Israel has ordered its forces to create a “sterile defence zone” in southern Syria that would be enforced without a permanent Israeli presence as it tightens its hold along the line between Syria and the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, Defence Minister Israel Katz stated on Tuesday.
He gave no details but said the zone, would “prevent the establishment and organization of terror in Syria” after the collapse of the government of President Bashar al-Assad at the weekend ended over five decades of his family’s rule.
“We will not allow this, we will not allow threats to the state of Israel,” Katz said following a visit to a naval base in the northern Israeli port of Haifa.
Earlier, a military spokesperson said Israeli troops remained in the demilitarized buffer zone in Syrian territory created after the 1973 Arab-Israeli war as well as “a few additional points” outside the separation area.
But he denied that forces had penetrated Syrian territory significantly beyond the zone, after Syrian sources said the incursion had extended to within 25 km of the capital Damascus.
“IDF forces are not advancing towards Damascus. This is not something we are doing or pursuing in any way,” Lieutenant Colonel Nadav Shoshani, the military spokesperson, told a briefing with reporters.
Israeli media reported that the air force had carried out as many as 250 sorties as war planes struck a string of targets across Syria since the weekend. The operation, which appears to have been one of its biggest in years, aimed to ensure Syrian military equipment, including combat aircraft, missiles and chemical weapons, does not fall into rebel hands.
“We have no intention of interfering in Syria’s internal affairs, but we clearly intend to do what is necessary to ensure our security,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said.
In addition to the airstrikes, Katz said Israeli missile ships had destroyed a Syrian military fleet in an operation on Monday night that British security firm Ambrey said targeted at least six vessels in the Syrian port of Latakia.
Following Assad’s flight on Sunday, Israeli troops moved into the demilitarised zone inside Syria, including the Syrian side of the strategic Mount Hermon that overlooks Damascus, where it took over an abandoned Syrian military post.
Israel, which has just agreed to a ceasefire in Lebanon following weeks of fighting the Iranian-backed Hezbollah terrorists, calls the incursion a limited and temporary measure to ensure border security.
But the move has been condemned by states including the United Arab Emirates and it remained unclear how far beyond the designated buffer zone its troops had stopped.
Israel welcomed the fall of Assad, an ally of its main enemy Iran, but has reacted cautiously to the leading rebel faction, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham. HTS has roots in Islamist movements including al Qaeda and Islamic State though it has sought for years to come across as a moderate outfit.
Team Bharatshakti
(With inputs from Reuters)