Israel fires back after Syria rockets hit Golan Heights

Israel fires back after Syria rockets hit Golan Heights

At least two rockets fired from Syria have hit the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights region, prompting Israeli forces to return fire, the army said.

Israeli army spokesman Peter Lerner said on Tuesday that the Syrian fire was "intentional, not spillover from the Syrian civil war" as has sometimes been the case in the past. Authorities evacuated visitors from Mount Hermon ski resort on the Golan Heights after the violence.

Security sources said farmers were told to leave their fields and go into bomb shelters and police said they had set up roadblocks to stop civilians entering the area.

There were no immediate reports of casualties on the Israeli side.

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu later warned that Israel was "ready to respond with force" to any attack.

Tensions have soared along the ceasefire line since a January 18 air strike attributed to Israel killed six Hezbollah fighters and an Iranian general near Quneitra on the Syrian-held side of the strategic plateau.

Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon said Friday that Israel was prepared for any retaliation by Lebanon's Hezbollah, which is operating in Syria in support of President Bashar al-Assad.

"Israel will hold responsible governments, regimes and organizations on the other side of our northern borders over any violation of Israel's sovereignty, or an attack on soldiers or civilians," he said during a tour of the Golan and the nearby border with Lebanon.

In September, the army fired at a Syrian military position in response to what it said was stray fire from fighting between soldiers and rebels close to the armistice line on the Golan.

There has been repeated fire across the ceasefire line since the uprising in Syria erupted in March 2011, not all of it stray.

In August, five rockets fired from Syria hit the Israeli-occupied sector of the Golan Heights and, in July, Israel shelled Syrian army positions when a rocket struck its territory.

Israel has deployed its Iron Dome missile defense system in the north, where local media say it is amassing tanks and infantry reinforcements.

Israel seized 1,200 square kilometers of the Golan from Syria in the Six-Day War of 1967 and annexed it in 1981 in a move never recognized by the international community.


PHOTO CAPTION


Israeli soldiers, taking up positions on the Israeli-Syrian border, near Quneitra in the Golan Heights, 25 January 2015.

Aljazeera

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