Prospect of U.S. attacks in Syria raises security concerns in Israel

A member of Netanyahu's cabinet said that Israel is "taking seriously" an Iranian threat to respond to a susptected Israeli strike on an airbase in Syria.

A US military convoy is seen on the main road in Raqqa, Syria July 31, 2017. (photo credit: REUTERS/RODI SAID)
A US military convoy is seen on the main road in Raqqa, Syria July 31, 2017.
(photo credit: REUTERS/RODI SAID)
JERUSALEM - Israel held top-level security consultations on Wednesday amid concern it could be targeted by Syria or Iran if the United States strikes Syrian government forces over an alleged poison gas assault.
A member of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's security cabinet and Israeli strategic affairs experts voiced doubt that Syrian President Bashar Assad, embroiled in a protracted civil war, would risk direct conflict with Israel.
But they said Israel - which has the region's most powerful military - was taking seriously an Iranian threat to respond to a strike on Monday on an airbase on Syria which Damascus, Tehran and Moscow have blamed on Israel.
Seven Iranian military personnel were killed at the T-4 facility, Iran's Tasnim news agency reported.
Israel has neither confirmed nor denied carrying out the attack.
But it has pledged not to allow Iran, whose allied Shi'ite militias fight in support of Assad, to establish a military foothold in Syria and it has carried out scores of strikes against suspected arms convoys believed destined for Lebanon's Hezbollah group.
Netanyahu, Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman, Israel's armed forces chief and the head of military intelligence met on Wednesday before a security cabinet session got under way, government officials said.
"We have to be prepared for any scenario. Iran is a dangerous and serious enemy that should not be underestimated," Zeev Elkin, a member of the security forum, said on Army Radio before it convened.
"I won't get into the operational details, but we are constantly in touch with the Americans. They are our strategic partner, and our defense establishment is in constant contact with them," Elkin said.

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TRUMP WARNING
In Washington, US President Donald Trump warned Russia that missiles "will be coming" after Moscow, Assad's most powerful ally, said any fired at Syria would be shot down and launch sites targeted.
The Syrian government and Russia say the reports of a poison gas assault on a rebel enclave in the Syrian town of Douma on Saturday are bogus.
"As for the question whether an American operation will draw a (Syrian) response against Israel: theoretically, it's possible but I'm not sure this is the most likely scenario," Elkin said. "It's possible Iran will attempt a response against us."
Yaakov Amidror
, a former Israeli national security adviser, said Iran has "an open issue with us" over the air base strike.
The same facility was targeted by Israel in an air strike in Syria in February after an Iranian drone was shot down inside Israeli territory.
Amidror told reporters a US strike in Syria could be used by Iran as a smokescreen "to do something against Israel."
"They have their long arm of Hezbollah, which is controlled by the Iranians," he said. "They have militias in Syria and in Lebanon which they control and they have Iranian military forces in Syria that can be used."
Amos Yadlin, a former Israeli military intelligence chief, wrote on Twitter that "the Iranians will probably respond to the strike attributed to Israel, even if not immediately."
Tehran, he said, aimed to deter Israel from continuing to strike Iranian forces in Syria.
But in a shopping center in an Israeli settlement in the occupied Golan Heights near the Syrian frontier on Wednesday, it was business as usual.
"Life goes on here, no matter what - in Israel in general and in the north in particular," said Sheila Wolensky, a Jerusalem resident visiting family in the Golan. "We always feel like we're on the edge of the sword."