Israeli warplanes have flown over one of the Syrian president’s palaces to warn Damascus against supporting Palestinian fighters who abducted an Israeli soldier, the Israeli army says.
Â
An Israeli army spokeswoman said the planes early on Wednesday flew over Bashar al-Assad’s palace near the city of Latakia, “because the Syrian leadership supports and harbours terrorist leaders, among them Hamas, the kidnappers of the soldier”.
Â
Syria said its air defences opened fire on Israeli warplanes that overflew the country, forcing them to flee.
Â
State-run Syrian television said two Israeli planes flew near Syria’s Mediterranean coast but did not mention Israel’s claim that the planes swooped low over the president’s summer residence.
Â
“The overflight by two Israeli planes near the Syrian shores is an aggressive act and a provocation,” the television news said, quoting an unindentified information ministry official.
Â
Israeli television reports said the overflights, early on Wednesday morning, created several sonic booms.
Â
The armed wing of Hamas was among the three factions that took part in the cross-border raid from Gaza in which the Israeli soldier was seized on Sunday, but it has not said it is holding him. Israeli leaders have accused Damascus-based Hamas leader Khalid Meshaal of being responsible for the kidnapping.
Â
Israeli television reports said four planes were involved and al-Assad was home at the time.
Â
The flyover was the second time Israel has buzzed al-Assad’s summer palace. In August 2003, warplanes reportedly flew so low that windows in the palace shattered.
Â
At the time, Israel said the flyover was aimed at pressuring al-Assad to dismantle Palestinian resistance groups based in his country.
Â
In October 2003, an Israeli warplane bombed an Islamic Jihad training base deep in Syria.
Â
It was the first attack on Syrian soil in more than two decades.
Â
The air strike followed a bomb attack by Islamic Jihad that killed 19 Israelis in a restaurant.
Â
Separately, the Syrian leader held talks on Wednesday with Marouf al-Bakhit, the Jordanian prime minister. The talks centred on “new political developments in the region, especially in the Palestinian Territories and Iraq”, Syria’s official news agency Sana reported.
Â
Al-Bakhit also handed al-Assad a letter from Jordan’s King Abdullah II dealing with bilateral relations between the two countries, Sana said.
Â
Al-Bakhit, who arrived in Damascus early Wednesday to co-chair meetings of the Higher Joint Syrian-Jordanian Committee, discussed with al-Assad the committee’s role in strengthening bilateral cooperation in all fields, it said.