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Netanyahu agrees to limit strike on Iran: report

By Artorn Pookasook and Maya Gebeily
Updated

Tel Aviv: Israel said it was listening to US misgivings about its planned counterstrike against Iran but would act based on its own assessments, following a report suggesting Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu could spare Tehran’s nuclear and energy facilities from any immediate reprisal.

“We listen to the opinions of the United States, but we will make our final decisions based on our national interests,” said a statement from the prime minister’s office on Tuesday.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.Credit: AP

The statement came after a report in The Washington Post said Netanyahu agreed to limit his retaliation for an October 1 Iranian ballistic missile salvo to military targets. The report cited two officials familiar with the matter who it did not identify.

Israel’s potential response to the Iranian attack has been the latest strain in its ties with the Biden administration, which has sought unsuccessfully to secure a truce in Israel’s conflicts with Hamas in the Gaza Strip and Hezbollah in Lebanon. Both organisations are designated terrorist groups by the US.

A major escalation could engulf more of the Middle East in war and potentially impact next month’s US presidential election.

Israel and the US have been conferring regularly as Netanyahu prepares his nation’s response. Israel is due to receive a US-supplied and operated missile defence system, known as THAAD, that would enhance its ability to fend off any future ballistic missile salvos.

Children play in a makeshift camp in Martyrs’ Square, Beirut, where they are sheltering after being displaced by the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hezbollah.

Children play in a makeshift camp in Martyrs’ Square, Beirut, where they are sheltering after being displaced by the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hezbollah.Credit: Getty Images

A decision to limit retaliation would be a relief for US President Joe Biden, whose administration has urged Israel not to strike Iranian nuclear or energy sites for fear of escalating the conflict.

Meanwhile, Israel has expanded its targets in its war with Hezbollah militants, killing at least 21 people in an airstrike in the north of Lebanon, the Red Cross said, while millions of Israelis took shelter from projectiles fired back across the border.

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Until now, Israel’s operations in Lebanon have been concentrated in the south, the Bekaa Valley in the east, and the suburbs of Beirut.

The strike on the Christian-majority town of Aitou on Tuesday hit a building that had been rented to displaced families, according to local mayor Joseph Trad.

There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military, and it was not clear what the target was. Aitou is part of the country’s Christian heartland in the north, far from Hezbollah’s main areas of influence in the south and east.

Rescue workers searched through the rubble of the building as ambulances stood by to receive the bodies of victims. Several nearby buildings and cars were also damaged.

The strike came a day after a Hezbollah drone attack on an army base in northern Israel killed four soldiers and severely wounded seven others in the deadliest strike by the militant group since Israel launched its ground invasion of Lebanon nearly two weeks ago.

Netanyahu subsequently visited the army base and soldiers injured in the attack, vowing that “we will continue to strike Hezbollah without compassion in every part of Lebanon, including in Beirut”.

People attend a mass funeral for those killed by an Israeli airstrike in Maaysra, Lebanon on Saturday. Maaysra, a majority-Shiite village in a mostly Christian area north of Beirut.

People attend a mass funeral for those killed by an Israeli airstrike in Maaysra, Lebanon on Saturday. Maaysra, a majority-Shiite village in a mostly Christian area north of Beirut.Credit: Getty Images

Israel had ordered residents of 25 villages in southern Lebanon to evacuate to areas north of the Awali River, which flows some 60 kilometres north of the Israeli frontier.

At the Masnaa border crossing with Syria on Tuesday, Jalal Ferhat, his wife and five children were among those offloading belongings from buses, hoping to leave Lebanon.

“There are strikes in our neighbourhood and destruction, and they [Israeli forces] hit near my house,” said Ferhat, 40, from Baalbek, a Hezbollah stronghold in eastern Lebanon.

“I have children … We tried going to another place … we had to leave again.”

In central Israel, residents rushed to shelters as sirens sounded. The military said three projectiles that had crossed from Lebanon had been intercepted. Israeli fighter jets struck the launcher from which the projectiles were fired, it added. No injuries were reported.

The conflict between Israel and Iran-backed Hezbollah resumed a year ago when the militant group began firing rockets at Israel in support of Hamas at the start of the most recent Gaza war.

Israeli strikes have killed at least 2309 people in Lebanon over the last year, the Lebanese government said in its daily update, the majority since September. The toll does not distinguish between civilians and combatants.

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Israel says its operations in Lebanon are aimed at securing the return of tens of thousands of people displaced from their homes in northern Israel.

Israel at odds with UN peacekeepers

The Israeli military said it had killed Muhammad Kamel Naim, commander of the anti-tank missile unit of Hezbollah’s elite Radwan Force, in a strike in the Nabatieh area in the south of Lebanon. Hezbollah did not immediately comment.

The operations come amid tensions between Israel and the UN peacekeeping force UNIFIL in southern Lebanon, as Israel keeps pushing forces through the area in an attempt to wipe out Hezbollah and its military infrastructure.

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The UN said Israeli tanks had burst into its base on Sunday, the latest allegations of Israeli violations against peacekeeping forces.

Israel disputed the UN’s account, and Netanyahu said UNIFIL was providing “human shields” for Hezbollah, an allegation Hezbollah denies.

UNIFIL has said previous Israeli attacks limited its monitoring abilities, and UN sources say they fear any violations of international law in the conflict will be impossible to monitor.

European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said EU member states had taken too long to condemn Israel’s attacks on UNIFIL soldiers, describing them as “completely unacceptable”.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez urged EU members to respond to a request by Madrid and Ireland to suspend the bloc’s free trade agreement with Israel over its attacks in Lebanon and Gaza.

Israeli soldiers inspect what they claim is a Hezbollah tunnel found, according to the army, during an Israel Defense Forces media tour near Naqoura, southern Lebanon on Sunday.

Israeli soldiers inspect what they claim is a Hezbollah tunnel found, according to the army, during an Israel Defense Forces media tour near Naqoura, southern Lebanon on Sunday.Credit: Getty Images

EU countries – led by Italy, France and Spain – have thousands of troops in the 10,000-strong peacekeeping mission.

The Israeli military took foreign journalists into southern Lebanon on Sunday and showed them a tunnel shaft that was less than 200 metres from a UNIFIL position – a tunnel they claimed belonged to Hezbollah.

Since announcing its ground operation near the border, the Israeli military says it has destroyed dozens of Hezbollah tunnel shafts, rocket launchers and command posts.

Hezbollah possesses an extensive tunnel network in southern Lebanon, which Israel says extends for hundreds of kilometres. A Hezbollah field commander told Reuters last week that the tunnels “are the foundation of the battle”.

Reuters, AP and Bloomberg

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Original URL: https://www.theage.com.au/world/middle-east/displaced-lebanese-on-the-move-again-after-israel-expands-operations-20241015-p5ki9q.html