2024 Haret Hreik airstrike | |
---|---|
Part of the Israel–Hezbollah conflict (2023–present) and Middle Eastern crisis (2023–present) | |
Type | Airstrike |
Location | 33°51′16″N35°30′42″E / 33.85444°N 35.51167°E |
Target | Fuad Shukr |
Date | 30 July 2024 7:40 (UTC+03:00) |
Executed by | Israeli Air Force |
Casualties | 7 killed 80 injured |
On 30 July 2024, Israel conducted an airstrike on an apartment building in Haret Hreik in the suburbs of the Lebanese capital of Beirut, killing Hezbollah commander Fuad Shukr, [1] Iranian military adviser Milad Bedi, [2] as well as five Lebanese civilians, including two children, and wounding 80 others. [3] [4]
The attack targeted Shukr, who was accused by the Israeli military of being involved in the rocket attack that occurred three days earlier in Majdal Shams in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, which killed 12 Syrian Druze children and teenagers. [5] [6] Lebanese state news agency NNA reported that the attack was carried out by a drone firing three missiles at an apartment building, which partially collapsed. [6]
Since the 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel, Hezbollah and Israel have been involved in cross-border military exchanges that have displaced entire communities in Israel and Lebanon, with significant damage to buildings and land along the border. As of 5 July 2024, Israel reports having killed approximately 366 Hezbollah operatives with over 100 Lebanese civilians confirmed killed. According to the UN, over 90,000 people in Lebanon have been forced to flee their homes, while in Israel, 60,000 civilians have evacuated. [7] Israel and Hezbollah have maintained their attacks at a level that causes significant harm without escalating into a full-scale war. [8] From 7 October 2023 to 21 June 2024, Israel attacked Lebanon 6,124 times. Hezbollah and other Lebanese forces attacked Israel 1,258 times. [9]
On 27 July 2024, the Majdal Shams attack took place when a football pitch was hit by a rocket in the Druze town of Majdal Shams in the Golan Heights, [a] resulting in the deaths of 12 Syrian Druze children and young people. [10] [11] This incident became the deadliest along Israel's border with Lebanon since the onset of the 2023 conflict, provoking widespread outrage and shock. [12] Israel and the United States have attributed the attack to Hezbollah, noting that the rocket was an Iranian-made Falaq-1 with a warhead containing over 50 kilograms of explosives. [13] Hezbollah has, however, firmly denied any involvement. [12] In response, Israel vowed to retaliate while explicitly aiming to specifically target Hezbollah and avoid escalating the conflict into a full-scale regional war. [14] Before the attack, several international airliners ceased their flights to Beirut–Rafic Hariri International Airport. [15] Earlier on 30 July, a Hezbollah rocket attack on Kibbutz HaGoshrim in the Upper Galilee killed an Israeli civilian. [16]
Fuad Shukr, the target of the attack, was listed as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist by the US, and served as a senior advisor on military affairs to Hassan Nasrallah, secretary-general of Hezbollah. He also served in Hezbollah's highest military body, the Jihad Council. Shukr was involved in the 23 October 1983 bombing of the U.S. Marine Corps Barracks in Beirut which killed 241 U.S. military personnel and wounded 128 others. [17] According to Israeli intelligence, he was also a leading figure in facilitating the transfer of Iranian guidance systems for Hezbollah's long-range missiles. [18] In 2017, the US Treasury offered $5 million for information on Shukr. [16] [19] After the barracks bombing he mostly lived in an apartment in Haret Hreik rarely appearing in public. [20]
Witnesses reported a loud explosion at around 7:40 PM (local time) [21] in the Dahieh district of Beirut, an area with significant Hezbollah presence. [22] The attack targeted Hezbollah commander Fuad Shukr, [5] near Hezbollah's Shura Council. [23] According to a WSJ report, a Hezbollah official said Shukr received a call telling him to go to his apartment five floors up. Shukr had his office on the second floor, and lived on the seventh floor of the same building. The call likely came from someone who had breached Hezbollah's internal communications network, and saw the higher floor as an easier target for an air attack. [20] Hezbollah denied this and said The Wall Street Journal report was "fabricated" and "full of lies". [24]
Lebanese state news agency National News Agency (NNA) reported that the attack was executed using a drone that launched three missiles, although the IDF's statement on the attack did not specify the exact method of the strike. [6] The missiles struck an apartment building prompting half of it to collapse and caused minor damage to a hospital next to the building. Immediately following the attacks, a significant panic occurred among the citizens, when many of them tried to flee home to safety and caused a lot of congestion. In addition, groups of demonstrators began to fill the streets near the site of the attack, while shouting slogans and slogans in favor of Hezbollah. [25] [26] Reporters and journalists faced hostility while covering the incident, namely Al Jazeera and MTV, who were attacked by Hezbollah supporters that were at the site of the raid in Haret Hreik and prevented them from covering the event. [27] [28]
Early reports indicated that Fuad Shukr survived the airstrike. However, Saudi-owned news outlets have cited sources reporting that Shukr was killed in the attack. Israel later said Fuad Shukr was killed, while Hezbollah did not yet confirm his death and stated that it was still assessing the damage from the strike. [29] The Lebanese Health Ministry said that two women, including Shukr's wife, [20] and two children were killed and an additional 80 were injured. [30] The following day, Lebanese security sources announced that his body was found under the rubble, confirming his death, [31] and Hezbollah formally announced it hours later. [32] Milad Bidi, an Iranian military adviser in Lebanon, was also killed raising the death toll to seven. [33]
Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati condemned the attack, calling it a “series of aggressive operations killing civilians in clear and explicit violation of international law.” [26] Information Minister Ziad Makary stated that Lebanon anticipates a Hezbollah retaliation for the Israeli strike and that the government will pursue diplomatic efforts to de-escalate tensions. [34]
Israeli Minister of Defense Yoav Gallant posted a public statement to his X (Twitter) account stating "Hezbollah crossed the red line." shortly after the attack took place. [26]
Hezbollah MP Ali Ammar stated: "This enemy demands war and we are up for it, God willing, we are up for it." [35] Thirty minutes later, it was reported that Israeli Defense Minister Gallant told troops that "we don't want war, but we're preparing for all possibilities." [36]
United States Vice President Kamala Harris stated that Israel "has a right to defend itself against the terrorist organisation, which is exactly what Hezbollah is" while on a campaign trip to Atlanta, Georgia. [26]
The Foreign Ministry of Iran called the attack "vicious" and expressed admiration for the resistance of the Lebanese people against "the aggression of the Israeli apartheid regime" in support of Palestinians. [26]
The Russian Foreign Ministry called the attack a "gross violation of international law". [26]
On August 25, 2024, in the early morning, Hezbollah launched an extensive rocket attack from Lebanon toward Israel in response to the killing of Shukr. [37] The attack coincided with Arba'in, a significant observance for Shia Muslims, which Hezbollah cited as part of their motivation. The group later announced that a total of 320 rockets had been fired at Israel during this phase. In response, Israel conducted preemptive airstrikes, targeting thousands of Hezbollah rocket launchers programmed to fire towards Tel Aviv at 5 a.m., deploying hundreds of jet fighters. [37] [38]
U.S. President Joe Biden closely monitored the situation, with continuous communications between U.S. and Israeli officials. Ben Gurion Airport temporarily halted operations. Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant declared a 48-hour emergency situation and briefed U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin on the developments. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu convened a security cabinet meeting to address the situation, and emergency measures were implemented across northern Israel, including the opening of shelters and restrictions on public movement. [39]
Several incidents have taken place on the Israeli–Syrian ceasefire line during the Syrian Civil War, straining the relations between the countries. The incidents are considered a spillover of the Quneitra Governorate clashes since 2012 and later incidents between Syrian Army and the rebels, ongoing on the Syrian-controlled side of the Golan and the Golan Neutral Zone and the Hezbollah involvement in the Syrian Civil War. Through the incidents, which began in late 2012, as of mid-2014, one Israeli civilian was killed and at least 4 soldiers wounded; on the Syrian-controlled side, it is estimated that at least ten soldiers were killed, as well as two unidentified militants, who were identified near Ein Zivan on Golan Heights.
The January 2015 Mazraat Amal incident was an airstrike against a two-car convoy that killed six Hezbollah fighters, including two prominent commanders, and a general of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards (IRGC), Mohammad Ali Allahdadi, at al-Amal Farms in the Quneitra District of Syria, in the Eastern Golan Heights, on 18 January 2015, during the Syrian Civil War. The attack was largely attributed to Israel, which did not officially confirm that it carried it out. Hezbollah and IRGC held Israel responsible and threatened to retaliate. On 19 January 2015, Al-Nusra Front member Abu Azzam al-Idlibi claimed that Jihad Mughniyeh and the other Hezbollah fighters were killed in an Al-Nusra Front ambush at Jaroud in the Qalamoun Mountains in the Al-Qutayfah District northeast of Damascus, claiming that it "will be the end of the Persian project, God willing."
Israel and the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah started exchanging fire along the Israel–Lebanon border and in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights on 8 October 2023. Israel also carried out airstrikes throughout Lebanon and in Syria. The clashes were part of the spillover of the Israel–Hamas war and the largest escalation of the Hezbollah–Israel conflict since the 2006 Lebanon War. On 30 September 2024, Israel escalated the conflict into a ground invasion of Lebanon.
Events of the year 2024 in Israel.
Events in the year 2024 in Lebanon.
This is a chronological timeline of the Israel–Hezbollah conflict since October 2023. The detailed timelines are split into different articles due to their length.
The Middle Eastern crisis is a series of interrelated conflicts and heightened instability in the Middle East which began with the Hamas-led attack on Israel on 7 October 2023 and the war that followed, leading to a major escalation of the existing tensions between Israel and Iran. This has resulted in several proxy conflicts breaking out across the Middle East involving both sides, such as Red Sea crisis and the 2024 Israeli invasion of Lebanon.
In 2024, the Iran–Israel proxy conflict escalated to a series of direct confrontations between the two countries. On 1 April, Israel bombed an Iranian consulate complex in Damascus, Syria, killing multiple senior Iranian officials. In response, Iran and its Axis of Resistance allies seized the Israeli-linked ship MSC Aries and launched strikes inside Israel on 13 April. Israel then carried out retaliatory strikes in Iran and Syria on 19 April.
The Majdal Shams attack, also called the Majdal Shams massacre by Israeli media, took place on 27 July 2024, when a rocket hit a football pitch in Majdal Shams in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights. The resulting blast killed 12 Syrian children belonging to the Druze community and injured at least 42 others, with most of the victims being between the ages of 10 and 16.
Fuad Shukr was a Lebanese militant leader who was a senior member of Hezbollah. A member of Hezbollah's founding generation, Shukr was a senior military leader in the organization from the early 1980s. For over four decades, he was one of the group's leading military figures and was a military advisor to its leader Hassan Nasrallah.
On 25 August 2024, Israel struck targets in southern Lebanon, followed by strikes by Hezbollah.
This timeline of the Israel–Hezbollah conflict covers the period from 1 April 2024, when Israel struck the Iranian consulate in Damascus, to 26 July 2024, one day before the Majdal Shams attack.
This timeline of the Israel–Hezbollah conflict covers the period from 27 July 2024, when a Hezbollah rocket struck a soccer field in Majdal Shams in the Golan Heights, killing 12 children, to 16 September 2024, one day before the explosion of Hezbollah pagers and walkie talkies.
On 20 September 2024, Israel launched an air attack that leveled an apartment building in the Dahieh suburb of Beirut, Lebanon. The attack killed at least 45 people, including 16 Hezbollah militants, two of whom were commanders, identified as Ibrahim Aqil and Ahmed Wehbe. They were the second and third Hezbollah commanders assassinated by Israel in two months during the ongoing Israel–Hezbollah conflict, after the killing of Fuad Shukr.
Ibrahim Aqil was a Lebanese militant leader who served as commander-in-chief of Hezbollah's special operations unit, the Redwan Force. He was a member of the Jihad Council, which oversees the military operations of the organisation. Some considered Aqil as the de facto Chief of Staff of Hezbollah.
On 23 September 2024, Israel began a series of airstrikes in Lebanon as part of the ongoing Israel–Hezbollah conflict with an operation it code-named Northern Arrows. Since then, Israel's attacks have killed over 800 people, injured more than 5,000, and displaced hundreds of thousands of Lebanese civilians. The attacks are the deadliest in Lebanon since the end of the Lebanese Civil War, and began five days after Israel performed a deadly pager and walkie-talkie attack on devices intended for Hezbollah members, and three days after Israel performed an airstrike on an apartment complex in Beirut which killed Redwan Force commander Ibrahim Aqil as well as 54 others.
This timeline of the Israel–Hezbollah conflict covers the period from 17 September 2024, when Hezbollah pagers exploded throughout Lebanon and Syria to the present. Beginning 23 September, Israel began its airstrikes in Lebanon, on 27 September, they assassinated Hassan Nasrallah, and on 1 October, they invaded Lebanon.
On 27 September 2024, Hassan Nasrallah, the secretary-general of Hezbollah, was assassinated in an Israeli airstrike in Beirut. The strike took place while Hezbollah leaders were meeting at a headquarters located 60 feet (18 m) underground beneath residential buildings in Haret Hreik in the Dahieh suburb to the south of Beirut. Conducted by the Israeli Air Force using F-15I fighters, the operation involved dropping more than 80 bombs, including US-made 2,000-pound (910 kg) bunker buster bombs, destroying the underground headquarters as well as nearby buildings. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) codenamed the operation "New Order".
On 1 October 2024, Israel invaded Southern Lebanon in an escalation of the ongoing Israel–Hezbollah conflict, a spillover of the Israel–Hamas war. It followed a series of major attacks on Hezbollah in September that degraded its capabilities and devastated its leadership, beginning with the explosions of its communication devices. This was followed by a massive Israeli aerial bombing campaign throughout Lebanon, killing over 800 Lebanese people in one week. On 27 September, Israel assassinated Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in an airstrike.