Tuesday, November 6, 2018

Putin-Netanyahu Meeting Scrapped As Tensions Over Syria Linger






A meeting planned for next week between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Russian President Vladimir Putin has been canceled by Moscow amid anger over Israel’s airstrikes in Syria, Israel’s public broadcaster reported on Tuesday.
Israel had already begun preparing for the meeting, which was to be held in Paris during events marking Armistice Day, before it was called off by Russia, according to Kan news.
The Prime Minister’s Office did not deny the report, but told Kan that France requested meetings not be held on the sidelines of the World War I commemorations in Paris.


A new date for a meeting between the Israeli and Russian leaders has yet to be set, according to the report.
Netanyahu may cancel his Paris trip altogether after the Putin meeting was called off, the Ynet news website reported on Tuesday night.
The two countries have been grappling with the fallout over the downing of a Russian military plane in September by Syrian air defenses during an Israeli airstrike in Syria.
Russia blamed Israel for the downing of the plane — a charge rejected by Jerusalem — and sent advanced S-300 anti-aircraft systems to Syria in the wake of the incident, in which 15 Russian servicemen were killed. Israel has also rebuffed a Russian claim its jets hid behind the Russian reconnaissance aircraft.

While there has been a noticeable drop in reported Israeli raids following the September 17 incident, a senior Israeli official last month said the Jewish state has continued attacking targets in Syria.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on Monday accused Israel of endangering Russian troops by not informing Moscow before striking in Syria on several occasions.
Israel and Russia have coordinated their military efforts in Syria in recent years, in order to avoid friction and accidental conflict. Israeli officials do not generally discuss the full extent of that coordination, but they stress that the Israeli military does not seek Russian permission before carrying out operations.
Despite the Russian anger over the downed spy plane, Netanyahu has reiterated several times that Israel will continue to act to prevent Iran’s military entrenchment in Syria and the smuggling of advanced weapons into Lebanon

Last month, Hadashot TV news reported that Russia was seeking to reset the terms of Israeli military operations in Syria and overhaul the existing Jerusalem-Moscow coordination system.
Russia insists that it receive further advance warning of Israeli strikes, the TV network said, though the report did not say how much. Israel usually informs Russia minutes before an airstrike.
Such a demand would likely limit Israel’s freedom of maneuver in Syria, with the report noting it could endanger Israeli aircraft and allow Iranian operatives more time to hide materials being targeted.
A senior diplomatic source quoted in the report said the demand was unacceptable operationally and that Israel must not acquiesce to it.
Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman later rejected the reported demands.


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