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Israeli warplanes strike Iran-linked targets in Syria, killing 3 troops

Israeli soldiers in the Golan Heights in 2018
Israeli soldiers alongside Merkava tanks near the Israeli-Syrian border in the Golan Heights in 2018.
(Lior Mizrahi / Getty Images)
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Israeli warplanes struck Iran-linked targets in Syria overnight after troops uncovered roadside bombs along the frontier in the Golan Heights, the Israeli military said Wednesday. Syrian state media said the strikes killed three Syrian soldiers.

A Syrian war-monitoring group said the strikes killed 10, including the three soldiers and at least five Iranians. The report could not be independently verified, and there was no immediate comment from Iran.

Israel has launched hundreds of strikes against Iran-linked military targets in Syria over the years but rarely acknowledges or discusses such operations. This time, the military appeared keen to publicize the placement of the bombs and its retaliatory strikes.

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That may partly reflect Israel’s concerns that President-elect Joe Biden will adopt a more conciliatory approach toward Iran. Biden has said he hopes to return the U.S. to Iran’s 2015 nuclear agreement with world powers, to which Israel was staunchly opposed.

Israel’s shadow war against Iran and its allies has escalated in recent months, with cyberattacks and occasional exchanges of fire with militants in Syria and Lebanon. Also, Israel and the U.S. worked together to kill a senior Al Qaeda operative in Iran earlier this year.

The Israeli military said the anti-personnel mines had been placed near one of its positions in the Golan Heights by a “Syrian squad led by Iranian forces.” It said a similar incident happened in the same area in August, which also prompted strikes on Syria.

Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guard has vowed that there will be dangerous consequences for the United Arab Emirates after it announced a historic deal with Israel to open up full diplomatic relations.

Aug. 15, 2020

Israel said the latest strikes targeted sites belonging to Iran’s elite Quds Force and the Syrian military, including “storage facilities, headquarters and military compounds,” as well as Syrian anti-aircraft missile batteries.

“It is apparent that the message that we wanted to convey last time wasn’t clear enough, not to the Iranians and not to the Syrian regime,” Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus, an Israeli military spokesman, said. “We hope now that the message is clear.”

Conricus said the strikes targeted the Iranian military headquarters in Syria at the Damascus airport, a secret facility that hosts visiting Iranian military officers and the Syrian army’s 7th Division, which oversees the Syrian side of the Golan Heights. He added that Iran’s Quds Force is embedded with the 7th Division.

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Syrian state media quoted an unnamed military official as saying the strikes killed three soldiers, wounded a fourth and caused material damage. The report added that Syrian air defenses shot down some of the Israeli missiles before they hit their targets.

The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the strikes hit an air-defense center, posts and ammunition warehouses for Iran-allied militias in and around the Damascus airport, as well as other targets to the south of the capital.

The group said a total of 10 people were killed, including at least five Iranians believed to be affiliated with the Quds Force.

Israel views Iran as its greatest threat and says it will not tolerate the establishment of a permanent Iranian military presence in Syria, especially near its borders. Iran is a key ally of Syrian President Bashar Assad in the country’s civil war and has dispatched military advisors and militias to aid his forces.

Israel seized the Golan Heights from Syria in the 1967 Middle East War and later annexed it in a move that is not internationally recognized.

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