Israel Prepared To 'Neutralize' Hezbollah With 'Overwhelming' Force In Next war
By Adam Abrams/JNS.org September 19, 2017 Share this article:
Despite the raging civil war to Israel's north and east in Syria,
the Jewish state's northern border has remained precariously quiet over
the last decade. No stranger to looming threats, Israeli officials are
planning and ready for several worst-case scenarios in the north as Iran
and its terror proxy Hezbollah continue to forge their stranglehold on
the region.
In a possible war scenario with
Hezbollah, the Israeli military can launch a "massive and overwhelming"
operation that would effectively "neutralize" a significant part of the
Lebanese terror organization's military capability, Lt. Col. Jonathan
Conricus, the head of the International Media Branch for the IDF
Spokesperson's Unit, told JNS.org.
The IDF's
operation would be based on "very accurate intelligence" collected
"relentlessly" and "would minimize to the greatest extent possible, harm
to non-combatants.... by using the most precise guided munitions that
strike only at the legitimate military targets," Conricus said.
Striking
only Hezbollah targets without collateral damage will be a challenging
military feat because Hezbollah is deliberately "deployed in order to
maximize collateral damage" to civilians, he added.
One-third of the homes in southern Lebanon's 130 villages are known to house military components belonging to Hezbollah.
"Hezbollah's
strategic choice of the battlefield, embedding its military assets in
Shiite villages and towns, has put the majority of the Shiite population
in Lebanon in harm's way, using it as human shields...." Brigadier
general (Res.) Assaf Orion, a senior research fellow at Israel's
Institute for National Security Studies (INSS), told JNS.org.
Defeating
the terror group would likely involve "significant IDF ground
incursions into Lebanon as well as taking out Hezbollah rocket positions
located in high-density population areas," in hospitals, schools and
apartment buildings, Dr. Jonathan Schanzer, senior vice president of
research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies think tank, told
JNS.org.
In a future conflict, one could expect
"significant damage to Israel," Orion said, but simultaneously "a
devastating and unprecedented destruction in Lebanon, including a
significant victory against Hezbollah's military forces and destruction
of most infrastructure enabling its war fighting capacity."
Largest drill in decades
Due
to Hezbollah's deep entrenchment within civilian infrastructure, the
IDF has narrow windows of opportunity to engage "legitimate military
targets," Conricus said.
However, the IDF is
prepared for this scenario and recently completed its largest drill in
two decades in Israel's northern region, simulating cross-border
Hezbollah attacks on Israeli towns in which the terror group aims to
commit massacres and take hostages.
The exercise was planned over a year and half in advance
and tens of thousands of soldiers from all branches of the IDF
participated.
During the initial stage of the
drill, soldiers simulated rooting out Hezbollah terrorists from Israeli
towns and defending the Jewish state's sovereignty. The drill's second
stage simulated "decisive maneuver warfare" into the depths of
Hezbollah's territory, Conricus said.
The
exercise sought to enhance "coordination and synchronization" between
the IDF's ground forces, air force, navy, intelligence and cyber units,
and shorten "the intelligence cycle" from when a "target is identified
to any type of munition meeting that target," he added.
Hezbollah's new capabilities and the coming two-front war
The
IDF has acknowledged that since the 2006 Second Lebanon War, Hezbollah
has matured from a guerilla organization to a fighting force equipped
with heavy artillery, high-precision missiles and drones. The terror
group also receives about $800 million a year in funding from Iran.
A
third of Hezbollah's forces are currently entrenched in Syria's ongoing
civil war -- becoming battle-hardened, but simultaneously
overstretched, losing some 2,000 fighters in the conflict.
Hezbollah
and Iran have established weapons factories in Lebanon that can produce
powerful missiles and, according to the IDF official, "more than
120,000 rocket launchers and rockets" are positioned in southern
Lebanon, "in clear violation of U.N. Security Council Resolution 1701."
Iran
and Hezbollah are also constructing permanent military facilities in
southern Syria to establish a land bridge stretching from Tehran to
Beirut along Israel's northern border.
According to Schanzer, this indicates the next war with
Hezbollah "would likely be a two-front battle in Lebanon and Syria,"
which could also include other Iranian terror proxies in the region.
The
IDF official confirmed, "it is definitely possible and plausible" that
the Israeli military will be required to fight on more than one front,
which the military is prepared for.
Intimate intelligence and advanced technology
Using
its "networked intelligence," the IDF is prepared to implement "a
massive precision strike.... on a scale which far exceeds the assessed
growth in Hezbollah's military [capability]," Orion said.
Since
2006, Hezbollah has occasionally been given a glimpse of the "quality,
scope and intimacy" of Israeli intelligence collected against it, the
IDF official said, which has created a deterrence and quiet for the past
11 years.
A recent purported Israeli airstrike
against a Syrian chemical weapons facility Sept. 7, which occurred
during the massive IDF exercise, may have served as one such glimpse
into Israel's intelligence capability directed against the terror group
and its allies.
Israel is "far better prepared
for the next war with Hezbollah" than it was in the 2006, Schanzer said.
"We see now the appearance of stealth tank technology, the preparation
for ground warfare and the possibility of tunnels into Israel... as well
as the preparation for mass volleys of rockets launched by Hezbollah
into Israel."
The Israeli Air Force has also
acquired several new state-of-the-art F-35 "Adir" stealth fighter jets,
and in recent weeks the military unveiled multiple revolutionary defense
technologies that will soon be added to its arsenal.
Originally published at JNS.org - reposted with permission.
No comments:
Post a Comment