Israel destroyed a bridge in southern Lebanon yesterday and dropped leaflets in Beirut threatening Gaza-scale devastation as it deployed more troops to fight Iran-backed Hizbollah and warned of more attacks on the country’s infrastructure.
As Israeli warplanes pounded Beirut’s suburbs with air strikes, Lebanon’s interior minister said authorities were unable to accommodate the hundreds of thousands of people who have sought refuge in the capital.
Israeli strikes have killed 773 people in Lebanon since March 2, Lebanon’s state news agency said yesterday, citing the health ministry.
Israel launched its offensive against Hizbollah after it opened fire on March 2 to avenge the killing of Iran’s supreme leader at the start of the US-Israeli war on Iran.
Making a visit to Lebanon yesterday, United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said he was seeking $308 million in emergency funding to help authorities grapple with the humanitarian fallout.
At least 800,000 people have been uprooted in Lebanon.
“Solidarity in words must be matched by solidarity in action,” Guterres said.
Israel’s military said it struck the Zrarieh Bridge spanning the Litani River early yesterday, claiming it was being used by Hizbollah to move between Lebanon’s north and south.
The military provided no evidence for the claim.
It appeared to be the first time Israel acknowledged attacking civilian infrastructure during its current military campaign in Lebanon.
“The Lebanese government ... will pay increasing costs through damage to infrastructure and loss of territory” until Hizbollah is disarmed, Defence Minister Israel Katz said in a statement.
International law generally prohibits militaries from attacking civilian infrastructure, though such operations can be sometimes permitted if it is being used for military purposes.
Lebanon’s government has sought to disarm Hizbollah, and the country’s army had said before the war that progress had been made in areas near the Israeli border.
On March 2, the Lebanese government banned military activities by Hizbollah, which has refused to fully disarm.
Israeli aircraft dropped flyers over Beirut threatening to inflict damage on Lebanon similar to the devastation the military wrought on Gaza during its two-year war with Hamas.
Much of Gaza has been reduced to rubble and nearly all its population displaced.
“In light of the great success in Gaza, the newspaper of the new reality arrives to Lebanon,” the flyer said.
Another flyer called on Lebanese to strip Hizbollah of its weapons.
It featured two QR codes to links on WhatsApp and Facebook, accompanied by a message telling Lebanese to make contact if they want to see “real change” in their country.