Israel is a gambling nation, says Bowen Hezbollah will crumble, but it is up against an enraged, well-armed foe.
The progress of the offensive against Hezbollah.
Which began with the detonation of weaponized radios and pagers and progressed to lethal and furious airstrikes, has Israel’s officials celebrating.
Following the airstrikes on Monday, Yoav Gallant, the minister of defense, did not hold back in praising.
“Today was a work of art. Hezbollah’s worst week since founding occurred this week, and the outcomes are evident.
According to Gallant, thousands of projectiles that could have harmed Israeli residents were eliminated by aircraft. In the process Lebanon believes Israel killed more than 550 of its civilians, including 50 children. That equates to nearly half of Lebanon’s casualties during Israel and Hezbollah’s 2006 month-long conflict Israel is a gambling nation.
Israel thinks that a fierce onslaught will force Hezbollah to comply with its demands, causing enough suffering that Hassan Nasrallah.
The organization’s head, and his supporters in Iran will conclude that resistance is too costly.
The generals and leaders in Israel require a win. Gaza is a mess after nearly a year of conflict.
Israeli soldiers continue to be killed and injured by Hamas fighters who continue to emerge from tunnels and ruins while Israelis are being held captive.
Last October, Hamas took Israel by surprise. The Israelis failed to recognize Hamas as a serious threat that may have disastrous effects. Lebanon is not like that.
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and the Mossad secret agency have been planning the next war against Hezbollah since the last conflict ended in a stalemate in 2006.
Benjamin Netanyahu, the prime minister of Israel, thinks the present onslaught is moving the political balance away from Hezbollah, which is his stated goal.
He seeks to put an end to Hezbollah’s rocket launches into Israel over the border.
Simultaneously, the Israeli military maintains that the strategy is to eliminate military.
Infrastructure that poses a threat to Israel and drive Hezbollah back across the border Israel is a gambling nation.
Another Gaza?
Echoes of the last year of Gaza war can be heard in the last week in Lebanon. As it did in Gaza, Israel warned people to evacuate locations that were going to be struck. It blames Hezbollah, as it blames Hamas, for employing civilians as human shields.
The warnings, according to some detractors and adversaries of Israel, were overly ambiguous and did not provide enough time for families to flee.
The laws of war dictate that people be safeguarded, and prevent indiscriminate, excessive use of force.
Hezbollah has occasionally attacked Israel’s civilian areas, violating legislation meant to keep people safe. The Israeli military has also been a target. Hezbollah is considered a terrorist organization by the US, the UK, Israel, and other important Western allies.
Israel maintains that its army is moral and adheres to the law. However, the majority of the world has denounced its actions in Gaza. The start of a more extensive border conflict will widen the divide at the heart of an extremely divisive debate.
Consider launching a pager attack. According to Israel, the pagers had been issued to Hezbollah agents. .
However, Israel was unable to predict their location when the bombs within the pagers detonated.
Which is why people, including children, were hurt and murdered in homes, stores, and other public areas.
According to some eminent attorneys, this indicates that Israel violated the norms of war by employing lethal force without making a distinction between soldiers and civilians.
The battle between Israel and Hezbollah started in the 1980s.
But Hassan Nasrallah gave the order for his soldiers to start a small-scale, nearly daily barrage over the border in order to support Hamas the day after Hamas attacked Israel on October 7. It confined Israeli troops and drove out about 60,000 residents of border towns.
Shadows of invaders past
There are some in the Israeli media who have drawn comparisons between.
Operation Focus—Israel’s surprise attack on Egypt in June 1967—and the effect of the airstrikes on Hezbollah’s ability to conduct war.
The Egyptian air force was decimated in a well-known raid when its planes were arranged in a line on the ground. For the next six days, Israel triumphed against Jordan, Syria, and Egypt.
Israel’s conquest of the West Bank, which included east Jerusalem, the Gaza Strip, and the Golan Heights, gave rise to the current conflict.
It is not a valid analogy. The battle with Hezbollah and Lebanon are not the same. Israel has dealt severe blows. However, it has not prevented Hezbollah from being able or willing to fire at Israel thus far.
Israel and Hezbollah never emerged from their previous attritional, grueling battles with a clear winner. This one could end up the same way, no matter how fruitful Israel’s military, intelligence services, and offensive actions over the past week have been Israel is a gambling nation.
Israel’s offensive is based on the presumption—or gamble—that Hezbollah will eventually crumble, withdraw from the border, and cease firing into Israel. The majority of Hezbollah watchers think it will not end. Hezbollah exists primarily to fight Israel.
Thus, Israel would have to intensify the conflict despite its equally reluctance to concede defeat.
Israel would have to choose whether to launch a ground offensive, most likely to capture a strip of land to serve as a buffer zone, if Hezbollah persisted in making northern Israel too hazardous for Israeli residents to return home.
Israel has previously invaded Lebanon. In an attempt to halt Palestinian incursions into Israel, its army stormed up to Beirut in 1982.
After Israeli troops maintained the perimeter while their Lebanese Christian friends killed Palestinian residents in the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps in Beirut.
They were pushed into an embarrassing retreat in the face of wrath both domestically and internationally.
Israel continued to hold a sizable portion of bordering Lebanese territory into the 1990s.
The Israeli generals of today were once young officers who engaged in ceaseless firefights and battles with Hezbollah, which was becoming more powerful in its efforts to expel Israel.
In 2000, Ehud Barak, the prime minister of Israel at the time and a former IDF chief of staff, left the so-called “security zone.
He came to the conclusion that Israel was losing too many soldiers’ lives and that it was not making the country any safer..
Hezbollah’s poorly planned 2006 attack across the heavily fortified border resulted in the deaths and captures of Israeli soldiers.
Hassan Nasrallah declared after the battle that if he had known what Israel would do in retaliation.
He would not have permitted the raid. Israel’s prime minister at the time, Ehud Olmert, entered combat.
Israel first believed that using air power would prevent missile assaults into its territory. When it didn’t, tanks and ground forces rolled back across the border. For the civilians of Lebanon, the conflict proved disastrous. But Hezbollah was still firing missiles into Israel on the final day of the conflict.
The leaders of Israel are aware that battling Hamas in Gaza would be a far less difficult military task than advancing into Lebanon under fire.
Hezbollah has also been formulating plans since the end of the 2006 conflict, and would be fighting on home ground, in south Lebanon which has plenty of tough, steep terrain that favors guerilla tactics.