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Saturday, April 26, 2025

Israeli army chief says military is preparing for possible ground operation in Lebanon

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213 days ago
20240925
People gather at the site of an Israeli airstrike that hit a hangar in the southern town of Jiyeh, Lebanon, Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)

People gather at the site of an Israeli airstrike that hit a hangar in the southern town of Jiyeh, Lebanon, Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)

Mohammed Zaatari

The Is­raeli army chief said Wednes­day that the mil­i­tary is prepar­ing for a pos­si­ble ground op­er­a­tion in Lebanon as Hezbol­lah hurled dozens of pro­jec­tiles in­to Is­rael, in­clud­ing a mis­sile aimed at Tel Aviv that was the mil­i­tant group’s deep­est strike yet.

Ad­dress­ing troops on the north­ern bor­der, Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Herzi Hale­vi said the lat­est Is­raeli airstrikes were de­signed to “pre­pare the ground for your pos­si­ble en­try and to con­tin­ue de­grad­ing Hezbol­lah.”

In an ap­par­ent ref­er­ence to the mis­sile aimed at Tel Aviv, he said: “To­day, Hezbol­lah ex­pand­ed its range of fire, and lat­er to­day, they will re­ceive a very strong re­sponse. Pre­pare your­selves.”

To achieve the goal of re­turn­ing the dis­placed cit­i­zens of north­ern Is­rael to their homes, “we are prepar­ing the process of a ma­noeu­vre,” he said.

In re­cent days, the Is­raeli mil­i­tary has said it had no im­me­di­ate plans for a ground in­va­sion. Hale­vi’s state­ment was the strongest yet from an Is­raeli leader sug­gest­ing that troops could move in.

In oth­er de­vel­op­ments, the Lebanese health min­is­ter said con­tin­ued Is­raeli strikes on Wednes­day killed more than 50 peo­ple. That raised the death toll from the past three days to 615, with more than 2,000 peo­ple wound­ed.

This week has been the dead­liest in Lebanon since the bruis­ing month­long war be­tween Is­rael and Hezbol­lah in 2006. With ten­sions still es­ca­lat­ing, the Is­raeli mil­i­tary said it would ac­ti­vate re­serve troops.

Is­raeli mil­i­tary of­fi­cials said they in­ter­cept­ed Hezbol­lah’s sur­face-to-sur­face mis­sile, which marked a fur­ther es­ca­la­tion af­ter Is­raeli strikes on Lebanon killed hun­dreds of peo­ple.

The mis­sile set off air-raid sirens in Tel Aviv and across cen­tral Is­rael. There were no re­ports of ca­su­al­ties or dam­age. The mil­i­tary said it struck the site in south­ern Lebanon where the mis­sile was launched.

The launch ratch­eted up hos­til­i­ties as the re­gion ap­peared to be tee­ter­ing to­ward an­oth­er all-out war, even as Is­rael con­tin­ues to bat­tle Hamas in the Gaza Strip. Thou­sands have fled their homes in parts of Lebanon com­ing un­der fire.

Is­rael said Wednes­day its air force had struck some 280 Hezbol­lah tar­gets across Lebanon by ear­ly af­ter­noon, in­clud­ing launch­ers used to fire rock­ets on the north­ern Is­raeli cities of Safed and Na­hariya.

Flee­ing fam­i­lies have flocked to Beirut and the coastal city of Sidon, sleep­ing in schools turned in­to shel­ters, as well as in cars, parks and along the beach. Some sought to leave the coun­try, caus­ing a traf­fic jam at the bor­der with Syr­ia.

The Unit­ed Na­tions said more than 90,000 peo­ple have been dis­placed by five days of Is­raeli strikes on Lebanon. The U.N. Of­fice for the Co­or­di­na­tion of Hu­man­i­tar­i­an Af­fairs said Wednes­day that a to­tal of 200,000 peo­ple have been dis­placed in Lebanon since Hezbol­lah be­gan fir­ing rock­ets in­to north­ern Is­rael near­ly a year ago, draw­ing Is­raeli re­tal­i­a­tion.

Hezbol­lah said it fired a Qad­er 1 bal­lis­tic mis­sile tar­get­ing the head­quar­ters of Is­rael’s Mossad in­tel­li­gence agency, which it blames for a re­cent string of tar­get­ed killings of its top com­man­ders and for an at­tack last week in which ex­plo­sives hid­den in pagers and walkie-talkies killed dozens of peo­ple and wound­ed thou­sands, in­clud­ing many Hezbol­lah mem­bers.

The Is­raeli mil­i­tary said it was the first time a pro­jec­tile fired from Lebanon had reached cen­tral Is­rael. Hezbol­lah claimed to have tar­get­ed an in­tel­li­gence base near Tel Aviv last month in an aer­i­al at­tack, but there was no con­fir­ma­tion. The Pales­tin­ian Hamas mil­i­tant group in Gaza re­peat­ed­ly tar­get­ed Tel Aviv in the open­ing months of the war.

The an­nounce­ment about re­serve troops in­di­cat­ed Is­rael is plan­ning even tougher ac­tion against Hezbol­lah. The army said it would call up two re­serve brigades for mis­sions in the north.

“This will en­able the con­tin­u­a­tion of com­bat against the Hezbol­lah ter­ror­ist or­ga­ni­za­tion,” the mil­i­tary said.

Hezbol­lah’s lat­est strikes in­clud­ed dozens of rock­ets fired Wednes­day in­to north­ern Is­rael, the mil­i­tary said. Two peo­ple suf­fered shrap­nel wounds, ac­cord­ing to Is­rael’s Ma­gen David Adom res­cue ser­vice.

Is­rael re­spond­ed with its own new strikes on Hezbol­lah. In Lebanon, at least three peo­ple were killed and nine wound­ed in an Is­raeli strike near By­b­los, ac­cord­ing to the coun­try’s Health Min­istry. The coastal town is north of Beirut and far from Hezbol­lah’s main strong­holds.

Ten­sions be­tween Is­rael and the Lebanese mil­i­tant group have steadi­ly es­ca­lat­ed over the last 11 months. Hezbol­lah has been fir­ing rock­ets, mis­siles and drones in­to north­ern Is­rael in sol­i­dar­i­ty with Pales­tini­ans in Gaza and its al­ly Hamas, a fel­low Iran-backed mil­i­tant group.

Is­rael has re­spond­ed with in­creas­ing­ly heavy airstrikes and the tar­get­ed killing of Hezbol­lah com­man­ders while threat­en­ing a wider op­er­a­tion.

The U.N. Se­cu­ri­ty Coun­cil sched­uled an emer­gency meet­ing on Lebanon for Wednes­day at the re­quest of France.

Near­ly a year of fight­ing be­tween Hezbol­lah and Is­rael had al­ready dis­placed tens of thou­sands of peo­ple on both sides of the bor­der be­fore the re­cent es­ca­la­tion. Is­rael has vowed to do what­ev­er it takes to en­sure its cit­i­zens can re­turn to their homes in the north, while Hezbol­lah has said it will keep up its rock­et at­tacks un­til there is a cease-fire in Gaza, some­thing that ap­pears in­creas­ing­ly re­mote.

The rock­et fire over the past week has dis­rupt­ed life for more than 1 mil­lion peo­ple across north­ern Is­rael, with schools closed and re­stric­tions on pub­lic gath­er­ings. Many restau­rants and oth­er busi­ness­es are shut in the coastal city of Haifa, and there are few­er peo­ple on the streets. Some who fled south from com­mu­ni­ties near the bor­der are com­ing un­der rock­et fire again.

Is­rael has moved thou­sands of troops who had been serv­ing in Gaza to the north­ern bor­der. It says Hezbol­lah has some 150,000 rock­ets and mis­siles, in­clud­ing some ca­pa­ble of strik­ing any­where in Is­rael, and that the group has fired some 9,000 rock­ets and drones since last Oc­to­ber.

Lt. Col. Na­dav Shoshani, an Is­raeli mil­i­tary spokesper­son, said the mis­sile fired Wednes­day had a “heavy war­head” but de­clined to elab­o­rate or con­firm it was the type de­scribed by Hezbol­lah. He dis­missed Hezbol­lah’s claim of tar­get­ing the Mossad head­quar­ters, lo­cat­ed just north of Tel Aviv, as “psy­cho­log­i­cal war­fare.”

The Iran­ian-made Qad­er is a medi­um-range sur­face-to-sur­face bal­lis­tic mis­sile with mul­ti­ple types and pay­loads. It can car­ry an ex­plo­sive pay­load of up to 800 kilo­grams (1,760 pounds), ac­cord­ing to the Wash­ing­ton-based Cen­ter for Strate­gic and In­ter­na­tion­al Stud­ies. Iran­ian of­fi­cials have de­scribed the liq­uid-fu­elled mis­sile as hav­ing a range of 2,000 kilo­me­tres (1,240 miles).

Cross-bor­der fire be­gan ramp­ing up Sun­day af­ter the pager and walkie-talkie bomb­ings, which killed 39 peo­ple and wound­ed near­ly 3,000, many of them civil­ians. Lebanon blamed Is­rael, but Is­rael did not con­firm or de­ny re­spon­si­bil­i­ty.

The next day, Is­rael said its war­planes struck 1,600 Hezbol­lah tar­gets, de­stroy­ing cruise mis­siles, long- and short-range rock­ets and at­tack drones, in­clud­ing weapons con­cealed in pri­vate homes. The strikes racked up the high­est one-day death toll in Lebanon since Is­rael and Hezbol­lah fought a bruis­ing month­long war in 2006.

An Is­raeli airstrike in Beirut Tues­day killed Ibrahim Kobeisi, whom Is­rael de­scribed as a top Hezbol­lah rock­et and mis­sile unit com­man­der. Mil­i­tary of­fi­cials said Kobeisi was re­spon­si­ble for launch­es to­ward Is­rael and planned an at­tack in 2000, in which three Is­raeli sol­diers were kid­napped and killed. Hezbol­lah lat­er con­firmed his death.

It was the lat­est in a string of as­sas­si­na­tions and oth­er set­backs for Hezbol­lah, which is Lebanon’s strongest po­lit­i­cal and mil­i­tary ac­tor and is wide­ly con­sid­ered the top para­mil­i­tary force in the Arab world. —TEL AVIV, Is­rael (AP)

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Sto­ry by MELANIE LID­MAN, TIA GOLD­EN­BERG and KA­REEM CHEHAYEB | As­so­ci­at­ed Press.  Chehayeb re­port­ed from Beirut. As­so­ci­at­ed Press writer Jon Gam­brell in Dubai, Unit­ed Arab Emi­rates, con­tributed to this re­port.


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