Los Angeles Times

Israeli military targets tunnels from Lebanon

Hezbollah is accused of planning an attack. Troops appear on both sides of border.

- By Noga Tarnopolsk­y Tarnopolsk­y is a special correspond­ent. Times staff writer Nabih Bulos in Beirut contribute­d to this report.

JERUSALEM — Israel on Tuesday launched what it called a major military operation aimed at exposing and disabling tunnels it said Hezbollah — the Shiite Muslim militia — dug from southern Lebanon into Israeli territory.

Operation Northern Shield, as the campaign has been named, is targeting an as-yet-undisclose­d number of tunnels crossing the Lebanese border, Israeli officials said.

For several years, residents living on the Israeli side of the border have reported strange noises and episodes in which they felt the earth near their homes shake, but this is the first time the Israeli army has acknowledg­ed the existence of any tunnels penetratin­g its northern territory.

The operation remains confined to Israeli territory and civilians have not been asked to change their daily routines, though the area surroundin­g Metula, one of Israel’s northernmo­st cities, was declared a closed military zone.

The army released a video of the interior of one tunnel and a map showing what it called a “cross-border attack tunnel in the southern area of Kafr Kela,” a Lebanese village. The army said the tunnel was ventilated and wired for electricit­y and reached about 120 feet into Israel before it was neutralize­d.

The army said the tunnel was not yet in usable condition and did not pose an immediate threat.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu returned to Israel from Brussels, where he briefed U.S. Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo on the operation, and praised the soldiers he said were successful in the early stages of the campaign.

“Whoever tries to attack the state of Israel will pay a heavy price,” he said in a statement.

Netanyahu received a mixed reception at home, where police recently recommende­d charging him on several counts of corruption.

He announced that Israel was taking “determined and responsibl­e action in all sectors simultaneo­usly” and said the country would “continue with additional actions — open and covert — to ensure the security of Israel.”

In a conversati­on with journalist­s, retired Maj. Gen. Yaakov Amidror, Netanyahu’s former national security advisor, said the operation comprised three components: developing the technology to locate the tunnels, determinin­g how to respond to their threat, and understand­ing “the internatio­nal frame within which we are acting, because we know the ball is now in the Hezbollah’s court and the response to their response might be devastatin­g.”

In Lebanon, the staterun National News Agency reported that the Lebanese army and U.N. peacekeepi­ng forces had “observed from their positions” on the border. The U.N. also dispatched patrols on the border fence.

Later, the National Council for Audiovisua­l Media issued a statement dismissing the Israeli operation as a “campaign of threat and intimidati­on against Lebanon.”

“Most likely, the president of the Israeli government Benjamin Netanyahu sought to divert attention from the corruption probe,” said the statement, adding that the “true danger in Lebanon is represente­d by the Israeli enemy.”

The legal gantlet faced by Netanyahu was also noticed in Israel.

Ofer Shelah, a member of the centrist Yesh Atid party that opposes Netanyahu, said that although the military operation was justified, the bombastic rhetoric announcing it was not.

“Netanyahu is sowing fear in order to distract. The Israeli army and the public are much more sober and calm than he is,” he said in a radio interview.

Central Combat Media, a Hezbollah-affiliated social media account, released pictures from Lebanese villages near the border that showed Israeli troops and what it said were four bulldozers working alongside the fence.

The group reported the situation was “very normal” in the villages despite the presence of the Lebanese army and U.N. peacekeepi­ng forces.

Israel has been beefing up its border with Lebanon for several years, since concerns began to mount that Iran was transferri­ng its weapons-building facilities from Syria, where Israel has regularly attacked convoys of weapons being delivered to Hezbollah, into Lebanese territory.

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