
Egypt is concerned Israel could be in a conflict in the very near future with  Syria or the Iranian-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon, a senior Egyptian security  official told WND. 
The security official said in any future war with  Syria or Hezbollah, both actors have been preparing to storm the Israeli border  with guerillas and commandos, an act unseen here since the 1973 Yom Kippur War,  the last conflict in which Syria was openly involved. 
In previous  conflicts with Hezbollah, the terrorist group fired rockets into  Israel. 
In addition, the security official said Syria has separately  been contemplating launching low-grade attacks against Jewish communities in the  Golan Heights to pressure Israel into negotiations aimed at relinquishing the  strategic territory. 
The official said his country is concerned about a  coming conflict but did not mention a specific timeframe. 
"It's possible  either side may misinterpret moves and launch the opening salvo very soon," he  said. 
The official also said Israel is concerned Syria has recently  passes advanced weaponry to Hezbollah in Lebanon. He said his country believes  Israel may want to engage in a conflict with Hezbollah to minimize that group's  capabilities before any future strike against Iran's nuclear  facilities. 
Hezbollah could be used as part of Iran's strategy of  retaliation against Iran in a future war, the official said. 
Recent  weeks have seen a war of words between Israel and Syria, as well as a dramatic  escalation of public cooperation between Israel's foes Iran, Syria, Hezbollah  and Hamas. 
Last month, Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman warned  Syria's president, Bashar Assad, that any war with his country would topple his  regime. 
"Assad should know that if he attacks, he will not only lose the  war. Neither he nor his family will remain in power," Lieberman  said. 
Lieberman was responding to a Syrian threat against Israeli cities  one day earlier. 
"Israel knows that if it declares war on Syria, such a  war will reach its cities as well," Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Moallem said  following a meeting last week with Spanish Foreign Minister Miguel  Moratinos. 
Syria has long demanded the Golan Heights as part of any deal  with Israel. The Golan looks down on Israeli population centers and twice was  used by Damascus to launch ground invasions into the Jewish state. 
Last  week, Syria hosted a summit with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,  Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah and Khaled Meshal, head of the Hamas. All  participants expressed solidarity with each other and vowed the destruction of  Israel. 
The meeting was followed up with another confab in Iran last  weekend entitled "Islamic and National Solidarity with the Palestinian People."  The summit was attended by the leaders of Hamas, Hezbollah and Syria. All three  again denounced Israel.