Israel says it attacked targets in Syria
after Iranian rocket fire
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[May 10, 2018]
By Dan Williams and Angus McDowall
JERUSALEM/BEIRUT (Reuters) - Israel said it
attacked nearly all of Iran's military infrastructure in Syria on
Thursday after Iranian forces fired rockets at Israeli-held territory
for the first time.
It was the heaviest Israeli barrage in Syria since the start in 2011 of
its civil war, in which Iranians, allied Shi'ite militias and Russian
soldiers have deployed in support of President Bashar al-Assad.
Syria's Army Command said three people were killed and two injured. A
war monitor, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said
the strikes killed at least 23 military personnel, including Syrians and
non-Syrians.
Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman said the Iranian rockets
either fell short of their targets, military bases in the
Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, or were intercepted.
Expectations of a regional flare-up, amid warnings from Israel it was
determined to prevent Iranian military entrenchment in Syria, were
stoked by U.S. President Donald Trump's announcement on Tuesday that he
was withdrawing from the 2015 Iranian nuclear deal.
The Trump administration portrayed its position against that agreement
as a response, in part, to Tehran's military interventions in the region
- underpinning Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's tough line
towards Iran.
The Golan attack was "just further demonstration that the Iranian regime
cannot be trusted and another good reminder that the president made the
right decision to get out of the Iran deal," White House press secretary
Sarah Sanders told Fox News.
Israel said 20 Iranian Grad and Fajr rockets were shot down by its Iron
Dome air defense system or did not reach targets in the Golan, territory
Israel captured from Syria in a 1967 war.
The Quds Force, an external arm of Iran's Revolutionary Guards, carried
out the launch, Israel said.
Syrian state media said Israel launched dozens of missiles and hit a
radar station, Syrian air defense positions and an ammunition dump,
underscoring the risks of a wider escalation involving Iran and its
regional allies.
Russia's defense ministry said Syria had shot down more than half of the
missiles fired by Israel, RIA news agency reported.
"We hit ... almost all of the Iranian infrastructure in Syria,"
Lieberman said, in a question and answer session at the annual Herzliya
security conference in Tel Aviv. "I hope we finished this chapter and
everyone got the message."
Israeli military spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Jonathan Conricus told
reporters the Iranian attack was "commanded and ordered by (Quds Force
chief General) Qassem Soleimani and it has not achieved its purpose".
Conricus said Israel responded by destroying dozens of Iranian military
sites in Syria, as well as Syrian anti-aircraft units that tried
unsuccessfully to shoot down Israeli planes.
"We do not know yet the (Iranian) casualty count," he said.
"But I can say that in terms of our purpose, we focused less on
personnel and more on capabilities and hardware ... to inflict long-term
damage on the Iranian military establishment in Syria. We assess it will
take substantial time to replenish."
There was no immediate comment from Iran.
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Missile fire is seen from Damascus, Syria May 10, 2018. REUTERS/Omar
Sanadiki
In the Golan Heights, Israeli schools opened as usual on Thursday
morning, after sirens sent residents to shelters during the night.
Lieberman said Israel was not seeking escalation on the Syrian
front. But Tzachi Hanegbi, a cabinet minister close to Netanyahu,
cautioned that more confrontation could come.
"I don't think I can tell you that one blow, as effective and
crushing as the one they (the Iranians) received last night, is
enough to convince a regime that is usually very fanatical and
determined," he said on Israel Radio.
NEW FRONT
The Israelis fear that Iran and its Lebanese ally Hezbollah are
turning Syria into a new front against them. Israel says its
occasional strikes in Syria aim to foil that.
Iran vowed retaliation after a suspected Israeli air strike last
month killed seven of its military personnel in a Syrian air base.
Israel regards Iran as its biggest threat, and has repeatedly
targeted Iranian forces and allied militia in Syria.
On Tuesday, hours after Trump's announcement on the nuclear deal,
Israeli rockets targeted a military base in Kisweh, a commander in
the pro-Syrian government regional alliance said.
That attack killed 15 people, including eight Iranians, the Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights said, though the commander said there
were no casualties. Israel has neither confirmed nor denied
responsibility.
Thursday's conflagration came hours after Netanyahu returned from a
visit to Moscow, where he discussed concerns about Syria with
Russian President Vladimir Putin. Russia, like Iran, fights in Syria
on the side of the Assad government.
Netanyahu said after the discussions that Russia was unlikely to
limit Israel's armed actions in Syria. The Israeli military said
Israel had forewarned Russia of its strikes on Thursday.
"There should be work to de-escalate the tensions," Russian Deputy
Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov was quoted as saying on Thursday
by the Tass news agency. He called the situation "very alarming".
French President Emmanuel Macron also appealed for calm.
(Additional reporting by Dan Williams and Jeffrey Heller in
Jerusalem and Dahlia Nehme and Tom Perry in Beirut; Writing by
Jeffrey Heller and Angus McDowall; Editing by Tom Perry, Larry King,
Richard Balmforth and Peter Graff)
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