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Times Of Israel
Times Of Israel
18 Apr 2025


NextImg:Hezbollah says it won’t discuss disarming until Israel completes Lebanon withdrawal

Two Hezbollah operatives were killed in separate Israeli drone strikes in southern Lebanon on Friday, the military announced, as the terror group ruled out any talk of disarmament until Israel withdraws from its five strategic points in the country.

A strike in the coastal Lebanese city of Sidon Friday morning targeted Muhammad Abdullah, the Israel Defense Forces said.

Abdullah was responsible for the deployment of the Iran-backed terror group’s communication systems across Lebanon, especially in areas south of the Litani River, according to the IDF.

“The activities of the terrorists in the recent period constitute a violation of the understandings between Israel and Lebanon and posed a threat to the State of Israel and its citizens,” the IDF added.

At the scene of the strike, members of the security forces stood guard as a crowd gathered to look at the charred remains of the vehicle after firemen had put out the blaze.

Separately, the IDF said it killed a Hezbollah operative in a drone strike in southern Lebanon’s Ayta ash-Shab on Friday.

The operative was involved in “terror activity,” according to the military.

Friday’s strikes came a day after the IDF said it killed a Hezbollah commander in a drone strike in southern Lebanon’s Blida.

The strike targeted Ali Ibar al-Nabi Khadi, the deputy commander of Hezbollah’s forces in the Mhaibib area, according to the military.

Smoke rises from the site of an Israeli strike in Ghazieh, near Sidon, on April 18, 2025. (Mahmoud Zayyat / AFP)

Also Friday, a Hezbollah official said the terror group categorically refuses to discuss handing over its weapons to Lebanon’s army unless Israel withdraws completely from the south and stops its “aggression.”

“It is not a question of disarming,” Wafiq Safa said in an interview with Hezbollah’s Al-Nur radio station. “What the president said in his inauguration speech is a defensive strategy.”

In his inauguration in January, Lebanese President Joseph Aoun vowed to assert the state’s monopoly on weapons. He has made similar comments last week, asserting that “2025 will be the year in which the Lebanese state alone holds weapons.”

Safa, said by experts to belong to the movement’s most radical faction, said Hezbollah has conveyed its position to Aoun, who on Tuesday said he sought “to make 2025 the year of restricting arms to the state” alone.

Commuters drive past a newly-installed billboard bearing the image of a Lebanese flag and a statement that reads in Arabic “Lebanon a new era”, replacing a Hezbollah billboard, on the road leading to Beirut’s Rafic Hariri International airport on April 10, 2025. (Photo by JOSEPH EID / AFP)

In his interview, Safa asked: “Wouldn’t it be logical for Israel to first withdraw, then release the prisoners, then cease its aggression… and then we discuss a defensive strategy?”

“The defensive strategy is about thinking about how to protect Lebanon, not preparing for the party (Hezbollah) to hand over its weapons.”

Under the terms of a November 27 ceasefire, which ended more than 13 months of war, Hezbollah was required to vacate southern Lebanon, while Israel was permitted to act against what it deemed to be imminent threats from the terror group. Israel, which was required to withdraw its forces from southern Lebanon, has held on to five areas it described as strategic.

The war was sparked when Hezbollah, unprovoked, began launching near-daily attacks on northern Israel on October 8, 2023 — a day after Hamas stormed southern Israel to kill some 1,200 people and take 251 hostages, sparking the war in Gaza. Israel invaded Lebanon in September in a bid to stop Hezbollah’s attacks, which had displaced some 60,000 northerners.