Nasrallah had led Hezbollah for 32 years, transforming it into a powerful political and militant force in Lebanon and a key adversary of Israel
Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah was killed in an Israeli airstrike on September 27, 2023, in an underground war operations room in Beirut. The attack, which also claimed five other lives, led to a full-scale war between Israel and Hezbollah.
turned months of low-level strikes between Israel and the fighters into all-out war that battered much of southern and eastern Lebanon for two months until a U.S.-brokered ceasefire took effect Nov. 27. “His Eminence (Hassan Nasrallah) used to lead the ...
Late Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah will be buried after the 60-day initial ceasefire period between Israel and the Iran-backed terrorist group, a senior Hezbollah official says during a tour of the site where Nasrallah was killed by Israel.
It is the latest Israeli assassination of a terror group leader and a pivotal development in the escalating conflict on Israel’s northern border. Israel killed ...
Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah was killed in an Israeli airstrike on 27 September 2023, confirmed by senior Hezbollah official Wafiq Safa. His deat
Israel has killed thousands of Hamas fighters. But the Gaza-based terrorist organization has not yet been completely destroyed, nor have its allied militias in the region.
Hamas murdered more than 1,200 people in Israel and abducted 251. The deal which begins its enactment tomorrow, provides for the release, in phases, of the estimated 94 hostages still held by Hamas, of whom,
French President Emmanuel Macron called on Israel on Friday to accelerate its troop withdrawal from southern Lebanon, as a deadline nears for the pullout under the terms of a ceasefire that ended the war with Hezbollah last year.
LBCI sources reported a private meeting between French President Emmanuel Macron and Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri at the Presidential Palace in Baabda on Friday afternoon. Upon leaving the palace, Speaker Berri briefly commented,
Politicians in Washington are indulging in a certain amount of unseemly grandstanding about who deserves credit for the Gaza ceasefire, provisionally agreed in Qatar this week and announced on Thursday.