Israel Threatens Lebanon with ‘Massive Destruction’ if Attacked

An Israeli soldier stands guard next to an Iron Dome anti-missile system near the Israel's northern border with Lebanon, July 27, 2020. (Reuters)
An Israeli soldier stands guard next to an Iron Dome anti-missile system near the Israel's northern border with Lebanon, July 27, 2020. (Reuters)
TT
20

Israel Threatens Lebanon with ‘Massive Destruction’ if Attacked

An Israeli soldier stands guard next to an Iron Dome anti-missile system near the Israel's northern border with Lebanon, July 27, 2020. (Reuters)
An Israeli soldier stands guard next to an Iron Dome anti-missile system near the Israel's northern border with Lebanon, July 27, 2020. (Reuters)

Israeli Minister of Security and alternative prime minister, Benny Gantz, threatened to make Lebanon pay a “heavy price” and inflict it with “enormous destruction” if a war broke out against Israel from the northern front.

He made his remarks as the Israeli kicked off on Tuesday a military exercise dubbed the “Lightning Storm”, on the Lebanese borders.

Gantz had sent a recorded speech that was broadcast at the annual ceremony commemorating the 24th anniversary of a helicopter disaster that took place in 1997 when two helicopters carrying Israeli troops to the occupied zone in southern Lebanon collided in the air, killing all 73 soldiers.

“If a [fighting] front breaks out in the north, the country of Lebanon will be the one to pay the heaviest of prices for the weapons that have been scattered in civilian population centers,” Gantz said.

“We have clarified — again and again — that we will not allow Hezbollah and the Iranians to turn Lebanon into a terror state… We will not hesitate to strike Iran’s efforts to rearm and entrench itself beyond our borders.”

“[Hezbollah leader Hassan] Nasrallah knows well that his decision to build bunkers full of munitions and missiles and to position Hezbollah capabilities is a danger to himself and to the citizens of the state of Lebanon,” the Israeli defense minister said, calling on the Lebanese government to “take responsibility.”

The two-day training at the northern border adjacent to Lebanese territory aims to enhance the readiness of Israeli forces of the Northern Command along the borders, according to a statement by the army.



Lebanon Calls for Negotiations Following US Strikes on Iran

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun
TT
20

Lebanon Calls for Negotiations Following US Strikes on Iran

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun

Following American strikes on Iran that fueled fears of a wider conflict, Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said on Sunday that the US bombing could lead to a regional conflict that no country could bear and called for negotiations.

“Lebanon, its leadership, parties, and people, are aware today, more than ever before, that it has paid a heavy price for the wars that erupted on its land and in the region,” Aoun said in a statement on X. “It is unwilling to pay more”, he added.

Iran and Israel traded air and missile strikes as the world braced on Monday for Tehran's response to the US attack on its nuclear sites and US President Donald Trump raised the idea of regime change in Iran. Iran vowed to defend itself on Sunday, a day after the US joined Israel in the biggest Western military action against the country since its 1979 Iranian Revolution, despite calls for restraint and a return to diplomacy from around the world.

Lebanon’s Hezbollah group has long been considered Iran’s first line of defense in case of a war with Israel. But since Israel launched its massive barrage against Iran, triggering the ongoing Israel-Iran war, the Lebanese group has stayed out of the fray — even after the US entered the conflict Sunday with strikes on Iranian nuclear sites.

Lebanese government officials have pressed the group to stay out of the conflict, saying that Lebanon cannot handle another damaging war, and US envoy Tom Barrack, who visited Lebanon last week, said it would be a “very bad decision” for Hezbollah to get involved.