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Hezbollah Missiles Strike Israel On Gaza War Anniversary

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On October 7, the first anniversary of the Gaza war, which has stretched violence throughout the Middle East, Hezbollah missiles struck Israel’s third-largest city, Haifa, early on Monday.

At the same time, the country appeared ready to increase ground operations in southern Lebanon. Supported by Iran In Gaza, Hezbollah, an ally of Hamas, the Palestinian terrorist group battling Israel, claimed to have started an attack on Tiberias, 65 kilometers (40 miles) away, and to have used “Fadi 1” missiles to target a military base south of Haifa.

Fears that Iran and the United States, Israel’s superpower ally, will be drawn into a larger confrontation in the Middle East, which produces most of the world’s oil, have been heightened by the conflict’s worsening spiral.

Another important port, Haifa, was hit by missiles, according to Israeli authorities, and local media reported that ten people were hurt. Five rockets were fired from Lebanon into Haifa, according to an Israeli military statement, and interceptors were also shot against them.

“There were said to be fallen munitions nearby. The event is being investigated. It claimed that fifteen further rockets, some of which were shot down, were fired inland at Tiberias in the northern Galilee region of Israel. According to Israeli media, five more rockets struck the Tiberias region.

According to the police, there were reports of minor injuries, some of which were treated at a local hospital, and damage to certain buildings and properties.

According to the IDF, Israel also stopped two drones that were launched early on Monday from the east after alarms went out in the middle of Rishon Lezion and Palmachim. It provided no additional information regarding the origin of the drone firing on October 7, the first anniversary of the surprise cross-border attack on Israel by terrorists commanded by Hamas that started the Gaza War.

According to the group, Hamas fired a rocket barrage at Israel’s commercial hub of Tel Aviv, causing sirens to go off in the nation’s center.

After a slew of fatal blows to the leadership of Hezbollah, Iran’s terrorist organization, many Israelis, demoralized by the appalling security lapses surrounding Hamas’ incursion from Gaza a year ago, have found confidence in their much-heralded military and intelligence infrastructure once again.

Israel continued its air attack against the location of Hezbollah’s headquarters overnight, pounding Beirut’s heavily populated southern suburbs. Israel charges the extremist Shi’ite Muslim movement of purposefully hiding its weaponry and command centers behind residential buildings in the center of Beirut. Hezbollah disputes that it keeps weapons among people.

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