Sunday, December 22, 2024

Iran’s twisted billboard celebrating missile attack on Israel

Must read

Iran has gloated about its regime’s recent missile attack on Israel on a sick billboard in its capital city, Tehran.

The billboard shows dozens of missiles raining down on Israel. Iran, which militarily and economically backs both the Lebanon-based Hezbollah and the Hamas militants who run the Gaza Strip, launched dozens of missiles into Israel on Tuesday night.

“If you want war, we are masters of war,” reads the slogan at the top, written in Farsi. The slogan underneath, in Hebrew, reads: “Israel must be wiped from the face of the earth and this is the beginning of the story.”

It is another escalation in a tit-for-tat cycle that is pushing the Middle East closer to a wider and more dangerous regional war. After the attack, Israel warned there would be “repercussions”.

On Wednesday, Israel pressed forward on two fronts, pursuing a ground incursion into Lebanon against Hezbollah that left eight Israeli soldiers dead. It also conducted air strikes in Gaza that killed dozens, including children.

The Israeli military said seven soldiers were killed in two Hezbollah attacks in southern Lebanon on Wednesday, without elaborating. The deaths followed an earlier announcement of the first Israeli combat death in Lebanon since the start of the incursion — a 22-year-old captain in a commando brigade. Another seven troops were wounded.

Together, the deaths announced on the eve of Rosh Hashana, the Jewish new year, were some of the biggest casualties sustained by Israeli forces in months.

In Gaza, Israeli ground and air operations in the territory’s second-largest city of Khan Younis killed at least 51 people, including women and children, Palestinian medical officials said.

Late on Wednesday night, an Israeli airstrike hit an apartment building near the Lebanese capital’s city centre, the second time Israel has struck central Beirut this week. At least six people were killed and seven wounded in the residential Bashoura district.

Residents reported a sulphur-like smell following the attack, and Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency accused Israel of using internationally banned phosphorous bombs. Human rights groups have in the past accused Israel of using white phosphorus incendiary shells on towns and villages in conflict-hit southern Lebanon. Israel previously denied using similar weapons.

Multiple strikes were also reported in Beirut’s southern suburbs in areas issued evacuation warnings by the Israeli army. The area struck in central Beirut was not covered in those warnings.

The latest actions on multiple fronts have raised fears of a wider conflict that could draw in Iran as well as the United States, which has rushed military assets to the region in support of Israel. Meanwhile, Syria’s state-run SANA news agency said an Israeli airstrike hit a residential building in Damascus on Wednesday evening, killing three people and wounding at least three others.

An Associated Press journalist at the scene said the missile appeared to have targeted the bottom floor of a four-storey apartment building. There was no immediate comment from Israel, which rarely claims responsibility for strikes outside of its borders.

Latest article