Israeli airstrikes pound southern Lebanon

Published July 31st, 2025 - 03:45 GMT
Israeli airstrikes pound southern Lebanon amid Hezbollah defiance over disarmament demands
Smoke rises after an Israeli strike on the area of Jabal al-Rihan in the southern Lebanese province of Jezzine on July 24, 2025. AFP
Highlights
The Israeli strikes, paired with intensifying international pressure, signal a dangerous new chapter in Lebanon’s already fragile security landscape
Israeli Defense Minister allegedly stated that IDF again attacked Hezbollah's largest precision missile production site.

ALBAWABA- The Israeli Air Force launched a series of heavy airstrikes on southern and eastern Lebanon on Thursday, targeting areas near Brital Jurud and the outskirts of the town of Masa in the Bekaa Valley. 

Israeli Defense Minister allegedly stated that IDF again attacked Hezbollah's largest precision missile production site.

The latest escalation comes just one day after Hezbollah’s Secretary-General, Naim Qassem, publicly rejected Israeli and U.S. demands to disarm the group, declaring Hezbollah's weapons a source of national strength and a strictly internal Lebanese matter.

In a televised address marking the first anniversary of the assassinations of Hezbollah Commander Fuad Shukr in Beirut and Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran, Qassem firmly stated: “Weapons are not part of any deal with the Israeli enemy. They are for resisting Israel, not for domestic conflict, and they represent a source of strength for Lebanon.”

He warned that calls for Hezbollah’s disarmament serve only Israeli interests. “We will not hand over our weapons to Israel. Those calling for this are asking us to disarm for Israel’s benefit,” he said, criticizing both Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak and U.S. officials who have demanded that Hezbollah relinquish its missiles and drones.

Qassem also emphasized that the real threat to Lebanon lies in ongoing Israeli military aggression: “The priority is not disarmament—it is reconstruction and ending the aggression. Any call to surrender our weapons while under attack is a call to disarm Lebanon in front of its enemy.”

Despite a ceasefire agreement reached in November 2024, Israeli air raids on Lebanese territory have intensified, with hundreds of violations reported. These strikes have resulted in the deaths of dozens of Lebanese civilians under the pretext of “security operations.”

On the political front, Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam announced that the cabinet would reconvene to discuss expanding state sovereignty across all Lebanese territory “through its own forces” — a veiled reference to Hezbollah’s armed presence. The discussion echoes earlier debates held in April and signals growing internal pressure to resolve the question of Hezbollah’s weapons.

Meanwhile, Al Arabiya reported that the United States has threatened to blacklist Lebanon’s banking sector and block vital imports of oil and flour unless Hezbollah agrees to disarm, a move seen by many in Beirut as collective punishment and foreign interference.

The Israeli strikes, paired with intensifying international pressure, signal a dangerous new chapter in Lebanon’s already fragile security landscape, as Hezbollah stands firm in its defiance and vows to resist disarmament at all costs.

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