Israel retaliates after Syrian missile lands near nuclear reactor

A picture taken on March 8, 2014 show a partial view of the Dimona nuclear power plant in the southern Israeli Negev desert. (JACK GUEZ / AFP)

A Syrian surface-to-air missile exploded in southern Israel on Thursday, the Israeli military said, in an incident that triggered warning sirens in an area near the secretive Dimona nuclear reactor.

There were no immediate reports of any injuries or damage in Israel.

The military said that in response to the launch, it attacked several missile batteries in Syria, including the one that fired the projectile that struck its territory.

The military said that in response to the launch, it attacked several missile batteries in Syria, including the one that fired the projectile that struck its territory

Syria’s state news agency said Syrian air defenses intercepted the Israeli attack that targeted areas in the Damascus suburbs.

“Air defenses intercepted the rockets and downed most of them,” the agency said.

However, four soldiers were injured in the attack and some material damage took place, it said.

READ MORE: Israel missile strikes target sites around Syrian capital

A Syrian military defector said the Israeli strikes targeted locations near the town of Dumair, some 40 km northeast of Damascus, where Iranian-backed militias have a presence. It is an area that Israel has hit repeatedly in past attacks

An Israeli military spokesman said the Syrian missile had been fired at Israeli aircraft during an earlier strike and had overflown its target and reached the Dimona area.

The errant Syrian missile was an SA-5, one of several fired at Israeli air force planes, according to the spokesman. It did not hit the reactor, landing some 30km away, he added.

Sirens sounded in the southern Israeli district of Abu Qrenat near the Dimona nuclear reactor on Thursday, the Israeli military said without immediately providing further details.

A Reuters reporter about 90 km north of Dimona heard the sound of an explosion minutes before the military tweeted that sirens had gone off in the region.

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Israeli media have said for weeks that air defenses around the Dimona reactor and the Red Sea port Eilat were being beefed up in anticipation of a possible long-range missile or drone attack by Iranian-backed forces – perhaps from as far away as Yemen.

Tensions are high between Israel and Iran over Tehran’s nuclear program and a recent surge in sabotage attacks, some of which the arch-foes have blamed on each other.

Early on Thursday, the Saudi-led coalition battling Yemen’s Houthis intercepted a drone attack by the Iran-aligned movement on the southern Saudi city of Khamis Mushait, state media reported.