IDF destroys weapons cache, military sites in overnight attack on Syria 

Posted January 21, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: IDF destroys weapons cache, military sites in overnight attack on Syria – Israel News – Jerusalem Post

The IDF announced, “We are warning the Syrian Armed Forces from trying to harm Israeli territory or its forces.”

BY ANNA AHRONHEIM, SETH J. FRANTZMAN, MAAYAN JAFFE-HOFFMAN
 JANUARY 21, 2019 01:46
Missile fire is seen from Damascus, Syria May 10, 2018

IDF fighter planes attacked Syrian military targets and Syrian air defense batteries in the Syrian region of Quds overnight Sunday and early Monday morning, according to a statement by the IDF spokesperson.
The attack was carried out in response to the launching of a missile by Iranian forces from Syria into Israeli territory, with intention of hitting the northern Golan Heights. The missile was intercepted by the Iron Dome.
The IDF attack targeted military targets belonging to the Quds Force in Syria, including weapons storage sites, mainly a site at Damascus International Airport, an Iranian intelligence site, and an Iranian training camp.
During the attack, dozens of Syrian surface-to-air missiles were fired. As such, several Syrian air defense batteries were attacked.
“The Iranian attack on Israeli territory yesterday is yet another clear proof of the intention behind the attempts to establish Iran in Syria and the danger they pose to the State of Israel and regional stability,” said the IDF spokesperson. “The IDF will continue to act decisively and firmly against the Iranian establishment in Syria.”
The spokesperson said the Syrian regime is responsible for what is happening in its territory and warns it not to act or to allow action against Israel.
“The IDF is ready and alert for any variety of scenarios and will continue to act as necessary for the safety of Israeli citizens,” said the IDF statement.

Following the attack, the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit announced that the Hermon skiing site would be closed to visitors on Monday.

The IDF Spokespersn’s Unit added that the residents of the Golan should continue their routine as usual unless further instructions from the Home Front Command are issued.

The IDF air strike took place hours after a projectile was identified over the Golan Heights. The Iron Dome successfully intercepted the projectile.

The projectile was launched from Syria after Damascus accused Jerusalem of carrying out a rare daytime attack on the south of the country on Sunday.

Pictures from Israel’s popular Mount Hermon ski resort, which was full of tourists enjoying the snow-filled hill, showed two trails from Iron Dome missiles while screams from children were heard in a video from the scene. The interception came shortly after the Syrian regime accused Israel of carrying out airstrikes in the south of the country, triggering air defenses that intercepted several of them.

“A military source said that our air defenses had successfully engaged an Israeli aerial attack targeting the southern region and prevented it from achieving any of its objectives,” read a report by the official Syrian news agency SANA.

Al-Manar, Hezbollah’s media network, reported the attack near Damascus but gave no further details. Syrian regime supporters said that a total of nine Israeli missiles were intercepted by regime air defenses. Russia’s Ministry of Defense, according to RIA news agency, said four Israeli jets fired seven missiles at the international airport, causing no injuries to Syrian nationals.

The Syrian regime used the Buk and Pantisr systems to intercept the missiles, according to Sputnik, the Russian news agency.

The Syrian air defenses were alerted on Sunday afternoon as a Mahan Air flight from Tehran to Damascus was about to make its approach to Damascus. At 1:30 p.m. the flight turned around and headed away from the city. A Syrian L-76 cargo lifter from Tehran was also en route to Damascus on Sunday morning. These kinds of flights have been seen as suspicious over the last year amid allegations that Iran delivers weapons to Syria and Hezbollah using different airlines as cover.

There was no comment on the strikes by Israel, which rarely comments on alleged Israel Air Force operations on the northern front, but Israeli officials have repeatedly voiced concerns over Iran’s presence in Syria and the smuggling of sophisticated weaponry to Hezbollah in Lebanon from Tehran via Syria, stressing that both are red-lines for the Jewish State.

With the presence of Iranian and Hezbollah forces, Israel’s northern front has become the IDF’s number one priority with former IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. (res.) Gadi Eisenkot admitting that Israel has carried out hundreds of strikes against Iranian targets in Syria.

Israel “operated under a certain threshold until two-and-a-half years ago,” when he got “unanimous consent” from the government to change the rules of the game and dropped some 2,000 missiles against Iranian and Hezbollah targets in 2018 alone, he said.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said last week that Israel conducted airstrikes on Iranian weapons near Damascus airport on January 13 and Russia warned Israel against further strikes near the airport. Syria is therefore on high alert for any potential airstrikes.

Nevertheless, daytime strikes by Israel against targets in the war-torn country are extremely rare with the IAF operating during the night.

Earlier on Sunday SANA reported that a bomb exploded near a highway at the southern edge of Syria’s capital Damascus. According to the report, an attacker was arrested and no one was injured.

 

Nasrallah to give TV interview after long public absence and ill health rumor

Posted January 21, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: Nasrallah to give TV interview after long public absence and ill health rumor | The Times of Israel

Hezbollah chief on Saturday expected to address Israeli operation to destroy cross-border tunnels from Lebanon, in first appearance in months

Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah speaks via a video link, as his supporters raise their hands, during activities to mark the ninth of Ashura, a 10-day ritual commemorating the death of Imam Hussein, in a southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, on September 19, 2018. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah speaks via a video link, as his supporters raise their hands, during activities to mark the ninth of Ashura, a 10-day ritual commemorating the death of Imam Hussein, in a southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, on September 19, 2018. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

Amid reports of his failing health and a long absence from the public eye, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah will give an interview later this week to a television channel associated with the Lebanese terror group.

In a short promotional clip released Sunday, al-Mayadeen said Nasrallah would appear on the network Saturday evening. Nasrallah typically grants an interview to the satellite channel around this time each year.

“Hezbollah’s secretary-general breaks his silence that frightens the occupation,” the video said.

In the interview, Nasrallah is expected to address for the first time an operation launched by the Israeli military last month to locate and destroy cross-border tunnels dug by Hezbollah. The Israel Defense Forces have said the underground passages were meant to bring fighters into Israeli territory as part of an opening salvo in a future war.

The IDF announced the end of the Operation Northern Shield last week.

“In occupied Palestine, Israel’s leadership is boasting about its Northern Shield, taking pride in its battles against Hezbollah and Syria and threatening Iran. In this way, Hezbollah’s leader responds,” al-Mayadeen said.

Israeli troops search for attack tunnels dug into Israel from southern Lebanon that the Israeli military believes Hezbollah planned to use in future wars, in January 2019. (Israel Defense Forces)

Nasrallah has not made a public appearance in months, leading to unconfirmed reports he was in critical condition following a heart attack brought on by cancer.

An official from Iran, Hezbollah’s main backer, dismissed the rumors as a “Zionist lie.”

Earlier this month, Europe-based Lebanese journalist Jerry Maher tweeted that unnamed intelligence sources had confirmed Nasrallah was taken to the hospital in Beirut in critical condition, and that he has been battling cancer for years.

Maher posted Twitter updates including claims that Hezbollah rejected a suggestion for Nasrallah to be moved to the Syrian capital Damascus for treatment by Russian and Iranian doctors.

Some Hebrew media reports said that Nasrallah had suffered a heart attack.

Maher noted that the Hezbollah leader has not been seen for weeks.

Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah gestures during a rally to mark Jerusalem Day or Al-Quds Day, in a southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, August 2, 2013. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla, File)

In the past, claims of Nasrallah’s death or severe illness have been countered by the publication of videos in which he was shown commenting on current affairs.

Nasrallah, 58, took over the Iran-backed Hezbollah group after its previous leader was killed in a 1992 targeted assassination by Israeli helicopters on his convoy.

As a precaution against a repeat of the incident, Nasrallah’s movements are shrouded in mystery with few public appearances. The Hezbollah leader frequently releases videos or live television broadcasts.

In his speeches, Nasrallah often makes threats to attack Israel. Hezbollah has accumulated an arsenal of hundreds of thousands of ground attack rockets, and is considered to be a more powerful military force than the Lebanese army.

Hezbollah is designated a terror organization, either entirely or partly, by Israel, the United States, the European Union and other countries.

Adam Rasgon contributed to this report.

 

Jihadists in Mali kill 10 peacekeepers over Netanyahu visit to Chad 

Posted January 21, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: Jihadists in Mali kill 10 peacekeepers over Netanyahu visit to Chad | The Times of Israel

Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb claims responsibility for attack on UN camp hours after Israeli PM visits Africa to re-establish ties with N’Djamena

In this July 28, 2013 photo, United Nations peacekeepers stand guard at a polling station, during presidential elections in Kidal, Mali. (AP/Rebecca Blackwell)

In this July 28, 2013 photo, United Nations peacekeepers stand guard at a polling station, during presidential elections in Kidal, Mali. (AP/Rebecca Blackwell)

BAMAKO, Mali — Jihadist gunmen angered by Chad forging ties with Israel killed 10 Chadian peacekeepers and injured at least 25 others in an attack on a UN camp in northern Mali on Sunday, one of the deadliest strikes against the UN mission in the West African country.

Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) claimed responsibility for the attack, saying it was “in reaction” to the visit to Chad by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, according to the Mauritanian Al-Akhbar news agency, which regularly receives statements from this jihadist group.

Netanyahu flew to Chad for a single-day visit Sunday, re-establishing ties with the Muslim-majority country after 47 years.

Netanyahu called the move ” a breakthrough into the heart of the Muslim world,” and lauded the fact that there was no opposition.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, and Chad’s President Idriss Déby speak at a press conference at the presidential palace in N’Djamena, Chad on January 20, 2018. (Kobi Gideon/GPO)

Israel has in recent years established or upgraded ties with a number of African countries, including with Guinea, which neighbors Mali.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres strongly condemned what he described as a “complex attack” on the peacekeepers camp in Aguelhok, in Kidal region and called for the perpetrators to be brought to justice.

“Ten peacekeepers from Chad were killed and at least 25 injured,” said a statement from UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric.

The gunmen struck early Sunday at the Aguelhok base 200 kilometers (125 miles) north of Kidal and towards the border with Algeria, according to a source close to the MINUSMA mission.

“MINUSMA forces responded robustly and a number of assailants were killed,” Dujarric said, without specifying the toll.

Mahamat Saleh Annadif, the UN envoy for Mali, condemned what he called a “vile and criminal” attack.

“Peacekeepers of the MINUSMA force at Aguelhok fought off a sophisticated attack by assailants who arrived on several armed vehicles,” he said in a statement.

The attack “illustrates the determination of the terrorists to sow chaos.

“It demands a robust, immediate and concerted response from all forces to destroy the peril of terrorism in the Sahel.”

Mali Islamist violence

On Sunday, France’s Defense Minister Florence Parly told French radio that the G5 Sahel anti-jihadist force in the region was resuming its operations.

They were suspended after an attack on their headquarters in mid-2018. The G5 force comprises contingents from Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Burkina Faso and Chad.

An attack at the same base last April killed two peacekeepers and left several others wounded.

UN peacekeepers salute during a memorial service for two colleagues who were killed in an attack on the UN compound in Juba, South Sudan, Saturday, Dec. 21, 2013. (AP/United Nations Mission in South Sudan)

In October 2014, nine troops of a Nigerian contingent were killed in the northeast.

Some 13,000 peacekeepers are deployed in Mali as part of a UN mission.

It was established after Islamist militias seized the north of the country in 2012. They were pushed back by French troops in 2013.

A peace agreement signed in 2015 by the Bamako government and armed groups was aimed at restoring stability to Mali.

But the accord has failed to stop violence by Islamist militants, who have also staged attacks in neighboring Burkina Faso and Niger.

Earlier this month, both France and the United States criticized the authorities in Mali for their failure to stem the worsening violence.

On January 16, France threatened to push for more targeted sanctions to be imposed on Mali after hearing a UN official report on worsening violence in the West African country.

Washington renewed its warning that it would push for changes to the peacekeeping mission in Mali, possibly a major drawdown, if there was no progress.

In August, a panel of experts said in a report to the UN Security Council that inter-communal conflicts in the region were exacerbating existing tensions from clashes between jihadist groups and international and Malian forces.

Times of Israel staff contributed to this report.

 

Khartoum lets Netanyahu’s plane fly over South Sudan, in first for Israel

Posted January 21, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: Khartoum lets Netanyahu’s plane fly over South Sudan, in first for Israel | The Times of Israel

Flight back from Chad shortened by an hour as Sudan gives permission for PM’s jet to cross over airspace of southern neighbor, amid reports of diplomatic opening

The flight path of Benjamin Netanyahu's plane over South Sudan, as seen on a screen inside Netanyahu's plane, January 20, 2019. (Rraphael Ahren)

The flight path of Benjamin Netanyahu’s plane over South Sudan, as seen on a screen inside Netanyahu’s plane, January 20, 2019. (Rraphael Ahren)

ABOVE SOUTH SUDAN — In an unprecedented move, Sudan on Sunday allowed an Israeli plane to cross over the air space it controls.

The flight, carrying Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu back to Israel from a lightning visit to Chad, jetted over South Sudan, whose skies are under the control of the civil aviation authorities in Khartoum.

The flight came hours after Netanyahu lauded Israeli “inroads” with the Islamic world as he and Chadian President Idriss Deby resumed ties, and amid a reported diplomatic push to reach an understanding with Khartoum to allow Israeli overflights above Sudan to shave hours off flights to western Africa and Latin America.

Israel has friendly relations with South Sudan, but the country’s airspace is controlled by its northern neighbor, which does not have diplomatic ties with the Jewish state.

Sunday’s flight was the first time an Israeli aircraft was allowed to fly over South Sudan, officials in the prime minister’s entourage said.

South Sudan, which is predominantly Christian, gained independence from Muslim Sudan several years ago, and the two countries are still hostile to each other. However, South Sudan’s civil aviation remains under Khartoum’s control.

South Sudanese government forces ride on a vehicle, January 12, 2014. (AP/Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin, File)

The Prime Minister’s Office asked reporters who accompanied Netanyahu to Chad not to publish the flight over South Sudan before his plane landed at Tel Aviv’s Ben-Gurion Airport, presumably for security reasons and to prevent last-minute efforts to change the mind of the Sudanese authorities.

Shortly after takeoff, the captain announced that this was a “historic flight,” and that thanks to the shortcut the return flight would be about one hour shorter than the trip’s first leg.

Earlier on Sunday, the prime minister’s plane took a long detour en route to Chad, flying south over the Red Sea and then across Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Central African Republic before entering Chadian airspace.

The flight path of Benjamin Netanyahu’s plane to Chad skirting Sudan, as seen on a screen inside Netanyahu’s plane, January 20, 2019. (Rraphael Ahren)

On the return flight, the El Al air craft flew from N’Djamena south to the Central African Republic but then turned eastward to cross over central South Sudan, from which it continued to Ethiopia and Eritrea to the Red Sea.

The flight path of Benjamin Netanyahu’s plane over South Sudan, as seen on a screen inside Netanyahu’s plane, January 20, 2019. (Rraphael Ahren)

Netanyahu had flown to Chad on Sunday to declare the resumption of diplomatic ties with the Muslim-majority country, together with Déby.

It was unclear whether Sudan’s decision to let Netanyahu’s jet fly over South Sudan was connected to Chad’s move Sunday. In November, Deby said during a visit to Israel in November that he would be willing to help Israel and Sudan negotiate forging ties.

Khartoum has said recently it was not changing its policy of forbidding Israeli planes from entering its airspace. Earlier this month, a Sudanese television station reported that Sudanese leader Omar al-Bashir had refused an request by a Kenyan airline to use its airspace for a flight to Tel Aviv.

However, Sunday’s unprecedented flight may indicate that Khartoum is willing to show flexibility regarding flyovers of third states under the control of civil aviation authority.

Netanyahu, who also serves as foreign minister, has in recent years pushed to open more flight paths to the Jewish state, including a direct route to India over Saudi Arabia and Oman.

Israeli and South American officials recently agreed to open a direct flight between Santiago and Israel, though the plane would still have to skirt Sudan, adding several hours to the time in the air.

Sudan has in recent years moved away from the geopolitical influence of Iran, which officials in the West have seen as an opportunity for a diplomatic breakthrough.

In the past, Sudan allegedly served as a way-station for the transfer of Iranian weapons to the Hamas terrorist group in Gaza. Israel has reportedly intercepted and destroyed transfers of weapons from Sudan bound for Gaza.

However, since it broke ties with Iran, Sudan is no longer perceived by Israel as a threat, but rather as a potential ally, amid a campaign by Netanyahu to forge open ties with more countries.

On Sunday, Israel added a record 160th country to the list of nations it has a relationship with, signing an agreement to resume bilateral ties with Chad.

Chad, a country of 15 million people, had severed ties in 1972 at the behest of Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi.

“We are making inroads into the Islamic world,” Netanyahu declared Sunday at N’Djamena’s presidential palace, minutes before he signed the formal document sealing the resumption of diplomatic relations.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (R) and Chadian President Idriss Deby meet at the presidential palace in N’Djamena, Chad, on January 20, 2019. (Kobi Gideon/GPO)

“We are making history and we are turning Israel into a rising global power.”

A few moments later, at a briefing for the traveling press, Netanyahu said that Jerusalem’s increasingly robust ties with the Arab world helps Israel break the ice with Muslim-majority states in Africa that do not have formal diplomatic relations with Israel.

“This visit first and foremost teaches us about our standing in the Arab world,” Netanyahu said. “Not only that there wasn’t any opposition, but also, I say this unofficially, there was some support.”

He declined to say which countries expressed support for Chad’s decision to establish ties with Israel nearly 50 years after they were severed.

 

Israel bombs Iranian targets near Damascus as border tensions rocket

Posted January 21, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: Israel bombs Iranian targets near Damascus as border tensions rocket | The Times of Israel

IDF warns Syria not to intervene, hours after regime fires missile at Israel in apparent retaliation for daylight attack near capital; army shutters Mount Hermon ski resort

An explosion, reportedly  during Israeli airstrikes near Damascus, on January 21, 2019. (screen capture: YouTube)

An explosion, reportedly during Israeli airstrikes near Damascus, on January 21, 2019. (screen capture: YouTube)

Israeli forces bombed targets belonging to Iran inside Syria early Monday morning, the Israel Defense Forces said in a statement, as tensions on the northern border continued to skyrocket.

The IDF said at 1:30 a.m. it was “striking Iranian Quds targets in Syrian territory,” and warned Syrian forces not to intervene.

“The IDF warns the Syrian Armed Forces against attempting to harm Israeli territory or forces,” the army said in an exceedingly rare statement.

The attack came less than a day after Israel reportedly carried out a rare daylight strike on targets near Damascus, sparking Syria to fire a retaliatory missile at Israel, and ratcheting up concerns of a wider confrontation between Israel and Iran in Syria.

Syria’s state-run SANA news outlet claimed Monday morning that its air defenses had shot down a number of “hostile targets.”

Videos posted online appeared to show Syrian air defense missiles being launched.

SANA claimed the strikes had come from the direction of Lebanese airspace and said explosion were heard near Damascus.

According to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor, the airstrikes tageted Iranian and Hezbollah warehouses at Damascus airport and other locations in the south and west of the capital.

The Quds Force is Iran’s expeditionary unit inside the powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, which Israel and others accuse of trying to gain a military foothold in Syria.

On Sunday, Syria shot a missile at Israeli territory, in apparent response to a rare daylight attack on targets in and around Damascus widely attributed to Israel.

Israel’s air defenses managed to down the surface to surface missile before it reached Israeli airspace over the Golan Heights, according to the military.

Signaling fears of a fresh attack on Israel, the army announced it would shutter the Mount Hermon ski resort on Monday. On Sunday, the popular site had remained open despite the missile attack nearby.

Embedded video

The cross-border fire comes less than a week after IDF Chief of Staff Aviv Kohavi took office.

The IDF announcement regarding the strike Monday morning attack was nearly unprecedented, after years of maintaining a policy of strategic ambiguity regarding its air campaign against Iran gaining a military foothold in Syria.

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other officials have seemingly become more open about Israel’s military efforts in Syria, even as the installation of more advanced Russian air defense systems and tensions with Moscow have complicated the campaign.

An Israeli army Merkava tank is loaded into a truck in the Golan Heights, on January 20, 2019. ( JALAA MAREY / AFP)

On Sunday Netanyahu appeared to confirm that Israel was behind the daylight strike while speaking to reporters in Chad.

“We have a permanent policy to hurt the Iranian entrenchment in Syria, and everyone who is trying to hurt us,” Netanyahu said. “This policy doesn’t change, whether I am in Israel or on a historic visit in Chad. It’s permanent.”

Local Syrian media said the targets of strike were in Damascus International Airport and in the town of al-Kiswah, south of the capital, both of which have been hit by Israeli attacks in the past. Last year, the Israeli military said bases near al-Kiswah were used by pro-Iranian militias. An Iranian weapons depot at the airport was targeted in an airstrike a week and a half ago, Israel said.

Israel typically refrains from commenting on individual airstrikes in Syria, but does generally acknowledge that it carries out raids against Iranian- and Hezbollah-linked targets in the country.

Israel in recent years has carried out hundreds of airstrikes in Syria against targets linked to Iran, which alongside its proxies and Russia is fighting on behalf of the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

Israel has accused Iran of seeking to establish a military presence in Syria that could threaten Israeli security and attempting to transfer advanced weaponry to the Hezbollah terror group in Lebanon.

 

Israeli strikes said to destroy Iranian, Hezbollah sites near Damascus

Posted January 21, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: Israeli strikes said to destroy Iranian, Hezbollah sites near Damascus | The Times of Israel

Bombings inflict heavy damage on weapons warehouses and military positions near airport and other areas, with casualties reported; Syria calls attack ‘heavy’

Illustrative: Flames rising after an attack in an area known to have numerous Syrian army military bases, in Kisweh, south of Damascus, released by Syria's official news agency on May 9, 2018. (SANA, via AP)

Illustrative: Flames rising after an attack in an area known to have numerous Syrian army military bases, in Kisweh, south of Damascus, released by Syria’s official news agency on May 9, 2018. (SANA, via AP)

Massive Israeli airstrikes on Syria destroyed weapons stores and military positions belonging to Iran and the Lebanese Hezbollah terror group, a war monitor said Monday.

The Israeli military said early Monday it was carrying out strikes against Iran’s Qud’s Forces, in a rare statement on its military activities in Syria.

“The Israeli missiles managed to destroy weapons depots and military posts of the Iranians and the Lebanese Hezbollah in the vicinity of Damascus International Airport and the area of Al-Kiswah and Jamraya,” the Britain-based Observatory for Human Rights said.

The monitor said there had been casualties and extensive damage, without providing details. A news site in the southern Syrian city of Suweida reported that eight soldiers had been brought to a local hospital with injuries sustained during the Israeli strikes, including two who died.

There was no immediate confirmation of casualties from Damascus. Syria’s state-run media described the attack as “heavy” and said Israel had launched “consecutive waves of guided missiles.” However, it claimed the majority of the missiles were shot down.

“Our air defenses responded effectively to an Israeli air attack targeting the southern region and prevented it from achieving any of its objectives,”SANA quoted a military source saying.

The airstrike was the second attack on the airport and al-Kiswah in as many days, after a rare daytime attack attributed to Israel on Sunday morning. Both locations have been attacked by Israel in the past and are thought to house Iranian or Hezbollah assets.

“Warehouses containing weapons for Syrian regime ally Hezbollah and Iranian fighters are located in that area,” Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor, said Sunday.

Israel has accused Iran of seeking to establish a military presence in Syria that could threaten Israeli security and attempting to transfer advanced weaponry to the Hezbollah terror group in Lebanon.

Last year, the Israeli military said bases near al-Kiswah were used by pro-Iranian militias. An Iranian weapons depot at the airport was targeted in an airstrike a week and a half ago, Israel said.

Jamraya, which has also allegedly been attacked by Israel in the ast, is thought to house a military facility and scientific research center.

A Google Earth view of a Syrian scientific facility in Jamraya, near Damascus, before it was allegedly struck by Israeli warplanes in late January. (photo credit: image capture from Google Earth)

A Google Earth view of a Syrian scientific facility in Jamraya, near Damascus, before it was allegedly struck by Israeli warplanes in late January 2013. (photo credit: image capture from Google Earth)

The Israeli attack Monday morning was widely seen as a response to a surface to surface missile fired at Israel Sunday, apparently in retaliation for the earlier airstrikes.

Israel intercepted the missile near the Mount Hermon ski resort, but on Monday said it would shut the site, apparently signaling fears violence could continue to escalate.

For years, Israel has conducted airstrikes against Iranian and Hezbollah targets in Syria, which it considers threats to national security. However, those attacks typically take place under the cover of darkness.

The strike appeared to be the first major attacks carried out by the Israel Defense Forces since Aviv Kohavi took over as chief of staff last week.

The alleged strike Sunday came hours after a Syrian cargo plane touched down in the Damascus International Airport from Tehran, according to publicly available flight data. Israel and American defense officials have said these types of ostensibly civilian cargo planes are often used to transport advanced weaponry from Tehran to pro-Iranian militias, fighting in Syria, including the Hezbollah terror group.

Satellite image allegedly showing damage to buildings at Damascus International Airport caused by a May 11 Israeli airstrike, released by ImageSat International, on May 13, 2018. (ImageSat International)

Another flight from Iran, flown by Tehran’s Mahan Air carrier, was en route to Syria on Sunday afternoon, but turned back following the reported Israeli strikes, according to flight data. Mahan Air has been identified by defense officials as one of the cargo carriers suspected of ferrying war materiel from Iran to Syria. As a result, it is subject to sanctions by the US Treasury Department.

 

Most extensive Israeli attack ever on Soleimani’s military resources in Syria – DEBKAfile

Posted January 21, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: Most extensive Israeli attack ever on Soleimani’s military resources in Syria – DEBKAfile

Early Monday, Jan 21, the IDF struck Iranian Al Qods forces, command centers and ammo dumps in Syria for 50 minutes in volleys of guided missiles from the air and the ground. Syrian and Russian sources reported that Syrian air defenses intercepted at least 29 Israeli missiles, coming from three directions – Lebanon and two northern Israeli regions of Galilee and the Kineret (Sea of Galilee).

The IDF called this its most extensive operation ever against Iranian Al Qods chief Qassem Soleimani’s forces in Syria and issued a statement warning the Syrian army not to retaliate against Israeli territory, citizens or military forces. The Mt Hermon area and ski sites were placed off-limits to civilians as of Monday. Before midnight, a series of explosions were heard across Damascus.

DEBKAfile’s military sources add: The earlier attack by four Israeli Air Force fighter jets on a target south of Damascus international airport during the day on Sunday was clearly the signal for a broader Israeli clash with Russia and Syria over the continued IDF offensive for evicting the Iranian military presence from Syria.
The Israeli military had five incentives to go forward:

  1. This first IAF air raid failed to connect to target.
  2. Syrian aid defense responses to the Israeli raid were closely synchronized with the Russian Khmeimim Airbase in Latakia and the Russian national air defense coordination center at Air Force HQ n Moscow.
  3. Israel’s Prime Minister and Defense Minister and newly-appointed IDF Chief of Staff were faced with a tough decision over whether to climb down on its campaign against Iran after being warned off by Russia against attacking Damascus or its airport.
  4. The IDF decided it could afford to let Lt. Gen. Aviv Kochavi’s first operation as IDF chief of staff be a flop.
  5. The Syrian ground missile fired into Israel and intercepted by its Iron Dome defense battery over northern Golan could not go unanswered, especially when it was not the first. A Syrian missile flew over central Israel on Dec. 26. The assumption at the time was that an Israeli posture of non-response would result in expanding Syrian ground missile volleys with Russian backing for every Israeli air strike over Syria.
    Therefore, Sunday night, Israel took up the challenge, threw the gauntlet down for Moscow, Tehran and Damascus, and turned its back on Moscow’s warning to stay out of Damascus’ skies. Urgent conferences are no doubt taking place in and between the three capitals on their next steps.

 

PM Netanyahu and Chad President Deby joint statements 

Posted January 20, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

 

 

Report: Syrian air defense repels Israeli attack in south

Posted January 20, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: Report: Syrian air defense repels Israeli attack in south

Source tells state news agency: ‘Our air defence systems thwarted an Israeli air aggression and prevented it from achieving any of its goals’; meanwhile, Iron Dome intercepts a rocket fired at Golan Heights.
Syrian defense systems thwarted an Israeli air attack on Sunday in the south of the country, state media said, citing a military source. Short time later, a rocket fired at the northern Golan Heights had been intercepted by the Iron Dome aerial defense system over Syrian territory, said the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit.”Our air defense systems thwarted… an Israeli air aggression …and prevented it from achieving any of its goals,” the Syrian source told state news agency SANA. An Israeli military spokeswoman declined to comment.

Russia’s National Defense Control Centre said the attack was carried out by four Israeli jets and targeted an airport in southeastern Damascus, RIA news agency reported. There were no victims and the airport was undamaged in the attack, RIA cited the centre as saying.

The smoke trails of Iron Dome interceptor were clearly seen over the Mount Hermon ski resort that opened its doors to tourists earlier on Sunday. Although the site was not evacuated following the rocket attack, heavy military presence was reported in the area following the events. The new IDF Chief of Staff Aviv Kochavi was also making his way to the northern border immediately after the incident.

The Al Quds Al Arabi newspaper reported on Friday that Russia had conveyed to Israel its intent to renovate Damascus International Airport and warned the Israeli government against striking targets, believed to be Iranian arms depots, in the airport’s proximity. According to the report, the Israel Air Force attacks prevent various Russian airlines from resuming their operations in the region.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confirmed last week in a rare admission that the Israel Air Force struck Iranian targets in Syria last weekend, following Syrian reports of successful interceptions over Damascus.

The prime minister said that “in the past 36 hours,” the IAF hit Iranian arms depots near Damascus airport. “The wave of recent attacks proves that we are determined more than ever to act against Iran in Syria,” he told the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem.

Iron Dome intercepts rockets over Mount Hermon (Photo: Attila Somfalvi)

Iron Dome intercepts rockets over Mount Hermon (Photo: Attila Somfalvi)

Netanyahu also said that the IAF has hit “hundreds” of targets belonging to Iran and its proxy Hezbollah in Syria since the start of Israel’s campaign to thwart Iranian military entrenchment in the region.

The prime minister’s statement came after Syria’s state-run news agency SANA said the country’s air defenses intercepted missiles fired by Israeli fighter jets last Friday night. The attacks reportedly caused damage but no casualties. SANA reported that “over eight targets” exploded over the capital, adding that most of the Israeli missiles had been intercepted.

IAF strike in Syria

IAF strike in Syria

An ammunition warehouse at the Damascus airport was reportedly hit, but a Syrian Transport Ministry official said to SANA airport activity continues as normal.

“At 11:15 before midnight Israeli warplanes coming from Al-Jalil area launched many missiles towards Damascus area and our air defenses intercepted them and downed most of them,” a Syrian military source told SANA.

Syrian state media broadcast footage of what it said were the air defenses firing, with bright lights seen shooting across the night sky. Explosions were heard in one of the videos.

 

Report: Hamas threatens Gaza escalation as Qatari money transfer delayed 

Posted January 20, 2019 by Joseph Wouk
Categories: Uncategorized

Source: Report: Hamas threatens Gaza escalation as Qatari money transfer delayed – Breaking News – Jerusalem Post

The terrorist organization also demanded that the fishing area be expanded and to stop the blockade prohibiting goods into Gaza.

BY YVETTE J. DEANE
 JANUARY 20, 2019 07:53
Qatari Ambassador to Gaza Mohammed al-Emadileaves following a press conference in Gaza

Hamas threatened Israel through western and regional mediators on Sunday because of the delay of the Qatari money transfer, according to Hadashot News.

“If Israel does not transfer the Qatari money, Hamas will escalate the situation on the ground,” a report from Asharq Al-Awsat, an Arabic international newspaper located in London, quoted Hamas as saying. The terrorist organization also demanded that the fishing area be expanded and the blockade on prohibiting goods into Gaza be stopped.

After delaying the third installment of the $15 million, the payment was scheduled to be delivered to Hamas on Sunday or Monday.

Former defense minister and chairman of the Yisrael Beytenu party MK Avigdor Liberman bashed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for leaving to Chad as the Qatari money is scheduled to be transferred to Hamas.

“Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu went tonight for an important political visit to Chad. And who comes in his place? The Qatari envoy, who brings in an additional $15 million in cash earmarked for Hamas,” Liberman said. “This is the continuation of the process of surrendering to terrorists and Hamas, and no political visit to Africa can cover that up.

“The government of Israel must stop the transfer of Qatari money, fuel and any additional equipment to Gaza and make sure every concession to Gaza is only in return for the release of our soldiers and citizens who are held by Hamas!”