A Syrian army outpost south of Damascus was hit by an “Israeli bombardment,” according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. Deutsche Welle reports: “The location was targeted by three missile strikes, which caused physical damage,” the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said in a report. “It is unknown whether members of Hezbollah were inside the location or not,” SOHR added, referring to an armed Lebanese Shiite movement allied with the Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. However, the Reuters news agency reported that a “pro-Syrian government military source” had denied the reports. While mystery shrouds Israel’s involvement in the five-year Syrian conflict, both Damascus and Tehran have claimed that the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) have launched attacks in Syria. #SOHR 3 missile strikes target location for the regime forces south of the capital #Damascus https://t.co/itQc8HId1y pic.twitter.com/u2xzXSFJpR — #المرصدالسوري #SOHR (@syriahr) February 17, 2016 In December 2014, Syrian state television reported that Israeli airstrikes were carried out near the nation’s capital. Shortly after the alleged airstrikes, Iran’s Revolutionary Guards confirmed one of its generals had been killed in the attack “by the Zionist regime’s helicopters.” Tensions between Jerusalem and Damascus escalated in 2013 amid skirmishes between the country’s forces in the [...]