The Foreign Ministry in Moscow has said Israeli airstrikes in
Syria, if confirmed, would constitute "a grave violation of the UN
charter." A US newspaper reported that officials in Washington were
forewarned by Israel.
Russia's Foreign Ministry said on Thursday that it was urgently
investigating reports of Israeli airstrikes in Syria (note: the Israeli
jet pictured above is taking part in a December display in Israel),
saying the attack would be a breach of international law. "If this
information is confirmed, this would be a grave violation of the UN
charter," the ministry wrote in a statement. The government in Moscow
has largely supported Syrian President Bashar Assad during the 22-month
conflict, and also reiterated its opposition to outside intervention in
the country in Thursday's statement.
Arab League chief Nabil
Elaraby also said that the reported Israeli airstrike on Syria was a
"flagrant aggression and a glaring violation" of the country's
sovereignty.
"Silence of the international community about
Israel's bombing of Syrian sites in the past encouraged it to carry out
the new aggression, taking advantage of political and security
deterioration in Syria," Elaraby said in a statement.
Lebanese
movement Hezbollah was even more vocal, saying the attack showed the
"conspiracy against Syria that has been going on for the past two
years." Most Western media reports said the Israeli strikes targeted a
consignment of weapons that were being transported into Hezbollah
territory in Lebanon. The Syrian army, meanwhile, spoke of airstrikes on
a "scientific research center" near Damascus. The Israeli government
has not commented on the attacks amid multiple media reports on the
matter, though Tzahi HaNegbir of the ruling Likud party spoke in more
general terms about concerns of high-tech weapons reaching Hezbollah.
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