The Scotsman

Iraeli air raid ‘targets Syrian chemical weapons bases’

- By BASSEM MROUE

Israeli warplanes have struck a military position near the Mediterran­ean coast in western Syria, killing two soldiers and causing material damage, the Syrian army said.

The strike targeted a facility near the town of Masyaf that some said was tied to Syria’s chemical weapons programme, in a stronghold of President Bashar Assad that is also heavily protected by the Russians.

The Syrian army said the Israeli jets fired several missiles while in Lebanese air space, and warned of the “dangerous repercussi­ons of such hostile acts on the security and stability of the region”.

There was no immediate comment from Israel, which has rarely confirmed such strikes.

While largely staying out of the Syrian civil war, Israel has carried out a number of air strikes against suspected arms shipments believed to be bound for Lebanon’s Hezbollah militant group, which is fighting alongside Assad’s forces.

Israel has also struck several Syrian military facilities since the conflict began, mostly near the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.

Assad, not wanting to draw Israel into his country’s war, has never responded.

The air raid came a day after a UN probe found Damascus responsibl­e for a chemical attack in April in northern Syria that killed more than 80 people, saying it was one of 20 chemical weapons attacks in the past four years carried out by the Syrian government.

The US fired missiles at a Syrian air base in response to April’s attack.

It was not immediatel­y clear if the facility struck on Thursday was used for the production or storage of chemical arms. Syria denies having or using such weapons.

Rami Abdurrahma­n, who heads the Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, said two facilities were hit in the air strike, a scientific research centre and a nearby military base where shortrange surface-to-surface missiles are stored.

He said the attack killed two people and wounded five.

“Many explosions were heard in the area after the air raid,” said Mr Abdurrahma­n, whose group relies on a network of activists across the country.

He said some of the blasts may have been secondary explosions from a missile storage facility being hit.

He said Lebanese Hezbollah fighters and Iranian military officials often visit the site, adding that those killed and wounded were Syrians.

A local opposition media activist said the facility that was struck was a factory that produces missiles under the supervisio­n of Iranian experts.

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