Sudanese warplanes launched their first attack on a major South Sudanese town on Thursday, with five bombs dropped on the capital of the oil-producing Unity border state, Southern officials said.
"They dropped bombs in Bentiu town -- apparently they were aiming for a bridge," South Sudan's deputy information minister Atem Yaak Atem told Agence France Presse.
Bombs were dropped at dawn targeting a strategic bridge on the edge of Bentiu, which lies some 60 kilometers (40 miles) from the frontier, on the third straight day of violence.
The latest clashes gave brought the two former civil war foes closer to an outright war, after parliaments in both countries on Wednesday urged their respective citizens to take up defenses.
"Our position is not to go to war except in self-defense" Atem said, adding that there were no reported casualties from Thursday's raid.
Atem said the bridge was near a United Nations compound, slightly outside the town and on the road leading north to the frontline.
Khartoum has vowed to react with "all means" against a three-pronged attack it said South Sudanese forces had launched against Sudan's South Kordofan state, including the Heglig oil field.
A statement on Khartoum's official SUNA news agency warned of "destruction" in South Sudan.
"I think they want to disable communication and transport -- they said they were going to destroy the South," Atem added.
The African Union, United Nations and the United States have called for restraint and voiced deep concern at the escalation of violence which saw South Sudan's army seize the Heglig oil region.
In response, Khartoum has pulled out of AU-led crisis talks aimed at resolving the protracted dispute over oil, border demarcation, contested areas and citizenship issues.
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