TEL AVIV Ñ Israel has placed its military on alert along the borders
of Israel and Syria.
The military alert was ordered on Monday in wake of two attacks by
Hizbullah along Israel's border with Lebanon in which an Israeli soldier was
killed. Hizbullah launched automatic weapon, rocket and mortar fire toward
Israeli
military posts along the Israeli border on Monday and early Tuesday in what
officials deemed retaliation for an Israeli air strike on a Palestinian
training base near Damascus.
Maj. Gen. Benny Ganz, head of Israel's military Northern Command, warned
Lebanon and Syria against escalating tension with Israel and did not rule
out additional attacks. Ganz said Syria would be held responsible for
attacks by those trained in that country.
"We want to tell them that Syria is a major agent for terror and engages
constantly in a war of proxy," Ganz said on Tuesday. "The [Israeli air]
attack was a signal Syria that this cannot continue."
Officials said Sunday's air strike against the Ein Saheb training
facility 15 kilometers northwest of Damascus was meant to send a message to
the regime of President Bashar Assad that it would become a target for
Israeli
retaliation for Palestinian insurgency attacks. The officials said the
attack came after several diplomatic warnings to Damascus, which serves as
headquarters of Islamic Jihad, were sent through the European Union and the
United States.
"The attack on the north has the potential for escalation," Yuval
Steinitz, chairman of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee,
said. "But we can't be sitting ducks."
U.S. President George Bush has expressed concern over a military
escalation in the Middle East. Bush telephoned Israeli Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon after the Israeli strike on the Palestinian camp as U.S. officials
said the Bush administration was not informed in advance of the air attack.
"I think the point we're at now it's important to urge Israel to urge
Syria not to do anything that would escalate the situation,
not to do anything that would heighten tensions in the region," White House
spokesman Scott McClellan said. "And that's what we're doing."
Israeli military sources said F-16 fighter-jets struck the Ein Saheb
base on early Sunday, hours after 19 Israelis were killed in an Islamic
Jihad suicide strike in the northern city of Haifa. The sources said the
F-16s dropped several bombs and fired
missiles toward buildings in the training base in the first such attack in
more than 20 years. The pilots were said to have reported direct hits and
the base was heavily damaged.
The base was said to have been used by Hamas and Islamic Jihad for
training of their members. The sources said many of the Palestinian
insurgents, financed by Iran, were then sent to the West Bank where they
provided training to other Palestinians.
"We struck a base 15 kilometers from Damascus," Israeli Transportation
Minister Avigdor Lieberman said. "We can also reach Damascus."