Lebanon’s official National News Agency said “Israeli warplanes launched a strike on the town of Mahrouna” while other raids targeted buildings in Jbaa, Majadal and Baraasheet.
An AFP photographer saw smoke rising from the site of the strike in the town of Jbaa.
“It’s a completely civilian area. We’re used to Israeli threats from time to time,” local official Yassir Madi told journalists, including AFP.
“As for the damage, there’s not a window within 300 metres that didn’t break. Everyone is living in shock,” he added.
Meanwhile, the Israeli military said it struck “weapons storage facilities belonging to Hezbollah” located in the “heart of the civilian population”.
“This is yet another example of Hezbollah’s cynical use of Lebanese civilians as human shields, and continued operations from within civilian areas,” it said.
Lebanon’s Government has committed to disarming Hezbollah but the group has rejected the idea and many in the country fear a return to expanded Israeli military operations.
Not yet at peace talks
Lebanese and Israeli civilian representatives held surprise talks Wednesday under the auspices of the ceasefire monitoring mechanism at the UN peacekeeping force’s headquarters in Lebanon’s Naqura near the border with Israel.
Representatives of the ceasefire monitoring committee – the United States, France, Lebanon, Israel and the UN force – regularly convene in Naqura.
On Thursday, Lebanon’s President Joseph Aoun said another round of talks with Israel will begin on December 19.
Information Minister Paul Morcos quoted Aoun as calling the initial negotiations “positive” and stressing “the need for the language of negotiation – not the language of war – to prevail”.
Lebanon and Israel have technically been at war since 1948, and Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam cautioned the new diplomatic contact did not amount to broader peace discussions.
The United States has been piling pressure on Lebanon to rapidly disarm Hezbollah, and has pushed for direct talks between the two neighbours.
Limited discussions
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said the atmosphere at the talks was “positive”, and that there had been agreement “to develop ideas to promote potential economic co-operation between Israel and Lebanon”.
Israel also made it clear it was “essential” that Lebanese militant group Hezbollah disarm regardless of any progress in economic co-operation, the premier’s office added.
Salam said the new discussions were strictly limited to fully implementing last year’s truce.
“We are not yet at peace talks,” he told journalists, including AFP, on Wednesday.
He said the talks only sought “the cessation of hostilities”, the “release of Lebanese hostages” and “the complete Israeli withdrawal” from Lebanon.
A spokesman for the French foreign ministry, meanwhile, said France “welcomes the holding of these discussions” that allow “all parties to come to the table”.
“We are fully committed to ensuring that this mechanism remains the framework to promote de-escalation and enable a lasting return to stability in the region,” he said.
Until now, Israel and Lebanon, which have no formal diplomatic relations, have insisted on limiting participation in the ceasefire mechanism to military officers.
The US embassy in Beirut said US envoy Morgan Ortagus also attended.
Ortagus was in Jerusalem a day earlier and met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar.
- Agence France-Presse