
   a red line, and that message may be directed to Assad's other big
   foreign backer, Russia. Israel and Moscow have been in negotiations for
   weeks about a buffer zone along the Israeli-Syria border with the
   Israelis demanding it extend at least 40 kilometers inside Syria. The
   Russians, according to Israel diplomats, have agreed only an off-limits
   zone 10 to 15 kilometers.

   Last month, the chief commander of Iran's Revolutionary Guards,
   Mohammad Ali Jafari, said Tehran will help rebuild Syria and bring
   about a lasting "ceasefire." Iranian state television quoted him as
   saying, "Hezbollah must be armed to fight against the enemy of the
   Lebanese nation, which is Israel. Naturally they should have the best
   weapons to protect Lebanon's security. This issue is non-negotiable."