Ever since October 8, the day after the heinous Hamas surprise attack on southern Israel, Hezbollah has been conducting a low-level war of its own against Israel. The Hezbollah attacks have been carefully calibrated to be intense enough to force Israel to evacuate its civilian population along the northern border with Lebanon. But at the same time, they were not threatening enough to force Israel to divert enough of its military strength from the war in Gaza to launch an operation powerful enough to neutralize Hezbollahâs huge inventory of missiles before it could overwhelm Israelâs Iron Dome defense system.
But that strategic calculation has now changed. After 11 months of high-intensity combat in Gaza, Hamasâ military formations have been decimated to the point that Israelâs leaders are now concentrating the IDFâs firepower on Hezbollah missile launching sites and other military targets across Lebanon. As of last week, Israelâs newest official war goal is to make it safe for 70,000 or more residents of northern Israel displaced by Hezbollahâs rocket attacks to return safely to their homes.
The fighting along the Israel and Hezbollah border has been escalating since the summer when Israel succeeded in assassinating several of Hezbollahâs top commanders. In retaliation, more than 1,000 rockets were fired at northern Israel by Hezbollah in both July and August, compared to about 300 a month since Hezbollah started attacking Israel on October 8.
At one point, when Israel uncovered Hezbollahâs plans to launch a particularly massive retaliatory missile attack, Israeli warplanes were able to strike first, destroying hundreds of Hezbollah rockets on their launching platforms just minutes before they were scheduled to be fired at Israel. That enabled Israeli defenses to shoot down almost all of the sharply reduced number of Hezbollah missiles that survived the Israeli first strike.
Meanwhile, Israeli leaders came to the conclusion that continued attacks by Hezbollah could no longer be tolerated and that it was long past time for them to start keeping their promises to end the misery of the more than 70,000 Israelis who were forced to flee from their homes and live in exile elsewhere in Israel since the war in Gaza started.
ISRAELâS DEMORALIZING OPENING ATTACKS
The fighting escalated quickly last week, beginning with two consecutive days of exploding Hezbollah pagers and walkie-talkies that had been sabotaged by the Mossad, killing dozens of Hezbollah fighters and wounding thousands more.
A couple of days later, the Israeli air force launched a deadly strike targeting a secret meeting in the subbasement of an apartment building in the Beirut neighborhood of Dahiyeh, which killed 16 senior commanders of Hezbollahâs elite Radwan special forces battalion, which had been trained for infiltration operations, making it a major target for Israel.
The sabotage of Hezbollahâs communications gear was directly related to the Friday air strike in Beirut, because without secure beepers, walkie-talkies, and cell phones to communicate with, Ibrahim Aqil, Hezbollahâs Radwan special forces commander, and his top officers suddenly needed to meet in person to develop their plans for an October 7-type attack on northern Israel called âOperation Conquer the Galilee.â
Aqil was considered one of the most important surviving figures in Hezbollahâs senior leadership. He took over the role of top Hezbollah commander and confidante for Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah after Israel killed Fuad Shukr in July in another air strike on an apartment building in the same Beirut neighborhood of Dahiyeh.
Also killed in the same Israeli air strike was Ahmed Wahbi, a former commander of the Radwan Force, who was head of the terror groupâs training unit.
HEZBOLLAHâS RETALIATION FALLS SHORT
Hezbollah responded to that attack by launching 200 rockets, cruise missiles, and drones at targets in northern Israel, expanding the range of the attacks to Haifa, Afula, and the Jezreel Valley, putting some two million Israelis in harmâs way. The vast majority of them were either shot down or fell harmlessly in open spaces. A few did inflict some damage but no Israeli casualties. Two of them hit residential buildings in the city of Kiryat Bialik. According to KAN, a rocket fell in Nazareth, and Mogen David Adom reported that a 60-year-old man was slightly wounded by shrapnel in the Lower Galil. There were also social media reports of rockets falling in Moshav Sde Yaâakov, and a fire breaking out as a result of a missile strike in Kfar Baruch.
Israel Army radio and KAN also reported that Hezbollah specifically targeted the Ramat David, the only major air force base in the north air base, 28 miles from the border with Lebanon. Hezbollah also said it targeted Israelâs Rafael Advanced Defense Systems. one of the developers of the Iron Dome air defense system, whose headquarters is located near Haifa.
âWe are in a war thatâs getting more and more intense every day,â said Giora Zaltz, head of the Upper Galil Regional Council, bordering Lebanon, which has been decimated by the war. âFrom day to day, the war in the north just grows.â
Israel responded by launching a systematic campaign of pre-emptive air attacks against Hezbollah targets as deep into Lebanon as the Bekaa Valley. Hundreds of rocket launcher barrels that were primed for imminent attacks on Israel were hit in the strikes, the IDF said.
In addition to targeting Hezbollahâs missile sites, the Israeli jets sought to punctuate the message of intimidation to Hezbollahâs leaders and members in Beirut by breaking the sound barrier while flying low over the city, deliberately setting off sonic booms that sounded like explosions.
Israeli Air Force Chief General Tomer Bar said, âWe are continuing to maintain the highest possible level of readiness in the Air Force. Weâve placed all the Air Forceâs capabilities⊠on the table. Everything is ready.â
Israelâs civil aviation authority issued a notice closing the airspace from the coastal city of Hadera and northward. Ben Gurion Airport was unaffected by the notice because commercial airline flights using the airport generally do not need to fly that far north.
PREPARING ISRAELâS HOME FRONT
According to new instructions from the Home Front Command, work, and educational activity will only be permitted in the north where an adequate shelter is nearby and can be reached in time if a warning sounds about a missile attack. In addition, gatherings are limited to up to 30 people outdoors and 300 people indoors.
Israelâs Health Ministry ordered hospitals in the north to operate from protected areas, and Israelâs national blood bank administrator made a public call for donations. Haifaâs Rambam Health Care Campus began to transfer its patients to the underground facilities that it built in preparation for war, following the Hezbollah missiles that fell in its vicinity during the 2006 war.
The U.S. Department of State issued a travel advisory urging American citizens to depart Lebanon via commercial flights while they are still available. It also urged U.S. citizens not to travel to Lebanon due to the unpredictable nature of the ongoing conflict between Hezbollah and Israel.
DESTROYING HEZBOLLAHâS MISSILE THREAT
On Monday, Israeli warplanes attacked an astounding 1600 Hezbollah targets, including many private homes in which Hezbollah had hidden its missiles. According to Lebanese authorities, the Israeli air strikes resulted in 492 killed and 1,645 injured, in what was, by far, the most violent day of fighting in the north since Israelâs 2006 war against Hezbollah.
The IDFâs main spokesman, Admiral Daniel Hagari, said that the air strikes would continue in the near term in order to degrade Hezbollahâs missile threat. Hagari then warned, âWe advise civilians from Lebanese villages located in and next to buildings and areas used by Hezbollah for military purposes, such as those used to store weapons, to immediately move out of harmâs way for their own safety.â
Many Lebanese civilians received similar warnings from the Israeli army in calls and text messages to their cellphones, as well as in a radio broadcast. Tens of thousands of them responded by fleeing from their homes in southern Lebanon, clogging the roads heading north toward Beirut. For example, in the city of Sidon, all eight lanes of Rafic Hariri Boulevard were filled with cars pointed north sitting in bumper-to-bumper traffic.
After Hagari showed a video of an Israeli air attack on a civilian structure which resulted in a tremendous secondary explosion, he said, âThe sights that are now seen in southern Lebanon are Hezbollahâs weapons exploding inside houses. Every home we struck, there are rockets, drones, missiles, which were intended to kill Israeli civilians.â
Hagari also declared, âWe will do whatever is needed to return the residents of the north home safely.â
Meanwhile, the head of the IDFâs Northern Command, Maj. Gen. Ori Gordin, met with the commanders of the divisions and brigades under his command âas part of preparations for the widening of the fighting in the area,â an IDF statement said.
NETANYAHU ANNOUNCES A CHANGE IN THE BALANCE OF POWER
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, speaking from an underground command center at the IDF headquarters in Tel Aviv, said that the intensified air strikes were intended to change the balance of power with Hezbollah and the ground rules of the undeclared tit-for-tat war since October, in which Israel had effectively been playing defense, reacting to the Hezbollah cross-border attacks.
âI promised that we would change the security balance, the balance of forces in the north [by Lebanon] â this is exactly what we are doing. We are destroying thousands of missiles and rockets that are directed at Israelâs cities and citizens.
âI would like to clarify Israelâs policy to whoever does not yet understand,â Netanyahu said. âWe are not waiting for the threat, we are preempting it â everywhere, in every sector, constantly. We are eliminating senior figures, terrorists, and missiles.â
He then asked for the cooperation of Israelâs citizens as the war with Hezbollah unfolds. âWe face complex times. Citizens of Israel, I ask of you two things: Follow the directives of Home Front Command, they save lives; and stand together with determination, responsibility, and, of course, patience. Together we will stand strong, together we will fight and, with Hashemâs help, together we will win,â Netanyahu said.
Netanyahu also had a separate message for the Lebanese people. He started by declaring, âIsraelâs war is not with you. Itâs with Hezbollah.
âFor too long, Hezbollah has been using you as human shields. It placed rockets in your living rooms and missiles in your garage. Those rockets and missiles are aimed directly at our cities, directly at our citizens.
âTo defend our people against Hezbollah strikes, we must take out these weapons.â
URGING LEBANONâS PEOPLE TO GET OUT OF HARMâS WAY
âStarting this morning, the IDF has warned you to get out of harmâs way. I urge you to take this warning seriously. Donât let Hezbollah endanger your lives and the lives of your loved ones. Donât let Hezbollah endanger Lebanon.
âPlease, get out of harmâs way now. Once our operation is finished, you can come back safely to your homes,â Netanyahu stressed.
The prime minister also repeated his warning to Hezbollah and Israelâs other enemies, by declaring, âWhoever tries to harm us, we will harm them all the more forcefully.â
Ever since the war in Gaza began, the Biden administration has been warning Israel against attacking Hezbollah, because of the risk that it would force Hezbollahâs sponsor, Iran, to get involved, widening the war. Instead, the United States has been pushing the negotiations with Hamas for ceasefire-hostage swap agreement, in the hope that Hezbollah would keep its promise to honor the ceasefire and halt its near-daily attacks on northern Israel once the fighting stops in Gaza.
U.S. GIVING UP ON A GAZA CEASE-FIRE DEAL
But according to a Wall Street Journal report, after months of claiming that a Gaza ceasefire deal was close at hand, senior Biden administration officials now privately admit that they no longer expect Israel and Hamas to reach such an agreement before Biden leaves office in January. That is because Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar has made it clear that he wants the war in Gaza to continue indefinitely, in the belief that other enemies of Israel in the region, led by Iran and its proxy terrorist forces, would also attack Israel, or that the U.S. would eventually stop supporting Israel, forcing it to accept his demands for a ceasefire, by allowing Hamas to remain in power over Gaza, withdrawing all Israeli troops from Gaza, and releasing massive numbers of Palestinian security prisoners from Israeli jails.
Sinwarâs original calculation in launching the October 7 attack was that once he invaded southern Israel, Hezbollah, Iran, Yemen, the Syrian militias, West Bank terrorists, and Arab Israelis would all join in.
In his best-case scenario, Sinwar had hoped that Hezbollah would open a second front by invading Israelâs communities along the Lebanese border, just as Hamas was doing in the south, while using its huge inventory of long-range rockets to bombard large portions of Israel to create further chaos and put the IDF on the defensive.
Instead, Hezbollah initially launched a mostly symbolic barrage of rocket and drone attacks only on the Israeli villages and cities closest to the Lebanese border and failed to attack vulnerable nearby targets like the Golan Heights or cities like Tzfas, Akko, or Nahariya.
Yemenâs long-range missile attacks aimed mostly at southern Israel were never more than sporadic, while Iran did not attack Israel until April, in response to an attack that killed eight IRGC officers at an Iranian consulate building in Damascus, and since then has mostly remained on the sidelines.
But Sinwar is still hoping that Hezbollah as well as Iran will eventually join Hamas in the war against Israel.
Meanwhile, American diplomats have become particularly frustrated by the Hamas practice of repeatedly âmoving the goalpostsâ in the negotiations whenever an agreement has seemed near. Under Sinwarâs orders, Hamas negotiators have repeatedly introduced new demands. But when the United States then pressures Israel into accepting them, Hamas keeps refusing to say âyesâ to the modified ceasefire proposal and issues new demands for Israeli concessions.
As a result, a disappointed senior U.S. official recently admitted to the Wall Street Journal that, despite President Bidenâs optimistic pronouncements that Israel and Hamas are close to agreement, âNo deal is imminent. Iâm not sure it will ever get done.â
But President Biden said that his administration was still trying to ensure that âboth people in northern Israel, as well as southern Lebanon, are able to go back to their homes and go back safely.â
He also said that a ceasefire in Gaza was still possible, even though the current state of the negotiations looks bleak. Nevertheless, he told White House reporters, âA lot of things donât look realistic until we get them done. We have to keep at it.â
BIDEN HAS LOST HIS LEVERAGE OVER NETANYAHU
That means that the Biden administration has lost its leverage over the Israeli government to stop the rapid escalation of its conflict with Hezbollah into an all-out war. While some senior Biden administration officials are still publicly holding out hope for a diplomatic breakthrough, many top-level officials in the White House, State Department, and Pentagon have privately conceded that there is no longer any realistic chance of an agreement between Hamas and Israel because of Sinwarâs opposition,
They also cited two other reasons for their pessimism about the ability of their diplomatic efforts to prevent the fighting in the north from becoming an all-out regional war. The first reason is the large number of Palestinian prisoners that Hamas is demanding that Israel release in exchange for the surviving Israeli hostages still being held hostage in Gaza. This was a major sticking point in the negotiations even before Hamas murdered six of the hostages last month, including a dual-American citizen. They did not let them be freed by Israeli soldiers closing in on the tunnel where they were being held. Over the weekend, Prime Minister Netanyahu estimated that there are only about 50 hostages left still alive in Gaza, making it that much harder to justify the release of the jailed terrorists who will no doubt attack Israel again at the first opportunity.
Prime Minister Netanyahuâs American and Israeli critics have accused him of introducing new demands to drag out the ceasefire negotiations with Hanas, to extend the war, and his tenure in office as prime minister. However, Netanyahu does have sound security reasons for insisting upon maintaining an Israeli military presence forces in Gaza when the first six-week phase of a ceasefire goes into effect, especially along the Philadelphi corridor on the Egyptian-Gaza border, which is honeycombed with tunnels that Hamas has used to smuggle in weapons.
NETANYAHU DENIES HE IS BLOCKING A GAZA HOSTAGE DEAL
Netanyahu also denies the accusations by the family members of the Gaza hostages that he has been standing in the way of a deal for their release. He insists that Hamas is the intransigent party, having demanded 29 revisions to the American cease-fire proposal, while he has accepted, on behalf of Israel, all of the conditions laid out by the American mediators.
Also, despite their previous complaints about Netanyahu, American officials have agreed that Hamas is currently the major stumbling block to a ceasefire agreement.
The second reason is last weekâs devastating series of Israeli attacks using exploding pagers and walkie-talkies to kill dozens and wound thousands of Hezbollah fighters, followed by the Israeli air strike that killed 16 top Hezbollah commanders while they were meeting to plan an attack on northern Israel.
That attack was carried out by Israelâs advanced F-35 stealth attack jets, which fired four missiles at the location of the meeting, two stories underground. One of the missiles destroyed a neighboring nine-story apartment building while the other three came in at angles enabling them to penetrate down to the subbasement where more than 20 commanders were taking part in the meeting.
The day after the attack, Lebanonâs health minister put the death toll at 37, including seven women and three children. Another 68 people were wounded and 23 people were listed as missing.
ISRAEL HAS KILLED ANOTHER TOP HEZBOLLAH LEADER
But the death of Ibrahim Aqil was the most serious loss from the attack on Hezbollah.
âHe is among the people in Hezbollah who are most skilled, most trusted, and most knowledgeable of its internal organization and military operations,â said Randa Slim, a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute, a think tank in Washington.
Israeli military spokesman Daniel Hagari called Aqil the closest person to Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah.
For years, Aqil commanded Hezbollahâs operations in Syria, helping dictator Bashar al-Assad fight his Western-backed civil war opponents, and building a close relationship with the Russian military forces which were also there to support Assad in the civil war.
âYou take out Ibrahim Aqil, and you have made a significant dent in their capabilities,â said Matthew Levitt, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute think tank.
âTheyâre looking to take out people who matter,â he said. âSo this is calculated.â
SHAKING HEZBOLLAHâS CONFIDENCE
According to Levitt, the attacks on Hezbollahâs electronic devices have shaken the confidence of Hezbollah members in their organization, by forcing them to ask âWhat gear can I use? Who can I trust? Whereâs the mole?â
âWhat Israel has done is it has delivered a very powerful psychological and tactical blow to Hezbollah, and itâs devastating,â said Fawaz Gerges, a Middle East expert and professor of international relations at the London School of Economics. âHow do the rank and file feel now? They feel rattled, they feel shocked. Theyâre off balance.â
One Hezbollah official admitted to a reporter that the terrorist group and its remaining leaders are struggling to regroup amid worries about the extent to which its communications infrastructure was compromised by the Israelis. It has been trying to determine whether any of its networks are safe, as it searches for security gaps and hunts down possible moles in the organization.
Even the Hezbollah-affiliated Al Akhbar newspaper in Lebanon recognized that Israelâs attacks using Hezbollahâs pagers and walkie-talkies vividly demonstrated its technological and intelligence superiority and delivered the worst blow to Hezbollah since the Gaza War began.
âWhat happened inspires great awe at the enemyâs ability to inflict pain on its rivals, without hesitation in executing any operation,â it wrote. âAnd now we face a new reality. The rules of the game have changed.â
Another challenge that Hezbollah faces is that one of its targeted operatives was the head of Hezbollahâs signals unit, which runs its communications systems.
It is also investigating the possibility that one of its members might have leaked information about its procurement procedures to Israel enabling it to trick Hezbollah into buying the booby-trapped pagers and walkie-talkies.
Hezbollah leader Nasrallah said in a speech addressing the pager and walkie-talkie attacks, âThere is no doubt that we have been subjected to a major security and humanitarian blow that is unprecedented in the history of the resistance in Lebanon at least and unprecedented in the history of Lebanon.â
Nasrallah has been worried about the possible penetration of Hezbollahâs communications networks since February, when urged his rank-and-file members of Hezbollah to throw away their smartphones because Israel could use them for surveillance or targeting.
Levitt said that Israel was looking to neutralize Hezbollahâs capability to wage war by targeting key personnel, such as Aqil, telecommunications networks, and weapons systems. He predicted more such strikes, including potentially against Hezbollahâs long-range rockets that carry bigger warheads and its precision-guided munitions.
âItâs more than just [sending] a message,â he said. âIt is actually intended to pull the carpet out from under Hezbollahâs military capabilities and make it so that they no longer pose the threat that they have been posing very tangibly for the past 11 months, and have been threatening for much longer.â
KILLED HEZBOLLAH TERRORIST WAS WANTED BY THE U.S
Aqil has also been high on the U.S. list of wanted terrorists. Last year, the White House announced a $7 million reward for information leading to Aqilâs arrest, because he was one of the masterminds of the 1983 bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut that killed 63 people. He also played a role in the October 1983 bombing of the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut, which killed 241 U.S. service members. In addition, he oversaw the abduction of American and German hostages in Lebanon.
White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan called Akilâs death âa good outcomeâ and said he had âAmerican blood on his handsâ for the embassy attack.
âYou know, 1983 seems like a long time ago,â Sullivan said. âBut for a lot of families and a lot of people, theyâre still living with it every day.â
Aqil previously survived several Israeli assassination attempts, including one in February 2000 when Israeli Apache helicopters fired missiles at his car, leaving him lightly wounded.
Ahmed Wahbi, who was killed in the same air strike, played major roles within Hezbollah for decades and was imprisoned in an Israeli jail in southern Lebanon in 1984. He was also one of the Hezbollah field commanders during a 1997 ambush in southern Lebanon that left 12 Israeli troops dead.
It will likely take Hezbollah some time to adequately replace its longtime leaders like Aqil and Wahbi. Their deaths have weakened Hezbollahâs command and control capabilities, but not enough to force it to agree to end its attacks on Israel.
HEZBOLLAH LEADER WAS PLANNING ANOTHER OCTOBER 7 ATTACK
IDF spokesman Hagari told the media that, âAqil and the [other] Radwan Force commanders. . . intended to raid Israeli territory, occupy the communities of the Galilee, and murder and kidnap Israeli citizens â similar to what Hamas did on October 7.â
He added that âthe commanders who we eliminated todayâ had been overseeing attacks on Israeli citizens since October 8, and planned to carry out more such attacks.â
During an interview with British-based Sky News, Israeli President Yitzchak Herzog held up an IDF poster showing some of the other senior Hezbollah leaders who were killed in the strike with Aqil and Wahbi.
âAll of these leaders were meeting to launch the same horrific, horrendous attack that we had on October 7 by Hamas, by burning Israelis, butchering them. . . taking hostages, old people, and little babies,â Herzog said, and noted that Hezbollah was operating, âunder the plans of the Empire of Evil of Iran.â
Asked about the risk of causing a wider war, Herzog agreed that the recent escalation of the fighting âis clearly a very dangerous situation,â but he also stressed that, âHezbollah started this war following the horrendous [attack] of Hamas on October 7.â
Hezbollah, he continued, has been âbombarding us endlessly,â and until now Israel has shown restraint. âBut something has to end,â he said, and added that returning displaced residents to their homes âis the natural obligation of any nation to its citizens.â
Herzog said Israel has a âsimple message. We donât want war. We absolutely did not seek this war. This war was instigated by the empire of evil, by the Iranian proxies in the region, under the command of Iran.
âIsrael is fighting for its well-being, for its existence, its citizens.
âWe are working to change the equationâ which has perpetuated the low-level war with Hezbollah since October 8, and, âin order to change the equation, one has to fight,â he said.
Asked about civilian casualties from the pager explosions, Herzog refused to confirm that Israel was behind the attack but noted that a Hezbollah rocket attack this summer had killed 12 Israeli Druze children. Herzog said, âThere are terrible tragedies in this war, and we never want to get there but we have the inherent right to defend ourselves. We have to take action like any normal nation would do to defend its people.â
The attack that killed Aqil and Wahbi in Dahiyeh was the third high-profile assassination carried out by the Israeli air force since the beginning of the war in Gaza. In the first attack, on January 2, founding senior Hamas official Saleh al-Arouri was killed in another attack in Dahiyeh, and in the second, Fuad Shukr, then Hezbollahâs chief of staff and Nasrallahâs closest advisor was killed in a July 30 attack in the same neighborhood, in apparent retaliation for the Hezbollah missile strike which killed 12 Syrian Druze children playing on a sports field in the Druze village of Majdal Shams in the Golan Heights.
BEHIND THE PAGER AND WALKIE-TALKIE ATTACKS
There is an ongoing debate in the media over whether the detonation of the pagers and walkie-talkies had been planned by Israel to launch the current escalation of the conflict with Hezbollah, or whether Israel had been forced to detonate the devices because of fears that Hezbollah was about to discover that they had been rigged to explode. Under the latter scenario, the Israelis faced the choice of using the exploding devices quickly or losing the opportunity to do so.
âIt was a use-it-or-lose-it moment,â one U.S. official said describing the reasoning Israel gave the U.S. afterward for the timing of the attack.
Either way, there is no doubt that they created widespread panic among Hezbollahâs fighters, seriously disrupted Hezbollahâs command and control capabilities, and wounded 3,000-4,000 Hezbollah operatives.
The pagers were produced under license from a well-known Taiwanese manufacturer by a front corporation that was set up in Hungary by Israeli agents. Similarly, 2,000 exploding Hezbollah walkie-talkies looked like a popular Japanese model. Both devices seemed to function normally until they were triggered by a coded signal sent by an Israeli agent.
The walkie-talkies exploded with more force than the pagers because they were larger and contained more explosive material. They were meant to assist Hezbollah during its planned ground attack against northern Israel. Hezbollah purchased these devices about five months ago â around the same time that the sabotaged pagers were acquired.
When President Bidenâs adviser Amos Hochstein visited Israel on the day before the pagers were detonated, Prime Minister Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant were busy for hours with security consultations about the attack, but when they met with Hochstein, they didnât give him a clue about what they were planning to do.
The only advance notice the U.S. received came the next day, just a few minutes before the pagers began to explode, when Gallant called Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin to tell him that Israel was about to conduct an operation in Lebanon, but gave him no further details.
ISRAELâS FOCUS HAS SHIFTED FROM HAMAS TO HEZBOLLAH
By that time, it was obvious from the public statements made by both Netanyahu and Gallant that their main focus had shifted away from the war against Hamas. Gallant had declared that war to be essentially over on August 21 because the last of Hamasâ 24 battalions in Gaza had been defeated by the IDF. They were now focused on their promise to enable the safe return to their homes in the north of the 70,000 Israelis displaced by the threat from Hezbollahâs missiles and had made it a primary mission of the war.
To keep that promise, Defense Minister Gallant said the IDF was shifting the armyâs elite 98th Division, made up of paratroopers and commandos, from Gaza to the northern front. The unit is expected to play a key role in the IDFâs plans to conquer the commanding ridges of southern Lebanon, and clear out the underground infrastructure that Hezbollah has built on the Lebanese side of the Israeli border apparently in preparation for a possible ground invasion.
In addition, the IDF forces already deployed in the north completed exercises simulating combat in Lebanon, and several army reservists received orders in recent days to report for active duty in the north.
IDF chief of staff, General Herzi Halevi, has also approved a new set of battle plans for the northern front against Hezbollah.
In response to rising tensions, the Pentagon said last week that it was sending the aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman to the eastern Mediterranean, to join the USS Abraham Lincoln carrier group that is already in the region. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin also canceled plans for a trip to Israel, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia, out of fears that a regional war, in reaction to a possible Israeli invasion of Lebanon, could break out at any moment.
From last Thursday through Sunday, the Israeli air force carried out four major attacks on Hezbollahâs missile forces, destroying an estimated 500 rocket launchers as well as several thousand rockets.
Defense Minister Gallant then told his air force commanders to keep up the âtargeted action to eliminate the operational elite of Hezbollah,â and promised to continue the attacks on Hezbollahâs missiles until Israelâs northern residents could return home. âThis is the goal, this is the mission, and we will use everything necessary to achieve it,â
Meanwhile, Prime Minister Netanyahu said in a video statement shortly after the strikes, âIf Hezbollah doesnât understand the message, I promise them â they will understand the message. We will take whatever action is necessary to restore security.â
RE-ESTABLISHING A SOUTH LEBANON SECURITY ZONE
One of Israelâs primary goals in Lebanon is to establish a Hezbollah-free security zone south of the Litani River, 10 miles north of the Israeli border, to make it safe for Israeli civilians to return to their homes along that border. Such a zone had been envisioned by U.N. Security Council Resolution 1701 which ended the Second Lebanon War in 2006. It was supposed to have been enforced by UNIFIL, an international United Nations peacekeeping force, but UNIFIL has been unable to keep Hezbollah out of southern Lebanon or keep it from re-arming.
This is not a new problem. After Israel invaded and conquered most of Lebanon in 1982 to end repeated attacks from there by Palestinian terrorists, it withdrew from most of the country, except for a security zone on the southern border. Israel occupied the zone from 1985 to 2000, when then-Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak ordered an Israeli withdrawal to put an end to the losses from repeated attacks on the occupying Israeli forces by Hezbollah terrorists.
Since October 7, the U.S. has been urging Israel to hold off on an attack on Hezbollah while it worked to achieve a diplomatic solution that would have Hezbollah agree to voluntarily move its force several miles off the Israeli border to the line agreed to in Resolution 1701.
Those U.S.-sponsored talks hit a dead end months ago. Part of the problem, according to a Wall Street Journal editorial, is that from the outset, âNasrallah tied Hezbollahâs actions to a Gaza ceasefire. This has mortgaged the future of Lebanon to the priorities of Hamasâ Yahya Sinwar.
âEven the Biden Administration has now recognized that Mr. Sinwar doesnât want a deal. . . [and it is now clear that] one way or another, Israel is going to return its displaced northern citizens to their homes.â
TIME RUNNING OUT FOR A PEACE DEAL IN THE NORTH
Israelâs leaders agree that time is running out to find an alternative to war. After almost a year of internal exile, the 70,000 former residents of northern Israel are anxious to return to their homes, and Israelâs government now seems prepared to do whatever it takes to stop Hezbollahâs constant cross-border missile attacks.
Nir Barkat, Israelâs economy minister, said in a recent interview, âWe cannot leave the north the way it is. I donât think that Hezbollah will volunteer to move to the north. So thereâs another part of the war ahead of us.â
Since the inconclusive end of the Second Lebanon War in 2006 Israel and Hezbollah have been fighting each other according to an informal set of rules which limit which types of weapons they can use, where the fighting can take place, and how many civilians or combatants can be killed.
For example, while Israel frequently struck at weapons transfers to Hezbollah in Syria over the past decade, it was careful to avoid killing Hezbollah members. Israeli officials now say that they regret having observed those constraints because they permitted Hezbollah to rearm while entrenching itself further in southern Lebanon along the Israeli border.
But the Israeli air strikes on Hezbollahâs senior leadership in their stronghold in Beirut changed the rules of the game and sent the message Israel no longer respects those former red lines.
ISRAEL CHANGING THE RULES AND ERASING RED LINES
âThose red lines no longer exist,â said Carmit Valensi, a senior researcher at the Institute for National Security Studies and an expert on Hezbollah. âThings dramatically changed in these rules of the game.â
As Lina Khatib, an associate fellow at Chatham House, a London-based research organization told the New York Times, âEighteen years of mutual deterrence has now given way to a new phase of one-sided superiority on the part of Israel. The facade that Hezbollah had been presenting to the world of it being an impenetrable organization is shattered, and Israel has displayed with flair how much of an upper hand it has in this equation vis-Ă -vis Hezbollah.â
âHezbollah has been backed into a corner by Israel,â Khatib said. âEven if its military arsenal remains intact, its ability to deploy it has been curtailed.â
According to Paul Salem, a vice president at the Middle East Institute in Washington, D.C., âIt has been very clear since the first months of the war that Israel is saying, âThis threat that we lived with for 18 years, we are not able to live with it anymore. We canât have this massive force on our northern border.ââ
AFTER OCTOBER 7 ISRAEL IS MORE READY FOR WAR
Salem adds that before the Gaza war, Israeli actions in the north were restrained by its reluctance to risk taking losses or sustaining damage compared with the apparent willingness of Hezbollah fighters to die for their cause. But since the October 7 attack, that, too, has changed.
âThe simple threat of Hezbollah causing damage no longer has the same effect on Israel that it had before Oct. 7,â Salem said.
Yaron Buskila, the CEO of the Israel Defense and Security Forum, told Maariv that the strike on Beirut which killed Ibrahim Aqil sent a message that Israel has decided to âtake the gloves offâ in its engagements with Hezbollah.
âThe strike itself in the Dahiyeh district of Beirut is essentially a statement. It doesnât matter who the target was. The fact that terrorists were struck in Beirut is a very significant message from Israel to Hezbollah,â Buskila said.
âThere is no intention to continue playing this symmetric game that Israel has been playing with Hezbollah so far. . . For Israel, there is readiness for war, and the center of gravity is shifting to northern Israel. The IDF has decided that the Northern Command will become the main arena, while Gaza will become secondary. . . even if it means entering a much tougher war.â
He went on to say, âIran and Hezbollah understand that Israel is determined to move forward, and itâs also a message to the Americans [who] donât want Israel to go into a campaign against Lebanon right now.â
âThey are focused on maintaining regional stability. However, [Israel is] unwilling to accept what has been. What was will not continue to be. . . We want to return our residents to their homes safely, without the threat of Hezbollah sitting right on the border. . .
âNegotiations have failed so far, and Hezbollah hasnât withdrawn or reached any agreements. As a result, we are prepared to use all available force. Even without relying on American munitions â since their supply has diminished. . . Israel will utilize everything at its disposal to strike Hezbollah and restore peace to the northern border.â
Before the ground rules of the war between Israel and Hamas were changed last week, the fighting since October 8 had resulted in 26 civilian deaths on the Israeli side, as well as the deaths of 22 IDF soldiers and reservists. On the other side, Hezbollah named 503 of its members who have been killed by Israel, mostly in Lebanon but also some due to Israeli attacks in Syria. Another 79 members of other terrorist groups, one Lebanese soldier, and dozens of Lebanese civilians have also been killed.
ISRAEL WONâT HOLD BACK
But as one Israeli official warned, âIf [Hezbollah leader] Nasrallah escalates, then the price heâll pay in [his] Dahiyeh [stronghold] in Beirut will be very high.â Israel wonât hold back from striking again at Hezbollahâs nerve center, as it did last week when it killed his commanders, Aqil and Wahbi, Nasrallahâs longtime confidante, Fuad Shukr in July, and Hamas founding member Saleh al-Arouri in January.
Israel has also demonstrated its ability to neutralize the threat from Hezbollahâs missile force by conducting large-scale pre-emptive air strikes based on its superior intelligence about Hezbollahâs intentions. Israel is also willing to target Iranians who have been working with or on behalf of Hezbollah. Israel killed a group of senior Iranian military officials in a strike on an Iranian consulate building in Damascus in April, and launched a commando raid on an Iranian-controlled factory making weapons for Hezbollah earlier this month.
The success of these Israeli operations, as well as the exploding pager and walkie-talkie attacks, has revealed significant problems in Hezbollahâs security, communications, and counterintelligence.