Top Hezbollah Commander In Syria Killed By Israel
The top clandestine operative for Lebanese-based terror organization Hezbollah was killed in an IDF military operation in Syria overnight Friday, according to Arab media reports.
The top clandestine operative for Lebanese-based terror organization Hezbollah was killed in an IDF military operation in Syria overnight Friday, according to Arab media reports.
A convoy of Hezbollah terrorists and weapons was hit in an apparent Israeli airstrike in Lebanon, according to Arab media reports.
An indictment presented to the Be’er Sheva District Court on Wednesday asserts that Majd Ouida, a computer engineer and tech expert from Gaza, managed to hack into the IDF’s drone surveillance system, allowing the leaders of the Islamic Jihad terrorist organization to view HD footage from drones hovering above the Gaza Strip.
It has been learned that the Israel Air Force Hercules transport plane sent to Turkey to bring back survivors and the bodies of the victims of the Istanbul suicide bombing attack was stripped of identifying symbols.
An image released Sunday appears to show an Israeli-made drone flying over Syria. Israel Air Industries (IAI) sold the same model of drones to Russia, which may explain the aircraft’s presence in the country.
Foreign reports attributing strikes against the Syrian regime to the IDF may only rarely elicit a military response, such as a barrage of rockets, however they certainly result in a direct threat to Israel’s security systems.
American and British intelligence services did not hack the encrypted systems of Israel’s unmanned aircraft, Israeli officials said Tuesday, after investigating reports that the US and UK spied on Israel’s air force operations for years.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights is claiming that Israel on Wednesday evening struck military outposts in Syria, near the capital Damascus, Reuters reports.
According to Lebanese newspaper Al-Akhbar, former Hezbollah defense chief Imad Mughniyeh wanted to find information on Israeli Air Force navigator Ron Arad to use in a potential prisoner swap.
Irrespective of the global deal over the Iranian nuclear program, the Israel Air Force goes on building its long-range capabilities, and maintaining its readiness for any potential future scenario that may develop between Israel and the Islamic Republic.