Hezbollah has claimed responsibility for targeting Israel's Home Front Command base in Ramla and the Emek HaEla satellite station. Israeli media relayed the claims while maintaining their standard framing of the group as a terrorist organization.
On March 9, 2026, Hezbollah issued declarations claiming it had executed targeted strikes on critical Israeli military and communications infrastructure. The claims were widely circulated across Hebrew-language media channels, highlighting the group's alleged use of advanced weaponry deep inside Israeli territory.
According to the Israeli news aggregator דור פ. בטלגרם, which reports from a distinctly pro-Israel editorial stance, Hezbollah declared that it attacked the "Emek HaEla" satellite station. The channel noted that the militant group specifically claimed to have utilized "precision missiles" for this operation. This development was concurrently reported by חדשות 301 העולם הערבי (301 Arab World News), an Israeli channel dedicated to monitoring and analyzing Arab media networks.
In a subsequent update, Hezbollah announced that it had carried out a shooting attack targeting the Home Front Command base in the central Israeli city of Ramla, as reported by דור פ. בטלגרם.
Cross-Narrative Analysis: The reporting of these events highlights a stark linguistic and framing divide, even as the basic facts of the announcements are agreed upon. While the original Arabic-language statements from Hezbollah frame these actions as successful military operations targeting strategic and defense infrastructure, the Hebrew-language channels filtering these updates maintain a strict defensive framing. Notably, Israeli sources consistently preface the announcements by labeling Hezbollah as a "terror organization" (ארגון הטרור חיזבאללה). This dynamic allows Israeli media to inform their domestic audience of Hezbollah's claimed precision capabilities and strategic reach, while linguistically stripping the group of legitimate military status.The provided source material consisted exclusively of Hebrew-language reports from Israeli channels, rather than direct Arabic-language primary sources from Hezbollah. Therefore, the cross-narrative analysis focuses on how Israeli media translates, frames, and editorializes Hezbollah's Arab-language military claims for a Hebrew-speaking audience.