MARJAYOUN, Lebanon: Hezbollah fighters attacked an Israeli military convoy in the occupied Shebaa Farms, in south Lebanon Wednesday, killing four soldiers in a clear response to a recent Israeli airstrike.
Hezbollah issued a statement, it dubbed, "statement number 1," adopting the attack on the Israeli military convoy.
"At 11:25 [Wednesday morning] the Quneitra Martyrs unit targeted with appropriate missile weapons an Israeli military convoy comprising several vehicles and [transporting] Zionist officers and soldiers causing the destruction of several vehicles and inflicting many casualties on the enemy," the brief Hezbollah statement read.
"The ball now is in the Israeli court if the Israelis launch a wide scale response, Hezbollah will respond in kind," a senior political source told The Daily Star. "At this stage we cannot completely rule out this spiraling out of this incident into a full fledged war," he added.
The source said Hezbollah is expected to release a second statement that includes pictures and footage of the ambush.
A security source told The Daily Star that 30 shells were fired from the Israeli side across the Lebanese border following the midday attack that struck a convoy, damaging two vehicles. Hezbollah's Al-Manar TV said the attack destroyed 9 vehicles. Al-Manar also reported the killing of a Spanish peacekeeper serving as part of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) in the attack.
Eye witnesses said Hezbollah responded to shelling of Lebanese territories from an Israeli position in the Ruweisat al-Alam area in the Shebaa Farms with projectiles.
The source said at least eight shells landed in the Israeli-occupied Shebaa Farms and several others crashed into nearby Majidieh, a town mainly comprised primarily of agricultural land along the Wazzani River and opposite occupied Ghajar.
Earlier Reuters quoting an Israeli military source, reported that an anti-tank missile was fired at an Israeli military vehicle near the Lebanon border, wounding four soldiers.
The incident came several hours after Israel launched an airstrike in Syria amid tensions that have escalated in the frontier area over the past 10 days.
The Israeli military source said Israeli helicopters were deployed after the anti-tank missile struck the vehicle and the army was checking whether there had been any attempt to abduct one of the soldiers.
According to Israeli daily Haaretz, the attacks took place as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was in the southern city of Sderot, laying the cornerstone for a new settlement. "At these moments, the IDF is responding to the events in the north. Look what happened here. Not far from the city of Sderot, in Gaza, Hamas was hit by the strongest blow it ever received last summer... Security comes before all else. Security is the foundation for everything."
Netanyahu cut short his visit to Sderot and was headed to the Defense Ministry headquarters in Tel Aviv for consultations, Haaretz said. Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon also convened a security briefing in the wake of the attacks.
Israeli media reported that flights had been suspended at the airports in Rosh Pina and Haifa.
On Tuesday, at least two rockets from Syria hit the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, and Israel responded with artillery fire.
The attack comes after an Israeli airstrike on a Hezbollah convoy near the Golan Heights on Jan. 18 that killed an Iranian Revolutionary Guard general along with six Hezbollah fighters, including the son of slain Hezbollah commander Imad Mughniyeh.
There was no official comment from the Lebanese government on the Hezbollah attack.
However, Progressive Socialist Party leader MP Walid Jumblatt tweeted: “It seems we’re headed for big trouble.”
Plumes of smoke billow from the occupied Shebaa Farms region in south Lebanon after a Hezbollah squad targeted an Israeli military convoy on Wednesday, Jan. 28, 2015. (The Daily Star/Stringer)