Israel Pounds South Lebanon After Intercepting Rockets, Hezbollah Denies Involvement 

FILED - 22 March 2025, Lebanon, Sujoud: Heavy black smoke billows from an Israeli air strike in the southern Lebanese village of Sujoud in Iqlim al-Toufah. Photo: STR/dpa
FILED - 22 March 2025, Lebanon, Sujoud: Heavy black smoke billows from an Israeli air strike in the southern Lebanese village of Sujoud in Iqlim al-Toufah. Photo: STR/dpa
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Israel Pounds South Lebanon After Intercepting Rockets, Hezbollah Denies Involvement 

FILED - 22 March 2025, Lebanon, Sujoud: Heavy black smoke billows from an Israeli air strike in the southern Lebanese village of Sujoud in Iqlim al-Toufah. Photo: STR/dpa
FILED - 22 March 2025, Lebanon, Sujoud: Heavy black smoke billows from an Israeli air strike in the southern Lebanese village of Sujoud in Iqlim al-Toufah. Photo: STR/dpa

Israel bombarded Hezbollah targets in south Lebanon on Friday after intercepting a rocket fired from its northern neighbor, the Israeli military said, although the Iranian-backed group denied involvement in the incident. 

Israel had vowed a strong response to protect its security, in what amounted to a further blow to the shaky ceasefire deal between the sides that ended a year-long war, a spillover of the Israeli-Hamas conflict in Gaza. 

A senior Hezbollah official denied in a statement that the group was involved in Friday's rocket launch, which followed a rocket salvo into northern Israel on March 22 for which the Iranian-backed group also denied responsibility. 

Hezbollah said the incidents appeared to be part of what it called attempts to create pretexts for the continuation of Israeli military action in Lebanon. 

Defense Minister Israel Katz said Israel held Lebanon responsible for missile fire into the Galilee region of northern Israel. "We will ensure the security of the residents of Galilee and will act forcefully against any threat," he said. 

Lebanese media said Israeli warplanes were flying over the country on Friday. 

A second rocket launched from south Lebanon on Friday landed inside the region, the Israeli military said. 

The truce disruptions have coincided with Israel's renewal of war against Palestinian group Hamas in Gaza, breaking a two-month-old ceasefire after the two sides could not agree on terms for extending it. 

Israeli artillery and airstrikes hit southern Lebanon on March 22, killing at least eight people, after Israel said it intercepted rockets fired from across the border. 

Hezbollah denied responsibility for rockets fired on Saturday, saying it had "no link" to the launches and remained committed to the ceasefire. 

Under a deal agreed in November, Hezbollah was to remove its weapons from southern Lebanon, Israeli ground forces were to withdraw, and the Lebanese army was to deploy in the area. 

The agreement tasked Lebanon's government with dismantling military infrastructure in the south and confiscating unauthorized weapons. 

The truce ended Israel's bombardment and ground operations in Lebanon, as well as Hezbollah's daily rocket fire into Israel. Both sides have accused each other of failing to fully implement the terms. 

Israel says Hezbollah maintains military positions in the south. Lebanon and Hezbollah say Israel continues to violate the deal by carrying out airstrikes and keeping troops at five hilltop positions near the border. 



Iraq Sends Delegation to Damascus to Study Restoring Oil Pipeline Via Syria

A worker walks at the Rumaila oil field in Basra, Iraq (Reuters file photo)
A worker walks at the Rumaila oil field in Basra, Iraq (Reuters file photo)
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Iraq Sends Delegation to Damascus to Study Restoring Oil Pipeline Via Syria

A worker walks at the Rumaila oil field in Basra, Iraq (Reuters file photo)
A worker walks at the Rumaila oil field in Basra, Iraq (Reuters file photo)

Iraq sent a delegation to Damascus on Friday to study the possibility of restoring an Iraqi oil pipeline that transports oil through Syria to Mediterranean ports, the prime minister's office said. The Iraqi delegation, led by the head of the National Intelligence Service, is also set to discuss counter-terrorism cooperation, border security and ways to expand trade between the two countries, the office added. Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani held talks with Syria’s President Ahmed al-Sharaa in Qatar this month, marking their first meeting since the ousting of former President Bashar al-Assad in December after more than 13 years of civil war, Reuters said. Syria is facing a severe energy crisis after the collapse of its oil industry during civil war and is now turning to local intermediaries for oil imports. Its efforts to secure oil through public tenders have been largely unsuccessful owing to international sanctions and financial risks.