Israel kills Hezbollah chief of staff in Beirut

People gather looking at the debris following a targeted Israeli military strike on a residential building in the Haret Hreik neighbourhood of Beirut’s southern suburbs on November 23, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 24 November 2025
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Israel kills Hezbollah chief of staff in Beirut

  • Strike kills Haytham Ali Tabtabai, 5 others, injures 28
  • President Joseph Aoun slams Israel, seeks world help

BEIRUT: Israel said on Sunday that it had killed Hezbollah’s chief of staff Haytham Ali Tabtabai in a strike on a neighborhood in Beirut that also resulted in the death and injury of several other people.

Israeli army spokesman Avichai Adraee said that the regime had succeeded in the “elimination” of Tabtabai, whom he described as a “terrorist.”

Hezbollah has reportedly confirmed that Tabtabai was killed.

The Lebanese Ministry of Health said the airstrike, which hit several floors of a residential building on Al-Arid Street in Haret Hreik without prior warning, killed five people and injured 28 others.

Lebanon’s President Joseph Aoun said “the Israeli airstrike targeting Beirut’s southern suburbs is further proof that Israel disregards repeated calls to cease its attacks on Lebanon.”

Aoun said the Israeli regime “refuses to implement international resolutions and all efforts and initiatives aimed at ending the escalation and restoring stability not only to Lebanon but to the entire region.”

He added that Lebanon “has adhered to the cessation of hostilities for nearly a year and has presented initiative after initiative.”

He reiterated his “call on the international community to assume its responsibilities” and intervene “forcefully and seriously” to stop the attacks on Lebanon and its people.

He warned that further escalation risked reigniting regional tensions and causing additional bloodshed.

Israeli media reported that Tel Aviv informed the ceasefire monitoring committee that it would not escalate unless Hezbollah retaliated.

Lebanon’s Prime Minister Nawaf Salam said that “protecting the Lebanese people and preventing the country from sliding into dangerous situations is the government’s priority at this critical juncture.

“It will continue to work through all political and diplomatic means with brotherly and friendly nations to protect the Lebanese people, prevent any open escalation, and ensure a halt to Israeli aggression, its withdrawal from our land, and the return of our prisoners.”

Approximately four hours after the attack, Adraee described Tabtabai as “a key Hezbollah operative who joined its ranks in the 1980s and held a series of leadership positions, including commander of the Radwan Unit and Hezbollah’s operations officer in Syria.

He added that “during the last war between Israel and Hezbollah, Tabatabai assumed the position of commander of Hezbollah’s operations system and was responsible for shaping the organization’s situation and building its strength.

“During Operation Northern Arrows, after the elimination of most of the organization’s military leadership, he took charge of managing the war with Israel.”

At the conclusion of Operation Northern Arrows, Tabtabai “became Hezbollah’s chief of staff, leading the organization’s reconstruction efforts and commanding most of its units, working to rehabilitate them for war with Israel.”

The Israeli army spokesman said the military “will act against attempts to rebuild and rearm the terrorist group Hezbollah and will work forcefully to eliminate any threat to the citizens of the State of Israel. It remains committed to the understandings reached between Israel and Lebanon.”

According to initial reports from Beirut, Tabtabai was the second-in-command of Hezbollah. He has an Iranian father and Lebanese mother.

The Lebanese army has imposed a security cordon around the attack site. Several families fled fearing further attacks amid continuous, low-altitude Israeli reconnaissance flights extending as far as Baalbek and Hermel.

The airstrike, described as “precise,” was ordered by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu based on recommendations from the defense minister and chief of staff, according to Netanyahu’s office.

Israeli Channel 12 reported that Israel “attempted to assassinate” Tabtabai twice during the war. “The raid against the Hezbollah chief of staff at his hideout in the southern suburbs of Beirut was coordinated with the Americans.”

Three missiles hit the building. Israeli media said they were GBU-39s, “characterized by their high accuracy, light weight, and small dimensions, allowing them to be precisely guided to specific targets” and capable of penetrating about 1.8 meters of reinforced concrete.

The US State Department had offered a reward of up to $5 million for information leading to the location or arrest of Tabtabai.

According to the department, he commanded elite forces and played a direct role in Hezbollah’s operations in Syria, as well as overseeing special forces operatives who worked in Yemen.

This activity, Washington said, contributed to destabilizing regional actions through training, equipment, and expertise. He was labeled a “Specially Designated Global Terrorist” in 2016.

The Iranian Embassy in Lebanon said on its social media accounts that “the terrorist Israeli entity does not hesitate to threaten the safety of the dear Lebanese people.

“These cowardly attacks will not diminish the resolve of those who are in the right, nor will they weaken their unwavering will to confront it.”


Baghdad airport reopens after weather disruption

Updated 19 sec ago
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Baghdad airport reopens after weather disruption

  • A thick fog has blanketed the capital Baghdad and several areas in Iraq, drastically reducing visibility since the early morning hours

BAGHDAD: Baghdad International Airport reopened Thursday after a 12-hour halt due to bad weather, the transport ministry said.

Authorities announced at around 12:30 a.m. (2130 GMT) they had temporarily shut Baghdad airport to air traffic because of poor weather conditions and fog that drastically reduced visibility.

Other airports, Najaf in central Iraq and Sulaimaniyah in the northern Kurdistan region, were also closed.

The transport ministry said at midday Thursday the “airspace has been reopened” at Baghdad and Najaf airports, according to the official INA press agency.

Heavy rains over the past two days caused flooding in several areas in Iraq, particularly in the autonomous Kurdistan region.

Floods in the north killed at least three people, including a child, according to local authorities. A key bridge connecting the northern city of Kirkuk to Baghdad also collapsed.

Authorities hope the heavy rains will help alleviate water shortages in drought-stricken Iraq, after water reserves in artificial lakes hit their lowest levels in the country’s recent history following a dry season.

Iraq, heavily impacted by climate change, has been ravaged for years by drought and low rainfall.