Israelis Worry With Syrian Al-Qaida on Doorstep
MEROM
GOLAN, Golan Heights — For the first time in the Syrian civil war,
al-Qaida fighters are hunkered down on Israel's doorstep, and Israelis
in the lush, hilly Golan Heights who have long considered Syrian
President Bashar Assad their bitter foe are now worried about something
more ominous — that they could become the militants' next target.
The
push into the Golan by the Nusra Front, as al-Qaida's branch in Syria
is known, comes just two weeks after Israel ended a 50-day war against
Hamas on its southern border with the Gaza Strip, giving the
conflict-weary nation another cause for concern.
Israelis
in the Golan -- a long-disputed territory that marks the frontier
between the two countries -- have grown accustomed to hearing the sound
of distant battles between rival forces in Syria's civil war.
But
last week's seizure of the strategic Quneitra border crossing by a mix
of rebels — including the Nusra Front, fighters of the Western-backed
Free Syrian Army and others — has created an unprecedented situation
that has brought the extremists to within just a few meters (yards) of
Israeli positions.
The
Syrian government is "not our cup of tea," said Gabi Kuniel, an Israeli
who tends vineyards recently damaged by mortar shells when the violence
spilled over to the Israeli-held side of the strategic Golan Heights.
But
"we prefer that the Syrian army controls this region and not a group of
radical al-Qaida Muslim people," he said Wednesday, sitting behind a
concrete structure near his fields to stay out of the line of fire.
As
he spoke, heavy machine gunfire could be heard in the distance.
Earlier, a plume of smoke rose from the Syrian side of the frontier
fence.
For
the past three years, Israelis in the Golan have had a relatively safe
front seat view of the civil war as Syrian government forces battled
rebels attempting to wrest control of the area.
But
now the Nusra Front and the other rebels move around in camouflaged
trucks and on foot with guns slung over their shoulders, in some cases
just 50 meters (yards) away from Israeli military outposts and Israeli
farmers' fields. Some Israelis are convinced it's a matter of time
before the Islamic radicals set their sights on them.
"They'll
come at us in the end, I have no doubt," said Yehiel Gadis, 56, peering
through a small pair of binoculars at an Israeli lookout point across
from Syria's Quneitra crossing.
"The entire Arab world is furious with us," said his friend, Yigal Bashan, 57.
The
two men, who live in central Israel, were on a sightseeing trip in the
region and were among some two dozen curiosity seekers who stopped at
the lookout.
Israel
captured the Golan, a plateau overlooking northern Israel, from Syria
in the 1967 Mideast war. It later annexed the area, a move that has
never been recognized internationally. Since the aftermath of the
subsequent 1973 war, U.N. monitors have helped to enforce a stable truce
and the area has been tense but generally quiet.
That
started to change when the Syrian uprising erupted in March 2011, and
the frontier has grown more volatile as the conflict has escalated into a
complex and bloody civil war.
Israel
has largely stayed on the sidelines of the war, quietly content to see
Assad's forces tied down by battles with various rebel groups trying to
oust him. However, Israel has occasionally responded to mortar fire that
spilled over the border, usually unintentionally, and is believed to
have carried out several airstrikes on weapons shipments thought to be
bound for Hezbollah militants in Lebanon.
As
the rebels took over the border area last Wednesday, the Israeli army
ordered Kuniel's 200 farmhands out of the fields for three days, forcing
them to leave behind freshly picked fruit in vats to rot.
Then,
mortar shells fell near the village of Merom Golan, setting large
swaths of Kuniel's vineyards ablaze and imparting a smoky taste to what
remained of his plump grapes.
Those
grapes were destined for some of the Golan Heights Winery's higher-end
Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc and Pinot Noirs, he said. Now they can be
used only for cheaper wines - amounting to about $200,000 worth of
damage, he estimated.
Fighting
resumed near the border on Thursday, with one Syrian army projectile
hitting the northern Golan Heights, apparently by mistake, the Israeli
military said. The military said it returned fire at a Syrian army
position, hitting it. There were no immediate reports of casualties.
Israeli
officials believe the Syrian rebels' sights are set -- at least for now
-- on battles within Syria. Nevertheless, the Nusra Front poses an
unprecedented threat.
Aviv
Oreg, former head of the al-Qaida desk on the Israeli National Security
Council, said the Nusra Front sees Israel as a "legitimate target." He
said that while the group is preoccupied with the fighting inside Syria,
it is just a matter of time before it tries to strike Israel, since its
fighters now "have direct access."
The
Quneitra crossing was an important victory for the Nusra Front and the
other rebels. It was the Syrian army's last stronghold in the Golan
Heights and sits at the tip of the main access road to the capital
Damascus.
The
crossing also has symbolic significance, serving as the only portal to
Israeli-held territory between enemy countries. While mostly closed, it
opens to allow U.N. peacekeepers, Red Cross workers and Druse university
students to cross back and forth.
Israeli
defense officials estimate that a few thousand Syrian rebels are now
positioned along the border in the Golan, with a few hundred in the
Quneitra area, including the Nusra fighters.
When
the rebels seized the crossing, they captured 45 U.N. peacekeepers from
Fiji and trapped about 80 others from the Philippines. The Filipino
troops later fled to safety, while the Fijians remain in rebel
captivity. The Philippines has since announced it will be withdrawing
its troops from the U.N. peacekeeping force, known as UNDOF.
Stephane
Cohen, a former Israeli military liaison with UNDOF, said the
peacekeeping force is rapidly collapsing and can no longer serve its
purpose of enforcing a truce between Israel and Syria. He said that as
more countries pull out of the force, it is unlikely other armies will
want to contribute troops.
The
loss of UNDOF would be a blow to Israel and leave Israelis alone "in
front of al-Qaida," Cohen said. It would also undermine regional
stability, he added, since the force has provided an important outlet
for Israel and Syria to air their grievances.
"In
Syria there are no good guys and bad guys," said Uzi Dayan, a former
deputy military chief of staff. "There are bad guys, very bad guys and
extremely bad guys."
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