Netanyahu threatens Iran with Israel’s ‘long arm’

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The Israeli PM holds up the killing of Hassan Nasrallah as a warning to both Tehran and the wider Middle East

The Israeli assassination of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in Lebanon shows that no location in the Middle East is beyond the reach of the Jewish state, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned regional rivals and foes in a televised address on Saturday.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) killed the leader of the Lebanese militant group in a bombing of an underground compound in Beirut. Hezbollah confirmed Nasrallah’s death on Saturday.

Netanyahu warned Iran – referring to it as the “ayatollahs’ regime” – that Israel will retaliate against any state that threatens it.

”Those who strike at us, we will strike at them. There is nowhere in Iran or the Middle East beyond the reach of the long arm of Israel, and today you know how true that is.”

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Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov speaks at the UN Security Council meeting in New York, US, on September 27, 2024. Russia condemns Israeli attacks on Lebanon

The killing of Nasrallah serves as an additional message to Hamas, Netanyahu said. “The more that Hamas political chief Yahya Sinwar realizes that Hezbollah is no longer coming to save him, the greater the chances for the return of our hostages,” he declared.

Netanyahu further cautioned Israelis that the coming days will be difficult. “We will face significant challenges in the days ahead and will meet them,” he said, describing this period as a “historical turning point.”

According to sources from ABC News, the IDF may be planning a ground operation against Hezbollah in Lebanon.

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Israeli battle tanks gather at the Israeli-Lebanese border on September 28, 2024. Israel to invade Lebanon – media

Hezbollah and Israel have engaged in increasingly frequent cross-border strikes recently, raising concerns of a full-scale conflict since the onset of the Israel-Hamas war last October. Tensions escalated earlier in September when thousands of pagers and handheld radios detonated across Lebanon, resulting in dozens of deaths and thousands of injuries. The UN condemned the electronics blasts as “unacceptable,” with the organization’s human rights chief, Volker Turk, calling for a thorough investigation.

While Israel has neither confirmed nor denied its involvement, the covert attack is widely believed to have been conducted by Israeli intelligence.

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