Israel attacks Damascus international airport again

Israel attacks Damascus international airport again ( )

The Syrian government accused Israel on Sunday (11/26/2023) of launching a new rocket attack on Damascus International Airport and once again decommissioning the facilities, marking the second action by the Jewish state against the country. Arabic this week. Flights that were destined for the Syrian capital are being diverted to other areas.

“At around 4:50 p.m. (1:50 p.m. GMT), the Zionist enemy carried out an airstrike with missiles from the direction of the occupied Syrian Golan, targeting Damascus International Airport and some points in the rural areas of Damascus,” he told the official SANA agency an unidentified military source.

Although Syrian anti-aircraft defenses managed to shoot down most of the projectiles, the missiles that reached their target caused material damage and forced the suspension of air traffic at the capital’s airfield, the source said. The NGO Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported that the target of the attacks was the airport runways and that there were also explosions at a military airfield in another area of ​​Damascus.

Just reopened

The Syrian Observatory also recalled that the airport reopened yesterday after being closed for more than four weeks due to a series of previous attacks on this airfield and the Aleppo (northwest) airfield. Local press reports reported that Damascus-bound flights were being diverted to Aleppo and Latakia airports.

Last Wednesday, the Syrian authorities reported that two Israeli rockets were fired against the outskirts of the capital. Israel has intensified its attacks against Syria since the Gaza conflict broke out on October 7, launching more than twenty operations in just a few weeks and shutting down the country’s two main airports several times.

However, it had previously attacked targets in the Arab nation that often belonged to Iranian or Lebanese militias allied with Damascus and which the Jewish state viewed as a threat to its security.

DZC (EFE, AFP, Portal)