Israel's
Unsung Humanitarian Mission Saved Thousands of Syrian Lives
by Yaakov Lappin
Special to IPT News
August 13, 2018
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As the Assad regime completes its takeover of southern Syria, Israel is
winding down a humanitarian and medical operation that saved thousands of
Syrian lives throughout the civil war.
A brief look at the official Israeli figures, unveiled recently by the
Israel Defense Forces (IDF), which led the operation, dubbed 'Operation Good Neighbor,' gives an indication of what
went into it.
Israeli medical centers and hospitals treated 4,800 south Syrian
civilians since the conflict began
in 2011, half of them children suffering from a range of war injuries
and illnesses.
A separate field clinic, established by the IDF and international air
organizations in the southern Golan Heights, has treated 6,000 Syrian
civilians since opening its doors last year.
"I'm proud to be an officer in an army and a country that carries
out an operation filled with values of humanity and compassion,"
Lt.-Col. E (full name withheld), who commanded Operation Good Neighbor,
said at the end of July, according to an IDF press statement.
Often, the IDF would receive word at night of Syrian civilians who
needed urgent help. The civilians would wait at a set meeting point on the
border, and IDF medical units from the Northern Command would meet them at
the crossing, beginning treatment immediately, before evacuating them to
hospitals.
On June 30, for example, three Syrian children, ages 6, 7 and 10, all
suffering with head injuries, were rushed to Israeli hospitals for
life-saving care. So was a 14-year-old with a stomach wound and shrapnel
injuries, according to an IDF statement.
Southern Syria has been a conflict zone for several years, torn apart
between rebel organizations and the regime, and basic medical care services
have broken down there. The IDF stepped in to the void. Since 2016 alone,
1,300 Syrian children suffering from a variety of illnesses came to Israel
with family members for one-day treatments and medicine distribution in
specialty clinics.
On a regular basis, the IDF transferred tons of food, fuel for heating
and electricity, diaper packages, baby food, and boxes of medicine and
medical equipment to those suffering across the border. Clothes, hygiene
products, and tents also flowed continuously into southern Syria from
Israel.
July, for example, saw 72 tons of food, 70 tents, 9,000 liters of fuel,
and other goods delivered to Syria from Israel, as the IDF stepped up
assistance to Syrian displaced people made homeless by Assad's advance and
mass bombings.
On July 22, the IDF rescued 800 White Helmet civil rescue workers from
south Syria and their family members, who were in imminent danger due to
the impending conquest of the area by Assad regime forces, and their
Iranian-backed allied forces. The Assad regime has described these civil
rescue personnel, who have risked their lives to save trapped civilians
from rubble created by relentless regime air strikes, as
"terrorists."
There can be no doubt that Israel's efforts left a lasting impression on
Syrians in general, an impression that went beyond those who benefited
directly from the extensive humanitarian work, Brig. Gen. (res.) Yossi
Kuperwasser, former IDF Military Intelligence research division chief, and
a former director general of the Israeli Ministry of Strategic Affairs,
told the Investigative Project on Terrorism.
"They are much more aware than they were in the past that Israel is
a force for good," he said.
"In the past, due to education programs, Syrians perceived Israel
as a demon that wants to expand, and which poses many dangers," said
Kuperwasser. "Today, the Syrian public knows that Israel is a power
that tried to help it, at least on the humanitarian level, during years of
war. They know Israel provided extraordinary care for the sick and wounded
near the border. And beyond that, that a variety of Israeli humanitarian
organizations provided aid. That will remain in the Syrian public
awareness."
In addition, he argued, many Syrians will be hoping that Israel will
succeed in its efforts to prevent Iran from consolidating itself in their
war-torn state, a scenario that they fear. "They know Israel is the
only that can do this, so their expectations – not just hopes – have
changed," he added.
At the same time, Kuperwasser cautioned, this will not significantly
change daily affairs on the Israeli-Syrian border, which will go back to
being closed, as the pro-Assad military forces and the IDF face off against
one another.
Syrian-Druze civilians living in villages near the Israeli border have
also become more friendly towards Israel, Kuperwasser assessed. "They
see Hizballah [which has fought alongside the Assad regime] as hostile.
There has been an attempt to force the Syrian-Druze in the southwest
village of As-Suwayda to join Hizballah. But they have resisted this,"
he said. "The Assad regime is also trying to forcibly recruit them,
but they refused this as well."
Yaakov Lappin is a military and strategic affairs correspondent. He
also conducts research and analysis for defense think tanks, and is the
Israel correspondent for IHS Jane's Defense Weekly. His book, The
Virtual Caliphate, explores the online jihadist presence.
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