Israel has today released footage of the moment one of its missiles destroyed an Iranian rocker launcher in Syria in retaliation for Tehran forces shelling the Golan Heights hours earlier.
The video was revealed as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned that Iran had ‘crossed a red line’ by firing 20 rockets across the border early on Thursday.
The 20-second clip shows a missile mounted with a camera hurtling towards the SA22 aerial interception system as soldiers stood just yards away – unaware of the impending impact.
A SA22 aerial interception system, also known as Pantsir-S1, is a Russian-made truck-mounted short to medium range surface-to-air missile and anti-aircraft artillery weapons system.
Israel said it had attacked nearly all of Iran’s military infrastructure in Syria, destroying dozens of sites, in an operation dubbed ‘House of Cards’ after Iranian forces fired rockets at Israeli-held territory for the first time.
The targets of the strikes, Israel’s largest in Syria since the 1973 war, included weapons storage, logistics sites and intelligence centers used by elite Iranian forces in Syria.
Netanyahu said his country’s strikes on Iranian targets in war-torn Syria were an ‘appropriate’ response after the Islamic Republic ‘crossed a red line’ by striking military positions.
‘We are in the midst of a protracted battle and our policy is clear: We will not allow Iran to entrench itself militarily in Syria,’ Netanyahu said.
Later, in a statement issued as Israel’s security cabinet was meeting, Netanyahu said the strike on Iran’s military installations inside Syria sent a ‘clear message’ to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad not to attack Israel.
Netanyahu warned ‘whoever attacks us – we will attack them sevenfold and whoever prepares to attack us – we will act against them first.’
A video shows Israeli missiles destroying Iranian military targets in Syria after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned Tehran that they’d ‘crossed a red line’ when they fired at the Golan Heights
He said that ‘we are in a continuous campaign’ and that ‘Israel’s military had carried out very extensive strike against Iranian targets’ in Syria. Netanyahu said Syrian batteries fired at Israeli forces ‘and therefore we struck them.’
Alongside the video of the strike, the IDF wrote that they ‘struck an SA22 aerial interception system as part of a wide-scale attack against Iranian military sites in Syria.’
It added: ‘The IDF strikes were a response to the rockets that were launched by the Iranian Quds Forces against IDF positions on the Golan Heights & the Syrian aerial defense fire at IAF aircraft.’
The military said previously it targeted a number of Syrian air defense systems – the SA22 as well as SA5, SA2, SA17 batteries – which had fired at Israeli planes, according to the Times of Israel.
It comes after Iran and Israel traded blows on the Syrian border overnight, marking the first time Tehran has directly attacked Israel.
Iranian forces fired 20 rockets across the border at Israeli frontline military positions early on Thursday, the Israeli military said.
The Israeli military said its Iron Dome defence system intercepted some of the incoming projectiles, while others caused only minimal damage.
The 20-second clip shows a missile mounted with a camera hurtling towards the SA22 aerial interception system as soldiers (pictured top left) stood just yards away – unaware of the impending impact
A SA22 aerial interception system (pictured), also known as Pantsir-S1, is a Russian-made combined short to medium range surface-to-air missile and anti-artillery weapon system
Lebanese soldiers inspect the remains of a surface to air missile that landed in the southern Lebanese village of Hebarieh on Thursday
Cows are seen alongside Israeli Soldiers and Merkava tanks deployed near the Israeli-Syrian border on Thursday
Israeli soldiers were deployed near the Syrian border in the Israel-annexed Golan Heights as Israel carried out widespread raids against Iranian targets in Syria
Israel carried out the raids after it said around 20 rockets were fired from Syria at its forces in the occupied Golan Heights at around midnight. Pictured, cows graze near Merkava tanks in Golan Heights
An Israeli soldier stands next to signs pointing out distances to different cities, on Mount Bental, an observation post in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights on Thursday
Israeli Merkava tanks are deployed in the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights near the Israeli-Syrian border on Thursday
The attack was followed by retaliatory strikes by Israeli jets, which struck ‘dozens’ of Iranian military installations within Syria. They struck a radar station, air defence positions and an ammunition dump, Syrian state media said.
Israeli defence minister Avigdor Lieberman said the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) had ‘hit almost all of the Iranian infrastructure in Syria’.
But he insisted Israel had ‘no interest in escalation’ of the situation, adding: ‘I hope that we have finished this chapter and that everyone got the message.’
Meanwhile, France and Germany on Thursday urged Israel and Iran to exercise restraint and avoid further escalation of hostilities in the Middle East after the heaviest military exchange ever between the two regional adversaries.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron discussed the Iranian rocket attacks and Israel’s response in Aachen, western Germany, and called for prudence and de-escalation.
‘The escalations of the past few hours show us that it is truly about war and peace. And I can only call on all sides to exercise restraint here,’ Merkel said during a ceremony awarding Macron the Charlemagne Prize for strengthening EU integration.
Britain also condemned a rocket attack on the occupied Golan Heights by Iranian forces based in Syria, and said that Israel has every right to defend itself.
Downing Street called for calm on both sides and urged Tehran to refrain from further assaults. Number 10 also urged Russia to use its influence in Syria to rein in Iranian aggression.
Prime Minister Theresa May’s official spokesman said: ‘We condemn Iran’s attack on Israel. Israel has every right to defend itself.
‘We call on Iran to refrain from any further attacks and for calm on all sides. We call on Russia to use its influence in Syria to prevent further Iranian attacks.’
France’s foreign ministry called on Iran to refrain from ‘any military provocation’ in Syria following the back-and-forth between Israel.
A French foreign ministry spokesman warned Iran ‘against any temptation for regional dominance’, something which French foreign minister Jean-Yves Le Drian would discuss with his Iranian counterpart Mohammad Javad Zarif next week.
Syrian air defense missiles are seen in the sky over Damascus, Syria. According to Syrian official media reports, the air defense was responding to a new wave of Israeli missile strikes
Israel said Iranian forces had fired 20 artillery rockets at their military bases in the disputed Golan Heights and that their Iron Dome defence system had intercepted a number of them
An image released by the government-affiliated ‘Central War Media’ in Syria purportedly shows Syrian air defence systems intercepting Israeli missiles over Damascus’ airspace
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (pictured in Moscow on Wednesday) said his country’s strikes on Iranian targets in war-torn Syria were an ‘appropriate’ response after the Islamic Republic ‘crossed a red line’ by striking military positions
The French foreign ministry reiterated ‘unwavering support for Israel’s security and condemns all attempts to harm it’.
Merkel has scrambled to try to preserve the nuclear accord with Iran following the United States’ withdrawal.
In a call with Hassan Rouhani, Merkel called for talks to be held in a broader format on Iran’s ballistic missile programme and its regional activities – including in Syria and Yemen, her office said in a statement.
She condemned Iran’s overnight attacks on Israeli military positions in Golan Heights and called on Iran to contribute to de-escalation in the region.
UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the Israeli strikes killed at least 23 military personnel, including Syrians and non-Syrians.
Israel said the Iranian rockets were either shot down by its Iron Dome air defence system or fell short of the Golan targets, claiming the Quds Force, an external arm of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, carried out the launch.
The exchange of fire came less than a day after US President Donald Trump pulled out of the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, which lifts sanctions on Tehran in exchange for a halt on its nuclear program.
Israeli Merkava tanks are deployed near the Israeli-Syrian border in the Golan Heights today after some 20 rockets were fired at Israeli military bases by Iranian forces from southern Syria just after midnight
Firing back: This photo supplied by Syrian state media allegedly shows Israeli missiles hittin air defense position and other military bases, in Damascus, Syria
The Israeli Iron Dome defense system is seen above on the Golan Heights attempting to intercept suspected Iranian missiles being launched from Syria
The project was given a bigger boost when the Obama administration sought and received hundreds of millions of dollars in additional funding
It was the heaviest Israeli barrage in Syria since the start in 2011 of its civil war, in which Iranians, allied Shi’ite militias and Russian soldiers have deployed in support of President Bashar al-Assad.
‘We hit nearly all the Iranian infrastructure in Syria,’ Israeli Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman told a security conference on Thursday morning.
‘They need to remember the saying that if it rains on us, it’ll storm on them. I hope we’ve finished this episode and everyone understood.’
An IDF spokesperson said Iran’s Quds force fired the rockets at several Israeli bases, though would reveal how Israel determined the Iranian involvement.
If Israeli claims are true, it would be the first time Iranian troops have directly attacked Israel rather than using proxies such as Islamist militant group Hezbollah.
Trading blows: Iranian forces reportedly fired 20 rockets on the Golan Heights, to which Israel responded with dozens of strikes on Iranian positions in Syria
This frame grab from video provided on Wednesday by Syria News shows people standing in front of flames rising after an attack on an area known to have numerous Syrian army military bases in Kisweh, south of Damascus
The incoming attack set off air raid sirens in the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights, which was captured from Syria in the 1967 war.
People in Metula, a town in northern Israel, were reportedly asked to enter ‘secure areas’ following an explosion in the area.
While the IDF blames Iran for firing the initial barrage of rockets into the Golan Heights, Syrian media claims Israel fired first.
Israel’s response saw war planes targeting Iranian positions inside Syria, according to an IDF spokesman.
Targets included the Mezzeh airbase in Damascus, according to Israeli media. More than 30 Israeli missiles have reportedly struck targets near the city, with the Russian military claiming 70 were fired – and half of them downed.
Russia’s defence ministry said: ’28 Israeli F-15 and F-16 aircraft were used in the attack, which released around 60 air-to-ground missiles over various parts of Syria. Israel also fired more than 10 tactical ground-to-ground missiles.’
Russia said Syria’s air defence systems shot down more than half of the missiles, while the extent of the damage was still being assessed.
‘The locations of Iranian armed groups and also the positions of the Syrian army’s air defences in the area around Damascus and in the south of Syria were attacked,’ the ministry said.
Syria’s state media said Syrian air defenses had intercepted ‘hostile Israeli missiles’ early Thursday that were fired over southwestern Damascus.
‘Air defenses confronted tens of Israeli rockets and some of them reached their target and destroyed one of the radar sites,’ Syrian state news agency SANA reported, citing a military source. Another rocket hit an ammunition warehouse, it said.
Syrian state television was broadcasting footage of its air defenses firing at incoming rockets, and playing patriotic songs.
Long-exposure photographs showed Israeli artillery launched to intercept projectiles fired from Syria early today
It said Israeli warplanes were firing the rockets from outside Syria’s borders and targeting Baath City in Quneitra province.
Earlier, Syrian media said the hostilities began with Israeli fire at Syrian positions in the country’s south from across the border. Pro-Syrian media said Syrian missiles then fired at Israeli forces.
One TV station, Beirut-based Al-Mayadeen, said at least 50 missiles were fired from Syria at Israeli forces in the occupied Golan Heights.
It was the first time in years that Syrians had fired at Israeli forces in Golan, Syrian media reported.
The news that Israel and Iran had exchanged fire saw several world leaders call for de-escalation in the area, amid concern about growing military tensions between the two nations.
This morning, France’s President Emmanuel Macron was first to call for de-escalation, and will be meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel later today to discuss the Middle East.
This was echoed by Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov, who said: ‘This is all very alarming, it causes concern. There should be work to de-escalate the tensions,’
An air defense missile is seen over Daraa, Syria on Thursday. Daraa is very near the southwestern border with Jordan and not far from the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights
Anti-aircraft missiles are seen from the Syrian capital of Damascus before dawn on Thursday
The above image shows more Syrian air defense missiles as seen in the sky over the capital Damascus on Thursday
Syria’s state media said Syrian air defenses had intercepted ‘hostile Israeli missiles’ early Thursday that were fired over southwestern Damascus
Israel has been on heightened alert in recent days, anticipating an attack from Iran following the Iranian regime’s vows to retaliate to what it says are recent Israeli strikes in Syria targeting Iranian outposts.
Late on Tuesday, Syrian state media said Israel struck a military outpost near the capital of Damascus.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said the missiles targeted depots and rocket launchers that likely belonged to Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guard.
Last month, an attack on Syria’s T4 air base in Homs province killed seven Iranian military personnel.
On April 30, Israel was said to have struck government outposts in northern Syria, killing more than a dozen pro-government fighters, many of them Iranians.
SOHR said the attacks killed 23 fighters, including five Syrian soldiers.
The head of the Observatory, Rami Abdurrahman, said five Syrian soldiers, including two officers, and 18 militia fighters were killed. Abdurrahman says it is not immediately clear if he believed Iranians were among those killed.
Israel has neither confirmed nor denied most of the airstrikes.
But for months, it has repeatedly said it will not accept a permanent Iranian military presence in Syria.
Russian deputy foreign minister Mikhail Bogdanov today called for ‘restraint on all sides’, adding that Moscow was ‘concerned’ at the development.
The strikes came a day after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held talks in Moscow with Russian President Vladimir Putin, whose country has provided massive military and diplomatic backing to the regime of President Bashar al-Assad in Syria’s seven-year civil war.
At the meeting Putin also expressed ‘deep concern’ over US President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw from a key 2015 Iran nuclear deal on Tuesday, a decision Netanyahu supported.
On Wednesday the Russian leader called the situation in the Middle East ‘unfortunately very acute’.
Netanyahu had told Putin that ‘it is the right of every state, certainly the right of Israel, to take the necessary steps in order to protect itself from (Iranian) aggression)’, his office said in a statement Wednesday, referring to Iran’s presence in Syria.
An Israeli Iron dome system is seen deployed near the Israeli-Syrian border in the Golan Heights
An Iron Dome anti-missile system can be seen near the Israeli side of the border with Syria in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights on Wednesday
An Israeli tank can be seen near the Israeli side of the border with Syria in Golan Heights
The Israeli-occupied section of the Golan Heights was placed on high alert due to ‘irregular activity by Iranian forces’ across the demarcation line in Syria
An Israeli artillery unit takes position near the Syrian border in the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights
Israeli soldiers stand on top of their Merkava tanks deployed near the Israeli-Syrian border in the Golan Heights
Israel has long objected to an Iranian military presence near the Golan Heights frontier
In February, Israel shot down what it said was an armed Iranian drone that entered Israeli airspace.
Israel responded by attacking anti-aircraft positions in Syria, but an Israeli warplane was shot down during the battle.
Iranian forces moved into Syria after the outbreak of the Syrian civil war in 2011 to back the forces of President Bashar Assad.
As that war winds down, and Assad appears to be headed toward victory, Israel fears that Iran, along with tens of thousands of Iranian-backed Shiite militiamen, will carry out attacks against Israel.
Speaking at the Herzliya Conference, an annual security gathering north of Tel Aviv, Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman said Israel would response fiercely to any further Iranian actions.
‘We will not let Iran turn Syria into a forward base against Israel. This is the policy, a very, very clear policy, and we’re acting according to this policy,’ he said.
‘We, of course, struck almost all the Iranian infrastructure in Syria, and they need to remember this arrogance of theirs. If we get rain, they’ll get a flood. I hope that we ended this chapter and that everyone understood.’
This morning’s exchange of fire comes after President Donald Trump’s announcement on Tuesday that the US was withdrawing from the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran triggered uncertainty and threatened to spark more unrest in the Middle East.
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei yesterday blasted President Trump, calling him a liar and saying that his move to pull out of the deal was ‘foul play’.
Iranian protesters burn US flags during an anti-US gathering outside of the former American embassy in central Tehran
Iranians reacted angrily on Wednesday to President Trump’s decision to withdraw from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal. Protesters are seen above walking on the US flag in Tehran
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s comments came Wednesday as he met with a group of school teachers in Tehran, a day after Trump announced he was renewing sanctions on Iran.
‘From day one, I said several times that the United States is not to be trusted. I said it publicly and privately. I said if you want to sign an agreement, first make sure that necessary guarantees are made,’ Khamenei said in his speech
‘What happened is a foul play on the part of the United States, and it does not surprise us,’ he said during a speech he gave in Tehran.
Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu traveled to Moscow on Wednesday to meet with President Vladimir Putin and discuss military coordination in Syria.
Russia has also sent forces to Syria to back Assad.
But Israel and Russia have maintained close communications to prevent their air forces from coming into conflict.
Together with Putin, Netanyahu toured a parade celebrating the anniversary of the Second World War victory over the Nazis and then met the Russian president at the Kremlin for consultations.
Rules of the agreement: Behind the historic 2015 Iran nuclear deal
After 10 hours together, Netanyahu said he conveyed Israel’s obligation to defend itself against Iranian aggression.
‘I think that matters were presented in a direct and forthright manner, and this is important. These matters are very important to Israel’s security at all times and especially at this time,’ he said.
Israel views Iran as its archenemy, citing Iran’s calls for Israel’s destruction, support for militant groups across the region and growing military activity in neighbouring Syria.
Israel has warned that it will not allow Iran to establish a permanent military presence in Syria.
Israel’s military went on high alert on Tuesday and bomb shelters were ordered open in the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights following reports of ‘irregular activity of Iranian forces in Syria.’
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (left) traveled to Moscow on Wednesday to meet with President Vladimir Putin (right) and discuss military coordination in Syria
After an uneventful night, the military on Wednesday called on residents to return to ‘full civilian routine,’ meaning studies and excursions would continue as usual, although the shelters would remain open.
Amos Gilead, a retired senior Israeli defence official, told a security conference in the coastal town of Herzliya that Iran’s intentions in Syria meant a wider conflagration may only be a matter of time.
‘They want to build a second Hezbollah-stan,’ he said, referring to the Iranian-backed Lebanese Shiite militant group that last fought a war with Israel in 2006.
‘They are determined to do it and we are determined to prevent it. It means we are on a collision course.’