TYRE, Lebanon - Hezbollah launched a new kind 
of rocket Friday that made its deepest strike into Israel yet, rattling Israelis 
as their warplanes and artillery blasted apartment buildings and roads gunning 
for guerrillas. 
Lebanese officials said about 12 civilians died 
in the day's fighting; Israel said it killed 26 militants, raising to about 230 
the total number killed in the campaign. 
Hezbollah's launching of the new weapon 
unnerved Israelis, 500,000 of whom are already living in northern shelters 
because of rocket bombardments. The rocket firing was also likely to escalate a 
conflict now in its 18th day, with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice heading 
back to the Middle East this weekend to make a second attempt to resolve the 
crisis. 
The guerrillas said they used the Khaibar-1- 
named after the site of a historic battle between Islam's Prophet Muhammad and 
Jewish tribes in the Arabian peninsula- to strike the Israeli town of 
Afula. 
"With this, the Islamic Resistance begins a new 
stage of fighting, challenge and confrontation with a strong determination and 
full belief in God's victory," Hezbollah said in a statement. 
Five of the rockets crashed into empty fields 
outside Afula, causing no injuries. Still, Israel deployed a Patriot interceptor 
missile battery north of Tel Aviv, believing the area could be in range of 
Hezbollah's barrages. 
Israel said the Khaibar-1 rockets were renamed, 
Iranian-made Fajr-5s. They have four times the power and range of Katyusha 
rockets, making them able to hit Tel Aviv's northern outskirts. 
Hundreds of Katyushas have hit northern Israel 
in the current fighting, including 96 on Friday, one of which hit a hospital. 
The Afula strike came two days after Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah 
vowed his guerrillas would fire rockets beyond Haifa, Israel's third-largest 
city, which has been hit repeatedly in the conflict. 
Rice's second trip to the region comes as 
diplomatic efforts are solidifying into two sharply divided camps. Most agree on 
the idea of bringing international forces into the south to end Hezbollah's 
decade-long free rein here - but still unresolved is how and when. 
The United States, backed by Britain, wants the 
force to be part of a broad package that will disarm guerrillas along the border 
and move in the Lebanese army to end the Hezbollah threat to Israel once and for 
all. It says it won't press for a cease-fire until such an agreement is 
reached. 
Many Europeans and Arab countries are 
increasing the pressure for an immediate cease-fire first, followed by a plan to 
tackle the complicated issues of a force to curb the Shiite guerrillas. 
The deadlock allowed the offensive to persist 
with a new dimension of destruction emerging - the environment. 
Beaches in Beirut were black with oil spilled 
from a power station that was blasted by Israel two weeks ago and was still 
burning. In the south, rescue workers dug through the rubble of bombed houses, 
looking for bodies. 
Late Friday, the Israeli army said it killed 26 
Hezbollah guerrillas in fighting for the Shiite town of Bint Jbail. The army did 
not report Israeli casualties, but Israel Radio said six soldiers were 
wounded. 
Hezbollah has verified 35 guerrilla casualties. 
The competing claims could not be resolved independently. 
Hezbollah said its guerrillas attacked Israeli 
troops on a ridge overlooking Bint Jbail and in Maroun al-Ras, a nearby villages 
that Israeli troops overran last weekend. The guerrillas said five Israeli 
soldiers were wounded. 
Eight Israelis died fighting for control of 
Bint Jbail on Wednesday, the highest toll of the campaign. Bint Jbail had the 
largest Shiite community along the border; it was known as the "capital of the 
resistance" during Israel's 1982-2000 occupation because of its vehement support 
for the Shiite Hezbollah. 
The Israel army said a half-million Israelis 
were living in shelters in northern Israel. U.N. humanitarian chief Jan Egeland 
told CNN that 800,000 Lebanese had fled or were caught in crossfire. 
A top U.N. peacekeeping official said he 
thought the war could continue until the end of August and voiced fears Israel 
would flatten Lebanon's southern villages and destroy the port of Tyre 
"neighborhood by neighborhood" if Hezbollah rockets keep slamming into the 
Jewish state. 
At U.N. peacekeeping headquarters in Naqoura, 
barely a stone's throw from Israel, political affairs officer Ryszard Morczynski 
said Tyre would become a target of intense Israeli attacks because Hezbollah was 
firing rockets from the city's suburbs into Israel's northern port, Haifa. 
The Israeli offensive began after Hezbollah 
guerrillas killed three soldiers and captured two others in a cross-border raid 
into Israel. The war with Hezbollah opened a second front for Israel, which was 
already battling Palestinians in Gaza after Hamas militants seized a soldier in 
a cross-border raid June 25. 
Israeli tanks and troops pulled back to the 
Israel-Gaza border Friday after an unusually deadly incursion that killed 30 
Palestinians over three days. The army said the withdrawal was temporary. 
On Israel's border with Lebanon, the United 
Nations decided to move 50 unarmed observers from their posts to the 
better-protected positions of 2,000 lightly armed U.N. peacekeepers after an 
Israeli bomb killed four observers this week. 
With medicine, food and shelter trickling into 
the war zone in southern Lebanon, Egeland called for a three-day truce to let 
help aid get in and enable thousands of civilians trapped in the heat of the 
battle to get out — a call that got no response. 
In Washington, President Bush and British Prime 
Minister Tony Blair said they want an international force dispatched quickly to 
southern Lebanon. But they said any plan to end the fighting must address the 
long-term issue of disarming Hezbollah. 
"This is a moment of intense conflict in the 
Middle East," Bush said. "Yet our aim is to turn it into a moment of opportunity 
and a chance for broader change in the region." 
In Beirut, Hezbollah signed onto a peace plan 
put together by the prime minister that calls for an international force and the 
Lebanese army to move into south Lebanon — a step that could mean the withdrawal 
of guerrillas from the border and eventual disarming. 
But the plan requires not only a cease-fire 
first — but also a prisoner exchange and a resolution of several disputes 
between Israel and Lebanon that Beirut says fuel Hezbollah's strength and gives 
it a reason to continue fighting. 
A team of European Union leaders praised the 
proposals and the show of unity in Lebanon's government, which has been 
paralyzed by divisions over the crisis. "We think (the plan) forms a good basis 
for a regional agreement," said Finnish Foreign Minister Erkki Tuomioka, whose 
country holds the EU presidency. 
French President Jacques Chirac said his 
country will press for the rapid adoption of a U.N. Security Council resolution 
calling for an immediate cease-fire, increasing the pressure on the United 
States and Israel. 
In southern Lebanon, Israeli missile strikes 
and artillery rained down around towns and roads targeting rocket sites and 
buildings believed connected to Hezbollah but wreaking destruction in populated 
areas. 
One airstrike flattened a house in the village 
of Hadatha, and six people inside were believed dead or wounded, the Lebanese 
state news agency reported. Hezbollah's al-Manar TV said all six were dead. 
Missiles destroyed three buildings in the 
village of Kfar Jouz near the market town of Nabatiyeh, apparently targeting the 
apartment of a Hezbollah activist. A Jordanian was killed in a nearby house, and 
the blasts collapsed a shelter, killing a Lebanese husband and wife. 
Three women were killed in strikes on their 
homes in other southern villages, security officials said. A wounded woman was 
rushed to the hospital in the village of Ain Arab, and more people were believed 
trapped in the debris of a destroyed building there. 
An explosion, believed to be from Israeli 
artillery, hit a convoy evacuating villagers from Rmeish, lightly wounding a 
driver and a Lebanese cameraman for German TV news. Another strike hit a potato 
truck and a nearby car, wounding three. 
At least 445 people have been killed in Lebanon 
in the fighting, most of them civilians, according to a Health Ministry count 
Friday based on bodies taken to hospitals. But Lebanon's health minister 
estimated Thursday that as many as Lebanese 600 civilians have been killed, with 
other victims buried in rubble. 
On the Israeli side, 33 soldiers have died in 
fighting, and Hezbollah rocket attacks on northern Israel have killed 19 
civilians, the Israeli army said.