Mikati: Lebanon ready to apply UN resolution on border if Israel complies

Update Mikati: Lebanon ready to apply UN resolution on border if Israel complies
Lebanon is ready to implement a UN resolution that would help end Hezbollah’s cross-border attacks on Israel if Israel also complies and withdraws from disputed territory, Lebanon’s prime minister Najib Mikati said Friday. (AP/File)
Short Url
Updated 22 December 2023
Follow

Mikati: Lebanon ready to apply UN resolution on border if Israel complies

Mikati: Lebanon ready to apply UN resolution on border if Israel complies
  • Southern front sees further escalation as more than 50 villages directly affected
  • On Friday, more residents fled their homes in southern Lebanon when Israeli bombing targeted the area

BEIRUT: Lebanon is ready to implement a UN resolution that would help end Hezbollah’s cross-border attacks on Israel if Tel Aviv also complies and withdraws from occupied territory, Lebanon’s Prime Minister Najib Mikati said on Friday.
His remarks came as Hezbollah intensified its operations against Israeli military sites amid the heated confrontation on the southern Lebanese front.
UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which ended a 2006 war between Israel and Hezbollah, called for the removal of armed personnel south of Lebanon’s Litani River, except for UN peacekeepers and the Lebanese security forces.
The solution to the latest cross-border hostilities “is the implementation of international resolutions,” including Resolution 1701, Mikati said in his statement.
“We are ready to commit to their implementation, on the condition the Israeli side does the same and withdraws — according to the international laws and resolutions — from occupied territory,” he added.
On Friday, more residents fled their homes in southern Lebanon when Israeli bombing targeted the area.
The UN Development Programme this week published a report providing a preliminary analysis of the impact of the Gaza war on Lebanon and the repercussions of the hostilities in southern Lebanon on the local economy as of Dec. 6.
The report said: “As per the National Council for Scientific Research, or CNRS, 91 towns in Nabatieh and southern Lebanon have faced 1,768 Israeli attacks, including 1,564 airstrikes, 90 incendiary bombs, 62 phosphorus shells, as well as other types of attacks, causing casualties and the displacement of 64,000 civilians scattered across 10 districts.”
The hostilities have directly affected more than 50 villages across four districts — Tyre, Bint Jbeil, Marjayoun and Hasbaya — and destroyed assets and infrastructure, as well as disrupted economic and social services.
Regions that were directly affected by bombing and displacement include all the border villages from Naqoura toward the Shebaa Farms — an area that is 100 km long and 5 km deep.
The Lebanese Ministry of Agriculture reported “the loss of around 47,000 olive trees in the conflict area, representing about 0.44 percent of the total number of olive trees in Lebanon.”
It added that the trees were directly burnt down “due to the use of internationally banned white phosphorous bombs and other explosives.”
The ministry added that the agricultural areas affected by the fires caused by Israel include 97,800 square meters of olive groves, 66,000 square meters of citrus farms and 98,800 square meters of banana farms.
Fires have also ignited in 20,800 square meters of pasture lands.
Moreover, the Agriculture Ministry reported the destruction of a 600-square-meter fodder warehouse and the complete destruction of about 60 agricultural greenhouses.
More than 200,000 birds and chickens and 700 heads of livestock were reported killed, in addition to the destruction of 250 beehives.
In Tyre, fishermen have found it challenging to access fishing grounds due to the conflict.
The report warned that “forest fires caused by white phosphorus bombs significantly impact natural ecosystems, leading to documented incidents of death among mammals, birds and fish.”
It added: “The water infrastructure has been significantly damaged.”
Soil quality in the conflict area had been affected by physical destruction and pollution due to the spread of heavy metals and toxic compounds from explosive weapons, the report said, warning that white phosphorus usage had “further reduced fertility and increased soil acidity.”
Also on Friday, Israeli media reported that a missile and machine gun fire injured several Israeli soldiers on the border with Lebanon.
Israeli media said that “unusual incidents took place on the northern border with Lebanon, and military censorship was imposed on a security event in the north.”
In the afternoon, six missiles were fired from southern Lebanon toward Israeli positions in the Upper Galilee.
Hezbollah announced in the afternoon the targeting of “a gathering of officers and soldiers of the Israeli enemy in Even Menachem with missile weapons, causing confirmed injuries.”
The Lebanese group carried out operations before noon and announced in successive statements that it targeted “a building in the Shomera settlement with a missile launched from Lebanon.”
It then said it had targeted “gatherings of Israeli soldiers in the vicinity of the Shomera barracks with missile and artillery fire, causing direct hits.”
A missile fell near the Nahariya settlement without any sirens sounding.
The Israeli army responded with airstrikes and artillery fire on the Lebanese border area. Jets struck the Labouneh forests south of Naqoura with missiles.
The Israeli shelling of the Ras Naqoura area led to stones flying toward a Lebanese army position in the area. Sirens sounded at the UNIFIL headquarters in Naqoura.
The shelling targeted the outskirts of Aita Al-Shaab, Ramyah, Al-Qawzah, Beit Lif and Jabal Blat near Marwahin, in addition to the outskirts of Tayr Harfa and the Hamoul area in the western sector.
In a statement, the Israeli army said it attacked “military sites as well as terrorist infrastructure of the Hezbollah organization.”
Fighter jets also attacked a series of Hezbollah targets, it added.
Hezbollah mourned two fighters who died in the south: Hussein Ali Ezzedine from the town of Maaroub and Abdul Aziz Ali Maslamani from the town of Al-Shaitiya.
Hezbollah’s Al-Manar channel reported Israeli army soldiers, quoted by the media, as saying that they felt “like sitting ducks on a shooting range” while operating on the border with Lebanon.
The soldiers said: “The pace of events is increasing here; it is a war on everything, and the higher ranks of the army believe everything is fine.”


Netanyahu says Israel ‘settled the score’ with Nasrallah’s killing

Netanyahu says Israel ‘settled the score’ with Nasrallah’s killing
Updated 6 sec ago
Follow

Netanyahu says Israel ‘settled the score’ with Nasrallah’s killing

Netanyahu says Israel ‘settled the score’ with Nasrallah’s killing
  • The Israeli premier said his country was on the cusp of “what appears to be a historic turning point” in the fight against its “enemies”

JERUSALEM: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Saturday that Israel had “settled the score” with the killing of Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah in an air strike in Beirut.
“We settled the score with the one responsible for the murder of countless Israelis and many citizens of other countries, including hundreds of Americans and dozens of French,” he said in his first statement since Nasrallah’s death on Friday.
He was alluding to 1983 bombings in Beirut that killed 63 people at the US embassy and 241 US marines and 58 French paratroopers at their barracks.
Netanyahu said that as long as “terrorist” Nasrallah was alive, he “would quickly restore the capabilities we had eroded from Hezbollah” in a series of recent operations.
“So, I gave the order — and Nasrallah is no longer with us.”
The Israeli premier said his country was on the cusp of “what appears to be a historic turning point” in the fight against its “enemies.”
According to Netanyahu, who has faced growing criticism at home and abroad over his war policy after nearly a year of fighting in the Gaza Strip, the killing of the Hezbollah leader was essential for achieving Israel’s goals.
“Nasrallah’s elimination is a necessary condition for achieving the goals we set: the safe return of the residents of the north to their homes and the long-term alteration of the balance of power in the region,” he said.
It will also help facilitate the return of hostages seized by Hamas during its October 7 attack and still held in Gaza, he said.
“The more (Hamas leader Yahya) Sinwar sees that Hezbollah will no longer come to his aid, the greater the chances of returning our captives,” Netanyahu said.
“We are winning. We are determined to continue striking our enemies, returning our residents to their homes and bringing back all our hostages. We do not forget them for a moment.”


Saudi FM slams Israel’s ‘barbaric practices’ against ‘defenseless’ Palestinian civilians

Saudi FM slams Israel’s ‘barbaric practices’ against ‘defenseless’ Palestinian civilians
Updated 24 min 35 sec ago
Follow

Saudi FM slams Israel’s ‘barbaric practices’ against ‘defenseless’ Palestinian civilians

Saudi FM slams Israel’s ‘barbaric practices’ against ‘defenseless’ Palestinian civilians
  • Addressing the UN General Assembly, Prince Faisal calls for full membership for Palestine
  • Priority for the Kingdom is to ‘fulfill the needs of future generations, empower women and youth, and build bridges with the world’

CHICAGO: Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister on Saturday condemned Israel’s “crimes” and “barbaric practices” against “defenseless civilians” in the Gaza Strip during his speech to the UN General Assembly.

Prince Faisal bin Farhan accused Israel of creating a “real humanitarian catastrophe” that is “continuing to get worse.”

He lauded the recent International Court of Justice advisory opinion that Israel’s occupation of the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem is illegal under international and humanitarian law.

Prince Faisal urged the UN to recognize Palestine as a full member, saying: “We welcome the adoption by the General Assembly on May 10, 2024, of a resolution that states that the state of Palestine fulfills all the conditions to become a fully fledged member state of our organization, and we welcome the decision of Norway, Spain, Ireland, Slovenia and Armenia, who have recognized the brotherly country of Palestine.”

He added: “We call upon other states to bilaterally recognize the state of Palestine, and to act together in order to recognize the state of Palestine as an independent state.”

Israel’s actions continue despite Saudi efforts to “stop the bloodshed, to ensure unhindered humanitarian access, and to realize the legitimate demands of the Palestinian people,” including an independent state with East Jerusalem as its capital, Prince Faisal said.

“We categorically reject all crimes perpetrated by Israel against the kindred Palestinian people. The most recent crimes committed against civilians, defenseless civilians, is just one chapter in the story of suffering by this brotherly people who have been suffering for decades now,” he added.

Israel’s “barbaric” practices since last year have “cost the lives of tens of thousands of Palestinian civilians, in particular women and children,” he said.

“We’re seeing bombing, murder and destruction. This is a real humanitarian catastrophe and it’s continuing to get worse. It’s necessary to halt this aggression.”

Saudi Arabia has provided $5 billion to the people of Gaza in the past year, and is working with different UN agencies to raise a total of $106 billion for reconstruction and humanitarian aid, Prince Faisal said.

The Kingdom is working with UN ministerial committees, Norway and the EU to achieve peace between Israelis and Palestinians on the basis of the two-state solution, he added.

Saudi Arabia is also working to “fight against the financing of terrorism” by cooperating with international partners, he said.

The Kingdom is working to bring peace to the region by resuming relations with Syria, pushing to resolve the Yemen crisis, and striving for peace and stability in Sudan, Prince Faisal said, adding that his country is preparing to host the third round of Sudanese peace talks in Jeddah.

Saudi Arabia has restored diplomatic relations with Iran “based on the respect of sovereignty and non-interference in internal affairs, and also on respect of the UN Charter,” he said.

“We hope that Iran will cooperate with the international community, in particular vis-a-vis its nuclear program and its ballistic missile program.”

A priority for Saudi Arabia is to continue to “fulfill the needs of future generations, to empower women and youth, and to build bridges with the world,” Prince Faisal said, adding that the Kingdom is addressing major world issues such as climate change.

Last September, Saudi Arabia created an international organization to address water resource challenges, he said.

The Kingdom, which was chosen to host Expo 2030, will use the forum “to focus on the (UN’s) Sustainable Development Goals,” Prince Faisal said, adding that the event is “an opportunity to find political solutions when it comes to sustainability, and also to honor our commitments to developing countries.” 

He said: “We hope that the efforts being made will enable us to establish a common principle with mutual respect to build a better future for the whole of humanity.”


Why Lebanon is seen as trapped ‘between mafia and militia’

Why Lebanon is seen as trapped ‘between mafia and militia’
Updated 32 min 41 sec ago
Follow

Why Lebanon is seen as trapped ‘between mafia and militia’

Why Lebanon is seen as trapped ‘between mafia and militia’
  • Two experts claim strategic missteps being made by the US as tensions between Israel and Hezbollah intensify
  • Academic Hamoud Salhi and expert Jean AbiNader made the comments while appearing on Ray Hanania Radio Show

CHICAGO/LONDON: Lebanese experts have painted a bleak picture of the country’s imminent future, describing the nation as trapped “between mafia and militia” and criticizing the failure of the US to intervene effectively in the region. 

Speaking on the Ray Hanania Radio Show, Hamoud Salhi, a political science professor at California State University-Dominguez Hills, and Jean AbiNader, vice president for policy at the American Task Force on Lebanon, highlighted the strategic missteps being taken by the US, especially as tensions between Israel and Hezbollah intensify. 

The US “is strategically being affected. Number one, can you afford continuing to sponsor this war?” Salhi said, adding that further escalation could draw Hezbollah and Iran’s regional allies, such as Yemen and Iraq, into a broader conflict.

He explained that up to this point the US had attempted to leverage its influence in the region through Israel to counterbalance growing powers such as Russia and China. 

However, after nearly a year of conflict, Salhi questioned the sustainability of the current US approach, saying: “The US cannot sustain that. And more than anything else, Israel cannot sustain this war.” 

He warned that continued regional instability could lead to mass protests, putting “huge pressure” on the US and its Arab allies. 

“The US could potentially lose its allies in the region, the leaders they are working with,” Salhi said, adding that any potential normalization efforts must include a solution to the Palestinian’s cause. 

FASTFACTS

• A Hezbollah statement on Saturday said Hassan Nasrallah ‘has joined his fellow martyrs.’

• Israeli military said Ali Karki, commander of Hezbollah’s Southern Front, and several other commanders, were also killed in the attack.

• Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei said ‘the resistance movement, heading by Hezbollah, will decide the fate of the region.’

He anticipated that any significant changes in Washington’s position would likely occur only after the US presidential election on Nov. 5. At that point President Joe Biden, no longer constrained by election concerns and with just over two more months left in office before the inauguration of his successor on Jan. 20 2025, “could get away with adopting decisions that could favor the region.” 

Judging by events on Thursday, when Israeli President Benjamin Netanyahu arrived in New York to address the UN General Assembly, US influence over Israel is weakening.

The day before Netanyahu’s arrival, in a joint statement, the US and 11 allies, including France, the European Union, Saudi Arabia and the UAE, had called for “an immediate 21-day ceasefire across the Lebanon-Israel border to provide space for diplomacy toward the conclusion of a diplomatic settlement.” 

The White House and French officials indicated the ceasefire plan had been coordinated directly with Netanyahu. But faced with pressure from the rightwing members of his government, Netanyahu’s first act on touching down in the US was to disown the proposal, with a spokesperson claiming that he had not even responded to it. 

Instead, the prime minister’s office said, he had “instructed the IDF to continue fighting at full force, according to the plans that were presented to him.” 

In recent months, the US, alongside Qatar and Egypt, has been a primary broker in ceasefire negotiations between Hamas and Israel in Gaza. Hezbollah’s leader, Hassan Nasrallah, had indicated that similar efforts could also halt the hostilities between Hezbollah and Tel Aviv. 

However, in the past week, both Hezbollah and Israel have escalated their attacks, and on Saturday Israeli aircraft carried out a massive airstrike in Beirut’s Dahiyeh suburb, killing Nasrallah along with several other Hezbollah figures and possibly some Islamic Revolutionary Guards commanders.

Opinion

This section contains relevant reference points, placed in (Opinion field)

A statement from Hezbollah on Saturday said Nasrallah “has joined his fellow martyrs” but that the group would “continue the holy war against the enemy and in support of Palestine.”

This escalation followed the detonation of thousands of pagers and walkie-talkies used by Hezbollah operatives in two waves of attacks suspected to have been carried out by Mossad, Israel’s intelligence agency, which killed dozens of people and injured thousands more across Lebanon. Most of the dead are believed to have been fighters, based on death notices posted online by Hezbollah.

Subsequent Israeli airstrikes against Hezbollah strongholds in southern Lebanon and Beirut suburbs have killed nearly 700 people and displaced hundreds of thousands. 

“The issue of Lebanon is part of the bigger picture, part of the grand design that Israel has,” said Salhi. “We could talk about the Golan (Heights), we could talk about what’s happening today even in Yemen. Those are really complex issues. 

“But it is also, as we’ve seen so far, connected to the big, big problem of the existence of an entity like Israel, who sees its security through strength, military buildup and occupation within the context of their bigger picture, which is to occupy other countries for the purpose of achieving the right agenda.” 

Israel and Lebanon have a long history of conflict, with tensions peaking during the Lebanese Civil War. Israel invaded Lebanon in 1978 and 1982 in response to attacks from Palestinian militants, occupying southern Lebanon until 2000 while fighting a guerrilla war against Hezbollah. 

After Israel’s withdrawal, Hezbollah attacks led to the 2006 Lebanon War, which formally ended with UN Security Council Resolution 1701. The resolution, calling for a cessation of hostilities, Israeli withdrawal, and the deployment of UNIFIL forces, remains only partially implemented, further entangling Lebanon in a web of unresolved conflict. 

“(This situation) gets to the heart of what we’ve been saying about Lebanon for 40 years,” said AbiNader.

“In other words, most people have in their mind the image of a country torn between Christians and Muslims, which is absolutely inaccurate. And now the narrative is the country is torn between Christians and Hezbollah, or between Israel and Hezbollah. The overriding images are incorrect to begin with. 

“But we are fighting for the soul of Lebanon,” he said, adding that the question at this point was whether Lebanon was going to become “an outpost for the Iranian paramilitary called Hezbollah, or is it going to return to its weak roots as a quasi-democratic country?” 

The current situation, he said, highlighted the fragile balance underpinning Lebanon’s entire political system. 

“The expression a lot of Lebanese use is, they’re caught between the mafia and the militia. Mafia, the old political leadership, and the militia, which has its own raison d’etre. 

“And so Lebanon has really put itself into a trap that underscores the question of whether or not Lebanon can survive.”

AbiNader said that Hezbollah had been able to fill the vacuum created by Lebanon’s antiquated and dysfunctional political system, itself a major obstacle to progress. 

“Until you have a (proper) state, you have Hezbollah, which has a stronger military, bank system, supermarkets, all this kind of stuff that supports people and has been done the way the government should, but didn’t,” he said. 

The Lebanese people are suffering now because “the overriding (Israeli) narrative is that Hezbollah is bad, therefore, by extension, the Lebanese are bad and so we can do whatever we want to protect our northern border.” 

Israel’s current attacks on Lebanon are motivated by a determination to allow an estimated 70,000 Israelis, displaced from the north by Hezbollah rocket and missile attacks since Oct. 7, to return to their homes close to the Lebanese border. 

But the bid to drive Hezbollah back from the border region, said AbiNader, “has resulted in increased retaliation toward the Lebanese people, and very little toward Hezbollah.

“Look at the threats that Israel is making. They’re always saying: ‘OK, Lebanese civilians get out of these areas, because it’s where Hezbollah has its rocket launchers. We’re going to go in and clean up the rocket launchers.’

“Well, we just accept what’s said about Hezbollah without really knowing on the ground what’s there and not there. It’s no question (Hezbollah) are a malign force, but they also represent Lebanese people.

“So, the question is, how do we get the needs of the Lebanese people, that Hezbollah represents, met without further antagonism?”

AbiNader called for the international community to intervene and establish clear boundaries to “stop what’s happening in Lebanon,” adding that competing US interests in the region have long complicated Lebanon’s integration and progress. 

“But it’s not going to happen,” he said.

“Hezbollah and Israel certainly are not going to change. They both think they’re protecting their own people, their own interests, therefore they’re morally right. So, when you have two moral rights arguing against each other, you’re not going to have an easy resolution.” 

He added: “So until there’s some dialog about these dueling narratives — without trying to find who’s right, just to find out where’s the middle ground —  we’re going to continue to have this conflict.”
 

 


Russian FM slams killing of Palestinians with US weapons

Russian FM slams killing of Palestinians with US weapons
Updated 28 September 2024
Follow

Russian FM slams killing of Palestinians with US weapons

Russian FM slams killing of Palestinians with US weapons
  • Palestinians have ‘legitimate right’ to self-determination, Sergey Lavrov tells UN General Assembly
  • Israel’s attacks on Lebanon are ‘inhumane’ and a ‘glaring example of terrorist methods’

DUBAI: “The killing of Palestinian civilians with American weapons must be immediately ended,” Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov told the UN General Assembly on Saturday.
“There can be no justification for acts of terrorism, which Israelis fell victim to on Oct. 7 of last year, but everyone who still has a sense of compassion is outraged by the fact that the October tragedy is being used for the mass collective punishment of the Palestinians in the form of an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe,” he said.
It is important to ensure the delivery of humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip and the reconstruction of its infrastructure, he added.
Lavrov highlighted the importance “to guarantee the realization of the legitimate right for the Palestinians to self-determination and to allow them, not in words but in deeds as they say on the ground, to create a contiguous and viable state within the 1967 borders with its capital in East Jerusalem.”
He described Israel’s attacks on Lebanon as “inhumane” and a “glaring example of terrorist methods as a means of achieving political aims” by transforming civilian technology into a lethal weapon.
“There must be an immediate investigation into this crime, but already we can’t remain silent in the face of many publications in the media, including in Europe and here in the US, that indicate to varying degrees the involvement and awareness of Washington when it comes to the preparation of that terrorist attack,” Lavrov said.


Revolutionary Guard general’s killing ratchets up pressure on Iran to respond

Gen. Abbas Nilforushan. (Supplied)
Gen. Abbas Nilforushan. (Supplied)
Updated 28 September 2024
Follow

Revolutionary Guard general’s killing ratchets up pressure on Iran to respond

Gen. Abbas Nilforushan. (Supplied)
  • Gen. Nilforushan served as the deputy commander for operations in the Guard, a role overseeing its ground forces

DUBAI: A prominent general in Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard died in an Israeli airstrike that killed Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in Beirut.
The killing of Gen. Abbas Nilforushan marks the latest casualty suffered by Iran as the nearly yearlong Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip teeters on the edge of becoming a regional conflict.
His death further ratchets up pressure on Iran to respond, even as Tehran has signaled in recent months that it wants to negotiate with the West over sanctions crushing its economy.
Ahmad Reza Pour Khaghan, the deputy head of Iran’s judiciary, also confirmed Nilforushan’s death, describing him as a “guest to the people of Lebanon,” the state-run IRNA news agency said.
Khaghan also reportedly said that Iran had the right to retaliate under international law.
Nilforushan served as the deputy commander for operations in the Guard, a role overseeing its ground forces.
What he was doing in Lebanon on Friday wasn’t immediately clear. The Guard’s expeditionary Quds Force for decades has armed, trained and relied on Hezbollah as part of its strategy to rely on regional militias as a counterbalance to Israel and the US.
Nilforushan, like other members of the Guard that view Israel as Iran’s main enemy, long mocked and criticized the country.
“The Zionist regime has many ethnic, cultural, social and military rifts. It is in vulnerable and in doom status more than before,” Nilforushan said in 2022, according to an IRNA report.
The US Treasury sanctioned Nilforushan in 2022 and said he had led an organization “directly in charge of protest suppression.”
Those sanctions came amid the monthslong protests in Iran over the death of Mahsa Amini following her arrest for allegedly not wearing her headscarf, or hijab, to the liking of police. At the time, Nilforushan accused Iran’s enemies abroad of stoking the demonstrations led by Iranian women that challenged both the mandatory hijab and the country’s theocracy.
Nilforushan also served in Syria, backing President Bashar Assad in his country’s decades-long war that grew out of the 2011 Arab Spring. Like many of his colleagues, he began his military career in the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s.
In 2020, Iranian state television called him a “comrade” of Gen. Qassem Soleimani, the head of its expeditionary Quds Force who was killed in a US drone attack in Baghdad that year.
Nilforushan’s death comes as Iran in recent months has been signaling it wants to change its tack with the West after years of tensions stemming from then-President Donald Trump’s unilateral withdrawal of America from Tehran’s nuclear deal with world powers in 2018.
In July, Iranian voters elected reformist President Masoud Pezeshkian following a helicopter crash that killed President Ebrahim Raisi, a hard-line protege to 85-year-old Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
While critical of Israel, Pezeshkian has maintained that Iran is willing to negotiate over its nuclear program, which now enriches uranium to near weapons-grade levels. While Iran has been able to sell oil abroad despite sanctions, it likely was at a steep discount and energy prices have fallen further in recent weeks.
Meanwhile, Iran still threatens to retaliate for Soleimani’s killing and the suspected Israeli assassination in Tehran of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in July. Iran hasn’t explained why it hasn’t struck yet, though an unprecedented direct attack it launched in April on Israel failed to seriously damage any major target.