Hezbollah say F-16’s downing means end to Israel’s free hand in Syrian airspace
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Hezbollah say F-16’s downing means end to Israel’s free hand in Syrian airspace

Lebanon-bases terror group says the shooting down of an Israeli F-16 is the start of a 'new strategic phase' of the regional conflict

Members of the United Nations Disengagement Observer Force (UNDOF) looks through binoculars at an observation post in the Golan Heights Photo by: JINIPIX
Members of the United Nations Disengagement Observer Force (UNDOF) looks through binoculars at an observation post in the Golan Heights Photo by: JINIPIX

Hezbollah called the downing of an Israeli F-16 fighter plane the start of a “new strategic phase” in which Israel would no longer operate freely in Syrian airspace.

In a statement Saturday, the Shi’ite terrorist group praised the “alertness of the Syrian army, which downed the plane,” saying this marks the “end the of abandonment of the Syrian sovereignty in the air and on land.”

The statement followed the Israeli plane’s crash in northern Israel after an anti-aircraft missile hit it, prompting its two pilots to eject. One is in serious but stable condition and the other one was lightly wounded. Brigadier General Tomer Bar, a senior Israel Air Force officer, was quoted as telling the Israel Broadcasting Corporation that the pilots had to be “extracted,” suggesting they landed in enemy territory.

Their plane and several other aircraft were heading back into Israel after striking there an Iranian command centre that had launched an unmanned aircraft, or drone, into Israel. The drone was shot down and captured, the statement said, and Israeli warplanes went in pursuit of the command centre that operated the drone.

The Israeli aircraft that targeted the Iranian drone’s mobile command centre pursued and destroyed the target while it was moving, Bar said. He called it a “successful and complex mission.”

Israeli aircraft have been operating relatively freely in Syria and Lebanon since the 1980s, encountering largely ineffective anti-aircraft fire. Iran has considerably increased its presence in Syria since the outbreak of that country’s civil war in 2011. Last year, Iran acknowledged that it had deployed Russian-made S-300 surface-to-air missiles.

In 2015, a retired Israel Air Force Brigadier General, Asaf Agmon, told the Globes daily that Israel would need to spend billions of dollars to cope with the S-300 missile, whose lock on targets he said was impossible to jam. Iran obtaining  the missile “could severely hamper the Israeli air force’s freedom to act and dramatically limit the aerial manoeuvring freedom of every aircraft in the Middle East because this is a strategic, balance-breaking weapon,” added Agmon, who then headed the Fisher Institute for Air and Space Strategic Studies.

In 2016, Russia, whose forces and Iran’s are propping up Syrian President Bashar Assad against Sunni rebels, said it had deployed the system in Syria.

In a statement quoted by the Israel Broadcasting Corporation, Brigadier General Tomer Bar, a senior Israel Air Force officer, said the Israeli aircraft was downed by a surface-to-air missile but he did not specify. He also said the planes striking in Syria had dozens of surface-to-air missiles “of various kinds” launched at them.

“Essentially what followed was, in my opinion, the most massive assault by the Israel Air Force against the Syrian aerial defence deployment since Operation Peace for Galilee,” the Israeli army’s name for the 1982 Lebanon War, Bar said. “We struck the [anti-aircraft missile] batteries and additional Iranian targets in Syria.”

 

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