Syrian
TV: Israel bombed military site near Damascus
Syrian
opposition claims bombed site was used to develop chemical weapons;
Syrian army denies report that convoy carrying weapons to Hezbollah
was bombed; U.S. official confirms Israel behind attack.
30
January, 2013
Israeli
forces attacked a target on the Syrian-Lebanese border overnight,
Western diplomats and regional security sources said on Wednesday, at
a time of growing concern over the fate of Syrian chemical and
conventional weapons.
The
Israel Defense Forces refused to confirm or deny the report. "We
do not comment on reports of this kind," an IDF spokeswoman
said.
The
reported attack came soon after the Lebanese media said that Israel
Air Force jets had flown over Lebanon's airspace in
three separate missions late Tuesday and early Wednesday. There was
no confirmation of that report from Israel, either.
Live
Blog
- Haaretz
brings you the latest updates in real time
10:00
P.M. Sky
News in Arabic reports that Syrian opposition activists claim that
the research institute that was attacked is known to be a weapons
development center, which also produces chemical weapons.
9:20
P.M. Syrian
state TV and army spokesmen say that Israeli warplanes bombed a
military research center in the Jermana area northwest of the
capital, Damascus, killing two people and wounding five. The report
also said the strike caused material damage and the center was used
to advance Syrian military capabilities.
8:30
P.M. White
House Press Secretary Jay Carney, asked during his daily press
conference about reports of an Israeli attack in Syria, responded:
"No comment. I refer you to the Israeli government." (Barak
Ravid)
7:05
P.M. Speaking
to the Associated Press on condition of anonymity, a U.S.
government official confirms that the Israeli strike hit a convoy of
trucks. U.S. officials, however, say they are tracking Syria's
chemical weapons and that they still appear to be solidly under
regime control. Israel suspects that Damascus obtained a battery of
SA-17s from Russia after an alleged Israeli airstrike in 2007 that
destroyed an unfinished Syrian nuclear reactor. The Israeli military
declined to comment, and Syrian officials and state media continue to
be silent on the issue. (AP)
6:48
P.M. The
website Lebanon Now reports that the convoy that was attacked
departed from somewhere around the city of al-Kassir in western
Syria, located some 15 kilometers from the Lebanese border, and was
headed for the Hermel area in northern Lebanon. The source
added that the convoy was carrying self-propelled strategic weapons
meant for Hezbollah. (Jacky Khoury)
6:10
P.M. Speaking
to the Associated Press, two "regional security officials"
say Israel conducted an air strike inside Syria overnight near the
border with Lebanon. While they did not say what the target was, they
did say that Israel had been making plans in the days leading up to
the air strike to hit a shipment of weapons bound for the anti-Israel
militant group Hezbollah in Lebanon. According to the officials, the
shipment included sophisticated, Russian-made SA-17 anti-aircraft
missiles, which would be strategically "game-changing" in
the hands of Hezbollah. (AP)
5:40
P.M. Al-Arabiya
reports that the target of the air strike was a convoy of trucks
carrying advanced anti-aircraft missiles. Sky News correspondent Sam
Kiley, quoting security sources not connected to the attack, also
reported that the attack was carried out against trucks carrying
anti-aircraft missiles capable of limiting the freedom of action of
Israeli Air Force jets over Lebanon. Kiley also suggested that the
missiles could be of the type used against naval ships.
4:11
P.M. Lebanese
security official says no evidence found of Israeli strikes on
Lebanon's side of the border. (Haaretz)
4:07
P.M. A
few hours after first reports, both Al-Jazeera and Al Arabiya are
still ignoring the incident. (Haaretz)
4:02
P.M. Sky
News Foreign Affairs Editor Tim Marshall: "If you put it all
together and if there is movement of significant weapons coming out
of Syria toward Lebanon, it would be probably be one of two things:
Chemical weapons, or equally problematical for the Israelis, the air
defense systems that Syria has many of. Both of those are a red line
for the Israelis."
3:57
P.M. Minister
Silvan Shalom: "The international community has stated more than
once that it takes developments in Syria, which might have negative
ramifications, very seriously. Any negative development, of course,
should be prevented." (Army Radio)
3:23
P.M. Military
Intelligence chief Aviv Kochavi and National Security Adviser Yaakov
Amidror return from consultations in Washington and Moscow. (Barak
Ravid)
3:20
P.M. Vice
Premier Silvan Shalom, speaking on Israel Radio, was asked if there
was unusual activity on the northern front. "The entire world
has said more than once that it takes developments in Syria very
seriously, developments which can begin negative directions. And
therefore the world, led by [U.S.] President [Barack] Obama who has
said this more than once, is taking all possibilities into account
and of course any development which is a development in a negative
direction would be something that needs stopping and prevention."
3:08
P.M. Lebanese
news site Naharnet: Total of 12 Israeli fighter jets enter Lebanese
air space over last 24 hours.
3:03
P.M. Security
source tells AFP: The air force bombed a weapons convoy just as it
was crossing from Syria into Lebanon.
2:56
P.M. The
French newspaper Le Figaro: Israeli security sources say the target
of the attack was a weapons convoy traveling from Syria into Lebanon.
Not clear whether the attack took place inside Syria or in Lebanese
territory.
2:27
P.M. Reuters reports that Israel has sent its national security
adviser, Yaakov Amidror, to Russia and its military intelligence
chief Major-General Aviv Kochavi to the United States for
consultations.
1:58
P.M. Laura Rozen, of Al-Monitor, posts on Twitter that the "#Israel
jets said to have struck alleged weapons convoy in Syria, after #IDF
intel chief consultations in Washington".
1:45
P.M. Security source: There was definitely a hit in the border
area"; A Western diplomat in the region who asked about
the strike said "something has happened", without
elaborating.
An
activist in Syria who works with a network of opposition groups
around the country said that she had heard of a strike in southern
Syria from her colleagues but could not confirm.
The
sources, who declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the
issue, had no further information about what might have been hit or
where precisely the attack happened.
Background
Earlier
this week, the Lebanon Army reported that the IAF had violated
Lebanon's airspace on Saturday in four different incidents. The
Lebanese newspaper The Daily Star reported that IAF fighter jets were
seen flying around the Beka'a Valley.
Also
Saturday, the Lebanese daily Al-Mustaqbal said that an explosion
struck a weapons storage facility in an area of southern Lebanon
controlled by Hezbollah. The report was not confirmed by Lebanon's
government or by the Lebanese army. The latter said it had conducted
a number of controlled explosions on Saturday of munitions left over
from the Second Lebanon War.
According
to the daily, the explosion took place in the small town of
Machghara, located in the Beka'a Valley. It said that a cloud of
smoke was seen rising from the site, which was quickly cordoned off
by Hezbollah forces.
On
Sunday, Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned his cabinet ministers of the risk
that chemical weapons from Syria could be falling into the hands of
Hezbollah in Lebanon.
"It
is necessary to look at our surroundings, both at what is happening
with Iran and its proxies, and what is happening in other arenas -
lethal weaponry in Syria, which is steadily breaking up,"
Netanyahu said during the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem.
Also
Sunday, Vice Premier Silvan Shalom said that any sign that Syria's
grip on its chemical weapons was slipping, as President Bashar
al-Assad fights rebels trying to overthrow him, could trigger Israeli
intervention.
The
commander of the Israel Air Force, Major General Amir Eshel, on
Tuesday issued his own warning over the volatility of Syria and its
weapons. Addressing the international space conference in Herzliya,
Eshel described Syria as a "country falling apart", adding:
"Nobody has any idea right now what is going to happen in Syria
on the day after, and how the country is going to look. This
[sectarian crisis] is happening in a place with a huge weapons
arsenal, some of which are new and advanced, and some of which are
not conventional."
Israeli
sources said on Tuesday that Syria's advanced conventional weapons
would represent as much of a threat to Israel as its chemical arms
should they fall into the hands of Syrian rebel forces or Hezbollah
guerrillas based in Lebanon.
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