(Reuters) - The leader of Lebanon's Hezbollah said on Friday his group did not want war with Israel but was ready for one, and reserved the right to respond to Israeli attacks any time, anywhere. "We do not want a war
but we are not afraid of it and we must distinguish between the two, and
the Israelis must also understand this very well," Sayyed Hassan
Nasrallah said. Nasrallah
was speaking at an event to commemorate the deaths of six Hezbollah
fighters and an Iranian general killed by an Israeli air strike in Syria
on Jan. 18. The Iranian-backed Hezbollah hit back on Wednesday with a
rocket attack that killed two Israeli soldiers on the frontier with
Lebanon. The violence has raised tensions between Israel
and Hezbollah to their highest point since they fought a 34-day war in
2006, but both sides have appeared to back away from further escalation. Branded
a terrorist organization by Washington, the Shi'ite Hezbollah movement
has both a military wing and a political party that is part of the
Lebanese government. Addressing a hall full of supporters via video
link, Nasrallah said it would hold Israel responsible for the assassination of any of its leaders or fighters. "We
have the right to respond in any place and at any time and in the way
we see as appropriate," Nasrallah said. The speech was broadcast live on
Arabic news channels and greeted by heavy celebratory gunfire in
Beirut. Israel had no
immediate comment after Nasrallah's speech, but shortly beforehand Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu blamed the upsurge in violence on
Hezbollah's Iranian sponsors. "We are under continued assault orchestrated by Iran, let there be no doubt about it. Iran
is trying to uproot us, they won't succeed," Netanyahu told soldiers
wounded in Wednesday's attack, now convalescing in hospital. He has
previously said those behind Wednesday's attack would "pay the full
price". Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, campaigning in the occupied Golan Heights for Israel's
March 17 parliamentary election, said: "We ought to respond in such a
way that nobody would think twice again about attacking Israel." IRANIAN LINK Attendees
at the Hezbollah event included visiting Iranian official Alaeddin
Boroujerdi, head of the Iranian parliament's national security and
foreign policy committee. He was shown with tears in his eyes as
Nasrallah spoke about the men killed in the Jan. 18 Israeli helicopter
attack in the Syrian Golan Heights. The
dead included a Hezbollah commander and Jihad Mughniyeh, the son of the
group's late military leader, Imad Mughniyeh, who was assassinated in
Damascus in 2008. The
Iranian general killed, Mohammad Allahdadi, had been a senior figure in
Tehran's military effort to support the Syrian government in its battle
against insurgents trying to topple President Bashar al-Assad. Hezbollah
is also fighting alongside Syrian government forces and allied militia
in the civil war. One of
the top figures in the Iranian Revolutionary Guards, Qassem Soleimani,
visited the grave of Jihad Mughniyeh the day after his funeral, a
Lebanese source said. A
picture of Soleimani, head of the Quds Force, praying at Mughniyeh's
grave was broadcast by Lebanese television channel Al-Mayadeen.
Soleimani had become a father figure to Jihad Mughniyeh after his
father's death, the source said. Soleimani also met Nasrallah during his
short visit to Beirut. Nasrallah
said Hezbollah, which launched the attack from the Israeli-occupied
Shebaa Farms, had gone into the operation "ready for the worst
possibilities." "What happened in the Shebaa Farms was more than vengeance but less than a war," he said.
Hezbollah: we don't want war with Israel but do not fear it
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