Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

IDF strikes Hezbollah terrorist infrastructure in Syria

“The IDF holds the Syrian regime accountable for all activities which take place within its territory and will not allow for any attempted actions which could lead to the entrenchment of Hezbollah on the Syrian front.”

The flag of Hezbollah flies in Syria, where Hezbollah has become an active element in a civil war that has claimed the lives of 80,000 people. Credit: Hezbollah Flag/Wikimedia Commons.
The flag of Hezbollah flies in Syria, where Hezbollah has become an active element in a civil war that has claimed the lives of 80,000 people. Credit: Hezbollah Flag/Wikimedia Commons.

The Israel Defense Forces on Tuesday night struck Hezbollah military infrastructure in Syria.

“The IDF holds the Syrian regime accountable for all activities which take place within its territory and will not allow for any attempted actions which could lead to the entrenchment of Hezbollah on the Syrian front,” the military said.

At the same time, the IDF said that it had struck Hezbollah observation posts and infrastructure in Southern Lebanon.

Throughout the day on Tuesday, IDF artillery fired across the border to remove threats in the areas of Dhayra and Tayr Harfa in Southern Lebanon.

The Israeli Air Force overnight Monday attacked terrorist infrastructure belonging to the Syrian Army in the area of Mahajja, the Israeli military announced on Tuesday.

In addition, Israel Defense Forces artillery struck a military post in southern Syria on Monday night.

According to the latest IDF war data, as of April 2, a total of 3,100 launches from Lebanon and 35 from Syria have crossed into Israeli territory since the start of the war on Oct. 7.

In the northern arena, more than 3,300 targets have been attacked from the ground and another 1,400 from the air. Also, around 30 commanders and 330 terrorists have been killed.

Organizers of the festival said there will be “proactive and precautionary” security for the event, as county officials encouraged the community to attend an unveiling of a memorial stone marker.
“We expect a decision in the coming months,” an attorney working with the scholar told JNS. “The case is now at an inflection point.”
Sen. Chris Van Hollen’s op-ed was “historically inaccurate and out of touch,” according to Democratic Majority for Israel.
A New York district court judge ruled that the janitors, who were subjected to anti-Jewish slurs, could not prove that the protesters occupied the campus building.
The Democratic political consultant Jared Sclar told JNS that “the results will cut in more than one direction, and that split is the story.”
A ceremony took place at Mossad headquarters to welcome its new director, who will serve a five-year term.