Israel
won't comment on Syria strike, vows to hinder Hezbollah arms
shipments
Israel
has declined to comment on airstrikes which allegedly hit a Syrian
air defense base on Thursday. Instead, officials issued a déjà vu
statement which said that Israel will not allow advanced weapons to
fall into the hands of Hezbollah.
RT,
1
November, 2013
“We
have said many times that we will not allow the transfer of advanced
weapons to Hezbollah. We are sticking to this policy and I say so
without denying or confirming this report,” Home Front Defense
Minister Gilad Erdan told Israeli Radio on Friday.
The
Home Front reportedly met just hours before the alleged airstrike on
Syria’s base in Latakia.
On
Thursday afternoon, an explosion rocked an area which housed an air
force brigade with troops loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad, an
activist based in the principal Syrian port city of Latakia told
Reuters.
The
British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which has a
network of contacts in Syria, said there had been up to five
explosions at the air force base but that only limited damage was
reported. The damage suggested a pinpoint guided missile strike, an
anonymous local source told the organization.
A
former Syrian intelligence agent who has defected to France alleged
that Russian-made ballistic missiles had been stored at the air force
base that was attacked.
However,
neither Israel nor Syria confirmed that the strike took place at all.
A
confirmation came from a US security official instead, who leaked to
the press that Israel carried out the strikes and that the target was
surface-to-air SA 125 missiles.
Israel
was less than amused with the leak. Yedioth Ahronoth, the top selling
Israeli daily, said that “Washington is selling our secrets on the
cheap.”
Israel
is believed to have attacked Syria on four occasions, the last time
on July 5, 2013. At that time, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
again said that he wouldn’t let Hezbollah get its hands on
sophisticated weapons.
Israel
also attacked a military research center outside Damascus on May 5.
The airstrike was confirmed by a senior US official to NBC news, who
said that it targeted Iranian supplied Fateh-110 missiles.
A
senior Israeli source confirmed to AFP that an Israeli airstrike
carried out near the Damascus airport targeted Iranian missiles which
were destined for Hezbollah.
The
Syrian Ministry of Health did not confirm if there were casualties,
though rumors on Syrian social media say that at least 300 soldiers
who were stationed there were killed.
Hezbollah
is based in Lebanon and has close relations with Shia states such as
Iran. It also has close ties with Assad’s Alawite leadership in
Syria.
Hezbollah
actively supports the Palestinian cause and is in a state of virtual
war with Israel. In 2006, a 34-day conflict raged between Israeli
armed forces and Hezbollah in Lebanon, northern Israel, and the Golan
Heights.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.