Earlier that month, Israel intensified air campaigns against Hezbollah in Lebanon, in response to escalating rocket attacks by the Iran-backed armed group which had killed civilians, and displaced tens of thousands more from homes in northern Israel.
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IDF would not be able to fully withdraw from southern Lebanon at the end of the 60-day ceasefire period as initially planned.
To date, the IDF has killed around 50 Hezbollah fighters since the ceasefire, but almost all of those occurred within the first month.
Does Trump care? Better yet, does Trump respect an ally who begs his permission to control its border against terrorists?
Israeli war planes struck Hezbollah targets in Lebanon, the Israel Defense Force said early Monday, as it accused the truce monitoring mechanism of ignoring the threat the targets posed to Israel.
The idea that Russia did not know that its weapons were reaching Hezbollah seems far-fetched. In the end, the exhibition served as a deeply sobering reminder of the dangers Israel confronts. It underlined the need for continuous vigilance and readiness.
The most likely impact of the two ceasefires is for all parties to avoid returning to war. The risk of one blown ceasefire leading to another will weigh heavily on their minds.
An RPG taken from Hezbollah exploded in the military engineering school in the south • Military Police opened an investigation into the circumstances
UN chief meets newly-elected Joseph Aoun in Beirut, hails 'new chapter of peace'; Hezbollah chief urges government to confront Israel over 'more than hundreds' of violations
On Sunday, the 60-day window to implement the ceasefire between Lebanon and Israel will close. As part of the deal, Israeli troops must withdraw from Lebanon and Hezbollah must disarm in a border zone.