Hezbollah resistance movement has struck a major Israeli military base in Tel Aviv with ballistic missiles, besides debuting one of its long-range tactical rockets in its ongoing struggle against the Israeli regime.
On Wednesday, Hezbollah announced targeting the HaKirya base, which is located 120 kilometers (74 miles) from Lebanon’s border with the occupied Palestinian territories in Tel Aviv, with its Qader-2 ballistic missiles.
The group hailed hitting the target “accurately,” and described it as the headquarters of the regime’s ministry of military affairs, the Israeli military’s General Staff, its war management room, and its air force's Military Control and Supervision Authority, Press TV reported.
This was the second time the movement’s fighters were targeting the outpost within a day after striking it with a squadron of attack drones.
The movement also released a video marking its starting deployment of its Fadi-6 missiles against the regime.
It said the projectile was 302 millimeters in diameter, weighed 650 kilograms, including its 140-kilomgram warhead, and could fly as far as 225 kilometers (139 miles).
Hezbollah further identified the missile as a surface-to-surface projectile used for striking targeted areas with a small margin of error, adding that the missile was being deployed to expand the group’s operational range.
The movement, meanwhile, released another video, depicting its deployment of the missiles against the Tel Nof airbase southeast of Tel Aviv, and describing the outpost as the Israeli air force’s oldest main base that houses numerous F-15 warplanes and drones as well as units specializing in the electronic warfare.
bd-pratidin/GR