Saturday, August 3, 2024

Skies Are Lit Up Over Northern Israel As Hezbollah Fires Dozens Of Rockets


Skies Are Lit Up Over Northern Israel As Hezbollah Fires Dozens Of Rockets
TYLER DURDEN


 Hezbollah in the overnight hours has launched dozens of rockets toward Beit Hillel settlement in northern Israel, possibly over 50, triggering Israel's Iron Dome anti-air defense system.

The sky has been lighting up over northern Galilee Sunday morning with the intercepts, as several social media videos show.

Despite many intercepts, Israeli media is reporting that there were several impacts as a result, and any potential casualties are as yet unknown, but multiple fires reportedly broke out in northern Israel.

Steady cross-border rocket fire has been going since Friday, as Reuters reported: "Hezbollah said it had fired a surface-to-air missile at an Israeli warplane flying in Lebanese airspace overnight and forced it to turn back. Its forces also carried out two artillery attacks and two rocket strikes at military positions in northern Israel, it said."

But so far all of this is looking limited and contained, amid continued fears that things could slide into all-out war in the region involving Iran.

Meanwhile, speculation has abounded as to potential increased Russian defense support to Iran amid the standoff with Israel in the wake of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh's assassination this week...

The US embassy in Lebanon has issued an alert warning American citizens to exit Lebanon on "any ticket available" as the likelihood of a major war between Israel and Hezbollah as well as Iran grows.

A series of international and Western airlines have suspended service to the region as a the specter of all-out war looms. The embassy said that though there have been service stoppages and cancellations, "commercial transportation options to leave Lebanon remain available."


"We encourage those who wish to depart Lebanon to book any ticket available to them, even if that flight does not depart immediately or does not follow their first-choice route," the embassy stated.

Starting in late June, Biden's special envoy Amos Hochstein warned the Lebanese government, "The US won’t be able to hold Israel back if the situation on the border continues to escalate and that Hezbollah needs to indirectly negotiate with Israel instead of ratcheting up tensions."

Hezbollah Secretary General Hasan Nasrallah has warned of a "new phase" in the war following an Israeli airstrike targeting and killing his top military chief Fuad Shukr this week.

Iran has already signaled what this will look like, with its Permanent Mission to the United Nations on Saturday saying in a statement to CBS that the group is expected to strike deeper inside Israel and that it will no longer confine itself to military targets.

The Iranian statement outlined that so far Hezbollah has limited itself according to an "unwritten understanding" or status quo engagement with Israel "confining their actions to border areas and shallow zones, targeting primarily military objectives."


"However, the [Israeli] regime’s attack on the Dahieh [neighborhood] in Beirut and the targeting of a residential building marked a deviation from these boundaries," the statement added. 

"We anticipate that, in its response, Hezbollah will choose both broader and deeper targets, and will not restrict itself solely to military targets and means," the spokesperson emphasized.

If the situation begins to spiral, it is likely the US military will use its significant naval assets in the Mediterranean to begin evacuating American nationals from Lebanon. Often the first place Israel bombs is Beirut's lone international airport.

On Friday night US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin ordered additional navy cruisers, destroyers and a fighter squadron to deploy to the Middle East.


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