Benjamin NetanyahuAny retaliation against Iran will be based on national...

Any retaliation against Iran will be based on national interest, says Israel

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Benjamin Netanyahu’s office has said that Israel will decide alone on the form of any retaliation to Iran’s barrage of 180 missiles fired at the country earlier this month, although it would listen to advice from Washington.

The comments came after US media reported that the Israeli prime minister had given an assurance to the US president, Joe Biden, that Israel would not attack sites associated with Iran’s nuclear programme or oilfields before the US presidential election.

On Tuesday, Israel continued to press its offensive in Lebanon and Gaza, with airstrikes in Gaza killing a further 50 Palestinians as Israeli forces fought Hamas and other militants in the north of the territory.

Tens of thousands of civilians have been trapped in the densely populated northern Gaza neighbourhood of Jabaliya by a new Israeli military operation there. Most are suffering appalling conditions and mounting casualties from Israeli shelling, bombs and missiles.

In Lebanon, Israel’s military launched several strikes in eastern areas, a day after Netanyahu vowed to “mercilessly strike Hezbollah in all parts of Lebanon – including Beirut”.

Warplanes targeted the eastern Bekaa valley, putting a hospital in the city of Baalbek out of service, Lebanon’s official National News Agency reported. “It was a violent night in Baalbek, we have not witnessed a similar one since” the 2006 war between Israel and Lebanon, 50-year-old resident Nidal al-Solh told Agence France-Presse.

Two people cover faces as car passes partially destroyed building with dust and debris around
Men cover their faces as a vehicle leaves a trail of dust while moving past a destroyed building after an Israeli airstrike in the village of Douris in Lebanon’s Bekaa valley on Tuesday. Photograph: Nidal Solh/AFP/Getty Images

Israeli strikes have targeted Hezbollah strongholds as well as other parts of Lebanon, including a northern Christian-majority village where at least 21 people were killed on Monday, according to the health ministry.

The UN human rights office said on Tuesday it had received reports that most of the 22 victims of an Israeli airstrike on a building in northern Lebanon were women and children.

At a briefing, the UN refugee agency’s Middle East director, Rema Jamous Imseis, said that new Israeli evacuation orders to 20 villages in southern Lebanon meant that over a quarter of the country was affected.

“Now we have over 25% of the country under a direct Israeli military evacuation order,” she said. “People are heeding these calls to evacuate, and they’re fleeing with almost nothing.”

Closeup of Netanyahu
Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu.

Israel says it wants to push back Hezbollah in order to secure its northern boundary and allow tens of thousands of people displaced by rocket fire since last year to return home safely.

Hezbollah, which is backed by Iran, claimed responsibility for several attacks early on Tuesday, including one targeting Israeli troops in northern Israel with a barrage of rockets fired towards the Israeli town of Kiryat Shmona. Warning sirens sounded in Haifa, local media reported.

A Hezbollah drone attack on an army base in central Israel killed four soldiers and severely wounded seven others on Sunday in the deadliest strike by the militant group since Israel launched its ground invasion of Lebanon nearly two weeks ago.

Hezbollah says its strikes are also in support of Palestinian militant group Hamas, which attacked Israel on 7 October last year, killing 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and triggering the latest conflict.

The region remains on the brink of further escalation, with the multi-front war fought by Israel risking a regional conflagration.

On 1 October, Iran launched more than 180 missiles at Israel in response to an Israeli strike in Lebanon’s capital, Beirut, that killed Hassan Nasrallah, Hezbollah’s veteran leader, and Abbas Nilforoushan, an Iranian general. Israel has vowed to respond to the attack.

Iran views Hezbollah as the keystone of its “axis of resistance”, a loose coalition of allied, Tehran-backed armed militant groups across the Middle East.

The US has warned Israel against striking Iran’s nuclear or oil facilities, fearing a broader war and turmoil on the world’s energy markets. A US air defence battery has now arrived in Israel to bolster its protection against Iranian ballistic missiles.

According to a Washington Post report on Monday, Netanyahu has told the White House that Israel was only contemplating targeting military sites. US officials told the newspaper that Netanyahu was in a “more moderated place” than during previous discussions with Biden.

A statement from Netanyahu’s office on Tuesday denied any such commitment. “We listen to the opinions of the United States, but we will make our final decisions based on our national interest,” the statement said.

Man centre with grey beard next to two other men, one in a mask
Esmail Qaani attends the funeral of Abbas Nilforoushan in Iran. Photograph: Sepahnews/Zuma Press Wire/Rex/Shutterstock

Analysts say there is no shortage of military targets that Israel could strike, including many linked to the hardline Islamic Revolutionary Guards.

In Iran on Tuesday, Esmail Qaani, a general who commands Iran’s Quds Force, made his first public appearance for several weeks when he attended the funeral for Nilforoushan. There have been recent rumours that Qaani had also been killed in an Israeli strike or even been detained by Iranian intelligence services hunting spies. The Quds Force is part of the Revolutionary Guards and specialises in overseas and clandestine activities.

At least 1,315 people have been killed in Lebanon since Israel last month escalated its bombing there, according to Lebanese health ministry figures, although the real toll is most likely higher. The war in Lebanon has displaced at least 690,000 people, according to verified figures last week from the International Organization for Migration.

Israel has faced new criticism over injuries and damage sustained by the UN interim force in Lebanon (Unifil), the peacekeeping body deployed in the country since 1978, after a previous Israeli invasion.

The Italian prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, whose country is the second-biggest contributor of Unifil peacekeepers, criticised Israeli attacks, telling the Italian Senate that the attitude of the Israeli forces was “entirely unjustified”.

On Monday, the UN security council for the first time expressed “strong concerns” over peacekeepers being wounded in Lebanon.

Unifil has refused Netanyahu’s request for peacekeepers to “get out of harm’s way”.

The Hamas-led attack into Israel in October last year also resulted in the abduction of about 250 people, mostly civilians. Israeli officials say half of the 100 hostages who remain in Gaza may now be dead. Efforts to secure their release through a possible ceasefire deal now appear to be on hold.

Israel’s offensive in Gaza has killed 42,344 people, the majority civilians, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory. The UN has described the figures as reliable.

At a school-turned-shelter hit by an Israeli strike in the central Nuseirat camp, Fatima al-Azab said “there is no safety anywhere” in Gaza. “They are all children, sleeping in the covers, all burned and cut up,” she said.

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