Star-Telegram

Israel prepares forces; conflict with Hezbollah intensifie­s

- BY GALIT ALTSTEIN

Israel is stepping up preparatio­ns for a potential all-out war with Hezbollah, as the risk of a devastatin­g new phase in the country’s conflict with Iran and its proxy militias grows more acute.

Israeli forces have been exchanging cross-border fire with the Lebanonbas­ed group almost daily since the start of the campaign against Hamas in October, and is now putting in place measures that would enable an escalation of hostilitie­s – if required. Those include additional military exercises for ground, naval and aerial forces in the north of the country, according to the Israel Defense Forces.

Local leaders in the area have been briefed “on the processes to accelerate readiness for continued fighting,” the IDF said in a statement. Additional storage facilities are being installed to enable a quick and broad mobilizati­on of IDF troops to the front line, the armed forces said.

Israel said it struck about 40 sites linked to Hezbollah in southern Lebanon on Wednesday, an escalation of hostilitie­s after the militant group staged its deepest attack inside Israel the previous day. Tensions between the two have been high since Israel invaded Gaza to try and eradicate Hamas – which like Hezbollah is an Iran-backed group considered a terrorist organizati­on by the U.S. – but appear to have intensifie­d since Israel and Iran began attacking each other directly earlier this month.

Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah said April 8 he was “working night and day to serve this resistance” after a deadly attack on Iran’s diplomatic compound in Syria a week earlier, which the Islamic Republic blamed on Israel.

Tens of thousands of civilians have been evacuated from settlement­s on both sides of the Lebanese border. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said pushing Hezbollah out of southern Lebanon is a national goal. A United Nations security council resolution put in place after the two sides fought a war in 2006 called for Hezbollah forces to respect a no-go zone close to Israel’s border.

This will be achieved using diplomacy or military force, Netanyahu has said on several occasions.

DANGEROUS PLAY

An Israeli escalation of fighting with Hezbollah would be fraught with danger. The group is considered the most powerful militia in the Middle East, and is believed to possess some 150,000 missiles and rockets – some with a long enough range to reach almost anywhere in Israel – according to a senior Israeli official.

Israel has been targeted by about 17,000 rockets, missiles and artillery shells since Oct. 7 – the date Hamas militants invaded the country and killed about 1,200 people – with some two thirds making it across the border. About 3,000 were fired from Lebanon and the rest from Gaza, with a total of 27 fatalities. Around 350 people have been killed by Israeli strikes on Lebanon, most of them Hezbollah fighters.

If a fully fledged war breaks out in the north, Israel estimates a baseline scenario of as many as 5,000 missiles a day will be fired from Lebanon, on top of several hundred more by other Iranian proxies in Yemen, Iraq, and Syria, said the Israeli official, who asked not to be identified discussing sensitive informatio­n.

The sheer volume of rockets could test Israel’s much vaunted air defense systems to breaking point, increasing the number of casualties and disrupting daily life. Hezbollah is likely to try and hit infrastruc­ture facilities like power plants and water pipes, as well as sea ports, airports and communicat­ion sites, the official said.

The military effort would come on top of Israel’s ongoing war in Gaza, where the IDF is preparing a potential ground invasion of Rafah, the southern city where more than 1 million civilians have taken refuge from the months of bombardmen­ts further north. More than 34,000 Palestinia­ns have been killed in the campaign so far, according to Hamas-run health authoritie­s.

 ?? AFP/TNS ?? Smoke plumes erupt during Israeli bombardmen­t on the village of Alma al-Shaab in south Lebanon on Thursday amid ongoing cross-border tensions as fighting continues between Israel and Palestinia­n Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip.
AFP/TNS Smoke plumes erupt during Israeli bombardmen­t on the village of Alma al-Shaab in south Lebanon on Thursday amid ongoing cross-border tensions as fighting continues between Israel and Palestinia­n Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip.

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