The New York Times 2024-10-06 00:10:49


Ukraine’s Donbas Strategy: Retreat Slowly and Maximize Russia’s Losses

Throughout the year, Ukraine has lost a series of cities, towns and villages in its eastern Donbas region to Russia, typically withdrawing its troops after hard-fought battles that sometimes lasted for months.

Marinka was the first to fall, a sign in January that Russia had regained momentum on the battlefield. Then came Avdiivka, an industrial city where Ukrainian soldiers had hunkered down in a dense maze of trenches and bunkers. Finally, this past week, Ukraine retreated from Vuhledar, a mining town perched on high ground that was a linchpin of Ukrainian defenses in the southeast.

To outside observers, Ukraine’s slow but steady retreat from the Donbas region, the main theater of the war today, may seem to signal the beginning of the endgame, with Moscow firmly gaining the upper hand on the battlefield, leveraging its overwhelming advantage in manpower and firepower.

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A Menace to Motorists, but the ‘Noble’ Moose Is Adopted by Newfoundland

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Ian Austen

Reporting from Gander, Glovertown, Glenwood and St. John’s, Newfoundland. Attempts to spot moose through nighttime driving were unsuccessful.

Running into a moose when driving a car or truck is bad enough, but crashing into the giant animal while riding on two wheels can be worse.

Kevin Connors barely survived such an encounter while cruising on his motorbike just after sundown on a highway in Newfoundland, a Tennessee-size island in the North Atlantic.

“I was looking ahead of me into a gradual turn to the right, and the moose came up from the left, so I didn’t really see it until it was very close,” Mr. Connors recalled. The moose stopped in its tracks, “and I hit him dead on.”

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Live Updates: Israel Strikes Across Lebanon as Attacks Expand

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Here are the latest developments.

The Israeli military launched attacks across Lebanon on Saturday, and said it had killed two Hamas officials in the country as Israel’s war against Hezbollah and its allies expanded.

Airstrikes hit areas of central, northern and southern Lebanon. The Israeli military said it had struck “weapons storage facilities, command centers and additional terrorist infrastructure” near the capital, Beirut. That appeared to refer to the Dahiya, an area where Hezbollah holds sway and where clouds of smoke were seen rising on Saturday.

A huge Israeli strike around the same area earlier in the week targeted Hashem Safieddine, the presumed successor of Hassan Nasrallah, the recently assassinated leader of Hezbollah, an Iranian-backed militia. It was not clear whether Mr. Safieddine had been killed.

Israel’s systematic targeting of Hezbollah leaders and their allies appeared to reach deep into Lebanon on Saturday. The armed group Hamas, which is based in Gaza, said that one of its commanders had been killed in an Israeli strike in the Lebanese city of Tripoli, near the country’s northern edge. Hours later, Israel said it had also killed a second high-ranking Hamas commander in Lebanon.

As Israel kept up its campaign, Hezbollah on Saturday fired what Israel’s military said was an estimated 90 rockets into northern Israel. Most appear to have been intercepted by air defense systems, and there were no immediate reports of injuries.

Concern has been building over whether the broadening war would further draw in Iran, which supports both Hamas and Hezbollah and launched a barrage of ballistic missiles at Israel earlier in the week. Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said on Friday that Iran could carry out additional attacks on Israel “if necessary.”

Here is what else to know:

  • Iranian diplomacy: Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, arrived in Syria early Saturday, according to Iranian state media. Mr. Araghchi appears to be on a diplomatic tour, and on Friday visited Beirut in an apparent effort to convey Iran’s readiness to support a joint cease-fire in Lebanon and in Gaza.

  • Gaza evacuations: The Israeli military announced a new evacuation warning in the Gaza Strip for the first time in several weeks, advising residents of Nuseirat and Bureij in the central part of the enclave to flee. Israel has largely been focused on Lebanon since September, although in August it issued evacuation warnings in Gaza that covered roughly 250,000 people.

  • White House remarks: President Biden said on Friday that Israel had not decided how to respond to Iran’s recent attacks but that if he were the Israeli leader, “I would be thinking about other alternatives” to attacking Iran’s oil facilities.

  • American death: The State Department said it was “aware and alarmed” about reports of the death in Lebanon of Kamel Ahmad Jawad, an American citizen. His family said in a statement this week that Mr. Jawad, who was from Dearborn, Mich., had been killed in an Israeli airstrike.

  • Hospital closures: 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. The St. Therese Hospital near the Dahiya has also suspended services, saying that Israeli strikes inflicted “huge damage.”

The Israeli military said it killed another senior Hamas leader in Lebanon in an airstrike earlier today, the second in less than 24 hours. The military said the Hamas official, Muhammad Hussein Ali al-Mahmoud, was the armed group’s “executive authority in Lebanon” and had been involved in planning terrorist attacks in the occupied West Bank. There was no immediate comment from Hamas, which earlier confirmed that Israel had killed another commander, Saeed Ali, overnight in the Lebanese city of Tripoli.

Israel is continuing to strike in southern Lebanon. From northern Israel, I can see dark gray clouds of dust and smoke rising above two villages as warplanes zoom overhead and the sound of artillery echoes through the area.

It appears that Hezbollah has fired back with rockets, at least some of which I saw intercepted by Israel’s air defenses.

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Hamas said an Israeli airstrike near the northern Lebanese city of Tripoli killed a commander in its military wing. In a statement, the military wing, known as the Qassam Brigades, identified the commander as Saeed Ali and said the strike hit his home. His wife and two daughters were also killed, the statement said. The Israeli military didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

In recent years, Hamas has been developing a branch of its military wing in Lebanon, which has occasionally launched rockets at Israel.

The Israeli military has announced a new evacuation warning for residents of the Nuseirat and Al-Bureij refugee camps in the central Gaza Strip. It appeared to be the first such order in Gaza in several weeks; more than a dozen orders in August displaced as many as 250,000 people in Gaza, but Israeli military activity, including evacuation warnings, was largely focused on Lebanon in September.

A Michigan father was killed in an Israeli airstrike, his family says.

Kamel Ahmad Jawad remained calm, even as Israeli missiles rained down around him in his hometown in southern Lebanon, thousands of miles from his other home, Dearborn, Mich.

That’s what his family recounted in a statement about Mr. Jawad on Tuesday. When the impact of an airstrike knocked him down while he was on the phone with his daughter, he got back up, found his phone and told her he needed to finish praying. Then, he got back to helping others, the family added.

That was his last day alive. Mr. Jawad, an American citizen, husband and father, and resident of Dearborn, was killed on Tuesday at 9:30 a.m. during an Israeli airstrike, his family said.

“I would often ask him if he was scared, and he repeatedly told me that we should not be scared because he is doing what he loves the most: helping others live in the land he loved the most,” his daughter Nadine Jawad, a Rhodes scholar and Stanford medical school graduate, wrote in the statement.

When Mr. Jawad’s wife was reached on Friday, she said the family declined to comment further.

The airstrike was part of Israel’s intense bombardment and ground invasion in Lebanon, intended to target Hezbollah forces in that country and stop Hezbollah rocket attacks on northern Israel. The military campaign has caused widespread destruction and displacement. At least 1,600 people have been killed by the airstrikes, and over 1.2 million people have been displaced across the country, according to Lebanese authorities.

A State Department representative wrote in a statement on Friday evening that it had confirmed that Mr. Jawad was a U.S. citizen and that it was “aware and alarmed” of reports of his death.

“We extend our condolences to the family,” the statement said.

His friends and family described Mr. Jawad as a man deeply committed to his faith and to helping others, especially through his frequent trips to Lebanon, where he quietly paid off debts of people living there and supported those without the means to flee. He was also known for his devotion to his family — he is survived by his wife and four children — and his passion for soccer.

“He was this old-school, legendary father figure,” said Hussain Makke, 33, a preacher and teacher of Islamic sciences. Mr. Makke said he was living with his parents in London after his home in Lebanon was destroyed.

Mr. Makke stayed with Mr. Jawad’s sister in Dearborn several years ago. Mr. Makke’s father was also friends with Mr. Jawad and completed the hajj, the pilgrimage to Mecca, with him.

Hamzah Raza, another friend of Mr. Jawad’s who is living in Maryland, described him in a statement on social media as someone who loved people and loved helping people.

Mr. Raza, 27, a religious studies Ph.D. student, recalled in his post how, a week before Mr. Raza went to Lebanon, he told Mr. Jawad that he wanted to buy some books there.

Mr. Raza wrote that Mr. Jawad told him, “Just send the names of the books and I will get them for you. I want you to have as much time as you can seeing the country.”

As the fighting between Israel and Hezbollah escalated, so, too, did Mr. Jawad’s efforts to help people in Lebanon, Mr. Makke said.

He added that during a recent series of Israeli airstrikes, Mr. Jawad saved his nephew, who was one of Mr. Makke’s students at a seminary in southern Lebanon. Mr. Jawad’s nephew did not have any family in the area, and Mr. Jawad drove to him and took the nephew to Beirut, perhaps saving his life, Mr. Makke said.

Mr. Makke said that a video taken from that experience shows Mr. Jawad laughing and smiling, even though the two were driving under airstrikes.

“He made it into an action movie,” he said. “He knew how to keep morale high, to not feel scared.”

But while Mr. Jawad also could have flown home, he chose to remain behind: “In his last days, he chose to stay near the main hospital in Nabatieh to help the elderly, disabled, injured and those who simply couldn’t financially afford to flee,” the statement from his family said.

His family noted in the statement that Mr. Jawad’s death was one of many across the Middle East.

“The fact that he was an American citizen should not make his story more important than others,” his daughter wrote.

According to a fund-raiser in Mr. Jawad’s memory, he sent a voice note to his children before his death.

“Peace be upon you,” he told them. “Everything is OK, but if something happens to me, your duty is to the poor.”

Kirsten Noyes and Sheelagh McNeill contributed research.

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The U.S. military conducts strikes against the Houthi militia in Yemen.

The United States Central Command said on Friday that it struck Houthi targets in Yemen, including “Houthi offensive military capabilities,” in an effort to secure international waterways.

The Iranian-backed Houthi militia in Yemen has been striking ships in the Red Sea in solidarity with Hamas, another Iranian-backed militia, since last year, disrupting commercial shipping. Central Command said on social media that it struck 15 targets in Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen.

“These actions were taken to protect freedom of navigation and make international waters safer and more secure for U.S., coalition, and merchant vessels,” the post said.

The Houthi-affiliated al-Masirah TV reported four strikes on Sanaa, the capital of Yemen, seven on the port city of Hodeidah and at least one strike on Dhamar, south of the capital.

The attack on Sanaa came as the Houthis and their supporters were holding their weekly “million-man march” protest, which this week was focused on Israel’s killing of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in an airstrike near Beirut, Lebanon, last Friday.

The Houthi-run Yemen News Agency, SABA, reported that Hashem Sharaf al-Din, a Houthi official, said that he considered the strikes “a desperate attempt” to intimidate the Yemeni people and he vowed not to be deterred by them.

But the Houthi attacks on commercial vessels have increasingly drawn the ire of international actors and condemnation by diplomats. The Red Sea is a key trade route between Asia, Europe and the Middle East. Since the strikes began, many vessels have been forced to reroute. Those that have not have sometimes paid severe consequences.

Ships have been hit and sustained damage, and some sailors have been abducted and held captive for many months, while others have died or been injured in the Houthi attacks. In August, a Houthi strike on a Greek oil tanker threatened to devolve into an environmental disaster as the burning ship remained at sea for weeks, with militia members threatening tugboats attempting to salvage the vessel. The ship was towed to safety in mid-September.

The attacks on commercial shipping have been met with counter strikes by the United States military and British troops before. Between January and May, the two countries’ militaries conducted at least five joint strikes against the Houthis in response to the attacks on shipping.

United States Central Command regularly announces actions against the militant group. In August, after the Houthis said they targeted American warships, the U.S. military struck back. Last week, the Houthis made a similar claim, and now appear to have drawn the same response.

The latest strikes by the United States come as tensions in the Middle East have risen significantly following Israel’s killing of Mr. Nasrallah, its expanded operations against Hezbollah in Lebanon and an escalating conflict with Iran, which launched a salvo of about 200 missiles at Israel on Tuesday in retaliation for the assassinations of some of its proxy groups’ leaders.

On Sunday, the Israeli military also struck in Yemen in response to several recent Houthi missile strikes targeting Israel.

Israel’s latest strike in Lebanon makes clear that it is taking its fight against Hezbollah to a new scale.

Just a week had passed since Israel’s assassination of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in Beirut’s southern suburbs when Israeli warplanes unleashed another intense barrage of strikes overnight Thursday, this time targeting his presumed successor.

It was unclear on Friday whether the strikes succeeded in killing that figure, Hashem Safeiddine. Given the restrictions on journalists amid the fighting, it was difficult to assess the scale of the damage or the deaths from the bombardment, described as the heaviest of the rapidly escalating new war in Lebanon.

What was clear from the twisted mangles of concrete and destroyed buildings across the Hezbollah stronghold of the Dahiya, along with Israel’s widening ground invasion in the south, is that Israel is determined to take the fight against Hezbollah to a new scale. It’s doing so not just in the south, where its ground invasion is seeking to halt Hezbollah’s rocket fire into northern Israel, but also with its systematic targeting of Hezbollah’s remaining leadership, whose movements Israeli intelligence apparently still track.

Many people in Lebanon and the broader Middle East had long feared that such a war was coming, even before the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attacks on Israel. Hezbollah began firing on northern Israel soon after in solidarity with Hamas in Gaza. Hezbollah last fought an inconclusive war with Israel in 2006, and, given Iran’s support for Hezbollah, concern had built over time that they would soon be at war again.

After nearly a year of tit-for-tat strikes, as both groups tested the tolerance of the other side, Israel dramatically escalated the confrontation.

Three weeks ago, Israel detonated thousands of Hezbollah’s pagers and walkie-talkies, killing scores of people and injuring thousands. Last Friday, Mr. Nasrallah was assassinated. And overnight on Thursday came the gigantic attack in which Israel tried to kill Mr. Safeiddine, whose fate remains unclear.

The fighting has now spread far outside of the area along the Lebanon-Israel border where the warring parties initially sought to keep it contained. Israel has sent ground troops tasked with destroying Hezbollah’s military infrastructure into southern Lebanon, its first such invasion since 2006. Nearly a dozen of its soldiers have been killed in clashes there, including two killed in northern Israel that the military announced on Friday.

Israel’s airstrikes — which it says target Hezbollah’s munitions, bases and commanders — regularly kill civilians, bring down buildings and send up huge clouds of smoke in and around Beirut and elsewhere in the country. One strike on Friday left a large crater near a border crossing with Syria, forcing people fleeing from one war-torn country to another to carry their possessions around its rim.

Hezbollah, although battered by Israel’s recent attacks, still fires barrages of rockets over the border, as well as missiles that reach deep inside Israel and send people running for shelters.

Israeli leaders now say they can no longer tolerate the threat that Hezbollah poses on their northern border and that the group must be pushed back so that the 60,000 Israelis who have fled their homes in the country’s north can return.

Hezbollah, which the United States considers a terrorist organization, says it will keep fighting until Israel’s attacks in Gaza cease and that it must defend Lebanon from Israeli aggression. Hundreds of thousands of Lebanese have fled their homes, including many from southern villages that Israel has largely destroyed.

Many Lebanese resent Hezbollah, whose military activities are outside of the state and not subject to any oversight, for dragging the country into a new war for the sake of Hamas.

But with Lebanon’s other political parties in disarray and the country’s economy suffering from a profound collapse, there are few other forces they can turn to for protection and to guide the country out of the spreading war.

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The leader of Hamas is holding out for a bigger war, U.S. officials say.

The leader of Hamas, Yahya Sinwar, has become fatalistic after nearly a year of war in Gaza and is determined to see Israel embroiled in a wider regional conflict, U.S. officials said.

Mr. Sinwar has long believed he will not survive the war, a view that has hindered negotiations to secure the release of hostages seized by his group in the Oct. 7 attacks in Israel, according to U.S. intelligence assessments.

His attitude has hardened in recent weeks, U.S. officials say, and American negotiators now believe that Hamas has no intention of reaching a deal with Israel.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel has also rejected proposals in the negotiations and added positions that have complicated the talks. U.S. officials assess that he is mainly concerned about his political survival and might not think a cease-fire in Gaza is in his interests.

Hamas has shown no desire at all to engage in talks in recent weeks, U.S. officials say. They suspect that Mr. Sinwar has grown more resigned as Israeli forces pursue him and talk about closing in on him.

A larger war that puts pressure on Israel and its military would, in Mr. Sinwar’s assessment, force them to scale back operations in Gaza, the U.S. officials said.

The war in the region has widened, but not in ways that have meaningfully benefited Hamas, at least not yet.

Immediately after Oct. 7, Hezbollah began carrying out strikes in northern Israel in a show of solidarity with Hamas. While the attacks drove Israelis from their homes, they did not put pressure on the military. Hezbollah’s leaders did not want to start a new war with Israel, U.S. officials assessed at the time.

Since the Israeli campaign against Hezbollah began last month, the group has not launched a major counterattack on Israel, much less opened an offensive front. Israeli and U.S. officials say Israel has destroyed half of the militia’s arsenal and killed many of its leaders.

Israeli troops moved into southern Lebanon this week, after a nearly monthlong bombing and sabotage campaign that included a strike that killed Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of Hezbollah.

Iran, which backs Hezbollah and Hamas, unleashed a missile barrage against Israel on Tuesday in response to the killing of Mr. Nasrallah. But most of the missiles were shot down or failed to do any real damage.

The failure of Hezbollah or Iran to meaningfully damage Israel, at least so far, is a telling sign of Mr. Sinwar’s miscalculation, American officials said.

Isolated and in hiding in Gaza, Mr. Sinwar’s communication with his organization has become strained. He stopped using electronic devices long ago and stays in touch with his organization through a network of human couriers, according to Israeli and American officials.

The pace of Israeli operations in Gaza has slowed, as Israeli leaders have shifted their attention to the north. Israeli forces are now in just a few positions in Gaza, including what they call the Philadelphi Corridor between the enclave and Egypt. While Israel has not launched a major raid into civilian areas of Gaza for weeks, it still conducts daily airstrikes targeting Hamas.

As a result, the toll on civilians in Gaza continues. In a 24-hour stretch on Wednesday and Thursday, the Israeli military killed 99 Palestinians in the enclave, local health officials said, one of the highest death tolls in months.

Talks to broker a cease-fire in Gaza and release the Israeli hostages have broken down. Mr. Netanyahu has added demands and revived some that had previously been dropped, frustrating international negotiators. And Mr. Sinwar has become far more inflexible, U.S. officials say.

His actions and motivations have long been a focus of the American intelligence community. But after Oct. 7, the spy agencies intensified their work on the Hamas leader, forming a targeting cell to study and hunt him.

For months, intelligence agencies have assessed that Mr. Sinwar has a fatalistic attitude and cares more about inflicting pain on Israelis than helping Palestinians. U.S. officials will not discuss their recent intelligence collection on him, but the view that his attitude is hardening comes from officials studying his negotiating stances and classified reports.

Mr. Sinwar’s position stiffened this summer after Israel assassinated Ismail Haniyeh, the political leader of Hamas based in Qatar and one of the chief negotiators. Mr. Haniyeh was a more conciliatory negotiator who was interested in making a deal, and U.S. officials say he was willing to push back against Mr. Sinwar’s more extreme demands. Israel’s decision to kill a top Hamas leader who was negotiating a cease-fire infuriated the group and Mr. Sinwar, according to U.S. officials.

Some Israeli officials have questioned whether Mr. Sinwar is still alive. U.S. and Israeli officials acknowledge there is no definitive proof of life. There have been no audio or video recordings from him for months.

On Sept. 13, Hezbollah released a letter that Mr. Sinwar sent in support of Mr. Nasrallah. Some Hamas officials, speaking elliptically, suggested that it was written outside Gaza by someone else, with Mr. Sinwar’s approval. It was not handwritten, unlike other communications that have been verified to come directly from him.

But American officials said they had no evidence he was dead, and in fact senior U.S. officials said they thought he was alive and making critical decisions for Hamas.

Mr. Sinwar remains in hiding but appears to recognize that Israeli forces are closing in on him. They came near his position in August, with Defense Minister Yoav Gallant of Israel saying that their forces had discovered signs that the Hamas leader had spent time in the warren of tunnels beneath Rafah, in southern Gaza.

“When we entered the tunnels under Rafah, where the hostages were murdered, we found signs of Sinwar’s past presence in Tel Sultan,” Mr. Gallant told reporters recently, referring to six hostages who were believed to have been killed in a neighborhood of Gaza, near Rafah.

While Mr. Sinwar’s strategy is not yet working, it could ultimately succeed.

Israeli forces are fighting Hezbollah on its home territory in southern Lebanon. While the Israeli government is promising a limited incursion in Lebanon, so far the military operations have been large-scale.

The fighting has already proved difficult: At least nine soldiers were killed in the first days of close-quarter combat. If the intense fighting continues, and Iran is drawn in, Mr. Sinwar could get his wish of a multifront war that eases pressure on Hamas.

Iran and Israel could continue to trade ballistic missile strikes. If one weapon causes immense damage, a larger conflict might erupt.

American officials are waiting to see whether the conflict between Iran and Israel escalates further. They do not believe that Iran wants a full-scale war with Israel or to directly intervene to help Hamas. But they also publicly support a planned Israeli strike against Iran in retaliation for the ballistic missile attack this week.

“Iran will hold a grudge for Nasrallah’s killing,” said Scott D. Berrier, a retired lieutenant general and the former head of the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency. “But their options are limited. I don’t see Iran going toe to toe with Israel anytime soon.”

A senior U.S. official said Iran’s actions over the past few months had sent a clear message to Mr. Sinwar: “The cavalry is not coming.”

Julian E. Barnes and Adam Goldman reported from Washington, and Edward Wong reported from New York and Washington. Adam Rasgon and Aaron Boxerman contributed reporting from Jerusalem, and Ronen Bergman from Tel Aviv.

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.

Deadly Marburg Virus Hits Rwanda’s Doctors and Nurses Hard

Rwanda’s fragile health care system could become overwhelmed by the deadly Marburg virus, doctors fear, because most of those currently infected are medical professionals, and some have already died.

Since the first outbreak in the country in September, at least 30 medical workers have been infected, and at least four have died. Among the infected are two of the country’s scarce anesthesiologists. More medical staff members are isolated in hospital wards in the capital, Kigali. The health care system, with approximately 1,500 doctors and fewer than 40 anesthesiologists for a nation of just over 13 million people, could face significant strain.

Rwanda’s health minister, Dr. Sabin Nsanzimana, has said the country is seeking experimental vaccines and treatments, and hopes to address the outbreak with candidate drugs and shots — those in preclinical or clinical trial phases.

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As Israel Attacks, Many Lebanese Feel Dragged Into Someone Else’s War

When Hezbollah announced that its longtime leader, Hassan Nasrallah, had been killed in an Israeli airstrike, the talk among many of the group’s Shiite Muslim followers was of defiance and vengeance.

But many others in Lebanon say that this is not their war to fight.

“How is anyone benefiting from what’s going on?” said Rana Khalil, 45, an owner of a small clothing and accessories store in Beirut, the capital. “We’re the ones being injured, we are the ones being killed.”

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Israel Expands Attacks on Hezbollah as Iran Warns of Retaliation

Less than a week after Israel killed Hezbollah’s leader, Hassan Nasrallah, Israeli warplanes bombarded areas south of Beirut around midnight on Thursday, this time targeting his presumed successor.

It was unclear on Friday whether the strikes in Lebanon had succeeded in killing the group’s potential next leader, Hashem Safeiddine, who is also a cousin of Mr. Nasrallah’s. And it was difficult to assess the scale of the damage from the bombardment, described as the heaviest of the rapidly escalating war in Lebanon.

But it was clear from the images of destroyed buildings, now merely broken concrete and twisted metal, along with Israel’s ground invasion in the south, that Israel was determined to take the fight against Hezbollah to a new level.

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