Israel continues its operation in Lebanon on Thursday, days after an Iranian missile attack against Israel and a deadly shooting attack in Tel Aviv-Jaffa, for which Hamas has claimed responsibility.

An Israeli air strike targeted “the intelligence headquarters of the terrorist organization Hezbollah” in central Beirut, according to a post on X by the Israeli Air Force, a branch of Israel’s military. The post was written in Hebrew and translated to English.

A building targeted by the air strike was in Beirut’s Bachoura neighbourhood, the Times of Israel reported, which is less than a 15 minute walk from the Lebanese Parliament. There were at least six deaths reported, according to some media sources, like the Times and NBC News, although the exact number and identities of those killed could not be independently confirmed.

Smoke rises from the site of an Israeli airstrike in Dahiyeh, Beirut, Lebanon, Thursday, Oct. 3, 2024.Photo by Hassan Ammar /THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Israeli air strike in Lebanon comes after Hezbollah launched rockets into Israel Wednesday morning, following a missile attack by its ally Iran on Tuesday night.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called it a “big mistake” and said that Iran “will pay for it.”

On Wednesday, Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations Danny Danon told CNN that Israel’s response to the Iranian attack would be “very strong” and “painful.” However, it would have to be calculated because “we don’t want to see a full war with Iran.”

“We have shown our capabilities when we fought Hamas in Gaza, and we are fighting Hezbollah in Lebanon. They better look at what happened in Beirut and in Gaza before they start a war with us,” said Danon.

Any country helping Israel will be ‘legitimate target,’ Iran says

According to a statement from Iran’s mission to the United Nations on Thursday, any country that helps Israel will become a “legitimate target” of Iran, NBC News reported.

The website for the Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations, New York was not available on Thursday morning. When clicked, the link redirects to a site run by Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which is “currently undergoing scheduled maintenance and upgrades,” it says online.

However, per NBC, the statement called on “countries to refrain from entangling themselves in the conflict between the Israeli regime and Iran and to distance themselves from the fray.”

“Our response will be solely directed at the aggressor. Should any country render assistance to the aggressor, it shall likewise be deemed an accomplice and a legitimate target,” the statement said, per NBC.

Palestinian who lynched 2 Israeli soldiers nearly 25 years ago killed in strike

On Thursday morning, the Israeli military confirmed they killed terrorist Aziz Salha, who lynched two Israeli soldiers in October 2000.

The soldiers, Sergeant First Class (Res.) Yosef Avrahami and Corporal (Res.) Vadim Norzhich, had inadvertently ended up in the city of Ramallah in the West Back, which was controlled by the Palestinian Authority, the Times of Israel reported.

Salha took part in their “brutal lynching,” Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said. He became the subject of an infamous photograph, in which he is shown holding up his bloodied hands in the window of a police station, where the soldiers were killed.

Salha was detained in 2001 and exiled to Gaza in 2011, the Times reported, when Israel exchanged more than a thousand Palestinian prisoners for Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit. Shalit was captured by Hamas and held as a prisoner in Gaza for five years.

After being exiled, Salha was “involved in terrorist activity in Judea and Samaria and remained involved in Hamas terrorist activities,” the IDF said.

Hamas leaders killed in Gaza strike months ago

Three prominent Hamas leaders were killed roughly three months ago, the IDF and Israel Foreign Ministry announced on X Thursday. The IDF and Israeli Security Agency (ISA) “eliminated” the terrorists in a joint effort.

The head of Hamas in Gaza Rawhi Mushtaha, commander of Hamas’ general security mechanism Sami Oudeh, and Sameh al-Siraj, who held the security portfolio on Hamas’ political bureau and Hamas’ Labor Committee, were fatally struck by Israeli fighter jets, according to a statement by the IDF.

They had been hiding in a “fortified and equipped underground compound in northern Gaza,” the IDF said.

“The compound served as a Hamas command and control center and enabled senior operatives to remain inside of it for extended periods of time.”

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our newsletters here.