Israel, Notified Ahead of Trump’s Syria Strike, ‘Fully Supports’ US Response to Assad
Error: Contact form not found.
by Sean Savage / JNS.org
JNS.org – Israeli leaders welcomed US President Donald Trump’s surprise military action late Thursday to strike the airbase where Syrian President Bashar Assad is believed to have launched a chemical attack on his people, which killed at least 86 Syrians, including 27 children.
“In both word and action, President Trump sent a strong and clear message … that the use and spread of chemical weapons will not be tolerated,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stated. “Israel fully supports President Trump’s decision and hopes that this message of resolve in the face of the Assad regime’s horrific actions will resonate not only in Damascus, but in Tehran, Pyongyang and elsewhere.”
Israeli opposition leader Member of Knesset Isaac Herzog (Zionist Union) said that the strike came at the “right time and in the right place,” and sent an “important message to the butcher from Damascus.”
“[On Thursday], I ordered a targeted military strike on the airfield in Syria from where the chemical attack was launched,” Trump said. “It is in this vital national security of the United States to prevent and deter the spread and use of deadly chemical weapons.”
Netanyahu’s office said on Friday that Vice President Mike Pence called the prime minister “and thanked him — on behalf of US President Donald Trump — for Israel’s strong support for the American action in Syria. The vice president also updated the prime minister on the details of the action and its results.”
The IDF said that it had been notified ahead of the US strike, which saw close to 60 Tomahawk cruise missiles, launched from two naval destroyers in the eastern Mediterranean, strike the Shayrat Airfield north of Damascus.
“The American update to the IDF and security establishment before the attack in Syria is further proof of the strength of the relationship and depth of the connection between Israel and its largest ally, the United States,” Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman said.
Assad’s chemical attack had struck a nerve in Israel, where many saw parallels to the Nazis’ gassing of Jews during the Holocaust.
“We, as a people who survived the greatest of atrocities and rose from the ashes to be a strong and secure nation, we will do all we can to continue to aid the survivors of the horrors in Syria,” President Reuven Rivlin said earlier this week.
On Friday, Rivlin said that Trump’s actions “constitute a fitting and appropriate response to such unthinkable brutality.”
Avner Shalev, the head of Israel’s Yad Vashem Holocaust remembrance center, noted that in the aftermath of World War II, “the global community enacted universal principles and instituted international organizations with the express purpose of averting future crimes against humanity.” He called on the international community to “act now in order to put a stop to the atrocities and avert further suffering” in Syria.
Daniel Pipes, a historian and the president of the Middle East Forum think tank, gave an alternative perspective on Trump’s military action, arguing that the US should stay out of the “grisly” Syrian Civil War. The previous administration’s non-involvement was justified, according to Pipes, despite the fact that President Barack Obama “made a fool of himself [in 2013] when he declared the Assad regime’s use of chemical weapons a ‘red line,’ and proceeded not to enforce it.”
“Despite all this, it was right not to intervene because Iranian- and Russian-backed Shi’ite pro-government jihadis are best kept busy fighting Saudi-, Qatar-, and Turkish-backed anti-government Sunni jihadis; because Kurds, however appealing, are not contenders for control of the whole of Syria; and because Americans have no stomach for another Middle Eastern war,” Pipes wrote.
“I see this military action as an error,” he added. “Nothing in the US Constitution requires that American forces fight in every war around the world; this one should be sat out, letting enemies of the United States fight each other to exhaustion.”
Anti-Israel Boycott Fight at Brooklyn Food Co-Op Sparks Allegations of Antisemitic Discrimination
European Parliament Slams Iran Over Surge in Executions, Brutal Repression
Leading Demography Expert Says Israel Expected to Hit 50% of Global Jewish Population as Early as 2035
Germany Charges Two Iran-Backed Operatives Over Plot to Kill Jewish Leaders
Irish PM Seeks EU-Israel Trade Review After Gaza Flotilla ‘Abduction,’ President Says She’s ‘Proud’ of Sister Aboard
Board of Peace Publishes Roadmap for Gaza Peace Plan
Vermont Police Investigate Anti-Israel Vandalism of Jewish-Owned Store as Possible Hate Crime
Giuliani Says Mamdani Has ‘Hatred’ for Jews for Declining to Attend Israel Day Parade in New York City
Supreme Leader Says Enriched Uranium Must Stay in Iran, Iranian Sources Say
Mediator Pakistan Pushes to Get US-Iran Peace Talks on Track






Why Do We Read the Book of Ruth on Shavuot?
Shavuot and the Enduring Genius of Sinai
Antisemitism and ‘The End of History’ That Never Came to Pass
The Limits of Campus Solidarity: Why Are Some Issues Seemingly Ignored By Campus Activists ?
Giuliani Says Mamdani Has ‘Hatred’ for Jews for Declining to Attend Israel Day Parade in New York City



