GAZA STRIP, July 13, 2006

Israel Bears Down On Two Fronts

Hezbollah TV Hit In Lebanon; Foreign Ministry Bombed In Gaza

  • Play CBS Video Video Mideast Crisis Escalates

    After Hezbollah terrorists captured two more Israeli soldiers, Israel responded by sending planes and tanks seven miles into Lebanon, killing at least eight. Lara Logan reports.

  • Video Analysis Of Mideast Crisis

    CBS News "60 Minutes" correspondent Bob Simon has been covering this story for more than two decades. He adds perspective from Tel Aviv.

  • Video Is It War For Israel?

    Professor Robert Lieber from Georgetown University discusses Israel's bombing of Gaza and their fight to retrive two abducted Israeli soldiers from Lebanon.

    • A crater is seen next to planes on a runway after Israeli warplanes targeted the Rafik Hariri International Airport, in Beirut, Lebanon, Thursday, July 13, 2006.

      A crater is seen next to planes on a runway after Israeli warplanes targeted the Rafik Hariri International Airport, in Beirut, Lebanon, Thursday, July 13, 2006.  (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

    • Israel's attack on the Beirut airport is the first such assault in 24 years.

      Israel's attack on the Beirut airport is the first such assault in 24 years.  (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)

    • An armed Palestinian man stands beneath the Foreign Ministry building in Gaza City after an Israeli airstrike early morning Thursday, July 13, 2006.

      An armed Palestinian man stands beneath the Foreign Ministry building in Gaza City after an Israeli airstrike early morning Thursday, July 13, 2006.  (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)

    • In a Beirut suburb, a Lebanese woman, brandishing guns, celebrates the capture of two Israeli soldiers, July 12, 2006.

      In a Beirut suburb, a Lebanese woman, brandishing guns, celebrates the capture of two Israeli soldiers, July 12, 2006.  (Getty Images/Anwar Amro)

    • Israeli artillery fires into Lebanon, July 12, 2006.

      Israeli artillery fires into Lebanon, July 12, 2006.  (AP Photo/Haim Azulay)

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  • Interactive Mideast Conflict

    Events, key players and a history of the world's most unstable region.

  • Photo Essay Lebanon Border Clash

    Hezbollah guerillas capture two Israeli soldiers in cross-border raid, triggering Israeli retaliation.

  • Photo Essay Gaza Strikes

    Israeli tanks and troops, backed by air strikes, move into Gaza in a new phase of an offensive aimed at confronting militants.

(CBS/AP)  In northern Israel, thousands of civilians spent Wednesday night in underground shelters as Hezbollah fired rockets across the border. A 40-year-old Israeli woman was killed and five people were wounded in the rocket attacks, the Israeli army reported.

"The government wants to change the rules of the game in Lebanon and make the Lebanese government understand that it is responsible for what happens in Lebanon," Israeli Agriculture Minister Shalom Simchon told Israel Radio.

Israeli fighter bombers carried out their biggest offensive in Lebanon since Israel's 1982 invasion after the Cabinet approved a forceful response to Hezbollah's daring raid across the border on Wednesday to capture the Israeli soldiers. Three Israeli soldiers were killed in that raid, and five others died during fighting since.

Air force Maj. Gen. Amir Eshel said the campaign is likely Israel's largest ever in Lebanon "if you measure it in number of targets hit in one night, the complexity of the strikes." The last major air, ground and sea offensive against Lebanon was in 1996 when about 150 Lebanese civilians were killed.

Trying to avoid devastating Israeli bombardment of the nation's infrastructure, the Lebanese government insisted Wednesday it had no prior knowledge of the Hezbollah operation, did not condone it and bore no responsibility for it. The Cabinet, which includes two Hezbollah ministers, urged the U.N. Security Council to intervene.

Senior Israeli military officials said Israel warned the Lebanese government that it plans to strike offices and homes of Hezbollah leaders in the southern suburbs of Beirut.

An airstrike also hit deep inside eastern Lebanon, striking a civic center attached to a Shiite Muslim mosque near the town of Baalbek, as well as a transmission antenna for Al-Manar, witnesses reported. The group's broadcasts stopped in the area.

After dawn, warplanes struck the runways of Beirut's international airport, located by the seaside in the Lebanese capital's Hezbollah-controlled southern suburbs, forcing its closure and the diversion of incoming flights to Cyprus.

Travelers to and from Beirut were stranded all over the region and beyond.

The Israeli military said it struck the airport because it is "a central hub for the transfer of weapons and supplies to the Hezbollah terrorist organization."

It was the first time since Israel's 1982 invasion of Lebanon and occupation of Beirut that the airport in south Beirut was hit by Israel. The Israelis in 1968 sent commandos to Beirut airport, blowing up 13 passenger planes on the runway in retaliation for Arab militants firing on an Israeli airliner in Athens.

In its overnight attacks, Israeli aircraft and artillery targeted roads and bridges as well as Hezbollah positions and houses of guerrilla members and leaders. Meanwhile, helicopter gunships and jet fighters scoured southern Lebanon for guerrillas launching rockets into northern Israel.

Hezbollah fired volleys of rockets at the Israeli town of Nahariya, and said that in some of its attacks it was using a rocket called "Thunder 1" for the first time. The missile appeared to be more advanced than the inaccurate Katyusha which has been the standard Hezbollah rocket for years.

The Israeli army said several rockets had landed more than 20 kilometers (12 miles) south of the border, showing that Hezbollah has managed to extend its missiles' range.

A 40-year-old Israeli woman was killed when her home in Nahariya was struck by a rocket. At Nahariya Hospital, patients were moved to secure rooms on lower floors. Nahariya's Mayor Jackie Sabag said the whole town had been shut down and urged residents to stay in underground shelters.

Hezbollah's TV station reported Thursday that guerrillas fired Katyusha rockets at the Israeli border town of Kiryat Shmona, targeting an airstrip in the upper Galilee panhandle.

Hezbollah has declared it has over 10,000 rockets and has in the past struck northern Israeli communities in retaliation for attacks against Lebanese civilians.

©MMVI CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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