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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Israel could swoop on S-300 missiles in Syria, but with risks
2013-05-31
[Al Ahram] Israel could overcome advanced S-300 anti-aircraft missiles if they were deployed in Syria but any strikes on the system would be difficult and risk alienating its supplier, Russia.
Because Russia isn't 'alienated' from Israel now, they're just selling weapons to Israel's chief enemy...
Israel has pledged to take preventive action, seeing a future Syrian S-300 as a "game-changing" threat to its own airspace as well as to the relative free rein with which it now overflies its northern foe and neighbouring Leb.

Experts agree that Israeli sabotage or open force to disrupt delivery by Russia is extremely unlikely -
...the experts are wrong, of course...
a view seemingly shored up by Syrian Hereditary President-for-Life Bashir Pencilneck al-Assad
Oppressor of the Syrians and the Lebs...
's announcement on Thursday that the first missiles had arrived.

That leaves Israel lobbying Moscow to slow down the shipment in hopes it would be overtaken and scrapped if Assad fell to a more than two-year-old rebellion, and in parallel preparing counter-measures to neutralise the S-300 on the ground in Syria.

The Israeli newspaper Haaretz quoted National Security Adviser Yaakov Amidror as warning European diplomats that Israel would "prevent the S-300 missiles from becoming operational". That may be achieved by ensuring Assad does not get the full system, experts say, or by disabling it militarily if he does.
That doesn't sound as if the Israelis are all that worried about being alienated from the Russians...
"The S-300 would be the pinnacle of Russian-supplied arms for Syria," Colonel Zvika Haimovich, a senior Israeli air force officer, told Rooters in an interview. "Though it would impinge on our operations, we are capable of overcoming it."

He said Israel's "red line" on the S-300 was "between Syria and others". This was a hint Israel might hold off on bombing the batteries as long they did not appear set on shooting down planes within Israeli airspace, of being transferred to Lebanese Hezbollah guerrillas or to Iran both staunch allies of Assad and enemies of Israel, or of being looted by Salafist tough guys.
Posted by:Fred

#2  The missiles are not very important, it is the radars that matter. And the human beings that run the radars.
Posted by: rammer   2013-05-31 10:23  

#1  Just a guess - they'll explode anyways, because of a 'coolant leak' or something...
Posted by: Raj   2013-05-31 01:11  

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