What if they're not being used to support a war effort against Israel? What if all they're doing is helping the Syrian military build up a massive arsenal of drones and missiles? A Syria that in this example is at peace with Israel? And why exactly would something that's an imminent threat make the state of peace irrelevant? Are you arguing the Bush doctrine of pre-emptive strike?
Being a hypothetical, there is much unknown here. It's unprecedented. But I think it also misses an important context - when Israel negotiated peace with Syria back in the 2000's for example, one of the demands was no Iranian presence on Syrian soil. Likewise, Israel is highly likely to demand something similar of Lebanon in the current and following negotiations if they extend to peace talks.
So in any realistic case, such presence would in itself be in violation of the peace agreement.
I'll use Syria as an example once again. If Iran's military presence in Syria is used, for example, to rearm Hezbollah in Lebanon, then that could certainly be constructed as a military threat and violation of an agreement.
In that case, Israel could, as in the Assad precedent, request Syria to remove Iran's presence on its own (with a deadline), or in the less likely case inform Syria that it will remove Iran's presence and de-conflict so that Israeli and Syrian military assets do not shoot at each other.
During ISIS's peak of popularity, its Sinai branch fired missiles at the Israeli city Eilat. Although a breach of the peace agreement, it did not break down, and Israel and Egypt coordinated to remove the threat, including with Israeli airstrikes on Egyptian soil and deconfliction with Egyptian forces.
Hogwash. This has been your assertion but the facts don't bear it out. Israel continued to work with Russia despite US sanctions, including transferring technology in violation of those sanctions.
What time period are you referring to? I can only assume you mean the IAI Searcher (Forpost) sale to Russia, which at the time was dwarfed by other western arms sales to Russia, including an entire French Mistral LHD whose sale was only cancelled at the last moment. Israel was not the exception back then. West-Russia relations were much less hostile back then.
Right now Israel is in favor of a continued Russian presence in Syria. USSR and USA were firmly hostile. Can you ever imagine this sort of thing taking place between them?
Yes, actually.
Israel and Iran were also mutually hostile post-revolution, yet they cooperated against the Iraqi nuclear program.
But the comparison with the USSR-USA is a bad one. USA-USSR were each other's main adversaries. For Israel, that would be Iran. Russia ceased to be a major adversary after the USSR collapsed, and even before that when peace with Egypt and Jordan was negotiated and Soviet/Russian presence at Israel's borders was reduced to just a fraction of the past.
A closer comparison would be the US preferring Iran take over a certain area from the USSR, as Iran was not nearly as important an adversary.
But another difference here is that the US is a superpower with global reach. Israel is not. Its resources are limited, and just defending its borders takes up significant treasure and manpower, far beyond what western nations would typically accept.
Israel has a complex relationship with Russia and they aren't exactly friends. But they also aren't exactly hostile. In point of fact I can't think of a single overtly hostile act between the two off the top of my head.
Because, as I explained, there is no reason to get kinetic over things. Hostile actions are kept at a low. Israel sells arms to Europe. Russia sells arms to Israel's adversaries, including Hezbollah, and invests in political influence campaigns across the west, including in Israel.
It's not like Israel and Russia are neutral to one another. It's more hostile than friendly.
All of them? The majority? The ones that were killed? There is a distinct disconnect between the decision makers and the victims here.
Tell me, do you honestly believe the Alawites generally see Israel favorably and would accept an alliance?
We have a wholesale slaughter of civilians and your response is that trusting those civilians, you know the ones that got murdered and the ones in the process of being murdered, is problematic because... "Assad's main supporter base, as an Alawite... are Alawites. That means their survival also depended a lot on Russia, Iran, and Hezbollah. Else they'd be butchered as well."
Take moment, consider your statement.
What do you find wrong about this statement?
There are also clashes in Jenin between PA security forces, local terrorist orgs, and Hamas. All of them consider Israel an enemy, and all are terrorist organizations. So when they kill each other, just because there are civilians being murdered by them, it somehow makes the local civilian populations view Israel favorably? No. It won't.
My first response in the forum (I wrote much more on Twitter) on the subject was:
"I hate the IRGC and Assadists as much as everyone else, but this brutality is meant to signal to us that they're (HTS) just Assadists 2.0.
Like I said on the day it happened (HTS revolution) - I'm happy for the Syrians who feel like they've been liberated, and at the same time Jolani is still the ISIS longbeard he always was. "
In a wider look at the region, Alawites have multiple options to choose from as protectors, and given sentiment toward Israel in the region - Israel is an unlikely option. Is that a wrong assessment?
If so, why do you believe Alawites would prefer Israeli support over Russian, Iranian, or Turkish?
You don't stop ethnic cleansing to form a political partnership. One may follow the other, but it's not why this needs to stop. It needs to stop because it's wrong on its own. Even if Alawites are completely hostile to Israel, this needs to be stopped.
Israel is not the middle east's police. Nor is it anyone's cultural parent.
It doesn't have the resources to intervene on everyone's behalf. One tribe massacring another is called "ethnic cleansing" in the west, and "Monday" in the middle east.
It intervened in Druze and Kurds' favor because they've proven valuable allies in the past.
If the EU and US decided they want Israel to take up that role and finance the relevant expenses - I'm all for it. Really. But when our own security challenges take budgetary precedent, I don't see that happening. I certainly don't see the EU supporting Israel in such an endeavor, especially with their unique interests in Syria.