The Israeli regime forces and the so-called anti-Damascus “rebels” are fighting on the same front, says Mordechai Kedar, a prominent Zionist analyst who is in regular contact with "leaders of Syrian opposition factions."
“Israel is on the side of the so-called Syrian rebels,” Kedar stated in a video posted on social media on Monday.
The lecturer at Bar-Ilan University said militants currently operating in northern Syria are fighting against President Bashar al-Assad, the Lebanese resistance movement Hezbollah, and Iran. Therefore, he argued, they enjoy Israel’s support.
Zionist analyst Mordechai Kedar confirms Israel's support for foreign-backed terrorists against Syria, Iran, and Hezbollah, revealing plans for embassies, peace deals, and equipment requests, while highlighting Israel's ties to Al-Qaeda-linked terrorists in Syria. pic.twitter.com/F16gUBScAK
— PressTV Extra (@PresstvExtra) December 2, 2024
“Leaders of Syrian opposition factions have conveyed to Tel Aviv that they are planning to open an Israeli embassy in Damascus and Beirut. I am in constant contact with leaders of Syrian opposition factions, and their current impression is that they do not consider Israel an enemy,” Kedar said.
“The armed factions have requested a detailed list of equipment from Israel, and they are ready for a peace agreement with Israel after taking control of Syria and Lebanon.”
Israeli officials have not shied away from supporting Al-Qaeda/Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), including by extending medical care to the anti-Syria groups.
To justify the treatment of Takfiri terrorists in Israeli hospitals, Israeli officials often quote the former Mossad head who in 2016 stated, “Al-Qaeda has never attacked Israel.”
Not long after a ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hezbollah took effect, social media platforms witnessed a flurry of postings featuring terrorists who openly threatened to escalate violence in Syria.
Terror outfits, led by the Hay’at Tahrir al-Shams (HTS), launched their largest attack in Syria in years, taking control of parts of Aleppo, and advancing southward on the city of Hama.
On Monday, Syria’s state television said roughly 320 terrorists had been killed by the government forces near the cities of Aleppo, Idlib, and Hama.
The toll took to nearly 1,300 the number of terrorists eliminated as a result of joint operations by Syrian and Russian forces.