Times Colonist

Rearmed Hezbollah Israel’s top security concern

- ARON HELLER

On a moonlit night, two dozen Israeli soldiers in full battle gear march near a Lebanese border village with a bomb-sniffing dog, searching for explosives and infiltrato­rs.

Suddenly the force stops. Through nightvisio­n goggles, two suspicious men appear over the ridge, holding what looks like binoculars. Could they be undercover Hezbollah guerrillas? Lebanese soldiers on a night patrol? Or perhaps UN peacekeepe­rs?

The men appear unarmed and since they are on the other side of the internatio­nally recognized “blue line” that separates the two countries, Israeli troops move on, completing another routine foot patrol along a scenic frontier that has remained quiet but tense since the bloody battles of a 2006 summer war.

Even with attention focused on Gaza militants along the southern front, Israel’s main security concerns lie to the north, along the border with Lebanon.

Israeli officials have long warned the threat posed by Gaza’s Hamas rulers pales in comparison to that of Lebanon’s Iranbacked Hezbollah militant group — a heavily armed mini-army with valuable combat experience and an arsenal of about 150,000 rockets that can reach nearly every part of Israel.

It’s along this northern front that Israeli soldiers come face-to-face with Hezbollah guerrillas and where any skirmish could spark an all-out war.

“The rules of the game are very clear. They know I’m here and I know they’re there,” said Lt. Col. Aviv, a regional battalion commander. “But if they break that equation, they are going to get hit.”

From his base along the border near the Israeli farming community of Avivim, he can see the hilltop Lebanese village of Maroun al-Ras, a UN observer outpost and a new square house inside an agricultur­al field, assumed to be a Hezbollah lookout.

Under the UN-brokered cease-fire that ended the 2006 war, Hezbollah’s troops are prohibited from approachin­g the border. But Israeli intelligen­ce says Hezbollah men operate freely, generally unarmed and in civilian clothes.

Sometimes they come within just a few metres of the Israeli troops, it says. Only a coil of barbed wire separates them but there are no interactio­ns.

“They are very discipline­d soldiers. They won’t initiate anything,” said Aviv, who can only be identified by his first name under military regulation­s.

When Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu decided against a full-scale offensive in Gaza, he cited the “security-sensitive period” in what was widely assumed to be a reference to the northern front.

Israel has generally refrained from engaging in Syria’s civil war, where Hezbollah has fought fiercely alongside President Bashar Assad’s troops, though it has carried out scores of airstrikes against what Israel says were Iranian shipments of advanced weapons bound for Hezbollah.

Until recently, Israel flew its jets through Syrian skies with impunity.

But that was severely restricted after a Russian plane was downed in September by Syrian forces responding to an Israeli air strike, a friendly fire incident that stoked Russian anger toward Israel and hastened the delivery of sophistica­ted S-300 air defence systems to Syria.

With Syria’s civil war winding down, an empowered Hezbollah is now free to re-establish itself back home in Lebanon and refocus on Israel, said Eyal Ben-Reuven, a lawmaker and retired general who commanded Israeli ground troops in the 2006 war.

Armed with more exact rockets and munitions, Hezbollah now poses a far more dangerous threat, he said.

 ?? SEBASTIAN SCHEINER, AP ?? An Israeli soldier stands near a wall at the Israel Lebanon border near Rosh Haniqra in northern Israel.
SEBASTIAN SCHEINER, AP An Israeli soldier stands near a wall at the Israel Lebanon border near Rosh Haniqra in northern Israel.

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