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The week that pushed the Middle East closer to all-out war


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The week that pushed the Middle East closer to all-out war

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Over 2000 people have been ******* in Lebanon since hostilities between ******* and Hezbollah began nearly a year ago

There have been many moments of extreme danger over the past year. This is the worst.

In the past seven days, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah has been assassinated, ******* has launched a ground invasion of Lebanon, and Iran has fired nearly 200 ballistic missiles at targets across *******.

Western and regional powers – led by the US – have pushed for de-escalation. The UN Security Council called for an “immediate end” to hostilities and the G7, which includes the US, *** and Germany, has called for “restraint”.

But so far those efforts have ******* – and the Middle East stands closer than ever to all-out war.

Here’s how the last week played out.

Friday evening: Nasrallah is assassinated.

As the sun set over Beirut on 27 September, the south of the city was hit by a series of huge explosions.

Several apartment buildings had been struck, leaving a huge crater in the ground. Plumes of dust and debris filled the skyline, visible from across the Lebanese capital.

The strike, aimed at an underground bunker,

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.

Seen as a prize-target, Nasrallah had not been seen in public for years for ***** of being assassinated by *******.

His ****** capped a week of ramped-up ******** strikes targeting Hezbollah that had left more than 500 people *****.

The week before that, a series of

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targeting the group left at least 32 ***** and over 3000 injured.

Nasrallah’s ****** wiped all hopes of a de-escalation, which just hours earlier had seemed possible.

A US proposal for a 21-day ceasefire had been discussed

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of the ******* Nations (UN) General Assembly in New York. *******’s UN ambassador Danny Danon had even said his side was “open to ideas”.

But hours after the strike, ******** Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was on an early flight home from the UN – and any lingering hopes of diplomacy prevailing faded away.

Monday night: ******* invades Lebanon.

Three days later, ******** forces crossed into Lebanon, marking the start of a ground invasion.

The ******* Defense Forces (IDF) said its operations would be “limited and targeted”.

Fighting so far has driven nearly 1.2 million people from their homes, according to Lebanon’s crisis unit. At least 8 ******** soldiers have been *******.

******* says the operation is aimed at stopping Hezbollah’s ability to launch rockets and drones over the border – something it has done on an almost daily basis since ******, its ************ ally, launched a deadly raid into southern ******* almost a year ago, triggering the current Gaza war.

Now ******** troops are fighting a ground war on two fronts simultaneously: Gaza and Lebanon. That hasn’t happened in decades.

The last war between ******* and Hezbollah, in 2006, ended inconclusively with UN Resolution 1701, which stipulated Hezbollah withdrew its forces from southern Lebanon.

That never happened, and with Iranian support, Hezbollah grew in strength.

******* has not said that it wants to remove Hezbollah entirely from Lebanon’s political landscape (as it has with ****** in Gaza), but for all its talk of this being a “limited and targeted” operation, it’s clear that ******* is ruthlessly determined to cut Hezbollah down in size.

Spurred by an astonishing two and a half weeks, ******* is in an ambitious frame of mind.

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Tuesday evening: Iran attacks *******.

The next day, at around 19:30 local time, 10 million Israelis were sent running for ***** shelters across the country after

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at *******.

The

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– and allies including the US and *** were involved in repelling the ******* – another sign of the broadening scope of the conflict.

The IDF said most of the missiles were intercepted, but that a small number struck central and southern *******. The only person reported to have been ******* was a ************ man in the occupied West Bank.

With its biggest proxy group in disarray, Tehran calculated that to restore some semblance of deterrence it needed to do something more dramatic than its last well-telegraphed missile and drone ******* on ******* in April.

Hence the larger number of ballistic missiles and the lack of advance notice.

But while the ******* was more than purely demonstrative, it did not appear to signal Iran’s ******* for an all-out ******.

That’s hardly surprising. If it came to a full-on war, Iran knows that it would lose, and badly.

It could even herald the end of the Islamic Republic.

*******, with powerful western allies – and a smattering of Middle Eastern neighbours willing to help ****** down Iranian missiles – is a regional superpower.

Iran, economically fragile and led by an unpopular government, is no match. Nor does it have the sort of allies that would be willing to spring to its defence in the event of a confrontation.

The supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, made suitably defiant noises at Friday prayers in Tehran, but Iran knows it cannot afford to escalate much further.

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What next?

Despite Hezbollah’s devastating losses, it has vowed to ****** on in Lebanon.

And history shows us it is easy for ******* to enter Lebanon, but difficult for them to leave.

As for *******’s response to Iran, the region – and the world – has been on tenterhooks since Tuesday.

US president Joe Biden said he has discouraged ******* from striking Iranian

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or
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as part of its retaliation.

A severe reaction

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, though, and some of Benjamin Netanyahu’s recent rhetoric suggests that he might be thinking, ultimately, of regime change in Iran.

But *******’s immediate objectives are closer to home. “Total victory” in Gaza and removing the threat posed by Hezbollah along the northern border.

******** leaders point out that they at war on many fronts. Benjamin Netanyahu says there are seven: Gaza, Lebanon, the West Bank, Yemen, Iran, Iraq and Syria.

It’s true that over the past year, attacks have come from all these directions, even though pro-Iranian groups in Iraq and Syria have so far posed little real threat.

We’re not seeing an all-out regional war just yet, but with so many players feeling they have a stake in it, the war in Gaza has metastasised in a dramatic fashion.



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#week #pushed #Middle #East #closer #allout #war

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