Israel, Hezbollah trade heavy fire before pulling back

August 26, 2024 by Reuters
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A heavy exchange of fire between Israel and the Lebanese group Hezbollah has ended, with both sides signalling their most intense clashes in months is over.

An Israeli fighter jet ejects flares over an area near the Lebanon-Israel border, as seen from northern Israel, 25 August 2024. Photo: Atef Safadi/EPA

Hezbollah has launched hundreds of rockets and drones at Israel as Israel’s military said it struck Lebanon with about 100 jets to thwart a larger attack, in one of the biggest clashes in more than 10 months of border warfare.

Missiles were visible curling up through the dawn sky, dark vapour trails behind them, as an air raid siren sounded in Israel and a distant blast lit the horizon while smoke rose over houses in Khiam in southern Lebanon.

Any major spillover in the fighting, which began in parallel with the war in the Gaza Strip, risks morphing into a regional conflagration drawing in Hezbollah’s backer Iran and Israel’s main ally the United States.

With three deaths confirmed in Lebanon and one in Israel, both sides indicated they were happy to avoid further escalation for now but warned that there could be more strikes to come.

Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah said the group’s barrage, a reprisal for the assassination of senior commander Fuad Shukr last month, had been completed “as planned”.

However, the group would assess the effect of its strikes and “if the result is not enough, then we retain the right to respond another time,” he said.

Israel’s foreign minister said the country did not seek a full-scale war but Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned: “This is not the end of the story.”

Earlier, Netanyahu had said: “We are determined to do everything we can to defend our country … whoever harms us – we harm him”.

The two sides have exchanged messages that neither wants to escalate further, with the main gist being that the exchange was “done,” two diplomats told Reuters.

Expectations of an escalation had risen since a missile strike in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights last month killed 12 youngsters and the Israeli military assassinated Shukr in Beirut in response.

Hezbollah had delayed its retaliation to give time for ceasefire talks, and had calibrated its attack to avoid triggering a full-scale war, a Hezbollah official said.

Israel’s air strikes started before Hezbollah began its barrage, Nasrallah said.

Netanyahu said these “pre-emptive” strikes had foiled a much larger Hezbollah barrage but Nasrallah said they had had little effect.

Hezbollah’s own rocket and drone strikes were focused on an intelligence base near Tel Aviv, Nasrallah said.

Netanyahu said all the drones targeting what he called a strategic location in central Israel were intercepted.

A security source in Lebanon said at least 40 Israeli strikes had hit various towns in the country’s south in one of the densest bombardments since hostilities began in October.

Hezbollah said the strikes killed two of its fighters in al-Tiri.

The Hezbollah-allied Shi’ite Muslim group Amal said a strike on Khiam killed one of its fighters.

Israel’s military said a naval soldier was killed and two wounded.

US General CQ Brown, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, arrived in Israel on Sunday as part of a regional tour aimed at preventing escalation.

He is expected to meet senior Israeli military officials.

The United Nations peacekeeping force in Lebanon and the UN’s special co-ordinator’s office in the country called on all sides to cease fire, calling the developments “worrying”.

Egypt, one of the mediators in Gaza ceasefire talks, warned against the dangers of a new war front opening in Lebanon.

Jordan also warned against more escalation.

Hezbollah fired missiles at Israel immediately after the October 7 attacks by Hamas gunmen on Israel.

Hezbollah and Israel have been exchanging fire constantly ever since, while avoiding a major escalation as war rages in Gaza to the south.

Hamas representative Osama Hamdan told al-Aqsa TV on Sunday the group is sticking to a July 2 Gaza ceasefire proposal and rejected new Israeli conditions for a ceasefire and said talk of an imminent deal is false.

On Sunday evening, sirens sounded in Rishon Letsiyon, central Israel, the Israeli Defence Forces said, and added that one projectile had been identified crossing from the southern Gaza Strip and falling in an open area.

The armed wing of Hamas said it had fired an “M90” rocket at Tel Aviv.

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