World Jewish News
Netanyahu and Putin agreed to strenghten their security coordination on Syria
22.04.2016, Israel and the World During a meeting in Moscow, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Russian President Vladimir Putin agreed to strengthen security cooperation between the two countries regarding activities in Syria.
But Netanyahu at the same time that the Golan is a ‘’red line’’ for Israel in the region,
Since the Kremlin’s intervention in Syria, Israel and Russia established a high-level chain of communication, in order to coordinate their respective military operations in and around Syria.
This was Netanyahu’s third meeting with Putin since September, an indication of the close coordination that is taking place between the two countries as a result of Moscow’s involvement in Syria.
In what Netanyahu described as a “successful meeting” with the Russian leader, the two leaders agreed to continue such cooperation. Although Russia has decreased its military presence in Syria during the last month, Russian jets continue to provide support for President Assad’s forces.
Netanyahu said that such coordination would “avoid mishaps, misunderstandings and unnecessary confrontations” between Israeli and Russian militaries.
He also explained that it would help Israel “maintain freedom of action for the IDF and the air force in places that are important to us vis-à-vis our security.”
He reiterated Israel’s red lines in the region, saying that it would continue “to prevent the transfer of advanced weaponry from Iran and Syria to Hezbollah in Lebanon.”
Netanyahu recently said publicly for the first time that Israel has taken military action to this end on numerous occasions.
He also said that Israel will continue “working to prevent the establishment of an additional terror front against us on the Golan Heights.”
Some Israeli commentators reported that the meeting was held against the background of Russian fighter reportedly firing at Israel Air Force aircraft on at least two occasions.
Last Sunday, during the first-ever cabinet meeting on the Golan Heights, Netanyahu declared that the plateau will remain under Israeli control. It is thought Israeli concerns exist that the contested area’s status will come under discussion in the context of Syrian peace talks.
In Moscow, the Israeli Prime Minister reiterated that “we will not go back to the days when they (Syria) fired at our communities and at our children from atop the Heights,” before the Six Day War in 1967 and that “Therefore, with or without an agreement, the Golan Heights will remain under Israeli sovereignty.”
Netanyahu also said that he plans to return to Moscow once again on 7 June to mark 25 years of relations between Israel and Russia.
During that visit, marking 25 years to the reestablishment of diplomatic ties between the two countries, Netanyahu said he would sign a long sought-after agreement with Moscow to pay pensions to immigrants in Israel from the former Soviet Union.
According to Immigration and Absorption Minister Ze’ev Elkin, who also joined Netanyahu and served as his translator, while some 30,000 immigrants from the FSU already receive a pension from Russia, the new agreement will secure pensions for another 30,000 who up until now have not received Russian pension funds.
Netanyahu pointed out during his comments alongside Putin that there were currently more than a million native Russian speakers living in Israel, and that they serve as a “living bridge between our two peoples.”
EJP
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