Lebanon
Hezbollah is losing support in Lebanon, and Nasrallah could choose war “to exit his trap,” according to the document.
U.S. State Department senior adviser for energy security Amos Hochstein will be following up on his visit to Lebanon in July.
Israel has repeatedly accused the Iran-backed terror group Hezbollah of preventing agency peacekeepers from carrying out their mandate.
Peacekeepers are increasingly blocked from monitoring the border area, according to the United States.
Are Hezbollah and Lebanon one and the same? It depends who you ask.
Israel and Lebanon are reportedly closing in on a deal to end a longstanding dispute over contested offshore natural-gas deposits.
Charbel Abou Daher pulled out of the competition in Abu Dhabi after a draw placed him against Israeli athlete Yonatan Mak in the Youth B 48-kilogram weight class category.
Surveillance allegedly captured images between June 9 and July 30.
Mohammad Raad, Hezbollah’s parliamentary bloc leader, called the archbishop’s delivery of cash and medicine a “national betrayal.”
Amos Hochstein’s trip comes just days after media cited Israeli officials as saying that the longstanding border dispute was “on the verge of a solution.”
“The time has come for a close examination of whether 15 years of substantial support has enabled Lebanon’s armed forces to serve as an institutional counterweight to Hezbollah,” writes David Kilcullen.
Report: Israel assesses that Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah’s recent threats are an attempt to frame the pending agreement as Hezbollah achievement.