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Wars 2023 10/08 Monitoring the Israel and Lebanon War

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Wars 2023 10/08 Monitoring the Israel and Lebanon War
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Hopefully the Arab countries will be united against Israel because of Israhell's transgressions.

Saudi and UAE's relations are flourishing with Israel. Which other countries will ally against Israel which can make impact. After assassination of Ismail Haniyeh, Iran is also gone on Back foot. No Islamic country has guts to mess with Israel.
 

Israel strikes Hezbollah bastion in Beirut
Agence France-Presse. Beirut, Lebanon 28 September, 2024, 04:50

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Rescuers stand on the rubble of a builiding destroyed in an Israeli air strike in the Haret Hreik neighbourhood of Beirut's southern suburbs on September 27, 2024. | AFP Photo

Israel conducted a wave of air strikes on the south of Lebanon's capital Beirut on Friday that it said targeted Hezbollah's headquarters, warning of more to come as it told civilians to leave the densely populated neighbourhood.

Friday's strikes sent huge clouds of smoke soaring above the area and were heard across the Mediterranean city, sparking panic in the residential area that has been the Iran-backed movement's main bastion for decades.

They were by far the fiercest strikes to hit Beirut since Israel shifted its focus from the war in Gaza to Lebanon this week, pounding Hezbollah strongholds around the country and killing hundreds of people.

Hezbollah started fighting Israeli troops along the Lebanon border a day after its Palestinian ally Hamas staged its unprecedented attack on Israel on October 7.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed in an address to world leaders on Friday that there would be no-let up in the battle against Hezbollah until Israel's northern border was secured.

‘Oh my God, what strikes. I felt like the building was going to collapse on top of me,’ said Abir Hammoud, a teacher in her 40s who lives in the southern suburbs of Beirut.

Ahmad Ahmad, in his 60s, said he fled his house in the southern suburbs after the strikes, which he said felt ‘like an earthquake’.

Nasrallah 'fine'

A source close to Hezbollah said the strikes levelled six buildings, and according to a preliminary toll, six people were killed and 91 wounded.

Israeli military spokesman Daniel Hagari said the strike targeted ‘the central headquarters’ of Hezbollah in the southern suburbs of the city.

Israeli television networks reported that Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah was the target of the strike, though the source close to Hezbollah said he was ‘fine’.

Nasrallah enjoys cult status among his Shiite Muslim supporters, is equipped with a formidable arsenal far bigger and more modern than the national army's, and holds sway over Lebanon's institutions.

He has rarely been seen in public since his movement fought a devastating 2006 war with Israel, living in hiding to avoid assassination.

After the Beirut strikes, Hezbollah said it had fired more rockets into Israel ‘in defence of Lebanon and its people’.

The Israeli military said a Hezbollah rocket had hit a house and a car in the northern city of Safed but there were no immediate reports of casualties.

Rear Admiral Hagari warned Israel would not allow Hezbollah backer Iran to use Beirut airport to transfer weapons to its ally.

He also said the military would attack ‘in a short while’ three buildings Hezbollah was using to store weapons, calling on residents to evacuate them.

‘The force of the explosions as a result of the missiles which are under the buildings may cause damage to the buildings and even their collapse,’ Hagari said.

Deadliest in a generation

The UN has repeatedly condemned the sharp escalation of violence in Lebanon.

‘We are witnessing the deadliest period in Lebanon in a generation, and many express their fear that this is just the beginning,’ the UN humanitarian coordinator in Lebanon, Imran Riza, said.

In Israel, too, many were weary of the violence.

‘It is incredibly exhausting to be in this situation. We don't really know what's going to happen, there’s talk of a ground offensive or a major operation,’ said Lital Shmuelovich, a physiotherapy student.

In New York, Netanyahu also addressed the war in Gaza, saying that Israel's military would continue to fight Hamas until it achieved ‘total victory’.

Diplomats have said efforts to end the war in Gaza were key to halting the fighting in Lebanon and bringing the region back from the brink of all-out war.

But despite months of mediation efforts, a Gaza ceasefire remains elusive.

Hamas's October 7 attack resulted in the deaths of 1,205 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli official figures that include hostages killed in captivity.

Of the 251 hostages seized by militants, 97 are still held in Gaza, including 33 the Israeli military says are dead.

Israel's retaliatory military offensive has killed at least 41,534 people in Gaza, most of them civilians, according to figures provided by the Hamas-run territory's health ministry. The UN has described the figures as reliable.

Change the rules

The Lebanon violence has raised fears of wider turmoil in the Middle East, with Iran-backed militants across the region vowing to keep up their fight with Israel.

Netanyahu took aim at Iran in his UN General Assembly address, saying: ‘I have a message for the tyrants of Tehran. If you strike us, we will strike you.’

He added: ‘There is no place in Iran that the long arm of Israel cannot reach, and that's true of the entire Middle East.’

Analysts have said Iran would try to resist being dragged into the conflict.

But following the Beirut strikes, Iran's embassy in Lebanon said: ‘This reprehensible crime... represents a dangerous escalation that changes the rules of the game.’

Iran's president, Masoud Pezeshkian, later condemned the strikes, branding them a ‘flagrant war crime’.​
 

Israeli strikes kill 92 in Lebanon in past 24 hours: ministry
AFP
Published: 27 Sep 2024, 12: 39

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This picture shows the destruction in a area targeted overnight by Israeli airstrikes in Lebanon's town of Saksakiyeh, on 26 September, 2024. AFP

Israeli strikes have killed 92 people in Lebanon over the past 24 hours, the country's health ministry said late Thursday.

The ministry said in a series of statements that Israeli raids killed 40 people in towns and villages in the south, 48 in two eastern regions and four in the east of central Mount Lebanon Governorate.

Overall it said 153 people were injured.​
 

Israel kills Hezbollah chief in Beirut
Agence France-Presse . Beirut 28 September, 2024, 15:51


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Lebanon's Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah addresses a ceremony on the eve of the tenth day of the mourning period of Muharram, which marks the day of Ashura, in a southern suburb of the capital Beirut on October 11, 2016. | AFP file photo.

Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah has been killed, the Lebanese movement said Saturday, dealing a seismic blow to the Iran-backed group that has been engaged in a year of cross-border hostilities with Israel.

Hezbollah’s statement came after Israel’s military said it had killed Nasrallah in an air strike on Beirut’s southern suburbs, in a move that could destabilise Lebanon as a whole.

Iran, which arms and finances Hezbollah, said a senior member of its Revolutionary Guard Corps was killed in the same strike.

‘Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, Secretary General of Hezbollah, has joined his great, immortal martyr comrades whom he led for about 30 years,’ Hezbollah said in a statement.

It said he was killed with other group members ‘following the treacherous Zionist strike on the southern suburbs’ of Beirut.

AFP journalists heard a passer-by scream ‘Oh my God!’, and women weeping in the streets after Hezbollah announced the news.

Rarely seen in public, Nasrallah had enjoyed cult status among his Shiite Muslim supporters, and was the only man in Lebanon with the power to wage war or make peace.

‘Hassan Nasrallah is dead,’ Israeli Lieutenant Colonel Nadav Shoshani announced earlier on X.

Military spokesman Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari, in a televised briefing, called Nasrallah ‘one of the greatest enemies of the State of Israel of all time’ and added: ‘His elimination makes the world a safer place.’

In Tehran, posters of Nasrallah were erected bearing the slogan ‘Hezbollah is alive’.

Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani posted on X that Nasrallah’s ‘sacred goal will be realised in the liberation of Quds (Jerusalem), God willing’.

Earlier, Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei condemned what he called Israel’s ‘short-sighted and stupid policy’, without referring to Nasrallah’s fate.

Hezbollah in Lebanon began low-intensity cross-border attacks a day after its Palestinian ally Hamas staged its unprecedented attack on Israel on October 7, triggering war in the Gaza Strip.

Hamas on Saturday condemned Nasrallah’s killing as a ‘cowardly terrorist act’.

Israel has shifted the focus of its operation from Gaza to Lebanon, where heavy bombing has killed more than 700 people, according to Lebanon’s health ministry, as cross-border exchanges escalated over the past week.

Most of those Lebanese deaths came on Monday, the deadliest day of violence since Lebanon’s 1975-90 civil war.

The United Nations said around 118,000 people have been displaced.

Israel’s military said ‘most of the senior leaders of Hezbollah have been eliminated’, and added that it had hit more than 140 Hezbollah targets in Lebanon since Friday night.

The military continued to pound Hezbollah’s south Beirut stronghold into Saturday, sending panicked families fleeing.

An AFP photographer said dozens of buildings have been destroyed.

The blasts that rocked southern Beirut late Friday were the fiercest there since Israel and Hezbollah last went to war in 2006.

In the Haret Hreik neighbourhood, an AFP photographer saw craters up to five metres (16 feet) wide.

Middle East expert James Dorsey described Friday’s attack as ‘very sophisticated’, adding it ‘demonstrates not only significant technological capacity but just how deeply Israel has penetrated Hezbollah’.

Shoshani said Saturday there was ‘still a way to go’ in Israel’s fight against Hezbollah, adding that it was believed to have ‘tens of thousands of rockets’.

Some Israelis hailed the reports of Nasrallah’s death.

‘Absolutely fantastic news, it should have been done a long time ago,’ said David Shalev in Israel’s commercial hub Tel Aviv.

He said it sent a clear message to Israel’s foes: ‘Don’t screw with us.’

After Friday’s heavy strikes, Israel issued fresh warnings for people to leave part of the densely populated southern Dahiyeh suburbs before dawn.

Hundreds of families spent the night outside, in central Beirut’s Martyrs’ Square or along the seaside boardwalk.

‘I didn’t even pack any clothes, I never thought we would leave like this and suddenly find ourselves on the streets,’ south Beirut resident Rihab Naseef, 56, told AFP.

Israel’s military also announced strikes Saturday on the Bekaa area in eastern Lebanon and on the south.

It said a surface-to-surface missile from Lebanon fell in an open area in central Israel and another was intercepted in the north.

Hezbollah claimed a rocket attack on Kabri in northern Israel, and later said it launched ‘a salvo of Fadi-3 rockets’ towards the Ramat David airbase in northern Israel, which it has targeted before.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed to keep fighting Hezbollah until the northern border with Lebanon is secured.

‘Israel has every right to remove this threat and return our citizens to their homes safe,’ he said.

Israel has raised the prospect of a ground operation against Hezbollah, prompting widespread international concern.

‘We must avoid a regional war at all costs,’ UN chief Antonio Guterres told world leaders, again appealing for a ceasefire.

Diplomats have said efforts to end the war in Gaza were key to halting the fighting in Lebanon and bringing the region back from the brink.

The Lebanon violence has raised fears of a wider spillover, with Iran-backed militants across the Middle East vowing to keep fighting Israel.

Netanyahu addressed Iran in his UN General Assembly speech, saying: ‘If you strike us, we will strike you.’

He added: ‘There is no place in Iran that the long arm of Israel cannot reach.’

Iran’s official IRNA news agency reported General Abbas Nilforoushan, deputy commander of the Guards’ operations, died in the strike that killed Nasrallah.​
 
Nasrallahs successor has already taken command.

Iran will move a chess piece forward soon, toward a checkmate move.

There’s no way in hell Iran will accept anything else.

It’s all or nothing! Killing leaders of the resistance willy nilly is not going to save Israel.

This is just Israeli desperation
 
Saudi and UAE's relations are flourishing with Israel. Which other countries will ally against Israel which can make impact. After assassination of Ismail Haniyeh, Iran is also gone on Back foot. No Islamic country has guts to mess with Israel.
Iran has taken a step back/ time out and is analyzing the evolving chess board. Fresh eyes and younger minds in the IRGC are giving it a good look over, a new war plan being formulated.

Iran could pull yet another Oct 7th any moment.......but a much bigger/ far more sinister event this time around.

This is not a religious war bhai.......This is just Iran doing what it always does. Fukks with anyone standing in its way. Doesn't matter who or why or how.
 
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Nasrallahs successor has already taken command.

Iran will move a chess piece forward soon, toward a checkmate move.

There’s no way in hell Iran will accept anything else.

It’s all or nothing! Killing leaders of the resistance willy nilly is not going to save Israel.

This is just Israeli desperation
The brutal killing of Hezbollah chief is just the beginning of the end for Israel. I am sure the Iranians and Yemenis will put an end to the pathetic shitty life of Israel.
 
Iran has taken a step back/ time out and is analyzing the evolving chess board. Fresh eyes and younger minds in the IRGC are giving it a good look over, a new war plan being formulated.

Iran could pull yet another Oct 7th any moment.......but a much bigger/ far more sinister event this time around.

This is not a religious war bhai.......This is just Iran doing what it always does. Fukks with anyone standing in its way. Doesn't matter who or why or how.

What you say is very correct but verses from Holi books are invoked for political purpose whenever it is required. Islamic brotherhood is one such Fraud . They fight among themselves and unite on the name of Islamic brotherhood and opposes Israel and India by invoking the verses from Holi book.
 

NASRALLAH’S KILLING IN ISRAELI STRIKES
What will Israel, Iran, Hezbollah do next?

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The last 72 hours in the Middle East – in which Israel killed Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah and continued to bombard the Iran-backed group across Lebanon – have once more ratcheted up fears that this long-running conflict could spiral into a wider regional war. Here's what we know so far and where things might go next.

ESCALATING CONFLICT

Israel has pounded what it says are Hezbollah targets in the Lebanese capital of Beirut and elsewhere in the country on Friday, Saturday and yesterday, including the attack on the capital's southern suburbs that killed Nasrallah and another top figure Nabil Kaouk.

Lebanese civilians say they cannot heed warnings from Israel's military to avoid places where Hezbollah is operating, because the group is highly secretive.

The US sees the possibility of a limited ground incursion into Lebanon as Israel moves forces to its northern border, CNN reported earlier. But the US officials stressed that Israel does not appear to have made a decision on whether to carry out a ground incursion.

WHAT WILL HEZBOLLAH OR IRAN DO?

In the wake of Nasrallah's killing – and the attack on pagers and walkie-talkies – Hezbollah's remaining leaders are likely to be assessing how to meet, communicate and respond. But analysts say the setbacks faced by the group are unlikely to leave it completely weakened.

"Hezbollah has taken the biggest blow to its military infrastructure since its inception," said Hanin Ghaddar, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute and author of "Hezbollahland."

The group, however, still retains skilled commanders, as well as many of its most powerful assets – including precision-guided missiles and long-range missiles that could inflict significant damage to Israel's military and civilian infrastructure, said Ghaddar.

But the latest development raises the potential for a shift. Hezbollah will almost certainly respond, according to Jonathan Panikoff, a former senior intelligence official.

Another key question is the extent to which Iran could get involved.

Iran's embassy in Lebanon in a social media post Friday called Nasrallah's killing a "serious escalation that changes the rules of the game," and said its perpetrator "will be punished and disciplined appropriately."

The Iranian envoy to the UN on Saturday also requested an emergency meeting of the Security Council to "condemn Israel's actions in the strongest possible terms."

Pointing to the ongoing conflicts between Israel and Hamas, Israel and Hezbollah, and Israel and Iran, former US State Department Middle East negotiator Aaron David Miller told CNN: "None of these wars of attrition are going to end any time soon… there are no transformative, diplomatic Hollywood endings."​
 

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