Fox News: Iran Establishing Secret Military Base in Syria

Iran has established a new military base in Syria and has plans to house thousands of troops at the location. (ISI)
Iran has established a new military base in Syria and has plans to house thousands of troops at the location. (ISI)
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Fox News: Iran Establishing Secret Military Base in Syria

Iran has established a new military base in Syria and has plans to house thousands of troops at the location. (ISI)
Iran has established a new military base in Syria and has plans to house thousands of troops at the location. (ISI)

Iran has established a new military base in Syria and has plans to house thousands of troops at the location, multiple Western intelligence sources told Fox News.

The classified Iranian project, called the Imam Ali compound, was approved by top leadership in Tehran and is being completed by the Iranian al-Quds Forces, said Tuesday’s report.

Using a civilian satellite company, Fox News verified the information and obtained images that show a base being constructed on the Syria-Iraq border.

Analysts at Image Sat International (ISI) who reviewed the images say that precision-guided missiles could be housed at five different newly constructed buildings that are surrounded by large dirt mounds. The images also show, in the northwest part of the base, ten additional storehouses with less external protection, as well as new buildings and missile storage structures.

ISI analysts say that construction could be completed over the next few months and the base would be operational shortly after.

According to security experts, this is the first time that the Iranian military is building a base of this scale from scratch in Syria. There is an American army position less than 200 miles from the new Iranian compound.

In recent months, Israel has targeted Iranian military facilities in Syria and destroyed structures that were used to house weapons and troops.

Iran and Iranian-backed militias are using the chaos caused by the Syrian civil war to strengthen their presence in the region.



Extreme Heat in Morocco Claims 21 Lives

21 deaths, most of them elderly or suffering from chronic illnesses, were recorded in Morocco due to a heatwave (dpa)
21 deaths, most of them elderly or suffering from chronic illnesses, were recorded in Morocco due to a heatwave (dpa)
TT

Extreme Heat in Morocco Claims 21 Lives

21 deaths, most of them elderly or suffering from chronic illnesses, were recorded in Morocco due to a heatwave (dpa)
21 deaths, most of them elderly or suffering from chronic illnesses, were recorded in Morocco due to a heatwave (dpa)

A heatwave in Morocco has killed at least 21 people in a 24-hour period in the central city of Beni Mellal, the health ministry announced on Thursday
The meteorology department said soaring temperatures affected much of the North African country from Monday to Wednesday, reaching 48 degrees Celsius (118 Fahrenheit) in some areas.
In Beni Mellal, "the majority of deaths involved people suffering from chronic illnesses and the elderly, with high temperatures contributing to the deterioration of their health conditions," the regional health directorate said in a statement.
Morocco has suffered a sixth consecutive year of drought, and record heat this past winter with January the hottest since 1940, according to the meteorology department.
The rising temperatures and prolonged drought, which have lowered reservoir levels, are a threat to the vital farm sector.
Water evaporation reached 1.5 million cubic meters per day, Water Minister Nizar Baraka said at the end of June.
Globally, Monday was the hottest day recorded since measurements began in 1940, the European Union's Copernicus Earth observation program said.
Morocco's record temperature -- 50.4 degrees Celsius -- was set in August last year in the coastal resort city of Agadir.