kayhan.ir

News ID: 89595
Publish Date : 25 April 2021 - 21:39
Chief of Staff Gen. Baqeri:

Resistance Will Bring Zionists to Their Senses

TEHRAN (Dispatches) – The occupying regime of Israel should expect more attacks on its interests in the future, the chief of staff of Iran’s armed forces warned Sunday, days after a rocket launched from Syria landed near the top secret Dimona atomic bomb factory.
General Muhammad Baqeri said the Zionist regime believes it can hit targets on Syrian soil and launch attacks at sea without repercussions.
"Certainly efforts undertaken in recent days and efforts in the future that will endanger their interests will bring them to their senses, and the future of the resistance front is bright,” he told reporters.
Baqeri said he had no comment on who was behind recent attacks, but added he was confident "the resistance front will give the Zionists a fundamental response”.
"The Zionists think that they can permanently target the Syrian territory and do mischief in different places and in the seas and not get a response,” he said.
Baqeri touched on a series of incidents in Iran, including a power outage at Natanz uranium enrichment facility, as well as attacks on oil tankers in international waters, which Israel is suspected of having a role in.
"We will not announce anything about the actor of the incidents and we do not know who it is, but the resistance front will give a fundamental answer to the Zionists,” he said.  
Asked how Iran will respond if the occupying regime continues to attack its interests, he said, "It is not clear what Iran’s response will be, but the Zionist regime will not rest easy.”
There is confusion and shock among the occupying regime of Israel after its air defenses failed to intercept a missile fired from Syria overnight Thursday that traversed 125 miles of its highly protected airspace and landed near the Dimona nuclear reactor.
The surface-to-air missile was believed to have been fired by Syrian air defenses against Zionist jets that were bombing a site near Damascus, but the path it flew led to speculation that the occupying regime’s most sensitive site may have instead been a target.
The missile landed around 20 miles short of the Dimona site, in Negev desert. The occupying regime of Israel has some of the most tightly protected airspace in the world.
The incident happened only weeks after Israel said it had upgraded Iron Dome, amid fears in the regime over the increasing military prowess of anti-Israel resistance groups in Lebanon and the blockaded Gaza Strip.
The incident came after a large explosion occurred at a rocket factory owned by the occupying regime of Israel in central Occupied Palestine on Tuesday morning.
The blast sent up a massive plume of fire and smoke outside the central town of Ramle, which could be seen from miles away. It took place at the Tomer military firm, which manufactures propulsion systems for a variety of rockets and missiles.
Videos of the blast were widely shared on social media, prompting speculation that that it was the result of a malfunction or sabotage, especially in light of ongoing tensions between the Zionist regime and Iran.
Additionally, resistance fighters based in the Gaza Strip launched almost 40 rockets into the occupied lands over the weekend, causing alert sirens to go off across Occupied Palestine.