Hezbollah leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah said that his group is capable of hitting every part of Israel, and had the same capability during the Second Lebanon War last summer. Hezbollah's missiles can reach any spot in Israel, the Lebanese group's chief said in remarks aired on Sunday, months after the United Nations beefed up its peacekeeping force in south Lebanon.
About 1,200 Lebanese and 157 Israelis were killed in a 34-day war between group and Israel which began after Hezbollah seized two Israeli soldiers in a cross-border raid on July 12, 2006. "In July and August (2006), there was no place in occupied Palestine which was out of the reach of the resistance missiles," Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah told Al Jazeera television. "I stress that we can do this today as well. Tel Aviv or elsewhere, we were certain that we could reach any corner or spot in occupied Palestine and now we are certain that we can reach them."
Jazeera said Nasrallah was speaking in an interview which it will air on Monday. The context of his remarks was not clear from the excerpts it broadcast.
Nasrallah also said that Syria had been willing to engage in last year's war. However, he said: "Hezbollah did not see the interest in that, and that the Israelis took into account the Syrian preparation but did not act militarily on the front which may require Syrian advancement."
The U.N. peacekeeper force in south Lebanon, UNIFIL, was expanded as part of an August 14 truce between Israel and Hezbollah and says its mandate is to ensure the group does not have a military presence south of the Litani River. Lebanese security and political sources said in May that Hezbollah had replenished its rocket arsenal and received improved anti-aircraft and anti-tank missiles since a U.N.-backed truce halted hostilities in August. Israel and the United States accuse Syria and Iran of arming, training and funding Hezbollah. Syria and Iran say their support to the anti-Israel faction is purely political. The Beirut government says it has no proof of arms transfers from Syria since August.
Israel has complained about Hezbollah's re-supply effort but analysts have said the group has rearmed since last year's war but had little interest in provoking a new one. Lebanon deployed regular forces along the frontier as part of the U.N.-brokered ceasefire that ended the war. The border has been largely quiet since then. |