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Israel widens fight, bombs camp in
Syria
Jerusalem -
Israeli fighter jets flew into Syria on Sunday and bombed a
suspected terrorist training camp, pushing Israel's fight to quell the
Palestinian uprising beyond the boundaries of the Palestinian
territories and sending waves of outrage throughout the region.
Israel struck Syrian territory in
retaliation for a suicide attack that killed 19 people in a seaside
restaurant hours earlier. Israel said it bombed an Islamic Jihad
compound on the densely wooded site in El Saheb, about 14 miles
northwest of Damascus, to "send a message" to unfriendly nations.
A lone man was reportedly injured,
and there was some confusion over the target. Syrian officials
insisted there was no camp there, only an ordinary run of civilian
land, and Islamic Jihad denied training there.
"This is a very clear message both to
Syria and to all those countries involved in the axis of terror
directed against us," said Raanan Gissin, a senior advisor to Israeli
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. "We will not tolerate that there will be
sanctuary or immunity for anybody, regardless of geography. It's up to
Syria whether Syria accepts the message and restrains its terror
groups."
The predawn bombings, the first such
strike in nearly three decades, unveiled a sharp shift in Israeli
policy. After three years of battle in the West Bank and Gaza Strip,
Israel is now declaring the right to chase armed Palestinian factions
onto their bases in foreign countries. It's a philosophy that echoes
the U.S. doctrine that nations harboring terrorists are subject to
attack.
It was the militant Islamic Jihad
that sent a young lawyer to blow herself up in a crowded eatery
Saturday and Syria was taken to task for aiding the group. Some
Israeli officials described the air attack on Syria as self-defense.
"In the raid last night, Israel has
upgraded its military reaction," said Israel Radio, citing military
sources. "The raid is a strategic change for Israel, which will no
longer contain the struggle and restrict it to the Palestinian
Authority territory alone."
An infuriated Syria, at an emergency
Sunday meeting of the U.N. Security Council, urged the council to
condemn the attack. "Many people across the globe feel that Israel is
above the law," said Fayssal Mekdad, Syria's United Nations
representative.
While Syria is widely regarded as
unlikely to respond with military force, a letter from the embattled
state to the United Nations hinted otherwise. "Syria is not incapable
of creating a resisting and deterring balance that forces Israel to
review its actions," it said.
The Arab League, too, scrambled to an
emergency meeting in Cairo, where Secretary-General Amr Moussa called
the bombings against Syria an act of "state-sponsored terrorism" and
said, "Can there be more chaos than this?"
After a heated session, the Arab
League issued a scathing statement to protest the "unjust aggression"
and confirm Syria's right to strike back. The raid threatened to pull
the entire region into "whirlwind violence," the statement said.
Lebanon blasted Israel for attacking
a sovereign nation, and Jordanian Foreign Minister Marwan Muasher
called the strike "an aggression on an Arab brotherly country."
Muasher told Jordan's official Petra news agency: "It can drag the
whole region into a circle of violence."
The strikes were launched on the eve
of the 30th anniversary of the Yom Kippur War, a watershed battle
between Israel and Syria and Egypt.
"This can only mean that Israel wants
war," said Imad Fawzi Shueibi, a political scientist at Damascus
University. "I believe Israel is playing with fire. If Israel wants to
take the U.S. example of striking terror abroad, it has chosen a very
bad time."
Palestinian groups rejected Israel's
description of the Syrian site. Islamic Jihad denied that it was their
training center. And the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine
said it once was theirs, but that it was now defunct.
Vincent Cannistraro, a former senior
CIA official, said recent intelligence indicated that the site was a
refugee camp, though in the past it had been used for training by both
Islamic Jihad and the Popular Front. "There is no current terrorist
training there. This is a symbolic act," Cannistraro said. "This seems
like an escalation to send a message to the Syrians: Cease supporting
Hamas and [Islamic Jihad]."
But Israel maintained that the base
was used by a constellation of factions, including Al Qaeda and Hamas.
A grainy video released by the Israeli army showed barracks and
underground tunnels stacked with guns and explosives; Israel said it
was footage shot by an Iranian television crew inside the Syrian camp.
According to Israel, the training
base was operated with logistical help from Syria and money from Iran.
Palestinians came to the camps for courses in explosives, artillery,
guerrilla warfare and aviation, the Israeli army said. "Through Syria,
Iran is sending a tentacle of terror into the [Palestinian]
territories," Gissin, Sharon's advisor, said.
Sunday's early-morning raid
reportedly caused only minimal damage. An Israeli security source said
the attack wasn't meant to demolish the compound, but rather to rattle
Israel's foes.
"Always, when we know somebody is out
there on their way to strike us, we'll strike first," Foreign Ministry
spokesman Jonathan Peled said.
The United States has accused Syria
of fostering terrorism and has pushed Damascus to shut down Islamic
Jihad and Hamas command centers. In the nervous weeks after the
invasion of Iraq, Syria reportedly shuttered the groups' offices.
But domestic public opinion makes any
Arab nation hard-pressed to turn its back on the Palestinian cause,
and Syria has mostly avoided embroiling itself in a confrontation with
the militant groups.
The United States has kept up its
complaints against Syria — American officials also suspect Syria of
working to develop chemical, biological and nuclear weapons. But some
Israeli officials say the United States has been too gentle with
Syria.
"We find it very, very hard to
believe or understand how the international community can allow Syria
to continue harboring terrorists," Peled said.
In the hours after the attack,
Israeli officials hinted that they had bombed Syria with the implicit
approval of the United States, and listed Syria's defiance of U.S.
demands as a justification for the overnight raids.
But in Washington, a senior Bush
administration official said the White House found out about the
bombing Sunday morning, hours after it took place.
President Bush phoned Sharon on
Sunday morning and urged him not to heighten regional tensions.
However, Syria's move to condemn Israel in a resolution put before the
U.N. Security Council is likely to be blocked by the U.S. unless
Washington perceives it as "balanced" in its condemnation of both
Israel and Palestinian leaders.
Under the spiritual guidance of its
Damascus-based leader, Ramadan Shallah, Islamic Jihad has launched
some of the deadliest suicide attacks against Israel in three years of
gory conflict. But Sunday, the faction denied running any training
camps in Syria.
"The Islamic Jihad Movement confirms
that it does not have any training center or military presence in
Syria," said a statement from the group, faxed to Associated Press in
Lebanon.
"This Israeli declaration is a failed
attempt by the Zionist entity's leadership to export its internal
crisis and historic predicament, which was caused by the intifada and
resistance, to neighboring countries," the statement said.
As the silence of Yom Kippur stole
over Israel — with businesses closed — bereaved families moved through
the numbing rite of burying the dead. Reaction to the raid was muted.
But it was domestic politics that
drove the surprise airstrike, argued Moshe Maoz, a Syria specialist
with Hebrew University who described the attack as a dangerous bid to
placate a bomb-battered Israeli public.
"It's to appease enraged, frustrated
Israelis, and it's not going to help anything," he said. "It's risky.
If it escalates, it could be ugly. If it expands to further attacks
inside Syria, that's dangerous."
In the West Bank city of Ramallah,
the attack on Syria momentarily eased fears that Israel might exile
Arafat, which remains a standing Israeli threat amid the carnage of
the failed Palestinian cease-fire.
After the Haifa bombing,
international activists ringed Arafat's compound as human shields in
case Israeli soldiers came to seize him. But Israel's hastily convened
security meetings focused on moving the fight against Islamic Jihad
beyond its borders and scarcely mentioned Arafat, Israeli media
reported.
Although the Israel blames Arafat for
propagating terrorism and undermining the Palestinian government,
leaders are deeply divided over the wisdom of removing a man who is
both a national symbol and the elected leader of the Palestinian
people. Gissin said Israel will probably begin by shutting Arafat into
a more intense isolation.
"If he were put in complete
isolation, there's a possibility that the Palestinian government could
begin to breathe and function," he said. "He's this golden idol, this
sacred cow, this thing that everybody worships. We'll lock him up and
isolate him."
Still, the attack drew new calls for
expulsion, and Arafat wasn't taking any chances. He declared a state
of emergency throughout the Palestinian territories on Sunday night, a
move that allowed Palestinian Authority Prime Minister-designate Ahmed
Korei to take over at the head of an emergency Cabinet.
The crisis was forced, Arafat said,
by the "difficult current conditions the country is going through."
"We need to have a Palestinian
Cabinet so that there will be no power vacuum in the Palestinian
Authority," emergency Cabinet member Jamal Shoubaki told Al Jazeera
television. Until the Haifa bombing disrupted the schedule, Korei,
popularly known as Abu Alaa, was to present a proposed Cabinet to the
Palestinian parliament for a vote this week. Thanks to Arafat's
declaration, he is now free to launch an assault against the militant
factions, if he chooses.
Korei gave a news conference Sunday
calling the security situation "unbearable," and vowing to act. --
Los Angeles Times
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