Ten cars were graffitied, two were burned and four buildings were vandalised in a 41-minute rampage in Woollahra, a heartland for Australia's Jewish community, in the dead of the night on November 20, 2024.
Mohommed Farhat and Thomas Stojanovski, both 21, were later arrested over the night of terror in the eastern Sydney suburb.
Magistrate Scott Nash on Tuesday afternoon hit Farhat with a sentence of one year and eight months behind bars with a non-parole period of 10 months.
Because of time already spent in custody, he will be released on parole on December 6.
Farhat took the lead during the anti-Semitic spate of attacks, calling an Uber using his own account to get home.
Police used this information during their investigation to uncover who was behind the vandalism, arson and graffiti.
"F*** Israel" and "PKK coming" - referencing the terror-designated Kurdistan Workers' Party - were among the slurs emblazoned across the cars and buildings.
Multiple slurs also misspelled the word "f***"
Farhat, who pleaded guilty in September to a suite of charges including property destruction, did the vast majority of the damage.
Stojanovski assisted him by shining a torch or holding a suitcase containing the jerry cans purchased earlier in the night.
CCTV also showed the pair at a service station where Farhat went inside to buy fuel, a lighter and a box of tissues before driving to Woollahra.
A Ford Ranger valued at more than $80,000 was graffitied and then set alight by the two men, with the subsequent fire causing an adjacent car to have its rear lights and electrics melted.
Woollahra Fire Station was also targeted in the attack with "PKK coming" sprayed on a side wall, along with two outdoor tables in the courtyard of a nearby restaurant and the walls of two apartment blocks.
The restaurant, Chiswick, is operated by famed chef Matt Moran.
Farhat was also ordered to pay a total of $5324 in compensation to five residents whose cars he vandalised.
There is no indication in the agreed facts of the case as to why the two men carried out the attack. But the NSW Supreme Court previously heard Farhat might have neck and throat tattoos in support of terrorist group Hezbollah.
The vandalism was among a spate of anti-Semitic incidents in Sydney, including an arson attempt on a synagogue and the targeting of a prominent Jewish leader's former home.
Iran orchestrated at least two anti-Semitic attacks in Australia at a similar time, Australia's national security service ASIO said in August.
Stojanovski remains out on bail awaiting his sentence on Friday.