Israel’s military said Monday it was widely attacking Hezbollah targets in Lebanon, amid days of escalated conflict between the two sides that has raised fears of an all-out war.
The Israel Defense Forces did not immediately identify exact targets.
The strikes followed what Hezbollah said were artillery and missile strikes it launched at northern Israel.
Israeli air defenses also intercepted a drone early Monday launched by a pro-Iranian militant group in Iraq.
The Islamic Resistance in Iraq said it was targeting an Israeli base.
The surge in fighting along the Israel-Lebanon border during the past week prompted the U.S. State Department to issue a new travel warning urging U.S. citizens to leave Lebanon on commercial flights while they still have the option.
Hezbollah and Israeli forces traded hundreds of missile strikes Sunday, while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pledged to do “whatever it takes” to restore safety in northern Israel.
Netanyahu said Israel in recent days had “dealt Hezbollah a series of blows they never imagined,” calling it a “message.”
The back-and-forth attacks included Hezbollah retaliating to an Israeli attack that killed Hezbollah military leaders in Beirut on Friday, while the militants blamed Israel for remotely detonating explosives in pagers and walkie-talkies inside Lebanon, killing at least 32 and injuring thousands.
Hezbollah deputy secretary-general Naim Qassem said Hezbollah had started a new phase of its fight against Israel, which he described as an “open-ended battle of reckoning.”
U.S. national security spokesman John Kirby said Sunday on ABC News’ “This Week” show that Israel and Hezbollah must restrain themselves to keep the conflict from escalating into an all-out war.
“We believe there are better ways … than opening a second front” along the Israeli-Lebanon border beyond Israel’s nearly year-long fight with Hamas militants in Gaza.
“Nobody is pollyannish about how difficult this will be,” Kirby said, but the warring parties should pull back from continued fighting so this doesn’t become an all-out war.
As the Israeli-Hezbollah warfare mounts, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees pointed to ongoing conflicts in Syria and Yemen, noting that the region is already very fragile.
“An expansion of the conflict may have incalculable consequences,” Filippo Grandi told VOA of the escalation in Lebanon this week.
He said the U.N., particularly its humanitarian agencies, has been making contingency plans for some time should the war spread, but that no one should expect humanitarians “to address all the countless problems, countless challenges, that will emerge from an even greater regional war.”
Israel and Hezbollah have traded fire since the outbreak of the war in Gaza last Oct. 7, when the militant group began firing rockets in solidarity with the Palestinians and its fellow Iran-backed ally Hamas. The fighting has killed dozens of people in Israel, hundreds in Lebanon, and displaced tens of thousands on both sides of the frontier.
The war in Gaza began with Hamas’ October 2023 attack on southern Israel, in which Palestinian militants killed about 1,200 people and took about 250 others hostage. They are still holding around 100 captives, a third of whom are believed to be dead. More than 41,400 Palestinians have been killed, mostly women and children, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, with the Israeli military saying the death toll includes thousands of Hamas fighters.
Hamas has been designated a terror group by the U.S., U.K., EU, and others.
VOA’s United Nations correspondent Margaret Besheer contributed to this report; some material came from The Associated Press.