Syrian missile explodes in area near Israeli nuclear reactor, Israel
retaliates
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[April 22, 2021]
By Dan Williams and Jeffrey Heller
JERUSALEM (Reuters) -A Syrian missile
exploded in southern Israel on Thursday, the Israeli military said, in
an incident that triggered warning sirens near the secretive Dimona
nuclear reactor and an Israeli strike in Syria.
An Israeli military spokesman identified the projectile as an SA-5
surface-to-air missile fired by Syrian forces against Israeli aircraft.
He said it overflew its target to reach the Dimona area, 200 km (125
miles) south of the Syrian border.
The missile did not hit the reactor, exploding some 30 km (19 miles)
away, the spokesman added.
The sirens that sounded overnight in the Dimona area followed weeks of
heightened tension between Israel and Iran, a close ally of Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad, amid renewed global negotiations over
Tehran's nuclear programme.
For weeks, Israeli media have said air defences around the Dimona
reactor and the Red Sea port of Eilat were being strengthened in
anticipation of a possible long-range missile or drone attack by
Iranian-backed forces.
In public remarks on Thursday's incident, Israeli Defence Minister Benny
Gantz said the anti-aircraft missile was fired from Syria during an
Israeli strike there against "assets that could be used for a potential
attack against Israel".
Gantz said Israel's anti-missile systems had attempted to intercept the
SA-5 but were unsuccessful.
"In most cases, we achieve other results. This is a slightly more
complex case. We will investigate it and move on," he said. Israeli
security sources said the missile exploded in mid-air.
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An Israeli soldier surveys the area after a Syrian missile exploded
in southern Israel, the Israeli military said, near Ashalim,
southern Israel April 22, 2021. REUTERS/Amir Cohen
In response, Israel launched further overnight
attacks inside Syria, the military spokesman said, targeting several
missile batteries, including the one that fired the SA-5.
Syria's state news agency said the country's air defence system
intercepted Israeli rockets over the suburbs of Damascus "and downed
most of them". Four soldiers were injured and there was some
material damage, it said.
A Syrian military defector said the Israeli strikes targeted
locations near the town of Dumair, some 40 km (25 miles) northeast
of the capital, where Iranian-backed militias have a presence. It is
an area hit repeatedly in past Israeli attacks.
Addressing the likelihood of a Syrian anti-aircraft missile
overshooting its target and flying a long distance into Israel, Uzi
Rubin, an Israeli missile expert, said the scenario was "consistent
with the characteristics" of an SA-5.
"The trajectory of a stray anti-aircraft missile on an unintended
descent is very tricky to track," he told Reuters.
"Israel's air defence systems are in theory capable of carrying out
such an interception with proper preparation, but it would be at the
edge of the capability envelope."
(Reporting by Dan Williams and Jeffrey Heller; Additional reporting
by Maha El Dahan, Suleiman Al-Khalidi and Ghaida Ghantous; Editing
by Clarence Fernandez and John Stonestreet)
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