Israel weighing biggest Lebanon ground invasion since 2006: report

Axios states Israeli incursion could draw Lebanon deeper into the escalating regional conflict involving Iran

People work on Israeli Army tanks, amid cross-border hostilities between Hezbollah and Israel, in northern Israel on September 27, 2024. PHOTO: REUTERS

Israel is preparing to expand its ground operation in Lebanon, potentially annexing the entire area south of the Litani River and targeting Hezbollah’s military infrastructure, according to a report by Axios citing Israeli and US officials.

If launched, the offensive could become Israel’s largest ground invasion of Lebanon since the 2006 war. The report says such an operation could draw Lebanon deeper into the escalating regional conflict involving Iran.

A senior Israeli official told Axios that the campaign would resemble Israel’s operations in Gaza, referring to the destruction of buildings that the Israeli military claims Hezbollah uses to store weapons and launch attacks.

In Israel's attacks in Gaza, it routinely claimed Hamas used civilian infrastructure to carry out attacks while providing no evidence to back up the claim. It subsequently bombed these locations, resulting in the deaths of civilians, including children.

According to Axios, the scale of the operation could lead to a prolonged Israeli presence in southern Lebanon. Lebanese authorities have expressed alarm that the renewed conflict could further devastate the country.

The report says the administration of former US President Donald Trump supports a major Israeli operation aimed at disarming Hezbollah.

Axios reports that until recently, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government had been trying to contain the escalation on the Lebanese front to focus on Iran. That position reportedly changed after Hezbollah launched more than 200 missiles in a coordinated attack alongside Iran, which fired dozens of its own.

Despite this claim by Netanyahu, Israel has been bombing Lebanon long before its recent escalation into South Lebanon, as Al Jazeera reports that on January 5, they launched strikes into Lebanon, saying they were targeting "Hezbollah and Hamas."

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