Israel Greatly Concerned Over Quality, Quantity Of Russian Weaponry In Region
By Ruthie Blum/Algemeiner.com October 31, 2016 Share this article:
The IDF is in a panic about the Russian military's presence and
deployment of sophisticated weaponry in the region, Israel's Channel 2
reported on Sunday.
According to the report,
though the IDF is not admitting this openly, high-ranking officers have
said behind closed doors that the "surprising" quality and quantity of
Russian systems in the area is dramatically hampering the way the
Israeli Air Force and Navy are able to operate.
Both
these branches of the IDF, according to Channel 2, were used to flying
and sailing wherever and whenever they saw fit, with no real threat to
their movement. But since Russia began to intervene in the Syrian civil
war last year in an attempt to protect the regime of President Bashar
Assad, things have changed.
One particular worry, the report said, was the impending
arrival of the Admiral Kuznetsov, Russia's flagship aircraft carrier,
which is on its way from the North Sea to the Middle East, and is
expected to anchor off the Mediterranean coast of Syria in the coming
weeks.
The Kuznetsov force is made up of some
1,900 sailors, more than 50 advanced fighter jets, the latest
aeronautical defense systems, radars and among the world's best
electronic warfare capabilities. The force has anti-submarine
capabilities and boats with a wide range of missiles for aerial
photography and intelligence-gathering.
The
report said Israeli defense officials admit that the Russians know about
every movement Israel makes in its air and sea space, as there is no
way to elude Russian radars, and thus Russia has been able to collect
massive amounts of information.
As was reported
by The Algemeiner in April, the Russians announced several months ago
that they were leaving Syria. Since then, however, according to Channel
2, they have been dispatching more ground troops to the area; they have
increased their air power; and they have brought in ground-to-air
missiles -- with a range of more than 200 kilometers - and are capable
of employing cruise and ballistic missiles, planes and drones.
At
present, they are also reinforcing their naval presence in the eastern
Mediterranean, in parallel with a decrease in the presence of the US
Navy there.
In addition, a spokesperson for
the Russian Defense Ministry recently issued a veiled threat, presumably
to Israel, by stating, "If anyone thinks he can hide behind stealth
technology, let him think again." This, said Channel 2, was in reference
to the F-35 stealth planes that Israel is acquiring from the US.
Meanwhile, the Russian parliament approved an unlimited
time frame for the deployment of the country's air force, which means
that Israel could face having the bulk of its areas of interest covered
by S-300 and S-400 advanced missile defense systems for decades to
come.
And it is this understanding that
spurred Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to fly to Moscow in the spring
with the commander of the IAF, Maj. Gen. Amir Eshel, to discuss
military coordination with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
As
was reported in The Algemeiner, Netanyahu made this trip to create a
mechanism for avoiding unwanted collisions between Israeli and Russian
planes.
Despite the arrangement agreed upon
between Netanyahu and Putin, however, two Russian drones were shot down,
which nearly caused a confrontation between Israeli and Russian planes,
Channel 2 said. In addition, two ground-to-air missiles were fired at
Israeli jets, though Russia claimed they belonged to a Syrian battery.
In
an interview with The Algemeiner in June, Mideast and Russia expert Zvi
Magen said that the ties between Netanyahu and Putin involve
realpolitik, with Israel protecting its interests, chief among them
ensuring that sophisticated weapons do not fall into the hands of the
Lebanon-based Shiite terrorist organization Hezbollah, which is backed
by Iran and allied with Russia in the fight to keep Assad in power.
Originally published at Algemeiner.com - reposted with permission.
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