Israeli strikes targeting Hezbollah kill hundreds across Lebanon

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Video shows Israeli airstrikes battering Lebanon
2:12 • Source: CNN
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Lebanon saw its deadliest day since 2006 as Israel strikes Hezbollah. Here's what we know

Lebanon-based militant group Hezbollah has fired a fresh barrage of strikes into northern Israel, a day after Israeli airstrikes targeting the militant group in Lebanon killed nearly 500 people and wounded 1,600 others — the country’s deadliest day in nearly two decades.

Israel and Hezbollah have been stuck in tit-for-tat escalation since the war in Gaza began. But over the past week, Israel’s escalated attacks on the group have again heightened fears of a wider regional war.

Here’s what to know:  

China condemns Israel's airstrikes in Lebanon

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi has slammed Israel’s deadly airstrikes in Lebanon, saying that he and his government “strongly condemn acts that violate basic norms of international order.”

Wang told his Lebanon counterpart on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly that “China resolutely supports Lebanon in maintaining its sovereignty, security, and national dignity,” according to a foreign ministry readout published on Tuesday.  

China’s role in the Middle East: Since the start of the war in Gaza, China – which has looked to bolster its influence and ties in the Middle East in recent years – has presented itself as a voice for countries across decrying Israel’s war in the enclave and calling for Palestinian statehood.

Analysis: Lebanon’s people are reeling from the deadliest day in a generation  

Lebanon may be no stranger to conflict. But Monday was the deadliest day the country has seen in a generation.  

Israel’s aerial bombardment killed nearly 500 people, including at least 35 children and 58 women, according to Lebanese authorities.

That’s nearly half the number killed throughout the entire 34-day war between Israel and Hezbollah in 2006.   

That conflict was savage. I still remember the stench of victims decomposing in refrigerator trucks because it was too dangerous to transport bodies out while Israeli attack drones and fighter jets patrolled overhead.  

When the fighting finally stopped, around 1,100 Lebanese people had been killed.  On the Israeli side, 21 Israeli soldiers and 43 civilians were killed.  

Fighting in the shadows: On the battlefield, Hezbollah’s fighters must be an infuriating enemy. They fought an Israeli ground incursion to a standstill in 2006. But throughout the war, I didn’t see a single armed Hezbollah fighter, such is their ability to blend in.  

The Iran-backed group operates as a “state within a state” in a bitterly divided country with a borderline bankrupt government that has no president, where neighborhoods still bear the scars of a 15-year civil war.  

Lebanese civilians know all too well how frightening the Israeli military’s attempts to target Hezbollah can be.   

On Friday, Israeli jets carried out an airstrike in Beirut’s southern suburbs, in which they killed several senior Hezbollah commanders. But the missiles also destroyed a nine-story building in a densely populated neighborhood, killing 45 people, including women and children.  

The Israeli military accuses Hezbollah of using civilians as human shields.  

Families flee: But that is little consolation to Lebanese citizens like my mother-in-law, who was a block and a half away from the building the Israeli jets destroyed. For several hours, my family struggled to evacuate my wife’s grandmother — a stroke victim who could not walk out of her apartment.  

Like the exodus of panicked civilians who fled the Israeli bombardment of southern and eastern Lebanon on Monday, my in-laws have taken shelter in another neighborhood.  

Four generations are now gathered in a single apartment, including a week-old newborn, aunts and uncles who work as teachers and building contractors. They have no connection whatsoever with Hezbollah.    

We hope and pray that their neighborhood will not be bombed.  

Hezbollah fires multiple rocket barrages into northern Israel 

Hezbollah fired multiple rocket barrages into northern Israel overnight, a day after the Israeli military escalated its attacks on the Iran-backed group and launched airstrikes in Lebanon.  

Hezbollah said it had targeted the Ramat David airbase, Meggido airfield, and the Amos base, all located in the vicinity of the town of Afula in northern Israel.  

About 20 “projectiles” were identified crossing from Lebanon into Israeli airspace between 2:39 a.m. and 3:11 a.m. local time, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said Tuesday. 

Some of the projectiles had been intercepted while others had fallen in open areas, the IDF said, without specifying where they had fallen. 

The Israeli Air Force responded by striking the sources of the rocket fire.

It came after warning sirens blared in the HaAmakim area, southeast of the northern Israeli city of Haifa.  

Israel’s emergency response service, Magen David Adom (MDA), said it dispatched teams to search areas in the Lower Galilee, where reports of rocket fire were received.  

MDA said the windows of one of its ambulances in the Jezreel Valley were damaged from a blast wave.  

Some background: The Amos base, inaugurated in 2021, serves as a transport and logistics hub for the Israeli military’s Northern Command. It also is “the central axis” for the IDF’s Technological and Logistics Directorate, which is responsible for multi-agency logistics and emergency preparedness in the northern front, according to the IDF.  

Qatar and Egypt condemn Israeli strikes on Lebanon, warning of greater risk of "regional war"

Qatar and Egypt have condemned the wave of Israeli airstrikes on Lebanon, which killed more than 450 people and injured thousands, warning the attacks increase the risk of a “regional war.” 

Egypt expressed its solidarity with Lebanon and affirmed its “categorical rejection” of any violations of Lebanon’s sovereignty and its territories. 

Both countries called for urgent international diplomatic pressure to de-escalate the widening conflict and expressed their readiness to support efforts to achieve regional peace and stability.  

More context: Qatar and Egypt, along with the US, have been mediating talks between Israel and Hamas for a ceasefire agreement in Gaza and the release of Israeli hostages held by the militant group.

"We're clearly walking into a much wider war," former US Defense Secretary and ex-CIA chief tells CNN

CNN's Jake Tapper speaks with Leon Panetta on September 23.

More than 450 people were killed and 1,600 others were injured in Israeli airstrikes in Lebanon on Monday, marking the deadliest day in the country since the Hezbollah-Israel war in 2006 — but neither side is calling the current escalation a war.

Former US Defense Secretary and ex-CIA chief Leon Panetta told CNN’s Jake Tapper that the situation has “crossed a threshold.”

Panetta said there’s no doubt world leaders gathering in New York for the UN General Assembly this week will be “talking an awful lot about the war that’s taking place now between Israel and Hezbollah and the fact that it’s become a wider war.”

He added the US must make clear there cannot be “an all-out war in the Middle East.”

France requests emergency UN Security Council meeting to address strikes in Lebanon

France has requested an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council to address the strikes in Lebanon, French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot told the UN General Assembly on Monday.

Barrot called for de-escalation and a halt to strikes being carried out across the region.

“For that reason, I have asked for an emergency meeting of the Security Council on Lebanon this week. In Lebanon as elsewhere, France will remain fully mobilized to resolve major crisis that are disrupting the international agenda,” Barrot said. 

UN Secretary-General calls for immediate cessation of hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah 

UN Secretary-General António Guterres urged Monday for the immediate cessation of hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon, his spokesperson said, as world leaders prepare to meet Tuesday for the UN General Assembly. 

He said Guterres was alarmed by the escalating situation and the “large number of civilian casualties” being reported by Lebanese authorities, and expressed the urgent need for de-escalation and for all efforts to be devoted to a diplomatic solution. 

In an interview with CNN’s Fareed Zakaria aired Sunday, the UN Secretary-General warned that Lebanon could transform into “another Gaza.”

More context: World leaders are gathering in New York for the UN General Assembly (UNGA) on Tuesday after Lebanon saw the deadliest day of strikes from Israel in the country since the 2006 war. It came after a weekend of bombings between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon, contributing to the most intense exchanges of fire between the two sides since October 7. 

"We have nowhere to go": Displaced people in Lebanon say as they flee Israeli strikes 

Cars sit in traffic as they flee in Sidon, Lebanon, on September 23.

Panic and fear have gripped Lebanon as displaced people flee their homes, taking along with them frightened children to shelter at schools, according to videos of the destruction caused by the deadliest day of Israeli strikes in the country since 2006

Fatma Ibrahim Shehab was among several people who had taken shelter at a school in the coastal city of Sidon after being evacuated from southern Lebanon following consecutive days of Israeli strikes. 

She told the AFP news agency she had to leave after an Israeli strike next to her home left her building shaking.  

“We got very stressed, this is why we had to leave and we came here. We were told it’s safe here. The situation is very tragic, the strikes were right next to us,” she said.

Mohamed Hamayda, a Syrian man displaced from Deir al-Zahrani, told the news agency he had no choice but to take his mother and the rest of his family on public transport to the Kuwaiti school in Sidon after being told it had opened as a shelter. 

And Hassan Banjak said he had reluctantly fled the village of Chaaitiyeh. 

“Since the war and bombings with the Israeli enemy began, we hadn’t left. But after the strikes intensified and got closer, the children got scared, so we decided to leave. If it wasn’t for the children I would have never left,” he said. 

Scale of destruction: Their accounts came as Reuters video footage from the southern suburbs of Beirut showed debris from damaged buildings and shards of glass littering the ground after Israel’s deadly wave of strikes on Monday.  

One video showed a car with rubble on its windshield, in front of a building with shattered windows. Another video, from Zahle, which is east of Beirut in the Bekaa governorate, showed plumes of smoke rising in the distance.  

An eyewitness video verified by CNN, which appears to have been taken from a balcony in the Bekaa governorate, shows smoke rising in what appears to be a multi-story residential compound.

The person filming can be heard saying, “This is right outside our house. This is right outside our house.” 

IDF says 1,600 Hezbollah targets hit on Monday 

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) says it struck 1,600 Hezbollah targets in southern Lebanon and Bekaa on Monday.  

In the deadliest day of Israeli strikes targeting Hezbollah in Lebanon since the 2006 war, nearly 500 people have been killed so far, including dozens of women and children, according to the Lebanese health ministry. 

Lebanese representative at UNGA says Israeli attacks have damaged economy and "threatened social order"

Lebanon’s representative to the United Nations General Assembly described the turmoil caused by Israel’s deadly attacks.

Bahia El Hariri, a member of the Lebanese parliament, addressed the assembly in New York on Monday on behalf of Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati, who she said was dealing with the “urgent circumstances facing the Lebanese people, including in their homes.” 

El Hariri said Mikati was working with the government “to deal with the aggression that we are victim to at all levels, diplomatic, humanitarian, health, security, and also in terms of people’s livelihoods.” 

She told the assembly that residential areas were being targeted and that there was an “exodus” of people trying to flee to safety. 

Israel conducted its deadliest round of strikes in Lebanon against Hezbollah since the 2006 war on Monday, killing nearly 500 people including dozens of women and children. 

“The summit of the future is taking place at a time that is ever so sensitive. The whole of humanity urgently needs dialogue to call ourselves into question and to become aware of the dangers that are threatening international peace and security,” she said. 

US does not think Israel's strategy of "escalating to de-escalate" will be effective, State Department says

The United States does not believe the reported Israeli strategy of “escalate to de-escalate” along its northern border with Hezbollah will be effective, a senior State Department official said, adding that the US and its partners are working to find a diplomatic off-ramp.  

Instead, US officials and their global partners at the gathering in New York are working “to deal with the increasing challenges and risks of escalation across the blue line between Israel and Lebanon,” they said, noting this is a “key focus” for Secretary of State Antony Blinken this week.

The official said the US and its partners had come up with some “concrete ideas” to de-escalate the situation, and they “want to stress test them to a degree with allies and partners whose support and participation are going to be essential to whether or not they may prove successful or not.”

The official would not give details on the “concrete ideas,” but said they “reflect the ongoing set of conversations that we have had with the Israeli government, with other governments in the region, and with like-minded governments about, particularly the escalating tensions and escalating conflict in Lebanon.”

The official did not say if the US expects Israel to launch a ground incursion on Lebanon if the efforts at de-escalation fail, but noted that it is “important for everyone to take Israeli preparations seriously.”

EgyptAir suspends flights to and from Beirut amid unrest in Lebanon

An EgyptAir plane prepares for landing at the Beijing Capital International airport on September 6.

Egypt’s national carrier, EgyptAir, says it is canceling all its flights to and from Beirut starting Tuesday “due to the current events unfolding in Lebanon.”

The cancellations “will remain in effect until the situation stabilizes,” the airline said in a statement Monday.

Earlier today, Jordan also announced a suspension of flights to Beirut until further notice.

Hamas field commander killed in Israeli strikes in Lebanon, group says

Hamas’ armed wing, the Al-Qassam Brigades, said Monday that one of its field commanders had been killed in an Israeli airstrike in Lebanon.

It named the commander as Hussein Mahmoud Al-Nader, also known as Abu Saleh, from the town of Marjeyoun in southern Lebanon.

Israeli political echelon greatly satisfied by military's operation in Lebanon, source says

There’s “great satisfaction” among Israel’s political echelon with the military’s performance during Monday’s operation in Lebanon, an Israeli official told CNN.

Some background: On Monday, Israel launched the most intense wave of strikes in Lebanon since the 2006 war. The military struck 1,300 Hezbollah assets across Lebanon and the operation is not over yet, Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Daniel Hagari said earlier.

Hagari did not rule out the possibility of a ground operation into Lebanon.

At least 492 people in Lebanon have died and at least 1,645 were injured, according to the Lebanese health ministry.

Here’s what some high-profile figures in Israel have said so far:

  • Herzi Halevi, IDF chief of the General Staff, when describing the strikes, said that the military began a “proactive offensive operation” to target infrastructure “that Hezbollah has been building for the past 20 years.”
  • Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his country is changing the “balance of power” on its northern front.
  • The country’s defense minister Yoav Gallant said the military had carried out an “impressive operation.”
  • Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid also praised the operation in .

Lebanese judicial system will suspend operations Tuesday 

Henri Khoury speaks during a news conference in Beirut, Lebanon, on January 11, 2023.

Lebanese authorities will suspend work in all courts and judicial departments across the country on Tuesday, according to the state-run news service NNA.

The decision, announced by the Minister of Justice Henri Khoury and the head of the Supreme Judicial Council Judge Suhail Abboud, comes in response to the intensifying conflict between Israel and Hezbollah.

Only urgent cases will be handled during the suspension, NNA said. It did not say if services would resume Wednesday.

Jordan leaders express solidarity with Lebanon and call for UN action against "Israeli aggression"

Officials in Jordan are expressing solidarity with Lebanon and calling for the United Nations to take action after Israel’s military launched airstrikes on what it says are Hezbollah targets that killed hundreds of people.

Jordan’s King Abdullah warned Israel’s strikes in Lebanon represented a dangerous escalation and called for immediate international efforts to prevent a broader conflict in the region.

He made the comments on a call with the Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati, the Royal Hashemite Court said in a statement on Monday. Abdullah also said there was an urgent need to halt Israel’s conflict with Hamas in Gaza as a crucial step toward de-escalation. 

Earlier Monday, Jordan’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Ayman Safadi called on the United Nations Security Council to act immediately to “curb Israeli aggression and protect the region from its disastrous consequences.” 

He noted the Israeli strikes came as world leaders meet in New York for the United Nations General Assembly and said Israel’s actions were in defiance of the 2006 Security Council Resolution 1701 which called for a permanent ceasefire and end to hostilities between Hezbollah and Israel. 

The Jordanian Civil Aviation Authority also announced that it was suspending Jordanian flights to Beirut until further notice, citing heightened regional tensions, according to a statement.

Death toll from Israeli strikes in Lebanon rises to 492, health ministry says

Smoke billows from the site of an Israeli airstrike in Marjayoun, near the Lebanon-Israel border, on September 23.

The death toll from Israel’s strikes in Lebanon has risen to at least 492, according to the Lebanese health ministry.  

Among the dead are 35 children and 58 women, the ministry said in a statement Monday regarding the ongoing strikes in southern Lebanon, Beqaa, and Baalbek.

The ministry said that at least 1,645 people had been injured. 

Some casualties likely caused by secondary explosions, Israeli military says

Some of the casualties following Israel’s strikes in Lebanon Monday were likely caused by secondary explosions, an Israeli military spokesperson said.

At a press briefing on Monday, Daniel Hagari said there had been “many secondary explosions,” which occurred when buildings “containing deadly munitions, rockets and missiles” were struck. 

“It is likely that some of the casualties are from these secondary explosions,” he said. 

The spokesperson said Hezbollah was using civilian homes to store its weapons and showed photos that he said showed long-range rockets stored inside a house in Lebanon. CNN cannot verify the authenticity of the photos. 

“Among those killed were a large number of Hezbollah terrorists who were next to the weapons that we targeted, ” Hagari said, adding there had been a “high number of casualties.” 

Some background: Lebanon’s health ministry said at least 356 people have been killed including 24 children and 42 women during Israel’s aerial offensive against Hezbollah on Monday, the deadliest since the 2006 war.

Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid praised the operation in a post on X, saying, “Eliminations, a thousand targets within one day, hitting strategic assets. That’s how you restore the Israeli deterrence!”

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