Lebanon to file complaint to UNSC against Israel border escalation

Lebanon has stated that it will file a complaint with the United Nations Security Council over a recent Israeli attempt at escalation that saw the regime fire dozens of flares over the country’s border.
The
country’s Supreme Defense Council announced the plan during a meeting chaired
by Lebanese President Michel Aoun on Wednesday, Lebanon’s official National
News Agency (NNA) reported.
Early in the
day, Israel’s Channel 12 said the regime had fired more than 30 of the
projectiles into Lebanon.
Lebanon’s
al-Manar television network, however, described the projectiles as phosphorous
shells and identified the targeted areas as the southern Lebanese towns of
Houla and Mays al-Jabal.
The regime
described the development as a “security-related incident.”
Israeli
media initially said the firing came amid concerns over what they called a
possible infiltration near Kibbutz Menara in the Upper Galilee area, located
near the Lebanese border and the Israeli-occupied Syrian territory of the Golan
Heights.
Neither the
Lebanese army nor the country’s resistance movement of Hezbollah has, however,
reported carrying out any such operation into the occupied territories.
Netanyahu’s
threat
The
escalation was followed by a vocal threat, with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu saying in a statement, “We shall react forcefully to any attack
against us.”
“I advise
Hezbollah not to test Israel’s strength,” it added, alleging, “Hezbollah is
once again endangering Lebanon due to its aggression.”
Hezbollah
became an integral part of the Lebanese defensive structure after forcing the
occupying regime into a retreat during two wars that Tel Aviv waged against
Lebanon in the 2000s.
The Israeli
military adventurism came as the occupied territories have been on alert over
the possibility of a retaliatory attack by Hezbollah after one of its members
was martyred in an Israeli act of aggression on the Syrian soil last month.
Ali Kamel
Mohsen was killed during an Israeli attack near the Syrian capital of Damascus
on July 20, according to a statement by Hezbollah.
Hezbollah
said at the time that a response to the deadly aggression was “inevitable,”
which led to the deployment of more troops by the Israeli regime to the north
of the occupied territories.
Israel
claimed a week later that the regime’s forces had thwarted an effort by
Hezbollah resistance fighters to infiltrate into the occupied territories
through Lebanon’s Tel Aviv-occupied Shebaa Farms.
The movement denied the claim. It said all Israeli reports about border clashes with the movement’s fighters were fake and served to boost the morale of Israeli forces by fabricating fictitious victories.