The remarks, delivered by
various Iranian officials and reported in state media, came Sunday
after Syria claimed that Israel launched a fresh attack inside its
borders.
"As a Muslim and friendly
country, we stand by Syria and if there is need for training, we will
provide them with necessary training," Brig. Gen. Ahmad-Reza Pourdastan,
commander of the Iranian Army's Ground Forces, told reporters Sunday.
Around the same time,
Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast said he had no
doubt Syria and its allies will "give a crushing response to the
aggressions of the Zionists," the state-run IRNA news agency reported.




Israel has not confirmed or denied that it fired rockets that hit a military research center in the Damascus suburbs Sunday.
But Syria says it was the
second Israeli airstrike in three days, and Deputy Foreign Minister
Faisal al Mekdad told CNN the attack was a declaration of war by Israel.
The airstrikes have riled Syria's allies in the region: Iran and the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah.
Why Syria matters
The Syrian civil war has
pitted rebel fighters against the regime of President Bashar al-Assad,
whose family has ruled the country for four decades. More than 70,000
people, mostly civilians, have been killed in the bitter conflict during
the past two years.
Syria matters to Iran
because it is believed to be the main conduit to the Shiite militia
Hezbollah in Lebanon, the proxy through which Iran can threaten Israel
with an arsenal of short-range missiles.
In 2009, the top U.S.
diplomat in Damascus disclosed that Syria had begun delivery of
ballistic missiles to Hezbollah, according to official cables leaked to
and published by WikiLeaks.
The last thing Iran
wants is a Sunni-dominated Syria -- especially as the Syrian rebels'
main supporters are Iran's Persian Gulf rivals: Qatar and Saudi Arabia.
Hezbollah's feared scenario is Israel on one side and a hostile Sunni-led Syria on the other.
'We are watching everything'
Sunday's reported attack
comes days after U.S. officials told CNN that they believed Israel had
conducted an airstrike against Syria on Thursday or Friday.
The Israeli military did not comment on the U.S. claim either.
But Israel has long said it would target any transfer of weapons to Hezbollah or other terrorist groups.
"We are watching
everything when it comes to the movement of these types of weapons. We
have the means to do that," a senior Israeli defense official told CNN's
Sara Sidner on Sunday. The official is not authorized to speak to the
media.
Shaul Mofaz, a lawmaker
in Israel's Knesset, told Israeli Army Radio on Sunday that Israel isn't
meddling with Syria's civil war. But Israel must protect itself from
Lebanese militants, he said.
"For Israel, it is very important that the front group for Iran, which is in Lebanon, needs to be stopped," Mofaz said.
Hezbollah did not immediately comment after Sunday's claims.
'Everything kept exploding'
Syria said Sunday's
attack targeted the Jamraya research center in the Damascus suburbs. But
state media reports did not provide details about what type of research
occurs in the facility, or how much damage occurred.
"Until now, the details
are not clear on what happened," al Mekdad told CNN. "Did they fire
missiles? ... It is not clear for me, because I don't know how it
happened, and of course it is worrying, but Israel will suffer the
same."
The blasts rocked a
large military area in the suburbs of Syria's capital, prompting
terrified residents nearby to run for cover.
"Everything kept
exploding over and over again," said Anna Deeb, whose family lives just
over a mile away. "We could hear gunshots, we could hear people
screaming. ... We didn't know what to do, and there was a problem with
us breathing because the smoke was too much."
In January, Syrian
authorities said Israeli warplanes killed two workers and injured five
others when they struck the same research facility that officials said
was targeted on Sunday.
A U.S. official told CNN at the time that the Syrian claims were false.
Source : CNN
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