Over a dozen top commanders in Hezbollah's Radwan Force killed in Beirut strike ■ UN human rights chief: Pager explosions in Lebanon violated international law ■ U.S. national security advisor: Risk of Israel-Hezbollah escalation 'acute' ■ IDF said it attacked 180 targets in southern Lebanon, striking thousands of Hezbollah rocket launchers; 65 rockets launched from Lebanon at Israel ■ Gaza's Hamas-run Health Ministry: 22 killed in Israeli strike on what the IDF called a Hamas compound in building previously used by Gaza City school ■ Here's what you need to know 351 days into the war
Hezbollah is not falling into Israel's trap, and has signaled it will not stray from its guiding strategy in the Gaza war – supporting Hamas without plunging into an all-out regional war that would implicate Iran
IDF says it assassinated Ibrahim Aqil, Hezbollah's head of operations, in Beirut ■ Some 150 rockets fired into northern Israel, most fall in open areas, causing fires ■ IDF: Israeli soldier severely wounded in southern Gaza combat ■ Lebanese Health Ministry: 9 dead and 59 wounded in Israeli strike on Beirut ■ Two Israeli soldiers killed by Hezbollah fire near Israel-Lebanon border
Maj. (Res.) Nael Fwarsy, 43, from Maghar, and Sgt. Tomer Keren, 20, from Haifa, were killed on Thursday in separate Hezbollah drone and anti-tank missile strikes along the Israeli-Lebanese border
Sources told The Times that Israeli shell company BAC Consulting was licensed to make Taiwanese-designed pagers, producing both legitimate devices and those for Hezbollah containing plastic explosives
Hezbollah's Nasrallah says radio device explosions attributed to Israel could be called 'declaration of war' ■ Ten Israelis wounded by drone, anti-tank missile fire from Lebanon. The IDF chief of staff approved battle plans for Israel's northern front with Hezbollah ■ Death toll from Wednesday's walkie-talkie blasts rose to 25, Lebanon's health minister says ■ Israel submits new cease-fire proposal ■ Here's what you need to know 349 days into the war
Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, as jets flew low over Beirut, declared that Israel's alleged attacks on Hezbollah were a 'declaration of war,' delivering a 'blow that is unprecedented in its history'
Hezbollah chief Nasrallah: Pager blasts could be called 'a declaration of war,' will meet 'just punishment' ■ IDF chief approves northern front plans as Israel strikes Hezbollah targets in Lebanon ■ Several Israelis wounded in Hezbollah anti-tank, drone hits in country's north ■ Jewish Israeli businessman charged with plotting assassinations of Netanyahu and key officials for Iran ■ Eight Israelis wounded by Hezbollah missile fire in country's north
Eight Israelis and Palestinians were indicted for assisting terrorist activities and collaborating with a hostile entity and were allegedly recruited by Hezbollah member, a former Israeli now living in Lebanon, in exchange for payment
Around 2,800 people seriously wounded, eight killed after pagers in Beirut and across Lebanon explode, Lebanese government says ■ Dozens of wounded are Hezbollah members, security sources tell Reuters ■ Israel's top security officials called for emergency meeting with government leaders to present options for addressing escalation with Hezbollah ■ Here's what you need to know 347 days into the war
Israeli security officials believe Hezbollah plans military action, prompting an urgent meeting of senior officers at the defense ministry to explore options for a possible northern escalation
The beeper, which predates mobile phones, allows professionals to receive messages in remote areas. Today, it was released that Hezbollah operatives used the device.
Lebanese PM says incident is 'serious violation of our sovereignty' ■ Hezbollah chief Nasrallah not harmed, source says ■ Seven reportedly killed in additional pager explosions in Syria ■ IDF Home Front Command doesn't issue any update in instructions for the Israeli public ■ Netanyahu convenes meeting with top ministers in Tel Aviv
One of the deadliest weapons on the Ukrainian battlefield has recently appeared in the conflict between Hezbollah and Israel, and it's extremely difficult to intercept: first-person view drones that allow the pilot to see from the aircraft's perspective
Lebanon is in the midst of a crisis on many levels, and Israel's threats 'to send it to the stone age' are met with rolled eyes, as many Lebanese feel they are already there. The Lebanese people have risen up before, but Hezbollah is too well armed and too well supported to be challenged
Hezbollah gives Sinwar the military pressure against Israel and buys him time to set the pace of the negotiations and insist on preliminary conditions. Netanyahu is using the time as if it was meant for him too, while endangering the hostages' lives
After a preemptive Israeli strike and Hezbollah rocket attacks on the north, residents feel abandoned and discriminated against. Three northern Israeli council heads announced they are severing ties with the government
The army is investigating whether First Sergeant David Moshe Ben Shitrit was killed by an interceptor rocket which mistakenly targeted his ship, or by shrapnel after a Hezbollah drone was intercepted over the ship
'The martyrs rejoice as they witness the beginning of revenge,' one commentator said about the Hezbollah response – which caused only minor damage – to Israel's killing of a Hezbollah commander last month. Others pointed out the anticlimax of the group's long-awaited reprisal
Hezbollah stretched the limits when it tried to target army bases in the north and a security installation in central Israel. But not only is Hamas leader's dream of an all-out war still distant – Hezbollah may be looking to quell the flames