Hezbollah claims responsibility for rockets towards Israel from Lebanon
The Iron Dome missile defense system intercepted 10 rockets, with six falling in open areas; the others fell inside Lebanon.
A heavy barrage of close to 20 rockets was fired from Lebanon into northern Israel on Friday, activating the Iron Dome and setting off sirens throughout the area.
Hezbollah claimed responsibility for the rocket attacks, saying that “at 11:15 a.m. the Islamic Resistance responded to the Israeli aggression by targeting the vicinity of Israeli enemy posts in Shebaa Farms with dozens of rockets fired from woodlands that are far from residential areas.”
المقاومة الإسلامية "رداً على الغارات الإسرائيلية على أراضٍ مفتوحة في منطقتي الجرمق والشواكير ، قامت مجموعات الشهيد علي كامل محسن والشهيد محمد قاسم طحان في المقاومة الإسلامية بقصف أراضٍ مفتوحة في محيط مواقع الاحتلال الإسرائيلي في مزارع شبعا بعشرات الصواريخ من عيار 122 ملم— علي شعيب || Ali Shoeib (@alishoeib1970) August 6, 2021
Incoming rocket sirens were activated in northern Israeli communities bordering the Lebanese and Syrian borders, including Ein Quiniyye, Neveh Ativ and Snir, near Israel’s northern border with Lebanon and Syria.
There were no injuries or casualties.
The IDF initially responded with artillery fire toward the Mount Dov/Shebaa Farms area in Lebanon, from where the rocket fire originated.
“If Hezbollah wanted to carry out a significant response, they have the ability to do so,” he said.
חיזבאללה ירה 10 רקטות שיורטו, 6 שנפלו בשטחים פתוחים ו-3 שכשלו ונפלו בלבנון.כרגע שגרה ביישובי הצפון, ואין הנחיות נוספות מפיקוד העורף.צה"ל ערוך ומוכן להמשך לחימה בכל עת. אנו ערוכים להגיב בעוצמה ככל שיידרש. נמשיך לפעול במגוון דרכים ושיטות להגנה על יישובי ישראל.— רן כוכב (רנכו) - Ran Kochav (@IDFSpokesperson) August 6, 2021
According to Kohav, the Lebanese Armed Forces caught the mobile multi-barreled rocket launcher and the Hezbollah fighters who carried out the attack. Videos released on social media showed at least two Hezbollah operatives being violently forced into a car by Druze villagers in the town of Shwayya after they were stopped.
Though the LAF arrested four militants involved in the rocket fire, at least one was later released.
Prime Minister Naftali Bennett convened an emergency gathering of senior officials at the Kirya military headquarters in Tel Aviv including Defense Minister Benny Gantz, IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Aviv Kohavi and others to discuss Israel's options.
Looks like a big barrage. Several said to have been intercepted pic.twitter.com/krVWHnGs04— Anna Ahronheim (@AAhronheim) August 6, 2021
The IDF had initially retaliated Wednesday by firing some 100 artillery shells towards the launch sites and later carried out airstrikes.
The strikes targeted the areas from which the rockets were fired as well as other locations where rockets had been fired in the past. The IAF also struck additional infrastructure used for terrorism, a statement released by the military at the time said.
According to Kohav, “Hezbollah has tried to show that it is responding to these attacks” and that the group has “no choice but to respond” to Israeli strikes.
Israeli Ambassador to the US and UN Gilad Erdan wrote a letter to the UN Security Council and Secretary-General condemning the attacks by Hezbollah, which violate UN Security Council Resolution 1701, passed at the end of the 2006 Second Lebanon War.
“The recent attacks and growing tensions in the region, exacerbated by Iran’s activities and arming of its proxies, especially Hezbollah, demonstrate once again the urgent need to actively enforce UN Security Council Resolution 1701 (2006),” Erdan wrote. “I call upon the Security Council to unequivocally condemn these grave violations, and to remain seized on these matters in its upcoming deliberations on Security Council Resolution 1701.”
Erdan warned that Hezbollah’s actions and the Lebanese government’s inability to stop them “have the potential to wreak havoc and cause destruction in Lebanon.”
“While Israel is not interested in escalation, we will not allow attacks on Israeli civilians to go unanswered. If these attacks continue, Israel will have no choice but to respond and dismantle Hezbollah’s terrorist infrastructure that threatens Israel’s security and the lives of its citizens,” Erdan wrote.
A SENIOR defense official said that the IDF has been carrying out “extensive” strikes in Lebanon against infrastructure used by terror groups for artillery fire and airstrikes, something that “has not been the case for years.”
The defense establishment is preparing options for additional responses by “various means, both overt and covert, depending on further developments,” the official said.
“The continuation of [Israeli] operations will be in accordance with operational needs, and when it is convenient for Israel,” he said.
Meanwhile, Iran’s new president Ebrahim Raisi met with Hezbollah Deputy Secretary-General Naim Qassem and welcomed the group’s attack, saying that Hezbollah has “shown effective deterrence against the Zionist enemy.”
On Friday, instructions were sent to residents of Kiryat Shmona, stating that shelters that opened on Tuesday following rocket fire from previous days will remain open over the weekend to give them a sense of security. Mayor Avihay Shtern and Municipal Chief of Staff Dekel Arieh are in continuous contact with military officials.
In a statement on Twitter, United Nations Interim Force Lebanon called the rocket attack “a very serious situation” and urged both parties to cease fire.
Speaking to N12 later on Friday, Gantz warned that the IDF would not let Hezbollah test Israel.
הירי לצפון | לפי הערכה ראשונית, הירי בוצע מדרום לבנון@rubih67@ItayBlumentalpic.twitter.com/GukdLQXWcs— כאן חדשות (@kann_news) August 6, 2021
“We do not intend to let Hezbollah toy with us – and Hezbollah knows this. Lebanon’s situation is shaky. We can make it even shakier,” he said, referring to Beirut’s dire economic state. “We recommend to the Hezbollah, the Lebanese army and the Lebanese government: don’t test the State of Israel.”