Israel strikes Lebanon bridge, warns infrastructure at risk in Hezbollah campaign
Tel Aviv— Israel warned Lebanon on Friday that its infrastructure would face escalating damage until the Iran-backed Hezbollah militia is disarmed, after Israeli forces destroyed a bridge in southern Lebanon while expanding ground operations and air strikes in the country.
The Israeli military said it struck the Zrarieh Bridge spanning the Litani River early on Friday, asserting that the crossing was being used by Hezbollah fighters to move between northern and southern parts of Lebanon.
The military did not provide evidence for the claim.The strike appeared to be the first instance in the current conflict in which Israel publicly acknowledged targeting civilian infrastructure in Lebanon.
Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said Lebanon would face increasing consequences unless Hezbollah was disarmed.
“The Lebanese government will pay increasing costs through damage to infrastructure and loss of territory,” Katz told senior military officers during a briefing, according to a statement from his office.
Israeli troops have been pushing deeper into southern Lebanon as part of the military campaign, while air strikes have continued to hit districts in the southern suburbs of Beirut.
Lebanese officials say the expanding conflict has displaced hundreds of thousands of people across the country.
Lebanon’s interior minister said authorities were struggling to accommodate the influx of civilians seeking refuge in Beirut, where many displaced residents have gathered after fleeing combat zones in the south.
The minister said government resources were insufficient to manage the scale of displacement, with large numbers of people arriving in the capital in recent days.
Lebanese authorities estimate that around 800,000 people have been forced from their homes since the fighting intensified.
Antonio Guterres, secretary-general of the United Nations, said the Lebanese population had been drawn into a broader regional conflict.
Speaking about the humanitarian impact of the fighting, Guterres said the Lebanese people had been “dragged into” the war as hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah expanded.
The escalation in Lebanon is unfolding as the wider regional conflict continues to intensify, raising concerns among international officials about the growing humanitarian and security consequences across the Middle East.