Hezbollah leader says more Israelis will be displaced as the militants
extend their rocket fire
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[October 08, 2024]
By BASSEM MROUE and TIA GOLDENBERG
BEIRUT (AP) — Hezbollah’s acting leader said Tuesday that even more
Israelis will be displaced as the militant group extends its rocket fire
deeper into Israel, in a defiant televised statement marking the
anniversary of fighting that escalated into war last month.
Sheikh Naim Kassem, the acting leader of Hezbollah, said its military
capabilities are still intact and that it has replaced all of its senior
commanders after weeks of heavy Israeli airstrikes across large parts of
Lebanon, including targeted strikes that killed much of its top command
in a matter of days.
He also said Israeli forces have not been able to advance after
launching a ground incursion into Lebanon last week. The Israeli
military said a fourth division is now taking part in the incursion,
which has expanded to the west, but operations still appear to be
confined to a narrow strip along the border.
The Israeli military says it has dismantled militant infrastructure
along the border and killed hundreds of Hezbollah fighters. On Tuesday,
it said a strike in Beirut had killed Suhail Husseini, who it described
as a senior commander responsible overseeing logistics, budget and
management of the militant group.
There was no immediate comment from Hezbollah, and no way to confirm
battlefield claims made by either side.
“We are firing hundreds of rockets and dozens of drones. A large number
of settlements and cities are under the fire of the resistance,” Kassem
said in a video address, speaking from an undisclosed location. “Our
capabilities are fine and our fighters are deployed along the
frontlines."
He said Hezbollah's top leadership was directing the war and that the
commanders killed by Israel have been replaced. “We have no vacant
posts,” he added.
He said that Hezbollah will name a new leader to succeed Hassan
Nasrallah, who was killed in an Israeli airstrike in a bunker in Beirut
last month, “but the circumstances are difficult because of the war.”
The Israeli military said that 85 projectiles were launched from Lebanon
toward northern Israel in a significant burst of fire on Tuesday.
Israel’s aerial defense intercepted most of the rockets, the military
said. A 70-year-old woman was moderately wounded by shrapnel and Israeli
media aired footage of what appeared to be minor damage to buildings
near the coastal city of Haifa.
The military also said that it struck Hezbollah targets in the southern
Beirut suburbs, known as the Dahiyeh, where the militant group is
headquartered.
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A man shows a burnt car to a girl, after a rocket launched from
Lebanon, hit an area in Kfar Vradim, northern Israel, Monday, Oct.
7, 2024. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)
Hezbollah began firing rockets into northern Israel on Oct. 8, 2023,
the day after Hamas' surprise attack into Israel ignited the war in
Gaza. Hezbollah and Hamas are both allied with Iran, and Hezbollah
says its attacks are aimed at aiding the Palestinians. Israel began
carrying out airstrikes in response and the conflict steadily
escalated, erupting into a full-fledged war last month.
The Lebanese militant group has said it will stop the attacks if
there is a cease-fire in Gaza, but months of diplomatic efforts on
that front have repeatedly stalled.
Israel has inflicted a punishing wave of blows against Hezbollah in
recent weeks and says it will keep fighting until tens of thousands
of displaced Israeli citizens can return to their homes in the
north.
More than 1,300 people have been killed in Lebanon and over a
million displaced since the fighting escalated in mid-September.
Since then, Hezbollah has extended its rocket fire into central
Israel, setting off air raid sirens in the country's commercial hub
of Tel Aviv. Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen have also launched
missiles that reached central Israel. Most of the projectiles have
been intercepted or fallen in open areas, disrupting life in Israel
but causing few casualties and little property damage.
Last, week Iran launched its own barrage of some 180 ballistic
missiles at Israel, in what it said was a response to the killing of
Nasrallah, an Iranian general who was with him at the time and
Ismail Haniyeh, the top leader of Hamas, who was killed in an
explosion in Iran's capital in July.
Israel has vowed to respond to the missile attack, without saying
when or how.
Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant is in Washington this week to
meet with his American counterpart, Lloyd Austin. The Biden
administration says it is opposed to an Israeli attack on Iran's
nuclear facilities, which could escalate regional tensions even
further.
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Goldenberg reported from Jerusalem.
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