The article titled Trump’s target is a Quick Edit found on Page 1 of the sources. The following is the full text of the article:
Trump’s target
(Quick Edit)
If statements by US presidents are to be taken seriously, a point that wasn’t under much debate till the ascent of Donald Trump, America is taking an interesting turn., As part of a speech to celebrate America’s 250th birthday, Trump took on “communists” within. While it had faint echoes of the country’s McCarthyist era of anxiety over ‘reds under our beds,’ he did not rail against any ‘evil empire’ of that ideological bent overseas.
Between the end of World II and that of the Cold War 35 years ago, fighting global communism had been a US obsession. Some saw Islamist geopolitics as the next big threat it had identified. But rightist White House rhetoric is now focused on an alleged red shift in internal politics. The odd part is what’s stirring it.
Run-of-the-mill welfare moves by Democrats like health-insurance coverage and subsidies for household-use items have been labelled ‘communist’ by Republican party leaders. A proper red test, however, would ask if a new policy infringes the right to own assets privately. One that vaguely seems inspired by the spirit of ‘from each according to ability and to each according to needs’ doesn’t hurt capitalism. To the contrary, good welfare provisions could strengthen it.
The article titled “How no-egg meal shortchanges India’s children” is a Mint Primer by Sayantan Bera, found on Page 1 of the sources,. The full text and its key points are reproduced below:
How no-egg meal shortchanges India’s children
Children in Kolkata’s government schools won’t get eggs in mid-day meals as the new West Bengal government has entrusted meal preparation to a religious organization that shuns non-vegetarian foods. Mint explores whether India’s children can afford the nutritional cost.
What’s happening in West Bengal? The new BJP-led state government announced on 22 June that Iskcon, a Hindu religious organization, will provide “nutritious” meals to children attending government schools in Kolkata. Iskcon does not serve non-vegetarian food, including eggs, meat and fish, or ingredients such as onion and garlic. It has said animal-based proteins will be replaced with plant-based alternatives such as soy and legumes. But West Bengal is largely a non-vegetarian state and nutritionists argue that eggs are versatile yet a cheap source of protein, crucial to brain development and physical growth in children.
Which states serve eggs in mid-day meals? Most states in southern India serve eggs and fare better on child nutrition indicators. While Karnataka serves six eggs per week (one on each day), Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh provide five eggs per week. Schoolchildren in West Bengal and Bihar get just one egg per week, while states such as Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Gujarat and Rajasthan do not provide eggs at all. The Centre and states together spend between ₹12 and ₹18 per day per child on nutrition; since eggs cost ₹8-10 per piece, states providing 5-6 eggs per week usually spend out of their own budget.
Why are school meals so important? For children from poor families, these are often the most important meal of the day. The intervention has helped the country curb malnutrition: stunting (low height for age) among children under five fell from 38% in 2015-16 to 29% in 2023-24. However, nearly 32% of children under five continue to be underweight, and 85% of children in the 6- to 23-month age group do not receive an adequate and diversified diet.
Why does removing eggs raise concerns? While cultural and religious factors dictate dietary choices in India, the reality is that many Indian diets are rich in empty calories from cheap cereals. The 2024 dietary guidelines by the National Institute of Nutrition observed that 50-70% of the average Indian’s daily energy intake comes from cereals, while protein contributes just 7-9%, which is half the recommended level. Families are often unable to afford a diverse diet and are spending more on much cheaper ultra-processed junk food.
Can eggs be replaced by other food items? In terms of protein content, eggs can be replaced with dairy sources like paneer. However, 50gm of paneer (providing ~10gm protein) costs around ₹50, compared to just ₹10 for a 50gm boiled egg (~6.5gm protein). While soybeans have comparable protein levels, eggs boast a complete amino acid profile and better bioavailability.
The Nutrition Gap
Underweight prevalence among children under 5 years of age (%), by states (Source: National Family Health Survey-6, 2023-24):
- Madhya Pradesh: 39.7%
- Bihar: 35.7%
- Gujarat: 35.5%
- Uttar Pradesh: 34.5%
- West Bengal: 28.5%
- Karnataka: 27.8%
- Tamil Nadu: 23.2%
- Andhra Pradesh: 23.2%
- Kerala: 17.8%
- INDIA AVERAGE: 31.8%
The article titled “Inside the glittering world of India’s GCC offices” is a Long Story by Madhurima Nandy, found on Page 10 of the sources. The full text is reproduced below:
Inside the glittering world of India’s GCC offices
Developers and asset owners in India are racing to woo global tenants, upgrading their realty play
On a weekday afternoon in June, the global capability hub of 7-Eleven in Bengaluru is buzzing. The bright neon signage at the entrance leads to the reception that mimics a store counter of the Dallas-based convenience retail major with its signature cold Slurpee vending machine and a hot coffee dispenser.
Each workstation has dual monitors, huddle spaces and single-seater focus rooms for ‘deep work’. There are meeting rooms of all sizes. But then, all meetings don’t need to be formal, so there is a colourful space with relaxed seating where a watch party (people gather to watch a show) can be hosted. Some take a break from work. They are at the simulated racing room, at the gym, or at the pickleball court.
Each of the six floors it occupies has a theme. There is a ‘digital forest’ that has a podcast room, a jazz club with a jukebox and karaoke stage, and a popcorn vending machine. There is the ‘Cars of 7-Eleven’ floor, which is inspired by the cars parked before 7-Eleven stores in the US. The walls are splashed with colourful graffiti and the 7-Eleven brand colours in red, orange and green.
The aim of this global capability centre (GCC) is to provide a great work experience. The average age of an employee here is 26 years and everything mentioned above caters to this age bracket. “The office plays a big role in making employees want to come to work,” said Malahar Pinnelli, vice-president and country leader, 7-Eleven Global Solution Center.
In fact, that’s the goal of all GCCs in India who have upped the game in how their office spaces look and feel. In turn, it is slowly reimagining the face of Indian office real estate.
International hub
India has quietly become the largest hub for GCCs. Office leasing took off this year on a strong note, led by GCCs, as they continue to deepen their footprint in the region. As per property advisory CBRE India’s estimates, GCCs leased 9.1 million sq. ft of office space during the January–March quarter, accounting for 44% of the total leasing.
Geographically, Bengaluru remained central to GCC activity, capturing the largest share, followed by Hyderabad and Delhi-National Capital Region. Premiumization of offices is an emerging trend; GCCs are only pushing the envelope further, with branding, location and employee experience being the key.
Just like GCCs are leaving no stone unturned to retain talent by creating premium workspaces, developers and office park owners such as real estate investment trusts (Reits) too are building and designing offices suited to their needs. To set up a GCC unit for Commonwealth Bank of Australia in Bengaluru, the design team of Embassy Reit made two trips to the bank’s Sydney headquarters to understand its culture and philosophy. The fit-out process is currently on for a 1.1 million sq. ft workspace across eight levels at the Embassy Manyata Business Park.
The bank’s new office will have a massive grandstand with amphitheatre seating, stress relief zones with gaming on each floor, wellness access, and sleeping pods. Since the kitchen is an important feature in the Sydney office, the Bengaluru GCC will also have an elaborate food programme with live cooking.
“GCCs spend an equal amount or more on fitouts and technology compared to what developers spend on construction,” said Sriram Khattar, vice-chairman and managing director, DLF Rental Business.
Global DNA
India’s GCC story has moved well beyond cost arbitrage to housing critical functions and high-value talent. Global companies want to make their Indian employees feel part of the wider organization.
Take Walmart Global Tech’s large facility on Bengaluru’s Outer Ring Road. Jane Peter Lobo, an analyst at the company, said the workspace made him feel connected to the Walmart story. Meeting spaces are built for everything from five-minute conversations to full sprint sessions, and every floor has a wellness room, a mother’s room, and a doctor’s room. Sam Walton’s legacy is woven into the office to help employees understand why decisions are made the way they are.
South Carolina-headquartered Sonoco, a 125-year-old packaging firm, set up its GCC in Hyderabad last year. It shortlisted India among seven other countries due to talent availability and supportive policies. As a legacy manufacturing company, it wanted the office to reflect its DNA, featuring a "Sonoco history wall".
The wow factor
With the shift from India as an offshoring base to an AI-powered strategic hub, GCCs have moved up the real estate value chain. They are taking up larger spaces, with the average space per employee rising to 125–130 sq. ft, compared to 80–100 sq. ft in traditional offices. Specialized sectors like semiconductors require even more space for labs and collaborative areas.
Developers are rushing to adapt. In its new Lakeshore Drive business park, Bengaluru’s Prestige Group has leased out 2.6 million sq. ft to tech and capability centres of Uber, Blackstone and DXC Technology. Prestige has even worked on mobility by widening roads, building a flyover, and adopting the new Bellandur metro station for integrated access.
India’s GCC Landscape: Key Numbers
- Estimated Revenue: $98.4 billion
- Total Talent Pool: 2.36 million employees
- Number of GCCs: 2,117
- Jan-Mar 2026 Leasing: 9.1 million sq. ft (44% of total market)
Pecking Order: City-wise share in GCC leasing (2025)
- Bengaluru: 37%
- Hyderabad: 17%
- Delhi-NCR: 13%
- Pune: 12%
- Chennai: 4%
- Mumbai: 1%
Top Recent GCC Leasing Deals
- HSBC (Bengaluru): 1,200,000 sq. ft
- British Petroleum (Pune): 1,008,726 sq. ft
- Airbus (Bengaluru): 881,000 sq. ft
- Target Corp India (Bengaluru): 831,000 sq. ft
- Standard Chartered (Chennai): 777,331 sq. ft
- Citi Bank (Pune): 771,180 sq. ft
The article titled “A new reel deal: What India-UK trade pact means for film and OTT” is written by Lata Jha and found on Page 6 of the source. The full text is reproduced below:
A new reel deal: What India-UK trade pact means for film and OTT
The India-UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (Ceta), which comes into force later this month, could make it easier for film studios, streaming platforms and production houses of the two countries to collaborate seamlessly.
While the India–UK Film Co-Production Agreement recognizes qualifying projects as both British and Indian productions for incentives, industry experts say it will also bring certainty regarding intellectual property, easier movement of talent, and improved access to services. These changes are expected to make it simpler and more cost-effective for producers while reducing practical hurdles for projects. The deal aims to improve investor confidence, encourage cross-border collaborations, and make India a more attractive partner for international studios and streaming platforms.
The opportunity arises as the media and entertainment industry increasingly relies on licensing content across markets. According to Rohit Dalmia, chairman and managing director of CineNow, "Production incentives and rebates available in markets such as the UK can significantly improve project economics by lowering net production costs and enhancing capital efficiency".
Beyond filmmaking, the UK brings strengths in AI research, creative technology and production infrastructure, while India offers creative talent, engineering capability and cost-efficient production at scale, according to Ridhima Lulla. A high-profile example of this partnership was the announcement by former UK PM Keir Starmer and Yash Raj Films regarding YRF returning to shoot three Bollywood films in the UK, a move expected to create over 3,000 jobs.
For productions from countries with co-production treaties with India, such as the UK, the minimum spend threshold of ₹3 crore is waived entirely, making a production eligible for the rebate regardless of its budget. Ishan Johri, partner at Khaitan & Co, noted that the Ceta complements cultural agreements between the British Film Institute and the National Film Development Corporation, as well as between the UK producers' body Pact and the Producers Guild of India.
Prachi Shrivastava, founding advisor at Lawfinity Solutions, emphasized the enabling nature of the agreement. “A trade agreement doesn't, by itself, bring film shoots to a country,” she said. “What the FTA adds is mostly enabling: easier movement of crew and creative professionals, more certainty around intellectual property and its enforcement, and more confidence for UK studios and streamers investing in Indian production”.
This deal comes as the Indian media and entertainment sector is projected to grow to ₹2.86 trillion in 2026 before reaching ₹3.3 trillion by 2028.
Pact Play
- Greater Certainty: The pact provides more stability regarding intellectual property, movement of talent, and service access.
- Attractiveness: The deal is expected to improve investor confidence, push cross-border collaborations, and make India a more attractive partner.
The article titled “Tata Steel backs India growth with ₹20,000 cr capex” is found on Page 7 of the source. The full text is reproduced below:
Tata Steel backs India growth with ₹20,000 cr capex
The firm aims to increase global steelmaking capacity to over 50 MTPA, with India driving most of the growth
Tata Steel is looking to spend around ₹20,000 crore as capex in the current financial year, with a major share allocated to support its India business. This planned expenditure for FY27 is 38% higher than the ₹14,559 crore spent by the company a year ago.
“In FY26, we spent ₹14,559 crore on capital expenditure, and we plan to increase this to approximately ₹20,000 crore in FY 2026-27, with 60% allocated to India,” stated T. V. Narendran, CEO and MD, and Koushik Chatterjee, ED and CFO. The management explained that the capital allocation strategy for FY27 focuses on a balanced mix of sustenance projects, ongoing investments in value-added downstream and infrastructure projects, new technologies, and long-term growth projects, with a clear emphasis on India.
Key Projects and Expansions
Specific projects identified for this investment include:
- Expansions in tinplate and wires.
- The HRPGL (Hot Rolled Pickling & Galvanising Line) facility at Tarapur.
- The Coke Ovens project at Jamshedpur.
- Continued investments in mining, a stronger supply chain, and operational sustainability.
Capacity Goals
Tata Steel currently has a consolidated steelmaking capacity of over 36 million tonnes per annum (MTPA), excluding 3.2 MT in the UK currently under transition. Its existing capacity is distributed as follows:
- India: 27.35 MT
- Netherlands: 7 MT
- Thailand: 1.7 MT
In the long term, the company aims to increase its global capacity to over 50 MTPA, with the growth primarily driven by India, where it plans to add over 12 MT. The goal is to reach 40 MTPA capacity within India.
Indian Operations Overview
- Jamshedpur: 11 MTPA.
- Gamharia (Jharkhand): 1 MTPA.
- Kalinganagar (Odisha): 9 MTPA, including Neelachal Ispat Nigam Ltd (NINL), which was acquired through insolvency. The company is currently pursuing a 4.8 MTPA Phase-I expansion at NINL.
- Meramandali (Odisha): 5.6 MTPA.
- Punjab: Recently commissioned a 0.75 MT electric arc furnace.
Additionally, Tata Steel has formed a strategic partnership with Lloyds Metals and Energy Ltd to develop the emerging Gadchiroli iron ore hub and is evaluating a phased greenfield steel capacity of 6 MTPA.
The article titled “Calls for revenge as top officials appear at Khamenei’s funeral” is an AP report from Tehran, found on Page 8 of the sources. The full text is reproduced below:
Calls for revenge as top officials appear at Khamenei’s funeral
Iran’s top officials and brothers of the new supreme leader emerged into public view Sunday to attend funeral prayers for Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Their appearance signalled confidence in their safety as Iran pushes back on US demands in negotiations to permanently end the war.
Crowds of hundreds of thousands chanted “Death to America” and “Death to Israel”, as they called for revenge over the 28 February attack that killed the 86-year-old supreme leader and other top officials, triggering the war. Some hard-liners called for the assassination of US president Donald Trump.
Iran’s new supreme leader, Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, has yet to make an appearance in the funeral ceremonies, which are unfolding over several days. He is believed to be in hiding after reportedly being wounded in the airstrike that killed his father. At the height of the war, before an April ceasefire, Israel had targeted top leaders, in at least one case likely using their public appearance to fix their position. It has also threatened to kill the younger Khamenei.
The US is meanwhile pressing ahead with negotiations with Iran aimed at fully reopening the Strait of Hormuz and rolling back its disputed nuclear programme.
Ziba Naderi, a 42-year-old nurse attending the funeral Sunday, said Iran needed to heed Mojtaba Khamenei’s commands. “I heard the call for revenge, but our leader should say what we need to do,” she said. “And we must listen to him”.
Ayatollah Jafar Sobhani, a 97-year-old Shiite cleric, led the prayers at Tehran’s Grand Mosalla for the late Khamenei and his family members killed in the strike. On hand were Khamenei’s other sons, Masoud, Meysam, and Mostafa, who haven’t been seen since the war. Revolutionary Guard head General Ahmad Vahidi, who was photographed for the first time since the war on Thursday, could be seen in the crowd, flanked by plainclothes security forces and wearing a black baseball cap.
Iran’s president Masoud Pezeshkian, parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf—who has led the negotiations with the US—and Esmail Qaani, who leads the elite Quds Force of the paramilitary Revolutionary Guard, also attended.
The crowd had grown from the day before. Mourners dressed in black carried banners and flags honouring Khamenei. Posters and graffiti at the Grand Mosalla called for the killing of Trump and Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
“Why is the biggest bastard in the world still alive?” Mohammad Rasouli, a poet who emceed the event before the prayers, said to the crowd over loudspeakers, referring to Trump. “The world is no longer a good place” for Trump, he added as the crowd cheered.
“I came here to shout and seek revenge,” said Gholamreza Sabooni, a 29-year-old man who works in a grocery. “They killed our imam, we should kill their leader, Trump”.
The US president was giving a speech at the same time across the world in Washington, D.C., for the 250th anniversary of America’s founding. “We’ve had tremendous success,” Trump said about the US military. “You look at Venezuela, you look at Iran. We wiped it out, wiped out their military”.
US federal authorities have been tracking Iranian threats against Trump and other administration officials for years. That stems from Trump ordering the 2020 killing of General Qassem Soleimani, who had led the Quds Force. Iran repeatedly has denied plotting to kill Trump, though hard-line propaganda footage long has suggested Trump was in Tehran’s crosshairs. Trump meanwhile promised to destroy Iran’s very civilization during the war, among other threats.
Khamenei’s body will be transported to cities in Iran and neighbouring Iraq, with authorities planning to drive his casket and others through the streets of Tehran on Monday. Authorities have shut down streets, airspace and daily life for the mourning, which will end Thursday as he is buried at the Imam Reza shrine in Mashhad, Khamenei’s place of birth.
Authorities offered no attendance count for the event Saturday and Sunday. Other cities across Iran also held mourning ceremonies.
Talks over reaching a permanent end to the war appear to be on hold until the end of the funeral. The funeral was in part a show of unity and defiance as Iran demands a measure of control over the Strait of Hormuz, a vital waterway for global energy that it shut down during the war. The US has rejected those demands, and the sides are divided on other key issues, including the conflict between Israel and the Iran-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon and Iran’s nuclear programme.
The US assisted 70 transits of the Strait of Hormuz over the past 72 hours, including 18 on Saturday, a multinational maritime body overseen by the US Navy said Sunday. It called traffic steady along routes near Oman and Iran but still below prewar levels. The threat level remained “substantial” and mine clearance and surveying work continued.
“Our foreign policy should not be shaped in a way that allows our martyred leader’s blood to be dishonoured and other countries can afford to do such things, without any serious response from our government and diplomatic system,” mourner Mohammad Reza Sharifi said.
The article titled “The hidden costs of remote work for Gen Z” is written by Owen Tucker-Smith and found on Page 14 of the sources. The full text is reproduced below:
The hidden costs of remote work for Gen Z
Frustration among employers over the effects of working from home may be leading them to cut back on hiring young workers
After two years and 150 job applications, Kylie Klapp settled for something she hadn’t initially sought out: a company with no office. The 24-year-old’s colleagues are scattered across living rooms around the country, dealing in Slack messages and emails, but never chatting by the water cooler because, well, there isn’t one. She goes days without hearing a co-worker’s voice or seeing one’s face. When she does, the interaction is to-the-point: “You give me a task,” she says, “I give you an output”.
In the back of Klapp’s mind is the fear of getting left behind. “The job market is so bad right now,” she said. “I need to network”. And if that isn’t enough? Remote work “has ruined my social life,” she says.
Six years ago, the pandemic sent Klapp and her peers home from their high schools months before their graduations. Now, much of Gen Z remains alien to the American office. And while executives like Jamie Dimon and Andy Jassy have launched high-profile campaigns to get workers back to their desks, remote work remains a staple of the workplace, leaving plenty of recent grads Zooming into conference calls from their couches.
MENTORSHIP GAP
Those workers sometimes struggle to connect with mentors or shadow senior employees. Training junior workers remotely is “very expensive,” said startup founder Jason Crawford. “It becomes this silent tax on senior time”. Crawford’s top employees would be more productive at home, he said, but junior ones aren’t.
Recent grads are already fretting that artificial intelligence is shrinking the junior job market. Compounding those worries is fresh economic research arguing that frustration among employers like Crawford over how working-from-home policies have played out might have caused them to cut back on hiring young workers altogether.
A study last month from researchers at the London School of Economics noted that the amount of hiring devoted to entry-level roles across a handful of countries has fallen more than 14% since 2019. The study, based on more than 400 million online job postings, found that firms that stayed remote after the pandemic were more likely to cut back on junior hiring. Recruiting an entry-level worker, the researchers say, is a bet on the employee’s future skills. So a company’s return-on-investment hinges on the rate at which that young employee learns.
Since remote work slows that process, the researchers argue, companies see young talent as a less attractive value proposition, preferring to invest instead in older workers. As a result, remote work doesn’t just dampen young employees’ day-to-day experience. It also makes it harder for them to find a job in the future.
“The implication is stark,” the researchers wrote. “A persistent contraction of this kind hollows out the pipeline of future experienced workers, causing declines in aggregate productivity as well as imposing cohort-specific scarring”.
Less than a quarter of Gen Z wants a fully remote workplace, according to a Gallup poll last year, compared with more than a third of the older generations. Software developer Darby Vernon used to work at a company that allowed workers to stay home, and only a small cohort of young, mostly single workers would come into the office.
On the surface, Vernon said, remote work seemed attractive: “You can roll out of bed five minutes before your morning meeting”. But she started to miss socializing. An introvert, Vernon would realize she had gone a week without talking to anyone besides a waiter at a restaurant. She is now a month into an in-person role—and she feels sorry for young workers who are stuck at home.
“Sending someone a Slack message admitting ‘I don’t know what I’m doing’ is harder than leaning over at lunch,” she said.
Some also worry that remote work limits the development of the “soft skills” needed to succeed in workplace social situations. There is a whole cottage industry for it now: Amazon and Live Nation hired influencer Grace McCarrick to improve their workers’ social skills in the workplace.
McCarrick has recently started selling her services directly to workers, teaching them what to say when your boss’s boss approaches you at happy hour, for a few hundred dollars a month. She calls it “the Soft Skilled School” and said there is significant demand from young people. This month’s theme? Charisma.
Young workers can’t expect to flex these skills at home, she added. “You can have convenience when you’re 45”.
DIFFERENT PRIORITIES
Not everyone buys that. A camp of Gen Z has clung to the dream of work-life balance. Only 6% of Gen Z and Millennials say achieving a leadership position at their company is a primary career goal, according to a Deloitte survey last month. More than 40% said flexible work arrangements would be a top factor influencing their decision to take on a leadership role.
That spirit has led an army of young people to push back against the back-to-work crusade. Part of the problem, Klapp said, is that the emerging factions of Gen Z are now leading completely different lives: “I have a really hard time relating to peers that don’t have the same experience as me,” she said.
A thousand miles away from Klapp in Canada, 24-year-old software developer Chris Stevers doesn’t mind coding from his family farm outside of Stratford, Ontario. Yes, it was awkward when a cow interrupted one of his Zooms, and he realizes he could be missing out on networking by surrounding himself mostly with farmers. But Stevers likes that he is able to get his tasks done while tending to his herd of cattle and being near family.
Economists say the remote-work theory of entry-level hiring might be good news, especially if it means the effects of AI aren’t to blame for the hiring slowdown. The inconveniences of Slack and Zoom are fixable problems, the LSE researchers argue, which corporate America could work to address. On the other hand, if the slowdown is AI’s fault, they say, then there isn’t much that can be done easily, given the technology’s unstoppable force.
And yet the workforce doesn’t seem to have reached that point yet. Matthew Manning, already on his third remote job in three years after graduating in 2023, has never shadowed another employee. Manning, like others, enjoys the flexibility of remote work. But he also realizes he hasn’t been in a job long enough to go through a promotion cycle. He was laid off of both of his previous roles.
“I’ve never really gotten to know my co-workers,” he said. “And I think it’s easier to let someone go if you don’t have a physical relationship with them”.
© 2026 DOW JONES & CO. INC.
The article titled “Israel army chief vows decisive action on Hezbollah in Lebanon” is an AFP report from Jerusalem, found on Page 8 of the source. The full text is reproduced below:
Israel army chief vows decisive action on Hezbollah in Lebanon
Israel’s military chief visited forces deployed around Beaufort castle in southern Lebanon on Sunday, vowing to push ahead with the campaign against Hezbollah.
“The IDF will continue to operate decisively to remove threats from Lebanese territory and is prepared to transition rapidly to offensive operations should the ceasefire be violated,” Lieutenant General Eyal Zamir told soldiers during the visit, according to a statement issued by the military.
Israeli forces seized the crusader-era castle and the area around it recently, giving the military a strategic toehold it previously occupied for nearly two decades.
Israel says it uncovered a tunnel network beneath the castle, saying it was built to give fighters of Lebanese militant group Hezbollah a fortified strike hub just kilometres from Israeli territory.
Israel previously overran the fortress during its 1982 invasion of Lebanon, after a prolonged battle with the Palestinian fighters hidden in the castle’s maze of historic underground tunnels. The castle was damaged by violent bombardment in the process. Israel then used it as one of its main observation posts until its troops withdrew from the country in 2000.
“Our troops’ activities at the Beaufort Ridge and throughout southern Lebanon are being carried out in accordance with the framework of the agreement and the mechanisms established under it,” Zamir said on Sunday, referring to the recent US-brokered agreement between Israel and Lebanon intended to permanently halt hostilities.
But Zamir said that “any threat directed at our troops or the Israeli civilians will be struck immediately and eliminated”.
“The Lebanese Armed Forces are required to fulfil their commitments under the historic agreement that was signed and act to clear the area of Hezbollah terrorists and terrorist infrastructure,” he added.
Hezbollah drew Lebanon into the war in West Asia on 2 March with rocket fire at Israel to avenge the killing of Iran’s supreme leader in US-Israeli strikes days earlier. Israel responded with massive airstrikes and a ground invasion of southern Lebanon, where its troops now occupy swathes of territory near the border.