The Israeli Air Force’s major preemptive strike on Sunday, launched a little before 5 a.m. against Hezbollah positions in Southern Lebanon, was a stinging surprise to the Iranian-backed terror army.
However, despite this important
achievement, and the welcome activation of preemptive steps, it is
important to remember that the fundamental threat to Israel’s north
remains in place.
Both Hezbollah and its Iranian sponsor are
likely conducting an extensive situation assessment to gauge the damage
that Hezbollah sustained, and to plot their next move. Initial signs
are that they wish to end this particular episode and regroup for the
next stage of their war on Israel.
According to Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani,
Israel Defense Forces international spokesperson, the operation was a
direct response to intelligence indicating that Hezbollah was preparing
to launch an extensive missile and rocket attack on northern and central
Israel.
The IDF has been closely monitoring
Hezbollah and Iran attack capabilities, and remained on the highest
state of alert in anticipation of an attack on Israel. For weeks, the
Iranian-led Shi’ite radical axis has been threatening to respond to the
assassinations of Hezbollah chief of staff Fuad Shukr in Beirut on July
30 and Hamas Political Bureau chief Ismael Haniyeh in Tehran on July 31.
Around 100 IAF fighter jets, targeted thousands of Hezbollah
rocket launchers across more than 40 launch areas in southern Lebanon
This swift and decisive action by the IDF,
involving around 100 fighter jets, targeted thousands of Hezbollah
rocket launchers across more than 40 launch areas in southern Lebanon,
thwarting what could have been a significant assault on Israel.
Hezbollah was still able to fire hundreds
of rockets and unmanned aerial vehicles towards northern Israeli
communities on Sunday, but most of its attack was headed off by the
IAF’s preemptive move.
Hezbollah’s preparations involved
embedding rocket launchers within villages and towns across Southern
Lebanon, thereby increasing the risk of collateral damage during any
retaliatory strikes.
The IDF, which called Sunday on Lebanese
civilians to move away from Hezbollah’s areas of activities, carried out
a remarkable operation that not only destroyed a sizeable number of
launchers but also proved, at the operational and intelligence level,
that Israel is viewing Hezbollah’s activities in real time and can
respond quickly to intelligence warnings.
Hezbollah had been preparing to fire
rockets and missiles at Israel, with some reports indicating that these
were intended to target key strategic locations in central Israel,
including security and military installations. Shoshani confirmed that
most of Hezbollah’s planned attacks were intended to hit targets in
northern Israel, and “some in central Israel.”
More than 7,000 projectiles
Shoshani highlighted that Hezbollah has fired more than 7,000 rockets, missiles and explosive UAVs at Israel since October 2023.
This is a reminder of the intolerable situation in northern Israel created by this Iranian proxy.
Taking advantage of Israel’s two-front
conflict and the stretching of its military resources, Hezbollah has
been able to turn an entire section of northern Israel a no-go zone for
civilians for 10 months. Some 60,000 Israelis remain internally
displaced.
For Sunday’s intended attack, it appears
that Hezbollah was planning to fire a combination of precision-guided
ballistic missiles, UAV swarms and unguided rockets at valuable targets
in Israel, such as military targets in the heart of a central Israeli
city.
According to the Alma Research and
Education Center, Hezbollah has thousands of precision projectiles,
including the Iranian-supplied Fateh 110 missiles that have a range of
350 kilometers and which, if fired from Southern Lebanon, can hit
central Israel. Altogether, Hezbollah is believed to possess some
250,000 warheads, 150,000 of which are mortar rounds and 65,000 of which
are rockets with ranges of up to 80 kilometers.
By demonstrating its willingness and
ability to conduct large-scale operations preemptively, Israel sends a
clear message to Hezbollah and its patrons in Tehran: Any significant
imminent threat to Israeli civilians will be met with preventative
force.
The question that remains is how Israel plans on restoring security to its north.
Hezbollah’s deep entrenchment in Southern
Lebanon’s Shi’ite community, its conversion of some 200 southern
Lebanese villages into bases of attack, and its ideological commitment
to representing Iran’s Islamic Revolution all ensure that the threat
will persist until Israel decides to deal with it strategically.
The international community also has a
role to play in addressing the Iranian/Hezbollah’s jihadist war.
Hezbollah and its Iranian patron threaten to drag Lebanon into a broader
conflict, with devastating consequences for its civilian population.
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