Hezbollah suffered an unparalleled defeat,
the Lebanese terrorist group’s Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah
acknowledged on Thursday, saying that the alleged Israeli attacks using
its communication devices amounted to a declaration of war.
“There is no doubt that we have been
subjected to a major security and humanitarian blow, unprecedented in
the history of our resistance and perhaps in the history of the conflict
with the enemy,” the Iranian-backed Islamist said in a televised
address, adding that there is “no doubt” that Hezbollah has been
breached by Israeli intelligence.
“We know that the enemy has superiority on the technological level because it has American and NATO support,” he said.
As Nasrallah spoke from his bunker, Israeli jets broke the sound barrier over Beirut, with the BBC reporting “huge sonic booms” in the capital.
According to the Hezbollah chief, Israel
“crossed all red lines” by targeting terrorist operatives in the attacks
that saw thousands of pagers and walkie-talkies explode in Lebanon on
Tuesday and Wednesday, respectively.
“This blow, no matter how big or strong,
cannot break us. I can assure you faithfully and with confidence: This
hard, unprecedented blow did not bring us to our knees—and it will not,”
Nasrallah vowed.
“Can you return the displaced [Israeli
civilians] to the north [the Upper Galilee]? We accept this challenge,
but you will not be able to return them,” the terrorist leader said,
addressing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu directly. “What you are
doing will increase the displacement of your displaced settlers from the
north and will cancel the opportunity for their return.”
‘The price must be high’
Nasrallah said Israel's leadership is “leading their entity into a destructive abyss.”
Netanyahu, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant,
Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and National Security Minister Itamar
Ben-Gvir are “leading their entity into a destructive abyss and a third
historic humiliation,” said Nasrallah, referencing the destruction of
the Jewish Temples in Jerusalem in 586 BCE and 70 C.E.
Hezbollah’s cross-border attacks on the
Jewish state will continue, “no matter the consequences,” until Israel
Defense Forces troops leave the Gaza Strip and end the campaign against
Hamas terrorists, he said.
Regarding a possible Israeli ground
operation in Southern Lebanon, the Hezbollah chief declared that “if
they come to us, they are welcome, and we will consider this threat a
historic opportunity that we hope for.
“The [IDF] commander of the northern region [OC Northern Command Maj. Gen. Ori Gordin], a fool, proposed creating a buffer zone [in
Lebanon],” Nasrallah said. “If you think you’re building a security
belt around the resistance and you think you’re limiting the fighting to
this zone, your military centers will be targeted in the north of
occupied Palestine [northern Israel] and even further!”
On Tuesday, 3,000-plus Hezbollah
operatives were wounded and at least 34 were killed when their pagers
exploded, with the Lebanese terrorist group immediately blaming the
Jewish state.
The Israeli military declined to comment
on the two waves of explosions—the first of which came hours after
the Israeli Cabinet added the return of citizens displaced from their
homes in the north to the country’s war goals, bringing a major clash with Hezbollah closer.
Hezbollah has attacked Israel nearly daily
since Oct. 8, firing thousands of rockets, missiles and drones. The
attacks have killed more than 40 people and caused widespread damage.
Tens of thousands of civilians remain internally displaced due to the
violence.
A U.S. official told ABC News on
Tuesday that Hezbollah and its Iranian patrons will likely retaliate
against Israel for the pager attacks, but “it could take them time to do
so while they assess what happened.”
Israeli security officials also believe
that Hezbollah is preparing for a large-scale assault in response to the
attack attributed to Jerusalem, the Israeli Kan News public broadcaster reported on Tuesday night.
IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi on Wednesday night approved “attack and defense plans for the north,” the army said.
“We still have many capabilities that we
have not yet activated—I repeat, we have not yet activated. We saw some
of these things here,” Halevi said in remarks made at IDF Northern
Command headquarters in Safed.
“The rule is that every time we work on a
certain stage, the next two stages are already ready to advance. At each
stage, the price for Hezbollah must be high,” the Israeli army chief
said.
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