Hezbollah hits Israel with deadliest attack in months-long conflict, IDF says, raising fears of escalation

Shocking images and video footage from an Iran-backed Hezbollah rocket attack on a soccer field being used by children are streaming in with reports of critically wounded people.

Hezbollah hits Israel with deadliest attack in months-long conflict, IDF says, raising fears of escalation

JERUSALEM – The Iran-backed terrorist movement Hezbollah on Saturday rained down rockets on Israel, with at least one hitting a soccer field where children were playing in the northern Israeli town of Majdal Shams right by the border with Syria. Initial reports say at least 10 dead and 29 injured, many thought to be children.

The soccer field in the majority Druze town is a scene of shocking violence and the most devastating loss of life in the north since Hezbollah entered the war on behalf of the terrorist entity Hamas on Oct. 7. The Magen David Adom ambulance service says the victims are aged 10 to 20. 

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) put the blame squarely on Hezbollah in a statement issued shortly after the attack. "According to an IDF situational assessment and the intelligence in our possession, the rocket launch toward Majdal Shams was carried out by the Hezbollah terrorist organization. The Hezbollah terrorist organization is behind the rocket launch at a soccer field in Majdal Shams which caused multiple civilian casualties, including children earlier this evening."

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is currently in the U.S., was being updated and holding situational assessments, according to a political source. It was further announced that he would be returning to Israel "as soon as possible." 

Israel's Minister of Defense Yoav Gallant, together with the IDF's Chief of the General Staff, LTG Herzi Halevi, were conducting a situational assessment on the attack. 

The IDF said approximately 30 projectiles were identified crossing into Israel from Lebanon on Saturday. The U.S.-designated terrorist organization Hezbollah is the de facto ruler over Lebanon. 

According to Israeli Channel 12, the country's Foreign Minister Israel Katz said on a TV news show that, "We are approaching the moment of an all-out war in the north against Hezbollah, we will react in a disproportionate way," he reportedly said in a translated note on X by Israeli journalists Ben Caspit and Dafna Liel.

Earlier this month, Yakkov Amidror, the former national security adviser to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, discussed with Fox News Digital the likelihood of an imminent full-blown war between the Jewish state and the Lebanon-based terrorist movement Hezbollah.

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Jason Brodsky, an expert on Iran and its proxies, told Fox News Digital that "Hezbollah’s secretary-general [Hassan Nasrallah]has been warning in July about striking "new targets" in Israel. This kind of strike in Majdal Shams is likely what he had in mind—especially as it is outside of major population centers like Tel Aviv, which would almost certainly trigger a decisive response, and it’s a Druze town. Nasrallah might have thought Hezbollah could get away with it."

The Israeli Druze community live in numerous villages dotted across northern Israel. They have had a presence in the region for at least a thousand years, and their communities are also found in Lebanon, Syria and parts of Jordan. 

Brodsky, who is the policy director of United Against A Nuclear Iran, continued, "But that may prove to be a miscalculation on Hezbollah’s part because an attack of this nature has the potential to change the dynamics of the conflict in the north due to the mass civilian casualties, including children. How did we get here? Eroded deterrence. Hezbollah has been under the impression that the U.S. would constrain Israeli operations in Lebanon. When U.S. policy is centered on deescalation, it begets the very escalation that they hope to avoid."

Israel has fought two wars (1982 and 2006) against Hezbollah. The IDF estimates that it has killed 500 terrorists in Lebanon since the start of the war against Hamas, and that some 5000 projectiles have been fired into Israel.

Fox News' Ruth Marks Eglash contributed to this report.

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