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September 20, 2017 2:03 pm
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IDF: We Are Prepared to ‘Neutralize’ Hezbollah With ‘Overwhelming’ Force in Next War

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avatar by Adam Abrams / JNS.org

Members of Hezbollah’s youth movement trample on an Israeli flag at a rally in Beirut. Photo: File.

JNS.org – 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. But Israeli officials are planning and readying for several worst-case scenarios in the north, as Iran and its terror proxy Hezbollah continue to forge their stranglehold on the region.

If it ever came to war, the Israeli military could launch a “massive and overwhelming” operation that would effectively “neutralize” a significant part of Hezbollah’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 legitimate military targets,” Conricus said.

Striking only Hezbollah targets without collateral damage will be a challenging military feat, however, because Hezbollah has deliberately “deployed [its resources] 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 [them] 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.” These locations include hospitals, schools and apartment buildings, Dr. Jonathan Schanzer, senior vice president of research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, told JNS.org.

In a future conflict with Hezbollah, one should 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 [the] destruction of most [of the] infrastructure enabling its war fighting capacity.”

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. The drill simulated cross-border Hezbollah attacks on Israeli towns, in which the terror group commits massacres and takes hostages.

The exercise was planned more than 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 to shorten “the intelligence cycle” from when a “target is identified to any type of munition meeting that target,” he added.

The IDF has acknowledged that since the 2006 Second Lebanon War, Hezbollah has matured from a guerilla organization into a fighting force that is equipped with heavy artillery, high-precision missiles and drones. The terror group also now 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; Hezbollah has reportedly lost some 2,000 fighters in the conflict.

Hezbollah and Iran have established weapons factories in Lebanon that can produce powerful missiles. According to Conricus, “more than 120,000 rocket launchers and rockets” are positioned in southern Lebanon, “in clear violation of UN 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, all along Israel’s northern border.

According to Schanzer, this indicates that Israel’s 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 that “it is definitely possible and plausible” that the Israeli military will be required to fight on more than one front, which the Israeli military is prepared for.

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 deterrence and quiet for the past 11 years.

A recent purported Israeli airstrike against a Syrian chemical weapons facility on September 7 — which occurred during the massive IDF exercise,  — may have served as one such glimpse into Israel’s intelligence capability.

Israel is “far better prepared for the next war with Hezbollah” than it was in the 2006, Schanzer said.

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 has unveiled multiple revolutionary defense technologies that will soon be added to its arsenal.

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