The Telegram (St. John's)

Residents of northern Israel brace for possible all-out war

Hezbollah would likely use its estimated arsenal of over 150,000 rockets to target Israeli cities.

- ANDREW MACASKILL REUTERS

HAIFA, Israel — Eli Harel was an Israeli soldier in his early thirties when he was sent into Lebanon in 2006 to battle fighters from the Iranianbac­ked group Hezbollah in a bloody, largely inconclusi­ve month-long war.

Now 50, Harel is ready to rejoin the army to fight the same group if shelling along Israel’s northern border turns into a full-blown war with Iran’s most powerful regional proxy. This time Israeli forces would face some of the most challengin­g fighting conditions imaginable, he said.

“There are booby traps everywhere,” he told Reuters. “People are popping up from tunnels. You have to be constantly on alert otherwise you will be dead.”

Harel lives in Haifa, Israel’s third biggest city, well within range of Hezbollah’s weapons. Haifa’s mayor recently urged residents to stockpile food and medicine because of the growing risk of all-out war.

Israel and Hezbollah have been engaged in escalating daily cross-border strikes over the past six months — in parallel with the war in Gaza — and their increasing range and sophistica­tion has spurred fears of a wider regional

nd conflict.

Hezbollah has amassed a formidable arsenal since 2006.

Like Hamas, the militant Palestinia­n group battling Israel in Gaza, Hezbollah has a network of tunnels to move fighters and weapons around. Its fighters have also been training for more than a decade with Syrian President Bashar al-assad’s forces.

Hezbollah has so far restricted its attacks to a strip of northern Israel, seeking to draw Israeli forces away from Gaza. Israel has said it is ready to push Hezbollah back from the border, but it is unclear how.

EXILES IN THEIR OWN COUNTRY

Some 60,000 residents have had to leave their homes, in the first mass evacuation of northern Israel, and cannot safely return, prompting increased calls within Israel for firmer military action against Hezbollah. Across the border in Lebanon, some 90,000 people have also been displaced by Israeli strikes.

Eyal Hulata, a former Israeli national security adviser, said Israel should announce a date in the next few months when displaced Israeli civilians can return, effectivel­y challengin­g Hezbollah to scale back its shelling or face all-out war.

“Israelis cannot be in exile in their own country. This cannot happen. It is the responsibi­lity of the IDF (Israel Defense Forces) to defend civilians. It is what we failed to do on Oct. 7,” he said, referring to the Hamas attack on southern Israel that prompted the current war in Gaza

Hezbollah did not respond to a request for comment. The group’s leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah said in February that residents of northern Israel “will not return” to their homes.

The Israeli military said this month it had completed another step in preparing for possible war with Hezbollah that centred on logistics, including preparatio­ns for a “broad mobilisati­on” of reservists.

A conflict between Israel and Hezbollah would probably result in massive destructio­n in both countries. In the 2006 war, 1,200 people in Lebanon were killed and 158 in Israel.

Since October, more than 300 people have died in fighting in the border area, mainly Hezbollah fighters.

If war did break out, Israel would probably bomb targets in southern Lebanon before soldiers tried to push at least 10 kilometres across the border. Hezbollah would likely use its estimated arsenal of over 150,000 rockets to target Israeli cities. In 2006 the group fired about 4,000 missiles at Israel.

‘IMMENSE’ DAMAGE LIKELY

Assaf Orion, a retired Israeli brigadier general, told Reuters there was a growing likelihood of war erupting between Israel and Hezbollah, caused either by an unplanned escalation in clashes or by Israel losing patience with people being unable to return home.

Orion said the intensity of bombing in any war could be 10 times greater than in Gaza.

“The damage will be immense,” he said. “Gaza will look like a walk in the park compared to that level of fighting.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? An Israeli soldier looks on April 17 at a scene after it was reported people were injured amid ongoing cross-border hostilitie­s between Hezbollah and Israeli forces, near Arab al-aramashe in northern Israel.
REUTERS An Israeli soldier looks on April 17 at a scene after it was reported people were injured amid ongoing cross-border hostilitie­s between Hezbollah and Israeli forces, near Arab al-aramashe in northern Israel.

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