What are the issues between Iran and the Zionist regime in Syria?
The Syrian crisis began in early 2011 with the intervention of foreign countries, which soon became one of the areas of regional and trans-regional alignment. The geopolitics of this country was and is such that many actors considered it necessary to declare their position and determine their behavior towards it. Meanwhile, one of the most important geopolitical features of Syria is its proximity to occupied Palestine. This feature, which is doubly important with the incompatibility of the government of Hafez al-Assad and then his son Bashar, caused the Islamic Republic of Iran and the Zionist regime to confront each other, this time in a new way. What follows is an analytical look at the areas of confrontation between the two in the Syrian arena.
جولان; Off or on?
The Golan Heights in the Syrian province of Quneitra, which was occupied by the Arabs and the Zionist regime during the 1967 war, and whose cabinet officially declared these heights under the false rule of the Zionist regime in 1982, is one of the most important Zionist concerns in the Syrian crisis. These heights, after 1973, when Hafez al-Assad tried unsuccessfully to reclaim them, were accompanied by a kind of sluggishness in the fight against the Zionist regime until almost 2011. Even the Syrian government tried several times to get it back from the diplomatic route, but in the middle of the route, it left it unfinished.
This sluggishness and silence on the Golan Heights practically changed the Syrian crisis, so that the region became a new arena for feeling threatened by the Zionist regime. The Zionist regime, which faced the activism of the northern front (southern Lebanon) from Hezbollah and the activism of the southern front from Hamas and Islamic Jihad, and on the other hand, the fire of resistance in the West Bank was manifested a few years ago, with practically new fronts. He encountered the Golan Heights, which no longer had the former predictable order.
There are several indications that the Zionist regime is so concerned about this front that it has examined it in the form of the Northern Front in part of its national security assessment report. Among these numerous symptoms and media coverage, it is enough to mention that the Zionist regime is even afraid of spying on the shepherds stationed in the Golan Heights for Iran and sends them a threatening written message by plane that you should not spy for Iran! It is natural that for the axis of resistance, which has now been able to ignite even the fire of resistance in the lands of 1948, the activation of the Golan Heights is a high-level strategic advantage.