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Israel strikes Beirut for first time since Lebanon ceasefire

Israel launched airstrikes on Beirut for the first time since a mid-April ceasefire with Lebanon, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said. Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz announced wednesday that the strikes targeted a senior Hezbollah figure-commander of the Radwan Force-whom they said had directed rocket attacks on israeli communities and attacks on Israeli soldiers.

The renewed strikes come after Israel and Hezbollah reignited fighting following a Feb. 28 U.S.-Israeli attack that killed Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. After an initial 10-day Israel-Lebanon ceasefire began april 16, it was extended by three weeks in late April, with the agreement set to expire May 14. Despite the ceasefire, sporadic exchanges continued, but Beirut itself had remained largely untouched untill Wednesday.

Netanyahu and Katz’s statement said the Israel Defense Forces struck to eliminate the Radwan Force commander. Hezbollah had not responded at the time of publication. The development also coincides with President Donald Trump’s ongoing efforts to negotiate a broader peace arrangement related to the Iran conflict.


Israel launched airstrikes on Beirut for the first time since agreeing to the ceasefire with Lebanon in mid-April, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said.

Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz announced the airstrikes in a joint statement on Wednesday, saying they targeted a senior Hezbollah official whose force had launched rockets at Israeli communities and targeted Israeli soldiers.

“The IDF has just struck in Beirut the commander of the Radwan Force in the Hezbollah terror organization to eliminate him,” Netanyahu and Katz said in the statement.

Israel and Hezbollah, the Iran-backed terrorist group that resides in Lebanon, reignited their conflict after Hezbollah launched strikes at Israel over the joint U.S.-Israeli attack on Feb. 28 that killed Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Israel and Lebanon first agreed to an initial 10-day ceasefire on April 16, days after President Donald Trump urged Netanyahu to slow strikes against Lebanon’s capital city of Beirut.

On April 23, Trump announced the initial ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon had been extended by three weeks, meaning it would expire on Thursday, May 14. However, Hezbollah and Israel have traded barbs in southern Lebanon throughout the ceasefire agreement, though Beirut remained untouched until Wednesday.

But the Wednesday attack on the suburb of Beirut, a region that has already taken multiple missile barrages from Israel, causing an exodus of civilians before the ceasefire, puts the already-fragile ceasefire on thin ice.

Hezbollah had not yet responded to Netanyahu and Katz’s statement by the time of publication.

TRUMP CLAIMS THERE IS NO DEADLINE ON PEACE DEAL TO END IRAN WAR

The attack comes as Trump has been working to hammer out a peace deal in the broader conflict with Iran.

“We’ve had very good talks over the last 24 hours, and it’s very possible that we’ll make a deal,” Trump told White House reporters on Wednesday.



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