ISRAEL LAUNCHES HEAVY AIR STRIKES ON SYRIA AFTER FIGHTER JET CRASHES
The Syrian army says it shot
down the F-16 jet that crashed in northern Israel.
Israel launched
heavy air strikes in Syria on Saturday, saying it hit air defenses and Iranian
targets, and the Syrian army claimed to have brought down an Israeli F-16 that
crashed in northern Israel in a major escalation of tension.
The Israeli military
said early assessments indicated the jet had been shot down by Syrian fire, but
this was still unconfirmed.
It marked the most
serious confrontation yet in Syria between Israel and Iranian and Iran-backed
forces that have established a major foothold in the country while fighting in
support of President Bashar al-Assad in the civil war.
Israel said the F-16
crashed during a mission to strike Iranian drone installations in Syria. It
said it sent its jets into Syria after shooting down an Iranian drone over
Israeli territory earlier on Saturday.
The military
alliance fighting in support of Assad denied any of its drones had entered
Israeli air space. In a statement, it said Israel had targeted an air base in
the Homs desert that is being used to fly drones in missions against Islamic
State.
Such “terrorist
action” by Israel would be met with a “severe and serious response,” it said.
The Israeli military
spokesman said Israel did not seek escalation in the region, calling its action
a “defensive effort triggered by an Iranian act of aggression”.
Iran’s expanding
clout during Syria’s nearly seven-year-long war, including deployments of Iran-backed
forces near the Golan frontier, has raised alarm in Israel, which has said it
would act against any threat from its regional arch-enemy Tehran.
Iranian and
Iran-backed Shi’ite forces, including Lebanon’s Hezbollah, have deployed widely
in support of Assad. Iran’s military chief warned Israel last October against
breaching Syrian airspace and territory.
Israel’s air force
has targeted Syrian military and Hezbollah targets in Syria on an almost
regular basis, but its attacks on Saturday appeared to be the most intense yet.
Referring to the
downed Israeli F-16, an official in the pro-Assad alliance said a “message” had
been delivered to Israel. “I do not believe matters will develop to a regional
war,” the official said.
U.S. HAWKISH ON IRAN
In Washington,
President Donald Trump’s administration has backed Israel’s hawkish stance on
Iran, and declared containing Tehran’s influence an objective of its Syria
policy. On a visit to Israellast month, U.S. Vice President Mike Pence called
Iran the world’s “leading state sponsor of terror.”
U.S. Secretary of
State Rex Tillerson is also expected to visit the region in the coming week to
discuss the crisis in Syria and other issues, and is scheduled to visit Jordan,
Turkey, Lebanon and other countries.
Hezbollah and Israel
last fought a major conflict in 2006.
Tensions have also
spiked across the frontier between Israel and Lebanon over Israeli plans for
border wall, and Lebanese plans to exploit an offshore energy block which is
partly located in disputed waters.
The Israeli military
said 12 targets, including three aerial defense batteries and four Iranian
targets that are part of Iran’s military establishment in Syria were attacked.
“During the attack,
anti-aircraft missiles were fired towards Israel, triggering alarms that were
heard in Northern Israel,” the military said.
Syrian state media
reported two separate Israeli attacks.
In the first one, a
military source said Syrian air defenses had opened fire in response to an
Israeli act of “aggression” against a military base, hitting “more than one
plane”.
Later, state media
said air defenses were responding to a new Israeli assault and air defenses had
thwarted attacks on military positions in southern Syria.
Israel said one of
its attack helicopters shot down an Iranian drone at around 4.30am (9.30 p.m.
ET/0230 GMT) that had come from Syria into Israel. “In response, the IDF
(Israel Defense Forces) targeted Iranian targets in Syria,” the military said.
“MASSIVE” ANTI-AIRCRAFT FIRE
Israeli military
spokesman Jonathan Conricus said a “substantial” number of Israeli warplanes on
the mission had come under “massive Syrian anti-air fire”, and only one Israeli
jet was harmed.
The F-16 came down
in a field near the northern Israeli village of Harduf, television footage
showed, and one of the pilots was injured as they ejected, the military said.
David Ivry, a former
Israeli Air Force chief, told Reuters he believed it was the first time an
Israeli F-16 was brought down since Israel began using the jets in the 1980s.
“We don’t know if
the pilots ejected because of the (Syrian)fire,” Conricus said. It was also
unclear at what stage of the mission they ejected, he said, “but it is of
extreme concern to us if they were shot down.”
The Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights said Israel had targeted areas in the countryside
southwest of Damascus, near the Syrian-Lebanon border west of Damascus and in
the eastern countryside of Homs province for several hours since dawn.
It said another set
of raids hit southwest of Damascus, and another struck around the
Damascus-Beirut highway near the border with Lebanon.
In Israel, uniformed
military personnel could be seen gathered around the burned and tangled metal
in Harduf by mid-morning, with what appeared to be white foam on the
surrounding grass. Others knelt in the grass, inspecting pieces of the jet.
Rocket alert sirens
sounded in the Israeli-held Golan Heights and in northern Israel. There were no
reports of casualties.
Flights in to
Israel’s main airport near Tel Aviv were suspended for about 15 minutes and
take-offs were held for about 20 minutes on Saturday morning. “Ben Gurion
Airport is now operating as usual,” Israeli Airport Authority spokesman Ofer
Lefler said.
The airport’s online
live flight schedule showed flights were departing and landing.
Source: Reuters
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