JERUSALEM (AFP) — Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert sought to reassure Syria and Lebanon on Sunday that the Jewish state was not looking to exacerbate tension along its northern border at the outset of a major 'missile attack' exercise.
The five-day nationwide exercise, simulating air and missile attacks on cities throughout the country -- including by non-conventional weapons -- began on Sunday, the army said.
"The goal of the exercise is to check the authorities' ability to carry out their duties in time of emergency and for preparing the home front for different scenarios," Olmert said at the start of a weekly cabinet meeting.
"There is nothing else hidden behind it. All the reports on tension in the north can be moderated and cooled down. We have no secret plans," he added.
Over the next few days emergency sirens will be sounded across the country and schoolchildren will practise entering shelters and protected spaces in the event of an attack by chemical or biological weapons.
The emergency services will also, for the first time, broadcast tutorial videos on television explaining how to act during an attack.
The planned exercise comes after local media last week reported heightened tensions along Israel's heavily-guarded border with Syria and just days after Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Siniora put his armed forces on alert.
Siniora also asked UN peacekeepers tasked with monitoring the border, "to be careful" that Israel will not use the manoeuvres "to launch operations capable of increasing tension," a statement from his office said.
Israel has repeatedly said the drills are purely aimed at preparing emergency services and civilians to respond to an attack.
"As far as I know the Syrians know this and there is no need to give the exercise a different interpretation," Olmert said.
"We are interested in negotiations for peace with the Syrians. They know exactly what our expectations are, we know their expectations, and if the circumstances allow this, that is where we would like to head," Olmert said.
The last round of negotiations between the two neighbours, technically at war since 1948, broke down in 2000 over disagreements over the strategic Golan Heights plateau, which Israel seized in the 1967 war and annexed in 1981.
Israel's Defence Minister Ehud Barak earlier said that "the northern front is particularly volatile, but we don't want any degradation and the other side knows it and we also think that the other side doesn't want a degradation."
He added, however, that Israel was "ready to confront any development."
Barak said the exercises were primarily aimed at "learning lessons" from the war with Lebanon in 2006, during which more than 4,000 rockets fired by the Hezbollah militia slammed into northern Israel.
An official investigation into the war harshly criticised Israel's military and political leadership for failing to protect civilians during the 34-day conflict.
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