Israeli airstrike in suburban Beirut unlikely to prompt escalation, observers say - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 02:08 AM | Calgary | -0.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
World

Israeli airstrike in suburban Beirut unlikely to prompt escalation, observers say

An Israeli airstrike in suburban Beirut that reportedly killed a Hezbollah commander may have caused outrage in Lebanon, but several outside observers suspect it'sunlikely to spur any significant military escalation.

Military says airstrike killed Fuad Shukr, a senior Hezbollah commander

A view of post-airstrike damage seen at a site in suburban Beirut on Tuesday evening.
A view of post-airstrike damage seen at a site in suburban Beirut on Tuesday evening. The Israeli airstrike that reportedly killed a Hezbollah commander may have caused outrage in Lebanon, but several outside observers suspect it'sunlikely to spur any significant military escalation. (Hussein Malla/The Associated Press)

An Israeli airstrike in suburban Beirut that reportedly killed a Hezbollah commander may have caused outrage in Lebanon, but several outside observers suspect it'sunlikely to spur any significant military escalation.

The strike hit a site in Beirut's Haret Hreikneighbourhood an area with shops and residential apartments, but also where Hezbollah has political and security operationson Tuesday evening.Fuad Shukr, a veteran Hezbollah commander,was the apparent target.

Dozens were injured in the strike and at least one person other than Shukr died, according to Lebanon's Health MinisterFiras Abiad.

The Israeli military said its "targeted strike" sought to kill "the commander responsible" fora July 27 rocket attackthat left 12 young people dead in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights. Hezbollahdenied it had been involvedin the attack.

WATCH | 'Mayhem' inBeirut:

Mayhem erupts after explosion rocks Hezbollah stronghold in Beirut suburb

1 month ago
Duration 3:02
Israel's military is confirming it carried out a strike targeting one of Hezbollah's commanders they say was responsible for a rocket blast in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights this weekend that killed 12 children. While Hezbollah has denied responsibility, reporter Irris Makler breaks down what's at stake.

Mark Schwartz, a retired U.S. army lieutenant-general who served as the U.S. security co-ordinator to Israel and the Palestinian Authority, expects"there will be a lot of rhetoric" following the strike, but does not believe it willmotivateIran-backed Hezbollah to expand the level of hostilities.

"There's no strategic benefit for Lebanese Hezbollah to further escalate the war," said Schwartz, who is an adjunct international defence researcher with the U.S.-basedRAND Corporation think-tank,in a phone interview with CBCNews.

Peter G. Bates, a retired Canadian foreign service officer, offered a similar assessment as to the possibility of escalation stemming from the Beirut strike.

"They want to keep it bubbling, but not boiling," Bates said, of the level of conflict between Israel and Hezbollah.

But he said there is"every likelihood that Hezbollah will respond in some way."

Tuesday's airstrike came months after an Israeli drone strike in January claimed the life of Saleh Arouri,a top Hamas official. Hewas also killed inBeirut.

A handful of senior Hezbollah commandershave also been killed in strikes in other parts of Lebanon.

Earlier this month, Mohammad Naameh Nasser, the leader of a regional division in southern Lebanon,died in a strike near Tyre, Lebanon, closer to the Israeli border. And in June,Taleb Abdallah, a senior field commander, was killed near the south Lebanon village ofJouaiyya.

Escalation could 'get out of control'

Gershon Baskin, the Middle East director at the U.K.-based International Communities Organisation, agreed that the warring parties did not favour escalating the current level of conflict.

But he saidfuture events could have unforeseen consequences.

WATCH | Assessing the Israel-Hezbollah tensions:

How could Israel-Hezbollah tensions impact Gaza ceasefire talks?

1 month ago
Duration 8:45
A sequence of attacks between Israel and Hezbollah this week marks the most significant escalation of tensions on the Israel-Lebanon border since Oct. 7. It comes as officials from Israel, Qatar, Egypt and the U.S. met in Rome over the weekend to discuss a ceasefire in Gaza. Former hostage negotiator Gershon Baskin joins Power & Politics to discuss how the Israel-Hezbollah conflict could play into negotiations.

"The problem is that once we begin to escalate, the escalation can get out of control," Baskin, a former hostage negotiator,told CBC's Power & Politicsfrom Jerusalem.

Baskin pointed to the recent Golan Heights attack as an example.

"We saw a rocket hit a soccer field over the weekend if another rocket falls somewhere in Lebanon or somewhere else in Israel and kills a lot of civilians, this is the kind of thing that can bring us to out-of-control escalation."

A man walks along a section of a building damaged in an Israeli airstrike on Tuesday evening.
A man walks along a section of a building damaged in an Israeli airstrike on Tuesday evening. (Hussein Malla/The Associated Press)

Mark Cancian, a senior adviser with the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington-based think-tank, told CBC's Canada Tonight that Hezbollah has ramped up attacks on Israel in recent months and specifically since the outbreak of war between Israel and Hamas.

And while these ongoing attacks have endured at "a relatively low level," Cancian, a former U.S. Marine colonel, said it's clear,as in the case of the Golan Heights rocket attack,that people eventually get hurt through these actions.

"Israel has a firm policy that if they get hurt, they'regoing to hurt you back, and that's what we've seen," said Cancian.

WATCH | Will Beirut strike escalate Israel-Hezbollah tensions?

Israel-Hezbollah escalation unlikely, says retired U.S. colonel | Canada Tonight

1 month ago
Duration 5:02
The Israeli military said late on Tuesday that Israeli air force fighter jets have killed Hezbollah's most senior military commander and head of its strategic unit, Fuad Shukr. Mark Cancian, a retired U.S. colonel and a senior adviser with the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a U.S. think-tank, says an escalation is unlikely, but not impossible.

Within Israel, it appears public opinion is "very much divided" as to how to deal with Hezbollah, said Renan Levine, an associate professor of political science at the University of Toronto.

There are some "who think ... the only thing to do is to hit back until this stops," he said.

In Lebanon, Foreign Minister Abdallah Bou Habibsaid his government condemnedthe Israeli strikeand intended to raise the matter with the United Nations.

He told Reuters the Beirut strike hadn't been expected and he hoped that any response from Hezbollah would not worsen the situation.

"Hopefully any response will be proportionate and will not be more than that, so that this wave of killing, hitting and shelling will stop."

Hezbollah official Ali Ammar, meanwhile, told Al-Manar TV that "theIsraeli enemy has committed a great stupid act in size, timing and circumstances by targeting an entirely civilian area."

Ammar said Israel "will pay a price for this sooner or later."

Hours after the strike in Beirut,the Israel Defence Forcesstatedthat Shukr, the Hezbollah commander, had been killed.

Hezbollah did not immediately confirm Shukr's death.

Schwartz said that Israel would havedetermined it had a high degree of confidence in who was responsible for the weekend attack.

Having made that conclusion,Schwartz saidIsrael would then "follow through" with a strike of this manner.

If Shukrsomehowsurvived, Israelwould have beenlikely to target him again in future, Schwartz said.

With files from The Associated Press, CBC News and Reuters