Israel army says 'more than 20' Hezbollah members killed alongside Nasrallah
The Israeli military said on Sunday the strike that killed Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah in Beirut also "eliminated" around two dozen other members of the Lebanese armed group.
"More than 20 other terrorists of varying ranks, who were present at the underground headquarters in Beirut located beneath civilian buildings, and were managing Hezbollah's terrorist operations against the state of Israel, were also eliminated," in Friday's air strike, the military said in a statement that listed some of them.
The dead included, according to the statement, Ibrahim Hussein Jazini and Samir Tawfiq Dib, who the military said were "among Nasrallah's closest associates" in the Lebanese armed group.
"Due to their proximity to him, they served a significant role in the day-to-day operations of Hezbollah and Nasrallah in particular," the statement said.
The military in recent days has pounded Hezbollah targets in southern Lebanon and also hit the group's stronghold in southern Beirut with intensified strikes.
Hezbollah confirmed Nasrallah's death on Saturday, and on Sunday it said Ali Karake, the group's top commander in southern Lebanon, was also killed in the Friday attack.
The Israeli military said on Sunday that Abed al-Amir Muhammad Sablini and Ali Naaf Ayoub also died with Nasrallah.
Earlier on Sunday, the military said it had killed Nabil Qaouq, a senior Hezbollah official, in an air strike in a Beirut suburb on Saturday.
Qaouq was a member of Hezbollah's central council and was considered "to be close to Hezbollah's senior commanders", a statement said.
A source close to Hezbollah told news agency AFP that Israel also carried out a strike on Sunday in southern Beirut that targeted Abu Ali Reda, a commander of one of the group's sectors in southern Lebanon.
Hezbollah said in a statement that Reda was "fine".
In July Nasrallah said Hezbollah divided its southern Lebanon operations into three areas after its last war with Israel in 2006: the Aziz unit in the west, the Nasr unit in the east and the Badr unit covering north of the Litani River up to the coastal city of Sidon.
The strike that killed Nasrallah also killed Iranian General Abbas Nilforoushan, a top commander of the Quds Force, the foreign operations arm of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Iran said.
In recent days, Israel has shifted the focus of its military operations from Gaza to Lebanon, after nearly a year of low-level cross-border fire with Hezbollah.
The Israeli military has carried out a blistering air campaign it says has targeted not just Hezbollah's senior leaders, but also its military installations and weapons storage facilities, particularly in southern Lebanon.
Israeli raids on Lebanon last Monday killed at least 558 people, Lebanon's health ministry said, in the deadliest day of violence since Lebanon's 1975-90 civil war.
Hezbollah began firing on Israel in what it described as a show of solidarity with Hamas a day after the Palestinian group's unprecedented October 7 attack on Israel.