JERUSALEM, Dec 14 — The chief of Israel’s armed forces today claimed credit for a recent air strike on a convoy that had entered Syria from Iraq, saying the target was a truck carrying weaponry.

Though he did not give a date for the event, describing it only has having taken place “several weeks ago”, Lieutenant-General Aviv Kohavi appeared to be alluding to a November 8 attack that Iraqi officials at the time said destroyed two fuel trucks.

Were it not for Israeli intelligence, Kohavi told a conference hosted by Reichman University, “we might not have known that among the 25 trucks (in the convoy), that was the truck — truck number eight — that was the truck with the arms”.

Advertisement

“There too, the pilots had to be sent. They had to know how to evade the ground-to-air missiles,” he added, hinting that piloted jets were used for the distant mission. Iraqi officials had described the November 8 strike as the work of a drone.

For almost a decade, Israel has been carrying out air strikes against suspected Iranian-sponsored weapons transfers and personnel deployments in next-door Syria. Israeli officials have rarely acknowledged responsibility for specific operations.

A regional official aligned with Iran said two Syrian nationals were killed in the November 8 air strike. Officials at the Iraq-Syria border were unaware of any Iranian casualties. — Reuters

Advertisement