By Darius Shahtahmasebi
Last week,
Israel began holding its largest military drill
in 20 years, and it was specifically designed to simulate a war with Hezbollah.
From the Independent:
“The Israel Defence Forces (IDF) has
deployed thousands of air, sea and land personnel to the Lebanese border for
its biggest military drill in almost two decades, a show of strength designed
to intimate Hezbollah and Iran even as their power grows in neighbouring Syria.”
Beginning last Monday, soldiers and
reservists alike practiced simulating a 10-day-long war with Hezbollah,
an Iranian-sponsored Shi’a militant group located
mainly in Lebanon. Israel even prepared two field hospitals, as well as trucks
and helicopters for evacuating simulated casualties.
According to the Independent,
the drill began with small border skirmishes and escalated into a full-on war
with the aim of completely obliterating the Lebanese opponents. Even the
soldiers playing the role of Hezbollah were to be dressed in the group’s
traditional attire and will don their yellow and green flag.
“The purpose of the drill is to test
the fitness of the Northern Command and the relevant battalions during an
emergency,” one IDF
officer told Haaretz. In the exercise, Israel was to
give the armed forces an order to “vanquish” Hezbollah, “the state in which
Hezbollah either has no ability or desire to attack anymore,” the IDF
officer explained.
The drill, known as the “Light of
the Grain” drill, took 18 months to plan. It utilizes fighter planes, ships,
submarines, drones, cyber and canine units, and Israel’s missile defense
system.
Speaking of Israel’s missile defense
system, Defense News recently reported that Israel is readying its
Iron Dome defense system for its first intercept test in the U.S., part and
parcel of the U.S. Army’s demonstration aimed at selecting an interim solution
for a medium and short-range air defense system.
The Iron Dome has proven very
effective, scoring over 1,500 intercepts against Gaza-launched rockets since it
was first deployed in 2011. However, it is now being tested to see if it can
defend Israel against other potential threats, as its proven capabilities
“don’t even come close” to the full extent of the system’s capabilities,
according to Ari Sacher, Rafael Ltd.’s Iron Dome Systems Project Manager.
Clearly, Israel is preparing its
defense systems for something far greater than the standard home-made rockets
found flying out of the Gaza strip. Considering the fact that an Israeli
military general is drafting a
defense policy document with the specific goal of launching a war with Iran, this might
give us some clues about what Israel is preparing for specifically.
Over a decade ago, Israel fought a
major short-lived war with Hezbollah in Lebanon. Israel has been preparing for its rematch with Hezbollah
for some time now, as well as striking Hezbollah targets from
within Syria.
Hezbollah has been a natural ally of Syria, even dating back to the reign of
Hafez al-Assad,
Bashar al-Assad’s father.
Israel also continues to strike
Syrian territory to this day in a flagrant disregard for international law,
specifically targeting Syrian government facilities
with ties to Hezbollah. Syria and Hezbollah have not responded yet, but no one seems to be
able to answer the question: what happens if Iran, Syria and/or Hezbollah
decide to respond in kind with an equally aggressive act?
A senior Israeli official warned the Russian government that if
Iran continues to expand its presence in Syria, Israel plans to respond by
bombing the Syrian president’s palaces. This is all while Israel knows full well that it cannot realistically
take on Iran, Syria, and Hezbollah by itself and without American intervention.
Hezbollah is a quasi-ally of not
only Iran, but Russia, too. Russia recently threatened to veto any UN Security
Council resolution that describes Hezbollah as a terrorist organization. Russia
also warned Israel indirectly not to attack Iran in Syria, explaining that
parties that violate international law and undermine Syria’s sovereignty will
not be tolerated.
Not to mention that in response to
Donald Trump’s April strike on the Syrian government, Russia and Iran issued a
joint statement with Hezbollah warning that
the next time such an attack occurs, they will all respond in kind.
It is also worth noting that
Hezbollah has spent six years in the brutal Syrian battle arena, during which
time they have attained new recruits, battle-hardened their members, and
developed the belief that they can successfully take on a number of military
forces in the region. As the Hill explains:
The new cadre of fighters Hezbollah
is bringing in is also professionalizing what was previously an explicitly
guerrilla-oriented organization. The fight for Syria against the nominally
Sunni ‘Takfiri’ (apostate) ISIS, has been a gift to the Shia Hezbollah, spurring
recruitment efforts.
Put simply, Hezbollah is not just getting better at fighting, its army is also
getting bigger.”
Prior to the 2006 conflict,
Hezbollah had approximately 13,000 rockets. It now boasts
some 150,000 rockets and missiles, as well as Russian-supplied
missiles that
“can hit anywhere in Israel,” according to one Lebanese commander.
Unsurprisingly, none of this is
headline news. Only those paying attention are aware of these looming
developments and the dangers of a direct confrontation involving Israel – a
stalwart American ally – approaching the Middle East’s numerous battle
theaters. Whether or not the world will sleep-walk into this war remains to be
seen; perhaps, and, ideally, Israel’s invasion simulation will act as a
deterrent only and ensure that cooler heads will prevail in order to diffuse
the situation between these regional adversaries.
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