'Israeli Missile strike' hits Syria
An Israeli
missile strike has caused a large explosion and fire at a military site near
Damascus international airport, Syrian state media report.
A fuel tank
and warehouses were damaged, the Sana news agency said.
But Syrian
rebel sources said an arms depot run by Lebanon's Hezbollah movement, which is
fighting in Syria as an ally of the government, was hit.
Israel said
the explosion was "consistent" with its policy to prevent Iran
smuggling weapons to Hezbollah. But it stopped short of confirming it was
responsible.
Israel
regards Hezbollah, and its key backer Iran, as its biggest threat. It went to
war with Hezbollah in 2006 and the group has grown considerably more powerful
since then.
The Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights, a UK-based monitoring group, reported that the
powerful blast was heard across the capital at dawn on Thursday and that it was
believed to have happened near the main road that leads to the airport.
Sana said
several missiles had been fired at a military site south-west of the airport,
causing explosions that resulted in some material losses.
Pro-government
Al-Mayadeen TV cited sources as saying that missiles had been fired by Israeli
jets flying inside the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.
Two senior
rebel sources based in Damascus told Reuters news agency that the missiles had
hit an ammunition depot in a closed military area that was used by Iran-backed
militias operating alongside the Syrian army, led by Hezbollah.
Appearing to
confirm Israeli involvement, Intelligence Minister Israel Katz told Israeli
Army Radio: "I can confirm that the incident in Syria corresponds
completely with Israel's policy to act to prevent Iran's smuggling of advanced
weapons via Syria to Hezbollah in Iran. Naturally, I don't want to elaborate on
this."
"The
prime minister has said that whenever we receive intelligence that indicated an
intention to transfer advanced weapons to Hezbollah, we will act."
The Israeli
military declined to comment on the reports.
In the wake
of the US cruise missile attack on a Syrian air base at the start of this
month, there was a lot of talk about Russia and Syria strengthening their air
defences and the likely implications of this for Israel.
Would it
hamper the Israeli Air Force's freedom of action in the skies over Syria, where
it has been conducting an intermittent air campaign to prevent sophisticated
weapons transfers to the Lebanese Shia militia group Hezbollah?
Well,
Thursday's attack near Damascus airport seems to provide an answer. Israel -
which is widely seen as being behind the strike - clearly intends to continue
its campaign against Hezbollah weapons shipments and one must assume that it
has a tacit understanding with Moscow.
Sophisticated
Russian air defences cover much of Syrian airspace and have a more than
adequate capability to interfere with Israeli attacks if Moscow so wished
Israel is
thought to have bombed arms shipments intended for Hezbollah several times
since the Syrian conflict began.
In a rare step last month, the Israeli military confirmed that
its jets had struck several targets inside Syria in a raid that prompted the
Syrian military to fire a number of ground-to-air missiles, one of which was
intercepted over Israeli territory.
On Wednesday, a high-ranking Israeli military officer briefed
reporters that approximately 100 missiles intended for Hezbollah had been
destroyed in the raid.
SOURCE: BBC
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