The
Mask Drops
By Yigal
Carmon
MEMRI
October 5,
2018
A
year ago, Russia’s mask of non-hostility towards Israel was still in place, in
the form of strategic coordination with Israel regarding the latter’s bombings
in Syria. This allowed it to conceal that it fully sided with Israel’s enemies
– Syria and Iran. Even as it refrained from trying to stop Israel from bombing
Iranian targets in Syria – as if it could have prevented this – it was at
the same time enabling and sponsoring Iran’s expansion into Syria.
An
article I wrote a year ago presented the unvarnished facts about Russia’s
support for Iran’s expansion in Syria at the expense of Israel’s national
security.1 It asserted that the Iranian forces’ presence in Syria constituted
an existential threat to Israel. It further explained, for the benefit of those
who could not conceive of Putin as so anti-Israel – after all, he had made
Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu a guest of honor at the Moscow Victory Day
parade in Red Square in May – that this was nothing personal against Israel,
but, as they say in the Mafia, just business connected to Russia’s rivalry
with the U.S. In truth, the strategic Israel-Russia coordination of Israeli
bombings in Syria served Russian interests: Israel declared that it would
continue the bombings no matter what, and an Israel-Russia military escalation
could only draw the U.S. into the melee and expose Russia as a mere regional
power that was no match for the U.S.
Following
the September 18 downing of an Ilyushin-20 plane by Syrian missiles, Russia’s
mask dropped, and the true anti-Israel face of its policy was fully revealed.
Indeed, Putin first attempted to conceal it by refraining from fully blaming
Israel for the tragedy. But soon enough he joined his subordinates in blaming
Israel, and announced that Russia would equip Syria with S-300 missile systems,
which would, inter alia, protect Iranian forces in Syria from Israeli attacks.
Now
the picture is crystal clear: The Russians, who originally enabled and sponsored
the Iranian expansion in Syria as an anti-U.S. measure, will now also protect
the Iranians in Syria from Israeli attacks. This constitutes an undeclared act
of war against Israel by an enemy, i.e. Russia – since it will not be the
Syrians operating the S-300s against Israeli aircraft, because they yet face a
long learning curve to do this; it will, for an indeterminate time, be Russian
officers.
But
with Russia’s equipping Syria with S-300s, and their inevitable operation by
Russian officers against Israeli aircraft, the Russians risk a major military
and technological debacle. They will learn, if they haven’t yet from the
Ilyushin tragedy, that Israeli-American technology is far superior to Russia’s
– and that goes not just for the S-300s now being shipped to the Syrians, but
also for the S-300s and S-400s that Russia already has in place in Syria for its
own defense. Perhaps only an internal Russian military investigation can show
what these systems were doing when the Ilyushin was shot down. 4 Russian Defense
Minister Sergey Shoygu rejects the Israeli version of events, according to which
the Israeli planes were already back over Haifa when the Ilyushin was shot down.
The Russians argue that the radar picture showed an Israeli plane using the
Ilyushin as a shield. A possible explanation for this, revealed by the Israeli
daily Haaretz, is that the radar picture available to the Russians was not
actual, but was the product of Israel’s electronic warfare. Given that this
will continue to be part of any future Israeli bombing, the advanced Russian
missile defense systems will be rendered no longer marketable. Perhaps this is
why the Russians, upon announcing that they will deliverer S-300s to Syria,
simultaneously announced their willingness to negotiate with the U.S. on this
delivery, in order to avert any possible clashes with Israel and their
ramifications.
Russia’s
true face has been revealed not only in the military/strategic sphere – by
providing S-300s to Syria – but also by its reversion to the old
Russian/Soviet antisemitism that not even Russian President Putin’s “special
relationship” with Chabad can camouflage. Former Israeli Ambassador to Russia
Zvi Magen noted: “The media blamed Israel on the day of crisis in a well-timed
orchestrated manner, filled with antisemitic elements. This wasn’t random.”2
Given Russia’s actual policy towards Israel, this should come as no surprise.