The F-16I shoot down came after an Israeli AH-64 Apache combat helicopter successfully intercepted an Iranian UAV launched from Syria that infiltrated the country’s airspace early Saturday
The impressive main image of this post shows the wreckage of the Israeli Air Force (IAF) F-16I Sufa that crashed on Feb. 10, 2018, after coming under “massive anti-aircraft fire” from Syrian forces.
As reported by CNN the incident came after an Israeli AH-64 Apache combat helicopter successfully intercepted an Iranian unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) launched from Syria that infiltrated the country’s airspace early Saturday, the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) said in a statement.
Both pilots aboard the Israeli jet are safe although one of them was severely injured as a result of an emergency evacuation from the plane.
According to Global Military Strategy & Statistics Facebook page, the F-16I was shot down by an upgraded S-125 surface-to-air missile (NATO reporting name SA-3 Goa). Noteworthy on Mar. 17, 2015, a U.S. MQ-1 Predator drone was shot down by a Syrian Air Defense Force S-125 missile while on an intelligence flight near the coastal town of Latakia.
The IDS said the crash happened as Israeli forces attacked 12 targets in Syria, including three aerial defense batteries and four targets described as Iranian.
According to the IDF statement the four Iranian targets as “part of Iran’s military establishment in Syria. The IDF will act determinately against such severe violations of Israeli sovereignty by Iran and Syria and will continue to act as necessary.”
Syrian state news agency SANA claimed that Syrian air defense forces had responded Saturday to what they called an Israeli “aggression” by hitting more than one Israeli plane, following attacks on a Syrian military base by Israel military aircraft.
“The Israeli enemy entity early morning at dawn conducted a new aggression against one of the military bases in the central region,” SANA said.
IDF spokesman Jonathan Conricus told CNN that the cause of the F-16I crash is being investigated and that only one Israeli aircraft had come down, with all others returning safely to base.
He said in a tweet that “Iran is responsible for this severe violation of Israeli sovereignty.”
IAF chief Tomer Bar revealed to Ynetnews that his service conjecture on the F-16I Sufa that was shot down by anti-aircraft fire on Saturday morning is that Syrian forces used a Russian-made SA-5 Gammon medium-to-high altitude surface-to-air missile to intercept the Israeli aircraft. Stay tuned for additional updates if further details on this story had to come to light!
Photo by Global Military Strategy & Statistics Facebook page