Middle East Defence & Security

swerve

Super Moderator
'''
Russian forces securing a Syrian Su-24 position, it's unclear if Russia intends to claim the jets for themselves. Russia donated a number of Su-24M2s to the Syrians, upon them being withdrawn from Russian service.

The Ukrainians are still using them, IIRC. Maybe they could find a new home.
 

Feanor

Super Moderator
Staff member
You're mistaking lack of overt hostility with friendship. By the same logic I could say the US and China are friendly nations to one another, just because they're not actively fighting a war. But that won't make it true. The entire cold war was characterized by a de facto war being prosecuted without going "hot", instead through proxies.
During the cold war, the USSR was a major antagonist for Israel. It supported, armed, and even fought beside - the Arab states that waged war on Israel.
When the USSR fell, Russia remained an arms supplier to Israel's enemies. Syria, Hezbollah, Hamas, Iran, etc - all had modern Russian, not Soviet, weapons.
It's a little more complex than that. Right now Russian UCAVs are striking Ukrainian forces in the Kursk border area with UAVs and munitions developed with Israeli help. In point of fact if Russia and NATO end up at war, weapons develop with Israeli assistance will be used against NATO forces. I'm reasonably confident Elbit is no longer camped out in the Urals, but what year did they stop? ;)

The Ukrainians are still using them, IIRC. Maybe they could find a new home.
Absolutely. Ex-Syrian MiG-29s and Su-24s would help Ukraine a lot. Though it's an open question whether Israel will leave them intact if they fall into rebel hands.
 

Big_Zucchini

Well-Known Member
It's a little more complex than that. Right now Russian UCAVs are striking Ukrainian forces in the Kursk border area with UAVs and munitions developed with Israeli help. In point of fact if Russia and NATO end up at war, weapons develop with Israeli assistance will be used against NATO forces. I'm reasonably confident Elbit is no longer camped out in the Urals, but what year did they stop? ;)
The IAI Searcher drone deal is more an exception than the rule. There was general thawing out between Russia and the west, and that was part of an attempt to shift things into more friendly territory but it never progressed beyond that one deal which was for equipment considered obsolete by Israel anyway.
 

koxinga

Well-Known Member
It's a little more complex than that. Right now Russian UCAVs are striking Ukrainian forces in the Kursk border area with UAVs and munitions developed with Israeli help. In point of fact if Russia and NATO end up at war, weapons develop with Israeli assistance will be used against NATO forces. I'm reasonably confident Elbit is no longer camped out in the Urals, but what year did they stop? ;)
Plenty of things were different before the war and Russia was just another client. The French sold thermals that were used for Russian tanks (Thales (Catherine-FC) / JSC Peleng) for example. Eyebrows were raised but the deals went ahead.

What is relevant is the current context. Russia was in Syria and supported Assad for its own self serving strategic interests (access to a warm water port on the Med, airbases to support operations in Africa, skin in the game to influence geopolitics in ME), not for any great love for the man himself.

Would Israel be happy if Russia exits? I'm sure they will be. While Russia is not a direct enemy of Israel, one less variable and player in the region is better since it is one less consideration.
 

Feanor

Super Moderator
Staff member
The IAI Searcher drone deal is more an exception than the rule. There was general thawing out between Russia and the west, and that was part of an attempt to shift things into more friendly territory but it never progressed beyond that one deal which was for equipment considered obsolete by Israel anyway.
Except... it wasn't just the one deal. Elbit camped out by the Ural Civil Aviation Plant for years. And this was after relations started to get frosty with Europe again. Iirc the US even got upset that Israel was allegedly supplying US tech to Russia in violation of sanctions. And this is just the part we can see. There were other... maneuvers. There's a reason Israel wouldn't sell UAVs to Ukraine even post 2014. Let me ask you this, when did Elbit stop cooperation on the Forpost-RU and the family of UCAV munitions being integrated on it?

Israel and Russia has a relationship behind the scenes. They're not exactly allies, and it's probably an uneasy partnership at best. But they're definitely not enemies. Not based on their mutual behavior. They're on different sides of the current global cleavage but Israel will sell upgraded pitchforks to hell itself if it's in their interest to do so.

Plenty of things were different before the war and Russia was just another client. The French sold thermals that were used for Russian tanks (Thales (Catherine-FC) / JSC Peleng) for example. Eyebrows were raised but the deals went ahead.
France was selling Russia warships and iirc the SENIT 9. Russia actually had good relations with France even after the events of '14. This current war of course tossed all that out the window, yet another reason for why it was a bad idea to invade. But I digress.

On a side note, you said "before the war". But which war to do you mean? The current one that started in 2022? Or the one '14-'16? The timeline here shows a fairly substantial difference. Russian defense cooperation with Italy and France was winding down post Crimea. But the Forpost-RU is all after that.

What is relevant is the current context. Russia was in Syria and supported Assad for its own self serving strategic interests (access to a warm water port on the Med, airbases to support operations in Africa, skin in the game to influence geopolitics in ME), not for any great love for the man himself.
Sure and in this regard Russia is different to every other player in the region who do it for the love of the men they support. Especially the US with their support of the Syrian Kurds. Russia supported Assad because Russia was very short on client states and Assad's Syria was one of the last few remaining. If Assad had managed to reclaim Syria's oil wealth, it would have been a boon to Russia as he would have spent that wealth on Russian rail infrastructure, and military hardware, and whatever else Russia was keen to export, presumably a bunch of Ladas and Ural trucks (though the Syrians were for some reason partial to the GAZ). Russia also supported Assad because there was no other viable option for the Mediterranean base. Libya was a total mess, and everyone else politely said no including Algeria. In other words the current defeat isn't that bad for Russia if they can keep the bases. They might even profit from this if the new Islamist Syria gets control of the oil wealth and wants to shop for weapons while being sanctioned by every civilized country for the usual reasons.

Would Israel be happy if Russia exits? I'm sure they will be. While Russia is not a direct enemy of Israel, one less variable and player in the region is better since it is one less consideration.
It depends on what else accompanies Russia's exit. I suspect all things being equal Israel might prefer Russian bases not to be there.
 

swerve

Super Moderator
Absolutely. Ex-Syrian MiG-29s and Su-24s would help Ukraine a lot. Though it's an open question whether Israel will leave them intact if they fall into rebel hands.
Should we still be calling them rebels? They're now the nearest thing Syria has to a national government. Assad's fled, & his army has pretty much either gone home or changed sides. The "rebels" appear to be largely focused on restoring the civil administration & some kind of rule of law, including reining in their own members.
 

Feanor

Super Moderator
Staff member
Should we still be calling them rebels? They're now the nearest thing Syria has to a national government. Assad's fled, & his army has pretty much either gone home or changed sides. The "rebels" appear to be largely focused on restoring the civil administration & some kind of rule of law, including reining in their own members.
Good point. What should we call them though? They're also still engaged in combat with the SDF and while I think it's unlikely the SDF will ultimately take Damascus, Syria remains divided.
 
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