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The results of a reported Israeli airstrike on a missile-production factory in the town of al-Safira, outside Aleppo, in northern Syria on Friday, Sept.11, 2020.Photo Credit: Copyright ImageSat International

Satellite Images Reveal Alleged Israeli Strike in Syria Targeted Missile Factory

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By Netta Bar and Lilach Shoval

ess than three days after airstrikes in Syria’s Aleppo province were attributed to Israel by Syrian state news agency SANA, satellite images released by ImageSat International on Sunday showed the facility to be a missile production plant near the town of al-Safirah in northern Syria.

According to ImageSat International, which specializes in satellite-imagery analysis, the two buildings that were targeted in the strike “played a significant part in the missile production at the al-Safirah Missile Factory.”

Pictures of one building, for example, which ImageSat said likely contained a large quantity of explosives, was completely destroyed in the attack. The second building reportedly sustained significant damage.

“The attack intended to weaken missile production in Syria, probably for Hezbollah, by harming its crucial elements,” said ImageSat International.

In the early hours of Friday morning, SANA reported that the country’s air defenses intercepted an Israeli missile attack in Aleppo.

The report quoted sources saying that among the sites attacked was a military airport and scientific facilities operated by the Syrian army. The IDF did not comment on the reported strikes, in accordance with its policy.

Aleppo is not a common site for reported Israeli airstrikes.

Claims that Syrian air defenses intercept incoming missiles are often dismissed by regional security experts as empty boasts.

Israel has previously admitted to having launched hundreds of strikes on Iranian assets in Syria since the start of the civil war there in 2011. The assaults usually target weapons shipments to Tehran’s proxy, the Lebanon-based Hezbollah, and are mounted as part of Israel’s policy to prevent Iran from gaining a larger foothold in the region.

This article first appeared in Israel Hayom.