A funeral procession for members of a Druze militia who were killed fighting in Jaramana, a suburb of Damascus, Syria, on Wednesday, April 30, 2025. Violent clashes between pro-government fighters and Drusze militia around Syria’s capital, Damascus, spread on Wednesday and drew Israel’s military into the fray, leaving at least 11 people dead, according to the Syrian authorities and a war monitor. (Nanna Heitmann/The New York Times)

- Israel launched airstrikes in Syria after clashes near Damascus killed 39, vowing to defend Druse civilians from extremist attacks.
- Sectarian violence erupted in Druse areas of Syria after a controversial audio clip, sparking deadly clashes with government forces.
- Israel warned it would intervene further as Syria’s new Sunni Islamist leaders struggle to control unrest among ethnic and religious minorities.
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BEIRUT — Israel waded into a wave of sectarian violence in Syria, launching airstrikes Wednesday and threatening to strike Syrian government forces if clashes persist with fighters from the country’s Druse minority.
The Israeli military said its aircraft had struck a group of “operatives” south of Damascus and accused them of having “attacked Druse civilians.” It did not identify the operatives. But earlier, the Israeli government said the attack targeted members of an unidentified “extremist group.”
At least 39 people — 22 of them on Wednesday — have been killed in two days of clashes between Syrians on the outskirts of Damascus, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a war monitoring group based in Britain.
Israeli Airstrike Wednesday Came After Violent Clashes
The Israeli airstrikes Wednesday came after violent clashes broke out between pro-government fighters and Druse militia members from near the town of Ashrafieh Sahnaya, a largely Druse area south of Damascus.
The attacks on areas around Damascus with large Druse populations began overnight from Monday to Tuesday after an audio clip circulated on social media purporting to be a Druse cleric insulting the Prophet Muhammad. The cleric denied the accusation, and Syria’s Interior Ministry said that its initial findings showed that he was not the person in the clip.
The violence is stoking fears among Syria’s many diverse ethnic and religious minorities, who have grown increasingly worried about persecution under the rule of Syria’s new Islamist leadership who overthrew dictator Bashar Assad in December.
The clashes began in the predominantly Druse city of Jaramana. By the end of the day Tuesday, 17 people were dead.
The unrest spread overnight into Wednesday to Ashrafieh Sahnaya, where Druse militia fighters battled “forces affiliated to the ministries of defense and interior and other proxy forces,” of the government, according to the Syrian Observatory.
The Syrian state news agency, SANA, said armed gunmen attacked checkpoints and vehicles belonging to government forces in Ashrafieh Sahnaya. The agency did not say who the armed gunmen were, but it was apparently making a reference to the Druse fighters.
A Syrian Interior Ministry official called the gunmen who attacked government forces “criminals” and said that the government would strike back “with an iron fist,” according to SANA.
Israel’s first airstrike Wednesday was described as a warning against what it called “an extremist group” said to be preparing to attack members of the Druse religious minority, according to a joint statement by the Israeli prime minister’s office and the defense minister.
Israel is home to a substantial Druse community, many of whom see themselves as loyal citizens and serve in the military. Israel has offered to protect the Druse in Syria should they come under attack amid the tumultuous transition of power in the country recently.
Syrian Druse Reject Offer
Many Syrian Druse have rejected that offer.
Syria is a predominantly Sunni Muslim nation, while the Druse are a religious group that practices a secretive religion rooted in Islam. The rebels who led the overthrow of the former dictator Bashar Assad belonged to a Sunni Islamist group that was once linked to al-Qaida. They now run the government and the national military.
Since Assad was ousted, Israel has carried out numerous incursions in Syria, raiding villages, launching hundreds of airstrikes and destroying military outposts. Israel says it wants to prevent weapons from falling into the hands of hostile groups and that it does not want enemy forces to entrench themselves in areas near its borders.
Syria’s new leaders have wrestled to integrate the complex web of armed groups operating across the country into the new state apparatus. Several of the strongest Druse militias are in talks with the government about their conditions for integrating into the army.
Sectarian violence has hit Syria several times since the ouster of Assad, stoking fears among many minority groups that the country’s new leaders will marginalize or even target them.
Last month, a wave of sectarian killings spread across Syria’s coastal region, home of the country’s Alawites, the minority group that the Assad family belongs to.
—
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
By Euan Ward and Aaron Boxerman/Nanna Heitmann
c. 2025 The New York Times Company
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