The New York Times 2024-10-05 00:10:28


Live Updates: Israeli Strikes Rock Lebanon as Iran’s Leader Issues Warning

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Victoria Kim and Farnaz Fassihi

Here are the latest developments.

Iran’s supreme leader warned on Friday of further strikes against Israel, using a rare sermon in Tehran to express solidarity with Palestinians and Hezbollah, as Israel kept up punishing attacks against Tehran’s proxy forces in the Middle East and took aim at more of its commanders.

Israeli warplanes carried out an overnight strike in an area just south of Beirut that targeted Hashem Safieddine, a cousin and the presumed successor of Hassan Nasrallah, the assassinated Hezbollah leader, according to three Israeli officials. It remained unclear on Friday whether Mr. Safieddine had been killed in the attack, which set off huge explosions and left part of the densely populated area known as the Dahiya a ruined landscape of jagged concrete, twisted metal and smoldering debris.

The Israeli strikes, and Iran’s own attacks, have heightened fears of a full-blown war between the two countries.

As Iran’s foreign minister landed in Beirut for meetings, Mr. Nasrallah was honored by Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who led the Friday Prayer in Tehran as he does only in extraordinary circumstances. Switching to Arabic to address Palestinians and the people of Lebanon, Ayatollah Khamenei said that Iran shares an enemy with them — a reference to Israel.

He defended Iran’s launch this week of nearly 200 missiles at Israel as “completely legal and legitimate,” and warned that more strikes could come “in the future.”

Here is what else to know:

  • Hezbollah fire: Air-raid sirens sounded on Friday across much of northern Israel as Hezbollah continued to fire rockets at the region. Israel’s military said around 100 rockets had been launched as of early afternoon, but the authorities did not immediately report casualties or significant damage.

  • Expanding evacuations: Israel appeared to expand its military operations in Lebanon, issuing new evacuation warnings across the south and striking a border crossing with Syria. Around 235,000 people have fled from Lebanon into Syria over the past two weeks to escape Israeli bombardment, the U.N. migration agency said.

  • Other fronts: Israeli attacks in Gaza killed at least 99 people on Wednesday and Thursday, according to local health officials. In the occupied West Bank, an Israeli airstrike in Tulkarm killed at least 18 people.

  • Presumed successor: Mr. Safieddine, who was targeted in the Thursday night strikes, was one of Hezbollah’s earliest members and rose quickly in its ranks alongside Mr. Nasrallah.

  • Iranian oil: President Biden said that the United States is discussing a potential Israeli strike on Iran’s oil facilities. The ambiguous response when asked whether he would support such an attack caused oil prices to jump. Brent crude, the international benchmark, is on track for a weekly gain of about 10 percent, which would be the largest increase in two years.

Here are the Hezbollah leaders Israel has targeted.


Hezbollah, the Lebanese militia, has sustained blow after blow over the past few weeks, as Israeli strikes targeted and killed a number of the group’s longtime military and political leaders.

On Thursday night, Israeli warplanes carried out an airstrike south of Beirut targeting Hashem Safieddine, a cousin and the presumed successor to the assassinated Hezbollah leader, Hassan Nasrallah, according to several Israeli officials. By Friday afternoon, it was not yet clear whether Mr. Safieddine had been killed.

The strike set off huge explosions and left a ruined landscape of jagged concrete, twisted metal and smoldering debris in the Dahiya, a densely populated area where an Israeli strike on Sept. 28 killed Hezbollah’s longtime leader, Hassan Nasrallah.

Above is a look at who has been killed and targeted among Hezbollah’s leadership.


An Israeli strike targeting a West Bank Hamas leader killed civilians, including a family of 4, residents say.

An Israeli airstrike tore through a bustling cafe and adjacent homes in a Palestinian city in the West Bank on Thursday night, killing at least 18 people, according to health officials, and leaving a swath of destruction. Residents said a family of four was among the dead, and on Friday, desperate people were still searching for loved ones in the rubble.

The Israeli military said that the strike killed the head of Hamas in the city, Tulkarm, whom it accused of leading attacks on settlers in the West Bank and supplying weapons to other fighters. Both Hamas and another armed group, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, confirmed that their local leaders had been killed in the strike. But most of the dead were civilians, according to residents, among them Abu Zahra’s family, including 7-year-old Sham and 5-year-old Karam, who lived above the cafe.

“Our family and the entire camp is already devastated,” said Anas Kharyoush, a cousin of the children’s mother, 28-year-old Saja Abu Zahra, referring to the neighborhood’s origin as a refugee camp for Palestinians displaced from their homes by the wars surrounding Israel’s establishment. “They are not the first martyrs in our family, and this is not the first airstrike in our neighborhood, but it’s the most devastating.”

The explosion was so fierce that the remains of those killed had to be gathered in blankets and sheets and taken to a hospital for bereft family members to identify, according to residents and videos of the aftermath. And the search for the missing continued.

“Mothers are desperate to know about their children, and families are still looking for their loved ones,” said Diala Hadaydah, a paramedic who lives in the neighborhood, who rushed to the scene moments after the strike.

The Israeli military did not respond to questions about the number of civilians killed in Thursday’s strike.

The strike in the densely packed area came amid increasingly deadly Israeli raids on Palestinian towns and cities across the Israeli-occupied West Bank, in what the military labels counterterrorism operations.

Tulkarm, which has a history of armed resistance against the nearly six-decade Israeli occupation of the West Bank, has been the frequent target of such raids. For more than nine days, starting in late August, Israeli bulldozers ripped through roads, infrastructure and businesses there, as well as in nearby Jenin.

Palestinians say they are terrified in their own homes, fearful of onslaughts from the ground — from tanks, armored vehicles or more bulldozers — and from the sky. The Israeli military has said the raids are an effort to crack down on Palestinian armed groups and combat rising attacks against Israelis and settlements.

Israeli settlements are considered illegal under international law but have continued to expand, threatening Palestinian livelihoods in cities, towns and farming villages.

Violence in the West Bank has been increasing since the war began in Gaza last Oct. 7, but the toll has been far higher among Palestinians. As one gauge, a United Nations report in mid-September, counting conflict fatalities from January 2023 onward, put Israeli fatalities at 41 and Palestinian fatalities at 722.

In the strike on Tulkarm on Thursday, witnesses said that an Israeli warplane fired at least one missile at the cafe while it was occupied by civilians. The use of a warplane there was unusual. Though Israel has increasingly been conducting once-rare airstrikes in the West Bank since the Oct. 7 Hamas-led attack on Israel, they have usually been carried out by armed drones.

Ms. Hadaydah, the paramedic, said the sound of the explosion was unlike anything she had ever heard before. She rushed to the scene and saw the scattered remains of body parts, burned beyond recognition. Ms. Hadaydah said only five bodies were intact.

“I saw teeth, I saw skin, I saw bodies hanging from electricity cables,” Ms. Hadaydah said. “It looked just like Gaza”

At least four hospitals across southern Lebanon are now out of service as a result of Israel’s bombardment, according to Lebanon’s state-run news agency. Closer to the capital, the Saint Therese Hospital near Dahiya, south of Beirut, has also suspended services, saying that Israeli strikes inflicted “huge damage” on the facility.

Nasruddin Amer, a Houthi government spokesman, said on X that Yemen’s cities of Sanaa and Hodeidah are under attack. A TV channel associated with the Houthis said the strikes had taken place in Sanaa and Hodeidah, a port city that has been struck by Israel in the past. Israel’s military did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The Israeli military said two soldiers were killed yesterday in combat in northern Israel. It named the soldiers as Sgt. Daniel Aviv Haim Sofer, 19, from Ashkelon, and Cpl. Tal Dror, 19, from Jerusalem. The military did not provide further details on the circumstances of their deaths, but said another soldier and a non-commissioned officer were severely wounded in the same incident.

The United Nations said that Israeli forces over the past four days have struck at least six school buildings and one orphanage in Gaza that were serving as shelters for internally displaced people. It added that since the war began last October, more than 85 perent of the school buildings in Gaza have either been directly hit or damaged in fighting.

Israeli news outlets are reporting that crews are battling a forest fire near Kibbutz Tzivon, a town in the Upper Galilee, following rocket fire from Lebanon. There appeared to be no risk to nearby buildings, but it has become very common for rocket fire to cause brush and forest fires in northern Israel, risking damage to communities there even when the rockets fail to make a direct hit.

In a rare move, Iran’s supreme leader leads Friday Prayer.

Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, led Friday Prayer for the first time in years, delivering a sermon during a memorial service in Tehran for Hezbollah’s leader that railed against Israel and warned of further retaliation for its attacks on Iran’s proxy forces.

The leader of Hezbollah, Hassan Nasrallah, was one of Ayatollah Khamenei’s closest allies and friends. He was killed in an Israeli attack last week. Many people had waited for hours inside the venue ahead of Ayatollah Khamenei’s address, carrying Palestinian flags along with the yellow flags of Hezbollah and posters of Mr. Nasrallah.

Ayatollah Khamenei switched to speaking in Arabic to address Palestinians and the people of Lebanon, which has been battered by Israeli strikes targeting Hezbollah, and said that Iran shared an enemy with them, referring to Israel. He also defended Tuesday’s Iranian missile attack against Israel as “completely legal and legitimate.”

“What our armed forces did was the least punishment they could do” against Israel, he said, adding that “what is logical and rational will be done at the right time and will be done again in the future if necessary.”

On Tuesday, Iran fired nearly 200 missiles at Israel in retaliation for Mr. Nasrallah’s death, as well as for the recent killings of Hamas’s political leader, Ismail Haniyeh, and an Iranian commander, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps said.

In a series of attacks, Israel has been diminishing the military abilities of and dismantling the leadership of Hezbollah, a militia group backed by Iran and based in Lebanon. On Thursday night around midnight, Israel launched an intense barrage of airstrikes in a neighborhood south of Beirut in an effort to target Hashem Safieddine, Mr. Nasrallah’s presumed successor, according to three Israeli officials.

It is rare for Ayatollah Khamenei to lead Friday Prayer and deliver the sermon, typically doing so under extraordinary circumstances related to Iran’s national security. The last time was in 2020 after the United States killed Iran’s top general, Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani, in Iraq. Iran retaliated by firing ballistic missiles at an American base in Iraq.

Ayatollah Khamenei’s appearance in person, despite security concerns, signaled the significance of the moment as anxiety mounts that Israel and Iran appear prepared to risk direct conflict.

Large crowds of men and women waited in lines on Friday that began forming outside the compound as early as 6 a.m., several hours before the event started, videos published by Iranian news media showed.

Ayatollah Khamenei said earlier in the week in televised comments that he was in mourning for Mr. Nasrallah, but that the grief would fuel Iran’s resolve to fight Israel.

Plans for an official funeral for Mr. Nasrallah have not been announced. It is not clear whether it is feasible for Hezbollah and what remains of its leadership to gather publicly, given Israel’s attacks.

Oil prices are extending their gains today, propelled by President Biden’s offhand remarks yesterday about Israel’s potential retaliation against Iran. Brent crude, the international benchmark, is on track for a weekly gain of about 10 percent, which would be the largest increase in two years. At nearly $79 per barrel, oil prices are still lower than they were for much of the year, but the recent reversal is big enough that, if sustained, it could feed through to gasoline prices and other costs felt by consumers.

The World Health Organization’s chief says an initial flight of medical supplies, enough to treat tens of thousands of people, has arrived in Beirut this morning. Two more flights will arrive later today with additional supplies, according to the agency’s director general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

Israel’s bombardment of Lebanon has driven around 235,000 people to flee into Syria over the past two weeks, the U.N. migration agency said, citing official Lebanese figures. Roughly two-thirds of those leaving are Syrian refugees who had sought shelter in Lebanon from civil war and insecurity in their own country, Mathieu Luciano, the agency’s spokesman in Beirut, told reporters.

Israel expands evacuation warnings in southern Lebanon after airstrikes hit near Beirut.

Israel appeared to expand its military operations in Lebanon on Friday, issuing new evacuation warnings across the south and bombing a border crossing with Syria, hours after a series of airstrikes shook the outskirts of the Lebanese capital, Beirut.

One of the strikes targeted a meeting of Hezbollah’s senior leadership at around midnight on Thursday. The meeting included Hashem Safieddine, the presumed successor of Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah, whom Israel assassinated last week. It was not immediately clear if Mr. Safieddine had been killed.

Israel said on Friday that a separate airstrike the previous day had killed Mohammad Rashid Sakafi, who it identified as a commander responsible for Hezbollah’s telecommunications division. Hezbollah, the Lebanese militia and political party backed by Iran, did not immediately comment on the claim.

As Israeli warplanes pummeled the Beirut area, soldiers were waging a ground invasion in southern Lebanon targeting what military officials said were Hezbollah sites in the rugged border area.

New evacuation orders issued on Friday brought to 87 the total number of Lebanese communities whose residents Israel has told to leave. Many are to the north of a swath of southern Lebanon that was designated a buffer zone by a 2006 U.N. Security Council resolution after the last Israel-Hezbollah war.

Israeli fighter jets also struck near of Lebanon’s Masnaa border crossing with Syria, cutting off a road used by hundreds of thousands of people fleeing Lebanon, Bachir Khodr, the governor of the Baalbek-Hermel region, said on Friday.

The Israeli military said the area — which lies on the highway linking Beirut and Damascus near the geographic center of the country — also contained a two-mile-long tunnel that was the main route used by Hezbollah to bring weapons into Lebanon from Syria, another Iranian ally.

The Israeli airstrike left a crater in the road but people were still crossing into Syria on foot, Rula Amin, a spokeswoman for the U.N. refugee agency, told reporters by video link from Beirut on Friday. “It’s a testament to the fear and panic that is driving people to cross into Syria,” she said.

In Israel on Friday, air-raid sirens sounded across much of the north as Hezbollah continued to fire rockets at the region. Residents reported hearing loud explosions in the sky — possibly from air defenses intercepting rockets. Israel’s military said around 100 rockets had been launched as of early afternoon, but the authorities did not immediately report casualties or significant damage.

Euan Ward contributed reporting from Beirut, Lebanon, and Nick Cumming-Bruce from Geneva.

Israel’s military just said that it had killed a Hezbollah commander, Mohammad Rashid Sakafi, yesterday in a strike in the Beirut area. Hezbollah did not immediately comment. Sakafi had been in charge of Hezbollah’s telecommunications division, according to the Israeli military.

An Israeli strike this morning near Lebanon’s Masnaa border crossing with Syria cut off a road used by hundreds of thousands of people to flee the escalating conflict, according to Bachir Khodr, the governor of the Baalbek-Hermel region. The Israeli military did not immediately comment. It claimed on Thursday that the Masnaa crossing was the main route used by Hezbollah to transport weapons into Lebanon.

The Israeli airstrike left a crater in the road but people were still crossing on foot, Rula Amin, a spokeswoman for the U.N. refugee agency, told reporters by video link from Beirut. “It’s a testament to the fear and panic that is driving people to cross into Syria,” she said.

Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, is leading the Friday Prayer in Tehran right now and is expected to honor the slain leader of Hezbollah, Hassan Nasrallah, who was one of his closest allies and who was killed in an Israeli airstrike last week. Khamenei only leads the Friday Prayer under extraordinary circumstances. Participants have been waiting behind the venue’s closed doors for hours, many carrying Hezbollah flags and posters of Nasrallah.

Khamenei switched to speaking in Arabic to address Palestinians and the people of Lebanon, saying that Iran shares an enemy with them, referring to Israel. He also defended Tuesday’s Iranian missile attack against Israel as “completely legal and legitimate” — and warned that more strikes could come in the future.

Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, has arrived in Beirut, according to Lebanon’s state-run news agency. Iranian state news media quoted an Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman, Esmaeil Baghaei, as saying that Araghchi will meet with “high-level officials” and is accompanied by Iranian lawmakers and the head of the Iranian Red Crescent.

The Lebanese Red Cross put out an “urgent” call this morning for blood donations, the second such request this week. On Thursday, at least 37 people were killed and 151 injured in Israeli attacks across Lebanon, according to Lebanon’s Ministry of Public Health.

Despite Iran’s bluster, anxiety is spreading among its people over possible war with Israel.

As Iran awaits possible retaliation strikes by Israel, its senior officials threatened to hit back with force and the armed forces were placed on highest alert. But in interviews and on social media and virtual town hall discussions, many Iranians said anxiety about an unpredictable war with Israel was spreading.

In telephone interviews with more than a dozen Iranians in different cities, men and women across political divides said they did not want or support a war with Israel or the United States. They said that their lives were already a struggle because of a terrible economy, American sanctions, corruption and oppression. War could exacerbate these hardships and plunge the country into more chaos.

“Nobody I know has prepared for a possible war,” Mahdieh, 41, an engineer in Tehran, said in a phone interview. “We are jarred. Let us have our normal life. We are not willing or want to enter a war era.” She asked that her last name not be published out of fear of retribution. She said she and her husband had prepared an emergency bag with their documents in case they needed to leave Tehran.

A message shared widely on social media by many Iranians read, “NO WAR,” and “Which bunkers will you use to shield the people? How will you repair damaged infrastructure? There is no good in war, do not lay ruin to Iran.”

On Monday Iran launched 180 ballistic missiles into Israel in retaliation for Israel’s killing of its top regional ally, the Hezbollah leader, Hassan Nasrallah, that of a senior Iranian general in Beirut and that of the political leader of Hamas in Tehran. Israel has said it plans to respond by attacking Iran; its potential targets include military bases for the Revolutionary Guards Corps and oil refineries.

President Masoud Pezeshkian of Iran traveled to Qatar on Wednesday to attend a conference of the Organization of Islamic Countries, where he said that Iran did not seek war, saying “there are no winners in war, we know this.” And then he warned, “Iran will respond stronger if Israel makes the slightest mistake.”

Iran’s mission to the United Nations said in a statement that Tehran and Washington had exchanged messages through their official intermediary in Tehran in the aftermath of the attack on Israel. The statement said that Iran considered any country that assisted Israel in an attack on Iran “an accomplice and a legitimate target.”

According to two Iranian officials, who are familiar with the war planning and were not authorized to speak publicly, Iran had asked Russia for cooperation with satellite intelligence ahead of an Israeli strike.

But despite the official saber rattling, even some supporters of the government who had cheered the attacks on Israel were now confronting the realities of an all-out war that could take out infrastructure and harm the economy. Facing that possibility, some said they hoped Israel’s response would be limited and any tit-for-tat strikes would end quickly.

“We had to slap it [Israel] in the face, otherwise it would keep moving forward,” Hamidreza Jalaeipour, a prominent sociologist close to the reformist faction, said in a discussion on the application Clubhouse. “If there is a war, it will be imposed on us.”

Mr. Jalaeipour said he predicted that in the event of war the majority of Iranians would rally behind the flag to defend their country forcefully and put divisions aside.

But discontent against the government runs deep, and in waves of protests, notably in the women-led uprising in 2022, demonstrators called for the toppling of the ruling clerics. The loyalty and ideological fervor of the early years of the revolution — when even teenagers volunteered for the front lines of the eight-year war the country was then fighting with Iraq — has given way to despair and frustration with the status quo.

Some opponents of the government said they were angry that Iran had struck Israel in the first place, placing the lives and safety of its own citizens at risk for a cause outside its own borders. In anti-government protests in previous years, people have chanted, “No to Gaza, no to Lebanon, my life for Iran.”

And now that Israeli attacks seemed likely and imminent, the government had not announced any emergency provisions to prepare the population for war.

“Most of us are not happy about the interference of the Islamic Republic in the region and its so-called proxies. People do not want their national resources to be spent abroad,” said Mahan, a 50-year-old doctor in the northern city of Rasht. “The most pressing feeling these days, both for myself and the majority of friends and people I know, is the fear and worry of war.”

Israel says it rescued a Yazidi woman in Gaza taken captive by ISIS as a child.

The Israeli military said on Thursday that it had rescued a 21-year-old Yazidi woman who had been held in captivity in the Gaza Strip after being captured by ISIS in Iraq as a child more than a decade ago, describing the operation as a “complex operation” involving the United States, Jordan and others.

The woman, Fawzia Amin Sido, appeared to be “more or less” in fine physical shape but was “not in a good mental situation,” Brig. Gen. Elad Goren, who leads the Israeli military’s humanitarian-civilian effort in the Gaza Strip, said in a briefing with reporters on Thursday.

He said that she had endured significant trauma over a long period, including rape and abuse. She received food and basic treatment in Israel, he said, and U.S. officials then escorted her to Jordan by car, from which she was returned to her family in Iraq. An Israeli diplomat, David Saranga, posted a video on social media showing Ms. Sido’s return, and said her captor was “a Palestinian Hamas-ISIS member.” The New York Times has not verified the video.

Ms. Sido and her family could not be contacted for comment.

General Goren said that the Israeli military had learned about her situation based on intelligence, and that the Israeli authorities engaged the United States for more information. Israel and the United States then began planning the operation, which added the cooperation of Jordan, and other unnamed international partners, he said.

Ms. Sido was sold by an ISIS operative more than 10 years ago to a member of Hamas who took her to the Gaza Strip, possibly through the Rafah crossing at the Egyptian border, General Goren said. That timing suggests she was initially captured when ISIS overran northern Iraq in 2014 and carried out what the United Nations has deemed a genocide against the Yazidi, an ethno-religious minority.

Her captor in Gaza was killed, General Goren said, most likely by an Israeli airstrike, and Ms. Sido fled and hid. He did not specify when that occurred, but said that it was at that point that the Israeli authorities learned of her existence, confirmed it with Americans and planned the rescue operation. She was taken out of Gaza through the Kerem Shalom crossing, another entry point at Gaza’s southern border.

The Yazidis were targeted by the Islamic State, or ISIS, in August 2014, when ISIS captured about one-third of northern Iraq and large areas of territory in neighboring Syria. Up to 10,000 Yazidis were killed; about 400,000 were displaced from their homes in Iraq’s remote, mountainous Sinjar district; and more than 6,000 were enslaved, most of them women and children, according to Yazda, a nonprofit group created in the wake of the onslaught to aid Yazidis.

Many of the enslaved Yazidis were sold in slave markets in Syrian cities, according to the Norwegian Refugee Council, a humanitarian agency.

In 2015, Sinjar was captured from ISIS by Kurdish forces and Yazidi fighters with the backing of American air power.

Rawan Sheikh Ahmad contributed reporting.

Who is Hashem Safieddine, the latest Hezbollah official targeted by Israel?

Israeli warplanes launched an intense barrage of airstrikes around midnight on Thursday in an attempt to target Hashem Safieddine, a cousin and the presumed successor of the assassinated Hezbollah leader, Hassan Nasrallah, according to three Israeli officials.

The bombardment was one of the heaviest in the area since Israel killed Mr. Nasrallah, but it was not clear if Mr. Safieddine, who was presumed to be at a meeting of senior Hezbollah officials, was killed in the airstrikes, said the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive matters.

The attempted assassination was the latest move by Israel in its quest to steadily decapitate much of Hezbollah’s leadership. It followed Israel’s invasion of southern Lebanon earlier this week.

Mr. Safieddine, born in the early 1960s in southern Lebanon, was one of Hezbollah’s earliest members. He joined after the Shiite Muslim group was formed in the 1980s, with Iranian guidance, during Lebanon’s long civil war. He rose quickly up its ranks alongside Mr. Nasrallah, playing many roles and serving as a political, spiritual and cultural leader, as well as leading the group’s military activities at one point.

As Mr. Nasrallah did, Mr. Safeiddine usually appeared in a black turban, marking him as a revered Shiite cleric who could trace his ancestry back to the Prophet Muhammad.

Biographical information reported in various outlets across the Middle East and Turkey portrays a rapid rise through Hezbhollah’s ranks. In 1995, he was promoted to Hezbollah’s highest council, its governing Consultative Assembly, and was soon after appointed as head of the group’s Jihadi Council, which controls Hezbollah’s military activities. Just three years later, in 1998, Mr. Safieddine, was elected to lead the party’s Executive Council, a position that was also twice held by Mr. Nasrallah, including before his appointment as Hezbollah’s secretary-general in 1992, the report said.

Like Mr. Nasrallah, he studied in Iran. Mr. Safieddine formed strong ties with Tehran during his religious studies in the Iranian city of Qom before returning to Lebanon to work for Hezbollah.

Those ties are also deeply personal. He was close friends of Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani, an Iranian who commanded the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps’ Quds Force until the United States killed him in an airstrike in Baghdad in 2020.

Later that year, Mr. Safieddine’s son Reza Hashem Safieddine married the Iranian general’s daughter, Zeinab Suleimani, in a much-publicized wedding. The marriage was seen by some analysts and critics as emblematic of Iran’s entrenchment in Hezbollah. The U.S. Treasury Department has described Mr. Safieddine’s brother, Abdallah Safieddine, as Hezbollah’s representative to Iran.

Mr. Safieddine was designated a terrorist by the United States and Saudi Arabia in May 2017 for his leadership role in Hezbollah. At the time, the State Department called him “a senior leader” in Hezbollah’s Executive Council, which oversees the group’s “political, organizational, social, and educational activities.” It said that Mr. Safieddine posed “a serious risk of committing acts of terrorism that threaten the national security and foreign policy of the United States.”

The United States designated Hezbollah a terrorist organization in 1997 and holds the group responsible for multiple attacks that killed hundreds of Americans, including the suicide truck bombings of the U.S. Embassy and U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut in 1983, the U.S. Embassy annex in Beirut in 1984 and the 1985 hijacking of TWA flight 847.

Farnaz Fassihi contributed reporting.

Israeli planes target Nasrallah’s likely successor with huge strikes near Beirut.

Israel bombed a meeting of Hezbollah’s senior leadership around midnight on Thursday, a gathering that included Hashem Safieddine, the presumed successor of Hassan Nasrallah, the group’s longtime chief who was assassinated in an airstrike in Lebanon last week, according to three Israeli officials.

The three officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence matters, said Israel had struck an underground bunker belonging to Hezbollah near Beirut, the Lebanese capital.

The strike was a sign that Israel had not let up on its campaign to eliminate the leadership of the Iranian-backed group, nearly a week after Mr. Nasrallah was killed.

Mr. Safieddine, Mr. Nasrallah’s cousin, is in his 50s and has long been a major player in Hezbollah and has been considered a contender to become the group’s new secretary general. Israeli officials previously told The New York Times that Mr. Safieddine was one of the few senior Hezbollah leaders not present at the site of Israel’s heavy bombardment last Friday near Beirut that killed Mr. Nasrallah.

It was not immediately clear if Mr. Safieddine was present in the bunker struck overnight Friday.

The Israeli military did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the strike, but had issued an evacuation order for the Burj al-Barajneh neighborhood in southern Beirut late on Thursday night. Shortly afterward, around midnight, a series of huge explosions rocked the Dahiya, the densely populated neighborhoods just south of Beirut where Mr. Nasrallah was killed and Hezbollah holds sway.

The shock waves sounded across the Lebanese capital, shaking buildings; they were felt at least 15 miles away. It was one of the heaviest bombardments in the area since the war began last October, according to Lebanon’s state-run news agency.

Who is Hashem Safieddine?

Born in the early 1960s in southern Lebanon, Mr. Safieddine was one of Hezbollah’s earliest members after the Shiite Muslim group was formed in the 1980s, with Iranian guidance, during Lebanon’s long civil war.

He rose quickly up its ranks alongside Mr. Nasrallah, playing many roles and serving as a political, spiritual and cultural leader, as well as leading the group’s military activities.

Mr. Safieddine has strong ties with Tehran, formed during his religious studies in the Iranian city of Qom. Like Mr. Nasrallah, he studied in Iran before returning to Lebanon to work for Hezbollah.

A cleric, Mr. Safieddine was designated a terrorist by the United States and Saudi Arabia in May 2017 for his leadership role in Hezbollah. At the time, the State Department called him “a senior leader” in Hezbollah’s executive council, which oversees the group’s political, organizational, social and educational activities.

Which other Hezbollah leaders has Israel targeted?

The strike targeting Mr. Safieddine was the latest in a series of successful Israeli attacks in Lebanon seeking to kill Hezbollah’s leaders.

On Thursday, an Israeli strike targeted the Hezbollah commander Rashid Shafti, the group’s official in charge of telecommunications and computer division in Beirut, according to two Israeli officials. Mr. Shafti had lost fingers in the wave of electronic explosion attacks Israel carried out this month, they added.

The Israel Defense Forces said in a statement on Thursday that it had also killed Mahmoud Yusef Anisi, a Hezbollah official it said had been involved in the group’s precision-guided missile manufacturing chain in Lebanon.

In the strike that killed Mr. Nasrallah last week, several of the group’s leaders were also slain, including Ali Karaki, Hezbollah’s top commander in southern Lebanon.

Ibrahim Aqeel, who oversaw Hezbollah’s military operations and founded the group’s elite commando unit, was killed on Sept. 20.

Euan Ward contributed to reporting.

An Israeli airstrike kills at least 18 people in the West Bank.

An airstrike on Thursday in Tulkarm, a city in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, killed at least 18 people, according to the Palestinian Health Authority. The Israeli military said the strike had been aimed at the local head of Hamas and his associates.

The use of a warplane there was highly unusual. Israel has more commonly employed airborne drones in attacks on the West Bank since Oct. 7 — in parallel to its war with Hamas in Gaza. The intensity of the airstrike was reflected in the reported death toll, which was steep for a single Israeli military operation in the West Bank.

The Israeli military said in a statement early Thursday that it had killed the head of Hamas in Tulkarm, Zahi Yaser Abd al-Razeq Oufi, “alongside additional terrorists.” It said he had planned and led multiple “significant” shooting attacks and car bombings on Israeli civilians in the West Bank and had supplied weapons to other operatives who also carried out attacks on Israelis.

The Israeli airstrike was aimed at a popular cafe in Tulkarm, according to Wafa news agency, killing a family in an adjacent house and children and older people in the neighborhood.

Tulkarm has been the focus of recent Israeli military raids in the West Bank, which have destroyed the city’s infrastructure and businesses.

Suleiman Zuhairi, a former Palestinian deputy minister who lives on the outskirts of Tulkarm, said Israel had not carried out such a bombardment in the West Bank for years, if not decades.

“The blast was terrifying,” he said. “My house trembled from the shock wave,” he continued, though it was a distance from the reported blast site.

Mr. Zuhairi said that with Israel’s assault on Lebanon drawing international attention, and its continuing war in Gaza doing so to a lesser extent, Israel was operating with a free hand to escalate its campaign in the West Bank.

Aaron Boxerman reported from Jerusalem, and Ephrat Livni from New York.

Israel’s bombardment of the Lebanese capital and its surrounding areas has now become a nightly occurrence. The attack tonight, however, felt even more destructive. For many, living in the city is becoming increasingly difficult.

Oil prices jump after Biden says the U.S. is ‘discussing’ a potential Israeli attack on Iran’s facilities.

Oil prices jumped on Thursday, after President Biden, when asked if he would support an Israeli strike on Iran’s oil facilities, said: “We’re discussing that. I think that would be a little … anyway.”

The market moves reflected continued nervousness about a potential Israeli military retaliation against Iran, which launched a barrage of missiles across Israel on Tuesday, doing little damage but increasing fears of an all-out war in the region.

Oil prices rose more than 4 percent on Thursday, with Brent crude, the global benchmark, climbing above $77 a barrel for the first time in a month after Mr. Biden’s remarks. Before the missile attack, Brent was trading at just above $71 a barrel.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel said after Iran’s attack on Tuesday that Tehran had “made a big mistake — and it will pay for it.”

When asked if he would allow Israel to retaliate against Iran, which said it had launched the missiles in retaliation for the assassinations of leaders of Hamas and Hezbollah, its proxies, Mr. Biden said: “First of all, we don’t ‘allow’ Israel. We advise Israel. And there is nothing going to happen today.”

Iran is a major oil producer, pumping about two million barrels a day, or about 2 percent of the world’s supply. Its production and sales are hampered by international sanctions, and most of its exports are bought by China.

The intensifying fighting between Israel and Iran and Iranian-backed groups, especially Hezbollah in Lebanon, has pushed up oil prices this week. The main concern is that the escalating conflict could prompt Tehran to try to restrict the flow of oil from key exporters like Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

Prices haven’t climbed back to their peaks this year, however, because those worries have been largely outweighed by factors like weak energy demand in China and increased oil production in the United States and elsewhere.

An agreement reached in June by Saudi Arabia and seven other oil producers to begin unwinding some production cuts also continues to weigh on prices. While these increases were recently postponed, the anticipation of increased supplies coming onto the market has offset some of the worry about potential outages stemming from fighting between Iran and Israel.

Until recently, oil prices had been steadily drifting lower, down from about $90 a barrel six months ago.

‘Mom, I Want to Live’: A Young Girl Battles War and Cancer

Sonya Liakh was 2 years old when she was diagnosed with a rare form of eye cancer.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine interrupted her chemotherapy.

The lapse in treatment allowed the cancer to spread. Soon new tumors emerged. Sonya lost both her eyes.

Ukrainian children with long-term illnesses and severe disabilities are among the war’s most overlooked victims.

‘Mom, I Want to Live’: A Young Girl Battles War and Cancer

Lynsey Addario

Lynsey Addario spent several weeks with Sonya and her family, documenting her strong-willed struggle against a relentless disease.


Splayed out on a pink bedspread, wearing a pink tank top and surrounded by stuffed pink unicorns, 6-year-old Sonya Liakh unscrewed the port to the catheter in her chest. She took a pre-filled syringe of morphine from the tray held by the nurse beside her, deftly inserted the syringe into her port, and pushed the contents into her jugular vein.

Her medication was one of the few things Sonya could still control. Russia’s invasion had uprooted her life, as it had so many lives in Ukraine. It had killed her father at the front line and dealt a debilitating blow to her health, delaying her chemotherapy and allowing a rare form of cancer to rob her of her vision and ravage her body.

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A More Working-Class British Cabinet, Still Seen as Out of Touch

Sign up for the Tilt newsletter, for Times subscribers only.  Nate Cohn, The Times’s chief political analyst, makes sense of the latest political data.

Hot water was a luxury in the home where Angela Rayner, Britain’s deputy prime minister, was raised. Wes Streeting, the health secretary, was born to a single mother who pawned her jewelry to make ends meet. Racist skinheads shouted abuse at the young David Lammy, a Black Briton who is now foreign secretary, near his home in a deprived part of north London.

Britain’s current cabinet, the country’s 22 senior lawmakers including the prime minister, Keir Starmer, is one of the most working class in the nation’s history. Only one attended a private school, and several spent their early lives in poverty. Mr. Starmer, whose father worked in a factory, has recounted when their phone was cut off because his parents couldn’t pay the bills.

Yet, while the cabinet may be more like many of the people it governs, Britons don’t seem to have noticed.

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After Successes, Israel’s Military Is in a ‘Long Game’ With No Clear Outcome

When thousands of Hamas-led gunmen breached the Gaza border last Oct. 7 and overran Israeli communities, army bases and a music festival, victims of the surprise assault sent desperate messages to loved ones from their hiding places and safe rooms.

“Where is the army?” they asked as they waited long hours to be rescued. For the many hundreds of those killed, the army came too late, if at all.

A year after perhaps the worst military and intelligence debacle in Israel’s history, the military is rehabilitating its image as a formidable regional power. It has penetrated the most secret and secure bastions of its archenemies with intelligence-based precision strikes, eliminated key leaders, pounded away at their assets, and largely thwarted their efforts to mount a response.

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At Least 70 People Dead in Gang Attack in Haiti

At least 20 people were killed in a gang attack in central Haiti on Thursday that sent hundreds of people running for their lives, posing another challenge for the international security force that has been deployed in Haiti since June.

The attack took place at about 3 a.m. in Pont-Sondé, roughly 60 miles north of Port-au-Prince, the capital. The town is in the Artibonite department, a key agricultural region that has seen a surge in gang violence.

While the gangs that the international security force has been sent to confront are mostly concentrated in Port-au-Prince, they have also spread their violence outside the capital, including the Artibonite.

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FIFA Limits on Player Transfers Are Illegal, Europe’s Top Court Rules

Europe’s top court ruled on Friday that some elements of soccer’s multibillion-dollar global player trading market are illegal, a decision that is likely to force changes to the way thousands of athletes move between teams around the world every year.

The ruling, concerning the right of players under contract to terminate those agreements under rules drawn up by FIFA, soccer’s global governing body, came in a case brought by a French player who was subject to millions of dollars in fines after walking out of his agreement with a Russian team in a pay dispute and trying to sign with a club in Belgium.

The penalties levied against the player, Lassana Diarra, and any team that wanted to sign him, “are contrary to E.U. law,” the European Court of Justice said in a statement on Friday.

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At Least 14 Die as Floods Sweep Through Bosnia and Other Balkan States

A severe rainstorm struck Bosnia and Herzegovina overnight into Friday, killing at least 14 people and flooding several towns and villages in central and southern parts of the Balkan nation.

Drone footage broadcast by Bosnian news outlets showed villages and towns completely submerged under water, while videos on social networks showed dramatic scenes of muddy torrents and damaged roads.

Photos showed that one of the busiest roads linking the capital, Sarajevo, with the Adriatic coast via Jablanica had been swept into a river along with a railway line in a huge landslide.

“Many people are endangered because of big waters and landslides,” the civic protection service said.

Heavy rains and strong winds were also reported in neighboring Croatia, where several roads were closed and Zagreb, the capital, prepared for the swollen Sava River to burst its banks.

Heavy winds have hampered traffic on the southern Adriatic coast, and flash floods resulting from heavy rain threatened several towns and villages in Croatia.

And floods caused by torrential rains were reported in Montenegro, south of Bosnia, where some villages were cut off and roads and homes flooded.

Human-caused climate change increases the intensity of rainfall, because warm air can carry more moisture. This summer, the Balkans were hit by long-lasting record temperatures, causing a drought. Scientists said the dried-out land had hampered the absorption of floodwaters.

Rescue services in southern Bosnia reported that several people were missing and called on volunteers and the army to assist, with roads closed and houses left without electricity.

Darko Jukan, a spokesman for the local administration in Jablanica, said that at least 14 people had died in the flooding, and Defense Minister Zukan Helez told N1 regional television that troops had been engaged to help.

“Hour after hour, we are receiving news about new victims,” Mr. Hezel said, adding, “We sent everyone we could. Our first priority is to save the people who are alive and buried in houses where the landslides are.”

Rescue services in Jablanica and Kiseljak said the power was off overnight and cellphone service was down. The Jablanica fire station said that the town was completely inaccessible, because roads and train lines were closed.

The state rescue service urged people not to venture out on the flooded streets.

The authorities also urged people to stay on upper floors. Reports said that surging waters had swept away cars and domestic animals as the water swiftly filled up the lower floors of buildings.