Last week, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin at Putin’s Black Sea residence in Sochi. It was their sixth meeting over the last two years, since Russia’s air force began its military operation in Syria. Netanyahu came to express his concern over the intentions of Iran and its allied Shiite militant movement, Hezbollah, to establish a permanent presence in an area of Syria currently being surrendered by the Islamic State (IS).
The Israelis are preoccupied with who is going to play the key role in the postwar future of Syria.