Israeli strikes in Syria kill 8 pro-Iran fighters
 
 
Israeli air strikes in Syria overnight killed at
least eight fighters operating in pro-Iran militias, a war monitoring group
said Wednesday.
The strikes near the capital Damascus targeted an
arms depot and a position held by Iranian forces and their Lebanese ally
Hezbollah, but the nationalities of the dead fighters was not immediately know,
the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
The Syrian army said early Wednesday that Israel
launched air strikes on an area in the southern outskirts of Damascus, where
military defectors believe has a strong Iranian military presence in the second
such attack within a week.
The Israeli aerial strike on a strategic area that
Israel had hit in the past came from the occupied Golan Heights and caused only
material damages, the army statement said.
Military defectors said the strike targeted an
military base in Jabal Mane Heights near the town of Kiswa, where Iranian
Revolutionary Guards have long been entrenched in a rugged area almost 15 km
(9.3 miles) south of the center of Damascus.
Strikes that occurred in July also hit towns near
Kiswa, where Lebanese pro-Iranian Hezbollah militia are deployed with other
pro-Tehran militias in strength, according to a senior army defector.
The area has anti-aircraft missiles that are
stationed to defend the Syrian Golan Heights along the border with Israel, the
military sources said.
“We don’t comment on these kind of news reports,” an
Israeli military spokesman told Reuters.
The aerial strikes hit a territory, which is
situated in a zone that extends from the southern countryside of Damascus to
the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights where the growing Iranian presence is viewed
as a strategic threat by Israel.
The Syrian army statement said the Israeli aerial
strike came from the occupied Golan Heights and caused only material damages.
Israel launched air raids against what it called a
wide range of Syrian and Iranian targets in Syria last Wednesday, sending a
signal that it will pursue its policy of striking across the border despite
U.S. President Donald Trump’s election defeat.
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s government has
never publicly acknowledged that there are Iranian forces operating on his
behalf in Syria’s civil war, saying Tehran only has military advisers on the
ground.
Western intelligence sources say Israel’s stepped-up
strikes on Syria in the last few months are a part of a shadow war, approved by
Washington and part of the anti-Iran policy that has undermined in the last two
years Iran’s extensive military power without triggering a major increase in hostilities.
Israeli defense officials have said in recent months
that Israel would step up its campaign against Iran in Syria, where Tehran has
expanded its presence with the help of its proxy militias.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


