The clashes, which erupted in the province of Suwayda on
July 13, involved armed Druze groups and Bedouin tribes — communities
tragically caught in the crossfire of broader regional power struggles.
Under the guise of protecting the Druze minority, Israel
launched a series of aggressive and unprovoked strikes across southern Syria
and even targeted the capital, Damascus, on Wednesday. The UK-based Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) reports that the death toll from violence
has now tragically surpassed 1,000 people.
This
staggering human cost starkly exposes Israel’s relentless warmongering and
expansionist ambitions in West Asia. Since its devastating assault on Gaza in
October 2023, Israel has escalated its campaign of violence, targeting not only
Gaza but also Iran, Lebanon, Syria, and Yemen. These military actions are part
of a calculated strategy to impose Israeli dominance and destabilize entire
nations.
Israel justifies its attacks with convenient narratives:
defending the Druze minority in Syria, neutralizing Hezbollah in Lebanon,
dismantling Iran’s nuclear program, or responding to attacks from Yemen’s
Ansarullah. Yet these explanations serve as thin veils masking a pattern of
aggressive intervention that violates sovereignty and inflames regional
tensions.
Despite the high death toll and widespread suffering,
Israel’s military ventures have failed to achieve their stated goals. In Gaza,
Israel has killed tens of thousands of civilians, including women and children,
yet Hamas remains resilient.
In Lebanon, the Lebanese resistance refuses to bow to
Israeli pressure.
Iran has dealt significant blows to Israel in recent
confrontations.
Ansarullah movement in Yemen continues to resist Israeli
aggression steadfastly.
Israel’s recent strikes in Syria follow the same aggressive
pattern. They aim to fragment Syria and extend Israeli control over more
territory, escalating a dangerous trend since the fall of Bashar al-Assad’s government
in December last year.
Although the Syrian government under Ahmed al-Sharaa has so
far refrained from direct military confrontation, popular anger against Israel’s
occupation is rising sharply.
History shows that Israel’s occupation of southern Lebanon
in the early 1980s triggered widespread resistance and ultimately costly
conflicts for the occupying forces. Syrians today are increasingly ready to
form resistance groups and rise up against Israel’s incursions.
While the Syrian government has mainly limited itself to
denouncing Israel’s aggression in statements, the growing anti-Israel sentiment
among the Syrian population could open a new front of resistance. This serves
as a stark reminder that occupation and aggression only sow seeds of conflict
and instability.
The
world must recognize that Israel’s unchecked military aggression is not about
defense—it is a deliberate policy of domination, suffering, and division. The
ongoing violence in southern Syria is a tragic symptom of this larger,
dangerous strategy that endangers peace across the entire region.
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