BEIRUT/JERUSALEM, Feb 18 (Reuters) – A drone flown by Lebanese militant group Hezbollah crossed into northern Israel on Friday, triggering air defences and the scrambling of fighter jets before returning to Lebanon.
Iran-backed Hezbollah, which fought a month-long war against Israel on the Lebanon border in 2006, said Friday’s flight was a 40-minute reconaissance mission. Earlier this week, it said it had started producing its own drones in Lebanon.
Hours later and roughly 100 km to the north, a thundering roar was heard in the Lebanese capital Beirut, probably caused by Israeli planes passing in the lowest overflight in years, according to a Reuters witness and a Lebanese security source.
The noise reminded residents of a huge 2020 port explosion.
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Israel’s military said Hezbollah’s radio-controlled drone had set off air raid sirens in the Galilee region of northern Israel warning residents to take cover.
“Aerial defence systems identified and tracked the threat along with helicopters and fighter jets that were dispatched,” it said, adding that its Iron Dome defence system had tried to intercept the drone but it made it back.
On Thursday, Israel said it had downed a drone that belonged to Hezbollah after it crossed into Israeli air space.
(Reporting by Mahmoud Mourad, Timour Azhari and Ari RabinovitchEditing by Mark Heinrich and Angus MacSwan)