Hezbollah announced on Friday that it fired rockets at Israeli military infrastructure in the Krayot region north of Haifa [1, 2].
These strikes signal a continued escalation of hostilities between the Lebanese group and the Israeli military, targeting strategic assets and personnel across northern Israel.
A spokesperson for Hezbollah said the group targeted infrastructure belonging to the Israeli army in the Krayot area [1]. Other reports indicated that the group also targeted military infrastructure in Safed [2].
The organization said these operations were efforts to weaken the Israeli army's infrastructure in the targeted regions [1, 2]. These specific rocket strikes were part of a larger series of coordinated actions carried out throughout the day.
According to a spokesperson for Hezbollah, the group executed 62 attacks on Friday [3]. These operations targeted a variety of Israeli objectives, including settlements, troops, vehicles, military sites, and infrastructure [3].
The group said that the wide range of targets was intended to disrupt military capabilities and pressure the Israeli defense forces. The attacks on Friday reflect a pattern of high-frequency engagements involving both rocket fire and ground-based targets [3].
While some reports focused on the strikes near Haifa, others highlighted the impact in Safed, suggesting a broad geographic spread of the day's operations [1, 2].
“Hezbollah executed 62 attacks on Friday”
The scale of the reported 62 attacks indicates a significant operational tempo for Hezbollah, moving beyond isolated skirmishes to a broad campaign against both military and civilian-adjacent infrastructure. By targeting Krayot and Safed, the group demonstrates its ability to strike multiple strategic points in northern Israel simultaneously, increasing the pressure on the Israeli military's northern defensive perimeter.





