14 Nov 2024
Israel
By Daily Mail

Israel has destroyed a Sudanese weapons factory in a bombing raid, it was claimed yesterday.
Sudan vowed to take decisive steps in retaliation against Israeli interests, which it said are now legitimate targets.

The Yarmouk arms factory, in the south of the capital Khartoum, was destroyed in a series of explosions on Wednesday last week, in which two people died.

Sudan immediately pointed the finger of blame at Israel, while an American monitoring group said satellite images of the aftermath of the explosion suggest the site was hit in an airstrike.

The images showed six large craters, each approximately 16 metres across and consistent with large impact craters created by air-delivered munitions.

They were centred in a location where, until recently, some 40 shipping containers had been stacked, according to the Satellite Sentinel Project.

There were claims yesterday that Israel attacked the factory because it was a front for manufacturing rockets and ballistic missiles for Iran. There were also reports that the raid acted as a dry run for a forthcoming strike on Irans nuclear facilities.

Israel has so far made no comment on the destruction of the factory, as has become conventional when it is accused of attacking targets in nearby countries.

But it has long seen Sudan as a conduit for weapons smuggled to the Hamas-ruled Gaza strip via the Egyptian Sinai desert. Sudans information minister, Ahmed Bilal Osman, said: The sophisticated warplanes and weapons used in the attack are available to no country in the region except Israel.

He added that Sudan would have to take decisive steps in retaliation although this would definitely not entail a direct strike.

But we have the means, we have the means of how we can reply. They killed our people... and we know how to retaliate.

There was widespread condemnation in the Arab world yesterday over the alleged attacks, although there was no direct proof linking them to Israel.

Western security sources told the Sunday Times the bombing raid was carried out by eight Israeli F-151 planes.

 

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