After months of quiet, the greater Jerusalem area came under fire twice within 12 hours on Saturday when missiles were launched at the region first by the Houthi terrorists from Yemen, and then by Hamas in Gaza.
The first attack came around 2 a.m. on Saturday, when the Houthis continued with their recent habit of firing ballistic missiles at Israel during the night – aiming for Jerusalem this time, rather than Tel Aviv.
Alarm sirens were activated in southern Jerusalem, in towns and cities west of Jerusalem, including Modi’in and Beit Shemesh, as well as several towns in Judea and near the Dead Sea.
The IDF stated that the missile was intercepted outside Israeli air space, and sirens were triggered to warn citizens against falling shrapnel. There were no injuries reported as a direct consequence of the missile attack.
The Houthis in Yemen later claimed responsibility for the attack, which they said successfully struck the Nevatim Airbase in the southern Negev Desert. This month alone, the Houthis have launched 10 ballistic missiles and about nine drones at Israel so far.
According to Army Radio, the American THAAD missile defense system deployed in Israel took part in the interception of the attack. The Israeli Air Force said it would check whether THAAD or the Israeli Arrow interceptor missile hit the Houthi missile.
After the first, rare attack on the Jerusalem area, sirens were activated a second time around 4:15 p.m., when Hamas launched two long-range rockets from the northern Gaza neighborhood of Beit Hanoun, shortly after the IDF began a fresh large-scale raid there.
No comments:
Post a Comment