Israel has carried out airstrikes on the southern suburbs of
Beirut, the most serious escalation in its war with
Hezbollah since a ceasefire was established in mid-April.The strike hit two apartments in two separate buildings,
Lebanon’s state news agency reported, killing two people and wounding 11, according to an initial death toll.The Israeli prime minister’s office said that the Israeli military had struck “terrorist headquarters” in the southern suburbs “in response to
Hezbollah’s firing at Israeli territory”.
Israel said that it intercepted
Hezbollah rocket fire at northern
Israel on Sunday morning, though the armed group did not claim responsibility for the attacks.The attacks showered the streets in rubble and caused a wave of people to flee the southern suburbs in fear of further strikes.First responders inspect damage after the Israeli strike. Photograph: AFP/Getty ImagesThe strikes on
Beirut came just days after a ceasefire proposal agreed by the Lebanese government and
Israel was rejected by
Hezbollah.
Washington had previously asked
Israel to not strike
Beirut, though Israeli media reported that the US had been informed before Sunday’s strike.
Iran had also previously threatened that any attack on
Beirut would be met with its own attack on northern
Israel. It had yet to comment on
Israel’s attack on Sunday.Fighting in
Lebanon started on 2 March when
Hezbollah launched rockets at
Israel in retaliation for the killing of
Iran’s late supreme leader
Ali Khamenei, triggering an Israeli invasion. Israeli strikes have killed more than 3,613 people in
Lebanon, while
Hezbollah has killed at least 30 Israeli soldiers in
Lebanon and 3 Israeli civilians.Why
Lebanon is divided over the war with
Israel – videoThe skirmishes in
Lebanon have been an obstacle for
Iran-US negotiations, as Tehran insists that
Lebanon be included in a broader ceasefire deal. On Sunday, Trump told NBC News he was not demanding that
Lebanon be part of any peace deal with
Iran, claiming again that such an agreement, which has so far proved elusive, was near.“I think they’d like to see it, but I’m not demanding,” Trump said in the interview recorded on Friday. He added: “We’re very close to a deal, or I’m going to blow the hell out of them [
Iran].”Before the strike on Sunday,
Israel had issued a forced evacuation order for most of the city of
Tyre, one of the largest cities in southern
Lebanon which is hosting thousands of people displaced from villages in the surrounding area. The Israeli army said that it would soon begin striking
Hezbollah infrastructure in the city, exempting
Tyre’s Christian quarter from the evacuation order.
Israel also carried out airstrikes across the south of
Lebanon, while
Hezbollah claimed responsibility for rocket and artillery barrages against Israeli troops in the Nabatieh area. Fighting has been concentrated around the city of Zawtar al-Sharqiya after
Israel took the Beaufort Castle along the route to Nabatieh, a large city in south
Lebanon that is has been encircling.On Saturday, the Israeli military killed two Lebanese army soldiers and an army captain in a strike on their vehicle. The Lebanese army is not party to the
Hezbollah-
Israel war.The government of
Lebanon and
Israel are negotiating directly in
Washington in an attempt to reach a comprehensive ceasefire.
Hezbollah, which is the party fighting with
Israel, is not participating in talks and in recent days has said it will not agree to any ceasefire deal that does not include a withdrawal of Israeli troops from
Lebanon and an end to Israeli strikes across the country, not just in
Beirut.It is unclear how negotiations in
Washington will be affected by
Israel’s latest strikes on
Beirut.