An Israeli airstrike on a building in a central neighborhood of the
Lebanese capital Beirut on Sunday reportedly killed the top spokesman
for the Hezbollah terror group.
Two Lebanese security sources told Reuters that Hezbollah’s media
relations chief Mohammed Afif was killed in the strike on the Ras
al-Naba’a neighborhood. A Hezbollah official, speaking anonymously,
confirmed this to The Associated Press.
The Israel Defense Forces did not immediately issue a comment on the strike.
Unlike dozens of other Israeli attacks carried out in Beirut this
past week, the strike killing Afif was not carried out in the southern
suburbs of Beirut, a Hezbollah stronghold known as Dahiyeh.
The building where Afif was targeted housed the offices of the Syrian
Ba’ath Party, Lebanese media reported. The IDF did not issue any
evacuation warning before the strike, as it was an assassination and did
not target Hezbollah’s infrastructure.
Afif had been especially visible after Israel’s military escalation
in September and following the assassination of longtime Hezbollah
leader Hassan Nasrallah, who was also killed in an Israeli airstrike.
Hezbollah’s chief spokesman Mohammed
Afif, speaks during a press conference at the al-Hawra Zeinab cemetery
in Dahiyeh, Lebanon, October 22, 2024.
Last month, Afif was forced to interrupt a press conference
in Dahiyeh after the IDF’s Arabic language spokesman, Col. Avichay
Adraee, issued an evacuation order for residents of the area ahead of an
airstrike.
“The bombing does not scare us, nor the threats,” Afif said at the time. |Our will is firm and our determination is strong.”
Residents gather at the site of an
Israeli airstrike that hit a building in central Beirut’s Ras al-Nabaa
neighborhood, Lebanon, November 17, 2024.
Also on Sunday, the IDF said it had completed a wave of airstrikes
against Hezbollah targets in Dahiyeh. The targets hit by fighter jets
included command rooms and other infrastructure, according to the
military.
Before those strikes were carried out, the IDF issued evacuation warnings to civilians in the area.
In recent days, the IDF has ramped up strikes against Hezbollah
targets in Beirut with over 50 Hezbollah sites hit in the past week.
One of the targets struck by Israeli fighter jets in Beirut on
Saturday was an apartment formerly belonging to Nasrallah, according to
the IDF.
The military said Nasrallah was targeted at the home during the 2006
Second Lebanon War, and it was later rebuilt. The apartment was
currently being used by Hezbollah for its activities, the IDF said.
Smoke rises between buildings hit in an
Israeli airstrike in Dahiyeh, in the southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon,
November 17, 2024.
Sunday’s strikes came after a barrage of some 20 rockets was launched
from Lebanon at the Western Galilee and Haifa Bay area in the morning.
According to the IDF, some of the rockets were intercepted by air
defenses, while the rest struck open areas, causing no injuries.
The IDF also released footage on Sunday showing a Hezbollah weapons
cache and tunnel being demolished by combat engineers in southern
Lebanon.
A Hezbollah weapons depot and tunnel
found by troops in southern Lebanon, in images distributed by the IDF on
November 17, 2024.
The site had been discovered by troops of the Kfir Brigade’s Haruv
reconnaissance unit, who are operating in Lebanon under the Alon Reserve
Brigade. It marked the first time in the unit’s history that it was
operating in Lebanon.
According to the IDF, during a raid in a southern Lebanon village,
the troops found a tunnel shaft that led to underground infrastructure.
Next to the shaft was a weapons depot, ammunition and a motorcycle,
which the IDF says “were prepared for an invasion” of Israel.
Three IDF divisions have been operating in southern Lebanon in recent
days, as the military has expanded its offensive against Hezbollah.
On Saturday, Hezbollah claimed to have confronted IDF soldiers on the
outskirts of Shama, a Lebanese village located some 5 kilometers (3.1
miles) from the border with Israel.
It would mark the deepest point in Lebanon that the IDF has reached during the ongoing ground offensive.
Meanwhile, the IDF reportedly removed roadblocks on the northern
border which were set up to prevent civilians from driving on roads that
were exposed to anti-tank missile fire from Lebanon.
According to a Sunday morning report by Army Radio, all of the
military roadblocks on the Lebanon border were removed in recent days,
ahead of a possible return of the displaced residents of the north to
their homes.
“The reality in the north has changed,” IDF officials were cited by the radio station as saying.
Police officers guard at a checkpoint on
Highway 90 not far from the Israeli border with Lebanon, October 11,
2024.
“There are no longer places where you can’t drive. Bypass roads are
no longer needed, and citizens can also drive on these roads,” the
officials were cited as saying, adding that this freedom of movement is
due to the IDF having taken control of key areas in south Lebanon,
thereby reducing the threat.
Some 60,000 residents were evacuated from northern Israeli towns on
the Lebanon border shortly after fellow terror group Hamas’s October 7,
2023, onslaught in southern Israel, amid fears Hezbollah would carry out
a similar attack, and increasing rocket fire by the Lebanese terror
group.
For months since October 8, 2023, Hezbollah-led forces attacked
Israeli communities and military posts along the border on a near-daily
basis, with the group saying it is doing so to support Gaza amid the war
there.
Hezbollah has since expanded its attacks to also target cities in
central and northern Israel with rockets, in addition to the attacks on
the border, though in recent days the IDF has seen a decrease in the
number of attacks.
Troops of the IDF Commando Brigade
operate in southern Lebanon, in a handout photo issued on November 16,
2024.
The attacks on northern Israel have resulted in the deaths of 43
civilians. In addition, 70 IDF soldiers and reservists have died in
cross-border skirmishes and in the ensuing ground operation launched in
southern Lebanon in late September. Two soldiers have been killed in a
drone attack from Iraq, and there have also been several attacks from
Syria, without any injuries.
The IDF estimates that some 3,000 Hezbollah operatives have been
killed in the conflict. Around 100 members of other terror groups, along
with hundreds of civilians, have also been reported killed in Lebanon.
Meanwhile, on Sunday morning, the IDF also said a drone launched at
Israel “from the east” — usually code for Iraq — was intercepted by air
defenses over southern Israel.
Footage posted to social media showed a cloud of smoke above a Bezeq
antenna farm near Rehovot, apparently following the interception of the
drone.
There were no reports of injuries. Shrapnel from the interception sparked a small fire in the area.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the drone.
1 comment:
Another asshole fucking goats in paradise.
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