Biden, Netanyahu discuss Iran plans
US President Joe Biden held talks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday as Hezbollah fighters and Israeli forces exchanged fire along the Lebanon-Israel border.
Hezbollah said its fighters were locked in clashes with Israeli troops in southern Lebanon, using rocket-propelled weapons to repel Israeli attempts to breach the border.
Two people were killed by Hezbollah rocket fire in the northern Israeli town of Kiryat Shmona, while Israeli air defences also intercepted two projectiles fired towards the coastal town of Caesarea, officials said.
Lebanon's health ministry said at least four people were killed in an Israeli strike on a village in the Shouf district, southeast of Beirut, a region largely spared by Israel's intensified bombing campaign.
As fighting raged, with Netanyahu warning Lebanon could face "a long war... like we see in Gaza", Biden was expected to seek to prevent the conflict escalating into a regional war directly involving Iran.
The US leader's call with Netanyahu was their first in seven weeks, with Israel's response to last week's missile attack by Iran expected to be high on the agenda.
There was no immediate readout of the meeting from the White House or from Netanyahu's office.
But Biden has cautioned Israel against attempting to target Iran's nuclear programme, which would risk major retaliation, and is also against striking the country's oil installations, which would send world crude prices spiking in the run-up to the US presidential election.
A new book by veteran US journalist Bob Woodward details growing tensions between Biden and Netanyahu, with Biden telling the Israeli premier in July that "the perception of Israel around the world increasingly is that you're a rogue state, a rogue actor", The New York Times reported.
A Lebanese government source told AFP that Hezbollah had accepted a ceasefire with Israel the day an Israeli strike killed its leader Hassan Nasrallah.
Prime Minister Najib Mikati was at the UN General Assembly in New York that day, when the United States and its allies put forward a proposal for a 21-day ceasefire in Lebanon.
But Netanyahu said in his speech to world leaders the same day that there would be no let-up in Israeli battle against Hezbollah and shortly afterwards a huge air strike killed Nasrallah.
Israel has intensified air strikes on Hezbollah strongholds in Lebanon since September 23, leaving more than 1,190 people dead and forcing more than a million to flee, according to an AFP tally of official figures.
Its ground forces crossed into Lebanon on September 30.
Israel's military said on Wednesday that its troops had "eliminated terrorists during close-quarter encounters and in aerial strikes" over the previous 24 hours, adding that "100 Hezbollah targets were destroyed."
Israeli operations have expanded from border areas in the interior to the southern section of Lebanon's Mediterranean coast.
According to a new toll from the Israeli army on Wednesday, 13 soldiers were killed since ground operations inside Lebanon began.
Israel was also extending an ongoing military operation around Jabalia in the north of Gaza on Wednesday, where around 400,000 people are trapped, according to Philippe Lazzarini, head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA).