Israel accused of ‘dragging area into chaos’ with Lebanon strikes
Israel was accused of ‘dragging the entire region into chaos’ after it pounded Lebanon with air strikes on Monday, killing at least 492 people, including 35 children, according to the Lebanese government.
Turkey joined Egypt in calling on Israel to halt its northern offensive as thousands of people were displaced from the suburbs in a desperate push to reach the capital – before Beirut too fell under heavy Israeli fire.
Harrowing video showed salvoes of IDF missiles hitting villages in the south, near the border with Israel in the deadliest cross-border exchange since the Gaza War erupted. But as residents fled north, traffic caught in gridlock near Sidon was hit by a ‘strike’ landing ‘about 200 metres’ from Sky News reporters.
Hellish scenes prompted fury from regional powers, warning the escalation risked dragging the Middle East into a wider war. Egypt urged the United Nations to intervene – as the peace body’s chief said he was ‘gravely alarmed’ by the civilian casualties.
Senior Hezbollah commander Ali Karaki was the target of strikes deeper into Lebanon on Monday, a senior security source told Reuters. Hezbollah said the commander was alive and had been moved to safety in a statement.
Smoke rises amid Israeli bombardment in Tyre, southern Lebanon, on Monday
Smoke billows from the site of an Israeli airstrike on the Lebanese city of Baalbeck in the Bekaa valley on September 23
People displaced by the shelling in southern Lebanon arrive at a shelter in Beirut today
Volunteers assist an elderly man as people who fled southern Lebanon villages arrive at a makeshift shelter at an educational institution in Beirut today
A Lebanese army soldier sits behind his weapon on the top of an armored personnel carrier at the site of an Israeli airstrike in Beirut’s southern suburb, Monday, September 23
A ranger works to extinguish fires after Hezbollah rockets landed in Israel today
Israel’s Iron Dome engages Hezbollah rockets over Haifa, on Monday
Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari, a spokesperson for the Israeli military, told a televised news conference late on Monday that Israel was prepared for a full ground invasion of Lebanon if needed.
He said Israel is ‘not looking for wars’ but would do ‘whatever is necessary’ to ensure its security after months of back-and-forth with Hezbollah, based out of southern Lebanon.
Asked if this could spell a full-scale war with Lebanon, he said: ‘Is the army prepared? Yes. The army is in full readiness, and we will do whatever is necessary to bring back home all our citizens to the northern border safely.’
He added that the IDF makes ‘vast efforts not to hit civilians and make every effort to mitigate harm to civilians during operational activity’.
‘Regarding the high number of casualties, every one is a tragedy in Lebanon,’ he said.
More than 1,600 people have been wounded during today’s bombardment of Lebanon alone.
Health Minister Firass Abiad said ‘thousands of families’ had been displaced by the shelling so far.
‘We sleep and wake up to bombardment… that’s what our life has become,’ said Wafaa Ismail, 60, a housewife from the southern village of Zawtar.
World powers implored Israel and Hezbollah to pull back from the brink of all-out war, with the focus of violence shifting sharply from Israel’s southern front with Gaza to its northern border with Lebanon.
Turkey’s foreign ministry said in a direct warning against escalating conflict that ‘Israel’s attacks on Lebanon mark a new phase in its efforts to drag the entire region into chaos’.
An outspoken critic of Israel’s offensive in response to the attack by Hamas militants that sparked the war, Turkey urged the international community to intervene.
‘It is imperative that all institutions responsible for maintaining international peace and security, especially the United Nations Security Council, as well as the international community, take the necessary measures without delay,’ the foreign ministry said.
‘The countries that unconditionally support Israel are helping (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu shed blood for his political interests,’ it said.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who is due to address the UN General Assembly on Tuesday, is expected to focus on the Gaza war.
Greece said the escalation followed from a lack of ‘effective pressure’ from the international community to end the war in Gaza, now in its 12th month.
‘We are friends of Israel, and we’re strategic partners of Israel, and we’re trying to be as open and sincere with them,’ foreign minister George Gerapetritis added.
‘The truth is that at the moment there is a continuous, very strong reaction on the part of Israel.’
Egypt, whose relationship with its northern neighbour has been further strained by the war in Gaza, called on the UN to intervene over the escalation.
Cairo, having played a key role in mediating between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, said that further conflict ‘threatens to drag the region into a comprehensive regional war’.
Iran echoed Israel’s neighbours, new president Masoud Pezeshkian telling reporters that Israel was seeking ‘all-out conflict’ in the region.
‘We know more than anyone else that if a larger war were to erupt in the Middle East, it will not benefit anyone throughout the world. It is Israel that seeks to create this all-out conflict,’ he said.
Tensions escalated dramatically after pagers and walkie-talkies ostensibly used by Hezbollah members exploded on Tuesday and Wednesday of last week, causing thousands of injuries and numerous deaths.
Hezbollah attributed blame to Israel and launched rockets south before Israel denied involvement. Experts believe Israel may have intercepted the devices and strapped them with explosives before they arrived in Lebanon to replace mobile phones deemed susceptible to Israeli hacking.
The Iranian proxy group has continued to fire rockets into Israel in recent days, including long-range missiles for the first time in the escalating conflict, with the Israeli Prime Minister warning the group: ‘Whoever hurts us, we will hurt him more’.
Damage following an Israeli strike in the suburbs of Beirut on Monday evening
Journalists are given a tour at the site of an Israeli airstrike in the southern suburb of Beirut
A hole caused by a rocket following an Israeli airstrike, on Monday
The aftermath of Israeli strikes in the suburbs of Beirut, on Monday September 23
Emergency workers use excavators to clear the rubble at the site of Friday’s Israeli strike in Beirut’s southern suburbs
A Lebanese girl, that fled with her family from their village in southern Lebanon, takes refuge at a public school in the Sidon on September 23
Lebanese people flee with their cars from southern Lebanon towards Sidon and Beirut, at Zahrani-Nabatieh road, in Ghazieh, southern Lebanon, 23 September
Israel’s Iron Dome anti-missile system engages as rockets are launched from Lebanon
Rockets are launched from Lebanon towards Israel amid cross-border hostilities, on Monday
In an indication that the region is sliding ever-closer to an all-out war, Benjamin Netanyahu added that his country faces ‘complicated days’ and called on Israelis to stay united as the campaign in Lebanon unfolded.
‘I promised that we would change the security balance, the balance of power in the north – that is exactly what we are doing,’ he said in a message issued following a situational assessment with top brass at the military headquarters in Tel Aviv.
Israel is aiming to ‘broadly neutralise’ the threat posed by Lebanon’s long-range missiles, according to veteran analyst Ehud Ya’ari.
He told the country’s Channel 12 that the militant group – proscribed as terrorists by the UK, US and others – has built up an arsenal of long-range missiles over the past 18 years, adding that the air force ‘won’t be able to destroy every missile.’
Terrified residents in Beirut and elsewhere received calls and texts warning them to move away from Hezbollah targets, with Lebanon’s information minister condemning the alerts as a tactic of ‘psychological war implemented by the enemy’.
Lebanon’s prime minister Najib Mikati accused Israel of waging ‘a war of extermination’ at a cabinet meeting this morning, and also urged the United Nations to intervene ‘to deter the (Israeli) aggression’, as the Middle East teeters on the edge of all-out conflict.
‘The continuing Israeli aggression on Lebanon is a war of extermination in every sense of the word and a destructive plan that aims to destroy Lebanese villages and towns,’ he said.
He urged ‘the United Nations and the General Assembly and influential countries… to deter the (Israeli) aggression’.
Hezbollah, funded and equipped by Iran, is both a political party and militant group operating within Lebanon.
The group has received wide condemnation from the people of Lebanon amid the country’s political and economic crisis.
A huge blast is seen near a residential building in southern Lebanon
A person films from a rooftop in Lebanon as airstrikes approach where they are standing
A huge plume of smoke rises over buildings in Tyre, southern Lebanon, following an Israeli strike
Smoke billows from the site of an Israeli airstrike in Marjayoun, near the Lebanon-Israel border
Smoke rises over buildings in southern Lebanon amid the wave of airstrikes
Israeli army chief Herzi Halevi said meanwhile that its strikes had hit combat infrastructure Hezbollah had been building for two decades.
Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant called Monday ‘a significant peak’ in the operation.
‘This is the most difficult week for Hezbollah since its establishment – the results speak for themselves,’ he said.
‘Entire units were taken out of battle as a result of the activities conducted at the beginning of the week in which numerous terrorists were injured.’
Huge plumes of smoke were seen at multiple sites deep into the country, with rockets fired at areas not previously hit by strikes and witnesses reporting intense bombing raids.
The IDF issued a warning to residents of villages in southern Lebanon: ‘If you are in or near a building that Hezbollah uses to store weapons or weapons, you must evacuate this building and move away from it immediately.
‘Anyone who is near Hezbollah operatives or the organization’s weapons puts themselves in danger.’
Hagari told a media briefing Israel’s military ‘will engage in (more) extensive and precise strikes against terror targets which have been embedded widely throughout Lebanon’.
Asked by reporters about a possible Israeli ground incursion into Lebanon, Hagari said ‘we will do whatever is needed’ in order to return evacuated residents of northern Israel to their homes safely, a war priority for the Israeli government.
He said that Hezbollah over the years has stashed weapons, including cruise missiles, in houses and buildings throughout southern Lebanon, and called on residents to stay away from these sites.
He presented in a media briefing an aerial video of what he described as Hezbollah operatives trying to launch cruise missiles from a civilian house in Lebanon, and the subsequent Israeli strike moments before it was launched.
‘Hezbollah is endangering you. Endangering you and your families.’
Some 500,000 Israeli children were told to stay away from school in the north and ministers declared a ‘special home front situation’, putting the entire Jewish State on alert for attack.
Hezbollah started raining missiles down on northern Israel in a show of support for Hamas a day after the terror group slaughtered 1,200 on October 7 — the largest massacre of Jews since the Holocaust.