IDF spokesperson: Israel will continue to do ‘whatever necessary’ to avoid 7 October repeat on any of its borders
Israel’s military spokesperson Daniel Hagari has issued a video message in English, in which he has claimed Israel is attacking villages inside Lebanon which Hezbollah has converted to military bases as part of a plan to launch an attack on Israel, and said his nation will “continue doing whatever necessary” to avoid a 7 October style attack happening again on “any one of our borders”.
In the statement, Hagari says:
The Israel Defense Forces is conducting limited and targeted raids along Israel’s northern border against the threat Hezbollah poses to civilians in northern Israel. These localized ground raids will target Hezbollah strongholds that threaten Israeli towns, kibbutzim and communities along our border.
Hezbollah turned Lebanese villages next to Israeli villages into military bases all ready for an attack on Israel. Hezbollah had prepared to use those villages as staging grounds for an 7 October style invasion into Israeli homes. Hezbollah planned to invade Israel, attack Israeli communities and massacre innocent men, women and children. They called this plan “Conquer the Galilee”.
For decades, UN security council resolutions have called on Lebanon to make sure that its territory is free of non-governmental armed groups. UN security council resolution 1701 from 2006, agreed upon by Israel and Lebanon, requires that there be no armed personnel, assets and weapons other than those of the government of Lebanon and Unifil in southern Lebanon.
18 years after [resolution] 1701, Hezbollah is the world’s largest non-state army, and southern Lebanon is swarming with Hezbollah terrorists and weapons. If the state of Lebanon and the world can’t push Hezbollah away from our border, we have no choice but to do it ourselves.
I want to make it clear our war is with Hezbollah, not with the people of Lebanon. We do not want to harm Lebanese civilians, and we are taking measures to prevent that. We will not let [a] 7 October happen again on any one of our borders. We will continue doing whatever necessary so that Israeli families can return to their homes in safety and security.
The Lebanese government has said that since Israel stepped up its airstrikes on the country, about 1,000 people including women and children have been killed, about 6,000 injured, and an estimated one million people displaced from their homes.
About 60,000 people in northern Israel have been displaced from their homes by rocket fire from Hezbollah and other anti-Israeli forces operating inside Lebanon. Dozens were killed in Lebanon and thousands more wounded when pagers and walkie-talkies were detonated last month. Although it has not directly claimed responsibility, the attack is widely attributed to an Israeli operation targeting Hezbollah operatives.
One of the UN’s social media accounts this morning posted to remind members that article 2.4 of the UN Charter states that “All Members shall refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state.”
Israel’s ambassador to the UN, Danny Danon, recently described a non-binding vote by the UN general assembly that Israel end its nearly six decades of occupying the Palestinian West Bank territory as “shameful.”
Key events
Syria’s foreign ministry has condemned an Israeli strike on Damascus earlier today which it said killed three people. In a statement the ministry said:
The Israeli enemy launched an air aggression at dawn today targeting several points in the city of Damascus, which led to the martyrdom of three civilians, the injury of nine, and the occurrence of significant damage to private property.
Syria condemns this brutal Israeli aggression and renews its call to the world to put an end to this Israeli chaos that is igniting the entire region and threatening regional and international peace and security.
The ministry said Syria had a “legitimate right to defend its land and people and to resist these crimes by all means guaranteed by international law.”
The Israeli defense minister’s office said Yoav Gallant has briefed US defense secretary Lloyd Austin on Israel’s raids into Lebanon, Reuters reports.
A road has been blocked in central Israel after it appears it was hit by a rocket. The Magen David Adom ambulance service now says it has treated two people at the scene – a bus driver who was hit by shrapnel, and another motorist. The military correspondent for the Times of Israel, Emanuel Fabian, posted images from the scene.
Israeli security official says there have been no direct clashes with Hezbollah inside Lebanon, contradicting earlier IDF claim of ‘heavy fighting’
The raids by Israeli troops in southern Lebanon that began overnight were limited and went only a short distance over the border, an Israeli security official has told Reuters, adding that no direct clashes with Hezbollah fighters were reported.
Reuters said the official would not be drawn on how far inside Lebanon the IDF service personnel had reached, but suggested it was within walking distance of the UN-drawn blue line which separates the two countries.
The official told the news agency a wider operation targeting the Lebanese capital Beirut, which has been hit by repeated airstrikes in recent days, was “not on the table”.
The suggestion there has been no clashes directly contradicts an earlier statement by IDF Arabic language spokesperson Avichay Adraee, who in a warning to Lebanese citizens that they should not move south of the Litani River claimed that there was heavy fighting.
Israeli media is reporting that one person has been “moderately wounded” after a rocket barrage fired from inside Lebanon aimed at locations in central Israel.
A helicopter carrier from France will arrive in the eastern Mediterranean in the next five to six days and take up position in case a decision is taken to evacuate foreign nationals from Lebanon, Reuters reports a French army spokesperson said on Tuesday.
Earlier the British government said it is chartering a flight to assist Britons who want to flee Lebanon, where the government says Israeli airstrikes have killed about 1,000 people and injured about 6,000 more in the past few days.
Fighting continues in the Gaza Strip. Local medical sources say that 21 people have been killed so far on Tuesday by Israeli strikes, Reuters reports. Hamas, Islamic Jihad, and other smaller militant factions have said in separate statements that their fighters attacked Israeli forces operating in several areas of Gaza with anti-tank rockets, mortar fire, and explosive devices.
Air raid sirens have sounded in central Israel, including in Tel Aviv. The IDF said “a number of projectiles were identified crossing from Lebanon into Israeli territory, some of which were intercepted.”
More details soon …
It remains unclear exactly what has transpired in the Red Sea, but at the moment the latest indication is that a vessel was struck by a missile and sustained damage at 97 nautical miles northwest of Yemen’s Hodeidah port, and the crew are safe.
More details soon …
Here are some of the latest pictures sent to us over the news wires from Lebanon.
IDF spokesperson: Israel will continue to do ‘whatever necessary’ to avoid 7 October repeat on any of its borders
Israel’s military spokesperson Daniel Hagari has issued a video message in English, in which he has claimed Israel is attacking villages inside Lebanon which Hezbollah has converted to military bases as part of a plan to launch an attack on Israel, and said his nation will “continue doing whatever necessary” to avoid a 7 October style attack happening again on “any one of our borders”.
In the statement, Hagari says:
The Israel Defense Forces is conducting limited and targeted raids along Israel’s northern border against the threat Hezbollah poses to civilians in northern Israel. These localized ground raids will target Hezbollah strongholds that threaten Israeli towns, kibbutzim and communities along our border.
Hezbollah turned Lebanese villages next to Israeli villages into military bases all ready for an attack on Israel. Hezbollah had prepared to use those villages as staging grounds for an 7 October style invasion into Israeli homes. Hezbollah planned to invade Israel, attack Israeli communities and massacre innocent men, women and children. They called this plan “Conquer the Galilee”.
For decades, UN security council resolutions have called on Lebanon to make sure that its territory is free of non-governmental armed groups. UN security council resolution 1701 from 2006, agreed upon by Israel and Lebanon, requires that there be no armed personnel, assets and weapons other than those of the government of Lebanon and Unifil in southern Lebanon.
18 years after [resolution] 1701, Hezbollah is the world’s largest non-state army, and southern Lebanon is swarming with Hezbollah terrorists and weapons. If the state of Lebanon and the world can’t push Hezbollah away from our border, we have no choice but to do it ourselves.
I want to make it clear our war is with Hezbollah, not with the people of Lebanon. We do not want to harm Lebanese civilians, and we are taking measures to prevent that. We will not let [a] 7 October happen again on any one of our borders. We will continue doing whatever necessary so that Israeli families can return to their homes in safety and security.
The Lebanese government has said that since Israel stepped up its airstrikes on the country, about 1,000 people including women and children have been killed, about 6,000 injured, and an estimated one million people displaced from their homes.
About 60,000 people in northern Israel have been displaced from their homes by rocket fire from Hezbollah and other anti-Israeli forces operating inside Lebanon. Dozens were killed in Lebanon and thousands more wounded when pagers and walkie-talkies were detonated last month. Although it has not directly claimed responsibility, the attack is widely attributed to an Israeli operation targeting Hezbollah operatives.
One of the UN’s social media accounts this morning posted to remind members that article 2.4 of the UN Charter states that “All Members shall refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state.”
Israel’s ambassador to the UN, Danny Danon, recently described a non-binding vote by the UN general assembly that Israel end its nearly six decades of occupying the Palestinian West Bank territory as “shameful.”
Israelis warn Lebanese citizens not to travel in southern Lebanon amid ‘heavy fighting’
William Christou
William Christou is in Beirut for the Guardian, and has this latest report on the situation this morning:
Following Israel’s announcement that it was starting a “limited” incursion into south Lebanon, Israel’s military spokesperson Avichay Adraee issued a statement on Tuesday morning, telling Lebanese not to travel in vehicles from the north to the region south of the Litani river “for their personal safety”.
“Heavy fighting is taking place in southern Lebanon, with Hezbollah elements using the civilian environment and the population as human shields to launch attacks,” Adraee said in an announcement on X.
The Litani river, about 20 miles north of the Lebanon-Israel border, separates the border region from the rest of Lebanon. Israel has demanded that Hezbollah withdraw its fighters north of the Litani river since fighting began on 8 October. Hezbollah has refused to negotiate on its presence south of the Litani until a ceasefire in Gaza was achieved.
Israeli jets carried out strikes on over a dozen targets in south Lebanon overnight, while shelling targeted areas facing the closed military zone established by Israel on Monday night. Israel also struck what it said were “Hezbollah installations” in Dahieh, the southern suburbs of Beirut, in successive waves of airstrikes.
Hezbollah announced that it was targeting Israeli soldiers who were approaching the UN-drawn blue line that separates Israel and Lebanon with rockets and shelling. The group said that it had fired on Israeli troops in Metula, a town on the Israeli side of the line, on Monday morning.
Lebanese authorities had yet to report casualties for the overnight fighting, but a medical source in Marjayoun public hospital in south Lebanon said they received wounded overnight.
Residents of south Lebanon found themselves unable to flee during the intense bombing overnight, with at least two major roads reported impassable due to airstrikes.
The Palestinian Wafa news agency has reported 19 civilians have been killed by Israeli airstrikes this morning, including on the Shuja’iyya school, which was housing displaced people near Gaza City. It claims that women and children were among the victims.
The IDF earlier issued a statement claiming it was targeting a Hamas command and control centre at the school, which has Israel has previously bombed.
The claims have not been independently verified. It has not been possible for journalists to independently verify the casualty figures being issued during the conflict.
Yemen’s Houthi movement targeted Israeli military posts in Tel Aviv and Eilat with drones on Tuesday, the group’s military spokesperson Yahya Saree said in a televised speech, Reuters reports.
A couple of images have appeared on the news wires which show the Israeli military operation in which IDF troops have entered Lebanon.
Itamer Ben-Gvir, Israel’s far-right interior security minister, who has previously threatened to collapse Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition government if it agreed a ceasefire with Hezbollah, has posted to social media saying he prays for the success of Israel’s ground invasion inside Lebanon. He said:
The decisions we made in the last few days are important, correct and necessary decisions. At the same time, this is the time not to stop, [but] to continue doing everything, with all our might, and crush the terrorist organisation Hezbollah, in order to return the residents of the north to their homes safely. I pray for the success of the IDF soldiers who are currently fighting in difficult conditions in southern Lebanon, the people of Israel stand behind them.