Israel,
Syria show teeth: Third cross-border shootout in week
Israeli
troops opened "retaliating" fire at targets across the
Syrian border with Syria later claiming it destroyed an Israeli
military vehicle stationed in Golan Heights. This is a third
consecutive cross-border shooting in a week, Israeli media say.
RT,
21
May, 2013
The
footage the Israeli army shared with RT shows the Syrian side firing
first followed by return fire from the Israelis.
The
Israeli military said their troops had “returned precise fire”
after a Syrian soldier allegedly caused damage to a military vehicle
stationed in Golan Heights, near the border.
The
shots “most likely were stray bullets, we don't know if it was
intentional,” an Israeli spokesperson told AFP. There were no
injuries following the initial shots.
Soon
after that the Syrian military declared in a televised statement that
in response they had successfully targeted a further Israeli vehicle:
"Our
armed forces have destroyed an Israeli vehicle with everything that
it had in it... The vehicle had crossed the ceasefire line and was
moving towards the village of Bir Ajam, situated in the liberated
Syrian zone [of the Golan]."
This
is the first time the Syrian government claimed responsibility for
firing into the Israeli territory.
Tel-Aviv
denied the claims. Israel’s Army Radio however said the Tuesday
incident was the third consecutive cross-border shooting this week
and the military considers the incident to be concerning.
Israel's
military chief Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz also warned Syrian President
Bashar Assad that the Syrian leader would “bear the consequences”
if there were any more attacks on Israeli forces.
An
Israeli Merkava tank is positioned for deployment during a drill in
the Israeli annexed Golan Heights near the border with Syria on May
5, 2013. (AFP Photo / Menahem Kahana)
Cross-border
gunfire incidents have become a more frequent occurrence in recent
months amid the ongoing Syrian civil war.
Fire
from the conflict within Syria has intermittently struck Golan
Heights, with Israel generally accepting these incidents as
accidental. However, Israel has occasionally retaliated for the
bullets and infrequent mortar shells entering the border territory,
which they captured from Syria in 1967.
Airstrikes
– attributed to Israel, but not confirmed – struck military posts
in Syria at the beginning of May, with the blasts reportedly killing
scores of soldiers.
Israel
has never made an official comment on the strikes, but only stated it
would do everything against the prospect of its foes in Lebanon
obtaining weapons smuggled through Syria.
Russian
President Vladimir Putin met Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu in Sochi exactly a week ago, with both agreeing that the
two -year Syrian armed conflict, if continued, could lead to
“disastrous consequences” for the region.
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