Published by an old curmudgeon who came to America in 1936 as a refugee from Nazi Germany and proudly served in the U.S. Army during World War II. He is a former law enforcement officer and a retired professor of criminal justice who, in 1970, founded the Texas Narcotic Officers Association. BarkGrowlBite refuses to be politically correct.
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Tuesday, May 17, 2022
THE UKRAINE WAR IS DRIVING ISRAEL AND RUSSIA FURTHER APART
Report: Russia Opens Fire on Israel
First reported incident of Russian military attacking Israeli planes could signal dangerous shift
Israel Today
The Israeli F-35s reportedly all returned home safely and were never in any real danger even from the Russian air defenses
If an Israel Channel 13 News report is to be believed, the first shots in the Israel-Russia conflict have already been fired.
Last week, Israel Air Force (IAF) jets allegedly attacked targets in northern Syria. That’s not out of the ordinary.
But this time, according to unnamed sources cited by Channel 13,
Russian military units stationed in Syria opened fire on the Israeli
aircraft.
Syrian military air defenses have been almost entirely ineffective in preventing Israeli airstrikes on targets in the country.
But there are a number of advanced Russian-made S-300 anti-aircraft
batteries deployed throughout Syria that until now have not been
activated against the Israelis.
Those batteries are operated by Russian military personnel and are
under Russian military command. And one of them reportedly joined Syrian
air defenses in attacking Israeli planes last week.
If true, experts said this marks a significant and dangerous policy shift on the part of Moscow.
With friends like these…
Israel tried to maintain at least the semblance of neutrality in the Russia-Ukraine war, believing it could play a role in brokering a ceasefire.
But as soon as Israel started to lean more toward Ukraine, Russia’s rhetoric against the Jewish state escalated exponentially.
And there were concerns that this new unfriendly rhetoric would be
followed by a policy shift in Syria, where for the past several years
Russia has turned a blind eye to Israeli strikes on Syrian, Iranian and
Hezbollah forces that are deemed a threat to the Jewish state.
The not-so-mighty bear
The bright side to this story is that the S-300 radar was reportedly
no more successful than Syria’s older anti-aircraft systems in locking
on to the Israeli aircraft, and ultimately posed no threat to them.
Israeli commentators have noted that Russia’s lackluster military
performance in Ukraine suggests that Israel has less to fear than it
supposed should Russian forces in Syria turn hostile.
1 comment:
I am unsure they were really all that friendly anyway.
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