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Netanyahu warns Hezbollah after Israeli retaliatory strikes in Syria

“We hit a cell, and now we hit the dispatchers. We will do what is necessary in order to defend ourselves,” insists the Israeli prime minister.

The border area between Israel and Syria in the Golan Heights on Feb. 20, 2019. Photo by Maor Kinsbursky/Flash90.
The border area between Israel and Syria in the Golan Heights on Feb. 20, 2019. Photo by Maor Kinsbursky/Flash90.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned the Lebanon-based terrorist group Hezbollah on Tuesday that Israel would take the necessary measures to defend itself after Israel launched airstrikes against targets in Syria.

“We hit a cell, and now we hit the dispatchers. We will do what is necessary in order to defend ourselves. I suggest to all of them, including Hezbollah, to consider this,” said Netanyahu on Twitter.

Syria’s air-defense systems were activated against “hostile targets” southwest of Damascus on Monday evening, reported the Syrian news agency SANA.

A source in the Syrian military told SANA that at approximately 10:40 p.m., Israeli helicopters had fired missiles at a number of sites near Quneitra, causing unspecified “material damage.”

The IDF confirmed that the Israeli Air Force aircraft had targeted sites including “observation posts and intelligence-collection systems, anti-aircraft artillery facilities and command and control systems” at Syrian army bases, in retaliation for an attempt earlier on Monday by a group of terrorists to place a bomb on the Israel-Syria border in the southern Golan Heights.

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