Hamas Chief Sinwar Thanks Hezbollah in Letter to Nasrallah 

13 April 2022, Palestinian Territories, Gaza City: Yahya Sinwar, leader of the Palestinian Hamas movement hosts a meeting with members of Palestinian factions over the escalation of tensions between Israel and the Palestinians in the West Bank and Jerusalem, at Hamas President's office in Gaza City. (dpa)
13 April 2022, Palestinian Territories, Gaza City: Yahya Sinwar, leader of the Palestinian Hamas movement hosts a meeting with members of Palestinian factions over the escalation of tensions between Israel and the Palestinians in the West Bank and Jerusalem, at Hamas President's office in Gaza City. (dpa)
TT

Hamas Chief Sinwar Thanks Hezbollah in Letter to Nasrallah 

13 April 2022, Palestinian Territories, Gaza City: Yahya Sinwar, leader of the Palestinian Hamas movement hosts a meeting with members of Palestinian factions over the escalation of tensions between Israel and the Palestinians in the West Bank and Jerusalem, at Hamas President's office in Gaza City. (dpa)
13 April 2022, Palestinian Territories, Gaza City: Yahya Sinwar, leader of the Palestinian Hamas movement hosts a meeting with members of Palestinian factions over the escalation of tensions between Israel and the Palestinians in the West Bank and Jerusalem, at Hamas President's office in Gaza City. (dpa)

Hamas chief Yehya Sinwar thanked the leader of Lebanon's Hezbollah Hassan Nasrallah for his group's support in the conflict with Israel, Hezbollah said on Friday, in the first reported message since Sinwar became Hamas leader in August.

The Iran-backed Hezbollah has been waging attacks on Israel for nearly a year in a conflict across the Lebanese-Israeli border that has been taking place in parallel to the Gaza war. Hezbollah says its attacks aim to support the Palestinians.

"Your blessed actions have expressed your solidarity on the fronts of the Axis of Resistance, supporting and engaging in the battle," Sinwar told Nasrallah, according to Hezbollah's al-Manar broadcaster.

Sinwar has not appeared in public since the Oct. 7 attacks, and is widely thought to be running the war from tunnels beneath Gaza.

It was the second time this week he is reported to have sent a letter. Hamas said on Tuesday he had sent one congratulating Algerian President Abdulmadjid Tebboune on his reelection.

Hezbollah is the most powerful faction in an alliance of Iran-backed groups known as the Axis of Resistance, which have also entered the fray with attacks from Yemen and Iraq in support of Hamas during the Gaza war.

In the early days of the conflict, former Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal hinted at frustration over the scale of Hezbollah's intervention, thanking the group but saying "the battle requires more".

Over the last year, Israel has killed around 500 Hezbollah fighters, including its top military commander Fuad Shukr. The toll is greater than Hezbollah's losses in its 2006 war with Israel. Hezbollah has said it had no advance knowledge of the Oct. 7 attack, which Sinwar helped plan.

Sinwar also thanked Nasrallah for a letter he sent expressing condolences for the death of Ismail Haniyeh, the former Hamas leader killed in Tehran in July in an assassination widely believed to have been carried out by Israel.

The hostilities across the Lebanese-Israeli border have forced tens of thousands of people to leave both sides of the frontier. The risk of escalation has loomed large.

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said on Tuesday that Israeli forces are near to fulfilling their mission in Gaza and their focus will turn to the Lebanon border.

Israeli leaders have said they would prefer to resolve the conflict through an agreement that would push Hezbollah away from the border. Hezbollah has said that it will continue fighting as long as the Gaza war continues.



Israeli Military Says It Acted against Targets in Syria

Syrians inspect the damage at the site of overnight Israeli strikes on the outskirts of Masyaf in Syria's central Hama province on September 9, 2024. (AFP)
Syrians inspect the damage at the site of overnight Israeli strikes on the outskirts of Masyaf in Syria's central Hama province on September 9, 2024. (AFP)
TT

Israeli Military Says It Acted against Targets in Syria

Syrians inspect the damage at the site of overnight Israeli strikes on the outskirts of Masyaf in Syria's central Hama province on September 9, 2024. (AFP)
Syrians inspect the damage at the site of overnight Israeli strikes on the outskirts of Masyaf in Syria's central Hama province on September 9, 2024. (AFP)

The Israeli military said Friday that over the source of the week it had acted in Syria against targets, just days after Syrian state media reported Israeli airstrikes killed 16 people in western Syria and wounded dozens more.

"In southern Syria, the IDF targeted several terrorists who were advancing terror activities against Israel," a statement from the military said Friday but did not give further detail.

The Israeli military rarely comments on allegations that it acts in Syria and declined to comment on a New York Times report that Israeli special forces raided a weapons manufacturing site near the Syria-Lebanon border on Sunday.

On Sunday, Syrian state news agency SANA reported that Israel launched the strikes on "a number of military sites in the central region", without elaborating on what was struck.