The Israel Protection Power (IDF) has met little resistance since saying its “limited” invasion of southern Lebanon early Tuesday morning native time, a transfer aimed to subvert Hezbollah’s buildup alongside the shared border.
Israel has been growing its strikes for weeks in opposition to the terrorist group in southern Lebanon, in addition to with focused strikes in Beirut.
On Tuesday, the IDF confirmed in a press release shared with Fox Information Digital that because the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas assaults in Israel – after which Hezbollah started putting army posts alongside Israel’s northern border – the IDF has performed dozens of “targeted operations” to “dismantle Hezbollah’s terrorist capabilities” that pose a risk to civilians within the north.
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IDF spokesman Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari stated Tuesday that IDF particular forces have entered Hezbollah compounds in “dozens of locations” alongside the Israel-Lebanon border, collected intelligence and dismantled positional strongholds.
“Our soldiers entered Hezbollah’s underground infrastructures, exposed Hezbollah’s hidden weapon caches, and seized and destroyed the weapons, including advanced Iranian-made weapons,” Hagari stated. “Overall, IDF soldiers exposed and dismantled over 700 Hezbollah terror assets during these operations. And there’s a lot more work to do.”
Because the conflict started almost a 12 months in the past, Israeli particular forces reportedly started conducting small raids in southern Lebanon, in some circumstances using the very tunnels Israel seized from the terrorist group years prior, and renewed consideration has been delivered to how the Hezbollah community operates.
The terrorist group for years has relied on its heavy entanglement in civilian life, significantly in southern Lebanon, the place it has rented civilian infrastructure to function weapons depots and even missile launcher websites. Civilian buildings have additionally been used to cowl entrances to the group’s subtle tunnel community that’s estimated to stretch over 100 miles in size cumulatively throughout the area.
However regardless of the feared all-out conflict that had the potential to erupt upon Israel’s invasion of its northern neighbor, Hezbollah’s resistance has been minimal.
Safety consultants feared Hezbollah’s longtime backing from Iran would allow it to levy as many as 8,000 rockets per day in a worse case state of affairs, and its greater than 50,000 operatives, together with the elite Radwan forces, might pose a big risk in opposition to an Israeli floor marketing campaign.
Hagari confirmed to reporters Tuesday that IDF forces had been actively working to dismantle Radwan infrastructure close to the border in southern Lebanon.
“We need to take care of it because we will not let another 7th of October occur next to our border,” he stated.
Within the aftermath of the Oct. 7 assaults, the IDF assessed that some 2,400 Radwan terrorists, together with one other 500 Palestinian Jihadists educated by the elite drive, had been positioned in villages throughout southern Lebanon poised to assault.
However the IDF on Tuesday additionally highlighted that Hezbollah didn’t mount a counter drive in response to Israel’s incursion.
Jonathan Conricus, former IDF spokesperson and present senior fellow for the Basis for Protection of Democracies (FDD), advised Fox Information Digital that Hezbollah’s near-complete lack of a counter drive may very well be defined by a number of causes.
“The IDF conducted hundreds of special operations during the last months to map and analyze Hezbollah’s hostile infrastructure in civilian houses in southern Lebanon, as well as targeted aerial campaigns against Hezbollah personnel,” he stated. “Hezbollah terrorists sustained severe casualties and started to flee from southern Lebanon.
“It stays unclear what number of Hezbollah militants stay within the south,” he added.
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Given the unknown number of terrorists who fled the south, most likely to other strongholds in Beirut and in central Lebanon, reporters questioned the current IDF spokesman if this could mean that Israel will need to expand its operations north.
“We’re not going to Beirut,” Hagari told reporters, emphasizing Israel’s stated goal to return its citizens to their northern homes. “We’re focusing within the space of these villages, the realm subsequent to [the] border. And we are going to do, on this space, what is important to dismantle and demolish Hezbollah’s infrastructure.”
Hagari would not provide specifics on the operational timeline but said Israel’s campaign in Lebanon would be conducted in “days [to] weeks.”