kayhan.ir

News ID: 102697
Publish Date : 17 May 2022 - 22:08

Russian S-300 Fires at Zionist Jets for First Time

TEL AVIV (Dispatches) --
Russian forces opened fire on Israeli jets with advanced S-300 anti-aircraft missiles at the end of an attack by the Zionist regime on targets in northwestern Syria last week, Channel 13 news reported, in what could signal a significant shift in Moscow’s attitude to the occupying regime of Israel.
According to the Times of Israel, the unprecedented incident occurred on Friday night, when the Israeli air force bombed several targets near the city of Masyaf in northwestern Syria.
At least five people were killed and seven were hurt in the airstrike, Syria’s state news agency said. Other media in the country said six were killed, all crew members of a Pantsir air defense system who attempted to take down the Israeli missiles.
The report said the Syrian military fired off dozens of anti-aircraft missiles.
However, this time the S-300 batteries also opened fire as the jets were departing the area, Channel 12 said. The report noted that Syria’s S-300 batteries are operated by the Russian military and cannot be fired without their approval.
If confirmed, this would mark the first use of the S-300s against Israelis air force warplanes over Syria and would be a worrying development for Israel, which has carried out hundreds of airstrikes inside Syria in the course of the war and since, the occupying regime’s newspaper said.
The Zionist regime rarely acknowledges or discusses such incursions and there was no confirmation of the raid or the S-300 launch from the occupying regime’s air force.
The Channel 13 report said it was not immediately clear if the S-300 missile fire was a one-time event or if it was a Russian signal to Israel that it was changing its policy.
The Masyaf area has been repeatedly targeted in recent years in attacks attributed to the occupying regime.
The report comes amid deterioration in ties between the Zionist regime and Russia over the war in

 
 Ukraine. Israel has tried to walk a fine line between Moscow and Kyiv but has recently become more critical of Russia after Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov touched on Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s Jewish roots.  
Russia, a close ally of Syria, has forces based and operating in the Arab country.
Beyond providing Syria with its air defenses, Moscow also maintains state-of-the-art S-400 air defense systems to protect its own assets in Syria, but has never turned them on Israeli planes.
In recent years the occupying regime of Israel and Russia have established a so-called deconfliction hotline to keep the sides from getting tangled up and accidentally clashing over Syria.
While meeting in Sochi last year, Zionist prime minister Naftali Bennett and Russian President Vladimir Putin agreed that the two sides would continue to implement the mechanism.
Bennett said at the time that Israel’s relationship with Russia was “strategic” in nature and noted the importance of the “intimate discourse” with the Russian military.
Former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu met Putin on multiple occasions to discuss the issue and claimed that their personal relationship was the main factor in keeping the mechanism in place.
In 2018, Russia provided the advanced S-300 air defense system to Syria’s military free of charge, transferring three battalions with eight launchers each to the country despite strenuous objections from Israel and the U.S.
Russia’s delivery of the S-300 system to Syria followed the downing of a Russian spy aircraft by Syrian forces that were responding to an Israeli strike over Syrian airspace. Russia blamed the occupying regime of Israel for the incident, which killed 15 Russian crew members.
The Zionist regime and its allies for years has lobbied Russia not to give Syria and other regional players the S-300 system, arguing that it would limit Israel’s ability to neutralize threats, including by Hezbollah.