Spotlight
A high-level Lebanese security official has told AFP that Israel fired guided missiles from a warplane to kill Hamas number two Saleh al-Arouri in a Beirut suburb.
Lebanese authorities and Hamas accused Israel of killing Arouri in Beirut's southern suburbs on Tuesday, with Lebanese state media saying he died with six others in a drone strike.

Hezbollah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah on Wednesday described Israel’s killing of Hamas deputy head Saleh al-Arouri in an airstrike in Hezbollah’s stronghold of Beirut’s southern suburbs as “a major and dangerous crime.”
“We cannot overlook it and the matter does not need a lot of talking. It will not remain without a response or punishment and the battlefield and days and nights will prove this,” Nasrallah said, in a televised address marking the third anniversary of the assassination of top Iranian general Qasem Soleimani and top Iraqi militant commander Abou Mahdi al-Muhandis.

A large hole is gaping in a building and debris litters the street in a southern Beirut suburb where a presumed Israeli strike killed the deputy leader of Palestinian militant group Hamas.
The day after loud blasts ripped through the district from the drone attack that killed Saleh al-Arouri, armed men of Hezbollah were standing guard in the area.

The Israeli artillery shelled Wednesday the outskirts of al-Labbouneh and al-Naqoura as Israeli media reported the launching of anti-tank missiles towards the upper Galilee. An Israeli drone later carried out a strike on the border town of Markaba.
Hezbollah said it has targeted the Zar'it barracks and the Jal al-Alam post. Hezbollah also targeted with a Burkan rocket a group of soldiers near al-Malkia post. The attack was a "direct hit", the group said.

Saleh al-Arouri, the senior Hamas official killed in a suspected Israeli strike in Lebanon, played a key role in building up the Palestinian group's military capabilities and its links with regional allies.
Arouri, 57, was one of the founders of the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of Hamas, in the early 1990s.

Israeli war cabinet minister Benny Gantz says he has discussed with French President Emmanuel Macron “the imperative of an international diplomatic effort in Lebanon,” after Israel was accused of assassinating Hamas deputy head Saleh al-Arouri in a brazen drone strike in Beirut’s southern suburbs.
“I expressed my appreciation to President Macron for his commitment to Israel’s security, regional stability, and France’s important efforts to release the hostages held in Gaza,” Gantz said in an English-language post on the X platform.

The deputy chief of UNIFIL’s Strategic Communications and Public Information Office, Kandice Ardiel, on Wednesday voiced concern over any potential escalation following the Israeli drone strike that killed Hamas deputy head Saleh al-Arouri in Beirut’s southern suburbs on Tuesday.

Israel was on high alert for an escalation with Hezbollah on Wednesday after one of the top leaders of the Palestinian Hamas was killed in a strike in Beirut that was widely blamed on Israel and heightened the risk of a broader Middle East conflict.
The killing of Saleh Arouri, the most senior Hamas member slain since the war in Gaza erupted nearly three months ago, provided a morale boost for Israelis still reeling from Hamas' Oct. 7 attack as the militants put up stiff resistance in Gaza and continue to hold scores of hostages.

An apparent Israeli strike in the Lebanese capital of Beirut that killed Hamas' No. 2 political leader Tuesday, marked a potentially significant escalation and heightened the risk of a wider Middle East conflict.
Saleh Arouri, who was the most senior Hamas figure killed since the war with Israel began, was also a founder of the group's military wing. His death could provoke major retaliation by Lebanon's Hezbollah.

Saleh Arouri, the deputy political head of Hamas and a founder of the group's military wing, had been in Israel's sights for years before he was killed in a drone strike in a southern suburb of Beirut on Tuesday.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had threatened to kill him even before Hamas carried out its deadly surprise attack on Israel on Oct. 7, sparking the ongoing brutal war in Gaza.
