Israel has killed Hizbollahâs leader Hassan Nasrallah in a massive strike on Beirut, in the latest in a series of devastating blows to the Lebanese militant group.
The strike in a densely populated residential neighbourhood in southern Beirut was part of an intense bombardment carried out by Israeli forces on Friday and marked a dramatic escalation of Israelâs offensive against Hizbollah.
The Lebanese group confirmed Nasrallahâs death in a statement on Saturday, saying he had joined the groupâs long list of âmartyrsâ. It said its leadership would continue to battle against Israel âin support of Gaza and Palestine, and in defence of Lebanon and its steadfast and honourable peopleâ.
Speaking late on Saturday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that âNasrallahâs killing was a necessary step toward achieving the goals we have set,â including âchanging the balance of power in the region for years to comeâ.
He added that the âwork is not yet doneâ, warning Israelis that they âwill face significant challenges in the days aheadâ.
He also issued a warning to Israelâs adversaries. âThere is nowhere in Iran or the Middle East beyond the reach of the long arm of Israel, and today you know how true that is,â Netanyahu said.
Herzi Halevi, chief of the general staff of the Israel Defense Forces, said the strike did not mark the conclusion of Israelâs operations. âThis is not the end of our toolbox,â he said. âThe message is simple: anyone who threatens the citizens of Israel â we will know how to reach them.â
US President Joe Biden said Nasrallahâs death was âa measure of justice for his many victimsâ.
âThe United States fully supports Israelâs right to defend itself against Hizbollah, Hamas, the Houthis, and any other Iranian-supported terrorist groups,â he said in a statement released on Saturday. âUltimately, our aim is to de-escalate the ongoing conflicts in both Gaza and Lebanon through diplomatic means.â
It was time to conclude deals to end the conflict in both Gaza and Lebanon, Biden added.
Israel claimed the strike had also killed the head of Hizbollahâs southern front, Ali Karaki, and other senior commanders. It was the latest in a succession of debilitating Israeli attacks on Iranian-backed Hizbollahâs chain of command.
A senior commander of Iranâs elite Revolutionary Guards, Abbas Nilforoushan, who was in a meeting with Nasrallah was also killed, an Iranian official told the Financial Times. The death of the commander and Nasrallah, one of Iranâs closest allies, raised the risk of retaliation by the Islamic republic.
On Friday, Lebanese officials warned an Iranian cargo plane to leave the countryâs airspace because of the risk Israel could target it, the Iranian official said. The Israeli military had said Israeli air force planes were âpatrolling the area of Beirut airportâ and would not allow âhostile flights with weapons to landâ there.
Iranâs supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said that the fate of the Middle East âwill be determined by resistance forces, the foremost of which is Hizbollahâ.
He added that the groupâs âsolid structure cannot be significantly damagedâ by âZionist criminalsâ who he said had demonstrated their âshort-minded and stupid policiesâ.
He urged all Muslims to stand by Hizbollah in its fight against âan occupying and vicious regimeâ.
At least 33 people were killed and 195 injured in the strike that killed Nasrallah, Lebanonâs health ministry said. That figure was expected to rise as rescue workers continued searching for survivors.
On Saturday, explosions were heard in Beirut as Israel continued to strike Hizbollah targets and announced it had killed a top member of the groupâs intelligence department responsible for selecting targets in Israel.
The Israeli military also posted warnings on social media telling Lebanese to evacuate the southern suburbs of Beirut, the Bekaa Valley and southern Lebanon.
The IDF said it had intercepted a missile fired from Yemen that set off air raid sirens across central Israel. Late on Saturday, sirens also sounded in parts of Jerusalem, as the IDF reported a rocket incoming from Lebanon.
Lebanese leaders from across the political spectrum called for unity, reflecting concerns that the fragile nation could slide into civil strife in the wake of Nasrallahâs assassination.
âWe differed a great deal with the deceased and his party and we rarely found common ground, but Lebanon was a tent for all, and in this deeply difficult time our unity and solidarity is fundamental,â Saad Hariri, former prime minister, said in a statement.
Nasrallahâs death capped a disastrous two weeks for Hizbollah during which it has sustained the heaviest succession of blows in its four decades of existence.
Residents of Beirut said the Israeli bombing raids on Friday night and during the early hours of Saturday had been some of the most intense in the city since Israel and Hizbollah fought a 34-day war in 2006.
Explosions lit up the sky throughout the night and threw huge clouds of dust into the air. Hundreds of people fled the south of the city, where Hizbollah is entrenched, to seek shelter on beaches and in public squares.
Over the past two weeks, Israel has escalated its offensive against the militant group, killing a string of its senior commanders. This week it embarked on an intense bombardment of sites across Lebanon that killed more than 600 people and displaced more than 90,000.
On Wednesday, Israel called up two reserve brigades for âoperational missionsâ in the north of the country, with Halevi telling troops to prepare for a possible ground offensive in Lebanon.
The Israeli military said it was continuing its bombardment on Saturday, carrying out âextensiveâ bombing raids in the Bekaa Valley in eastern Lebanon as well as striking more targets in Beirut, after warning civilians in some densely populated neighbourhoods to evacuate.
Additional reporting by Najmeh Bozorgmehr in Tehran and Andrew England in London