Mortars From Civil War Landed in Occupied Golan Heights
Israel
fired a guided missile into Syria on Sunday in a potent “warning shot”
after mortar fire from fighting between Syrian troops and rebels hit the
Israeli-occupied Golan Heights for the second time in four days.
Israel
Radio said it was the first direct engagement of the Syrian military on
the Golan since the countries’ 1973 war. It highlighted international
fears that Syria’s civil war could ignite wider regional conflict.
An
Israeli military source said troops fired a Tammuz missile towards a
Syrian army mortar crew that had launched a shell which overshot the
Golan disengagement fence on Sunday, exploding near a Jewish settlement
without causing casualties.
The missile, known internationally as
Spike, can be guided to its target by an operator who sees a live video
image from an onboard camera in its nose. There were no reported
casualties in what was evidently a demonstration of fire-power.
In
an official statement, the Israeli military said soldiers had “fired
warning shots towards Syrian areas” but did not mention the missile or
its target destination.
“The IDF (Israel Defence Force) has filed
a complaint through the UN forces operating in the area, stating that
fire emanating from Syria into Israel will not be tolerated and shall be
responded to with severity,” the statement said.
There was no
immediate comment from the 1,000-man United Nations Disengagement
Observer Force which patrols the area, and no reaction from Syria.
Spillover
violence this month from Syria onto the Golan has jangled the nerves of
Israelis worried the once-quiet front will add to threats facing the
Jewish state from Islamic militants in neighbouring Lebanon, Gaza and
Egypt’s Sinai.
There have been similar worries in Turkey, Jordan
and Lebanon about incidents on their own borders with Syria, where
forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad have been battling rebels for
19 months.
“WE WILL RESPOND”
Interviewed by Israel’s Army
Radio earlier on Sunday, Defence Minister Ehud Barak was asked about
public warnings he and another senior official issued to Assad last week
to rein in Syrian sweeps against rebels near the Golan.
“The
message has certainly been relayed. To tell you confidently that no
shell will fall? I cannot. If a shell falls, we will respond,” Barak
said, without elaborating.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu,
also speaking before Sunday’s mortar strike on the Golan, told his
cabinet Israel was “closely following what is happening on our border
with Syria .. and (is) prepared for any development”.
Israel
captured the Golan Heights in the 1967 Middle East war and annexed the
strategic plateau in 1981, a move not recognised internationally. In all
past peace talks with Israel, Syria has insisted on the Golan’s return.
The
two countries signed a disengagement agreement in 1974, a year after
another Arab-Israeli conflict, and though they are still technically at
war the Golan had been mostly quiet since.
Another Syrian mortar bomb, one of a salvo, struck a Golan settlement on Thursday but did not explode.
Separately,
Israel complained to the United Nations this month after three Syrian
tanks entered the Golan demilitarised zone, and said one of its army
jeeps had been hit by Syrian gunfire. No one was hurt.
Israel has
tried to stay out of the insurgency next door, reluctant to be drawn
into another war and unclear about whether a post-Assad Syria might
prove more hostile.
But Barak has said he hopes the rebels will win, Assad will fall and “a new stage in the life of Syria will begin”.
Israel’s
military chief, Lieutenant-General Benny Gantz, warned troops on the
Golan Heights a week ago: “This is a Syrian issue that could become our
issue.”
http://forward.com/articles/165937/israel-fires-missile-at-syria-amid-chaos/#ixzz2BxaGZUlX
Sunday, 11 November 2012
Israel Fires Missile at Syria Amid Chaos
Posted @ 15:35
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