Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime has given a Palestinian militant group the go-ahead to set up missiles to attack Israel in the wake of recent Israeli airstrikes on the Syrian capital, a spokesman for the group said yesterday.
Syria has hinted at possible retribution against Israel since the Jewish state carried out the airstrikes over the weekend, although official government statements have been relatively mild. In that light, the decision of al-Assad’s regime to allow a minor Syria-based Palestinian group to prepare for attacks is largely seen as a face-saving gesture unlikely to escalate the confrontation with Israel.
“Syria has given the green light to set up missile batteries to directly attack Israeli targets,” Anwar Raja of the Damascus-based Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command (PFLP-GC) said.
He said authorities also told the PFLP-GC that the group could carry out attacks independently without consulting Syrian authorities. Israel’s government has not formally confirmed involvement in the strikes on Syria. However, Israeli officials have said the attacks were meant to prevent advanced Iranian weapons from reaching Lebanon’s Hezbollah militia, an ally of Syria and foe of Israel.
The airstrikes raised the possibility of a wider regional conflict with Syria, which is already engulfed in a civil war that has killed more than 70,000 people, as its focal point.
Iran, a close ally of al-Assad’s regime, has condemned the Israeli attacks and warned of possible retaliation. However, yesterday, Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said it is Syria’s Arab neighbors — not Tehran — who should respond to the Israeli strikes.
Speaking to reporters in Amman, Jordan, Salehi said Arab nations “must stand by their brethren in Damascus.”
The Israeli strikes were met with condemnation from Arab nations, even those who oppose al-Assad and support the rebellion against him, but the protests stopped there.
Iran is deeply concerned with the fate of al-Assad’s regime, which has allowed Syrian territory to serve as a conduit for Iranian weapons and other support to reach their proxy, Hezbollah.
Tehran has supplied cash and weapons to help the Syrian government in its efforts to crush the revolt against al-Assad.
“The fallout from a vacuum in Syria will have adverse effects on its neighbors and the whole region,” Salehi said. “There will be serious repercussions from a vacuum. It will be grave and nobody can predict the results.”
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