An Israeli drone flies over Syria's southern city of Sweida on Jul 16, 2025 following Israeli strikes in the area. (Photo: AFP/Bakr Alkasem)

Israel bombs Syria army HQ after warning Damascus to leave Druze alone

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DAMASCUS: Israel bombed the Syrian army headquarters in Damascus on Wednesday (Jul 16) after warning the Islamist-led government to leave the Druze minority alone in its Sweida heartland, where a war monitor says sectarian clashes have killed nearly 250 people.

The strikes marked Israel's most forceful intervention in Syria in years, with warplanes also hitting near the presidential palace and flattening part of the defence ministry. 

Syrian government forces on Tuesday entered the majority-Druze city of Sweida, in the country's south, with the stated aim of overseeing a ceasefire agreed with Druze community leaders after clashes with local Bedouin tribes left dozens dead.

However, witnesses reported that the government forces joined with the Bedouin in attacking Druze fighters and civilians in a bloody rampage through the city.

The fighting marks the most serious outbreak of violence in Syria since government forces battled Druze fighters in Sweida province and near Damascus in April and May leaving more than 100 people dead.

The United Nations Security Council is expected to meet on Thursday to address the escalating conflict, diplomats said.

The Islamist-led authorities have had strained relations with Syria's patchwork of religious and ethnic minorities since they toppled longtime leader Bashar al-Assad in December.

Interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa has repeatedly promised to protect minorities, but his Islamist-backed government has drawn condemnation from Druze leaders and international rights groups.

Smoke rises while Syrian security forces sit in the back of a truck as Syrian troops entered the predominantly Druze city of Sweida following two days of clashes, in Sweida, Syria, on Jul 15, 2025. (Photo: REUTERS/Karam al-Masri)

Israel has presented itself as a defender of the Druze, although some analysts say that is a pretext for pursuing its own military goal of keeping Syrian government forces as far from the border as possible.

Syrian state TV reported several Israeli strikes on Wednesday near the army and defence ministry headquarters in central Damascus, and Israel's military said it had "struck the entrance of the Syrian regime's military headquarters".

AFP images showed the side of a building in the defence complex in ruins after the strike, as smoke billowed over the area.

A medical source said five Syrian security personnel were killed in the strikes.

The Syrian health ministry said in a preliminary toll that nine people were wounded in the strikes.

"EXISTENTIAL BATTLE"

Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz called on Damascus to "leave the Druze in Sweida alone", later threatening in a statement to unleash "painful blows" to "eliminate the forces that attacked the Druze until their full withdrawal" from Syria's south.

Israel, home to tens of thousands of Druze, said it was sending more troops to the armistice line between the occupied Golan Heights and Syrian-controlled territory.

Dozens of people were trying to cross the heavily fortified frontier, according to AFP correspondent in Majdal Shams, a mainly Druze town in the Israeli-annexed Golan.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu urged Druze not to cross, warning of a "very serious" situation in Sweida.

A military statement said Israeli forces were "operating to prevent the infiltration" from Syrian territory and to "safely return the civilians who crossed the border" from the Israeli-controlled side.

Following calls in Israel to help Druze in Syria, scores of Israeli Druze broke through the border fence on Wednesday, linking up with Druze on the Syrian side, a Reuters witness said.

"We will not allow southern Syria to become a terror stronghold," said Eyal Zamir, Israel's military chief of staff.

Netanyahu said in February that southern Syria must be completely demilitarised, warning that Israel would not accept the presence of forces of the Islamist-led government near territory it controls.

Sharaa faces mounting challenges to reunify Syria, with deep mistrust from ethnic and religious groups, particularly after the March massacre of Alawites.

The head of the Druze community in Israel, Sheikh Mowafaq Tarif, called the situation "an existential battle for the Druze community".

"My family is in Syria – my wife is in Syria, my uncles are from Syria, and my family is in Syria, in Sweida," said Faez Shkeir, an Israeli Druze man. "They kicked them out of their homes, they robbed and burned their houses, but I can't do anything."

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor has said at least 21 Druze civilians had been killed "in summary executions by government forces".

The Syrian presidency condemned in a statement the "heinous acts" in Sweida, expressing "full commitment to investigating all related incidents and punishing all those proven to be involved".

Sporadic gunfire continued to ring out in Sweida on Wednesday, an AFP correspondent reported.

Columns of smoke were seen rising from several areas amid the sound of shelling.

The correspondent counted the bodies of around 30 combatants, some in plain clothes and some in military uniform.

Syria’s health ministry said dozens of bodies, including fighters and civilians, had been found in a hospital in the city.

A Reuters reporter said government troops were seen looting and burning homes, stealing furniture and vehicles. One man showed the body of his brother, shot in the head.

A Syrian government soldier who was injured in Sweida city during clashes between the Syrian government forces and Druze militias, gets treated at a clinic in Busra al-Harir village, in southern Syria, on Jul 15, 2025. (Photo: AP/Omar Albam)

"STEP BACK"

The Observatory, witnesses and Druze armed groups have said government forces took part in fighting alongside the Bedouin against the Druze.

The Syrian defence ministry accused "outlaw groups" of attacking its forces inside the city, saying they are now "continuing to respond to the sources of fire".

The Britain-based Observatory said at least 248 people had been killed in Sweida province since the violence erupted on Sunday, including 92 Druze, 138 Syrian security personnel and 18 allied Bedouin fighters.

The Bedouin and the Druze have been at loggerheads for decades.

The latest violence erupted after the kidnapping of a Druze vegetable merchant triggered tit-for-tat abductions, the Observatory said.

Since they toppled Assad in December, Syria's Islamist authorities have been accused repeatedly of trampling over the rights of the country's religious and ethnic minorities.

The United States said the fighting "will stop soon", with Secretary of State Marco Rubio announcing on social media that all parties had agreed to steps that would end the clashes "tonight".

The United States, a close ally of Israel, said that "all parties must step back and engage in meaningful dialogue that leads to a lasting ceasefire" in Sweida.

Washington's special envoy for Syria, Tom Barrack, added on X that the "perpetrators need to be held accountable".

France said that "the abuses targeting civilians, which we strongly condemn, must stop", while the European Union urged "all external actors" to "fully respect Syria's sovereignty".

Source: AFP/ec

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