Alwaght- Lebanese Hezbollah says it carried out new attacks on Israeli positions on the border with Lebanon two days after Israeli shelling in Lebanon’s south killed three of its fighters.
One of the attacks targeted spying facilities in Ruwaisat Al-Alam in the occupied Shebba Farms, a statement by the resistance movement said on Thursday.
“In support of our firm Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip and in support of their brave and honorable resistance, the Mujahideen of the Islamic Resistance targeted, at 10:40 a.m. on Thursday 02/15/2024, the spy equipment at the Ruwaisat Al-Alam site in the occupied Lebanese Shebaa Farms with appropriate weapons, striking the facility directly,” part of the statement read.
Another statement said the movement’s forces struck spying facilities in Al-Rahib, an Israeli base on the border with the south.
A third statement held that an Israeli outpost was targeted with ‘Falagh’ missile, destroying part of the site and causing injuries among Israeli forces.
The attacks followed martyrdom of three Hezbollah fighters on Tuesday.
In a statement, Hezbollah mourned the loss of three of its fighters, saying they were killed “on the road to Jerusalem,” referring to the Palestinian struggle for freedom.
Tension has flared along the border between Lebanon and Israel amid intermittent exchange of fire between Israeli forces and Hezbollah, in the deadliest clashes since the two sides fought a full-scale war in 2006 that ended on Israeli loss.
Hezbollah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah in a Wednesday speech announced readiness for a full-scale war with Israel, vowing that the Israeli losses and damages will be unprecedented.
Pointing to vows of an Israeli official who promised the hundreds of thousands of Israelis displaced from their homes on the border with Lebanon due to clashes to return them home, Nasrallah warned that if Tel Aviv wages war on Lebanon, not only the displaced Israelis will not return, but also Israeli government should open all of its “schools, shelters, hospital, and cities” to two millions of displaced people.