NewsBite

Deadly rocket strike on soccer field raises risk of escalation with Hezbollah

Israel’s Foreign Minister accused Hezbollah of crossing ‘all red lines’ after a deadly attack on a soccer field in the Golan Heights.

Israeli security forces and medics transport casualties from a site where a reported strike from Lebanon fell in Majdal Shams village in the Israeli-annexed Golan area. Picture: AFP
Israeli security forces and medics transport casualties from a site where a reported strike from Lebanon fell in Majdal Shams village in the Israeli-annexed Golan area. Picture: AFP

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Saturday that Lebanese armed group Hezbollah “will pay a heavy price” for rocket fire that authorities said killed 12 people on the annexed Golan Heights.

“Israel will not let this murderous attack go unanswered and Hezbollah will pay a heavy price for it, a price it has not paid before,” Netanyahu told a local community leader, according to a statement issued by the premier’s office.

The strike on a soccer field full of young people in the Israel-controlled Golan Heights left a scene of carnage Saturday and threatened to escalate the already tense standoff on the Lebanese border.

The strike killed peopled aged 10 to 20 years old, and injured 19, according to emergency services. The rocket carried a heavier than usual warhead, Israel’s military said.

Israeli security forces leave in a helicopter near a site where a reported strike from Lebanon fell in Majdal Shams village in the Israeli-annexed Golan area. Picture: AFP
Israeli security forces leave in a helicopter near a site where a reported strike from Lebanon fell in Majdal Shams village in the Israeli-annexed Golan area. Picture: AFP

Foreign Minister Israel Katz told The Times of Israel that Hezbollah had “crossed all red lines” — repeating language he used in an interview earlier in the day — “and we will respond accordingly.”

“This is not an army against an army,” Katz continues. “It is an Iranian terrorist organisation against civilians and children.”

Israel is “approaching the moment of an all-out war against Hezbollah and Lebanon,” he says, pledging that Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah will be destroyed along with his organisation, and that Lebanon will be severely damaged.

Israel’s military said it believed Hezbollah was responsible, and Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said he had authorised a response by the military against the U.S.-designated terrorist group.

Hezbollah said it had nothing to do with the strike. The group has been exchanging fire with Israel on a near-daily basis since shortly after the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attacks on southern Israel left 1200 dead and around 250 taken hostage.

Video shows explosion in Israeli-occupied Golan Heights

The rocket hit Majdal Shams, a Druze minority town close to Lebanon and Syria. It was part of a barrage of about 40 projectiles that the Israeli military said were fired from Lebanon into Israel on Saturday afternoon. Hezbollah claimed a number of attacks on Israeli military targets Saturday.

Israel’s defence minister and most senior generals convened Saturday evening to assess the situation following the strike. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said the premier was assessing the situation and was expediting his return to Israel from Washington.

Israel responded to a similar strike injuring civilians on a soccer field in the Druze town of Hurfeish in June by attacking military targets deep in Lebanon.

The Australian's reporter Liam Mendes at the Israel and Lebanon border

Despite intermittently ratcheting up the intensity of their strikes, Israel and Hezbollah have kept attacks at a level that will inflict pain on each other without triggering an all-out war, which would be devastating to civilians on both sides of the border. The concern has been that a miscalculation or misfire could spark an escalatory spiral neither side wants.

“This is a reminder that this type of conflict management still entails playing with fire and the sides don’t have complete control over escalation,” said Daniel Sobelman, an Israel-based research fellow with the Middle East Initiative at Harvard Kennedy School.

He said Saturday’s strike was the most serious against Israel in nine months of fighting between the country and militants in Lebanon.

Local residents comfort each other after the strike. Picture: AFP
Local residents comfort each other after the strike. Picture: AFP

American-led negotiators are working to fend off a broader regional war by seeking a diplomatic solution between the two, but Hezbollah has said it won’t stop its strikes until fighting stops in Gaza. Talks on a ceasefire there have been stalled for months, with Arab negotiators and Israel’s security establishment blaming Netanyahu for impeding progress.

Netanyahu has said the fighting must continue until Hamas is destroyed and that military pressure will bring about a deal.

Hamas Gaza leader Yahya Sinwar has also held up the talks at times, calculating that the news of civilian deaths was damaging Israel internationally.

Gaza saw a bloody day of fighting as well Saturday, as Israel said it attacked a Hamas stronghold within a school in central Gaza’s Deir al-Balah. The enclave’s health authorities said the school housed a field hospital and that about 30 people were killed in the strike.

The strike happened shortly after Israel reduced the size of its humanitarian zone on Saturday, telling residents to leave an area it had previously told them to go to, saying Hamas, also a U.S.-designated terrorist group, was firing rockets from inside that area.

The wounded are treated after the strike. Picture: AFP
The wounded are treated after the strike. Picture: AFP

Negotiations over a Gaza ceasefire, which have been stalled for months, are set to resume next week in Rome with top officials planning to attend, including CIA Director William Burns, Israel spy chief David Barnea, Egyptian intelligence chief Abbas Kamel and Qatari Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdul Rahman al-Thani, people familiar with the matter said.

Israeli and U.S. officials were working on hammering out the details of a multistage ceasefire proposal expected to be delivered to Arab mediators on Saturday evening, officials briefed on the talks said. Major sticking points remain the process for allowing Palestinian civilians to return to northern Gaza, whether Israel would remove its troops from Gaza’s border with Egypt — which Israel seized in May — and the procedure for negotiating following the deal’s follow-on phases, the officials said.

More than 39,000 people have died in Gaza since the fighting started according to local health authorities, whose figures don’t say how many were combatants.

Adam Chamessedine, Summer Said and Suha Ma’ayeh contributed to this article.

The Wall Street Journal

Read related topics:Israel

Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/the-wall-street-journal/deadly-rocket-strike-on-soccer-field-raises-risk-of-escalation-with-hezbollah/news-story/f6cf28242241acebfcbaaeefa12092e2