Syria's Fragile Hope Is Being Battered by Israel's Predatory Campaign of Destruction
Dec 11, 2024
https://archive.is/8jU7E#selection-897.0-897.12
Predatory birds are now circling around in Syria's
skies, smelling the stench of the corpses lying around and descending to get
their share. Israel's air force is bombing and destroying the Syrian army, with
Israel's land army seizing chunks of its territory.
Like water seeking the lowest place, Israel has found
another opportunity in the multitude of options appearing on its path lately,
destroying Syria's army and taking
territory as this
beaten and bruised country awakens from the nightmare of the previous regime,
facing an unknown future.
Ostensibly, there is some logic to Israel's move. The
circumstances are favorable for destroying the military capabilities of another
enemy. No one can at present stand in its way in the post-traumatic Syria which
has just undergone
a coup. But one should
not ignore the fateful damage which this ugly pillage could entail in the long
run. The prophet Isaiah was instructed to give one of his sons a name depicting
rapid pillage. Then too, this was a reference to the imminent destruction of Damascus
(and the Israelite capital of Shomron). Rapid pillage seems to also be Israel's
operational plan 3,000 years later.
New hope is now breaking through in Syria. It may be
false hope, most likely it is, but the first days of the regime now taking
shape give some basis to this
hope. The rebel leader
seems judicious and wise, so far. In contrast to the coup in Iraq, the coup in
Syria does not include destruction of the old order; there is no wholesale
bloodshed and destruction of infrastructure. Abu Mohammed al-Golani is for now
doing everything to stabilize the situation and build a framework for ruling.
Israel is for now the last of his worries. His past doesn't bode well, but he
may have changed. The Syrian people deserve that.
While Syria is groping its way in the dark, Israel has
come in aggressively and forcefully, as is its wont, bombing and taking
territory, a real hero against the weak and bleeding. It may benefit from its
actions, but it's possible that Syria will recover and not forget who attacked
it in its difficult hour, without pretext, without legitimacy.
An opponent in a time of weakness is ostensibly an
opportunity for attacking, but it could also be an opportunity for extending a
hand. This may turn out to be futile, possibly rejected with disgust. But when
events unfold so quickly and dramatically, no one can tell what lies in store.
Israel should at least have tried. Instead of
threatening Syria, nothing would have been lost if it had called for the
opening of a new chapter. Cynics will say that this is madness, but the real
madness lies in not even trying, precisely at this time.
The Syrian people will not forget who exploited its
weakness and destroyed its country. In a demonstration supporting the coup in
the Israeli Druze town of Majdal
Shams on the
Golan Heights this week, one of the residents told me: "If Syria's fate
were left only in the hands of its people, hope would stand a chance. But
Israel is already intervening and stirring the pot, leaving the Syrian army
with only Kalashnikov rifles and bullets."
Israel is not only destroying the Syrian army; it is
also taking pieces of Syrian land at an unknown depth and scope. Let's leave
aside the unbelievable arrogance and insolence of trampling the sovereignty of
another country without any pretext while mocking international law. The damage
to Israel resulting from seizing this territory is certain to come. These
territorial swipes will be the pretext for another war. Just like the Shebaa
Farms on the Golan Heights, Israel's questionable conquests are never temporary.
Nothing is more everlasting. They end up as a sore that never heals.
Israel will not hurry to withdraw from territory it
has now seized. Such withdrawal will be perceived as surrender. The right will
object, as will the left. Israel is telling the new Syria to forget about a new
chapter. We will continue to fight you forever. To Israel, this sounds logical,
even a reason for hope.
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