NYT:
New Israeli airstrikes in Syria likely fries on pavement, eggs hatch
as heat wave grips China
New
Israeli airstrikes in Syria are likely because a recent strike didn't
destroy all the Russian-made cruise missiles Israel targeted, U.S.
officials said.
UPI
,
1
August, 2013
The
July 5 strike failed to get all the Russian Yakhont supersonic
anti-ship cruise missiles because some were removed from their
launchers and warehouse before the attack, the officials told The New
York Times.
But
to make it look like Israel had dealt a devastating blow, the regime
of President Bashar Assad set fire to the launchers and to vehicles
at the destroyed warehouse to hide the fact the Yakhont missiles were
missed, U.S. intelligence reports cited by the newspaper said.
The
Pentagon had no immediate comment. Israel has a longstanding policy
of not acknowledging pre-emptive military strikes. Damascus also had
no immediate comment.
Israeli
officials have said they will do what they believe they need to do to
stop sophisticated weapons from falling into the hands of Hezbollah,
the Lebanese Shiite Islamic militant group and political party whose
manifesto calls for Israel's elimination.
U.S.
and Israeli naval officials consider the advanced radar Yakhont
missiles a serious threat to their ships.
The
July 5 attack near the Mediterranean port city of Latakia was the
fourth known Israeli airstrike in Syria this year.
U.S.
officials told the Times Wednesday Israeli aircraft fired
air-to-ground missiles at the warehouse from the eastern
Mediterranean, never entering Syrian airspace.
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