Israel launches airstrikes against Hezbollah in Lebanon’s Dahiyeh
The Israeli military has launched airstrikes against Hezbollah infrastructure in Dahiyeh, a southern suburb of Beirut. This marks the first strike on the militant group's
The Israeli military has launched airstrikes against Hezbollah infrastructure in Dahiyeh, a southern suburb of Beirut. This marks the first strike on the militant group's stronghold since a ceasefire was brokered on April 16. Despite the truce, fighting has persisted in southern Lebanon, where Israel maintains it is actively dismantling Hezbollah operations along its border. Conversely, Hezbollah has dismissed any ceasefire proposals tied to its disarmament, countering that Israel must halt its offensive and pull back its forces from southern Lebanon first. In a joint statement with his defense minister, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confirmed that the Dahiyeh strike was a direct retaliation for Hezbollah fire directed at Israeli territory. While no immediate casualties were reported, the military earlier stated it had intercepted two projectiles crossing from Lebanon following air raid sirens in Yiftah and Ramot Naftali.
Hezbollah has not claimed responsibility for those specific launches. Additionally, Israel's military issued evacuation orders on Sunday to residents of the southern Lebanese city of Tyre and its suburbs ahead of anticipated strikes. Regionally, Iran has positioned a Lebanese ceasefire between its ally and Israel as a mandatory prerequisite for any peace agreement with the United States. Hezbollah formally entered the war on March 2, framing its involvement as retaliation for the assassination of Iran's Supreme Leader at the onset of a broader conflict that has claimed thousands of lives in Lebanon and displaced over a million citizens. Even before March 2, Israel had continued launching operations in Lebanon despite a previous U.S.-brokered ceasefire from November 2024, asserting that its targets remain strictly limited to Hezbollah personnel and military assets.
Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump said that he would not unfreeze Iranian assets or lift any sanctions before a peace deal is reached. Trump said he would consider those steps after an agreement is done. Trump also said that he was not demanding that Lebanon be a part of a short-term deal with Tehran. US intercepts fresh Iranian attacks Fresh hostilities have erupted between US and Iranian forces following a week of heightened tensions, marking the worst escalation since their unstable ceasefire began and stalling progress toward an interim peace agreement. On Sunday, US Central Command announced via social media that it had successfully downed two Iranian one-way attack drones threatening international shipping lines in the Strait of Hormuz.
