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2024.09.25 19:26 GMT+8

Hezbollah and Israel trade strikes in the heaviest round of fighting in a year of war

Updated 2024.09.25 19:26 GMT+8
CGTN

The damage caused at the site of an Israeli strike that hit the Lebanese seaside town of Jiyeh on Wednesday. /Amr Abdallah Dalsh/Reuters

Hezbollah said its fighters fired a rocket targeting the Mossad spy agency headquarters near Tel Aviv on Wednesday and Israel unleashed more airstrikes on southern Lebanon in the heaviest bout of warfare between the two sides in a year.

The Israeli military said a single surface-to-surface missile was intercepted by air defense systems after it was detected crossing from Lebanon. Warning sirens sounded in Tel Aviv, Israel's economic capital, but there were no reports of damage or casualties.

Israeli military spokesman Nadav Shoshani said he could not confirm what Hezbollah's target was when it fired the missile from a village in Lebanon. "The result was a heavy missile, going towards Tel Aviv, towards civilian areas in Tel Aviv. The Mossad headquarters is not in that area," he said.

Warning sirens also sounded in other areas of central Israel, including the city of Netanya. The Israeli military has been carrying out its heaviest airstrikes in a year of conflict this week, targeting leaders of Hezbollah and hitting hundreds of sites deep inside Lebanon.

Israel's focus has now turned to its northern frontier and southern Lebanon, already the scene of near-daily exchanges of fire for months.

There was no let-up on Wednesday. Israel said its warplanes were currently carrying out extensive strikes in south Lebanon and the Bekaa Valley. Hezbollah has fired hundreds of missiles and rockets at Israel in recent days.

Lebanon said ten people were killed in Israeli strikes on Wednesday, including two rare strikes in mountain areas outside Hezbollah's traditional strongholds in the south and east.

The health ministry said that an Israeli strike on the village of Joun in the Chouf mountains, southeast of Beirut, killed four people. It said two other strikes killed three people in the village of Maaysra, north of Beirut, and three in Ain Qana in the south.

Smoke billows over southern Lebanon following an Israeli strike, as seen from Tyre. /Aziz Taher/Reuters

Casualty toll rises

Hezbollah has blamed Mossad for the recent assassination of its leaders.

It has also accused the spy agency of carrying out an extraordinary operation last week in which the communications devices of its members were booby-trapped and exploded, killing 39 people and wounding nearly 3,000 in the worst security breach in its history.

Since Monday morning, the Israeli offensive has killed 569 people, including 50 children, and wounded 1,835 in Lebanon, Health Minister Firass Abiad told Al Jazeera Mubasher TV.

Half a million people are estimated to have been displaced in Lebanon, Foreign Minister Abdallah Bou Habib said. In Beirut, thousands of people who fled from southern Lebanon were sheltering in schools and other buildings.

Also on Wednesday, the Israeli military said a drone crossing into Israeli territory from Syria was intercepted by fighter jets south of the Sea of Galilee. The Islamic Resistance armed groups in Iraq said in a statement they had attacked a target in the occupied Golan Heights via a drone.

Israel military leaders have said they are prepared for a range of options as it battles Hezbollah, which has proven resilient over its decades-long hostilities with Israel. Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said on Wednesday that killing important Hezbollah figures would not bring it to its knees.

Troops from Israel have been training for months for a possible ground operation inside Lebanon aimed at securing its northern border and enabling thousands of Israeli residents who fled for their safety to return to their communities.

Israel's close ally the United States is sticking by it despite its concerns about mass civilian casualties. While Arab states have condemned Israel's military campaigns, they have not taken strong steps to force it to rein in the most powerful military in the Middle East.

On Tuesday, a strike in Beirut killed senior Hezbollah commander Ibrahim Qubaisi, who headed the group's missile and rocket force.

A member of the Israeli Army stands at the scene of a damaged home following a rocket attack from Lebanon in northern Israel. /Jim Urquhart/Reuters

'Lebanon is at the brink'

The new offensive against Hezbollah has stoked fears that conflict between Israel and Hamas in Gaza is widening across the Middle-East. The UN Security Council said it would meet on Wednesday to discuss the conflict.

"Lebanon is at the brink. The people of Lebanon, the people of Israel and the people of the world cannot afford Lebanon to become another Gaza," UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said.

Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said the attacks had weakened Hezbollah and would continue. Hezbollah "has suffered a sequence of blows to its command and control, its fighters and the means to fight. These are all severe blows," he told Israeli troops.

The Kremlin on Wednesday urged Russian nationals to leave Lebanon as soon as possible for their own safety on commercial flights.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov made the statement after warning a day earlier that Israeli strikes on Hezbollah targets in Lebanon had the potential to destabilize the Middle-East and widen the conflict there.

Israel's military offensive in the Gaza Strip has killed at least 41,495 Palestinians and wounded 96,006 since October 7, the Palestinian enclave's health ministry said on Wednesday.

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Source(s): Reuters
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