Japan’s Icom Inc., whose brand appears on walkie-talkies that exploded in Lebanon, said it halted production a decade ago of the model allegedly used in the attacks and is still investigating the ...
With their pagers out of action after being blasted into tiny pieces on Tuesday, members of Hezbollah were forced to communicate via hand-held radios. Those devices also exploded Wednesday in a ...
December 3, 2024: The September 17th mass exploding pager attack against Hezbollah did enormous damage to the Iran-backed anti-Israel group. The pager attack, and the next day exploding walkie-talkie ...
The walkie-talkie radios were purchased five months ago around the same time as the innocuous pagers. Little did anyone know at the time that these small, everyday, slightly old-fashioned pieces of ...
A Japanese manufacturer that supplies the U.S. military also supplied walkie-talkies reportedly used in Wednesday's mass attack in Lebanon. The company, ICOM, has supplied millions of dollars worth of ...
Another remote attack, causing handheld walkie-talkie devices to explode, went off across Lebanon today, after pagers were detonated yesterday. At approximately 5 p.m. in Lebanon (10 a.m. ET), the ...
Wireless communication devices have exploded again today across Lebanon in a second attack even deadlier than yesterday's explosion of thousands of Hezbollah pagers. According to Lebanon's Ministry of ...
With Hezbollah and Lebanon still reeling from a coordinated wave of pager explosions on Tuesday that killed at least 12 people and injured thousands, another bombardment began on Wednesday, this time ...
Recent deadly explosions of pagers and walkie-talkies used by members of Hezbollah in Lebanon have left 37 individuals dead and around 3,000 more injured. While details remain uncertain about the ...
At least 20 people were killed in Lebanon Wednesday and more than 450 injured after Hezbollah-issued walkie-talkies detonated, the government said. Lebanon was still reeling from thousands of ...
Another deadly wave of exploding communication devices — this time walkie-talkies — struck Lebanon yesterday, leaving at least 20 dead and hundreds more wounded, according to Lebanese Health officials ...