Israel-Hezbollah Clashes Means ‘Greater War’ Likely

Northern Israel is on fire. Hezbollah rockets fired from Southern Lebanon has been a constant reminder that a war-situation is here to stay and likely to develop.

A batch of 55 rockets were fired on Safad and the sorrounding areas adding to the scorching of the region. These rockets were launched from southern Lebanon and hit Israeli settlements and military bases in northern Israel adding to nervousness of the dwingling number of people who are still there.

They are just the latest batch at the wail of many sirens across northern Israel.

Since last night and into Saturday morning a total of 60 rockets fell on the area including over the border into Safad and Tiberius in the Upper Galilee and the vacuous Israel town of Kiryat Shmona,  the Israeli media reported.  

Fires raged in the different forest areas of this region soon after the rockets landed as testified by pictures and images on the social media adding to deep tensions and fear of a wider regional war.

The latest barrage of rockets was in retaliation for Israeli overnight airstrikes on towns in southern Lebanon which included the Beqaa and Nabatieh and which injured many Lebanese civilians.

The Israeli-Hezbollah crossfire clashes have increased in the passed few months but the upward momentum was noticed since the early summer. 

The Hebrew media has been rife in its reporting of the active northern front stating the Hezbollah rockets into these areas have become a routine affair. 

But this is a source of major worry for men like Benny Gantz who once served as a member in Netanyahu’s war cabinet but is now deeply at odds with him. 

‘Hit Hezbollah hard’

Gantz, a major contender for the Israeli leadership, says the present government needs to dampen its 11-month war on Gaza that killed over 41,000 civilians and to concentrate on the dangerous developments happening in northern Israel.

He said Israel must have an action plan and hit Hezbollah hard, adding the Israeli air force “has thousands of targets in Lebanon” Gantz said on Israel’s Channel 12. 

Meanwhile the cross-border war continues at its present tempo while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu refuses to leave Gaza but at the same time orders his military to maintain a war position on Hezbollah and southern Lebanon while continuing his strikes on different positions in Gaza.

But reports of the raging fires continue to be bad news for Israel. Hundreds of thousands have already left the north and are in temporary placements on hotels. The latest patch of fires are creating more displacements. One social media post points to the fact that 62,000 settler Israelis are fleeing the north for safety, pointing out that more than 40 percent of these wont return back.

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Hezbollah Fires 1,307 Rockets Into Israel in August

The Israeli military stated, Thursday, it detected 1,307 rockets and drones launched against from Lebanon in August alone.

This is the largest salvo of missiles fired against Israel from the Hezbollah group since the start of this year.  

In a statement, the Shin Bet domestic security service said around 42 rockets and drones were fired daily against Israel from Lebanon last month according to an Anadolu report.   

According to the statement, 1,091 rockets were launched by Hezbollah from Lebanon in July, 855 in June, 1,000 in May, 744 in April, 746 in March, 534 in February, and 334 in January. 

As for the Gaza Strip, the Shin Bet said 116 rockets were fired from the Palestinian enclave in August, down from 216 in July, 205 in June, and 452 in May according to the Turkish news agency.

Tensions spiked along Lebanon’s border with Israel amid cross-border attacks between Hezbollah and Israeli forces as Tel Aviv pressed ahead with its brutal onslaught on the Gaza Strip, which has killed over 40,800 people since last 7 October 2023 following an attack by the Palestinian resistance group Hamas into Israel in which around 1200 people were killed.

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Brik: ‘It is Not Hamas That is Collapsing But Israel’

Retired Israeli General Itzhak Brik said if the Israeli forces “continue fighting in Gaza by raiding and re-raiding the same targets, not only we won’t bring Hamas to collapse, but we will collapse ourselves”.

In an opinion piece published by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, titled, “It Is Not Hamas That Is Collapsing, but iIsrael,” Brik said every day, Israeli forces in Gaza grow weaker while Hamas, “in contrast, has already replenished its ranks with 17- and 18-year-olds”.

Brik also noted many Israeli reservists are “no longer consenting” to being “redrafted again and again” and “conscripted soldiers are exhausted and are losing professional skills for lack of training”.

“Some argue that withdrawing army forces from Gaza after signing a hostage deal with Hamas would be the same as being defeated and surrendering…but this claim is grounded in a fundamental misunderstanding of what is taking place in the Gaza Strip.

It is fueled by clichés spread by the political and military echelons to justify their actions and gain public support and legitimacy to continue a failed war… it is those very same people declaring that a cessation of hostilities means our defeat and surrender who are bringing the military closer to collapse and the state to its downfall,” he added.

“Israel’s economy, international relations and social cohesiveness are severely damaged by this war of attrition against both Hamas and Hezbollah,” he said, adding the Israeli military “does not have enough forces to fight a multi-front war”.

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Tel Aviv Declares Emergency as 300 Hezbollah Rockets Land in Israel

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Galant declared a 48-hour state of emergency across the country starting at 6 a.m. Sunday (03:00 GMT), after the military announced it was launching strikes in Lebanon to prevent a “major attack” by Hezbollah.

Galant’s office said in a statement that the declaration of a state of emergency allows the military to “issue instructions to the citizens of Israel, including limiting gatherings and closing sites where are relevant.”

Israel launched a series of intense airstrikes on southern Lebanon early on Sunday in what it said was a “preemptive” attack. Hezbollah said it has completed the “first phase” of the retaliatory attack on Israel with “a large number of missiles” in response to Israel’s killing of its commander Fuad Shukr in Beirut in July according to the Quds News Network.

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Hezbollah Attacks 15 Israeli Military Targets

Hezbollah officials stated, Friday, it carried out 15 attacks targeting military sites in Israel as part of new and vigorous front on the Israeli-Lebanese borders.

The attacks marks the largest number of rocket launches by the Hezbollah group from southern Lebanon in more that 35 days.

Statements from the Shiite group have been rife. It targeted the Israeli army’s Malkieh site twice, Al-Sammaqa, Ruwaisat Al-Alam, and Hadab Yarin sites whith with what they called as “appropriate weapons” that include drones.

Hezbollah stated it attacked the surveillance and spy equipment in the army’s Meron base, the Ramim site and the Ein Zeitim military base in northern Israel with rocket salvos according to Anadolu.

The group said it also attacked a group of Israeli soldiers near the Metula military site, and another gathering in the vicinity of Talat al-Khazan area with artillery shells.

Hezbollah pointed out as well that seven of its fighters were also killed in clashes with the Israeli army, Friday.

The new fatalities brought the total number of Hezbollah fighters killed in combat with Israeli forces since last October to 428, according to an Anadolu tally.

Earlier in the day, the Israeli army said Friday that around 20 rockets were launched from southern Lebanon toward the city of Safed and surrounding areas in the western Galilee region of northern Israel, causing several fires.

The rockets were detected as they were launched from southern Lebanon toward Safed and its vicinity, the Israeli army radio said on X.

The radio said that both the interception of the rockets and the impact of some of them led to fires breaking out in several spots in the Birya Forest, near the Ein Zeitim area in western Galilee.

It said that firefighting teams were dispatched to the site to extinguish the fires.

Meanwhile, sirens were activated in Sderot, Ibim, and Nir Am in the Gaza border region, marking the first such alert in three weeks, according to Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper.

Fears of a full-fledged war between Israel and Hezbollah have grown amid an exchange of cross-border attacks, and after the July 30 killing of senior Hezbollah commander Fouad Shukr in Beirut.

The escalation comes against the backdrop of the conflict in Gaza, where Israel has killed more than 40,200 Palestinians since the Oct. 7 Hamas incursion.

The military campaign has reduced much of the territory to rubble, and left most of the people homeless, hungry and prone to disease.

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