BEIRUT, Lebanon - Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah said Monday his
group possesses an arsenal of rockets that can reach all of Israel, including
Tel Aviv.
Lebanese Hezbollah women hold model of a Katyusha rockets
launchers in front of a portrait of Hezbollah's former Secretary-General
Abbas Musawi, who was killed in an Israeli helicopter gunship attack in
southern Lebanon in 1992, during a rally in Saksakkiyeh village, southern
Lebanon, Sunday July 22, 2007. [AP]
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"We could absolutely reach any
corner and any point in occupied Palestine," Nasrallah said in an interview
aired by Arab broadcaster Al-Jazeera and Hezbollah's Al-Manar television.
Celebratory gunshots and fireworks erupted in Beirut's southern suburbs for
several minutes as the interview began and after it ended.
Nasrallah said last year's war between Israel and Hezbollah did not succeed
in diminishing his group's military capabilities. Repeating earlier claims, the
Hezbollah leader said his group could already have fired at Tel Aviv last summer
during the conflict, but had avoided doing so.
"In July and August 2006, there wasn't a place in occupied Palestine that the
rockets of the resistance could not reach, be it Tel Aviv or other cities," he
said, describing Israel and the Hezbollah guerrillas in terms usually used by
the group.
"We could absolutely do that now," he added.
In Israel, senior military officials said that Hezbollah is not capable of
striking all parts of Israel, but its missiles can reach the northern Tel Aviv
area, which is about 60 miles south of the border with Lebanon.
Although Hezbollah has succeeded in restoring much of its arsenal since the
end of the war last year, it does not have the same military might that it had
at the start of the fighting, the officials said on condition of anonymity since
they were not authorized to talk to the media.
Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Mark Regev said Hezbollah's rearmament "is
a direct and grave violation of U.N. Security Council resolution 1701," which
ended last year's war.
"The international community must hold accountable those governments, namely
Syria and Iran, who by supplying weapons to Hezbollah are deliberately trying to
undermine the United Nations, the Lebanese government and peace and stability in
the region," he said.
Nasrallah has previously said his group increased its stock of missiles since
the war ended, despite attempts to keep arms from being smuggled into southern
Lebanon.
In a speech in October, he said the guerrillas had 33,000 rockets ¡ª up from
the 22,000 he said they had on Sept. 22.
Hezbollah fired nearly 4,000 rockets at northern Israel during the 34-day
conflict, including several medium-range missiles that for the first time hit
Israel's third-largest city, Haifa.
Nasrallah also insisted Monday that Israel had failed to hit any important
Hezbollah cache during the war.
Nasrallah warned during the war that he had weapons that could reach Tel
Aviv. Although the city was never targeted, Hezbollah's targets struck deeper
inside Israel than ever before, hitting on at least one occasion the town of
Hadera, 30 miles north of Tel Aviv.
The war began on July 12, 2006, after Hezbollah fighters crossed into Israel,
killing three soldiers and seizing two. Israel then invaded southern Lebanon and
pounded the country with massive bombardments that destroyed most roads, bridges
and other infrastructure.
More than 1,000 Lebanese _mostly civilians_ were killed in the fighting,
while 158 Israelis died, including 119 soldiers.
Nasrallah refused to say Monday whether the two Israeli soldiers were alive
or dead.
Nasrallah, who remains in hiding since last year for fear of an Israeli
assassination, also denied media reports that he lived in Syria or in the
Iranian embassy in Beirut during the war.