Israel Expands Evacuation Warnings in Southern Lebanon After Renewed Strikes

Israeli soldiers were also waging a ground invasion in southern Lebanon targeting what military officials said were Hezbollah sites in the rugged border area.

A cloud of black smoke rises over tall buildings.

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.

Liam Stack is a Times reporter on special assignment in Israel, covering the war in Gaza. More about Liam Stack

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