Israel accused of supporting terrorism through airstrikes
DAMASCUS, Syria — Israeli warplanes bombed two areas near Damascus on Sunday, striking near the city’s international airport as well as outside a town close to the Lebanese border, the Syrian military said.
Since Syria’s conflict began in March 2011, Israel has carried out several airstrikes in Syria that have targeted sophisticated weapons systems, including Russian- made anti- aircraft missiles and Iranian- made missiles, believed to be destined for Israel’s arch foe — the Lebanese Hezbollah militant group.
Israel has never confirmed the strikes, and on Sunday the Israeli military said it does not comment on “foreign reports.”
The Syrian armed forces’
This aggression demonstrates Israel’s direct involvement in supporting terrorism in Syria. SYRIAN MILITARY IN A STATEMENT SUNDAY
general command said Sunday’s “flagrant attack” caused material damage, but did not provide any details on what was hit near the airport or in the town of Dimas, which is northwest of Damascus along the main highway from the capital to the Lebanese frontier.
“This aggression demonstrates Israel’s direct involvement in supporting terrorism in Syria along with well- known regional and Western countries to raise the morale of terrorist groups, mainly the Nusra Front,” the military said in a statement carried by SANA.
There is no evidence that Israel has provided any support to the Nusra Front, which is alQaida’s affiliate in Syria.
The director of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, Rami Abdurrahman, said the strike near the Damascus international airport targeted a depot for newly arrived weapons at a military facility that is part of the airport. The strikes near Dimas, he said, went after weapons depots in hangars in and around a small airbase. It was not clear whether those weapons were for the Syrian government or for Hezbollah. He had no word on casualties.
The Britain- based Observatory monitors Syria’s civil war through a network of activists.