Israel strikes military compounds in Damascus as Syrian government widens attack on Sweida


Khaled Yacoub Oweis
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Israel attacked the main Syrian military compounds in the heart of Damascus on Wednesday, in a widening aerial campaign in response to an escalating Syrian government offensive on the southern city of Sweida.

A Syrian military official told The National that the Army General Command and Defence Ministry, both adjacent to the city's Ummayad Square, "took several strikes and were badly damaged".

The square is one of the capital's busiest intersections, leading out to the main road to Lebanon.

Israel, which says it is acting to defend Syria's Druze minority following clashes with Bedouin tribes that prompted Syrian government intervention, also said it attacked "a military target in the area of the Syrian regime’s presidential palace".

Sources in Jordan said Israel struck the Syrian army in Keswa on the outskirts of Damascus and in the southern governorate of Deraa, killing three security commanders.

Syrian authorities said one civilian was killed and 18 people injured in Damascus. One resident said Israeli warplanes and drones had been buzzing over the city since the morning.

The Israeli attacks could undermine a US push to end hostilities between Syria and Israel, with the new authorities in Damascus having reportedly engaged in talks with Israel, although the contents of the talks have not been disclosed.

Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said "painful blows have begun", as he posted footage of a Syrian TV anchor in panic at an explosion behind her while reading a report on air.

An Israeli statement said its army is monitoring the "regime’s actions against Druze civilians in southern Syria" and is striking in the area, and "remains prepared for various scenarios".

Israel struck the defence ministry headquarters in Damascus on a third day of strikes on Syria. Reuters
Israel struck the defence ministry headquarters in Damascus on a third day of strikes on Syria. Reuters

Israel's Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said "murder and pogroms" were taking place against minorities in Syria.

Residents of Sweida contacted by The National said they were afraid for their lives, not just from shelling but also from government snipers and the storming of houses by regular troops and militias allied with Damascus.

"My neighbour was shot dead by a sniper, right there in the street. He had just stepped outside," said one resident. The man had been trying to escape Sweida to a village on the outskirts before he was shot, they added.

Widening offensive

The Israeli attacks came as Syrian troops and their militia allies widened an offensive against the mostly Druze governorate of Sweida, deploying snipers and firing rockets on residential areas, witnesses said. However, they were facing resistance as Israel mounted its raids in support of the sect.

Tom Barrack, the US envoy to Syria, said Washington "condemns violence against civilians in Sweida", without assigning blame. "All parties must step back and engage in meaningful dialogue," he said.

The Syrian government offensive, in its fourth day, aims to spread government control over the province, where many Druze have resisted the post-Bashar Al Assad order, which is led by former members of Hayat Tahrir Al Sham, a splinter group from Al Qaeda.

Sheikh Hikmat Al Hijri, the spiritual leader of the Druze in Syria, has criticised the HTS government as extremist and anti-democratic.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu implored Druze in Israeli-controlled areas near south Syria not to cross into Syria to support their co-religionists. “You are risking your lives; you can be murdered, you can be kidnapped, and you are harming the efforts of the Israeli Defence Forces," Mr Netanyahu said.

Syrian militias forcibly shave men's moustaches in Druze heartland

A Druze politician close to Mr Al Hijri told The National that the 82nd Division of the Syrian army entered Sweida city overnight in an attempt to secure the area, the epicentre of the government attacks.

“About half of Sweida has fallen,” he said, adding that snipers from the 82nd Division had been deployed on Qanawat Road, a commercial thoroughfare. Pitched battles were continuing in many neighbourhoods, he said, including in the centre of city.

A witness in Sweida said government forces fired Grad rockets on the city on Wednesday, in addition to pounding it with artillery rounds since Sunday.

“We have not left our houses. We do not feel secure because the shelling is random,” said the witness, who is a member of Sweida's Christian clergy. The city of 140,000 is overwhelmingly Druze but has a minority of Christian and Sunni inhabitants.

Sources in Jordan say that government forces and allied militias have killed more than 150 Druze, including civilians, since Sunday. Among them are at least a dozen men who were executed after the loyalist forces stormed buildings in Sweida.

The Syrian authorities said 26 of its troops were killed. Sweida is home to most of Syria's registered 800,000 Druze. But many have emigrated, particularly during the country's 13-year civil war, with an estimated 270,000 Druze remaining in the province.

Rima Fleihan, a Druze civil figure who was a leading peaceful opponent of the Assad regime, said that the government's siege is endangering Sweida's hospitals, and that at least one doctor was killed by government snipers.

“The military forces are indiscriminately shelling civilian neighbourhoods,” Ms Fleihan said, adding that “numerous individuals” affiliated with the government have “carried out field executions of civilians, and have detained others in clear violation of international humanitarian law”.

The Druze follow an offshoot of Islam and are also present in Jordan, Lebanon and Israel. Israel intervened militarily in April to halt attacks by government militias on the sect in which dozens of Druze were killed in Damascus and Sweida.

Since Monday, Israel has attacked from the air several Syrian security targets inside and outside Sweida. But the attacks appear to have made little difference in slowing down the Syrian government advance. Sources in Jordan said dozens of troops and members of allied militias were killed in the Israeli raids in the past three days, before the attack on Damascus.

“This time, the regime is relying more on snipers, who are more difficult to hit,” one of the Jordanian sources said.

Another resident of Sweida, a woman who did not want to be named, said three young men she knew at university were captured and killed while trying to escape the government advance.

“The state is the cause of everything happening. They sent forces, and called for mobilisation,” she said. “But they came for sectarian reasons – not for safety or order.”

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The Federal Tax Authority will track shisha imports with electronic markers to protect customers and ensure levies have been paid.

Khalid Ali Al Bustani, director of the tax authority, on Sunday said the move is to "prevent tax evasion and support the authority’s tax collection efforts".

The scheme’s first phase, which came into effect on 1st January, 2019, covers all types of imported and domestically produced and distributed cigarettes. As of May 1, importing any type of cigarettes without the digital marks will be prohibited.

He said the latest phase will see imported and locally produced shisha tobacco tracked by the final quarter of this year.

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Hometown: Bogota, Colombia
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Updated: July 17, 2025, 10:49 AM`