IDF strikes Lebanon after rocket fire in biggest exchange of ceasefire
The
Israel Defense Forces said it targeted “Hezbollah rocket launchers and a
command center,” killing seven and wounding 40. Hezbollah denied
launching rockets.
Smoke
rises from Taibe, Lebanon, after an Israeli strike on Saturday. The
Israeli military and United Nations peacekeepers said rockets were fired
from Lebanon into Israel earlier. (Karamallah Daher/Reuters)
BEIRUT
— Israel launched strikes on southern Lebanon on Saturday, killing at
least seven people, authorities here said, in response to rockets fired
from across the border earlier in the day. The exchange was the largest
since the fragile ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah went into effect late last year.
The ceasefire remained in place, but the action fueled concerns that Israel’s resumption of war in Gaza
this week could imperil the truce in Lebanon. Hamas in Gaza and the
Houthis in Yemen have also targeted Israel with rockets in recent days.
Hezbollah,
the Lebanese militant group and political party, denied responsibility
for the rockets. It said it remains committed to the ceasefire.
Rocket
fire from Lebanon on Saturday morning triggered sirens in northern
Israel for the first time in months. United Nations peacekeepers said
four projectiles were launched from Lebanon into Israel near the town of
Metula about 7:30 a.m. Israel said it was six, three of which entered
Israel and were intercepted.
The
Israel Defense Forces said the rocket fire “constitutes a blatant
violation.” In response, the IDF said, it targeted “dozens of Hezbollah
rocket launchers and a command center.”
“We
promised security to the residents of the Galilee — and that is exactly
what will be,” Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said. “I have
instructed the IDF to respond accordingly.”
The
Israeli strikes killed seven people in southern Lebanon, one of them a
child, the Health Ministry here said. Forty others were wounded.
Videos
and images shared on social media indicated that most of the initial
wave of strikes hit rural areas. One video showed a town hit and people
rushing through debris to a strike site in the middle of a street.
After
the rocket fire, the Lebanese army said, troops on a “search and
inspection operation” found and dismantled three primitive launchers on
the outskirts of the southern Lebanese town of Nabatiyeh. It did not
identify who controlled the launchers.
The
Israeli airstrikes appeared to expand slightly during a second wave,
launched after nightfall in Lebanon. One strike hit the southern city of
Tyre, the first time the city had been targeted since the start of the
ceasefire. Other strikes were reported along Lebanon’s border with
Syria.
“People
are still in Tyre, no one is leaving, but everyone is on high alert,”
Mayor Hassan Dbouk told The Washington Post. He said that two
residential buildings in the city were partially destroyed by the strike
and that rescue teams were searching the debris.
“Hezbollah
denies any involvement in the launching of rockets from southern
Lebanon,” the group said in a statement. The group said Israel’s
“allegations are merely pretexts for its continued attacks on Lebanon,
which have not ceased since the ceasefire was announced.”
Hezbollah,
backed by Iran, renewed its attacks on Israel in support of Hamas at
the outset of the Gaza war in October 2023. Hamas-led fighters streamed
out of Gaza on Oct. 7, 2023, and killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians,
in Israel. Israel responded with a military campaign to eradicate Hamas.
The
regular exchanges of fire between Hezbollah and Israel on the Lebanese
border erupted in September into all-out war. Before the sides agreed to
a ceasefire in November, more than 4,000 people were killed and 1
million displaced in Lebanon, while 60,000 people were displaced in
Israel.
Israel
and Hamas agreed to a ceasefire in Gaza in January under significant
pressure from the Trump administration. But after weeks of relative
quiet allowed the exchange of Israeli hostages and Palestinian
prisoners, Israel this week restarted the war, launching airstrikes that
have killed more than 600 Gazans, the Health Ministry there says.
Hezbollah
condemned Israel’s return to war in Gaza but did not suggest it would
resume hostilities on the border. The last time Israel and Hezbollah
exchanged fire was in December, and the incident was contained.
The
Houthis, another Iranian ally, fired a ballistic missile at Israel on
Tuesday for the first time in months. It warned that the attacks would
continue unless Israel halted its renewed offensive in Gaza.
Lebanese
officials cautioned against further escalation. President Joseph Aoun
condemned “attempts to drag Lebanon back into a cycle of violence,”
according to the country’s official National News Agency. Foreign
Minister Youssef Raggi said he contacted Arab counterparts and others in
Jordan, Egypt, the European Union, France and the United States to curb
the escalation.
“I
requested that pressure be exercised on Israel to halt the aggression
and escalation and to contain the dangerous situation on the southern
border,” Raggi said in a statement.
The
ceasefire in Lebanon has been shaky from the start. Israel has
maintained troops in southern Lebanon past a mid-February deadline to
withdraw and has continued to strike at Hezbollah. Aoun said he
considered the exchange Saturday to be part of a “failure to adhere to
the details of the ceasefire agreement.”
UNIFIL, the U.N. peacekeeping force in Lebanon, said it was
“alarmed by the possible escalation of violence,” which it warned could
risk “serious consequences for the region.” U.N. peacekeepers maintain a
presence along Lebanon’s southern border with Israel and have been
caught up in the fighting there multiple times since the conflict
escalated last year.
George reported from Dubai. Bisset reported from London. Rom reported from Tel Aviv.