War came without warning to the village of Khodor in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley. Israel's fight with the Iran-backed group Hezbollah, long designated a terrorist organization by Israel and the U.S., has been focused for weeks in southern Beirut and further south, near the Lebanon-Israel border, where the Israel Defense Forces have ordered tens of thousands of people to evacuate.
One of the deadliest Israeli strikes to date came Thursday evening, when missiles slammed into buildings in central Beirut. Lebanon's caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati said 22 civilians were killed and wounded another 139. The Reuters news agency quoted Lebanese security officials as saying the Israeli strike had targeted senior Hezbollah official Wafiq Safa, who survived.
About 20 miles to the east of Beirut, there have been no IDF evacuation orders in Khodor. But there have been airstrikes. Mourners gathered and wept for five people killed in one of them Wednesday. A much-loved schoolteacher and his grandson were among those killed. So was Ahmed Awdeh's father — crushed to death under rubble.
Awdeh's memories of the man he adored have been reduced to a treasured photo album.
"My dad was a farmer," the traumatized boy (how old?)said. "He was kind and loved by all."
For most of the past year, since Hezbollah's Hamas allies in the Gaza Strip sparked the ongoing war there with their Oct. 7, 2023 terrorist attack, the people of Khodor had rarely found themselves in Israel's firing line.
Since the escalation of Israel's parallel war with Hezbollah about two weeks ago, however, the tiny village has been hit repeatedly by Israeli airstrikes. Israel ramped up its fight against Hezbollah, a powerful, well-armed Iranian proxy group deeply embedded in Lebanon's politics, in response to it launching more than 10,000 rockets at Israel in support of Hamas over the last year.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said the objective is to drive Hezbollah fighters and weapons back far enough from Israel's northern border to stop the hail of rocket fire, to enable tens of thousands of Israelis to return to their deserted homes in the region. The Israeli threatened this week to inflict upon Lebanon "a long war that will lead to destruction and suffering like we see in Gaza" if the Lebanese people do not reject Hezbollah.
The IDF said cross-border ground operations launched at the end of September in southern Lebanon would be "limited, localized, and targeted ground raids based on precise intelligence."
Lebanese officials say Israel has killed 2,141 people with its operations in the country since they began just over a year ago — about half of them since the assault escalated dramatically at the end of September, and at least 22 in strikes on Wednesday alone. More than 10,000 others have been wounded, according to the country's health ministry.