BEKAA VALLEY, Lebanon: Sympathizers of the Hezbollah movement gather to watch the transmission on a large screen of a speech by the movement's leader Hassan Nasrallah in the town of Al-Ain yesterday. - AFP

BEIRUT/JERUSALEM/DAMASCUS:
Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah said yesterday the fall of two Israeli
drones overnight in suburbs of Beirut dominated by the Iranian-backed group
amounted to a very dangerous move. Nasrallah, whose group fought a month-long
war with Israel in 2006, said in a televised speech: "The latest Israeli
development (is) very, very, very dangerous." There were no signs the
bitter enemies were headed for a conflict. But Lebanese Prime Minister Saad
Hariri said the drones were designed to stir up regional tensions.

In the first such
incident in more than a decade, one drone fell and second exploded before dawn
near the ground and caused some damage to Hezbollah's media center in the
Dahiyeh suburbs, a Hezbollah official told Reuters. "The new
aggression...constitutes a threat to regional stability and an attempt to push
the situation towards further tension," Hariri said in a statement from
his office. The Israeli military declined to comment.

The incident took
place hours after the Israeli military said its aircraft had struck Iranian
forces and Shiite militias near Syria's capital Damascus which it said had been
planning to launch "killer drones" into Israel. War monitor the
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said two members of Hezbollah and one
Iranian were killed in the Israeli strikes around Damascus.

The Israeli
military said its aircraft struck "Iranian Quds Force operatives and
Shiite militias which were preparing to advance attack plans targeting sites in
Israel from within Syria over the last number of days". The elite Quds
Force is the overseas arm of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC).
"Iran has no immunity anywhere. Our forces operate in every sector against
the Iranian aggression," said Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on
Twitter. "If someone rises up to kill you, kill him first."

Lieutenant-Colonel
Jonathan Conricus, an Israeli military spokesman, told reporters "a number
of attack drones", each armed with several kilograms of explosives, were
to have been launched simultaneously at targets in northern Israel on Thursday
but the plan was thwarted. He did not disclose what measures Israel took that
day. He described the "killer drones" - designed to slam into targets
- as highly accurate.

The military
released grainy black and white surveillance footage purporting to show the
Iranian operatives on Thursday near the drones' launching site. In the footage,
four people are seen walking in an open area, one of them carrying an object
that the military identified as a "killer drone". Conricus said the
drones, accompanied by the Iranian operatives, had arrived at Damascus airport
from Iran several weeks ago and were taken to a Quds-controlled compound in a
village southeast of the city. Israel carried out Saturday's attack, Conricus
said, after learning that another attempt to launch drones was imminent.

In Tehran, a
senior Revolutionary Guards commander denied that Iranian targets had been hit
in the Israeli air strikes in Syria, the semi-official ILNA news agency
reported. Israel deems Lebanon's heavily armed Shiite Hezbollah movement,
backed by Iran, the biggest threat across its border. In their 2006 war nearly
1,200 people, mostly civilians, died in Lebanon and 158 people died in Israel,
mostly soldiers. Lebanon has complained to the United Nations about Israeli
planes regularly violating its airspace in recent years.

Residents in
Dahiyeh said they heard the sound of a blast. A witness said the army closed
off the streets where a fire had started. A Hezbollah spokesman told Lebanon's
state news agency NNA the second drone was rigged with explosives causing
serious damage to the media center. Hezbollah is now examining the first drone,
he said. The Lebanese army said that one Israeli drone fell and another
exploded at 02:30 am local time (2330 GMT), causing only material damage.
"The army arrived immediately and cordoned off the area where the two
drones fell," it said.

Israel has grown
alarmed by the rising influence of its regional foe Iran during the war in
neighboring Syria, where Tehran and Hezbollah provide military help to
Damascus. Israel says its air force has carried out hundreds of strikes in
Syria against what it calls Iranian targets and arms transfers to Hezbollah.
Iran and Hezbollah are helping President Bashar Al-Assad in the eight-year-old
Syria war. Russia, which is also aiding Assad, has largely turned a blind eye
to the Israeli air strikes

Syrian state media
said air defenses confronted the "aggression" and the army said most
of the Israeli missiles were destroyed. The United States and Iran are at odds
over Tehran's nuclear program and the Gulf, with both sides trading accusations
over threats to the strategic waterway's security. Iran also has wide sway in
Iraq. Iraq's paramilitary groups on Wednesday blamed a series of recent blasts
at their weapons depots and bases on the United States and Israel.

The Popular
Mobilization Forces (PMF), the grouping of Iraq's mostly Shiite paramilitary
groups, many of which are backed by Iran, said the United States had allowed
four Israeli drones to enter the region accompanying US forces and carry out
missions on Iraqi territory. Netanyahu has hinted of possible Israeli
involvement in attacks against Iranian-linked targets in Iraq.

On the Israeli
YNet news website, military affairs commentator Ron Ben-Yishai described the
alleged Iranian killer drone attack plans as revenge by Tehran for the
purported Israeli drone strikes in Iraq. Amos Yadlin, a former head of Israeli
military intelligence, said neither Iran nor Israel were interested in all-out
war. "We're not there yet," he said on Israel Radio. "But
sometimes, someone makes a mistake." - Reuters