The Jerusalem Post

‘Israel sent two F-35s to attack Iranian targets in Iraq’

- • By TZVI JOFFRE and ANNA AHRONHEIM

The IAF used its F-35i stealth fighter jets to hit two Iraqi bases that were used by Iranian forces and proxies and for storing ballistic missiles, the London-based Saudi daily Asharq Al-Awsat reported on Tuesday.

The first attack happened on July 19 at a base in Amerli in the Saladin province north of Baghdad. Iraqi and Iranian sources blamed Israel at the time, and Asharq Al-Awsat reported that “diplomatic sources” confirmed the attack, specifying that it was carried out by an Israeli F-35.

Al Arabiya television news reported that Iranian-made ballistic missiles were transporte­d to the base shortly before the attack via trucks used to transport refrigerat­ed food. The identity of the aircraft that conducted the attack was unspecifie­d at the time, and the US denied any involvemen­t. Iranian Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps (IRGC) and Hezbollah members were killed in the airstrike, according to Al Arabiya. However, the Iranian-backed al-Hashd ash-Sha’abi (Popular Mobilizati­on Forces) denied that any Iranians were killed, according to Fars News Agency.

A source from the IRGC told the Kuwaiti Al-Jarida newspaper that preliminar­y investigat­ions indicate that Israel was behind the attack. An Israeli drone launched from a US base in Syria attacked the base, which stored short- and medium-range missiles.

The IRGC reached this conclusion because the type of missile that hit the camp is the same used by the IAF in attacks on Syria.

Asharq Al-Awsat also reported that a second attack by Israel on Sunday on a base in Ashraf, northeast of Baghdad, had targeted Iranian advisers who were present at the base, and a shipment of ballistic missiles that had just arrived from Iran.

Last week an explosion killed Hezbollah operative Mashour Zidan in southern Syria, and a few days later a rocket struck the strategic Tel Haraa site not far from where Zidan was killed.

A resident of the Druze village of Hadar, Zidan is said to have been a senior Hezbollah operative responsibl­e for recruiting volunteers from villages near the border with Israel as part of Hezbollah’s Golan file.

The site has been used by the Syrian Armed Forces for years to observe IDF movements, and there have been several strikes on the site that have been blamed on Israel since the Bashar Assad regime reclaimed the area from rebels last summer.

While the base, which has electronic surveillan­ce capabiliti­es, was supposed to be manned solely by regime troops, pro-Iranian militias – including Hezbollah – are known to be stationed there.

Iran has begun moving its assets from areas repeatedly struck by Israel to locations closer to the border with Iraq, specifical­ly the T4 Airbase located between Homs and Palmyra.

In September, Reuters reported that Iran had transferre­d ballistic missiles to Shi’ite proxies in Iraq over the course of several months, and that it is developing the capacity to build more there. The missiles that were said to have been transferre­d include the Fateh-110, Zolfaqar and Zelzal types that have ranges of 200700 km., allowing them to be able to threaten both Saudi Arabia and Israel.

Israel has not commented on the recent strikes.

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