Blinken heads to Middle East for new ceasefire push as Israel strikes Beirut

By Humeyra Pamuk and Timour Azhari

WASHINGTON/BEIRUT (Reuters) -U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken headed to the Middle East on Monday to launch another push for an elusive ceasefire, seeking to revive negotiations to end the Gaza war and defuse the spillover conflict in Lebanon.

Blinken’s trip to the region is his 11th since the attack on Israel by the Palestinian militant group Hamas on Oct. 7, 2023, that triggered the Gaza war. It comes as Israel intensifies its military campaign against Iran-backed militants – Hamas in the Gaza Strip and Hezbollah in Lebanon.

Israel carried out several strikes in Beirut’s southern suburbs on Monday, including one near the Rafik Hariri University Hospital, the capital’s main government hospital. Four people were killed, including a child, and 24 others were wounded, the health ministry said.

The Israeli military said it struck a “Hezbollah terrorist target” near the hospital and the facility was not hit, adding that the armed group “systematically embeds its terrorist assets into the civilian population.”

In the last month, Israel has assassinated the leaders of Hezbollah in Lebanon and of Hamas in Gaza, while showing no sign of reining in its ground and aerial offensives.

Killing Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar last week after a year-long search was a major victory for Israel. But its leaders say the war must go on until the Islamist group is eliminated as a military and security threat to Israel.

Iran and its allies have said Sinwar’s death in a gunbattle with Israeli soldiers in Gaza will strengthen their resolve.

Blinken will discuss with leaders in Israel and neighbouring Arab states the importance of ending the war in Gaza, ways to chart a post-conflict plan for the Palestinian enclave, and how to reach a diplomatic solution to the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah, the State Department said in a statement.

US SAYS UN RESOLUTION ON ITS OWN IS NOT ENOUGH

U.S. envoy Amos Hochstein held talks with Lebanese officials in Beirut on Monday on conditions for a ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah.

Hochstein said that it was “not enough” for both sides to commit to U.N. resolution 1701, which ended the last round of conflict between Israel and Hezbollah in 2006 and which calls for southern Lebanon to be free of any troops or weapons other than those of the Lebanese state.

He said neither Hezbollah nor Israel had adequately implemented the U.N. resolution, and that while it would be the basis for the end to current hostilities, the U.S. was seeking to determine what more needed to be done to make sure it was implemented “fairly, accurately and transparently.”

“We are working with the government of Lebanon, the state of Lebanon, as well as the government of Israel to get to a formula that brings an end to this conflict once and for all,” he said.

Israel has pursued a ground campaign over the past month after a year of border clashes touched off by Hezbollah rocket fire into Israel in support of Hamas in Gaza.

“Strike, strike, strike with planes and drones, and we don’t know who they are targeting and who will die each day,” said Micheline Jabbour, who works in a Beirut pastry shop.

The Israeli military said it was targeting the Al-Qard Al-Hassan Association, a financial institution with over 30 outlets across Lebanon which the U.S. has said is used by Hezbollah to manage its finances.

There was no immediate statement from the organisation, Hezbollah or the Lebanese government.

The Al-Sahel Hospital in Beirut’s southern suburbs was being evacuated following Israeli claims a Hezbollah cash bunker is located beneath it, hospital director Fadi Alameh said.

Israel’s chief military spokesperson, Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari, said Hezbollah had stashed hundreds of millions of dollars in cash and gold there and that Israel would not strike the hospital but was monitoring the compound. Reuters could not independently verify the accusation.

Alameh, who is also a lawmaker with the Shi’ite Amal Movement party, told Reuters that Israel was making false claims and called on the Lebanese Army to visit and show it only had operating rooms, patients and a morgue.

The ground outside the wrecked Al-Qard Al-Hassan branch in the city of Tyre was strewn with rubble, shattered glass and scattered papers.

In the Syrian capital, Damascus, meanwhile, at least two people were killed and three others injured on Monday in an apparent guided missile attack on a car, Syrian state television said, quoting a military source who attributed the attack to Israel.

Israel’s military said the strike killed the head of Hezbollah’s money transfers unit. Reuters could not independently verify the claim.

Lebanon’s health ministry said on Monday that the death toll since Israel’s offensive began had risen to 2,483, with 11,628 injured. Israeli authorities say 59 people have been killed in northern Israel and the occupied Golan Heights over the same period.

Israel’s campaign in Lebanon has driven 1.2 million people from their homes. It says its aim is to drive Hezbollah fighters from the border region so tens of thousands of Israelis can return to homes they were forced to flee over the past year due to Hezbollah cross-border fire in solidarity with Palestinians.

(Reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi in Cairo, Laila Bassam, Maya Gebeily and Amina Ismail in Beirut, Clauda Tanios and Nayera Abdullah in Dubai, Maayan Lubell and Jonathan Saul in Jerusalem; writing by Michael Georgy and Matt Spetalnick; editing by Kevin Liffey, Deepa Babington and Rosalba O’Brien)

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