Israeli Strikes on Hizbullah in Syria Pick Up Tempo in Proxy War

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Syria's military said Israel struck a military installation southwest of Damascus International Airport before dawn Thursday, setting off a series of explosions and raising tensions further between the two neighbors.

Apparently seeking to interrupt weapons transfers to Hizbullah in Lebanon, Israel has struck inside Syria with increasing frequency in recent weeks, making the war-torn country a proxy theater for Israel's wider war with Iran.

The increasing tempo of attacks risks inflaming a highly combustible situation drawing in Israel, Syria and the Iranian-backed Hizbullah, a staunch ally of President Bashar Assad's government with thousands of fighters in Syria. Israel's military said later Thursday that its Patriot Missile Defense system intercepted an incoming projectile from Syria over the Golan Heights.

An Israeli defense official said the Patriot hit a drone, and the military is checking if it was a Russian aircraft that entered the Israeli side by mistake or if it was Syrian. He spoke on condition of anonymity in line with protocol.

Both the Syrian government and Hizbullah, however, are mired in the country's 6-year-old civil war and are unlikely to carry out any retaliation that may ignite a bigger conflagration with Israel.

"Iran and Hizbullah are overstretched, and it's not clear they can afford to gamble with a direct showdown with Israel now," said Maha Yahya, director of the Carnegie Middle East Center. "Iran knows no matter how powerful they've become, they can't be fighting on two fronts at the same time."

Israeli Minister of Intelligence Yisrael Katz would not comment directly on the incident but said any similar strike would be in line with established policy to interrupt weapons transfers.

"It absolutely matches our declared policy, a policy that we also implement," Katz told Israel's Army Radio.

Just before the apparent Israeli missile strike, at least three cargo jets from Iran probably landed at the Damascus airport, said Ian Petchenik, a spokesman for the flight-tracking website FlightRadar24. They include an Il-76 flown by the Iranian cargo company Pouya Air that "was last tracked over Iraq headed towards Damascus," he said.

It's unknown what they were carrying. Passenger flights and civilian cargo jets continue flying into Damascus, although there's suspicion that some commercial flights serve as cover for weapons transfers from Iran.

The Washington-based Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a right-leaning think tank that has criticized the nuclear deal Iran struck with world powers, has said Pouya Air is the latest name for a long-sanctioned airline. It also has accused Pouya Air of funneling arms from Iran into Yemen's capital of Sanaa to supply Shiite rebels there.

Emanuele Ottolenghi, a senior fellow at the foundation, said he tracked a fourth cargo flight from Iran to Syria on Wednesday night, an Airbus A300 operated by Mahan Air, which is suspected of ties to Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard. He also called one of the cargo flights, a Qeshm Fars Air Boeing 747, especially suspicious because the airline stopped operating in 2013, only to resume flights to Damascus three weeks ago.

"We don't know for sure, but let's say that we can fairly safely assume that the weaponry and fighters reach Damascus through these daily flights," Ottolenghi told The Associated Press.

The explosions near Damascus reverberated across the capital, seat of Assad's power.

Syria's state-run SANA news agency said Israel had fired several missiles from inside the occupied Golan Heights, 60 kilometers (37 miles) south of Damascus, striking a military installation southwest of the airport that serves both military and civilian flights. It reported damage but no casualties.

"The buildings shook from the force of the blast," said a media activist who goes by Salam al-Ghoutawi of the Ghouta Media Center in the opposition-held northeastern suburbs, about 15 kilometers (9 miles) from the airport. He said he heard the roar of jets in the distance.

Explosions were silhouetted against the night sky in a video published by the center. Debris was seen flying out as the explosions illuminated a sizable cloud nearby.

Hizbullah's al-Manar television reported a blast at fuel tanks and a warehouse next to the airport, which is 25 kilometers (16 miles) east of central Damascus.

The Syrian military said in a statement the attack sought to "raise the morale of terrorist groups" the government maintains are fighting Assad's forces. It made no mention of whether it would respond.

Israel is widely believed to have carried out airstrikes in recent years on advanced weapons systems in Syria — including Russian-made anti-aircraft missiles and Iranian-made missiles — as well as on Hizbullah positions. It rarely comments on such operations.

Last month, Syria fired missiles at Israeli jets after they struck targets in Syria, in a rare military exchange between the two adversaries.

Hizbullah is an avowed enemy of Israel, and the two sides fought a monthlong war in 2006. Tensions between them along the Lebanon-Israel border have risen in recent weeks, with each side warning of a much more serious confrontation. Some Israeli officials have also recently been threatening grave damage to the Lebanese civilian infrastructure in case of a new conflict with Hizbullah, apparently in hopes the country can somehow rein in the group.

Yahya, the analyst, said Israel is increasingly worried about the potential arsenal that Hizbullah could acquire and the weapons already available in Syria.

"Most likely they see a window of opportunity where their intervention can degrade Hizbullah's military power," she said.

The conflict in Syria, which pits Assad and his regional allies against local and foreign opposition forces, has killed more than 400,000 people since it began in 2011. The civil war is further complicated by militant factions such as al-Qaida's affiliate in Syria and the even more powerful Islamic State group, which in 2014 seized a large chunk of territory but lately has been losing ground in the face of a campaign by a U.S.-led international coalition.

Russia, another key Assad ally, denounced what it called an act of "aggression" against Syria. Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova did not directly blame Israel for Thursday's explosion, but she cited Syrian media as saying Israel was responsible.

Comments 17
Thumb i.report almost 7 years

What Israel did here —sadly– was for the greater good. The fewer the weapons in Syria, the earlier the war will end and if it prevented weapons from reaching hezbollah then we -unfortunately- owe them a thank-you.

Thumb Mystic almost 7 years

Good to See you thanking Israel. Please do it in Lebanese public too.

Thumb Southern...... almost 7 years

@i.report, once he called himself terrorist, he is a coward a resentful tiny individual who belonged to the Muslem Brotherhood, but later due to his strong wahhabi commitment, he joined ISIS terrorists, now he earns for living spewing sectarian incitments... when he back to his cave they recieve him with pats on the back while he jumps joyfully like chimpanzee, this beside the few shekels he earns.

Thumb justin almost 7 years

Southern, I know you are part of hezbollah. As ex-fpm and texas said why do you think Israel did not bomb hezbollah's military parade in qusair but it bombs hezbollah's arms depots in damascus?

Thumb Southern...... almost 7 years

since you know that i'm part of hezbollah, then you must know the reason why Israel attacks it and why not.

Missing peace almost 7 years

conclusion justin: it makes southern brain bug... he doesn't understand a thing LOL

Thumb Southern...... almost 7 years

sure! because i don't belong to sick people like texas or you!

Thumb Southern...... almost 7 years

btw, understanding irony is a quality that you lack of.

Thumb galaxy almost 7 years

i tell you why southern......

Israel is happy to see hezbollah use those antiquated tanks being used against syrian and lebanese civilians and in support of the assad regime knowing they pose zero threat to israel's security. Israel knows as much as your terrorist leader knows these tanks will never see a day or even an hour in any future battles against israel because they will be wiped out as soon as they turn their rusty engines on.

Thumb i.report almost 7 years

Southern Le parano,complètement timbré.... you see me everywhere, am I some kind of prophet or God to you? I'm flattered. I hope you also see me in your worst nightmares mdr!

Thumb i.report almost 7 years

The way you put is totally credible, but why do they spare their men? They probably do because they know they radicalise their entourage in Lebanon and hope to Iranise the country so it implodes.... which would be just perfect for Israel.

Thumb i.report almost 7 years

Anonymoustexas, you wrote «Israel has Sisi in Egypt, the King of Jordan in Jordan, Assad in Syria, and now Nassrallah in Lebanon. »

There's a huge difference between the first names and the last one. The last one isn't as strong as you claim to be!!! He's a poule mouillée who lives in hiding like Ossama BenLaden . He's not our strong man at all, He parasites our country, he doesn't lead it. He never built anything, he destroys everything he touches and it also includes Lebanon's social fabric and economy. He has nothing of a country leader but everything of a terroriste ringleader.

Thumb gigahabib almost 7 years

Lol, one day the great minds here claim Israel and Syria are "secret allies", the other day they claim Israel's bombing of Syria is for "the greater good". You can't have it both ways.

Thumb ex-fpm almost 7 years

Many of us questioned why Israel did not bomb the iranian hezbollah's military parade in Qusayr yet they know of the contents of every box stored in hezbollah depots in Syria.

Thumb i.report almost 7 years

Excellent point! Why are they sparing their men, especially men they consider terroristes of the worst kind? Because they are collaborating! Iran never fired a bullet at Israel since its creation in 1948.

Thumb thepatriot almost 7 years

ex-fpm... I am sure they had the thumb on the trigger and weighted their options on this one... they took the wrong decision alas!

Thumb gigahabib almost 7 years

Lol, so many bad explanations, so little time.

If Israel killed Assad, you would claim it was to hide their alliance even better.