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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
Michael Howie and Matt Watts

Israeli tanks '15 miles from Damascus' as overnight raids 'destroy Assad army's assets'

Israeli tanks have reached about 15 miles southwest of Damascus, according to Syrian security sources, after Israel seized a buffer zone in the south of the country and launched air strikes on army and air bases overnight.

Israel’s military operation into Syria comes two days after the lightning overthrow of President Bashar al-Assad by a rebel alliance.

A Syrian security source said Israeli troops reached Qatana, which is six miles into Syrian territory east of a demilitarised zone separating Israeli-occupied Golan Heights from Syria. The Israeli military declined to comment.

A Syrian naval ship destroyed in an overnight Israeli attack on the port city of Latakia (AFP via Getty Images)

Israel has said it will not become involved in conflict in Syria and that its seizure of the buffer zone was a defensive move.

Egypt, Qatar and Saudi Arabia have condemned the incursion. Saudi Arabia said the move would “ruin Syria’s chances of restoring security”.

Regional security sources and officers within the now fallen Syrian army said heavy Israeli airstrikes continued against military installations and airbases across Syria overnight, destroying dozens of helicopters and jets, as well as Republican Guard assets in and around Damascus.

The rough tally of 200 raids had left nothing of the Syrian army’s assets, they said.

Israel's defence minister Israel Katz said on Tuesday that Israel's military destroyed Syria's fleet overnight and intends to establish a demilitarised zone "in southern Syria" to prevent attacks on Israel.

Mr Katz added that he had instructed the army to establish a "defence zone free of weapons and terrorist threats in southern Syria, without a permanent Israeli presence, in order to prevent terrorism in Syria from taking root and organising".

It was unclear if the demilitarised zone would reach beyond the buffer zone that Israel has taken over in the border area.

Israel said its airstrikes would carry on for days but told the UN Security Council that it was not intervening in Syria’s conflict. It said it had taken “limited and temporary measures” solely to protect its security. The United Nations Security Council met behind closed doors late on Monday, and diplomats said they were still in shock at how quickly Assad’s overthrow unfolded over 12 days, after a 13-year civil war that was locked in stalemate for years.

“Everyone was taken by surprise, everyone, including the members of the council. So we have to wait and see and watch ... and evaluate how the situation will develop,” Russian UN Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia told reporters after the body met.

Russia played a major role in supporting Assad’s government and helping it fight the rebels. The Syrian leader fled Damascus for Moscow on Sunday, ending more than 50 years of brutal rule by his family.

Syrian army sources said heavy Israeli airstrikes continued against military installations and airbases overnight (AFP via Getty Images)

With the mood in Damascus still celebratory, Assad’s prime minister, Mohammed Jalali, on Monday agreed to hand power to the rebel-led Salvation Government, an administration based in rebel-held territory in northwest Syria.

The main rebel commander Ahmed al-Sharaa, better known as Abu Mohammed al-Jolani, met with Jalali and Vice President Faisal Mekdad to discuss the transitional government, a source familiar with the discussions told Reuters. Jalali said the handover could take days to carry out.

Al Jazeera television reported the transitional authority would be headed by Mohamed al-Bashir, who has headed the Salvation Government. The steamroller advance of the militia alliance headed by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), a former al-Qaeda affiliate, was a generational turning point for the Middle East.

The civil war that began in 2011 killed hundreds of thousands, caused one of the biggest refugee crises of modern times and left cities bombed to rubble, countryside depopulated and the economy hollowed out by global sanctions.

But the rebel alliance has not communicated plans for Syria’s future, and there is no template for such a transition in the fractious region.

Oil prices rose more than 1% on Monday, partly on concerns that instability in Syria, which is not a major oil producer, could raise regional tensions, analysts said.

“This is an incredible moment for the Syrian people,” Deputy US Ambassador to the UN Robert Wood said in New York. “We’re really focused right now on trying to see where the situation goes. Can there be a governing authority in Syria that respects the rights and dignities of the Syrian population?” The US was seeking ways to engage with Syrian rebel groups and is reaching out to partners in the region such as Turkey to start informal diplomacy, Washington said.

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