Israel strikes south Lebanon, Saadiyat, and Jiyeh despite Washington talks
Two Israeli strikes on Wednesday hit vehicles south of Beirut, state media reported, while Hezbollah launched rockets at Israel, hours after Lebanon and Israel agreed to hold direct negotiations.
Israel is continuing its strikes on southern Lebanon, but has not targeted the Lebanese capital since a series of attacks across the country on April 8 that killed more than 350 people.
Lebanon's state-run National News Agency reported two separate Israeli strikes on two vehicles, one in the seafront town of Saadiyat and another on a coastal highway in neighboring Jiyeh, around 20 kilometers south of Beirut and outside Hezbollah's traditional strongholds.
One of the cars was transporting humanitarian aid, video footage showed.
NNA also reported several other strikes across southern Lebanon, including on Baraashit, Sawwaneh, Siddiqine, Qlayleh, Jbaa, Nsarieh, Tayr Debba, Mahmoudieh. Israel also targeted vehicles in Bablieh and on the Habboush-Arab Salim road.
The Israeli military meanwhile said it had detected "approximately 30 launches" by Hezbollah militants towards Israel since the early hours, a spokesman told AFP.
Hezbollah said it launched rockets at 10 northern Israeli areas and targeted troops in Bint Jbeil in south Lebanon.
The attacks come a day after Lebanon and Israel's ambassadors to the United States held their first direct talks in decades in Washington and agreed to hold further direct negotiations, with the Lebanese envoy calling for a ceasefire.
Hezbollah strongly rejected the talks.
Israeli attacks on Lebanon have killed more than 2,000 people and displaced more than a million since March 2, according to Lebanese authorities.
