Netanyahu, Putin to meet after Syria friendly fire incident

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin over Syria talks. (AFP)
Updated 07 October 2018
Follow

Netanyahu, Putin to meet after Syria friendly fire incident

  • Netanyahu made the announcement without citing a specific date

JERUSALEM: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday he would meet Russian President Vladimir Putin to discuss coordination in Syria after the accidental downing of a Russian plane led to tensions.
Netanyahu said he had spoken with Putin and the two agreed “to meet soon in order to continue the important inter-military security coordination.”
Speaking at the start of a cabinet meeting, Netanyahu again pledged to stop “Iran from establishing a military presence in Syria and to thwart the transfer of lethal weapons to Hezbollah in Lebanon.”
The meeting would be the first since the Russian plane was downed by Syrian air defenses, which fired in response to an Israeli raid in the country.
Putin and Netanyahu have spoken at least three times by phone since the September 17 incident.
Fifteen Russians were killed in the incident that Moscow blamed on Israel, accusing its pilots of using the larger Russian plane as cover.
Israel disputes the Russian findings and says its jets were back in Israeli airspace when the plane was downed.
Russia announced new security measures to protect its military in Syria, including supplying the Syrian army with S-300 air defense systems and jamming radars of nearby warplanes.
Those measures have led to concern in Israel that it will be forced to limit its strikes against what it calls Iranian and Hezbollah targets in the neighboring country.
It has carried out hundreds of strikes in Syria against what it says are Iranian military targets and advanced arms deliveries to Hezbollah.
Russia and Israel set up a hotline in 2015 to avoid accidental clashes in Syria.
Both Iran and Hezbollah, enemies of Israel, are supporting Syrian President Bashar Assad’s regime in his country’s civil war alongside Russia.


Italy urges its citizens to leave Iran, be vigilant across Middle East

Updated 10 sec ago
Follow

Italy urges its citizens to leave Iran, be vigilant across Middle East

  • The ministry said travel to Iraq and Lebanon was also strongly discouraged
  • It advised Italian nationals in Israel ⁠to exercise maximum caution

ROME: Italy’s foreign ministry on Friday urged its citizens to leave Iran and advised extreme caution across the Middle East, citing persistently unstable security conditions.
“Italians in (Iran) for tourism or whose presence is not strictly necessary are urged to depart,” ⁠the ministry said ⁠in a statement, adding that travel to Iraq and Lebanon was also strongly discouraged.
It advised Italian nationals in Israel ⁠to exercise maximum caution and remain vigilant.
Several governments have issued similar warnings in recent days. Britain said on Friday it had temporarily withdrawn its staff from Iran and closed its embassy amid rising regional tensions.
The United States ⁠has ⁠built up a large military presence across the Middle East ahead of a possible strike on Iran, as talks between the two countries over Tehran’s nuclear ambitions continue with no sign of a breakthrough.