Israeli Official Predicts War with Hezbollah in Near Future

Smoke rises from the disputed Shebaa Farms area in southern Lebanon in July 2020. (Reuters)
Smoke rises from the disputed Shebaa Farms area in southern Lebanon in July 2020. (Reuters)
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Israeli Official Predicts War with Hezbollah in Near Future

Smoke rises from the disputed Shebaa Farms area in southern Lebanon in July 2020. (Reuters)
Smoke rises from the disputed Shebaa Farms area in southern Lebanon in July 2020. (Reuters)

A senior official in the Israeli army Northern Command expected a conflict to erupt between the Hezbollah party in Lebanon and his country in the near future.

In remarks to Israel Hayom on Thursday, he said that “Hezbollah was very likely to try and perpetuate a cross-border attack in the near term, and that Israelis should consider the possibility that this path was inevitable.”

He vowed that the military will “retaliate forcefully to such Hezbollah provocations.”

“The northern border could see a resumption of full-fledged hostilities,” the official said.

“I am sure that we will see some incident that will eclipse the Shebaa Farms event, which could result in fatalities. There is a high probability of this materializing, and this requires all of us to prepare accordingly; the chances of a sudden escalation is increasing steadily.”

In July 2020, Hezbollah carried out an operation against the Israeli army in the disputed Shebaa Farms area at the Lebanese-Israeli border.

Dozens of Israeli shells hit the area along the frontier. Fires burned and smoke rose from the area, but no casualties were reported by Israel or Hezbollah.

The operation was made in response to an Israeli attack in Syria in which a Hezbollah fighter was killed a week earlier.

The Shebaa Farms area is occupied by Israel and claimed by Lebanon. The United Nations regards the territory as part of Syrian land captured by Israel in the 1967 Middle East war.



Remains of 30 People Believed Killed by ISIS Found in Syria in a Search by Qatar and FBI 

 Journalist James Foley responds to questions during an interview with The Associated Press, in Boston, May 27, 2011. (AP)
Journalist James Foley responds to questions during an interview with The Associated Press, in Boston, May 27, 2011. (AP)
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Remains of 30 People Believed Killed by ISIS Found in Syria in a Search by Qatar and FBI 

 Journalist James Foley responds to questions during an interview with The Associated Press, in Boston, May 27, 2011. (AP)
Journalist James Foley responds to questions during an interview with The Associated Press, in Boston, May 27, 2011. (AP)

The remains of 30 people believed to have been killed by the ISIS group have been found in a remote Syrian town in a search led by Qatari search teams and the FBI, according to a statement from Qatar on Monday.

The Qatari internal security forces said the FBI had requested the search, and that DNA tests are currently underway to determine the identities of the people. The Qatari agency did not whom the American intelligence and security agency is trying to find.

Dozens of foreigners, including aid workers and journalists, were killed by ISIS militants who had controlled large swaths of Syria and Iraq for half a decade. The extremist group lost most of its territory in late 2017 and was declared defeated in 2019.

Since then, dozens of gravesites and mass graves have been discovered in northern Syria containing remains and bodies of people ISIS had abducted over the years.

American journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff, as well as humanitarian workers Kayla Mueller and Peter Kassig are among those killed by ISIS.

John Cantlie, a British correspondent, was abducted alongside Foley in 2012, and was last seen alive in one of the extremist group's propaganda videos in 2016.

The search took place in the town of Dabiq, near Syria's northern border with Türkiye.

Mass graves have also found in areas previously controlled by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad who was ousted in a lightning insurgency last December, ending his family's half-century rule. For years, the Assads used their notorious security and intelligence agencies to crack down on dissidents, many who have gone missing.

The United Nations in 2021 estimated that over 130,000 Syrians were taken away and disappeared during the peaceful uprising that began in 2011 and descended into a 13-year civil war.