Israel Attacks More Hezbollah Targets as Iran Backs Cease-Fire

(Bloomberg) -- Israel carried out bombing raids in the suburbs of Beirut alongside ground attacks in southern Lebanon, while Iran said it would support a conditional cease-fire in the conflicts involving its allied groups Hezbollah and Hamas.

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The airstrikes in the southern outskirts of the Lebanese capital targeted the potential successor of Hezbollah’s assassinated leader Hassan Nasrallah and other figures, the New York Times and other US media reported, citing Israeli officials. It was not known if Hashem Safieddine died in the bombardment, which residents said shook buildings in the city.

Israel has stepped up a campaign to eliminate threats from Iran-backed Hezbollah after almost of year of trading cross-border rocket fire, killing much of its top leadership and sending troops into southern Lebanon for the first time since a 2006 war. The Israel Defense Forces said Friday it’s killed 250 Hezbollah militants since Monday, and troops recovered rocket launchers, explosives and other weapons while clearing the area just north of the border.

Two Israeli soldiers were killed while fighting in northern Israel, the IDF said. Israeli public broadcaster KAN said they were hit by a drone attack from Iraq.

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi travelled to Beirut on Friday and met with Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati. He said has discussed a cease-fire with both Lebanese officials and other countries in the region, according to comments shown on Iranian state TV. Araghchi added that any truce would have to be agreeable to Hezbollah and Hamas and take effect alongside a cease-fire in Gaza.

The US and others have been pushing Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to agree to a truce in both the Palestinian territory and Lebanon without success. Hezbollah has made a cease-fire conditional on something similar in Gaza, and Hamas hasn’t indicated a willingness to agree to terms.

Araghichi’s trip to the Lebanese capital came three days after Iran fired 200 ballistic missiles at Israel in retaliation for the attacks on Hezbollah and the killing of a Hamas leader in July, and Netanyahu has vowed to respond. That’s raised fears of major tit-for-tat attacks that could trigger a region-wide war and drag in the US, Israel’s main ally.