Hezbollahβs attack, which the Israel Defense Forces said involved at least two waves of some 170 projectiles, represented a major escalation in the simmering battle on Israelβs northern border that has consistently threatened to explode into all-out war. It came in retaliation for an Israeli airstrike Tuesday in southern Lebanon that killed a senior Hezbollah commander. Israel did not report any casualties in the rocket attacks.
The escalation comes at a fraught time for Israel as it faces mounting global pressure to wind down its war in the Gaza Strip, with negotiations for a cease-fire appearing to reach a fork in the road. Hamas submitted a response Tuesday to a U.S.-backed cease-fire proposal; the response asked for reassurances about an end to the war, according to an official with knowledge of the talks. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing diplomatic effort.
The official said Hamasβs response contained βamendments to the Israeli proposal, including a timeline for a permanent cease-fire and the complete withdrawal of Israeli troops from the Gaza Strip.β
Blinken said Hamas proposed βnumerous changesβ to the plan announced by President Biden late last month.
βSome of the changes are workable, some are not,β Blinken said in remarks in Doha alongside Qatari Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani. Qatar and the United States have mediated negotiations between Hamas and Israel as the parties work toward a deal that could facilitate the release of the dozens of hostages held by Hamas in the Gaza Strip and end Israelβs war there.
The deal on the table is βvirtually identicalβ to one proposed by Hamas on May 6, Blinken said, but the militant group is now asking for a number of changes.
βHamas could have answered with a single word: Yes. Instead, Hamas waited nearly two weeks and then proposed more changes, a number of which go beyond positions that it had previously taken and accepted,β Blinken said. He questioned whether Hamas was βproceeding in good faith or not.β
Hamas has described its response to the proposal as βpositive.β
Israel, for its part, had also appeared to be dragging its feet on the deal. Biden announced the proposal as an Israeli one, but Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu subsequently distanced himself from it under pressure from his right flank not to accept the deal.
Mediators fear that any Hamas amendments to the current deal will be framed by Israel as a rejection, said Aaron David Miller, a longtime U.S. diplomat now at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. If Hamas doesnβt reject the deal, βNetanyahu is counting on Hamas to say βyes, butβ in a way that is deemed unreasonable,β he said.
Mediators are hoping to delay conversations about more complicated questions of how to end the war in Gaza by getting the two sides to at least agree to the first phase of the deal, which would include a six-week cease-fire and the withdrawal of Israeli troops from heavily populated areas of Gaza; the freeing of all women, elderly people and children held hostage in return for Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails; the return of displaced Palestinians to their homes throughout Gaza; and a surge in humanitarian aid to the starving enclave.
βThe logic of the Biden administration is that if the two sides can agree to phase one, the six weeks of quiet will be an incentive to continue,β Miller said.
The Israeli strike Tuesday on the southern Lebanese town of Jwaya killed Talib Abdallah, along with three other Hezbollah members, the group announced. It was the first time since January that Hezbollah had acknowledged the killing of one of its commanders. In his eulogy, he was described as a hero of the month-long 2006 Israel-Hezbollah war.
At the funeral, Hezbollah official Hashem Safieddine vowed to increase operations βin intensity, strength, quantity and qualityβ in retaliation.
The Israeli military confirmed Abdallahβs killing in a Telegram post Wednesday, describing him as βone of Hezbollahβs most senior commanders in southern Lebanonβ and saying he was responsible for planning and carrying out βa large numberβ of attacks against Israeli civilians.
Hezbollah, in a statement Wednesday, said it targeted Israelβs Meron Air Base with rocket and artillery fire in retaliation.
According to a Washington Post tally, Israeli strikes have killed more than 300 Hezbollah members in Lebanon since Oct. 7, as well as 87 civilians and noncombatants.
The Israeli military has repeatedly said it is ready to launch an operation into Lebanon to push back Hezbollah forces from the border at any time.
Almost 3,000 malnourished children in southern Gaza are at risk of dying after recent violence cut them off from treatment, the U.N. childrenβs agency warned. UNICEF said Tuesday that the numbers represent about three-quarters of the children who were believed to be receiving βlife-saving careβ in the south before Israel launched its operation in the city of Rafah. The agency added that the deteriorating levels of aid access in the south meant that more children could fall ill with malnutrition. Humanitarian groups have previously warned of the risk of famine in northern Gaza.
A U.N. inquiry said Israel has committed war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza. The report, which the U.N. human rights office said was the first in-depth U.N. investigation of events on and since Hamasβs attack on Oct. 7, also found that Palestinian armed groups carried out war crimes in Israel. Last month, the International Criminal Courtβs chief prosecutor announced he was seeking arrest warrants against senior Israeli and Hamas officials for crimes committed in the war.
At least ββ37,202 people have been killed and 84,932 injured in Gaza since the war started, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, which does not distinguish between civilians and combatants but says the majority of the dead are women and children. Israel estimates that about 1,200 people were killed in Hamasβs Oct. 7 attack, including more than 300 soldiers, and it says 298 soldiers have been killed since the launch of its military operations in Gaza.
Bisset reported from London, El Chamaa reported from Beirut, George reported from Dubai and Pietsch reported from Washington. Kareem Fahim in Istanbul and Suzan Haidamous in Beirut contributed to this report.