The Israel Air Force conducted a new wave of strikes on Hezbollah terrorist infrastructure in the Lebanese capital of Beirut for the second time on Friday, the IDF said that evening.
The IDF did not provide further details on the strikes.
The earlier wave of strikes, however, coincided with Israeli airstrikes on Iranian targets in three locations across the Islamic Republic.
IDF attacks in Beirut often target the southern suburb of Dahiyeh, long considered a Hezbollah stronghold.
Lebanese Health Ministry says 1,142 killed without distinguishing between civilians, Hezbollah
Separately on Friday, the Lebanese Health Ministry reported that, between March 2 and March 27, 1,142 people had been killed in Israeli strikes on Lebanon. It did not differentiate between civilians and Hezbollah operatives.
The ministry said another 3,315 had been injured.
Israel launched Operation Roaring Lion against the Iranian regime on February 28. On March 2, Hezbollah joined the war, launching daily rocket and drone attacks, mainly against northern Israel.
On Thursday, 43-year-old Uri Peretz was killed in Nahariya by a series of Hezbollah rockets that wounded another 25 people.
Israel responded with airstrikes and a subsequent ground campaign against the terrorist organization that displaced hundreds of thousands of residents of southern Lebanon.
UN officials said on Friday that more than 370,000 children were among those displaced over the last three weeks.
By last Friday, according to the IDF’s tally, nearly 600 Hezbollah terrorists had been killed by Israeli actions.
On Tuesday, Defense Minister Israel Katz said that Israel would occupy southern Lebanon up to the Litani River to create a "defensive buffer."
Katz said the IDF would "control the remaining bridges and the security zone up to the Litani,” a river that meets the Mediterranean about 30 km north of Israel's border.
Reuters contributed to this report.