Spotlight
Israel’s top general commanding the restive northern frontier has reportedly begun actively lobbying leaders to okay a ground offensive into southern Lebanon with the goal of securing a buffer zone and halting Hezbollah’s attacks on Israeli settlements in the Galilee, amid disagreements over the matter among politicians and defense brass.

Lebanese novelist Elias Khoury who dedicated much of his writings to the Palestinian cause and taught at universities around the world, making him one of Lebanon's most prominent intellectuals, has died. He was 76.
Khoury, a leading voice of Arab literature, had been ill for months and admitted and discharged from hospital several times over the past year until his death early Sunday, Al-Quds Al-Arabi daily that he worked for said.

Israel dropped leaflets over a Lebanon border village Sunday urging residents to leave, state-run media said, but Israel's military told AFP a brigade had taken the initiative without approval.
It was the first time Israelis had told residents of south Lebanon to evacuate in 11 months of cross-border fire between Hezbollah and Israel over the Gaza war, triggered by Hezbollah ally Hamas' October 7 attack on Israel.

Israel’s defense minister has told his U.S. counterpart that time is running out for an agreement with Hezbollah to halt the fighting along the Israel-Lebanon border.
Yoav Gallant told Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin that “the possibility for an agreed framework in the northern arena is running out as Hezbollah continues to ‘tie itself’ to Hamas.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said that the current situation on the border with Lebanon is not sustainable.
"The existing situation will not continue. We will do everything necessary to return our residents safely to their homes," he said during a weekly Cabinet meeting.

Hezbollah said Sunday that it fired dozens of Katyusha rockets at the Rawya barracks in the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights in response to attacks on Lebanese towns, especially on the town of Sarafand which is distant from the border.

Hezbollah's second-in-command warned on Saturday that an all-out war by Israel aimed at returning 100,000 displaced people to their homes in areas near the Lebanon border would displace "hundreds of thousands" more.
Sheikh Naim Qassem, number two in the Iran-backed Lebanese group, was speaking after Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said Israel was determined to restore security to its northern front.

Hezbollah said Saturday that it fired dozens of Katyusha rockets at an Israeli artillery and precision missile base in Yiftah Elifelet northwest of Lake Tiberias, deep in northern Israel.

U.S. mediator Amos Hochstein will soon visit Tel Aviv as well as Lebanon, al-Jadeed television quoted sources as saying.

Hezbollah targeted Friday military positions in northern Israel and in the occupied Shebaa and Kfarshouba regions with suicide drones and other weapons while Israeli warplanes raided twice the southern town of Bint Jbeil.
The jets targeted early Friday a house and later the al-Wadi region in Bint Jbeil, causing no casualties, the National News agency said. Later in the day, artillery shelled the southern border town of Kfarshouba.
