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Israel strikes Assad military assets in Syrian coastal region

The targets reportedly included an air-defense base and a surface-to-surface missile depot.

Smoke billows from a Syrian naval ship destroyed in an overnight Israeli attack on the port city of Latakia on Dec. 10, 2024. Photo by Bilal Alhammoud/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images.
Smoke billows from a Syrian naval ship destroyed in an overnight Israeli attack on the port city of Latakia on Dec. 10, 2024. Photo by Bilal Alhammoud/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images.

Israel conducted a wave of airstrikes in Syria overnight Sunday, with local media reporting that the attacks were so powerful that they triggered minor earthquakes.

Israeli fighter jets bombed military targets of the deposed dictator Bashar Assad in the port cities of Latakia and Tartus, according to the reports, with Russian media, citing Syrian sources, saying that the target of the attack in Tartus was an air-defense base and a surface-to-surface missile depot.

Tartus is home to a Russian naval base and a military shipyard.

Russian media also reported strikes on military positions in Hama and Homs during the night.

A small earthquake (3.0 on the Richter scale) was recorded in the Tartus area at 1:48 a.m. Damascus time, according to the VolcanoDiscovery website. The Geological Survey of Israel’s seismic network also recorded a 3.1 tremor off the Syrian coast at 11:49 p.m. local time.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a war monitor associated with the opposition that maintains a network of sources in the country, said that the strikes were the heaviest in Syria’s coastal region in more than a decade.

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