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Deadly blast at Palestinian terror group base in Lebanon; Israel denies involvement

Five members of a Palestinian terror group in Lebanon were killed in a mysterious blast blamed on Israel on Wednesday morning, Arabic-language media reported. Israeli officials denied any involvement.

According to reports by Al Jazeera and other networks, the blast occurred at a base belonging to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – General Command (PFLP-GC), near the town of Qousaya in the Bekaa Valley in eastern Lebanon, near the border with Syria.

The reports said PFLP-GC accused Israel of carrying out a strike at the base. Images posted to social media showed a crater, a damaged building, and a damaged car, apparently as a result of the explosion.

Israeli officials, however, told reporters that the Israel Defense Forces did not carry out any strike in the area.

In past cases when Israel reportedly carried out strikes in the Bekaa Valley, it appeared to have acted in order to stop the transfer of advanced arms from Iran to the Hezbollah terror group, via Syria.

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The IDF reportedly struck a PFLP-GC base in the Bekaa Valley in 2019.

#عاجل – نفذ العدو الصهيوني فجر اليوم غارة جوية استهدفت أحد مواقع الجبهة الشعبية لتحرير فلسطين – القيادة العامة في #لبنان (قوسايا)، أسفرت عن وقوع خمسة شهداء وعدد من الجرحى إضافة لخسائر مادية. pic.twitter.com/VqtOKDrD1Y

— موقع النبطية (@Nabatiehorg) May 31, 2023

The PFLP-GC — not to be confused with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, from which it split in 1968 — was responsible for a number of vicious terror attacks in Israel in the 1970s and 1980s, including one against a school bus in northern Israel that killed nine children and three adults.

The PFLP-GC largely went underground in the late 1980s, working behind the scenes with the Lebanon-based Hezbollah terror group, but it reemerged in 2011 with the outbreak of the Syrian civil war, fighting alongside Syrian dictator Bashar Assad.

The alleged strike comes amid heightened tensions between Israel and Lebanon’s Hezbollah, with both sides issuing threats.

At a conference earlier this month, IDF Military Intelligence chief Maj. Gen. Aharon Haliva said Hezbollah’s leader Hassan Nasrallah was “close to making a mistake that could plunge the region into a big war.” Several days later, the IDF dropped flyers in southern Lebanon warning against border incursions.

Speaking at a “Liberation Day” marking the 23rd anniversary of Israel’s withdrawal of military forces from southern Lebanon, Nasrallah said Israeli leaders should “be careful and not make wrong calculations.”

“Any mistake might blow up the entire region,” he added, directly addressing Haliva’s remarks.