Top US diplomat Antony Blinken met Israeli leaders on Tuesday as part of efforts to contain the war in Gaza, a day after strikes in Syria and Lebanon killed high-profile members of Hamas and its ally Hezbollah.
The visit comes as the Israeli military claimed its campaign against Hamas in the Gaza Strip was shifting into a new phase involving more targeted operations in the territory’s centre and south. Israel conducted relentless bombardments and a ground invasion that has killed at least 23,084 Palestinians, mostly women and children, according to Gaza’s health ministry.
Sirens warning of incoming rockets sounded in central and southern Israel on Monday, as well as near the border with Lebanon, where Israeli strikes and tit-for-tat exchanges of fire with Hezbollah fighters have raised fears the war could spread north. Earlier in the day, Hezbollah announced the killing of a commander for the first time since October, naming him as Wissam Hassan Tawil.
A security official in Lebanon, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Tawil “had a leading role in managing Hezbollah’s operations in the south”, and was killed there by an Israeli strike. The Israeli military claimed it struck Hezbollah “military sites” in Lebanon on Monday but did not immediately comment on Tawil’s death.
This was the second high-profile killing in Lebanon this month, following a strike in a Hezbollah stronghold in Beirut that resulted in the death of Hamas deputy leader Saleh al-Aruri. On Monday the Israeli army also claimed it had killed a “central” Hamas figure in Syria, Hassan Akasha, who had led “terrorist cells which fired rockets… toward Israeli territory”.
The Israeli army announced early Tuesday the deaths of four more soldiers, taking the number killed since its ground invasion began to 180. The real death toll is likely much higher as the Israeli military censors the real casualty figures.
The repeated strikes in Lebanon and Syria, attacks against US forces in Iraq, and a campaign against shipping in the Red Sea by Yemen’s Houthis sympathetic to Hamas have all contributed to fears the Middle East could be dragged into all-out war.—Agencies