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Nick Schifrin Nick Schifrin
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Solveig Rennan Solveig Rennan
Transcript Audio
It is the deadliest day in the Middle East since Oct. 7. Lebanese authorities say Israeli airstrikes killed almost 500 and wounded more than 1,600. Israel said it struck 1,100 targets where Iran-backed Hezbollah hid weapons in Lebanon. That includes thousands of rockets and missiles aimed, and often fired at, Israel. Nick Schifrin reports.
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Amna Nawaz:
Welcome to the "News Hour."
It is the deadliest day in the Middle East since the October 7 terror attacks. Lebanese authorities say Israeli airstrikes killed nearly 500 people and wounded more than 1,600.
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Geoff Bennett:
Israel said it struck 1,100 targets where Iran-backed Hezbollah hid weapons in Lebanon, including thousands of rockets and missiles in a stash often fired at Israel.
The tensions have led the U.S. Defense Department to send additional troops to the region.
Nick Schifrin starts our coverage.
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Nick Schifrin:
In towns across southern and Eastern Lebanon today, at more than 1,000 sites, an avalanche of airstrikes. Lebanese across the region said today felt like the beginning of war. Thousands of families fled, cramming everyone they could fit into every vehicle they could find, even those shattered by shrapnel.
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Ahmed, Southern Lebanon Resident (through interpreter):
Strikes, warplanes, destruction. No one is left there. Everyone has fled. We took our belongings and left.
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Nick Schifrin:
Since October the 8th, Hezbollah has fired thousands of rockets into Israel, including yesterday outside Israel's third largest city. And Israel says its goal is to return some 60,000 residents to now empty Northern Israeli towns.
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Benjamin Netanyahu, Israeli Prime Minister (through interpreter):
I promised that we would change the security balance, the balance of power in the north. That is exactly what we are doing. We're destroying thousands of missiles and rockets directed at Israeli cities and Israeli citizens.
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Nick Schifrin:
And Israel expanded its targets today, warning residents to leave any homes with weapons in the Beqaa Valley, where Hezbollah was founded decades ago near the border with Syria.
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Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari, Spokesperson, Israeli Defense Forces:
We advise civilians from Lebanese villages located in and next to buildings and areas used by Hezbollah for military purpose, such as those used to store weapons, to immediately move out of harm's way for their own safety.
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Nick Schifrin:
Israel said the targets were Hezbollah, but Lebanese officials say Israel also struck hospitals, medical centers and other civilian infrastructure. It is a dangerous, violent escalation one day after Hezbollah leaders promised their own escalation.
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Naim Qassem, Hezbollah Deputy Secretary-General (through interpreter):
We don't need to make threats, and we won't specify how we will respond to aggression. We have entered a new phase titled open-ended battle of reckoning.
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Nick Schifrin:
But over the last week, it's been Hezbollah that's faced unprecedented attacks, their walkie-talkies and pagers turned into bombs, injuring thousands and killing nearly 40. And on Friday, an Israeli airstrike in Southern Beirut killed the founder of Hezbollah's special forces unit, but also dozens of civilians, who have faced the brunt of the violence, the U.N. said today.
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Imran Riza, U.N. Deputy Special Coordinator For Lebanon:
What we have seen over the last week has been dramatic, has been dramatic. The consequences on civilians has been huge.
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Nick Schifrin:
Today in Washington, for at least the fifth time in the last week, President Biden urged restraint.
Joe Biden, President of the United States: My team is in constant contact with their counterparts, and we're working to de-escalate in a way that allows people to return to their homes safely.
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Nick Schifrin:
But if Israel's hope is that Hezbollah chooses diplomacy, analysts say this week's attacks will produce the opposite effect, and is already leading to the very escalation from both sides the U.S. has been trying to prevent.
For the "PBS News Hour," I'm Nick Schifrin.
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PBS NewsHour from Sep 23, 2024
By —
Nick Schifrin Nick Schifrin
Nick Schifrin is PBS NewsHour’s Foreign Affairs and Defense Correspondent. He leads NewsHour’s daily foreign coverage, including multiple trips to Ukraine since the full-scale invasion, and has created weeklong series for the NewsHour from nearly a dozen countries.
The PBS NewsHour series “Inside Putin’s Russia” won a 2017 Peabody Award and the National Press Club’s Edwin M. Hood Award for Diplomatic Correspondence. In 2020 Schifrin received the American Academy of Diplomacy’s Arthur Ross Media Award for Distinguished Reporting and Analysis of Foreign Affairs. He was a member of the NewsHour teams awarded a 2021 Peabody for coverage of COVID-19, and a 2023 duPont Columbia Award for coverage of Afghanistan and Ukraine.
Prior to PBS NewsHour, Schifrin was Al Jazeera America's Middle East correspondent. He led the channel’s coverage of the 2014 war in Gaza; reported on the Syrian war from Syria's Turkish, Lebanese and Jordanian borders; and covered the annexation of Crimea. He won an Overseas Press Club award for his Gaza coverage and a National Headliners Award for his Ukraine coverage.
From 2008-2012, Schifrin served as the ABC News correspondent in Afghanistan and Pakistan. In 2011 he was one of the first journalists to arrive in Abbottabad, Pakistan, after Osama bin Laden’s death and delivered one of the year’s biggest exclusives: the first video from inside bin Laden’s compound. His reporting helped ABC News win an Edward R. Murrow award for its bin Laden coverage.
Schifrin is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and a board member of the Overseas Press Club Foundation. He has a Bachelor’s degree from Columbia University and a Master of International Public Policy degree from the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS).
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Solveig Rennan Solveig Rennan
Solveig Rennan is an associate producer for the PBS NewsHour.
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