IDF Strikes Hezbollah Targets in Dahiyeh Amid Ongoing Tensions
November 24, 2024
1:44 PM
Reading time: 3 minutes
The Israel Air Force (IAF) conducted a series of airstrikes targeting Hezbollah infrastructure in the Dahiyeh district of Beirut, Lebanon, on Saturday. This strike, part of ongoing military operations, targeted Hezbollah command centers and other terrorist facilities embedded within civilian areas. The IDF confirmed that these airstrikes are part of a broader campaign over the past week, aimed at dismantling Hezbollah's operational capabilities in southern Lebanon and Beirut.
The IAF’s precision strikes have focused on Hezbollah’s command centers, weapons storage sites, and various terror infrastructures located in densely populated areas. The IDF has repeatedly warned civilians in areas near Hezbollah strongholds to evacuate due to the imminent threat of Israeli military actions. On Saturday morning, Avichay Adraee, the IDF's Arabic spokesperson, issued a warning urging civilians to stay at least 500 meters away from Hezbollah sites in the Hadath and Choueifat-Al-Omrousiya regions, bordering Dahiyeh.
In addition to targeting Hezbollah's operational bases, the IDF attempted to eliminate senior Hezbollah figures. The IDF reportedly struck the head of Hezbollah’s operations department, Muhammad Haydar, in a Friday night airstrike. Haydar, a high-ranking Hezbollah commander, is wanted by the U.S. government and has a bounty placed on his head for his involvement in various terrorist activities. However, it is unclear whether the strike successfully neutralized him.
The situation in southern Lebanon remains tense, as Hezbollah retaliated by firing rockets into Israeli territory. On Sunday morning, a Hezbollah rocket strike hit a factory in the Galilee, wounding two civilians, one of whom was a 51-year-old woman with shrapnel injuries. The IDF responded by intercepting five of the six rockets launched by Hezbollah, with one rocket crashing in an open area. Additionally, the IDF discovered and dismantled an Iranian-made cannon and other Hezbollah weapons on Mount Dov, which borders Lebanon and Israel.