Israel Slams West's "Distorted" Stance as Hezbollah Fires 2,000 Rockets

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar has strongly criticized a joint statement from five Western nations calling for de-escalation with Hezbollah, labeling it a "distorted view of reality." Saar revealed that Hezbollah has launched approximately 2,000 missiles, rockets, and drones at Israeli civilians in just the last two weeks. The Israeli Defense Forces have conducted retaliatory strikes on Hezbollah infrastructure across Lebanon, including command centers in Beirut. The conflict continues to escalate, with Israel issuing forced evacuation orders for several neighborhoods in the Lebanese capital.

Key Points: Israel Condemns Western Statement on Hezbollah Conflict

  • Hezbollah fired 2,000 projectiles
  • Israel rejects G5 joint statement
  • IDF strikes Hezbollah in Beirut
  • Calls for Lebanon to disarm militants
4 min read

Hezbollah has fired 2,000 missiles, rockets, and drones at Israeli civilians in last two weeks: Gideon Saar

Israeli FM Gideon Saar rejects G5 call for de-escalation, reveals Hezbollah fired 2,000 missiles at Israeli civilians in two weeks.

"Would the citizens of the countries that signed this statement agree to live under such terror? - Gideon Saar"

Tel Aviv, March 17

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar on Tuesday termed the Joint Statement issued by the leaders of Canada, France, Germany, Italy and the United Kingdom on the escalating conflict between Israel and Hezbollah, as "a distorted view of reality".

Earlier in the day, leaders of the five countries issued a joint statement, highlighting their grave concern over the escalating violence in Lebanon and called for immediate de-escalation and meaningful engagement by Israeli and Lebanese representatives to negotiate a sustainable political solution.

"Hezbollah's attacks on Israel and the targeting of civilians must cease and they must disarm. We condemn Hezbollah's decision to join Iran in hostilities, which further jeopardises regional peace and security. We condemn attacks directed at civilians, civilian infrastructure, health workers and infrastructure, as well as the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon. These actions are unacceptable, and we call on all parties to act in accordance with international humanitarian law," the Joint Statement read.

"A significant Israeli ground offensive would have devastating humanitarian consequences and could lead to a protracted conflict. It must be averted. The humanitarian situation in Lebanon, including ongoing mass displacement, is already deeply alarming. We reiterate our call for the full implementation of UNSC Resolution 1701 by all parties and support the efforts of the Government of Lebanon to disarm Hezbollah, prohibit Hezbollah's military activities, and curb their armed hostilities. We stand in solidarity with the Lebanese government and people, who have been unwillingly drawn into conflict," it added.

However, Saar labelled it as a "distorted view of reality", highlighting that Israelis have been attacked unprovoked from Lebanese territory by Hezbollah since October 8, 2023.

"These are the same Israelis who for an entire year were forced to leave their homes due to relentless Hezbollah fire, yet the statement ignores their suffering. In the last two weeks, Hezbollah has fired approximately 2,000 missiles, rockets, and drones at Israeli civilians. Would the citizens of the countries that signed this statement agree to live under such terror? If these democracies were attacked in this way, would they accept a distorted symmetry between 'all parties' - equating a democratic state defending its citizens with a terror organization that has taken control over a neighbouring state?" the Israeli FM questioned.

"The statement includes no demand on the Lebanese government to stop the fire on Israel - or even to remove Hezbollah ministers from the government. The Lebanese government failed to disarm Hezbollah, and now it must take steps to immediately stop the firing towards Israel," he added.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said on Sunday that it has conducted a wave of strikes on Hezbollah infrastructure across Lebanon.

The Israeli Army struck launch sites in the Al-Qatrani area in southern Lebanon, from which Hezbollah militants planned to launch rockets imminently, the IDF said in a statement.

It noted that the IDF also dismantled Hezbollah elite Radwan Force command centres in Beirut, from which militants allegedly launched attacks on Israel, Xinhua news agency reported.

The Israeli army also issued immediate forced evacuation orders for residents in several neighbourhoods in the Lebanese capital.

In a statement, Israeli Army Spokesman Avichay Adraee urged residents of Haret Hreik, Ghobeiry, Laylaki, Hadath, Burj al-Barajneh, Tahwitat al-Ghadir, and Shiyah "to leave immediately and not to return until further notice," the Anadolu news agency reported.

He said the Israeli army would "forcefully operate" in these areas, citing what he called Hezbollah activities in the neighbourhoods.

Adraee threatened "to target anyone present near Hezbollah facilities, personnel, or military equipment in those locations".

Hezbollah said on Sunday it was also targeting several Israeli troop positions in villages close to the border.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
Saar has a point. 2000 rockets in two weeks is an act of war, not a minor skirmish. If a group like this was firing from across our border, we would expect our government to act decisively. The statement from the five nations seems to lack that urgency when it comes to Israeli security.
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Priya S
The Lebanese government's inability to control Hezbollah is the root cause. A sovereign state must have a monopoly on force. My heart goes out to the ordinary Lebanese people caught in this. They didn't ask for this war. 😔 The world must help Lebanon regain control of its territory.
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Rohit P
With respect, I think Minister Saar's dismissal of the joint statement is a mistake. The call for de-escalation and adherence to international law is correct. A major ground offensive *will* cause a humanitarian disaster. Israel's response, while understandable, must be proportionate. Civilian safety on both sides is paramount.
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Vikram M
Iran's role is the elephant in the room. Hezbollah is their proxy. Until the international community seriously addresses state-sponsored terrorism, these conflicts will keep flaring up. The focus shouldn't just be on Lebanon and Israel, but on holding Tehran accountable.
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Michael C
Forced evacuations in Beirut... that's a massive escalation. This is how full-scale wars start. Where are these families supposed to go? The region is a tinderbox. Diplomacy needs to work overtime, right now.

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