Israeli media quoted a military official as saying that the response to the Lebanese Hezbollah's launch of a drone was exaggerated, and that it had achieved the party's Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah's goal in his recent statements regarding the development of this type of aircraft.

And the "Ynet" website of the Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper reported that the Israeli military security class believes that Hezbollah's marches pose a serious challenge, as they are small in size, cheap in price and capable of sowing destruction and killing, according to the Israeli website.

Ynet added that the army was looking for what he described as a cheap remedy for such rallies, after Iran spread them throughout the Middle East, he said.

He also said that the military leaders do not rule out that the laser-intercepted system - which Prime Minister Naftali Bennett talked about - would constitute an effective weapon, as it is supposed to be put into practical trial soon.

The website indicated that the military security system fears that Israel will be attacked by swarms of small marches, before the laser interception system is completed and ready.

"Israeli" warplanes flying at low altitude over Beirut and its suburbs https://t.co/MwPqi8FQj3#Lebanon#Appendix pic.twitter.com/tge3gwYD5f

— Mulhak - Supplement (@Mulhak) February 18, 2022

The occupation army had admitted that its forces had failed to intercept the march that crossed the border yesterday from Lebanon, and that it had lost contact with it.

It was also reported that Iron Dome fired several missiles to intercept it.

And he stated, in a statement yesterday, that he had spotted a drone that penetrated the border, and that "Iron Dome" fired several missiles to intercept it after it penetrated the border near the "Rosh Pina" area in the Houla Plain in the Upper Galilee.

The Israeli army added that the march is not armed, and it appears that Hezbollah launched it with the aim of gathering information, according to the statement, which added that warplanes and helicopters were called in to patrol after the incident.

After that, Al-Jazeera correspondent reported that the Israeli warplanes flew over the Lebanese capital Beirut and the southern suburbs at low altitude.

And the reporter quoted - from a security source - that two planes entered from the sea side, and carried out a maneuver in the airspace of Beirut for a few minutes, before leaving.

For its part, Hezbollah announced yesterday the implementation of a "successful" reconnaissance mission by a drone in the Galilee region, which lasted for 40 minutes.

This Lebanese party revealed - in a brief statement - that the "Islamic Resistance" launched the "Hassan" march inside the occupied Palestinian territories on a "successful" mission that extended over 70 square kilometers in northern Palestine.

The party's statement added that "despite all the enemy's multiple and successive attempts to bring it down, the Hassan plane returned from the occupied territories safely, after it successfully carried out the required mission without affecting its movement, all the existing and followed enemy procedures."

And last Wednesday, the Secretary-General of the Lebanese Party stated that his party had increased its military capabilities in recent years, and had thousands of precision missiles and drones, with the ability to manufacture them locally.

Nasrallah explained that the Israeli strikes that prevented the transfer of weapons through Syrian territory from Iran to Lebanon "constituted a threat and an opportunity at the same time, and led to fruitful results."

And Israeli security sources reported last January - to Agence France-Presse - that the drones, which Tel Aviv recently brought down after flying across the border from Lebanon, revealed the growing capabilities of aerial reconnaissance that the Tehran-backed Hezbollah has become.