Inside Israel's combat zone in southern Lebanon
The ceasefire itself is already in tatters.
Israel’s ground invasion along this border last week was launched, it said, to destroy Hezbollah weapons and infrastructure in “limited, localised, targeted raids”.
Ten days on, the army was taking us to a village a couple of miles into Lebanese territory, where it had just established “some level of control”.
We were told not to reveal where it is, for military reasons, and our movements were restricted.
Israeli artillery was blasting through the air as we arrived. The brigade commander, Col Yaniv Malka, told us the area was still not clear of Hezbollah fighters.
Bursts of small-arms fire were from fighting that was taking place 500m away, he said, describing “face-to-face combat” with Hezbollah fighters inside the village just a couple of days before – meaning, he said, “my troops seeing in their eyes, and fighting them in the streets”.
All along the central path through the village, houses lay demolished; piles of rubble leaching glimpses of family life. Buildings left standing were shot through with artillery, missing corners or walls and peppered with gunshot and shrapnel holes.
Two tanks sat in churned up earth near what was once a village square. The level of destruction around them is reminiscent of Gaza.
THIS AND MORE UPDATES AT: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c80r9zyk89yo
No comments:
Post a Comment