The Province

Israel takes risk with airstrike on Hezbollah

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JERUSALEM — Israel has opened a new front in its attempts to halt weapons smuggling to Hezbollah, striking one of the group’s positions inside Lebanon for the first time since the sides fought a war eight years ago.

This week’s airstrike, meant to prevent the Islamic militant group from obtaining sophistica­ted missiles, is part of a risky policy that could easily backfire by triggering retaliatio­n. But at a time when the Syrian opposition says Hezbollah has struck a major blow for President Bashar Assad’s government in neighbouri­ng Syria by ambushing al-Qaidalinke­d fighters there, it shows the strategic importance for Israel of trying to break the Syria-Hezbollah axis.

For now, the odds of a direct conflagrat­ion between Israel and Hezbollah appear low. The group has sent hundreds of fighters to Syria and is preoccupie­d with saving Assad’s embattled regime. Syrian state media reported that army troops killed 175 rebels, many of them alQaida-linked fighters, near Damascus on Wednesday, but the Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said it was Hezbollah forces that carried out the dawn ambush.

Israel considers both Hezbollah and the al-Qaida-linked Nusra Front to be grave threats. Israel has avoided taking sides in the Syrian war content watching the two sides beat each other up.

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