The Jerusalem Post

Lebanese army: IDF smoke injured troops

Two soldiers reportedly suffered suffocatio­n injuries from smoke grenades

- • By ANNA AHRONHEIM

The Lebanese army accused Israel of injuring two soldiers who were on patrol along the border fence Tuesday morning.

According to the Lebanese army, the two soldiers were targeted with smoke grenades and suffered from smoke inhalation near the town of Rmaich across the border from the Israeli communitie­s of Netua and Dovev.

“As a patrol from the Intelligen­ce Directorat­e was inspecting a land lot... it came under an attack from a patrol belonging to the Israeli enemy,” the Lebanese news site Naharnet quoted an army statement as saying.

The army said IDF troops “hurled six smoke grenades, which resulted in suffocatio­n injuries of two agents and a blaze that spread into the occupied territorie­s. A Lebanese army patrol and members of the liaison unit of the UN. Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) and the Civil Defense immediatel­y arrived on the scene and worked on dousing the blaze on the Lebanese side of the border.”

An IDF spokesman confirmed the incident to The Jerusalem Post and said troops fired the smoke grenades toward “suspicious individual­s” who had been identified approachin­g the border fence with Lebanon in order to keep them away from Israeli territory.

Israel and Hezbollah fought a deadly 33-day war in 2006, which came to an end under UN Security Council Resolution 1701. That resolution called for disarmamen­t of Hezbollah, withdrawal of the Israeli army from Lebanon and deployment of the Lebanese army and an enlarged UN force in the South.

Last week Maj.-Gen. Stefano Dal Col assumed command of the peacekeepi­ng mission, taking over from Irish Armed Forces Maj.-Gen. Michael Beary. Dal Col will be tasked with keeping the quiet along the border with more than 10,000 UN troops deployed in southern Lebanon.

Since 2006, hostilitie­s have been limited to occasional firing across the border and reported air strikes by Israel against Hezbollah leaders and military equipment in Syria, where the group is fighting in support of President Bashar Assad.

In 2015, two IDF soldiers were killed and seven wounded after Hezbollah fired anti-tank missiles toward an unarmored military vehicle in the Har Dov area near the Lebanese border. It is believed that five Kornet anti-tank missiles were fired by the Lebanese Shi’ite terrorist group in retaliatio­n for an air strike in Syria that killed seven Hezbollah operatives a week earlier.

While the border with Lebanon has been relatively quiet since then, the IDF nonetheles­s sees it as the most explosive border region, with troops ready for the quiet to end at any instant.

In a televised speech given Tuesday night at an event in the Beirut suburb of al-Janubiyya to mark 12 years since the last war between the two enemies, Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah said the group was in “a stronger position than ever since its founding” and that it was stronger than the Israeli army.

“Twelve years Israel has threatened to go to war. At the same time, it talks about the strengthen­ing of the resistance in Lebanon and its capabiliti­es so much that one of the senior officers in Israel said Hezbollah is the second-most powerful army in the region after the IDF,” he said, referring to recent comments made by a senior IDF officer last week.

“Let me tell this senior officer: ‘Hezbollah is stronger than the Israeli army, the resistance in Lebanon is stronger than the Israeli army in capabiliti­es, in experience and courage. We are totally confident in our faith today. We are ready to sacrifice a lot more than their army. We are confident in our victory more than any other time.”

The border area with Lebanon has been flagged by the IDF as vulnerable to enemy infiltrati­ons, and Israel’s military believes the next war with Hezbollah will see the terrorist group trying to bring the fight to the home front by infiltrati­ng Israeli communitie­s to inflict significan­t civilian and military casualties.

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