Hezbollah leader offers ceasefire to Israel
Hezbollah’s leader offered for the first time today to stop rocket attacks on northern Israel in return for an end to airstrikes throughout Lebanon.
But Sheik Hassan Nasrallah vowed to fire rockets into Tel Aviv if Israel strikes at Beirut proper.
Israeli warplanes have hit Hezbollah strongholds in southern Beirut suburbs repeatedly, most recently before dawn today.
He warned Israel: “If you bomb our capital Beirut, we will bomb the capital of your usurping entity… We will bomb Tel Aviv.”
While threatening Tel Aviv for the first time, Nasrallah also offered his first gesture toward diminishing the conflict, which has taken more than 500 Lebanese lives and killed more than 50 Israelis.
“Any time you decide to stop your campaign against our cities, villages, civilians and infrastructure, we will not fire rockets on any Israeli settlement or city,” he said in a taped television speech.
Nasrallah said his forces were succeeding in inflicting ”maximum casualties” on Israeli forces in the south of the country, and said his guerrillas would not back down from the brutal fighting around towns and villages across the rugged region.
“We naturally prefer that it is a military against military fight, on the ground, on the battlefield – we are ready for it,” he said.
The statement was broadcast on Hezbollah's Al-Manar TV and carried simultaneously on all other Lebanese and Arab satellite channels.
Speaking directly to Israelis, Nasrallah said, “The only choice before you is to stop your aggression and turn to negotiations to end this folly.”
Parts of the speech were carried live on Israeli television channels, with Hebrew translation.
Nasrallah acknowledged Israeli advances deeper into Lebanon, but said his guerrillas were not trying to hold ground.
“We are fighting a guerrilla war. Our policy is not to hang on to geography... It is beneficial for us to allow them to advance to the entrances to villages – this is our goal. Our goal is to inflict maximum casualties and damage to the capabilities of the enemy, and we are succeeding,” he said.
Nasrallah said Hezbollah’s command and control structures and rocket forces remained intact.
Israel claims to have killed more than 300 Hezbollah fighters since the conflict began on July 12. The guerrilla group has acknowledged losing only 46 men.





