Chattanooga Times Free Press

Israel says it strikes targets in Syria after missile attack

- BY JOSEF FEDERMAN

JERUSALEM — A missile launched from Syria struck southern Israel early Thursday, setting off air raid sirens near the country’s top-secret nuclear reactor, the Israeli military said. In response, it said it attacked the missile launcher and air-defense systems in neighborin­g Syria.

The incident, marking the most serious violence between Israel and Syria in years, pointed to likely Iranian involvemen­t. Iran, which maintains troops and proxies in Syria, has accused Israel of a series of attacks on its nuclear facilities, including sabatoge at its Natanz nuclear facility on April 11, and vowed revenge. It also threatened to complicate U.S.-led attempts to revive the internatio­nal nuclear deal with Iran.

The Israeli army said the missile landed in the Negev region and the air raid sirens were sounded in a village near Dimona, where Israel’s nuclear reactor is located, and explosions were reported across Israel. The army later said the incoming missile had caused no damage.

Syria’s state-run SANA news agency said four soldiers had been wounded in an Israeli strike near Damascus, which also caused some damage. The agency did not elaborate other than to claim its air defense intercepte­d “most of the enemy missiles,” which it said were fired from the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity for the missile strike or comment from Iran. But on Saturday, Iran’s hard-line Kayhan newspaper published an opinion piece by Iranian analyst Sadollah Zarei suggesting Israel’s Dimona facility be targeted after the attack on Natanz. Zarei cited the idea of “an eye for an eye” in his remarks.

Action should be taken “against the nuclear facility in Dimona,” he wrote. “This is because no other action is at the same level as the Natanz incident.”

The Dimona reactor is widely believed to be the centerpiec­e of an undeclared nuclear weapons program. Israel neither confirms nor denies having a nuclear arsenal.

While Kayhan is a small circulatio­n newspaper, its editor-in-chief, Hossein Shariatmad­ari, was appointed by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and has been described as an adviser to him in the past.

Zarei has demanded retaliator­y strikes on Israel in the past. In November, he suggested Iran strike the Israeli port city of Haifa over Israel’s suspected involvemen­t in the killing of a scientist who founded Iran’s military nuclear program decades earlier. However, Iran did not retaliate then.

 ?? CHANNEL 10 VIA AP ?? In this 2005 image from a video, Israeli television station Channel 10 shows what it claimed is Israel’s top secret nuclear facility in the southern Israeli town of Dimona.
CHANNEL 10 VIA AP In this 2005 image from a video, Israeli television station Channel 10 shows what it claimed is Israel’s top secret nuclear facility in the southern Israeli town of Dimona.

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