The Jerusalem Post

Drone down

Hezbollah claims it shot Israeli drone over Lebanon

- • By ANNA AHRONHEIM

The IDF denied claims that Hezbollah shot down a drone in the pre-dawn hours of Monday over south Lebanon, stating that a small surveillan­ce drone crashed.

According to the military, the UAV fell in southern Lebanon while performing reconnaiss­ance operations. There was no concern that the Lebanese Shi'ite group got hold of any intelligen­ce from the drone.

Meanwhile, Hezbollah said it had "confronted" the Israel drone with "appropriat­e weapons" as it was heading towards the town of Ramiyeh. The wreckage is now in the hands of Hezbollah's fighters, the Iranian-backed terrorist group said in a statement.

The drone came down outside the village where Hezbollah had dug their flagship 1-km.-long cross-border tunnel that infiltrate­d several dozen meters into northern Israel, close to the communitie­s of Zarit and Shetula.

It was the last one discovered by the IDF in early January, and was the largest and most strategic of the six cross-border tunnels dug by the Lebanese Shi'ite group, which had planned to have dozens of terrorists attack the nearby communitie­s in the next war between Hezbollah and Israel.

The incident came a week after Hezbollah and Israel exchanged cross-border fire following an Israeli airstrike in Syria that killed two terrorists planning a drone attack against Israel. It was the fiercest bout of violence since the 2006 Second Lebanon War.

While the group retaliated for Syria, Lebanon's LBCI news channel reported that Hezbollah warned that it will retaliate for an alleged Israel drone attack in their southern Beirut stronghold of Dahiyeh, which targeted the group's precision missile project.

“Retaliatio­n over drones will be in kind, and will be at its own time and according to its own circumstan­ces,” Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah said.

Nasrallah said that while a flare-up with Israel at the border was over, the episode had launched a “new phase” in which the Iran-backed group no longer had redlines.

Despite the continued tension along the border, LBCI reported that US mediation regarding the demarcatio­n of the land and maritime borders between Israel and Lebanon is expected to resume “within the next few hours.”

US Envoy David Schenker is expected to hold discussion­s with Lebanese officials, mainly with Speaker Nabih Berri.

The UN-demarcated Blue Line currently separates Lebanon and Israel's territory with more than 200 points. Thirteen of these are disputed by the Lebanese government.

The two countries also have an unresolved maritime border dispute over an approximat­ely 860 sq. km. triangular area of the Mediterran­ean Sea, which extends along several blocs for explorator­y offshore natural gas drilling Lebanon put up for tender two years ago.

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 ?? (Ali Hashisho/Reuters) ?? UNIFIL peacekeepe­rs patrol yesterday in the southern Lebanese town of Ramiyeh.
(Ali Hashisho/Reuters) UNIFIL peacekeepe­rs patrol yesterday in the southern Lebanese town of Ramiyeh.

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