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2024.07.31 11:33 GMT+8

Israel claims killing senior Hezbollah commander in Beirut strike

Updated 2024.07.31 11:33 GMT+8
CGTN

Smoke billows following an Israeli airstrike in the southern Lebanese border village of Chihine, July 28, 2024. /CFP

The Israeli military said it killed Hezbollah's most senior commander in a Beirut airstrike on Tuesday in retaliation for a cross-border rocket attack three days prior that killed 12 people and was blamed on the Lebanese armed group.

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said the strike killed Fuad Shukr, who "has the blood of many Israelis on his hands."

"Tonight, we have shown that the blood of our people has a price, and that there is no place out of reach for our forces to this end."

There was no immediate response from Hezbollah. The group has denied involvement in a rocket strike on the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights on Saturday that killed 12 youths in a football field in the Druze village of Majdal Shams.

A senior security source from another country in the region confirmed Shukr had died of wounds sustained in the strike.

Israel's military said Shukr was the most important aide to Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah, his adviser for wartime operations and in charge of Saturday's attack.

The Israeli strike on the southern suburbs of Beirut also killed three civilians including two children, medical and security sources told Reuters.

Lebanon's Al Manar TV cited the Lebanese health ministry as reporting 74 people injured along with three killed in the attack.

Civil defense workers check for victims between the wreckage of destroyed buildings that were hit by an Israeli airstrike in the southern suburbs of Beirut, Lebanon, July 30, 2024. /CFP

Concerns about escalation

Hezbollah has denied involvement in the attack, but said the group fired rockets at a military target in the Golan Heights. The killing of the youths prompted a high-level Western diplomatic flurry to avert a major escalation that could inflame the wider Middle East.

UN Special Coordinator Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert called for calm to prevail amid escalating tensions and called on Israel and Lebanon to explore all diplomatic avenues to end hostilities.

"There is no such thing as a military solution," she said in a statement.

Tuesday's strike on Beirut prompted widespread condemnation by Lebanese officials and Hamas in Gaza, the Houthis in Yemen, Syria and Iran.

The White House, which previously also attributed Saturday's attack to Hezbollah, reiterated its commitment to Israel's security against "all Iran-backed threats including Hezbollah" and said it was working on a diplomatic solution.

The Israeli military said it had issued no new instructions for civil defense in Israel, a possible indication that Israel did not plan further strikes immediately. Channel 12 TV quoted an unnamed official as saying Israel did not want an all-out war.

Israeli media reported that depending on Hezbollah's reaction, the military considered the Beirut strike as concluding the response to the Golan Heights attack.

There were about 25 rockets launched from south Lebanon into northern Israel throughout the day, the Israeli military said.  

Lebanese Foreign Minister Abdallah Bou Habib said his government condemned the Israeli strike and planned to file a complaint to the United Nations.

"We were not expecting them to hit Beirut and they hit Beirut," he told Reuters, saying he hoped Hezbollah's response would not trigger an escalation.

"Hopefully any response will be proportionate and will not be more than that, so that this wave of killing, hitting and shelling will stop," he said.

Hezbollah and Israel, which last fought each other in 2006, have been trading fire since the eruption of the Gaza conflict in October, after Hezbollah began firing at Israeli targets in what it says is solidarity with the Palestinians.

The hostilities have mostly been limited to the frontier region and both sides have previously indicated they do not seek a wider confrontation even as the conflict has prompted worry about the risk of a slide towards war.

(With input from Reuters)

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