(Bloomberg) — President Joe Biden’s top diplomat held talks with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman about efforts to reach a cease-fire in Gaza and Lebanon, a bid to garner regional support for a push toward peace.
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Antony Blinken met with Saudi Arabia’s de-facto leader in Riyadh on Wednesday, having earlier traveled to Israel to discuss how to resolve the two conflicts with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. On departure from Tel Aviv, he said he urged Israel’s leader not to act in ways that exacerbate hostilities with Iran or its allied militant groups.
“We’ll always stand with Israel in its defense,” he told reporters as he prepared to board a plane to the Saudi capital. Referring to Iran’s missile attack on Israel at the start of the month, he said “it’s also very important that Israel responds in ways that do not create greater escalation and do not risk spreading the conflict.”
Overnight, Israel said it confirmed the killing three weeks ago of Hashem Safieddine, a cleric widely expected to become the leader of Hezbollah, the militant group Israel has been targeting with a major offensive in Lebanon.
His death was confirmed Wednesday by Hezbollah, whose previous leader, Hassan Nasrallah, was killed by an Israeli strike on Beirut in September. Israel stepped up its campaign against Hezbollah in Lebanon last month to end its military threat and force fighters away from the northern border.
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Israel carried out heavy airstrikes on the coastal city of Tyre on Wednesday, Lebanon’s state-run NNA reported, after the military asked people in several neighborhoods to leave their homes. Hezbollah has fired well over 100 rockets and missiles at Israel over the last two days, the Israel Defense Forces said, including long-range ones that were shot down over Tel Aviv.
“We are winning. We are not limited in time and space,” an Israeli lieutenant colonel, who gave only his first name – Jordan – due to military secrecy regulations, told reporters during a tour of the Lebanese border.
“We will have a cease-fire when our 65,000 civilians who fled their homes in the north of Israel can return home in safety and security,” he said, as artillery fired every few minutes into Lebanon, where black smoke plumed from one site.
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