Hezbollah fired two heavy barrages of around 70 and another 30 rockets at northern Israel in the span of two hours on Tuesday morning, after the IDF struck targets deep inside Lebanon the evening before.
Both of the rocket salvos fell in open areas in the northern Golan Heights and the northern tip of the Upper Galilee, causing no injuries or significant damage.
The first barrage was the largest yet fired by the Lebanese terror group during the current conflict, which began when Hezbollah opened hostilities against Israel in support of Hamas last October.
Hezbollah claimed responsibility for the attacks and said it fired over 100 Katyusha rockets in response to the Israeli attacks in the Beka'a Valley, some 100 kilometers (about 62 miles) inside Lebanese territory, that allegedly killed a civilian.
The rocket attacks followed an IDF announcement on Monday evening that the Israeli Air Force (IAF) had struck two Hezbollah compounds in Baalbek in the Beka’a Valley, part of the Shiite Hezbollah heartland around 100 km (62 miles) north of the Israeli border.
The compounds were part of Hezbollah’s aerial forces that were involved in the terror group's plans to attack Israeli forces, the IDF stated.
The Saudi newspaper al-Arabiya later reported that the targets were warehouses containing advanced attack drones.
“The escalating Israeli operations in southern Lebanon pushed the Hezbollah operatives, including staff members and not just its elite Radwan force, away from the frontlines on the border,” said KAN's Arab Affairs Correspondent Roi Kais.
“This creates problems and a challenge for Hezbollah regarding the direct flight path toward Israeli targets of the anti-tank missiles,” Kais explained and said he believes as the IDF pushes Hezbollah further from the border, Israel should anticipate a rise in rocket attacks.
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