Business Day

Israeli missiles bring down Syrian plane

• Two Patriot missiles launched at Sukhoi warplane in area where internal fighting in Syria has increased

- Agency Staff Jerusalem /AFP

Israel shot down a Syrian fighter jet with surface-to-air missiles on Tuesday after the plane infiltrate­d its airspace, the military said. Israel signalled that the plane’s infiltrati­on may have been the result of internal fighting in Syria’s civil war, but stressed it will enforce the ceasefire lines between the two countries.

Israel shot down a Syrian fighter jet with surface-to-air missiles on Tuesday after the plane infiltrate­d its airspace, the military said, in a rare incident that could provoke tension.

Israel signalled the plane’s infiltrati­on may have been the result of fighting in Syria’s civil war but stressed it will enforce the ceasefire lines between the two countries.

“A short while ago, two Patriot missiles were launched at a Syrian Sukhoi fighter jet that infiltrate­d into Israeli airspace,” the Israel Defence Forces said in a statement, adding that it monitored the advance of the fighter jet about 2km into Israeli airspace. “It was then intercepte­d by the Patriot missiles.”

A Syrian military source confirmed that Israel had fired at one of its warplanes but said the fighter jet had been carrying out operations against jihadists over Syrian territory.

Israel “targeted one of our warplanes ... in Syrian airspace”, the source said, cited by state news agency Sana.

It is the first time Israel has shot down a manned Syrian fighter jet since 2014.

An AFP correspond­ent said flames and smoke could be seen rising from the area of the fence between Syria and the Israeliocc­upied Golan Heights.

The army said there had been an increase in “internal fighting in Syria”, including involving the air force, since the morning hours. It said it was on “high alert and will continue to operate against the breach” of a 1974 ceasefire agreement between the two countries.

Israel has been stressing for weeks that it would enforce the ceasefire between it and Syria amid a Russian-backed government offensive in Syria’s south.

Tuesday’s incident comes a day after Israel’s air defences fired at Syrian rockets it feared could hit its territory.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Jerusalem on Monday to discuss the Syrian conflict.

Israel has been on high alert since June 19, when Syrian government forces launched the Russia-backed offensive to retake Quneitra and Daraa and provinces adjacent to the Israelihel­d section of the Golan and to Jordan, respective­ly.

Israel has sought to avoid direct involvemen­t in Syria’s seven-year civil war but it has acknowledg­ed carrying out dozens of air strikes there to stop what it says are advanced weapons deliveries to Hezbollah, one of its enemies.

It has also pledged to prevent its arch-enemy, Iran, from entrenchin­g itself militarily in the neighbouri­ng country.

A series of air strikes that have killed Iranians in Syria have been attributed to Israel in recent weeks.

The strikes have led to condemnati­on from Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime, but Israel has maintained good relations with Russia and has co-ordinated its actions in Syria with Moscow.

Both Russia and Iran are backing Assad in the civil war.

In Monday’s meeting between Lavrov and Netanyahu, Russia offered to keep Iranian forces 100km away from the Israeli-occupied Golan, but Israel said the proposal did not go far enough.

“We won’t accept Iranian military entrenchme­nt in Syria, not near the border, not beyond the 100km stretch, which by the way the Russians talk about and agree to,” a senior Israeli official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. “We said there are also long-range weapons beyond that distance, and all the forces must leave Syria,” the officer added.

Israel seized 1,200km² of the Golan Heights from Syria in the 1967 Six Day war, in a move that was never recognised internatio­nally.

 ?? /AFP ?? No end in sight: A picture taken on Monday from the Israeliann­exed Golan Heights shows a smoke plume rising during air strikes backing a Syrian government­led offensive in the southweste­rn province of Daraa.
/AFP No end in sight: A picture taken on Monday from the Israeliann­exed Golan Heights shows a smoke plume rising during air strikes backing a Syrian government­led offensive in the southweste­rn province of Daraa.

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