The New York Times 2024-10-01 12:11:23


Live Updates: Israel Begins Ground Operations in Southern Lebanon

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Patrick Kingsley

Reporting from Jerusalem

Here are the latest developments.

The Israeli military announced early Tuesday that its troops had begun crossing into southern Lebanon, saying that they would destroy Hezbollah military infrastructure in villages close to the Israel-Lebanon border.

In a statement issued shortly before 2 a.m., the military described the operation as “limited” and said that its troops had begun entering Lebanon “a few hours ago” in order to target sites that “pose an immediate threat to Israeli communities in northern Israel.”

The invasion followed intense Israeli strikes across Lebanon over the past two weeks that have killed hundreds of people, according to the Lebanese health ministry, including 95 on Monday. Israel is trying to force a conclusion to a war with Hezbollah that started in parallel with Israel’s war with Hamas in Gaza, which was set off by the Oct. 7 attacks on southern Israel last year. In the opening days of that war, Hezbollah started firing toward Israeli positions in solidarity with Hamas. Both groups are backed by Iran.

Three Israeli officials said the invasion plan involved operating in a narrow strip of land that lines the northern side of the border. The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive military matters.

The invasion force consisted of small groups of commandos, accompanied by air cover as well as artillery shells fired from Israel, the officials said. The plan could yet evolve into a larger invasion; thousands of additional troops have been deployed in northern Israel in recent days, leading to speculation about a broader and more prolonged operation.

The invasion plan was approved in a late night cabinet meeting shortly after the Israeli military declared a closed military zone in three villages at the northern tip of Israel that have been badly damaged through nearly a year of shelling and rocket fire from Lebanon.

Earlier in the day, a reporter for The New York Times saw at least two dozen military Humvees heading toward the same area carrying troops in full combat gear, including night vision goggles. Dozens of logistical trucks, some armored, were also heading north. Intense explosions could be heard near the border late Monday, according to two of the few residents who had not evacuated the area.

The invasion plan followed days of smaller and briefer cross-border reconnaissance missions in which Israeli commandos prepared for the larger incursion.

Israel’s official war aim is to make northern Israel safe enough for tens of thousands of displaced Israelis to return home after nearly a year of rocket fire from Lebanon. Hundreds of thousands of Lebanese civilians have also been displaced by Israeli fire and more than a thousand people, both civilians and combatants, have been killed by Israeli airstrikes.

Here is what else to know:

  • More American forces: President Biden is sending a “few thousand” more troops to the Middle East, the Pentagon said on Monday. Defense Department officials said the additional forces would bolster security for the 40,000 U.S. troops already in the region and help with the defense of Israel.

  • Inflaming Iran: Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, released an English-language video aimed at the Iranian public, saying, “The people of Iran should know — Israel stands with you.” He also reiterated his threats against Iran’s government, saying, “There is nowhere we will not go to protect our people and protect our country.”

  • Hezbollah’s future: In a televised address on Monday, Sheikh Naim Qassem, the deputy secretary general of Hezbollah, said that the group would name a leader to replace Hassan Nasrallah “at the closest opportunity.” Israel killed Mr. Nasrallah on Friday in a bombardment in a densely populated neighborhood near Beirut.

Ephrat Livni, Natan Odenheimer and Ronen Bergman contributed reporting.

Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III said he spoke with his Israeli counterpart, Yoav Gallant, on Monday, signaling U.S. support for Israel’s ground invasion into Lebanon. The two men agreed on the need to destroy Hezbollah “attack infrastructure” along the border, according to a Pentagon statement.

Austin said he emphasized the need for a diplomatic resolution “as soon as feasible,” but that the United States supports Israel’s right to defend itself and that the U.S. is positioned to defend Israel and U.S. troops in the region.

Explosions have been heard around Damascus, with air defenses engaging targets in the skies above the Syrian capital, according to SANA, Syria’s state news agency.


Shortly after the Israeli military announced that ground troops had entered southern Lebanon for “limited” raids, a military statement said that approximately 10 projectiles had crossed into Israel from Lebanon. It said that some of the projectiles were intercepted and others fell in open areas.

Hezbollah said in a statement that it had targeted Israeli troop movements across from Lebanese border towns. Rocket sirens were sounded in a number of northern Israeli border communities, including where the Israeli military has announced a “closed military zone.”

The Israeli military said in a statement early on Tuesday that its troops had “begun limited, localized and targeted raids against Hezbollah” targets in the border area of southern Lebanon. The military added that the targets were “located in villages close to the border and pose an immediate threat to Israeli communities in northern Israel” and that its Air Force and artillery troops were “supporting the ground forces with precise strikes on military targets.”

Video captured by Reuters shows a large explosion in a southern suburb of Beirut. The New York Times has determined that the blast occurred less than a mile from the airport, which is visible in the background of the video, and next to the Lebanese University’s Hadath Campus.

Signs of a looming Israeli ground invasion permeate the border.

Israeli troops in battle gear, equipped with night-vision goggles, patrolled a deserted border city in military Humvees on Monday. Convoys of army trucks sped along dark highways, while dozens of tanks, armored vehicles, and bulldozers waited in a staging area. Reservists reported for duty, and military police made sure the arriving soldiers were registered.

The signs that Israel was on the cusp of expanding the war into Lebanon were everywhere in Israel’s north, where caravans of buses and private cars transported soldiers to the border region with military trucks following behind.

In recent days, Israeli commando units have carried out raids into Lebanon, as part of preparations for a broader ground invasion.

Israel says its aim is to secure the northern border, allowing civilians to safely return to their homes, and on Monday, Israeli artillery shelling shook southern Lebanon, sending beige clouds of dust rising over mountain villages.

Despite the thunderous explosions, soldiers and the few remaining civilians in Kiryat Shmona, the northernmost city near the Lebanese border, stayed largely unfazed, perhaps inured to the sounds of war. The city is nearly abandoned, its streets dominated by soldiers, military vehicles, and security personnel.

In fading daylight Monday, a small group gathered at a cemetery for the funeral of 87-year-old Aliza Ohayun.

Midway through the ceremony, a siren wailed, and the mourners took cover between the graves. Then they hastily concluded the service.

“Despite the situation, we didn’t consider burying her elsewhere,” said Ms. Ohayun’s granddaughter, Hufit Lugasi, 43. “This has been her home since she arrived from Morocco as a teenager.”

Several miles south of Kiryat Shmona, in Kfar Blum, an Israeli village that has not been evacuated, Moran Grunter went out for a night jog, saying the exercise eases her mood in the tense atmosphere. Unlike many residents, Ms. Grunter, 44, opposes a ground invasion, she said. “They should operate from the skies,” she said, alluding to airstrikes and shelling. “There’s no need to endanger soldiers’ lives.”

Asaf Tzarfati, a 46-year-old infrastructure project manager from Kiryat Shmona, has been staying in Tel Aviv for a year with his wife and two children to avoid the rockets Hezbollah has been firing into northern Israel. Hezbollah launched the rockets in solidarity with Hamas, escalating cross-border attacks that have displaced tens of thousands on both sides.

Mr. Tzarfati said he believed that the heavy blows Israel has dealt to Hezbollah in recent days — including the assassination of the Hezbollah leader, Hassan Nasrallah — only a ground invasion of southern Lebanon could truly restore safety to northern Israel.

“Residents of the north won’t feel safe until the Israeli military takes over a security strip in southern Lebanon,” Mr. Tzarfati said.

The Lebanese ministry of health says that 95 people were killed and 172 wounded in Israeli strikes in the past 24 hours.

Moran Grunter, a resident of an Israeli village close to the Lebanese border, said in a phone interview that she could hear intense bombardments across the border — more than in recent days.

The U.S. is sending a ‘few thousand’ more troops to the Middle East, the Pentagon says.

President Biden is sending a “few thousand” more troops to the Middle East, the Pentagon said on Monday, as tensions rise amid Israel’s intensified attacks against Hezbollah militants in Lebanon.

Defense Department officials said the additional forces would bolster security for the 40,000 U.S. troops already in the region and help with the defense of Israel.

A Pentagon spokeswoman, Sabrina Singh, said the deployment would include multiple fighter squadrons. Other officials said they would include F-15, F-16 and F-22 fighter jets as well as A-10 warplanes, adding substantially to American air capability.

The Pentagon declined to say exactly how many more troops were being deployed. But one official put the number at between 2,000 and 3,000.

The 40,000 American troops already in the region are stationed on bases in Iraq, Syria and other countries. The U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln, in the Gulf of Oman, is on an extended deployment in the region, and a second aircraft carrier, the U.S.S. Harry S. Truman, left Norfolk, Va., a week ago for the Mediterranean as part of a regularly scheduled deployment.

Last week, the Pentagon announced it was deploying additional troops to the region but declined to give a number.

Israeli commando units have made brief incursions into Lebanon in recent days to prepare for a possible wider ground invasion, according to several Israeli officers and officials and a senior Western official. But American officials said on Monday that they believed that the invasion would be limited.

The Israeli and Western officials said the raids were focused on gathering intelligence about Hezbollah’s positions near the border, as well as identifying the Iranian-backed group’s tunnels and military infrastructure, in order to attack them from the air or the ground. The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive military matter. The Israeli military declined to comment.

Hezbollah began attacking northern Israel soon after Hamas, which is also backed by Iran, attacked Israel on Oct. 7. Israel and Hezbollah have been exchanging fire since then.

On Sunday, Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III warned that “should Iran, its partners or its proxies use this moment to target American personnel or interests in the region, the United States will take every necessary measure to defend our people,” according to a Pentagon statement.

I just saw another explosion in Dahiya, this time even louder. Thick black smoke is now rising about Beirut’s skyline.

Many of us here will be settling in for a sleepless night.

I am now beginning to see explosions and a flash of light, and hearing a loud blast, in Dahiya, the densely populated area just south of Beirut where the Israeli military has issued fresh evacuation warnings.

The Israeli military had called on Lebanese in and around three building complexes in Dahiya, just south of Beirut, to evacuate the areas immediately, saying they were in the area of Hezbollah targets.

Lebanon’s state-run news agency reported two hours of continuous shelling in parts of southern Lebanon — mainly around Wazzani, Marjayoun and Khiam. Residents of the southern border town of Rmeish said they had not yet seen Israeli troops inside Lebanon. “I can only see the glow of shells falling in places far from my town,” said Najib al-Amil, the town’s priest.

The U.N. peacekeeping troops along the Israeli-Lebanese border remain in position because “the intensity of fighting is preventing their movements and ability to undertake their mandated tasks,” said Stéphane Dujarric, a spokesman for the U.N. secretary general, António Guterres.

Israeli officials have told the U.S. that they are conducting “limited operations focused on Hezbollah infrastructure near the border” between Israel and Lebanon, Matthew Miller, the State Department spokesman, told reporters. “Israel has a right to defend itself against Hezbollah,” Miller said, adding that “we want to ultimately see a diplomatic resolution to this conflict, one that allows citizens on both sides of the border to return to their homes.”

Miller blamed Hezbollah for starting the current conflict by launching cross-border rocket attacks on Israel after Oct. 7. He said a U.S.-led proposal unveiled last week for a 21-day cease-fire between Israel and Hezbollah remained an option. The U.S. is also pursuing a long-term diplomatic resolution that would require Hezbollah to withdraw forces from the border in accordance with U.N. requirements that Hezbollah has flouted. “We should be clear that the burden of that diplomatic resolution falls not just on Israel, but on Hezbollah as well,” he said.

The Israeli military said on Monday that three areas in northern Israel have been declared “a closed military zone.” The towns that were closed, Metula, Misgav Am, and Kfar Giladi, have all been hollowed of residents in nearly a year of fighting with Hezbollah. The announcement comes as Israel appears to be preparing for a possible ground invasion.

Israeli reservists are gathering at assembly points in northern Israel ahead of a potential ground maneuver in Lebanon. Military police checkpoints along the northern roads are directing arriving soldiers to register, ensuring the detailed documentation of forces in the area.

In Kiryat Shmona, an Israeli border city, at least two dozen military Humvees were seen carrying troops in full combat gear, including night vision goggles. Dozens of logistical trucks, some armored, are also heading north, passing through the northern highways as the mobilization intensifies.

Jean-Noël Barrot, France’s minister for Europe and foreign affairs, announced an immediate grant of 10 million Euros to humanitarian organizations, in particular the Lebanese Red Cross, on Monday, the day after arriving in Beirut on a military aircraft carrying two mobile medical posts and over 12 tons of medical supplies.

In a televised news conference, Barrot said he had met representatives of the families of two French citizens who had died in the airstrikes, and that the French Embassy would help citizens who wished to leave the country. He also urged Israel and Hezbollah “to refrain from any ground incursions and to cease fire.”

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel will convene ministers from the country’s security cabinet this evening, his office said, as the chatter surrounding a potential wider Israeli ground incursion into Lebanon reaches a fever pitch.

President Biden just told reporters at the White House that he was aware of Israel’s plans to launch a limited operation into Lebanon. “I’m more aware than you might know, and I’m comfortable with them stopping,” Biden said. “We should have a cease-fire now.”

Lebanon’s prime minister, Najib Mikati, on Monday called for an immediate cease-fire and said that his country was committed to the 2006 United Nations resolution that ended Israel’s last war with Hezbollah, according to the country’s National News Agency. That agreement has never been fully implemented. Under it, Hezbollah was supposed to clear out of Lebanon south of the Litani River, leaving United Nations peacekeepers and the Lebanese military in control. Mikati said on Monday he was ready to deploy the Lebanese Army south of the Litani “to fulfill its duties in coordination with international peacekeeping forces in the region.”

Yoav Gallant, the Israeli defense minister, told mayors from Israeli towns along the border with Lebanon that “the next stage of the war against Hezbollah will soon commence.” In a statement released by his office, Gallant pledged that the next phase would “constitute a significant factor in changing the security situation,” allowing the tens of thousands of Israelis who have fled Hezbollah rocket fire over the past year to return to their homes.

Saudi Arabia pledges to send funding for Palestinians.

Saudi Arabia has pledged to send financial aid to the struggling Palestinian Authority, reversing a decision made during the Trump administration to slash funding to the governing body that administers some areas in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

The promise of a cash infusion won’t resolve the authority’s financial woes, but it reflects the improved relationship between Saudi Arabia and Palestinian leaders, which frayed during the Trump era. It is also a sign that the kingdom is strengthening its support for the establishment of a Palestinian state at a time when the Saudis appear to have shifted their tone on normalizing relations with Israel.

For months, the Biden administration and its allies have warned that the Palestinian Authority’s dire financial straits could foreshadow another escalation in the West Bank. Israeli forces have been stepping up raids targeting militants in which they ripped up roads and wrecked shops and homes in the territory.

The Saudi foreign ministry announced on Sunday night that it would send a monthly aid package to the country’s “brothers in Palestine” to alleviate the “humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip and its surrounding areas,” without specifying the amount or intended recipients. The commitment was made during a recent visit by the president of the Palestinian Authority, Mahmoud Abbas, to Saudi Arabia, according to one of his aides.

“Prince Mohammed affirmed to the president, Abu Mazen, the kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s support for the Palestinian people politically and materially,” said Mahmoud al-Habbash, a senior adviser to Mr. Abbas. Mr. al-Habbash was referring to the Saudi crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, and Mr. Abbas, using his nickname.

Saudi Arabia has agreed to deliver $60 million to the Palestinian Authority in six installments, with the first payment expected in the coming days, according to a senior Palestinian Authority official.

The funds will directly support the authority’s budget, said the senior official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive information.

Four other Palestinian officials and four diplomats, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to communicate with the news media, confirmed Saudi Arabia has committed to send tens of millions of dollars to the authority.

With an economic crisis engulfing the West Bank since Hamas-led attacks on Oct. 7, the Palestinian Authority has struggled to cobble together funds to pay its civil servants and security forces, who constitute much of the territory’s labor force.

Israel has frequently refused to transfer tax revenues it collects on behalf of the Palestinian Authority. International aid has also dwindled for the authority, which is viewed by its allies and much of the Palestinian public as both corrupt and ineffectual.

The economic hardship has been compounded by the Israeli authorities’ blocking of tens of thousands of Palestinian laborers from entering its territory since the Oct. 7 attacks. Those laborers had brought billions of dollars annually into the West Bank’s economy.

Experts on the Persian Gulf said that Saudi Arabia’s renewed financial support for the authority was an attempt to stave off its implosion, not an endorsement of its leadership. The deliberations over sending the aid preceded the recent escalation between Israel and Hezbollah by at least several weeks.

“For Saudi Arabia, a two-state solution is essential,” said Hussein Ibish, a senior resident scholar at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington. “They’re not saying the Palestinian Authority is a great institution, but they are saying it must not collapse in order to preserve the possibility of establishing a Palestinian state.”

At a meeting on the sidelines of the annual United Nations General Assembly on Thursday, Prince Faisal bin Farhan, the Saudi foreign minister, announced the establishment of an international coalition to push for the two-state solution.

“Implementing the two-state solution is the best solution to break the cycle of conflict and suffering and enforce a new reality in which the entire region, including Israel, enjoys security and coexistence,” Prince Faisal said.

This month, Prince Mohammed said Saudi Arabia would not establish diplomatic relations with Israel before the “establishment of a Palestinian state,” an apparent hardening of his position on an issue that could reshape the diplomatic map of the Middle East.

For decades, the leaders of Saudi Arabia, like those of most other Arab countries, refused to recognize Israel without the creation of a state for the Palestinians. But after 2020, when four Arab states established formal ties with Israel in agreements brokered by former President Donald J. Trump, Prince Mohammed became the first Saudi leader to talk openly about the possibility of Saudi Arabia’s doing the same.

The Biden administration worked to broker the agreement as part of a grand bargain among the United States, Israel and Saudi Arabia. But after Oct. 7, those talks slowly ground to a halt, as the war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza continued without an end in sight.

Ismaeel Naar contributed reporting from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

U.S. officials believe they have talked Israel out of a full Invasion of Lebanon.

American officials said on Monday that they believed they had persuaded Israel not to conduct a major ground invasion of southern Lebanon.

The understanding came after intense talks over the weekend. The United States saw some signs that Israel was preparing to move into Lebanon, and some American officials believed a major ground operation was imminent.

After the discussions, U.S. officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive intelligence and diplomatic negotiations, said they believed Israel was planning only smaller, targeted incursions into southern Lebanon. The raids by Israeli special operations forces would be designed to eliminate fighting positions from which Hezbollah has attacked towns in northern Israel.

But Israeli officials assured their American counterparts that they did not intend to follow up those incursions with a bigger operation by conventional forces or by occupying parts of southern Lebanon. U.S. officials said they believed the commandos would quickly pull back after the operations were finished.

Matthew Miller, the State Department spokesman, said Israeli officials told the United States that they were conducting “limited operations focused on Hezbollah infrastructure near the border” between Israel and Lebanon.

“Israel has a right to defend itself against Hezbollah,” Mr. Miller said, adding that “we want to ultimately see a diplomatic resolution to this conflict, one that allows citizens on both sides of the border to return to their homes.”

It is not clear if Israel has made a final decision, and it is possible that a full-scale invasion could still follow targeted raids, despite the White House’s concerns.

On Monday, after the raids became public, U.S. officials said the possibility of “mission creep” remained, and that Israel could decide it needed to support the raids with a larger force. But for now, American officials believe, Israel will not conduct a full-scale invasion.

U.S. officials have tried to prevent a wider regional conflict since the war in Gaza began last October after Hamas-led attacks in Israel.

Israel eventually cut back the intensity of its bombing campaign in Gaza, but months after the U.S. military had urged a shift to more targeted operations. The United States wanted the Israeli military to eschew major combat operations and said that operations in the city of Rafah needed to be more precise. The eventual Israeli operations in Rafah were extensive.

This month, some officials in the U.S. government have watched the Israeli operations against Hezbollah anxiously, fearing that the extensive attacks would provoke Iran to join the fight far more openly. But other officials believe that Israel’s actions have dramatically curbed Hezbollah’s military power. The risk of Iranian intervention remains, American officials said.

Still, to keep the wider conflict in check, American officials want to persuade Israel not to move large numbers of forces into Lebanon, and U.S. and French officials had been pushing for a cease-fire proposal. When Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel authorized the strike on Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of Hezbollah, the cease-fire plan was thrown into question.

At the State Department briefing, Mr. Miller said the proposal unveiled last week, which called for a 21-day cease-fire between Israel and Hezbollah, remained on the table. The United States is also pursuing a long-term diplomatic resolution which would require Hezbollah to withdraw forces from the border in accordance with United Nations requirements that Hezbollah has flouted.

“We should be clear that the burden of that diplomatic resolution falls not just on Israel, but on Hezbollah as well,” he said.

Despite hitting pause on the effort to broker a cease-fire, Americans have tried to convince Israeli officials that a ground invasion would be counterproductive.

American intelligence agencies stuck by their assessment throughout September that any sort of large-scale invasion of southern Lebanon would court disaster. While Israel’s strikes have diminished Hezbollah’s caches of weapons and hurt its ability to launch rocket attacks, the group’s forces maintain dug-in positions in the hilly and easily defended terrain of southern Lebanon.

The Hezbollah tunnel network largely remains intact, and American officials assessed that Hezbollah fighters would be able to move through it quickly to ambush advancing Israeli forces. Many of the tunnels are far bigger than the network Hamas built under Gaza, allowing Hezbollah to move large numbers of missiles and vehicles around southern Lebanon undetected.

People streaming through Beirut’s bustling Cola Junction stared in disbelief at a damaged apartment building that was struck by Israel overnight. It was the first known Israeli strike in the center of the Lebanese capital in nearly two decades. Mohamed al-Hoss, a resident of the predominantly Sunni Muslim neighborhood, said that even during the 34-day war between Hezbollah and Israel in 2006, the area had been spared. “We’re in shock — we’ve never experienced anything like this,” he said.

Israel’s attack in central Beirut was its first there in years.

The overnight strike in the Cola neighborhood in Beirut appeared to have been the first known Israeli strike in the city center since 2006. Israel has struck the densely populated Dahiya area to the south many times recently, with most of those strikes coming after a massive bombing attack on Friday that killed the Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah there.

Israel struck the Dahiya on Jan. 2 for the first time since the war in Gaza began last October, targeting a Hamas official. It struck one other time before September, killing the senior Hezbollah commander Fuad Shukr on July 30.

Along with Mr. Shukr, Israel killed two other members of Hezbollah’s highest military body, the Jihad Council, in the area: Ibrahim Aqeel and Ali Karaki, who was killed alongside Nasrallah.

The strike on Mr. Aqeel killed at least 45 people, according to Lebanese authorities, including three children.

‘There’s no safety anywhere’: An Israeli strike frays nerves in central Beirut.

Hours after a blast hit an apartment building in Cola, a neighborhood in western Beirut, Lebanese soldiers had cordoned off the area. Chunks of cinder blocks thrown from the building were scattered around.

“It was terrifying,” said Mohieddine Darwish, 52, who lives on the eighth floor of an adjacent apartment building. “It’s Beirut, not Dahiya,” Mr. Darwish added, referring to a dense urban area near Beirut where the militant group Hezbollah holds sway, one that Israel has repeatedly hit with airstrikes over the past week.

Cola is a largely Sunni Muslim neighborhood within the city limits. Lebanon’s health ministry said the blast had killed four people and injured four others.

The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a militant group based in Lebanon and Gaza, said that three of its members had been killed. On Monday afternoon, the Israeli military claimed responsibility for the blast, saying it had “struck and eliminated” the head of the militant group’s Lebanon branch and an associate. It was the first known Israeli strike in central Beirut since Israel and Hezbollah fought a war in 2006.

Mr. Darwish said he had been asleep with his wife when he woke up to the sound of an explosion and the crash of concrete hitting the sidewalk.

He immediately grabbed a bag of clothes and blankets he had packed days earlier, and he and his wife ran downstairs to their car. They set off for their second home in Lebanon’s northern mountains. The city, they deemed, was no longer safe.

Nearby, Ahmad Qanso, 60, gazed over at the destruction, leaning on his wooden cane. He said he was sleeping under a nearby bridge — one of many Lebanese who have spent nights in the open air in Beirut since Israeli bombardment escalated in recent days — when he woke up to what sounded like an explosion. “I was shocked,” he said.

Mr. Qanso and two of his neighbors arrived in Beirut on Saturday after fleeing their village of Chehabyeh, in southern Lebanon, which has been hit by Israeli airstrikes. “When we first arrived, we thought it was safe here,” he said. “But now, there’s no safety anywhere. There’s not even shelter.”

Hezbollah’s deputy commander rallies the group’s forces, but does not name a new leader.

Three days after Hezbollah’s leader, Hassan Nasrallah, was killed by Israeli bombs near Beirut, the group’s deputy leader said on Monday that it would name a new chief “at the closest opportunity,” without specifying when.

The televised statement by the deputy leader, Sheikh Naim Qassem, was the first public address by a senior Hezbollah figure since Mr. Nasrallah’s killing. It appeared aimed at reassuring the group’s members after a series of severe Israeli attacks killed and wounded many of its fighters and leaders over the last two weeks.

Speaking from an undisclosed location, Sheikh Qassem called on Hezbollah members to follow contingency plans put in place to ensure that alternate commanders were available if anything happened to the group’s leaders.

He denied reports that Israel’s attacks, which have pounded targets in Hezbollah strongholds across Lebanon over the past week and killed hundreds of people, had significantly damaged the group’s arsenal or reduced its fighting power.

Some Israeli leaders have spoken of the possibility of a ground invasion of southern Lebanon aimed at wiping out Hezbollah’s military infrastructure near the border. Sheikh Qassem said Hezbollah was ready to fight any ground incursion.

“We will confront any possibility, and we are ready if the Israelis decide to enter by land,” he said. “The forces of the resistance are ready for a ground engagement.”

Sheikh Qassem also denied Israeli claims that Mr. Nasrallah had been killed during a large meeting with many other senior officials, saying instead that those killed with him included Ali Karaki, a Hezbollah leader; Abbas Nilforoushan, a senior Iranian military official; Mr. Nasrallah’s head of security; and another close associate.

Israeli commandos have made brief raids into Lebanon in recent days, officials say.

Israeli commando units have made brief incursions across the border into Lebanon in recent days to prepare the ground for a possible wider invasion in the near future, according to seven Israeli officers and officials and a senior Western official.

The officials said the raids had focused on gathering intelligence about Hezbollah positions close to the border, as well as identifying Hezbollah tunnels and military infrastructure, in order to attack them from the air or the ground. The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive military matter. The Israeli military declined to comment.

Israel’s cabinet was expected to discuss on Monday evening whether and when to launch a major ground operation in southern Lebanon, which would be Israel’s first there in nearly two decades. Israel occupied southern Lebanon from 1982 to 2000 and briefly invaded again in 2006, during a monthlong war with Hezbollah.

Officials said that if a broader operation proceeds, Israel was expected to try to destroy Hezbollah military infrastructure near the border, likely in an intense series of cross-border raids, rather than to advance deep into Lebanon and occupy large areas of land. Southern Lebanon is a rugged area, filled with steep valleys in which defenders can easily ambush an invading army, a factor that may have shaped Israeli military planning.

The raids and plans suggest that Israel is seeking to capitalize on Hezbollah’s disarray, after it killed much of the group’s senior leadership in recent weeks, including its secretary general, Hassan Nasrallah. Though much of Hezbollah’s high command is dead, the group still controls much of the Lebanese side of the Israel-Lebanon border, where, Israel says, the group has built an extensive network of military installations, rocket launchers and tunnel networks that pose a threat to residents living in northern Israel.

The Israeli government’s declared goal is to make the border area safe enough for tens of thousands of Israelis displaced by Hezbollah rocket fire over the last year to return to their homes.

Hundreds of thousands of Lebanese civilians have also been displaced by Israeli fire on the other side of the border. Hezbollah and Israel first fought each other during Israel’s occupation of Lebanon in the 1980s, but the current conflict began last October after Hezbollah began firing into Israeli-controlled territory, leading to a low-intensity border war.

For nearly a year, the two sides have been gradually firing deeper into each other’s territory, but they avoided an all-out war until this month, when Israel targeted Hezbollah’s senior leaders and blew up hundreds of Hezbollah’s pagers and radios.

For months, Israeli special forces have also been briefly crossing the border on reconnaissance missions though those were not to prepare the ground for a land invasion, according to five of the officials.

Their approach changed in recent days as the incursions increased in intensity and ambition for a wider maneuver, three of the officials said.

Hezbollah said on Monday that its forces would confront Israeli troops if they mounted a full invasion. The group also denied that its fighting power or arsenal had been significantly damaged in recent weeks by Israel’s bombardments, which have killed hundreds of people, including civilians.

“We will confront any possibility, and we are ready if the Israelis decide to enter by land,” Sheikh Naim Qassem, Mr. Nasrallah’s deputy, said in a televised statement. “The forces of the resistance are ready for a ground engagement.”

Since Israel began escalating the conflict two weeks ago, Hezbollah and its benefactor, Iran, have failed to respond with the intensity that many analysts and officials had anticipated. They assumed that if Israel began assassinating Hezbollah’s senior leadership, the group would begin firing thousands of missiles toward central Israel, overwhelming Israel’s air defense systems and taking out key infrastructure targets, including the Israeli power grid.

Instead, Hezbollah has fired brief barrages of rockets, mostly toward northern Israel, forcing thousands of Israelis to take cover in their bomb shelters but failing to exact significant damage. And Iran has not directly intervened.

Still, American officials said on Monday that they had pressed Israel to avoid a full-scale invasion of Lebanon, amid fears that a more extensive attack would provoke Iran to join the fight far more openly in order to protect its proxy.

After discussions over the weekend with Israeli counterparts, the U.S. officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive intelligence and diplomatic negotiations, said they believed Israel was planning only smaller, targeted incursions into southern Lebanon.

Julian E. Barnes, Ben Hubbard and Gabby Sobelman contributed reporting.

A blast in central Beirut damages a building.

Emergency crews in Beirut were working early Monday in an area of the city where an apparent Israeli strike damaged a residential building, The Associated Press reported.

If Israel is confirmed to be behind the attack, it would be the first known Israeli strike within Beirut since Israel’s 2006 war with Hezbollah, a militia backed by Iran. Israel has been stepping up its attacks on Hezbollah in Lebanon over the past two weeks, killing its leader and striking targets nearly daily.

The A.P. released videos from the Lebanese capital on Monday that showed people and emergency workers gathering below a damaged multistory building in the largely Sunni Muslim neighborhood of Cola. There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military.

A militant group based in Lebanon and Gaza, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, said that three of its members had been killed in the blast in Cola. That claim by the group, which is mostly known for a string of airline hijackings and bombings decades ago, could not be independently verified.

The intensifying cadence of Israeli strikes has stretched deep into Lebanon. Israel has said that most have been directed at Hezbollah, whose leader, Hassan Nasrallah, was killed late Friday by Israeli bombs. But the military has also hit other groups, including a strike against Iran-backed Houthi forces in Yemen.

Euan Ward contributed reporting.

Facing a Big Test, Iran’s ‘Axis of Resistance’ Flails

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The idea was simple: When a big war with Israel broke out, all the members of the Iranian-backed network of militias in the Middle East known as the “axis of resistance” would join the fight in a coordinated push toward their shared goal of destroying the Jewish state.

Iran came up with the strategy and invested tremendous resources to build each group’s fighting abilities and connect them to one another.

But the axis’s response as Israel has pummeled Hezbollah in Lebanon in recent weeks — killing many of its commanders and assassinating its leader — has so far been feeble, suggesting that the axis is weaker and more fragmented than many in the region had expected and that Iran feared that widening the war could cause Israel to turn its firepower on Tehran.

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How Two Soul Mates, Separated by War, Found Each Other Again

Their love story was only a month old when the Russian Army smashed its way into their home city of Mariupol, in eastern Ukraine, two years ago and tore them apart.

Sofia Malina fled with her mother and grandfather to a cottage on the outskirts of the city and eventually managed to escape to Germany. Her soul mate, Polina Muzhychkova, hid with her parents in basements through weeks of bombardment and then fled with her mother to the Crimean Peninsula, a part of Ukraine annexed by Russia 10 years ago.

The two women — Ms. Malina was 19 at the time, Ms. Muzhychkova 17 — survived the terrifying violence of the Russian invasion, but ended up on opposite sides of the front line. It took two years, careful planning and huge leaps of faith for them to find a way to be together again.

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A 180-Year-Old Jewish Paper Is Roiled by Fabrications and a Secret: Who Owns It?

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For decades, members of Britain’s Jewish population have marked life’s milestones by taking out notices in The Jewish Chronicle, a weekly publication founded in 1841 that bills itself as the world’s oldest Jewish newspaper.

Births, weddings and deaths — or, as some like to call them, “hatches, matches and dispatches” — all are recorded faithfully each Friday in a community publication that Jonathan Freedland, who until recently wrote a column for The Chronicle, once described as the “beating heart of British Jewry.”

So when Mr. Freedland and several other well-known journalists announced this month that they would stop contributing to The Chronicle, it seemed less a business breakup than a family rupture. The trigger was a series of sensational articles about the war in Gaza that ran in the paper but were later debunked as fabricated.

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After U.S. Trip, Zelensky Returns to an Enduring War

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President Volodymyr Zelensky returned to Ukraine this weekend from a high-stakes diplomatic trip to the United States with limited new aid for his armed forces and mounting challenges on the battlefield.

While the Ukrainian leader was busy trying to rally support from the Biden administration and meeting with former President Donald J. Trump, Russian forces were pressing their grinding advance in Ukraine’s east, capturing more villages and closing in on a key Ukrainian stronghold.

They also continued their assault on Ukrainian cities, killing 10 in Sumy, in the northeast, in a strike on Saturday, while maintaining their attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure and energy facilities. Ukraine, for its part, struck several Russian ammunition depots in an attempt to disrupt Moscow’s military logistics.

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Dozens Feared Dead After Migrant Boat Sinks Off Spain

Spanish authorities are searching for dozens of migrants who are missing after their boat sank on Saturday off the Canary Islands, killing at least nine people. It is the latest deadly episode along the crossing from West Africa.

Here’s what you need to know:

  • What happened in this sinking?
  • How many West Africans are trying to cross and why?
  • Why is the route so dangerous?
  • What are countries doing in response?

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Embezzlement Trial of Le Pen and the National Rally Party Opens in France

The French far-right leader Marine Le Pen and over 20 other people went on trial in Paris on Monday on charges that they embezzled funds from the European Parliament between 2004 and 2016.

The trial, in a Paris criminal court, is scheduled to last two months and is an unwelcome distraction for Ms. Le Pen. She will have to be in court at a time when her National Rally party has acquired immense political sway in France following last summer’s parliamentary elections.

The accusations that the party illegally used several million euros in European Parliament funds for unrelated partisan expenses have been known for nearly a decade, but they have done little to hobble National Rally’s rise as a xenophobic, nationalist party.

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