Lebanon thought there was a ceasefire - then Israel unleashed deadly blitz

Hugo Bachega,Middle East correspondent, Beirut,
Samantha Granville,Beirutand
Paulin Kola
EPA/Shutterstock A Lebanese army soldier stands next to a destroyed residential building the day after an Israeli airstrike in the Ain Mreisseh neighbourhood of BeirutEPA/Shutterstock
Israel's attacks took the country by surprise on Wednesday

The guns were supposed to have fallen silent.

It was, after all, just hours after US President Donald Trump had announced that a two-week ceasefire had been agreed to halt the war in the Middle East.

But just as the region was breathing a sigh of relief, Israeli jets conducted a 10-minute blitz across Lebanon - a massive aerial attack that killed at least 203 people and wounded more than 1,000 others, according to Lebanon's health ministry.

Local and Western condemnation was swift and widespread, but no criticism came from the US against its ally in this war.

Iran said this was "a blatant violation" of the ceasefire deal and has asked the US to halt the Israeli "aggression".

Lebanese officials say more than 1,700 people have been killed since Israel launched its latest campaign in Lebanon last month. Israel has said its operations are aimed at weakening Hezbollah and achieving what it calls remaining military objectives.

The war began with US and Israeli strikes on Iran on 28 February - prompting retaliation from Tehran against US allies in the Gulf, and from Iran's proxies - Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Houthis in Yemen - against Israel.

In response, Israel began striking Hezbollah and even ordered its troops to occupy large parts of Lebanon.

BBC on Israeli attacks across Lebanon

The two-week pause in the fighting was announced by Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif - who has been serving as mediator between the warring parties. Sharif said the US and its allies "have agreed to an immediate ceasefire everywhere including Lebanon and elsewhere".

But the main adversaries of Iran do not appear to share this understanding. The government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the ceasefire did not include Lebanon and Donald Trump signalled his agreement by stating the war in Lebanon was "a separate skirmish".

Map of areas reported to have been struck by Israel since 8 April

Wednesday, 8 April. It was around 14:00 in Beirut (11:00 GMT) when the skies over Lebanon darkened.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said that within 10 minutes it had "completed the largest co-ordinated strike across Lebanon since the start of Operation Roaring Lion" - the code name for the Israeli operation against Iran.

It said it had targeted "100+ Hezbollah headquarters, military arrays, & command-and-control centres in Beirut, Bekaa and southern Lebanon".

Densely populated parts of central Beirut were hit in strikes described by officials as among the heaviest since Hezbollah joined the conflict in early March.

And it was not just the traditional Hezbollah stronghold of Dahieh that was hit in the Lebanese capital - the city centre was also hit.

Safa Bleik, a registered nurse and coordinator for international medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), happened to be inside the Rafik Hariri Hospital in Beirut as the attacks unfolded.

"The first patients came in with severe head injuries, with fragments of glass, metal and debris lodged in their bodies. Many were unconscious. Some died shortly after arrival," she said.

"Soon, the emergency room filled with people searching," Bleik said. "I was trying to stop the bleeding of a man who had arrived with severe head trauma and shrapnel in his abdomen, when a young man came up to me holding a phone, showing me a photo of his brother. He was asking if I had seen him."

Casualties were reported in the Bekaa Valley, in the east, and in the southern Nabatieh, Sidon and Tyre regions.

Hezbollah may have been taken by surprise - their only response appeared to have been a few rockets fired towards Israel hours later.

On Thursday, Israel continued its attacks, saying it had killed "70+ terrorists". It denies targeting civilians. The IDF also said Hezbollah had fired some 30 rockets at northern Israel, with no reports of injuries or damage.

The IDF also said it had "ELIMINATED: Ali Yusuf Harshi, the personal secretary to Hezbollah Secretary-General Naim Qassem in Beirut".

There has been no confirmation. The BBC is unable to verify the claims.

On a crisp and sunny Thursday morning, there was a heaviness in the air in Beirut. Usually the streets are buzzing with traffic but the country has been observing a day of national mourning. President Joseph Aoun described it as a "massacre".

At some locations search and recovery operations have been continuing.

There is nothing left of the 10-storey residential building that was attacked in Tallet el Khayat, a well-to-do neighbourhood of western Beirut, one of the many locations hit. The air strike happened without warning and would have caught everyone by surprise, as this was not an area that had been targeted in the past.

Civil defence teams have been combing through buildings here and across the country, but there is little hope for people who still have loved ones missing.

Ziad Samir Itani, who was leading the civil defence team, said rescuers were exhausted after more than six weeks of constant attacks by Israel.

"I'm sad, like everybody," Itani said.

Benjamin Netanyahu said on Thursday Israel would continue to strike Hezbollah "wherever necessary, until we restore full security to the residents of the north".

It is difficult to see what the long-term Israeli strategy is. Even Israeli military officials acknowledge what has been known in Lebanon for a long time: that Hezbollah will not be disarmed by force. The attacks may give Israel some military gain, but this is likely to be limited.

In Lebanon, opponents and supporters of Hezbollah are coming together in anger, united in the view that what happened here was unacceptable and unjustifiable.

Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian denounced the "blatant violations" by Israel, which, he added may render negotiations "meaningless".