Israel deploys air defense, diplomacy on Syria concerns

Israel deploys air defense, diplomacy on Syria concerns

JERUSALEM - Agence France-Presse
Israel deploys air defense, diplomacy on Syria concerns

Israeli soldier stands guard next to an Iron Dome rocket interceptor battery deployed near the northern Israeli city of Haifa January 28, 2013. REUTERS Photo

Israel is increasingly worried that Syrian chemical weapons could fall into the hands of Islamist militants and is taking military and diplomatic steps to prevent it, local media and a security source said Monday.
 
Two batteries of Israel's Iron Dome missile defence system have been deployed to the north of the country in case military action against targets in neighbouring Syria or Lebanon becomes necessary, a security source told AFP on condition of anonymity.
 
He said Israel believes Lebanon's Shiite movement Hezbollah has a large number of forces in Syria that are supporting President Bashar al-Assad against Sunni rebels, but which are also keen to grab his chemical weapons if he falls.
 
"A decision to attack in Syria or Lebanon will need to be implemented immediately," if it is taken, he said.
 
"There won't be time then to start deploying." The Israeli army played down its manoeuvres, saying in a statement that only one battery had been moved north.
 
"As part of the operational deployment programme, which includes changing locations throughout Israel from time to time, (an) Iron Dome battery is currently in the north," it said.
 
The Maariv daily said that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had "urgently dispatched" his national security advisor to Moscow, where he will meet Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.
 
He is expected to ask the Russians to use their influence to try to prevent the weapons from falling out of Assad's control.
 
The newspaper added that Netanyahu met US ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro on Sunday. Shapiro said on Monday that the two countries were closely coordinating on events in Syria.
 
"There is a genuine discussion between our intelligence services," he told Israeli public radio.
 
"There are two dangerous possibilities," he said. "Either the regime will use chemical weapons against the Syrian people or the chemical weapons will pass to Hezbollah or to other extremist organisations."

"We want to prevent both those possibilities taking place."