Lebanese Flock to Beaches Despite Expected Israel Attacks

Amid sweltering temperatures, Lebanese people are flocking to the beaches and shores of the country to cool off. This is despite a mounting threat of an Israeli attack on Lebanon that could happen any day now.

For the past 10 months, there have been reciprocal attacks between the Israeli army and the Lebanese Hezbollah group along the 120-kilometer (75-mile) border between Israel and Lebanon.

Tensions have escalated further following a missile attack on a football field in the town of Majdal Shams in the occupied Golan Heights.

The missile strike on Saturday killed 12 people. Israel blames Hezbollah for the attack. But Hezbollah denies playing any part in the attack.

Despite Israel’s threat of all-out war, Lebanese people, especially residents of Tyre, a city about 20 kilometers (12.4 miles) from the conflict zone, continue to head to the beach.

An Anadolu reporter interviewed people in Tyre who were swimming in the sea as they cooled off with their families and friends at a public beach.

Rayan Fayad, a Lebanese expat from Abidjan, Ivory Coast who was visiting his hometown with his family, said he loves the beach in Tyre.

“Everyone is happy and no one is afraid. People are carrying on with their lives as usual,” he said.

Another resident, Abdullah Yahya, subtly referring to Hezbollah said there is a force in Lebanon to prevent Israel from targeting civilians, which is why civilians continue to live normal lives.

“Our home is very close to Israel. Yet we still go out, come to Tyre, and continue our lives as we did before,” Yahya said.

Fears of a full-blown war between Israel and Hezbollah have grown amid an exchange of cross-border attacks between the two side according to the Turkish news agency.

The escalation comes against the backdrop of a deadly Israeli onslaught on Gaza which has killed more than 39,300 people since last October following a cross-border attack by the Palestinian group Hamas.

Continue reading
Golan Heights: Who is Dragging Who Into War?

The UN mission in Lebanon warned on Sunday of a “wider conflagration” between Israel and Hezbollah following a deadly attack on the town of Majdal Shams in occupied Golan Heights, according to Anadolu.

In a joint statement, UN Special Coordinator for Lebanon (UNSCOL) Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert, and head of UN Interim Forces in Lebanon (UNIFIL) Gen. Aroldo Lazaro Saenz, condemned “the death of civilians – young children and teenagers – in Majdal Shams.”

They urged “the parties to exercise maximum restraint and to put a stop to the ongoing intensified exchanges of fire.”

“It could ignite a wider conflagration that would engulf the entire region in a catastrophe beyond belief,” they added.

Israeli authorities say at least 12 people were killed and 35 injured as a rocket struck a football field in the town of Druze in Majdal Shams, northern part of Golan Heights.

Israel accused Hezbollah for the attack, but the Lebanese group has denied responsibility.

Israel and Hezbollah have traded cross-border fire since the Gaza conflict in October, leading to fears of an all-out war.

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said they will ensure that Hezbollah “pays a price,” the Turkish news agency reports.

Continue reading
Netanyahu: Tough But on Shaky Grounds

Despite his tough and uncompromising stands Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stands on shaky grounds.

As reported in the Jewish Maariv daily and highlighted in the Quds News Network, his teflon-factor toughness is dented domestically and daily, as characterized by the popular opposition against his rule, in the street and the Knesset.

Around 55% of Israelis have low confidence in the current military leadership of the country; 73% don’t trust the government and 71% express very low trust in Netanyahu.

Further, 86% are concerned about the security situation in Israel; 73% worried about the economic situation of the country and 63% support the recruitment of ultra-Orthodox Jews into the army.

Around 500,000 Israelis have left the country since 7 October, 2023, and the Ben Gurion Airport is already packed with travelers wanting to leave following Friday’s Houthi drone attack on Tel Aviv.

Netanyahu is visiting the United States with all these statistics staring him in the face.

He is addressing the US Congress and meeting US President Joe Biden amidst a declining trust among Israelis in his leadership.

This is particularly due to his failure to secure a ceasefire that could facilitate an exchange deal with the resistance in Gaza. At the same time the fate of 120-plus Israeli hostages hang in the balance.

At the same time, he is facing intense pressure from far-right ministers who threaten to dissolve the government if he agrees to a deal.

They are insisting that he initiate an all-out war against Lebanon—a conflict that, according to the U.S., could escalate into a regional war, which the U.S. has warned against.

But the US is worried also because Hezbollah is proving a very strong match in the north whilst the Houthis are prepared for an all out war which would disruptive globally.

Continue reading
Nasrallah Warns Israel Not to Invade Lebanon

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant threatened Hezbollah, Wednesday, with a potential ground invasion of Lebanon that would “be rapid, surprising and decisive,” Israeli media reported.

“We can swiftly shift our main effort from the south to the north in an instant,” Gallant said during a visit to the northern border, according to the Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper as reported in Anadolu news.

In response Hezbollah’s Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah, Wednesday pledged, his group’s fighters would wipe out the Israeli army’s tanks should they invade Lebanon reports the Lebanese website naharnet.

Such talk is happening when there are reports the Israeli army is running out of tanks and munitions and manpower as it continues its 10-month war on Gaza.

According to The New Arab  a significant number of tanks have been damaged or are completely out of service amid its Gaza offensive, Israel military sources suggest but they did not reveal the exact number, Israeli daily Yedioth Ahronoth reported.

Nasrallah commented “if your tanks come to Lebanon and its south, you will not suffer from a shortage of tanks, because you will no longer have tanks.”

Making his comments at the end of Ashoura commemorations he warned if Israeli strikes continue on southern Lebanon, Hezbollah will target new settlements in Israel which have not been hit before.

Hezbollah has vowed to keep up its retaliatory attacks on Israel so long as it continues its deadly onslaught on Gaza which began soon after 7 October, 2023.

He said Israel has continued to pay a heavy toll because of its aggression on Gaza.

 “The toll includes 9,254 individuals, among them officers and soldiers, with 3,000 amputees, 650 paralyzed, 185 completely blind, and several thousands suffering severe psychological trauma,” he said.

“Our front in Lebanon will remain active as long as the aggression against Gaza, its people, and its resistance continues in all its forms,” Nasrallah asserted and as reported by Press TV.

.

Continue reading
23 Israeli Soldiers Injured in 24 Hrs

Twenty-three Israeli soldiers were injured in the last 24 hours in occupied Palestine. About 17 of them were injured in different parts of the Gaza Strip.

The number of the Israeli injured is trending on the social media because of what is being described as a tough day for Israeli soldiers despite their incursions in different neighborhoods in Gaza city ordering displaced civilians to keep moving.

As well, the Israeli army have admitted to the number of injured in different parts of Gaza as well as north of the country were Israel is fighting a war with Hezbollah on its border with Lebanon.

The tense situation on the border is increasing as the Israeli army and Hezbollah continue to exchange fire.

An Israeli air raid on Maron Al Ras in southern Lebanon was met by a strong explosion in a building in the Galilee fired by Hezbollah according to Israel’s Channel 12.

Also, Hezbollah launched a batch of missiles on the Hagoshreem settlement meanwhile Israeli police in near Yifat Calderon snapped the wire of the microphone of one of the Israeli protesters who were calling for a settlement deal on the hostages.

Hezbollah also stated it targeted a building used by Israeli soldiers in the Mutallah settlement.

Meanwhile tens of protesters are outside the Israeli Ministry of Defense calling on the government to make a deal that would free the 120-or so hostages that are currently held by Hamas. 

Continue reading