Hezbollah said on telegram it hezbollah said on telegram it had targeted israel's ramat david airbase, 20 km south of the city of haifa. Air raid sirens were also triggered in several areas of northern isarel, including near haifa, according to israel. These pictures show part of an intercepted rocket launched from lebanon that fell in nazareth in israel in the early hours of sunday. It comes in the hours after the israeli military carried out what it called extensive strikes on hezbollah targets in southern lebanon. Israeli aircraft destroyed thousands of hezbollah rocket launch barrels in southern lebanon, according to israeli officials. Also tonight, the us state department is urging american he was wanted by the us government for years and was designated a global terrorist for his involvement in the 1983 bombing of the us embassy in beirut. Friday's bombing also killed civilians, including three children, with more feared trapped in the rubble. Our middle east correspondent orla guerin reports from the scene in beirut. A beirut suburb turned into a battlefield. They are standing on the ruins of a sevenstorey building in the hezbollah stronghold of dahieh. Israel says this was a precision strike. It doesn't look very precise. Well, the search for bodies is continuing here now. Rescue workers are still picking through the rubble. The strike took place in the middle of this densely populated residential area. The result for hezbollah has been the loss of a top military leader and other senior commanders. It is another blow to an organisation that is looking exposed and weakened. But the dead here also included women and children, and every member of the daqduqi family. Still counted among the missing fouryearold naya ghazi. Local people gathered today waiting for news, fearing what it might be. Some said the attack would change nothing. People absorb the shock and they start their life again. It's hard, but this is the way we choose, and we will not stop. We have to defend our country. We have to defend our border. We have to defend our people from any aggression, from israelis orfrom others. Hezbollah has been burying some of those killed by israel yesterday. They were carried aloft on anger and defiance. The iranianbacked group is fighting on, firing volleys of rockets across the border today. And israel has been hitting hard, with dozens of fighter planes bombing southern lebanon, targeting hezbollah rocket launchers, israel says. If the international community was concerned before, it will be far more worried tonight. Orla guerin, bbc news, beirut. And in gaza, palestinian health officials say at least 22 people were killed in an israeli strike on a school. Officials said most of the victims were women and children who were sheltering there. Israel's military says it was targeting a hamas command room. There are reports that an unborn child was among those killed. Bbc verify has looked at several videos of the aftermath. Clips appear to show a foetus being carried by a civil defence worker. We bring you some breaking news now out of the occupied west bank, where israeli forces have reportedly raided aljazeera's office in ramallah. That's according to the news organisation. These are stills from aljazeera's broadcast when israeli soldiers handed a 45day closure order to network journalist walid alomari and did not provide a reason for the decision. Back in may, israel banned journalists from the qataribased network from operating inside the country due to what it called threats to its national security. At least 12 people have been injured in a russian bomb attack on an apartment building in ukraine's secondlargest city, kharkiv. The assault on saturday came hours after ukrainian drone attacks on two russian ammunition depots, one in the southwestern region of krasnodar, the other in toropets, a town in russia's northwestern tver region. Ukrainian officials say more than 100 drones were used in the operation, which also focused on targets in russianoccupied crimea. Russia says it shot down 18 ukrainian drones overnight. Our europe correspondent jess parker reports. A fireball erupting into the night sky as ukraine staged a major drone attack. This, says kyiv, was a russian ammunition depot that included supplies it believes are from north korea one of two munitions stores ukraine claims to have hit last night. Translation: these were. Warehouses of russian tactical missiles and guided aerial bombs, all that russia uses for terror against our cities, our positions. Ukraine has been ramping up these kinds of attacks, demonstrating a growing drone strike capability. But what kyiv really wants is permission to use westernmade longrange missiles on targets deep inside russia permission inside russia permission president zelensky has president zelensky has confirmed he still confirmed he still doesn't have. Doesn't have. He is heading to the us this he is heading to the us this coming week seeking further coming week seeking further support, and this military support, and this military analyst says the recent drone analyst says the recent drone attacks are all part of kyiv*s attacks are all part of kyiv*s wider political message. Wider political message. The point is that ukraine the point is that ukraine could show to our western night's drone strike, could show to our western partners and the biden partners and the biden administration that even administration that even without western permission, western missiles, we could achieve our targets and our achieve our targets and our goals in russian territory. Goals in russian territory. But of course, with western but of course, with western missiles, it could be better, more massive, more concentrated and more effective. Missiles, it could be better, in russia, authorities released footage of what it says are evacuees following last are evacuees following last night's drone strike, devastation. Its troops try to push further into ukraine. One constant is the growing toll of victims. Jessica parker, bbc news, in kyiv. With officials and he is seeking permission for ukraine to use american and european weapons to strike further into russia's heartland. Well, do you think, then, in those conversations we're expecting him to have, this kind of success might factor in might be able to convince us officials to go ahead and maybe loosen the reins a bit? i think the people in the biden administration still are very concerned about the dangers of escalation and about a possible how the russians would retaliate to us weapons being used to strike further into russia's heartland. There's a big debate about that here. There are many people who say the us has been too concerned about escalation. So i think what president zelensky is also hoping is that president biden has his legacy to think about. He has between now and december, or 20 january, let's say, when the next president is inaugurated, to consider that legacy and maybe take some bolder steps. And i think the ukrainians are hoping that particularly in the time between the election on 5 november and the inauguration on 20 january that they might be able to secure permission for this. What about russia 7 do you think does it have an answer right now for these ukrainian counterattacks, of course for the incursion by ukraine that we saw? how do you expect russia to respond? well, the russians again, as your correspondent said, they're pushing back certainly in the east. They are taking more territory. They're also pushing back in the kursk region, which of course the ukrainians have occupied for a few weeks now, and so i think one russian answer is to try and push the ukrainians out of the kursk region. But we may see more russian escalation. Again, more weapons and ammunition arriving from north korea. Drones and other weapons are arriving from iran, so russia is not short of these kinds of weapons. Yes, what do you think that says about the way that russia is able to restore weapons stocks if what we hear from ukraine is true that it's getting weapons from countries like north korea? well, i mean, first of all, the russian military has been building up his own supplies. Certainly in the last year they've recovered from the initial problems they had when they first invaded ukraine and they were unsuccessful in achieving their goals. But i was at a conference in kyiv last week and it was clear that this increase, particularly in the supply of north korean ammunition, is of great concern to the ukrainians. You talked about the stakes in the legacy for presidentjoe biden. What about president volodymyr zelensky of ukraine? he's going to be here, obviously, in the us. He'll be at the un general assembly. What do you think is at stake for him over the next several days, as i'm sure he'll be meeting with world leaders here? i mean, ukraine is in a very precarious position. This is a very brutal war which is continuing. It shows no signs of abating. He is going to meet both with president biden and with vice president harris, and he's said that he would like to meet and has requested a meeting with former president trump. So he really would like to come back and show his own people that the us is reconsidering the restrictions that it's put so far on the use of these weapons. Angela, about 30 seconds left, but i do want to ask you because ukraine has banned the use of telegram, this messaging app, on its government devices. We've seen the impact, really, of this kind of technological warfare in the conflict between hezbollah and israel. Do you think there's some paranoia here in terms of not using the russian app on ukrainian phones? well, that telegram app has lots of different things on it. It has an enormous amount of russian disinformation and provocation on it, and there may be other technological reasons why the ukrainians have banned it. I wouldn't use the word paranoia for that. The us, australia, india and japan announced a new maritime security agreement and a joint coast guard mission on saturday, as the summit of the socalled quad alliance wrapped up in delaware. The alliance's joint statement also expressed the quad is seriously concerned about the situation in the south china sea. It is us president biden*s final quad summit of his presidency, and he is aiming to cement the importance of the alliance to countering china's rise in the indopacific. Mr biden*s message the alliance isn't going anywhere. And while challenges will come, the world will change, because the quad is here to stay, i believe here to stay. Daniel russel is vice president for international security and diplomacy at the asia society policy institute and former assistant secretary of state for east asian and pacific affairs. Hejoined me a little earlier. What did you make of what we're hearing now coming from that summit statement that concern about the situation in the south china sea? there's very close alignment among the four on their concerns about the behaviour of china. Interestingly, the statement doesn't mention china per se, but it does focus on the challenges and the problems. And one of the biggest ones and it's important that india is fully on board with that statement is the assertive behaviour and the ruleflouting behaviour that china is manifesting against small countries and neighbours in the south china sea. Is there anything of course, besides some kind of strong language in this document coming out of the summit that these four countries think they might be able to do to counter china's presence there? well, one of the important initiatives from the quad is something called the indopacific maritime domain awareness initiative. And that's a very long name for what really is the four countries putting their national satellite technology and also their private satellite information at the disposal of these small island nations, these small coastal nations, so that they can track the massive fishing fleets as well as the paramilitary coastguard activities of china and protect and defend not only their exclusive economic zones but importantly the resources in them the fish stocks and the minerals and so on. So it's not a headon confrontation, but this satellite surveillance information is otherwise unavailable to the countries. Moreover, what the four leaders today have agreed is to significantly bolster coastguard exercises and coastguard training for the countries in southeast asia and beyond, so they're looking at both the pacific ocean and the indian ocean. So these things do matter. It was also an interesting setting for this summit, wasn't it, taking place in the actual home of the president there in delaware. Well, it was at his home for the bilateral meetings and at his old high school for the meeting of the quad leaders. 0h, interesting, 0k. You've got to chuckle that this is sort of the ultimate revenge for somebody who wasn't necessarily first in his class at high school, and i think bidenjoked a little bit about that. But it wasn't a nostalgia summit. They weren't singing auld lang syne. They were getting real work done, important work, and they generated real outcomes. I mentioned the maritime security initiatives, but in technology, importantly in public health, in other areas, they produced programmes that directly benefit communities in southeast asia, in south asia and the pacific islands. So it's notjust the four countries collaborating on their own behalf. They're really generating global goods for countries in the region. Not a nostalgia tour, but at the same time maybe a bit of legacy building here, right? solidifying whatjoe biden has been working on for the past four years. We've seen the president with lots of time and resources put towards building those alliances and strengt