by Ehud Yaari
         Concerned about the possible drift of al-Qaeda affiliates to
 areas adjacent to the Golan Heights border, Israel finds itself obliged
 to increase its assistance to local rebel militias in southern Syria.
        
 As the fighting in Syria rages, Israel has been moving cautiously and 
often reluctantly toward assuming a modest role in the civil war, 
restricted to areas along the Golan Heights frontier line. What began as
 a purely humanitarian step -- extending emergency medical aid to 
injured and sick Syrians from neighboring villages -- has by now 
reportedly expanded into a well-developed mechanism for providing a 
whole range of items, from medications to food, fuel, clothes, heaters, 
and more. One should assume that the same understandings which allowed 
over 600 wounded Syrians to be evacuated for treatment in Israeli 
hospitals -- including a special military field hospital on the Golan --
 are facilitating other forms of assistance as well. A significant 
operation of this type indicates that a system of communications and 
frequent contacts have been established with the local rebel militias, 
since the evacuation of the injured and their return to Syria seem to 
function flawlessly.
 These developments bring to mind the establishment of "The Good Fence" 
along the Israel-Lebanon border when civil war erupted there in the 
mid-1970s. Yet unlike in Lebanon, the Israeli forces involved in the 
current Golan-based assistance effort have been very careful not to 
operate inside Syrian territory or assume responsibility for the 
villages in question, most of which are populated by a mixture of 
Sunnis, Druze, and Circassians, along with various armed factions.
 Israel initially opted to remove itself from the bloody quagmire in 
Syria. It even accepted without protest its exclusion from the latest 
Geneva II peace conference, despite Israel's major stake in how the 
conflict is settled and its longstanding bilateral accord with Syria -- 
the 1974 Separation of Forces Agreement, which is still in effect. Yet 
Israeli concerns about the war's consequences have been aggravated by 
the emergence of al-Qaeda affiliates and other radical Islamist 
militias, which have gained preeminence among rebel units in many parts 
of central and northern Syria. Israel apparently may feel obliged to 
take unpublicized measures aimed at preventing or at least slowing the 
movement of such fighters to territory south of Damascus, particularly 
those representing the al-Qaeda affiliates Jabhat al-Nusra and the 
Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS).
 The area in question stretches from the Golan frontier up to Mount 
Druze in the east, and between the southern suburbs of Damascus and the 
city of Deraa, where the Syrian uprising was first ignited in 2011. The 
local militias formed in this region's villages are recognized as a 
potentially effective barrier to a takeover by al-Qaeda disciples. 
Although Jabhat al-Nusra has established a presence in the vicinity of 
Deraa and close to the meeting point of the Rukkad and Yarmouk Rivers, 
the overall situation in the south does not follow the pattern witnessed
 in other parts of Syria, where radicals have asserted themselves at the
 forefront of the rebellion.
 For example, military commanders have the last word in other parts of 
the country, but southern militias are often directed by civilian 
elders. Many of them have come to view Israel as a temporary ally under 
the present circumstances. Emboldened by their belief that the Israel 
Defense Forces will indirectly protect their back, these militias have 
battled troops from the Assad regime's 90th and 61st Brigades, which are
 based in the area. When regime artillery units fire on rebel formations
 along the Golan frontier and an occasional stray shell lands on the 
Israeli side of the border fence, the IDF is indeed quick to retaliate 
with a single Tammuz missile directed at the position from where the 
shells were fired. Otherwise, however, the IDF refrains from any 
intervention, even when clashes occur very close to Israeli positions, 
sometimes with regime tanks driving within meters of the border.
 President Bashar al-Assad's main interest in the south is to ensure the
 safety of the main highway between Damascus and Deraa and maintain a 
hold over parts of the latter city. He has also ordered his generals to 
retain Quneitra, the capital of the district bordering Israel, as well 
as the stretch of Druze villages to the north along the eastern slopes 
of Mount Hermon. So far, the regime has managed to achieve these goals 
and does not seem worried about losing its grip on the rest of the 
region, which has little strategic significance for the outcome of the 
current struggle.
 The regime is also keen on keeping the southern Druze community out of 
the fight. Based mainly on Mount Druze east of Deraa, this community 
could play a major role in shaping realities on the ground in the south.
 For now, it prefers to sit on the fence until Assad's prospects of 
survival are clarified. Traditionally, though, Syrian Druze have special
 ties to the Hashemite court in Jordan and were once considered by 
Israeli strategist Gen. Yigal Allon as natural future allies of the 
Jewish state.
 For their part, Israel and Jordan share similar interests in southern 
Syria. King Abdullah II is no less worried about the possible appearance
 of numerous al-Qaeda militants along his border. Accordingly, Amman is 
cultivating an array of local militias close to the long frontier with 
Syria, taking advantage of the fact that many inhabitants of southern 
Syria and northern Jordan belong to the same tribes. There are also many
 reports -- repeatedly dismissed by Jordanian authorities -- of a 
clandestine "operations room" in Amman where Jordanian military and 
intelligence officers coordinate military assistance to local rebel 
groups alongside Saudi and Western advisors. If such reports are 
correct, the Israeli part of the effort should be viewed as 
complementing but not necessarily coordinated with the Jordanian 
endeavor.
 In all likelihood, the inability of al-Qaeda affiliates to seize the 
leading role in the south is due not only to alleged Israeli or 
Jordanian involvement, but also to the jihadists' preoccupation with the
 war in the north, where ISIS has been battling with the Islamic Front 
and rival group Jabhat al-Nusra (backed by al-Qaeda leader Ayman 
al-Zawahiri) in recent weeks in addition to fighting the regime. Yet 
ISIS and Jabhat al-Nusra have dramatically increased their strength -- 
according to Israeli intelligence estimates, they now total 40,000 men. 
If they launched a concerted effort to extend their foothold to the 
south, they would pose a major test to local militias that have yet to 
be seriously challenged. In that scenario, Israel and Jordan would have 
to decide whether to sit idly while al-Qaeda becomes entrenched along 
their borders.
 In light of these concerns, preventing the southward expansion of 
extremist Islamist groups is becoming a larger priority in tackling the 
overall Syrian problem. If al-Qaeda affiliates take charge of the 
regions bordering Israel and Jordan, new terrorist threats would arise, 
potentially exporting Syria's bloodshed to its neighbors. Such a 
development would give al-Qaeda freedom of action over a vast area 
stretching from west of Baghdad to southern Syria. Put another way, the 
organization would have achieved its long-sought objective: a front with
 Israel.
 Ehud Yaari is a Lafer International Fellow with The Washington 
Institute and a Middle East commentator for Israel's Channel Two 
television.
Source: http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/view/israels-growing-role-in-southern-syria
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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