Hezbollah publishes threatening video of Israeli vessels amid crunch Lebanon gas talks

Hezbollah publishes threatening video of Israeli vessels amid crunch Lebanon gas talks
A video that was posted by Lebanon's powerful Shia Hezbollah movement appeared to threaten three Israeli ships just 90km away from the coast.
3 min read
01 August, 2022
Lebanon and Israel are locked in a maritime border dispute [Getty]

Hezbollah published a threatening video clip depicting three Israeli ships extracting gas off Beirut's coast, ahead of cruch Lebanese-US talks.

The 1 minute 16 second video, which appeared to be filmed on Saturday, appeared warn Israel that its vessels are within easy range of Hezbollah's fire.

The Lebanese militant group also embedded scenes of a naval missile being prepared for launch, in addition to a previous statement by the group's Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah in which he warned that "playing with time is not useful".

It comes as US envoy Amos Hochstein arrived in Beirut to push talks to resolve a bitter maritime border dispute between Lebanon and Israel over Mediterranean waters with offshore gas fields.

Sources close to the Lebanese minister of energy quoted the official as saying the US mediator condemned the Hezbollah video, saying it "does not help in the ongoing negotiations" and would make the Israelis "more hawkish".

"Reaching a resolution is both necessary and possible, but can only be done through negotiations and diplomacy," the US State Department said in a statement ahead of Hochstein's visit.

Washington's envoy for global infrastructure and investment is "facilitating negotiations between Lebanon and Israel on the maritime boundary", the statement added.

Hochstein met with Lebanon's Energy Minister Walid Fayad on Sunday, and is scheduled to meet with President Michel Aoun and Prime Minister Najib Mikati on Monday.

The maritime border dispute between Lebanon and Israel escalated in early June, after Israel moved a production vessel to the Karish offshore field, which is partly claimed by Lebanon.

The move prompted Beirut to call for the resumption of US-mediated negotiations on the demarcation dispute.

Lebanon and Israel have no diplomatic relations and are separated by a UN-patrolled border.

They had resumed maritime border negotiations in 2020 but the process was stalled by Beirut's claim that the map used by the United Nations in the talks needed modifying.

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Lebanon initially demanded 860 square kilometres (330 square miles) of territory in the disputed maritime area but then asked for an additional 1,430 square kilometres, including part of the Karish field.

Israel claims that the field lies in its waters and is not part of the disputed area subject to ongoing negotiations.

On July 2, Israel said it had downed three drones launched by Lebanon's Iran-backed Hezbollah that were headed towards the gas field.

Nasrallah earlier this month warned that if Lebanon was prevented from extracting oil and gas from its waters, "nobody" would be able to do so, adding that Israeli offshore fields were "under threat" from the group's missiles.

Israel and Hezbollah last fought a devastating war in 2006.