Iran, Syria, and Hizballah - Threatening Israel´s North (JCPA-JERUSALEM CENTER PUBLIC AFFAIRS) By Lenny Ben-David Vol. 2, No. 3 JERUSALEM ISSUE BRIEF 07/17/02)
Source: http://www.jcpa.org/brief/brief2-3.htm
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Many television viewers were surprised when U.S. Senator Bob Graham
declared on "Meet the Press" on July 7 that there are "more urgent"
priorities facing the United States than dealing with Saddam Hussein.
The chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence singled
out the terrorist training camps in Syria and Lebanon "where the next
generation of terrorists are being prepared....That is a much more
immediate threat to the security of the United States of America, in
my judgment, than Saddam Hussein."1
However, for more than a
year Middle East analysts have been tracking
the growth of a dangerous collaboration between Iran, Syria, and the
Hizballah terrorist organization. Hizballah - with Syrian and Iranian
blessings - has been launching limited but dangerous attacks against
Israel´s north, testing Israel´s tolerance.
The Iranian-Syrian-
terrorist triad was alluded to in President Bush´s
June 24, 2002, speech in which he called for new Palestinian
leadership: "Every nation actually committed to peace must block the
shipment of Iranian supplies to these [terrorist] groups, and oppose
regimes that promote terror, like Iraq. And Syria must choose the
right side in the war on terror by closing terrorist camps and
expelling terrorist organizations."2
The Hizballah Build-
up
Since Israel´s withdrawal from southern Lebanon two years
ago,
Hizballah has moved its frontline positions to within several hundred
yards of Israel´s border and its civilian communities. Hizballah
continues to challenge United Nations´ authority by claiming the
Shaba´a Farms region as Lebanese territory under Israeli occupation,
requiring "liberation."3 Iranian transport planes continue to land in
Damascus to unload materiel for Hizballah in Lebanon. Israeli
intelligence sources warn that Hizballah has amassed an estimated
9,000 rockets and missiles, including new 70-kilometer missiles that
put one million Israeli citizens within their range,4 plus 45-
kilometer-range Fajr-5 surface-to-surface missiles, and SA-7 surface-
to-air missiles.5
Hizballah´s new forays and tactics are
growing bolder and are
approaching a point of no return. In March 2002, Palestinian gunmen
under Hizballah command crossed into northern Israel at Matsuba and
killed seven Israelis. Israeli security services recently arrested an
Israeli citizen, Nissim Nasser, a Lebanese Jew (born to a Muslim
father), who was spying for Hizballah, providing photos and maps of
targets for "mega-terrorist" attacks. In June, Israeli troops
captured a Hizballah official in Hebron who had apparently entered
the country on a Canadian passport. At the same time, Israeli
spokesmen revealed that they had captured mines in Hebron that had
previously only been used by Hizballah in Lebanon. During
April´s "Defensive Shield" operation, Hizballah fired 1,000 anti-tank
missiles and 1,000 mortar shells at Israeli positions in northern
Israel in solidarity with the Palestinians.6
Since January,
Hizballah gunners have been firing anti-aircraft guns
into the skies above northern Israel, whether planes are flying or
not. The shells - some of which may have been calibrated to explode
on contact - rain on Israeli communities in the north.
Syrian
Involvement
It is axiomatic that nothing happens in Lebanon
without Syrian
approval, including Hizballah mischief-making. Besides permitting the
transfer of Iranian military equipment via Damascus airport, Syria
reportedly provided Hizballah with heavy 240 mm rockets from its own
arsenal.7
In early July 2002, a commentator for the Beirut
Daily Star
revealed, "Hizballah´s secretary-general, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah,
visited Damascus to commemorate the death of Jihad Jibril. Surrounded
by Ahmad Jibril and Islamic Jihad´s Ramadan Abdallah Shallah,
Nasrallah emphasized that attacks against Israel would continue. No
doubt this is a view shared by the Syrian leadership."8
Syria
has not permitted the dispatch of the Lebanese army to the
southern regions controlled by Hizballah, as required by UN Security
Council Resolution 425 (March 19, 1978) which called for the return
of the Lebanese government´s "effective authority in the area."
President Bashar Assad boldly responded to President Bush´s
challenge
to cut ties with Hizballah and Palestinian terrorist organizations on
July 1. In an interview published in the Al-Liwaa newspaper, Assad
declared: "Syria supports the Lebanese national resistance, including
Hizballah...in resisting Israeli occupation and liberating land,
politically and in the media, because the brothers in the Lebanese
resistance do not need military support from Syria....As for the
Palestinian groups [in Syria]...their work is limited to political
and media activities, and their offices in Damascus provide political
representation to the 400,000 Palestinians living in Syria and who
look to attain their rights and return to their land."9
Syrian-
Iranian-Terrorist Ties
If the late President Hafez Assad kept
Iran at arm´s length, his son
Bashar, the current president, is locked in an embrace with
Iran. "The deepening partnership between Iran and Bashar Assad´s
Syria," warned strategic affairs analyst Ze´ev Schiff, "should be
considered as one of the more important recent developments in the
region. In the meantime, he is allowing Iranian religious
propagandists to operate in his country´s mosques."10
Iranian
fingerprints were evident in terrorist attacks against
Israeli targets in South America and in assassinations throughout
Europe a decade ago. If Iran did, indeed, turn away from terrorist
activity in the mid-1990s, as some analysts have argued, the Islamic
republic has now returned to the terrorist game with a murderous
vengeance. The arms-laden Karine-A ship was outfitted by Iran in
Iran, and visitors to Tehran report of officials´ public pride in the
venture.
Published reports point to the involvement of
terrorist Hizballah
leader Imad Mughniyah in the Karine-A affair.11 The Americans blame
Mughniyah for the 1983 bombing of the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut
which killed 241 Americans and the 1996 attack on Khobar Towers, a
U.S. military housing complex in Saudi Arabia, in which 19 American
servicemen were killed.12 Israeli intelligence sources believe that
Mughniyah has changed both his name and his physiognomy and is living
in Iran.
"Iranian terrorism," Schiff warned, "is aimed not only
against
Israel; it is also perpetrated in the Gulf states, in Turkey, in
Africa and in Central Asia....A report issued by the State Department
states that Iran is the most active country in the sphere of
international terrorism."13
In early June 2002, Hizballah
joined Islamic Jihad and the Popular
Front for the Liberation of Palestine - General Command at a two-day
conference in Tehran in support of the Palestinian "intifada." Iran´s
Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, sent a message to the
conference participants in which he denounced what he called the "new
strategy" of Israel and the U.S. to bring Palestinians to the
negotiating table. The conference organizer and one of Hizballah´s
founding fathers, Ali Akbar Mohtashemi-Pur, addressed the conference,
calling Israel a "cancerous tumor" and praising Palestinian suicide
bombers for achieving more than all Arab wars and peace talks.14
Iran´s terrorist sponsorship accompanies its development of
long-
range missiles that put Israel and other countries in the region
under missile threat. The Shihab-3 missile, apparently developed with
North Korean assistance, is now operational; the Iranians are
believed to possess 10 of these missiles in their arsenal. In a
manner reminiscent of the Soviet Union´s attempt to base mid-range
missiles in Cuba in the 1960s, Iran has provided Hizballah in Lebanon
with Fajr-5 surface-to-surface missiles.15
U.S. intelligence
officials reported in April that Iran´s annual
budget for Hizballah now exceeds $100 million.16
Now al Qaeda-
Hizballah Relations?
The Washington Post revealed the extent of
al Qaeda-Hizballah
cooperation on June 30. Hizballah, the Post warned, is "increasingly
teaming up with al Qaeda on logistics and training for terrorist
operations [including] coordination on explosives and tactics
training, money laundering, weapons smuggling, and acquiring forged
documents."
As evidence of the new ties, the Post provided the
October 2000
testimony of Ali Mohammed, "a former U.S. Green Beret who pleaded
guilty to conspiring with bin Laden to bomb U.S. embassies in Africa.
He testified to having provided security for a meeting in
Sudan ´between al Qaeda...and Iran and Hizballah...between Mughniyah,
Hizballah´s chief, and bin Laden.´ Hizballah, he testified, provided
explosives training to al Qaeda while Iran ´used Hizballah to supply
explosives that were disguised to look like rocks.´"17
Some
analysts discount the possibility of an alliance between the
radical Sunni al Qaeda and the Shi´ite Hizballah. They forget,
however, the close relationship between Sunnis and Shi´ites that
developed in December 1992 when 415 Sunni members of the Palestinian
Hamas were exiled by Israel to Lebanon. They were warmly received by
the Shi´ite Hizballah, who taught them the deadly craft of bomb-
making as well as the concept of suicide bombers, a "martyrdom"
closer to Shi´ite tradition than Sunni.
Conclusion
Last
year, a New York court handed down guilty verdicts against four
men accused of carrying out bombing attacks against American
embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. The court documents show al Qaeda´s
worldwide network, including the fact that Iranian government
officials helped arrange advanced weapons and explosives training for
al Qaeda personnel in Lebanon where they learned, for example, how to
destroy large buildings.18
The Iranian-Syrian-Hizballah threat
to Middle East stability is now
even more dangerous because of the introduction of al Qaeda
terrorism. As the world focuses on the fates of Yasser Arafat and
Saddam Hussein, attention should also be paid to the growing dangers
along Israel´s northern border. The volatile mix of two state
sponsors of terrorism and two potent international terrorist groups
has not escaped the attention of President Bush, leaders of the
Senate Intelligence Committee, or Israeli and American military
planners. (www.jcpa.org. © Copyright 07/17/02)
Notes
1. NBC, "Meet the Press," July 7, 2002.
2. President Bush, June 24, 2002,
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2002/06/20020624-3.html.
3. See UNSC Res. 425. In a statement released on October 7, 2000, UN
Secretary General Kofi Annan pointedly referred to the area as "the
Shaba´a farms area of the Golan Heights." UN Press Release
SG/SM/7578.
4. Alex Fishman, "The Next War is On the Way," Yediot Ahronot, June
28, 2002.
5. Michael Rubin, "No Change, Iran Remains Committed to Israel´s
Destruction," National Review, July 1, 2002.
6. Fishman, op. cit.
7. Fishman, op. cit.
8. Michael Young,
http://www.dailystar.com.lb/opinion/06_07_02_b.htm.
9. Cited by BBC, July 1, 2002,
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/middle_east/newsid_2078000/2078
503.stm.
10. Ze´ev Schiff, "Iran: Clear and Present Danger," Ha´aretz, May 31,
2002.
11. Matt Rees, "Postmarked Tehran," Time, January 13, 2002.
12. Dana Priest, Douglas Farah, "Terror Alliance has U.S. Worried,
Hizballah, Al Qaeda Seen Joining Forces," Washington Post, June 30,
2002.
13. Schiff, op. cit.
14. Guy Dinmore, "Iran Meeting Offers Support to Palestinians,"
Financial Times, June 3, 2002.
15. Schiff, op. cit.
16. Rubin, op. cit.
17. Preist, Farah, op. cit.
18. Daniel Pipes and Steven Emerson, "Terrorism on Trial," Wall
Street Journal, May 31, 2001.
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