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A nonprofit, independent news source to inform, inspire, educate and connect the St. Louis Jewish community.

St. Louis Jewish Light

A nonprofit, independent news source to inform, inspire, educate and connect the St. Louis Jewish community.

St. Louis Jewish Light

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As Russia scales back in Syria, Israel says it still won’t give Ukraine weapons

(JTA) — Intelligence officials say Russia has removed troops and an air defense system from Syria, removing a factor that until now has inhibited Israel from assisting Ukraine in defending itself from Russia’s war against the country.

Israel has delivered substantial humanitarian aid to Ukraine since the war’s launch but has resisted calls from the West and from Ukraine to provide defensive weapons. A main reason is that Russia has for years effectively controlled Syrian air space, making cooperation essential if Israel is going to continue conducting air raids there aimed at stemming the transfer and stockpiling of weapons likely intended for use against it.

“All the experts and ministers and the leaders of the state are explaining to me again and again that we have our challenge in Syria,” Natan Sharansky, a former Israeli minister who has been critical of his country’s approach to Ukraine, told the New York Times in April. “Unfortunately, the West gave the keys to the skies of Syria to Putin. And because of this we have no choice but to come to a strategic understanding with him.”

Now the airspace monitoring system that Russia had been using in Syria has been removed, according to a New York Times report citing an Israeli intelligence official and two Western diplomats. Russia has also removed at least 1,200 troops from Syria, according to the report, and both the soldiers and the equipment are believed to be rerouted to Russia’s war against Ukraine.

Ukraine’s Jewish president, Volodomyr Zelensky, has repeatedly called on Israel to provide the kind of missile interceptors that have successfully protected Israel during periodic outbreaks of violence with its neighbors. The pressure has intensified in recent days as it appears that Iran is supplying Russia with weaponized drones and missiles; Israel’s defense industry is focused particularly on designing defenses against weaponry designed by its deadliest enemy in the region.

Still, Benny Gantz, Israel’s defense minister, on Thursday reiterated Israel’s position that it would not provide weapons to Ukraine.

“Our policy vis-a-vis Ukraine will not change,” Gantz told ambassadors from European countries in a meeting. “We will continue to support and stand with the West; we will not provide weapon systems. We have asked the Ukrainians to share information regarding their needs, and offered to assist in developing a life-saving early-warning system.”

Nonetheless, Gantz made it clear that Israel was closely watching the delivery of Iranian weapons systems to Russia. “We are following Iran’s involvement in the war in Ukraine,” he told the European ambassadors. “We see that Iran provides UAVs and in the near future may also provide additional advanced systems.”


The post As Russia scales back in Syria, Israel says it still won’t give Ukraine weapons appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

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