Nelson Mail

War fears as Israel strikes back

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Israel and Iran lurched closer to all-out war yesterday after the Israeli military claimed it struck ‘‘almost all’’ of Iran’s bases in Syria in response to what it said was an Iranian rocket barrage fired at the Golan Heights.

The exchange of fire was the most direct confrontat­ion between the two Middle East rivals after years of standoff in Syria and came one day after Donald Trump pulled the United States out of the Iran nuclear agreement and reimposed sanctions on the regime.

Israel carried out its largest wave of air strikes in Syria since the 1973 war, hitting around 70 Iranian military bases, supply depots and intelligen­ce sites, as well as Syrian regime air-defence batteries, its military said.

‘‘We . . . struck almost all the Iranian infrastruc­ture in Syria, and they need to remember this arrogance of theirs,’’ said Avigdor Lieberman, the Israeli defence minister. ‘‘If we get rain, they’ll get a flood.’’

The attacks were in response to a barrage of 20 rockets that Israel said were fired by Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard towards the Golan, a mountainou­s region that Israel annexed from Syria after capturing it in 1967.

There were no casualties on the Israeli side. The country’s military said its Iron Dome missile defence system intercepte­d four of the rockets just after midnight yesterday, while the other 16 fell harmlessly in Syrian territory.

At least 23 people were killed by the Israeli strikes, according to the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights. It was not clear how many of the dead were Iranians. Iran has neither confirmed nor denied that it was responsibl­e for launching the attacks.

Israel has said repeatedly it would not allow Iran to build up a permanent military presence in Syria and was prepared to go to war to stop it. ‘‘Whoever hurts us, we will hurt him sevenfold. Whoever tries to hurt us, we will act to hurt him beforehand,’’ said Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister.

Tensions between the two sides have risen sharply since April 9, when a suspected Israeli strike on the T4 airbase in central Syria killed at least seven Iranians. Iran vowed revenge and Israel has been warning for weeks that it was expecting an Iranian attack.

Britain and the US were quick to issue messages of support for Israel and condemnati­on of Iran. ‘‘The United Kingdom condemns in the strongest terms the Iranian rocket attacks against Israeli forces,’’ said Boris Johnson, the Foreign Secretary. ‘‘We strongly support Israel’s right to defend itself.’’

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Theresa at a military parade in Moscow.

While Israel has scored tactical military victories over Iran in Syria, it has struggled with a broader diplomatic campaign to convince world powers to clamp down on Tehran. Netanyahu travels regularly to Moscow but his diplomatic efforts have so far yielded few visible results. Israel is also likely to have been emboldened by the arrival in the Trump administra­tion of John Bolton, the new national security adviser, and Mike Pompeo, the secretary of state, who take a much more hawkish approach to Iran than their predecesso­rs.

Meanwhile, Bahrain voiced support for Israel’s strikes, in an unusual example of an Arab state publicly applauding Israel for dropping bombs on the territory of a fellow Arab state. – Telegraph Group

 ?? AP ?? Israeli missiles hit air defence positions and other military bases in Damascus, Syria.
AP Israeli missiles hit air defence positions and other military bases in Damascus, Syria.
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