Russia also condemned
Wednesday's attack, saying it would represent an unprovoked violation of
United Nations charter if confirmed.
Syria's Foreign Ministry
summoned the commander of U.N. forces in the Golan Heights on Thursday
to formally complain about the incident, while Iran's deputy foreign
minister, Hossein Amir Abdollahian, warned the attack would have "dire
consequences" for Israel, according to Iran's semiofficial Mehr News
Agency.
Just last week,
Abdollahian warned that Iran would consider any attack on Syria as an
attack on itself, Mehr reported at the time.
Meanwhile, a U.S.
official said reports that
Israel had struck a Syrian research facility
were wrong, instead saying warplanes hit only one target: a convoy
carrying surface-to-air missiles.
A source said Wednesday
that Israeli fighter jets had struck a Syrian convoy suspected of moving
Russian-made missile parts that could have been used to attack Israel. A
senior U.S. official said the weapons were bound for the militant group
Hezbollah in Lebanon. Syria and Iran back the group, which the United
States has designated as a terrorist organization.
However, Syria's military
said Wednesday and again Thursday in state-run media that Israel had
struck at a defense research facility near the capital of Damascus,
killing two workers and injuring five others.
The report in Syrian
state media tied the attack to Syria's ongoing rebellion, saying Israel
struck the site after repeated attempts by what the regime of Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad refers to as terrorist groups failed to
capture the facility.
Experts say al-Assad's
regime is faltering after nearly two years of fending off the persistent
rebellion, and a former high-ranking Israeli Intelligence official said
Hezbollah probably wants to take hold of all the weapons it can before
that happens. Providing Hezbollah with Syrian arms would better equip it
to attack Israel, the official said.
In recent years, Syria
has transferred to Hezbollah Scud missiles that can carry chemical
weapons. U.S. authorities say they do not believe the strike was linked
to growing concerns about Syria's chemical weapons, the senior U.S.
official said Wednesday.
The attack was not particularly surprising, said senior Brookings Institution fellow Michael O'Hanlon.
"At first glance, it likely won't be seen as a large escalation, though there's still a possibility for retaliation."
State Department
spokeswoman Victoria Nuland and White House spokesman Jay Carney
declined to comment on the airstrike Wednesday. Carney referred
questions to Israel, which also has been tight-lipped about the strike.
On Thursday, Syria took
its case against Israel to Maj. Gen. Iqbal Singh Singha, the commander
of the United Nations Disengagement Observer Force in the Golan Heights,
former Syrian territory seized by Israel in 1967.
Foreign Ministry
officials demanded a U.N. response to the incident, which it said
violates the U.N. charter and the 1974 agreement between Syria and
Israel negotiated after the Yom Kippur War.
U.N. Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon's office issued a statement Thursday expressing "grave
concern" about the incident, but said U.N. officials lacked details
about exactly what had happened.
Russia, a Syrian ally, said it also had "grave concern" about Wednesday's airstrike.
"If the information is
confirmed, we are dealing with unprovoked attacks on targets situated on
the territory of a sovereign state that grossly violates the U.N.
Charter and is unacceptable whatever motives are used to justify it,"
the Russian Foreign Ministry said Thursday.
Iran also backed its
close ally. The semiofficial Iranian Student News Agency quoted Foreign
Minister Ali Akbar Salehi as saying the attack was "in line with the
West's policies of undermining the victories of the Syrian government."
Syria's ambassador to
Lebanon, Ali Abdul Karim, said Syria reserves the right to a "surprise
retaliation" against Israel, according to Hezbollah's official website,
Moqawama.
"I cannot predict this,
and this depends on the relevant authorities to decide on appropriate
retaliation and decide the manner and place," Moqawama quoted him as
saying.
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