Israel launched more than 120 airstrikes against
Lebanon on Tuesday in one of the heaviest days of bombing in weeks, as the Israeli prime minister,
Benjamin Netanyahu, said his military was escalating its offensive against
Hezbollah.A ceasefire brokered by the US last month between
Israel and the militant Islamist movement now appears close to total collapse, complicating negotiations to bring a definitive end to the war with
Iran.Tehran, which has a close relationship with
Hezbollah, has repeatedly signalled that an end to
Israel’s offensive in
Lebanon is a condition of any deal with Washington.
Israel’s military said it targeted 100 sites linked to
Hezbollah across southern
Lebanon and the eastern
Bekaa valley area, including storage facilities, command centres and observation points that Israeli officials say are used to attack troops and residents in northern
Israel.
Lebanon’s national news agency said at least 10 people, including women and children, were killed in one strike on the town of
Burj al-Shamali in southern
Lebanon, while another strike on the eastern village of
Mashghara killed 12 people including several members of the same family.People clean up debris caused by an Israeli airstrike in
Tyre,
Lebanon. Photograph: Adri Salido/Getty ImagesNetanyahu said in a statement that the Israeli military was “operating with large forces in the field and capturing and controlling areas”.“We are fortifying the security strip to protect the northern communities [in
Israel],” Netanyahu said in a reference to a self-declared security zone occupied by Israeli troops several kilometres inside southern
Lebanon.Netanyahu, who faces a tough battle for re-election later this month, is under pressure to show results against
Hezbollah, especially as few of the apparent aims of the war
Israel launched with
Iran in February have been achieved.Politicians and commenters in
Israel have called in recent days for Netanyahu to ignore any pressure from Washington to limit its military operations in
Lebanon.Writing in the Maariv newspaper, Avi Ashkenazi called for “sustained around-the-clock attack waves of strikes using hundreds of aircraft simultaneously”.“The ground in
Lebanon must tremble. Residents of
Beirut,
Tyre and
Sidon must sit in shelters just as residents of [
Israel’s] north are being forced to remain confined to their homes,” he wrote.
Beirut has so far been spared Israeli strikes since the start of the ceasefire, but the prospect of an escalation of the offensive has caused widespread concern.“By just saying a few words on TV, [Netanyahu] causes everyone to panic and flee their homes,” said Tony Aboud in
Beirut’s bustling Hamra district. “I don’t know what’s going to happen and how long we can live like this.”A man checks a house that was destroyed in an Israeli airstrike in
Burj al-Shamali, near the southern port city of
Tyre,
Lebanon. Photograph: Mohammed Zaatari/APThere were reports on Wednesday of new fighting in southern
Lebanon between Israeli troops and
Hezbollah.
Hezbollah said its fighters clashed with Israeli forces in a town north of the strategic Litani River in southern
Lebanon – the current de facto boundary in
Lebanon, with large areas to the south under Israeli military control.
Israel’s military has ordered residents not to return to dozens of villages in the buffer zone it is seeking to establish between five and 10 kilometres into
Lebanon, where its troops have been destroying homes.An Israeli military official said the military was “operating in a targeted manner beyond the Forward Defense Line in order to remove direct threats to the citizens of the state of
Israel [and Israeli soldiers]”.In recent weeks,
Hezbollah has boasted that it is using new fibre-optic drones, which Israeli troops have struggled to intercept, hitting Israeli forces and northern Israeli villages.
Israel has told people there not to gather in large numbers. On Wednesday, air raid sirens were activated in the area of Shlomi in the western Galilee after reports of a drone infiltration.“What this requires of us now is to increase the blows, to increase the intensity. We will smite them hip and thigh,” Netanyahu said earlier this week.Over 1 million people in
Lebanon have been displaced in the latest round of hostilities. Photograph: Raghed Waked/ReutersOver 1 million people in
Lebanon have been displaced in the latest round of hostilities between
Hezbollah and
Israel, which began when the Islamist movement fired rockets into northern
Israel in March, two days after
Israel launched strikes against Tehran which killed the then Iranian supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.At least 3,213 people have been killed in Israeli strikes since the start of the war, according to the Lebanese Health Ministry, with more than 9,700 wounded.According to Netanyahu’s office, 23 Israeli soldiers and a defence contractor have been killed in or near southern
Lebanon, and two civilians have been killed in northern
Israel.The Israeli military said that 10 of its soldiers had been killed since the 16 April ceasefire, six of them by
Hezbollah’s explosive drones.
Hezbollah has not released figures for its own casualties.
Israel’s defence minister,
Israel Katz, said the military had killed Mohammed Odeh, the new leader of Hamas’ military wing, during airstrikes in Gaza City, less than two weeks after killing his predecessor. At least five people were killed and 12 injured, according to local hospitals.Reuters and Associated Press contributed to this report