Hezbollah attack Israeli assembly point in northern occupied Palestine
The Islamic Resistance in Lebanon attacks an Israeli assembly point in Bayad Blida, northern occupied Palestine.
The Islamic Resistance in Lebanon - Hezbollah attacked Saturday an Israeli assembly point in northern occupied Palestine in continuation of their operations in solidarity with Gaza.
Hezbollah announced that it launched artillery strikes at several Israeli soldiers as they were maneuvering in the Bayad Blida military site.
The Resistance underlined that the attack was in response to the Israeli occupation's violations in southern Lebanon and its aggression on Gaza, which has been ongoing for nearly seven months.
Netanyahu crushed the north, left it at Hezbollah's mercy': Former IOF deputy chief of staff
Yair Golan, reserve major general and former Israeli deputy chief of staff, took a jab at Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu following the anti-tank missile strike that targeted the Metulla settlement in northern occupied Palestine.
Hezbollah released footage of its Resistance fighters bombarding and destroying buildings sheltering Israeli soldiers at the Metulla settlement on Monday.
"While Netanyahu babbles about an operation of no strategic importance in Rafah, Metulla is under fire from Hezbollah, cities and towns are being abandoned, as the terrible failure intensifies," the Israeli Channel 12 quoted Golan as saying.
Golan stressed that "Netanyahu crushed the north and left it at Hezbollah's mercy."
Meanwhile, Channel 12's correspondent in the North, Guy Varon, reported that 12 anti-tank missiles were fired in the past day at Metulla, four of which hit one house.
Varon mentioned that northern settlers have "spent an additional [Jewish] holiday outside" their settlements, dozens were evacuated, while 150,000 of al-Jalil settlers are still in a war zone.
According to the correspondent, these settlers don't feel that the Israeli government is working to change the situation, as not a single plan has been presented until now.
He added that the northern settlers fear one day they would be told they could return to their settlement without the situation being resolved.