Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted June 27, 2024 Diamond Member Share Posted June 27, 2024 An *******-Hezbollah war would be devastating to both sides ****** smoke billows following an ******** air strike that targeted a house in the southern Lebanese village of Khiam near the Lebanese-******** border on June 21, 2024, amid ongoing cross-border clashes between ******** troops and Hezbollah fighters. Rabih Daher | AFP | Getty Images The near-daily exchanges of ***** along Lebanon’s border with northern ******* have intensified at an alarming rate in recent weeks, spurring escalating threats between ******* and Hezbollah and forcing the U.S. to call for an urgent diplomatic solution. An all-out war between ******* and Hezbollah — the Iranian-backed Lebanese Shia militant and political organization, called a ********** group by the U.S. and U.K. — would be devastating for both sides. So stark is the danger of war erupting between ******* and Hezbollah — a far larger and more heavily armed fighting force than ****** — that U.S. President Joe Biden last week sent one of his top aides, Amos Hochstein, to ******* and Lebanon to push for a solution. U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin told reporters Tuesday that “diplomacy is by far the best way to prevent more escalation,” stressing that, “we are urgently seeking a diplomatic agreement that restores lasting calm to *******’s northern border and enables civilians to return safely to their homes on both sides of the *******-Lebanon border.” Hezbollah has launched This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up into ******* in the nearly nine months since the latter began its war against ************ militant group ****** in Gaza on Oct. 7. The rockets fired from Lebanon have ******* 18 ******** soldiers and 10 civilians, ******* says, while ******** shelling has ******* some 300 Hezbollah fighters in Lebanon and around 80 civilians, according to a This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up At least This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up have been evacuated from their homes and are internally displaced due to the regular cross-border *****. “A full-fledged war between ******* and Hizbullah would be a disastrous event for the region, including both ******* and Lebanon,” Victor Tricaud, a senior analyst at consulting firm Control Risks, told CNBC. ‘It only takes a single stray rocket’ The most extreme war scenario? Tricaud describes a large-scale ground invasion and aerial ******** campaign against Lebanon by *******, heavy bombardment by Hezbollah with regular direct hits on ******** civilian infrastructure, and potentially even the direct involvement of Iran, which would have major implications for the global economy. A conflict of this magnitude would see national infrastructure on both sides — like water, electricity and communications — heavily damaged or destroyed, along with homes and military targets. Smoke and flame rise after Hezbollah carried out a missile ******* on Safed city, northern ******* on June 12, 2024. Anadolu | Anadolu | Getty Images But for now, this ******** a “comparatively distant scenario,” Tricaud said, “with many escalatory steps likely to take place before the confrontation reaches such a level of intensity.” Leaders on both sides say they do not want all-out war. Their ****-for-tat strikes over the last several months, while at times lethal, are still broadly viewed as being carefully calculated to avoid major escalation. It only takes a single stray rocket causing significant casualties and the adversary retaliating in kind, for things to get out of control. Nimrod Novik Fellow, ******* Policy Forum Lebanon, meanwhile, is in the midst of an economic and political crisis, its infrastructure wholly unprepared for a new war. A major ******** incursion into the country would be catastrophic, particularly in Lebanon’s south – a key Hezbollah stronghold – posing a serious threat to the militant organization’s popularity and support there. “Today, each side presumes to ‘teach’ the other that it can inflict greater pain within the assumed rules of engagement of a limited ******,” said Nimrod Novik, a fellow at the ******* Policy Forum, which is dedicated to advancing a two-state outcome to the ********-************ conflict. “However, it only takes a single stray rocket causing significant casualties and the adversary retaliating in kind, for things to get out of control.” Hezbollah: 10 times stronger than ****** Hezbollah is considered to be among the most heavily armed non-state groups in the world. It’s estimated to have 10 times the military capability of ******, and most previous wars between ******* and Hezbollah have ended without a clear victory for either side. The outcome of a 34-day war between the two adversaries in 2006, however, which saw ******** ground troops fighting in Lebanon, was claimed as a victory by Hezbollah, and was seen as a strategic ******** in *******. The militant group is now significantly stronger and equipped with more advanced weapons than it was in 2006. A man waves a Hezbollah movement flag as its leader Hassan Nasrallah delivers a televised speech in Kherbet Selm in southern Lebanon on January 14, 2024, marking the one week memorial since the ******** top field commander Wissam Tawil. Mahmoud Zayyat | Afp | Getty Images Tricaud said Hezbollah combatants have become “increasingly battle-hardened, having taken part in the war in Syria, and will be able to leverage asymmetric warfare tactics very effectively thanks to the movement’s long-standing territorial control of southern Lebanon.” He added that the toll of a full-scale war on the ******** population “would be far higher than it was in 2006.” Retired ******* Defense Forces Col. Miri Eisin, who currently directs the International Institute for Counterterrorism in *******, illustrated the threat of Hezbollah’s weapons arsenal in the event of a full war. “We’re talking about weaponry that we have not seen in this area,” she said, describing Hezbollah’s potential use of mortars, rockets, guided missiles, drone swarms, ******** drones and even ground troops to dismantle *******’s defenses. Simultaneously, “******* will ******* an immense amount of Hezbollah targets,” Eisin said. “And Hezbollah has surface-to-air missiles that they’ve used very little and they have them both from Iran and from Russia.” Despite *******’s formidable air defense systems, there will still be “capabilities that will infiltrate inside *******, which means that we will have casualties in the heart of *******,” she said. U.S. support will be crucial for ******* in such a context; it also raises the stakes if other Iranian-backed proxy groups get involved and ******* ********* assets. This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up have cited anonymous U.S. officials as saying that the Biden administration will help ******* defend itself against Hezbollah retaliation. This could include keeping its Iron Dome air defense system stocked, providing intelligence — and possibly striking Hezbollah itself in the event of heavy attacks against *******. CNBC has contacted the U.S. Department of Defense for comment. This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Negative,Terrorism,Politics,Breaking News: Politics,Foreign policy,Government and politics,*******,business news #IsraelHezbollah #war #devastating #sides This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up 0 Quote Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/52851-an-israel-hezbollah-war-would-be-devastating-to-both-sides/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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