“The al-Nusra Front has quite possibly given information to Zionists to enable them assassinate the son of martyr (Imad) Mughniyeh,” Hossein Sheikholeslam told Tasnim on Tuesday.

His comments came after Israel killed six Hezbollah fighters on Sunday, including Jihad Mughniyeh, the son of Hezbollah's martyred top military commander, Imad Mughniyeh.

A military helicopter gunship operated by the Israeli army fired two missiles into Amal Farms in the strategic Quneitra region, situated some 60 kilometers (37 miles) south of the capital, Damascus, on Sunday. Two remote-controlled reconnaissance drones buzzed overhead as the airborne assault took place.

Links between Israel and the armed militants fighting against Syria’s legitimate government is not something new.

Israeli media reported in December 2014 that Zionists had taken three wounded militants belonging to Takfiri groups fighting in Syria to hospitals in Israel.

The reports also revealed that more than 449 wounded militants had been treated at Nahariya Hospital in Galilee.

According to documents from Israeli hospitals, Israel’s army paid $10 million until September 2014 for the costs of treatment to the foreign-sponsored militants injured during battles with Syrian government forces, and the money has come from the Israeli military’s budget.