Fear that Israel-Gaza war could spark regional conflagration growing exponentially amid rise in violence across Israel-Lebanon border.

 

ed note–we’ll forego the usual extended commentary for something ‘short & sweet’, as the saying goes–

 

‘On that day the LORD made a covenant with Abraham, saying ‘To your descendants I give this land, from the river of Egypt to the great river Euphrates’… –Book of Genesis, 15:18

 

‘And God spoke unto us saying, ‘Go to the hill-country and all the places nigh thereunto… in the Arabah, the hill-country and in the Lowland… in the South and by the sea-shore, the land of the Canaanites, and Lebanon, as far as the great river, the river Euphrates…Go in therefore and possess the land which the Lord swore unto your fathers, to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, unto them and to their seed after them…’ –Book of Deuteronomy 1:6–8

 

‘Every place whereupon the sole of your foot shall tread shall be yours, from the wilderness, and Lebanon, from the river Euphrates, even unto the hinder sea shall be your border…’ –Book of Deuteronomy

 

‘…From the wilderness, and this Lebanon, even unto the great river, the Euphrates, all the land unto the Great Sea toward the going down of the sun, shall be your border…’ –Book of Joshua

 

 

 

Al Jazeera

 

The Israeli army and Hezbollah, based in Lebanon, have again traded fire across the border.

 

The Iran-backed Hezbollah on Tuesday launched a drone attack on an Israeli command base. Israel retaliated with air strikes, while it is also reported to have killed three Hezbollah members in a targeted strike. The rise in attacks across the Israel-Lebanon border is stoking fear that the war in Gaza threatens to spark a regional conflagration.

 

Hezbollah said that it had targeted the ‘enemy’s northern command centre in the city of Safed with several drones’ in retaliation for the killing of Hezbollah field commander Wissam al-Tawil in Lebanon on Monday, as well as an attack on Hamas’s deputy leader Saleh al-Arouri in Beirut last week.

 

Al-Tawil was the deputy head of a unit in the elite Radwan force and is the highest Hezbollah fighter to be killed in the fighting since the war on Gaza began on October 7.

 

Al-Arouri was killed in a drone strike, presumably by Israel, on January 2 in Beirut’s southern suburbs of Dahiyeh, a Hezbollah stronghold.

 

The Israeli air force said it had intercepted a number of the Hezbollah drones before they reached their target. Videos show that at least one made it through. Planes then attacked the location from which the drones were launched.

 

Al Jazeera’s Laura Khan, reporting from Israel’s northern border town of Shlomi, said sirens had sounded for several hours across the 120km (75 miles) border between Lebanon and Israel.

 

‘We heard drones fly overhead for more than an hour. We also heard some jets screaming,’ she added.

 

Shlomi is now a ‘ghost town’ Khan reports, with thousands of people having evacuated amid the fighting.

 

‘The Israelis have been talking about pushing Hezbollah back from the border and bringing tens of thousands of residents who evacuated this area back. It’s a complete ghost town. This is really pushing both sides to the brink of war,’ she said.

 

 

 

Drone strike kills three Hezbollah members

 

Separately, three members of Hezbollah were killed in a targeted strike on a vehicle in the town of Ghandouriyeh in southern Lebanon, sources familiar with the group’s operations told Reuters news agency.

 

The vehicle was hit by an ‘apparent Israeli drone strike’ reports Al Jazeera’s Zeina Khodr from the Lebanese border town Tyre. The identity of those killed was not clear at the time of writing.

 

‘Ghandouriyeh is outside the battleground, which is the 120km (75 miles) border between Lebanon and Israel, 4 to 5km [2.5 to 3 miles] on each side. This strike is 10km [6.2 miles] deep inside Lebanon, not far from where Hezbollah commander al-Tawil was killed,’ she said.

 

‘Israel seems to have a new strategy targeting members and commanders of different groups that make up what Iran calls the ‘Axis of Resistance’.’

 

Hezbollah has lost more than 130 fighters in Israeli shelling on southern Lebanon, and the killings of al-Arouri and al-Tawil have hiked concern that the war in Gaza could spill over into Lebanon and elsewhere across the region.

 

Amid Israel’s bombardment of the enclave, violence is flaring in the West Bank, in Iraq and Syria, and in the Red Sea.

 

The rise in violence in Lebanon comes as US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is visiting countries in the Middle East to try to calm what he has called a ‘moment of profound tension’ in the region.

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