For Israel, a Rearmed Hizbullah in Lebanon is 'Top Concern'

W460

Israel's most pressing security concerns reportedly lie to the north, even with attention currently focused on Gaza-based Hamas militants along its southern border.

Israeli officials say the threat of the Palestinian Hamas group pales compared to the Iran-backed Hizbullah in Lebanon — a heavily-armed mini-army with combat experience in neighboring Syria and an arsenal of some 150,000 rockets.

The standoff plays out along a frontier where Israeli soldiers come face-to-face with Hizbullah guerrillas.

Under the U.N.-brokered cease-fire that ended the 2006 war, Hizbullah's troops are prohibited from approaching the border. But Israeli intelligence says Hizbullah men operate freely, generally unarmed and in civilian clothes.

Sometimes they come within just a few meters of the Israeli troops, it says.

Only a coil of barbed wire separates them but there are no interactions.

Comments 8
Thumb Knight 30 November 2018, 08:29

The standoff plays out along a frontier where Israeli soldiers come face-to-face with Hizbullah guerrillas.

terrorists is more like it!

Thumb EagleDawn 30 November 2018, 13:18

"patriotic southern.....6 hours ago
if you resist, then you exit..... the Lebanese resistance."

Thumb galaxy 30 November 2018, 09:32

what a useless article!

Missing un520 30 November 2018, 16:40

The only things Hezhollah are good at: War with human (civilian) shields, terror and political procrastination.

Thumb thepatriot 02 December 2018, 00:19

... and drugs... they are good at drug traffic too...

Missing phillipo 30 November 2018, 21:16

s.o.s. Why can't you write in English on an English language website?

Missing phillipo 01 December 2018, 10:12

With French I have no problem.

Missing phillipo 30 November 2018, 21:30

So what would happen if Israel killed a couple (or more) of them at the border fence?
Hizballah couldn't admit that they were Hizb. members as this would prove they are breaking the 2006 cease fire agreement. If they admit it, then Israel could rightly claim that the agreement no longer exists.