February 28th, 2015
Israel Working With Al-Qaeda?
by Jim Lobe
When Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addresses the Joint Session of Congress here next week, will any of those in attendance muster the courage to ask him whether Israel is supporting al-Qaeda? None other than Bill Kristol’s Weekly Standard strongly suggests that it is.
I know: it’s a rather shocking thing to suggest. And, thus far, LobeLog has only recently alluded to such support via the contributions in the past month ( here and here) of Aurelie Daher, an expert on Hezbollah. Her analyses focused on the possible emergence of a second front in the confrontation between Hezbollah (with Iran) and Israel along the occupied Golan Heights on the Syrian side of the border, which has been controlled by anti-government forces for well over a year. And those rebel forces have been increasingly dominated by Jabhat al-Nusra, as noted by Aurelie.
Now, in the March 2 edition of The Weekly Standard, Thomas Joscelyn, a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), reminded us that al-Nusra is “an official branch of al-Qaeda and openly loyal to al-Qaeda emir Ayman al Zawahiri.” Moreover, Joscelyn recalled that in their initial forays against the Islamic State (ISIS or IS) in Syria last September, U.S. warplanes also attacked members of the so-called “Khorasan” Group, which was allegedly planning attacks against the United States itself, as well as other western targets. This Group, Joscelyn stressed, “is not a separate entity, but instead “deeply embedded with the Nusra Front.” In other words, there seems to be no question that al-Nusra is indeed al-Qaeda, at least insofar as the FDD and The Weekly Standard are concerned. And there is also no question that al-Qaeda has been very interested in attacking the “far enemy,” including the United States and Western Europe, for quite some time.
Of course, Joscelyn’s article didn’t address the relationship between Israel and al-Nusra. As the title suggests “Doomed Diplomacy: There’s No Way Iran Will Ever Help Fight Al Qaeda” it focused almost entirely on recapping all past U.S. government allegations regarding Iran’s alleged “sponsorship” of al-Qaeda going back many years. (Joscelyn just published a couple of new allegations “New Docs Reveal Osama bin Laden’s Secret Ties With Iran”Friday on the Standard’s blog that actually suggest a much rockier relationship than “Doomed Diplomacy.”) You can judge the merits of his case yourself, although I would also encourage you to take a look at a less tendentious analysis that Matt Duss published for the U.S. Institute of Peace, as well as a shorter piece by occasional LobeLog contributor, Barbara Slavin, for Al-Monitor.
But, while Joscelyn didn’t address the tie between Israel and al-Qaeda/Nusra, another article appearing in the same Weekly Standard edition “Friend and Foe in Syria: The Enemy of My Enemy Is My Enemy’s Enemy”by hard-line neoconservative Lee Smith quite remarkably did. The article is a compelling one: not only because it concludes that Israel is indeed colluding with al-Qaeda’s Syrian affiliate, but also because it makes abundantly clear that, in Smith’s words, the United States and Israel have reached “strategic divergence” across the Middle East. Stated another way, U.S. and Israeli interests in Syria and elsewhere are no longer the same (if they ever were).
Smith begins his article with Israel’s outgoing chief of staff, Benny Gantz telling a U.S. audience “that it’s important that the international community defeat both camps of regional extremists.” In the general’s view, Smith went on,
- [O]n one side there are Sunni radicals, like the Islamic State,
al-Qaeda, the Muslim Brotherhood, and the Nusra Front, an al-Qaeda
affiliate. On the Shiite side are Iran and the Revolutionary Guards
expeditionary unit, the Quds Force, as well as Hezbollah and
Iranian-backed Iraqi Shiite militias.
- The reality, however, is that the government Gantz recently served
has made clear distinctions between extremist groups in the Middle East,
and has backed its preferences on the ground for certain actors in the
Sunni camp. The Obama White House has also signalled its priorities,
acquiescing to, if not actively supporting, the Iranian-backed Shiite
axis.
In explaining Israel’s preference for the Sunni (extremist) camp, Smith cites the January 18 Israeli strike on the Hezbollah convoy in the Golan Heights that killed six people, including five Hezbollah fighters and an Iranian general. To him, this “was the clearest indication yet of Jerusalem’s top priorityIran.”
- The evidence that the Israelis have no such immediate concerns
regarding the Sunni rebels fighting against the Assad regime is that this
was the first time Israel targeted the region around Quneitra, Syrian
territory that the rebels have controlled for a year. Presumably, for the
present at least, the Israelis have turned a blind eye to rebel
activitieseven though those units surely include fighters from Nusra,
one of the groups that Gantz says should be defeated.
- “Israel has provided medical treatment not just to Syrian civilians
but also fighters. It’s a channel of communication, then, they’re talking
to them, and likely sharing intelligence, in the full knowledge that
these rebel units cooperate with Nusra against the Assad regime,
Hezbollah, and the IRGC.”
- It’s hardly surprising then that Jerusalem sees a vital interest in
keeping IRGC troops off its border, even if that involves coordination
with rebel groups that include Nusra forces. [Emphasis added.]
- The upshot is that the Obama White House has a very different picture
of the region from Israel, and sees it almost exactly as Iran and its
allies do. Where Israel’s security needs require it to hold its nose and
work with Nusra-affiliated groups to keep the Iranian axis at bay, the
White House makes no distinction between the Islamic State and Nusra,
which it designated as a foreign terrorist organization in 2012.
[Emphasis added]
Smith naturally blames the current situation and the resulting “strategic divergence” between the United States and Israel on Obama. He argues that, if Washington had intervened early in the Syrian civil war, these kinds of moral compromises wouldn’t be necessary and everything would presumably be hunky-dory, at least on the Golan front.
- As many analysts warned at the time, if the White House stood by idly
while the war raged, the conflict might destabilize every U.S. ally on
Syria’s borders, including Turkey, Jordan, and Israel. Thus, it is
largely the White House’s negligence that has compelled U.S. allies,
including Israel, to partner with potential enemies against what they
perceive as an even greater threat.
But when Bibi starts talking about how Iran is the world’s greatest state sponsor of terrorism, I hope someone will ask what’s going on in the Golan.
http://www.lobelog.com/israel-working-with-al-qaeda/ --
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