Syrian state media said Israel on Wednesday struck near a defence research centre in northern Damascus and also raided central Syria as the Israeli army said it hit “military” capabilities in several areas.
Israel has launched hundreds of strikes on military sites in Syria since Islamist-led forces ousted longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad, saying it wants to prevent weapons from falling into the hands of the new authorities, whom it considers jihadists.
“Israeli occupation aircraft strike targeted the vicinity of the scientific research building” in Damascus’s Barzeh neighbourhood, the SANA news agency said.
It also reported an Israeli raid targeting “the vicinity of the city of Hama” in central Syria, without specifying what was hit.
The Israeli military said in a statement that forces “struck military capabilities that remained at the Syrian bases of Hama and T4, along with additional remaining military infrastructure sites in the area of Damascus”.
Last month, Israel said it struck the T4 military base in central Homs province twice, targeting military capabilities at the site.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor said Wednesday’s strikes targeted the Damascus research centre, the T4 “military airport” as well as “planes and the runways at the Hama military airport”, reporting unspecified casualties there.
In the days after Assad’s fall on December 8, the Britain-based Observatory reported Israeli strikes targeting the research centre in Barzeh.
Western countries including the United States had previously struck the defence ministry facility in 2018, saying it was related to Syria’s “chemical weapons infrastructure”.
Also since Assad’s fall, Israel has deployed troops to a United Nations-patrolled buffer zone on the strategic Golan Heights and called for the complete demilitarisation of southern Syria, which borders the Israeli-annexed Golan.
The Observatory has reported repeated Israeli military incursions into southern Syria beyond the demarcation line in recent months.
Last month during a visit to Jerusalem, EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said that Israeli strikes on Syria were “unnecessary” and threatened to worsen the situation.
Syria’s foreign ministry has accused Israel of waging a campaign against “the stability of the country”.