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Source: Israeli strikes in Lebanon kill 12, including 5 Hezbollah Fighters

A security source in Lebanon reported that heavy Israeli airstrikes in eastern Lebanon killed 12 people on Tuesday, including five Hezbollah members. Israel claimed the strikes were an attempt to warn Iran-backed Hezbollah against reestablishing itself.

The Israeli military claimed that the airstrikes were directed at Hezbollah training camps and weapons warehouses in eastern Lebanon's Bekaa Valley.

These airstrikes are the most deadly in the area since the ceasefire brokered by the United States between Israel and Lebanon last November. Bachir Khodr said that seven of the dead are Syrian citizens.

Israel's last conflict dealt Hezbollah a heavy blow, killing Hassan Nasrallah and other leaders as well as destroying a large part of their arsenal.

Israel Katz, the Israeli Minister of Defence, said that Tuesday's strikes were a "clear signal" to Hezbollah. He accused it of planning to re-establish the ability to raid Israel via the elite Radwan forces.

Israel will "respond with maximum force" to any attempts at reconstruction, he said. He said that the strikes were also meant to send a message the Lebanese Government, who he said was responsible for maintaining the ceasefire.

Hezbollah and the Lebanese Government did not respond immediately to the recent Israeli attacks.

The United States submitted a proposal for the Lebanese Government to secure Hezbollah’s disarmament in four months as a trade-off for Israel ceasing its air strikes and removing troops from their positions in south Lebanon.

According to the terms of a ceasefire brokered between the U.S., France and Lebanon, the armed forces of Lebanon were required to seize "all unauthorized weapons", starting in the area to the south of the Litani River -- the closest zone to Israel. Reporting by Steven Scheer from Jerusalem, and Maya Gebeily, Laila Basam and Tom Perry in Beirut. Writing by Ahmed Elimam and Nayera Abdallah; Editing and production by Alison Williams and Gareth Jones.

(source: Reuters)