A combination image from the US Department of Defense the Pentagon said showed the impact crater from this weekâs chemical-weapon attack inside Syria. The image was released after retaliatory US cruise missile strike against Syria on Friday.Courtesy U.S. DoD/Handout via REUTERS
Another image from the USS Porter conducting strike operations against Syria.Ford Williams/Courtesy U.S. Navy/Handout via REUTERS
US Navy guided-missile destroyer USS Ross in the Mediterranean on January 5.Reuters
Robert S. Price/Courtesy U.S. Navy/Handout via REUTERS
The US Navy guided-missile destroyer USS Porter conducting strike operations from the Mediterranean Sea that the Defense Department said was part of a cruise-missile strike against Syria on Friday.Ford Williams/Courtesy U.S. Navy/Handout via REUTERS
Satellite images released Friday of the Syrian air base that was pounded with 59 U.S. Tomahawk missiles show large-scale destruction to airfields, planes and fueling facilities allegedly used by the Assad regime to mount chemical weapons attacks.
Shayrat air base was âalmost completely destroyedâ by the barrage of 1,000-pound warheads launched from the Eastern Mediterranean Sea early Friday, according to a human rights group in the country.
U.S. intelligence sources told Fox News they believe with âhigh confidenceâ that a deadly gas attack on Syrian civilians was carried out by government aircraft at Shayrat air base, southeast of Homs.
âInitial indications are that this strike has severely damaged or destroyed Syrian aircraft and support infrastructure and equipment at Shayrat Airfield.â
â Capt. Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the missile attack damaged over a dozen hangars, a fuel depot and an air defense base.
At least seven Syrian soldiers were killed and nine wounded in the airstrike, the countryâs military said.
The governor of Homs province said he did not believe the strikes caused a large number of âhuman casualties.â A Syrian official the attack caused deaths and a fire, but did not elaborate.
Two senior defense officials with knowledge of the strike also told Fox News that about 20 Syrian jets were destroyed.
None of the jets managed to take off and escape before U.S. missiles hit the target, the officials said, adding that all of the destroyed aircraft were jets â not helicopters. No Russian aircraft were at the Sharyat airfield.
U.S. officials told Fox News there were between 12 and 100 Russian military personnel present at the base when the missiles hit and said the U.S. âtook painsâ to avoid hitting their barracks.
The U.S. missiles hit at 3:45 a.m. local time in Syria. Syrian state TV called the attack an âaggressionâ that lead to âlosses.â
âInitial indications are that this strike has severely damaged or destroyed Syrian aircraft and support infrastructure and equipment at Shayrat Airfield, reducing the Syrian governmentâs ability to deliver chemical weapons,â Captain Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman, said, according to Reuters.
Davis said the U.S. was still assessing the result of the 59 Tomahawks it fired, expressing hope that Assadâs government learned a lesson. He said it was ultimately âthe regimeâs choiceâ if more U.S. military action would be needed.
Fox News is told the missiles were the Tomahawk âEâ or Echo version. It is the latest model and has two-way satellite communication allowing the missile to be reprogrammed in flight if needed. The missiles can carry 1,000-pound warheads.
Syriaâs state TV showed footage of a fast sequence of orange flashes that lit the dark sky in the distance before the crack of dawn. The shaky footage was apparently filmed with a mobile phone camera and aired Friday.
In a different sequence after day break, the Syrian TV station al-Ikhbariyah showed another short clip of smoke billowing in the distance, hovering over a raging fire, the tip of which emerges and a forest of trees is in the foreground.
The U.S. launched the nearly five dozen cruise missiles in response to a chemical weapons attack that killed dozens of civilians, the first direct assault on the Damascus government since the beginning of that countryâs bloody civil war in 2011.
U.S. officials called the airstrike a âone-offâ and said there are no plans for escalation.
Russia, meanwhile, condemended the attack, calling it an âaggression against a sovereign stateâ and a violation of international law.
Shortly before the strikes, the head of information policy commission in the upper house of Russian parliament, Alexei Pushkov, said on Twitter said that if President Trump launches a military action in Syria it would put him in âthe same league with Bush and Obama.â
Trump on Thursday called for all âcivilized nationsâ to join the U.S. âin seeking to end this slaughter and bloodshed in Syria.â
Syria missile attack: Satellite photos show major damage to airfields April 07, 2017 Satellite images released Friday of the Syrian air base that was pounded with 59 U.S.