Turkey Deploys MIM-23 Hawk Missiles in Syria’s Idlib

Turkish military vehicles patrol near the Syrian town of Saraqeb in the northwestern province of Idlib, Sept. 4, 2019. (Getty Images)
Turkish military vehicles patrol near the Syrian town of Saraqeb in the northwestern province of Idlib, Sept. 4, 2019. (Getty Images)
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Turkey Deploys MIM-23 Hawk Missiles in Syria’s Idlib

Turkish military vehicles patrol near the Syrian town of Saraqeb in the northwestern province of Idlib, Sept. 4, 2019. (Getty Images)
Turkish military vehicles patrol near the Syrian town of Saraqeb in the northwestern province of Idlib, Sept. 4, 2019. (Getty Images)

The Turkish army deployed US-made medium-range surface-to-air MIM-23 Hawk missiles in Syria’s Idlib Idlib, satellite images showed.

Shared on social media, the images reveal the location of the air defense system in Al-Mastoumah camp, which is located five kilometers south of Idlib city.

The camp is strategically located along the Idlib-Latakia M4 Highway.

This is not the first time Ankara deploys such a defense system in Syria. In early 2018, Turkey sent the system to Dar Izza in the western Aleppo countryside.

The deployment of the MIM-23 HAWK system means that the Turkish army will no longer need to rely on fighter jets and drones to down Syrian regime fighter jets.

Sources at the Syrian armed opposition justified the deployment of the defense system as being part of Turkish measures to protect its borders against any regime attacks.

The HAWK system was developed in the 1960s but has been improved over the years. It has the ability to destroy aircraft flying at an altitude of up to 20 kilometers and has a range of 40 kilometers.

Local sources in Idlib noticed an unprecedented movement of Turkish military forces in Idlib, particularly following Saturday’s visit by Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar to the border with Syria, where the army is pushing military reinforcements to Idlib.

A column of dozens of Turkish vehicles was seen crossing into Syrian territory, via the Kafr Lusin crossing.



UNRWA: Gaza Aid System Strips People of Humanity, Leads to Chaos and Death

FILED - 19 November 2023, Egypt, Rafah: An UNRWA fuel truck queues to enter Palestinian territories from Rafah Border Crossing. Photo: Gehad Hamdy/dpa
FILED - 19 November 2023, Egypt, Rafah: An UNRWA fuel truck queues to enter Palestinian territories from Rafah Border Crossing. Photo: Gehad Hamdy/dpa
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UNRWA: Gaza Aid System Strips People of Humanity, Leads to Chaos and Death

FILED - 19 November 2023, Egypt, Rafah: An UNRWA fuel truck queues to enter Palestinian territories from Rafah Border Crossing. Photo: Gehad Hamdy/dpa
FILED - 19 November 2023, Egypt, Rafah: An UNRWA fuel truck queues to enter Palestinian territories from Rafah Border Crossing. Photo: Gehad Hamdy/dpa

Juliette Touma, UNRWA Director of Communications, said on Sunday that the Israeli-American aid system in Gaza is dehumanizing and brings chaos and death.

“We are very, very close to losing our collective humanity,” Touma told NewsNation.

“The manmade famine in Gaza has been largely shaped by the deliberate attempts to replace the UN-coordinated humanitarian system through the politically motivated “GHF”, UNRWA’s page on X quoted Touma as saying.

"This new Israeli-American system brings dehumanization, chaos, and death”, she elaborated.

“We must return to a unified, UN-led coordination and distribution system based on international humanitarian law. The abomination must end”, she concluded.

Eleven Palestinian civilians were killed in Israeli airstrikes targeting several areas in the Gaza Strip since dawn on Sunday, including three who were waiting for aid north of Rafah.