Analyst: Syrian hostilities bring Middle East catastrophe closer
By   Fawaz Gerges , Special to CNN
May 6, 2013 -- Updated 1409 GMT (2209 HKT) CNN.com 
People run for cover after what activists said was shelling by forces loyal to 
Syria's President in Raqqa province, on May 3.
Editor's note: Fawaz A. Gerges a professor of international relations at the 
London School of Economics where he directs the Middle East Centre. 
(CNN) -- What Syria asserts is Israel's launch of two air strikes on Damascus 
last week presents a marked and dangerous escalation of that country's 
involvement in the Syrian war.
Israel's intervention -- if 
confirmed -- also shows how the conflict has mutated from a political 
uprising to an internal armed struggle, and now to a regional war by 
proxy fiercely fought on Syria's killing fields. (Israel has a policy of 
refusing to confirm or deny attacks attributed to its military.)
The confrontation in Syria has become more complex, more perilous, and more 
difficult to resolve.
The Syrian struggle has not only 
spread into Syria's neighbors, like Lebanon, Iraq, Jordan and Turkey -- 
but has also become a battlefield wherein Israel and Iran are 
challenging each other.
There is also a fierce geostrategic rivalry unfolding in Syria between 
Sunni-dominant Saudi Arabia and 
Shiite Iran, a rivalry invested and fuelled with sectarianism.
A real danger exists that this 
complex conflict in Syria could escalate into a region-wide battle 
involving Syria's major allies -- Iran and Hezbollah, and Israel, other 
regional powers, and the Western states.
Israel's alleged deepening 
involvement in the conflict also changes the dynamics of the political 
struggle in Syria in two ways. It puts the armed opposition on the 
defensive, because it shows them that they and Israel are indirectly 
battling the same enemy -- the Assad regime.
And it reinforces President Bashar 
al-Assad's dominant narrative: that the struggle in Syria is not 
internal, that this is not about a domestic coalition striving to 
replace authoritarianism with democracy -- but rather this is a wider 
conspiracy spearheaded by Israel and its regional allies and Western 
powers. 
Israel won't confirm, deny Syria attack 
Will Israel, Syria go to war? 
Syrian official: Israel has declared war
The Syrian official media has already portrayed Israel's bombings as an attempt 
to shore up the armed opposition and reverse the balance of power in its favor.
Although the Iranian leadership has repeatedly stated that it would come to the 
aid of Syria if it is 
attacked by Israel, it is unlikely that Iran or its partner Hezbollah 
would retaliate directly against Israel's possible strikes.
Both Iran and Hezbollah would like to avoid a regional conflict in which Israel 
and its allies would have the upper hand.
Opinion: Is Obama failing on moral leadership? 
What Iran and Hezbollah would most 
likely do is deepen their involvement in Syria's shifting sands. In an 
emotional speech last week, Hassan Nasrallah, the Hezbollah top leader, 
stressed that al-Assad's allies will not allow Syria to fall. Now 
Hezbollah and Iran would become more determined than ever to prevent the 
removal of al-Assad from power.
Bluntly put, the recent escalation of h
ostilities will not only prolong 
the deadly conflict in Syria, but has now made it an open-ended war by 
proxy -- one with major potential repercussions for regional and 
international security and peace.
Israel's major goal appears to be 
the establishment of a red line in Syria, whereby no advanced weapons 
reach Hezbollah -- its archenemy in Lebanon. Israel's primary audience 
was Hezbollah and Iran. Israel is taking a calculated gamble that 
neither Syria nor Hezbollah would risk retaliation.
Obama: 'Do not foresee scenario' of American boots on ground in Syria 
There is a risk of miscalculation that could trigger a bigger clash.
Given the risks and the dangers of a region-wide conflict, one would hope that 
the great powers -- 
particularly the United States and Russia -- would assume their historic 
responsibility and reach an understanding that begins the process of 
putting an end to the deadly struggle in Syria that has killed more than 70,000 
Syrians, according to the latest United Nations estimate, and caused a 
humanitarian disaster.
More than two years after the 
breakout of the Syrian confrontation there does not seem to be a 
military solution. It is a long war of attrition with no end in sight. 
Neither internal camp seems to have the means to deliver a decisive 
blow.
Only a political solution will put 
an end to the shedding of Syrian blood and prevent the unthinkable: a 
region-wide conflict that would have catastrophic consequences.
The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Fawaz A. Gerges.
© 2013 Cable News Network.   Turner Broadcasting System, Inc.  All Rights 
Reserved. 
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