Israel deployed two Iron Dome batteries in the 
north on Sunday, at least one of them near Haifa, stationing the missile
 defense system in the north of the country for the first time amid 
growing fears that Syrian chemical weapons may be turned against Israel.
On Sunday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu 
summoned Home Front Defense Minister Avi Dichter for a special 
discussion regarding Syria’s chemical weapons and Israel’s preparedness.
The emergency meeting between Netanyahu and 
Dichter had to do with recent developments regarding the stockpile of 
weapons held by the Syrian regime, Ynet reported. Dichter is acting as 
interim defense minister while outgoing Defense Minister Ehud Barak 
heads home from the Davos Economic Forum.
Haifa was targeted by Hezbollah — a terror 
group and Iranian proxy based in Lebanon  – during the second Lebanon 
war in 2006. The city and its port are considered by many to have 
strategic importance.
Israel previously expressed concern about the possibility of chemical weapons being smuggled to Hezbollah or other terror groups.
Vice Prime Minister Silvan Shalom said Sunday 
the transfer of such weapons to Hezbollah would cross “a red line,” that
 Israel couldn’t ignore.
Such a scenario “would be crossing a line that
 would demand a different approach, including even action,” Shalom told 
reporters. Asked whether this might mean a pre-emptive attack, he said: 
“We will have to make the decisions.”
The deployment of the anti-missile battery may
 signal a new peak in fears by Israeli officials that the country could 
come under attack from Syrian weapons.
Israeli officials also feared the possibility of Scud missiles or other advanced weapons reaching Hezbollah, Channel 2 reported.
In October, Israel deployed a Patriot 
anti-missile battery to the port city, two days after a drone airplane, 
reportedly launched by Hezbollah, penetrated Israel’s airspace.
Over the weekend, Turkey also activated a 
number of Patriot missile batteries supplied by NATO along its border 
with war-torn Syria.
Last week the defense establishment announced it had successfully tested an upgraded version of the homegrown Iron Dome platform, intercepting medium-range missiles.
Meant to protect strategic assets and heavy populated areas, the
 Iron Dome system proved effective during Operation Pillar of Defense, 
intercepting 84 percent of the rockets fired from the Gaza Strip at 
residential areas in Israel’s south and center.
Calling for a broad coalition
 to deal with the threats Israel has to face, earlier in the morning 
Netanyahu warned about possible deterioration in the north and a 
possible escalation from Syria.
“We
 must look around us, at what is happening in Iran and its proxies and 
at what is happening in other areas, with the deadly weapons in Syria, 
which is increasingly coming apart,” Netanyahu told ministers Sunday 
morning.
Syria is believed to have one of the world’s 
largest chemical weapons stockpiles, and some fear the arms may find 
their way into the hands of terrorists should the Assad regime fall.
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