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Syria accuses Israel of strike near Damascus airport
By Maher Al Mounes with Rana Moussaoui in Beirut
Damascus (AFP) April 27, 2017


Israel raids on Syria since 2013
Beirut April 27, 2017 - A huge blast near Damascus airport early Thursday was the result of Israeli missile strikes, Syrian state news agency SANA said. Israel is believed to have carried out many such raids since the Syrian conflict erupted six years ago, mostly targeting its Lebanese arch-foe Hezbollah, a key regime ally. Here is a recap of notable strikes: - 2013 - - January 30: Israeli planes hit a surface-to-air missile site and military complex near Damascus suspected of holding chemical agents. A US official says Israel feared the transfer of weapons from Syria to Hezbollah. - May 3: A raid near Damascus targets Iranian weapons destined for Hezbollah, a senior Israeli official says. - May 5: A raid hits a scientific research centre in Damascus, a weapons depot and an aircraft unit, according to a diplomat in Beirut. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says 42 soldiers are killed. - 2014 - - June 23: Israel stages retaliatory air raids on Syrian army positions following an attack from Syria. - September 23: Israel downs a Syrian fighter jet as it tries to cross the Golan ceasefire line. - December 7: Syria's army accuses Israel of striking two regime-held areas in Damascus province. - 2015 - - January 18: Six Hezbollah fighters and an Iranian general are killed in an Israeli strike on the Syrian side of the Golan. Hezbollah retaliates several days later by killing two Israeli soldiers. - July 29: An air strike on a government-held village on the Syrian side of the Golan kills two Hezbollah militants and three pro-regime fighters, the Observatory says. - August 20: Israel launches strikes on 14 Syrian army positions on the Golan in response to rockets fired on Israel's northern Galilee region. One person is killed, the Syrian military says. - August 21: An Israeli strike on the Syrian side of the Golan kills five, Syrian state television says. - December 19: Hezbollah figure Samir Kantar dies in an Israeli raid near Damascus, the group says later. Kantar had spent almost 30 years in Israeli prisons. - 2016 - - April 11: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu admits that Israel has attacked dozens of weapons convoys in Syria that were destined for Hezbollah. - September 13: Israeli aircraft strike Syrian army positions for the fourth time in nine days after a projectile fired from Syria hits the Israeli-held zone of the Golan. Israel denies a Syrian claim to have downed an Israeli warplane and a drone. - December 7: Several Israeli missiles smash targets near the Mazzeh airbase outside Damascus. - 2017 - - January 13: The Syrian army says Israeli missile strikes have again targeted the Mazzeh base, where air force intelligence services are based. - March 17: Syria's military says it downed an Israeli plane near the famed desert city of Palmyra. Israel denies any planes were struck. Israeli media say the Arrow air defence system intercepted a missile north of Jerusalem. - April 23: An Israeli attack on a Syrian training camp near the Golan Heights kills three members of the pro-government National Defence Forces, the militia says. - April 27: A huge explosion sends a fireball into the pre-dawn sky near Damascus airport. Syrian state media says several Israeli missiles caused material damage. No casualties are reported.

Syria accused Israel of firing several missiles Thursday at a military position near Damascus airport, triggering a huge explosion and prompting a call from regime ally Russia for restraint.

The Israeli military later said it shot down "a target" over the occupied Golan Heights neighbouring Syria, although it was unclear whether the two incidents were linked.

Israel has carried out multiple air strikes in Syria since the country's civil war erupted in 2011, most of which it has said targeted arms convoys or warehouses of its Lebanese arch-foe Hezbollah, which is a key supporter of the Syrian regime.

In line with its usual practice, Israel's military declined to comment on the airport blast.

But Israeli Intelligence Minister Yisrael Katz said it was consistent with his government's policy to prevent arms transfers to Hezbollah, while stopping short of confirming his country was behind any attack.

Syria's state news agency SANA said several Israeli missiles hit near the airport causing material damage.

"A military position southwest of Damascus International Airport was targeted at dawn today by an Israeli aggression using several missiles fired from occupied territory, sparking explosions in the area," SANA said, citing a military source.

The source did not specify whether the military position belonged to the Syrian army or one its allies.

- 'Huge fireball' -

Earlier, Hezbollah said the blast was "probably" the result of an Israeli air strike.

The militia's Al-Manar television said the raid hit a warehouse and fuel tanks, also without specifying whether they were its own or belonged to the Syrian army or another of its allies.

Al-Manar said preliminary reports suggested the blast caused only material damage and no casualties.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring group, said the warehouse was largely empty and "probably" Hezbollah's.

A resident of the Dawwar al-Baytara neighbourhood in the southeast of the capital, who lives in a tower block that looks towards the airport area, said he had seen an immense fireball.

"Around 4:00 am (0100 GMT), I heard an enormous explosion," Maytham, 47, told AFP. "I ran to the balcony and looking towards the south, in the direction of the airport, I saw a huge fireball."

- Kremlin calls for restraint -

The Kremlin called for restraint and Russia's foreign ministry condemned the attack.

"We continue to consider that all countries need to refrain from any kind of actions that lead to an increase in tension in this already restive region and call for respect of the sovereignty of Syria," said Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov.

Peskov did not confirm if Israel had warned Moscow of the strike, saying only their defence ministries "are in constant dialogue".

Foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova later said: "Gross violations of Syrian sovereignty -- no matter how they are justified -- are unacceptable."

President Bashar al-Assad, quoted on Thursday by SANA, said Damascus was negotiating with Moscow to buy the latest anti-missile system to repel Israeli and American attacks.

"It is natural for us to negotiate with the Russians now with a view to strengthening (our) systems, whether to face any Israeli threats from the air or the threats of American missiles," he said.

The US military fired 59 Tomahawk missiles at a Syrian air base overnight on April 6-7 following a suspected chemical attack on a rebel-held town in Idlib province that left 87 dead, including many children.

In Israel, the army said Thursday its "Patriot Aerial Defence System intercepted a target above the Golan Heights", without elaborating.

A military spokeswoman refused to comment on Israeli media reports that the object was a drone.

Israeli warplanes have hit Damascus airport and other bases around the Syrian capital in the past, targeting what it said were weapons stockpiles destined for Hezbollah.

The airport, about 25 kilometres (15 miles) southeast of the city centre, was hit by Israeli air strikes in December 2014, Syrian state media reported at the time.

Israel does not usually confirm or deny each individual raid it carries out.

But last month, it said it had conducted several strikes near the Syrian desert city of Palmyra, targeting what it said were "advanced weapons" belonging to Hezbollah.

The strikes prompted Syria to launch ground-to-air missiles, one of which was intercepted over Israeli territory in the most serious flare-up between the two neighbours since the Syrian civil war began six years ago.

On January 13, Syria accused Israel of bombing Mazzeh airbase in the western suburbs of the capital. There were several strikes near the same base last year.

Israel and Syria are still technically at war, though the armistice line on the Golan Heights had remained largely quiet for decades until the Syrian conflict began.

Kremlin urges restraint after alleged Israeli strikes on Syria
Moscow (AFP) April 27, 2017 - The Kremlin on Thursday called for restraint after Syria accused Israel of firing several missiles at a military position near Damascus airport.

"We continue to consider that all countries need to refrain from any kind of actions that lead to an increase in tension in this already restive region and call for respect of the sovereignty of Syria," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.

Russia, which has deployed its forces to back up the Syrian regime, has a hotline set up to avoid clashes with Israeli jets in the skies over the war-torn country.

Peskov did not confirm if Israel had warned Moscow of the strike, saying only that the two nations' "defence ministries are in constant dialogue".

Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova later went further than the Kremlin and slammed the alleged Israeli strikes.

"Gross violations of Syrian sovereignty -- no matter how they are justified -- are unacceptable," she said in a televised briefing.

"Moscow condemns acts of aggression against Syria."

In line with its usual practice, Israel's military declined to comment on the latest blast, which saw a huge explosion near Damascus.

Israel has carried out multiple air strikes in Syria since the country's civil war erupted in 2011, most of which it has said targeted arms convoys or warehouses of its Lebanese arch-foe Hezbollah, which is a close ally of the Syrian regime.

Israeli Intelligence Minister Yisrael Katz said it was consistent with his government's policy to prevent arms transfers to Hezbollah, but stopped short of confirming his country was behind any attack.

WAR REPORT
Iraq forces retake town of Hatra southwest of Mosul
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