Turkish
PM slams Israel over Syria attack
Turkish
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused Israel of waging "state
terrorism" after it struck targets in Syria.
3
February, 2013
Turkish
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has accused Israel of waging
"state terrorism" as he condemned the air strike on Syria
as an unacceptable violation of international law.
"Those
who have been treating Israel like a spoilt child should expect
anything from them, at any time," said Erdogan on Sunday.
"As
I say time and again, Israel has a mentality of waging state
terrorism. Right now, there is no telling what it might do and where
it might do it," he told reporters.
Erdogan,
a harsh critic of the Jewish state, was speaking after Israel's
outgoing Defence Minister Ehud Barak implicitly confirmed that it had
staged Wednesday's bombing raid which Damascus said targeted a
military complex near the capital.
"We
cannot regard a violation of air space as acceptable. What Israel
does is completely against international law... it is beyond
condemnation," Erdogan said.
"I
am worried that in a situation like this, any scenario can play out
in the future."
Earlier
on Sunday, Barak refrained from a direct confirmation as he brought
the issue up at the Munich Security Conference in Germany.
"I
cannot add anything to what you have read in the newspapers about
what happened in Syria several days ago," Barak told
participants.
But
he added: "It's another proof that when we say something we mean
it. We say that we don't think that it should be allowable to bring
advanced weapon systems into Lebanon, the Hezbollah from Syria, when
[Syrian President Bashar al-] Assad falls."
According
to US officials, Wednesday’s attack hit a convoy of anti-aircraft
weapons inside Syria bound for the Lebanese Hezbollah group but
Israel has not publicly acknowledged the air strike.
The
Syrian military said the target of Israeli jets was a scientific
research centre. The facility is in the area of Jamraya, northwest of
the capital.
'Destabilising
Syria'
Following
Barak's comments, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad accused Israel of
trying to destabilise Syria and said Damascus was able to confront
"current threats ...and aggression" against it.
Syria's
state news agency SANA said Assad made the remarks in a meeting with
Saeed Jalili, Iran's national security council secretary, at meeting
in Damascus. It was Assad's first reported response to the attack.
Since
the outbreak of the Syrian conflict, Israeli leaders have repeatedly
expressed fears that if Syria were to disintegrate, Assad could lose
control of his chemical weapons and other arms.
Purported
images of the targeted site, aired by Syrian state television on
Saturday, show destroyed cars, trucks and military vehicles. A
building has broken widows and damaged interiors, but no major
structural damage.
Meanwhile,
Syrian opposition leaders and rebels on Friday slammed Assad for not
responding to the air strike, calling it proof of his weakness and
acquiescence to Israel.
On
Saturday night, Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, who is in
the process of forming a new ruling coalition, said his new
government would have to deal with weapons "being stockpiled
near us and threatening our cities and civilians" - an apparent
reference to the deteriorating situation in Syria.
Barak
said "Hezbollah from Lebanon and the Iranians are the only
allies that Assad has left".
He
said in his view Assad's fall "is coming imminently" and
when it happens, "this will be a major blow to the Iranians and
Hezbollah."
"I
think that they will pay the price," he said.
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