Iran to deploy '4,000-strong force’ to Syria as US military set to stay in Jordan

Iran will deploy 4,000 Revolutionary Guards to Syria to bolster Damascus against a mostly Sunni-led insurgency, media reported. Meanwhile, US F-16s and Patriots will stay in Jordan – speculatively, to help establish a no-fly zone to aid Syrian rebels.
  The deployment of the first several-thousand strong military
  contingent was reported by The Independent on Sunday who quoted
  Iranian sources tied to the state’s security apparatus. The
  sources said the move signals Iran’s intention to drastically
  step up its efforts to preserve the government of President
  Bashar Assad.
  
  The Islamic Republic’s heightened military commitment could
  reportedly extend to the opening up of a new “Syrian” front on
  the Golan Heights against Israel.
  
  Golan Heights have recently become a source of new instability
  with increasing cross-border fire and Austria withdrawing its
  peacekeepers from the buffer area after a checking point became the spot of military dispute
  between and Assad's and opposition's forces.
  
  This stirred concern in the UN with Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon
  warning the fragile state of no-war between Tel-Aviv and Damascus
  is at risk.
  
“The ongoing military activities in the [Golan] area of
  separation continue to have the potential to escalate tensions
  between Israel and the Syrian Arab Republic and to jeopardize the
  cease-fire between the two countries,” Ban Ki-moon said in a
  June 13 statement.
  
  Journalists have frequently asked Assad whether he plans to open a resistance
  front at Golans. The option discussion was brought back to the
  table after every air strike on the Syrian territory pinned on
  Israel. Tel-Aviv always stopped short of confirming the strikes
  but hinted that it would do “whatever it takes” to stop arms
  supplies to Lebanon’s Hezbollah even if convoys are found going
  through Syria.
  
  The strikes resonated across the world – and back in February
  Saeed Jalili, head of Iran’s National Security Council, warned Israel would “regret” them.

…vs. US troops in Jordan?
  Reports of Iran’s decision to get directly involved in the Syrian
  conflict come just days after Israel’s ally, the US, chose to
  reverse its policy of not providing lethal aid to rebel fighters.
  The argument the Obama Administration used was that Damascus had
  crossed a red line by deploying chemical weapons against
  opposition forces on four separate occasions.
  
   
  
  Washington’s policy shift has quickly materialized on multiple
  fronts, some of them also in the press.
  
  On Saturday, the Pentagon announced a detachment of F-16s and US
  Patriot anti-aircraft missile systems dispatched to Jordan for
  the ongoing joint Eager Lion military exercise will remain in the
  country once the training drills conclude. 

   
  
  The same day, The Washington Post reported that clandestine bases
  in Jordan and Turkey would serve as conduits for arms
  being delivered to the rebel fighters.
  
   
  
  US military support will thus far be limited to light arms and
  other munitions, although Washington’s shifting calculus has
  potentially given a green light to regional Sunni allies to
  provide anti-tank and anti-aircraft weapons to the Assad
  opposition.
  
   
  
  Just one day before the Pentagon announced its intention to leave
  Patriot missiles and F-16s in Jordan, senior Western diplomats in
  Turkey announced Washington was mulling the establishment of a
  no-fly zone, “possibly near the Jordanian border."
  
   
  
  Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov warned that any attempt to
  impose such a zone would be in clear violation of international law.
  
Syria vortex: Saudi Arabia, Al-Nusra, Hezbollah
  The US, Israel and Iran are not the only actors to have
  “activated” recently.
  
  On Sunday, the German daily Der Spiegel, citing the German
  foreign intelligence service, said Saudi Arabia is looking to
  provide European-made Mistral-class MANPADS – man-portable
  air-defense systems – to the Syrian opposition.
  
  Notably, on Tuesday, Saudi Arabia condemned the role of another
  party to the conflict – Hezbollah – announcing that measures
  would be taken against those loyal to the group who lived in Gulf
  Cooperation Council (GCC) states.
  
   
  
  Hezbollah, the Shia Islamist militant group based out of Lebanon,
  played an integral part in the recapture of the strategic city of
  Qusayr last week. Damascus announced its intentions to use the
  Qusayr victory as a stepping stone to retaking large swaths of
  the northern city of Aleppo and surrounding provinces. 

  Some 2,000 of Hezbollah’s 65,000 strong force has reportedly been
  operating in the city since early June. Shortly after these
  reports emerged, the New York Times rolled out an article saying
  Israel accelerated  planning for a “shock and awe”
  campaign to wipe out Hezbollah forces out of Syria.
  
  Despite Saudi Arabia’s condemnation of Hezbollah’s “blatant
  interference” in the Syrian conflict, a report issued by
  Intelligence Online in January said that Saudi Arabia was
  directly responsible for the radical al-Nusra Front’s very
  existence and operational superiority within the country.  
  
   
  
  "The Saudi General Intelligence, controlled by Prince Bandar
  bin Sultan bin Abdulaziz, exploited its broad calls with Takfiri
  [atoning] movements in Iraq to help establish al-Nusra Front, a
  low-profile Takfiri movement," the report stated.
  
   
  
  "Thanks to funding from the General Intelligence Department
  and support from the Saudi Intelligence in Lebanon, al-Nusra was
  able to swiftly arm its forces, and make the Syrian regime suffer
  painful blows through its expertise in Iraqi bombings," it
  continued.
  
   
  
  The Al-Nusra Front, with its alleged Saudi connections, is
  incidentally the Syrian branch of the Islamic State of Iraq,
  which aims to establish a caliphate in the Sunni dominated
  regions of Iraq. This brings a strong sectarian smell to the
  two-year conflict and lifts far above local “anti-government”
  sentiments.
  
  The increased effectiveness of pro-Assad forces has been met with
  frustration by prominent Sunni clerics. Sheikh Yusuf Qaradawi, a
  prominent Egyptian theologian, called on Sunnis in the region to
  join the battle against Damascus, asking: “How could 100m Shia
  [worldwide] defeat 1.7bn [Sunni]?”
  
  With the United States, its Sunni allies in the region and Israel
  all preparing to step up involvement in the Syrian conflict,
  Iran’s commitment to defend the Assad government is likely just
  as motivated by self-preservation as Shiite solidarity.













