Five martyrs in Israeli aggression targeting Damascus countryside
The Syrian Ministry of Defense reported that "Israel" carried out an aggression from the direction of the Syrian Golan in the early morning hours, specifically targeting the Damascus countryside.
The Syrian Ministry of Defense announced on Friday that Israeli occupation forces conducted an aggressive strike from the direction of the Syrian Golan, targeting a Syrian military facility near the village of Kfar Yabous in the Damascus countryside.
A statement from the Ministry of Defense revealed that the Israeli strike on Kfar Yabous, which occurred around 1:35 a.m. on Friday, resulted in the martyrdom of five soldiers and left another wounded.
On September 9, an Israeli aggression targeting the vicinity of the city of Masyaf in the western Hama countryside resulted in the deaths of 18 civilians and left dozens more injured.
Syria has asserted that the continuous attacks by occupation forces on its territory demonstrate that aggressive Israeli policies could escalate tensions in the region, potentially resulting in a comprehensive conflict that endangers both regional and international peace and security.
Four days of Israeli strikes on Lebanese civilians
The Israeli attacks on Syria are taking place alongside an extensive Israeli aggression on southern Lebanon and the Bekaa Valley, where airstrikes over the past four days have resulted in hundreds of civilian deaths and injuries.
The Israeli occupation military committed several massacres between Wednesday night and Thursday morning as the aggression on Lebanon continued for the fourth day.
Al Mayadeen's correspondent reported that 23 Syrian workers, including children, were martyred in an Israeli air aggression on Wednesday night on the town of Younine in northern Bekaa, located in northeastern Lebanon. The Israeli airstrike targeted a building housing Syrian workers and their families.
Just this morning, Israeli forces committed a massacre on the occupied Shebaa Farms, killing an entire family of nine.