Syrian commander on Israeli frontline says invasion will go no further
Rebel commander in Qatana, a Syrian town just 8km from
Israeli troops, says 'we refuse to let anyone enter Syria'
By Daniel
Hilton and Omar
al-Aswad in
Damascus
Published date: 14 December 2024
https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/syrian-commander-israeli-frontline-invasion-go-no-further
Qatana has seen Israeli-Syrian conflicts come and go.
The town in the Damascus countryside has been an
important staging post for Syrian troops in the wars of 1967 and 1973, and
today finds itself just 8km from invading Israeli troops.
As soon as Bashar al-Assad fled Syria last week to
escape a shock rebel advance, Israeli troops began moving themselves.
First, they took the UN-operated buffer zone in the
occupied Golan Heights, seizing more of the Syrian plateau it has occupied for
half a century.
Then they spread out into Syria’s adjacent Quneitra
province, before marching northeast towards Damascus, pausing outside Qatana,
25km from the capital.
Abdallah Sheikh, the rebel commander now overseeing
the town, says the Israelis will go no further.
“We refuse to let anyone enter Syria,” he tells Middle
East Eye from his new office in the town’s municipality building.
Israel’s invasion has forced Syrians in the areas
outside Qatana to flee to the town. Sheikh says it has left people here
unnerved.
“Israel wanted to enter the area to maintain chaos,”
he says. “It probably wants Syria to remain weak.”
But Syria’s rebels have other priorities right now.
“We are working on rebuilding Syria,” Sheikh says.
No excuse for Israel to stay
Qatana’s streets are a little quieter than normal.
Residents say people are wary with the Israelis next door.
Abdel-Malik Abdullah, 18, thinks the town will be left
untouched. “The rebels aren’t doing anything because Syria cannot afford
another war,” he says.
Nearby, Ahmed Weyda sells fruit from a cart. The
60-year-old remembers Syria’s war with Israel in 1973, pointing at places the
Israelis bombed at the time.
“If Israel wanted to be here, they would be by now,”
he says.
Every day, Israeli warplanes bomb sites across Syria. From ships in
Latakia to jets in Damascus, Syrian military gear now in rebel hands has been
incinerated. There have been more than 600 raids in a week.
One Syria expert said it was “now a de facto
demilitarised country”.
At Mezzeh air base, the wreckage of jets, helicopters
and rocket systems lie on the tarmac.
Rebels guarding the base warn not to spend too long
looking around. “It’s getting dark, so the Israelis will start bombing soon,”
one says.
Ahmed al-Sharaa, the most powerful rebel leader who
previously went by his nom de guerre Abu Mohammed al-Jolani, said on Monday
that Syria was not going to enter a war with Israel.
Syria is not “in a position to wage a campaign against
it”, he said.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he was
securing Israel’s borders. But Jolani noted that Iranian forces that backed
Assad were no longer in the country, so there was no excuse for Israel to be
there.
The Syrian Civil Defence, a search-and-rescue
organisation known as the White Helmets, has condemned Israel’s attacks, saying
they “were undermining the aspirations of Syrians to build a free, sovereign,
and stable state”.
Sheikh, the commander who now finds himself his
hometown’s top authority, says the international community could help with that
- “including by getting Israel to stop attacking Syria and leave”.
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