ISRAEL COMMANDOS
Syria has threatened an immediate response to any new Israeli strike, as its militant ally Hezbollah said Damascus would provide "game-changing" weapons despite two reported attacks on military sites.
Syria has threatened an immediate response to any new Israeli strike, as its militant ally Hezbollah said Damascus would provide "game-changing" weapons despite two reported attacks on military sites.
Damascus also welcomed a US-Russian initiative to
find a political solution to end the two-year-old civil war, while
balking at Washington's demand that President Bashar al-Assad would need
to stand down.
The Assad regime also said it was ready to receive a UN team to probe claims that chemical weapons had been used in the country.
In an exclusive interview with AFP on Thursday,
Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Muqdad said "the instruction has been
made to respond immediately to any new Israeli attack without
(additional) instruction from any higher leadership, and our retaliation
will be strong and will be painful against Israel."
Senior Israeli sources have said strikes early
Friday and Sunday targeted weapons bound for the powerful Shiite group
Hezbollah based in neighboring Lebanon, but Muqdad denied that.
In Beirut, Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah said
Syria would supply his movement with "game-changing weapons" and open up
the front to "resistance fighters" against the Jewish state on the
Golan Heights.
Israel captured the Golan from Syria in the 1967 Six-Day war and subsequently annexed it.
Israel has repeatedly warned that it will
intervene to prevent the transfer of advanced weaponry to Hezbollah,
with which it fought a devastating 2006 war.
Hezbollah is battling alongside Assad's troops in several parts of the country.
The regime is relying increasingly on its alliance
with Hezbollah, and Lebanese newspaper Al-Akhbar quoted Assad as saying
that Syria would "give Hezbollah everything" for its loyalty.
The military and the Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights watchdog group both reported that loyalist forces, including
Hezbollah elements, had advanced in the Qusayr area, strategically
located along the Lebanese border.
Observatory chief Rami Abdel Rahman said the army's campaign was "fierce."
An army officer told AFP the military seized
control of Shumariyeh village near Qusayr "and troops are currently on
their way to the village of Ghassaniyeh," which has been under rebel
control for more than a year.
ISRAEL COMMANDOS
Meanwhile, Syria's foreign ministry welcomed the US-Russian "rapprochement," under which the two countries will seek to convene an international conference to build on a six-point accord agreed in Geneva last year.
The Geneva agreement aimed at finding a path
towards a transitional government but made no mention of Assad's
departure, which the opposition says is non-negotiable.
US Secretary John Kerry said Assad would have to step down as part of the resolution to the conflict.
That was rejected by the Syrian foreign ministry, which stressed that the decision belongs "only" to the Syrian people.
And the ministry said it was "confident that the
Russian position, which is based on the principles of the UN Charter and
international law, will not change."
Russia is a top ally of the regime in Damascus and has staunchly resisted any bid to oust Assad.
The Obama administration is treading cautiously on
Syria, and the reports of chemical weapons use, after what it sees as
Washington's past errors in the Iraq invasion and occupation, Vice
President Joe Biden said.
Biden told Rolling Stone magazine that "we don't
want to blow it like the last administration did in Iraq, saying
'weapons of mass destruction.'"
Iraq's alleged weapons of mass destruction, cited
by George W. Bush's administration as the main motive to launch the
US-led invasion in 2003, never surfaced after the fall of Saddam
Hussein's regime.
Biden stressed that once the use of the chemical
weapons has been verified, Obama would likely make a "proportional
response in terms of meaningful action," without providing further
details.
Echoing the cautious tone, US Defense Secretary
Chuck Hagel said the problems that plague the Middle East, including
Syria's civil war, require "political, not military" solutions.
The United Nations said its Syria envoy, Lakhdar
Brahimi, has withdrawn a threat to quit and will stay the course in
light of the US-Russian agreement.
And The Wall Street Journal reported that Israel
had informed Washington about the imminent sale to Syria of Russian
S-300 missile batteries, advanced ground-to-air weapons that can take
out aircraft or guided missiles.
Reacting to the report, Kerry warned in Rome that the sale would be "potentially destabilising" for the region.
Moscow has continued to supply Damascus with
weapons throughout the conflict, which has left more than 70,000 people
dead since March 2011.
Under mounting international pressure over the
possible use of chemical weapons, Syria said it was ready to receive a
UN team to investigate the claims.
"We were ready and we are always ready, right now,
to receive the delegation that was set up by Ban Ki-moon to investigate
what happened in Khan al-Assal," Muqdad said, referring to a village
near Aleppo where authorities say rebels used chemical weapons, killing
30 people.
He added that the use of chemical weapons was a "red line for President Assad."
AFP
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