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Israel says strikes Hezbollah intel HQ in Beirut

Iran, which arms and funds Lebanon’s Hezbollah, said it would step up its response if Israel counterattacked.
Israel’s ground operations and strikes follow the killing in a massive bombing in south Beirut of Hezbollah’s chief Hassan Nasrallah and other commanders.Israel intercepted most of the 200 missiles launched by Iran. In the Israel-occupied West Bank, a Palestinian was killed by shrapnel.
Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant warned that “those who attack the state of Israel, pay a heavy price”.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said its missiles were fired in retaliation for Nasrallah’s killing alongside that of a general in the Guards’ Quds force, as well as for the killing in July of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran.
Lebanon’s health ministry said 46 people were killed and 85 others injured by Israeli strikes over the previous 24 hours.
The Israeli military has said that eight of soldiers have been killed in combat in Lebanon.
While there is “little appetite” for a longer-term occupation of southern Lebanon, Israel believes they are in a position to deal a strong blow to Hezbollah, said political science lecturer Simon Pratt of the University of Melbourne.
“Hezbollah is extremely weak right now,” he told CNA’s Asia First on Friday. 
“They have effectively lost all of their strategic leadership, and maybe Israel feels that by entering Lebanon and engaging in ground operations, they can kind of mop up some of the physical infrastructure and remaining assets, and that this will be a longer-term blow to Hezbollah.”
The impact of the war was also felt in Syria, where the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor said an Israeli strike in Damascus killed four people, including Hassan Jaafar al-Qasir, Nasrallah’s son-in-law.
Iranian media said a Revolutionary Guards military “adviser” in Syria, Majid Divani, succumbed Thursday to wounds sustained in an Israeli strike on Damascus earlier this week.
In Israel’s commercial hub Tel Aviv, Liron Yori, 22, said he was worried about “where the war’s going and I don’t feel comfortable with it”.
The fighting comes with many Israelis celebrating Thursday’s Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year.
Calls for restraint have multiplied but months of similar calls for Gaza failed to bring a ceasefire.
Hezbollah began strikes on Israeli troops a day after Hamas staged its Oct 7 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,205 people in Israel, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli official figures that include hostages killed in captivity.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive in Gaza has killed at least 41,788 people, the majority of them civilians, according to figures provided by the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry. The UN has described the figures as reliable.
The University of Melbourne’s Pratt does not foresee Gaza ceasefire talks resuming anytime soon.
“I think, to the surprise of many, it appears the Israeli government has effectively sacrificed the lives of the remaining hostages, in the name of its wars, both in Gaza and now in Lebanon,” he added. 
“There might have been the possibility of a conclusion to both the conflict in Gaza and in Lebanon via a hostage and ceasefire deal, but negotiations for this haven’t really progressed at all for a couple of months at this point.
“I don’t think that there’s any indication that they’ll resume or conclude in a positive direction.”

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