Hamas will survive Israel’s planned raids in Rafah: Hezbollah chief
Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah has said that Israel will not be able to eliminate Hamas even if it enters Rafah, a local media outlet reported.
Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah has said that Israel will not be able to eliminate Hamas even if it enters Rafah, a local media outlet reported.
The embassy said,''Our countries, who are sadly well versed in civilian loss, stand united in hopes of a speedy recovery for the injured and solace for the family of the bereaved.''
IDF said it identified a group of operatives at an anti-tank missile launch site, from where the attack was conducted earlier.
Hezbollah, a Lebanese Shia military group, has vowed to retaliate against Israel's "brutal aggression" after two journalists from Lebanese TV channel Al-Mayadeen were killed in Israeli attacks on the southern village of Tayr Harfa.
Four Lebanese were reportedly killed in confrontations between Hezbollah and the Israeli army.
The IDF further said that they have taken precautionary measures for the possibility of a two-front war following Hezbollah attack.
On Saturday, a group of around 18 Lebanese people, including one parliamentarian, crossed the border before being chased back by warning shots.
The most potent of all the armed non-state actors in West Asia, Hezbollah, is undergoing deep convulsions. The international footprint of the Lebanese Hezbollah, which fought the battle-hardened Israeli army to a standstill in the first decade of the millennium, has certainly grown. But conversely, the militant group is weaker domestically today than it was at any point over the past decade.
At the press conference, he showed pictures of Hezbollah's members training the Houthi militia to launch explosive-laden drones.
Nasrallah's comments came following the exchange of rockets between Lebanon and Israel over the past two days.