Pentagon Asks Israel Not to Expand War to Lebanon Amid Fresh Warnings From Iran

Unusually blunt request comes amid concerns Tel Aviv deliberately trying to draw Hezbollah into conflict to trigger U.S. involvement

Pentagon chief Lloyd Austin ‘expressed concern’ to his Israeli counterpart Yoav Gallant about Israeli actions serving to escalate tensions along the Israeli-Lebanese border.

That’s according to a report by US media citing three Israeli and American sources briefed on the Austin-Gallant phone call, which took place Saturday.

The unusually blunt request comes amid reports of concerns in Washington that Tel Aviv is deliberately trying to draw Lebanon’s powerful Hezbollah militia into the Palestinian-Israeli crisis to drag the United States and other powers into the conflict. Israel has dismissed such claims.

The official readout of the Austin-Gallant call did not mention Lebanon or Hezbollah, paraphrasing Austin as having “reaffirmed Israel’s right to self-defense,” while emphasizing “the need to contain the conflict to Gaza and avoid regional escalation.”

But in private, the report indicated, Austin specifically asked Gallant not to take ‘steps that could lead to an all-out war between Israel and Hezbollah,’ and for details on Israeli strikes against Lebanon, which Israeli media have indicated have proven increasingly ineffective against Hezbollah’s fighters.

Austin’s remarks come amid concerns expressed Monday by Amir-Ali Hajizadeh, a top commander in Iran’s elite Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, that Israel’s continued war in Gaza has already spilled over into Lebanon, and threatens to expand further.

“Today, we can see that the war has expanded and Lebanon is embroiled in it. It’s probable that the extent of clashes will grow even further. The future is uncertain, but Iran is prepared for all circumstances,” Hajizadeh said.

The brigadier general, who commands the IRGC’s powerful Aerospace Force, went on to stress that Iran is not afraid of the United States, which has parked two aircraft carriers and at least one cruise missile sub in the Middle East and shored up its bases in the region with thousands of additional troops and warplanes. “The US is not threatening Iran…Iran is not in a position where anybody would seek to threaten it, as we are currently at the peak of our military strength,” Hajizadeh assured.

The commander’s remarks were preceded by Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, who wrote on social media late Sunday that he had informed his Egyptian counterpart, Sameh Shoukry, that the “Israeli regime” had “collapsed on October 7 and is now alive” only thanks to “American artificial respiration.”

Tehran has thus far resisted efforts by neocon hawks in Washington and officials in Tel Aviv to be dragged directly in the Palestinian-Israeli crisis, instead joining with its BRICS bloc partners in calling for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza.

The Biden administration has continued to blame Iran for regional tensions, accusing its “proxies” in Iraq and Syria of targeting US bases in those countries, and claiming that the Houthi militants in Yemen launching missiles and drones at Israel are another Iranian “proxy.” Iran has rejected the allegations, stressing that it has nothing to do with the attacks on US bases in the Middle East, and noting repeatedly that its cooperation with the Houthis has always been limited to moral support, given the harsh blockade around the country.


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