On Monday morning, a Lebanese Armed Forces unit discovered a drone on the outskirts of Aaiha in the Rachaya district and called in the engineering unit to dismantle it.

Early in the morning, Israeli shells hit Jabal al-Sadana in the Hasbaya district, between Rachaya al-Foukhar and Kfar Hammam, on the outskirts of Kfarchouba, damaging several houses in the targeted area. Israeli artillery also struck the Shammis area nearby, and warplanes targeted the locality of Yaroun, though no casualties were reported.

Additionally, Israeli aircraft broke the sound barrier twice over the towns of Tyre and Saida.

Hezbollah announced that it had targeted “the Malkiya position with a diving drone, which destroyed one of the position’s strongholds and set it on fire.”

It also claimed responsibility for an airstrike with multiple drones on the new headquarters of Israeli forces in the Hanita settlement, stating there were “confirmed casualties among the soldiers.” It also targeted the headquarters of the Northern Army Corps at the Ain Zeitim base.

The pro-Iranian group shared images that it had targeted the Israeli army’s Zaoura silo in the Golan Heights.

The Israeli army stated it had “intercepted several aerial targets that crossed the border between Lebanon and the northern Golan Heights.”

According to Israeli media Ynet, “at around 8 AM, alarm sirens sounded in northern Israel due to numerous suspicious air targets that were successfully intercepted by the Israeli army’s air defense network coming from Lebanon across the northern Golan Heights region, without any injuries being reported.”

There has also been a security alert on the Lebanese-Syrian border, with reports of “abnormal movements” leading to the rerouting of travelers to the Syrian capital. These unprecedented measures were implemented “fearing Israeli aggression following the targeting of personalities on this international route.”

With tensions mounting, Sleiman Haroun, the Head of the Syndicate of Private Hospital Owners, assured in an interview with The Voice of Lebanon radio station that hospitals “are ready to deal with a large-scale war, but within certain limits, whether in terms of manpower or medical supplies.”

He emphasized that “the necessary training has been set up in hospitals under the supervision of the Ministry of Health.”

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