Hezbollah’s plans, Israel’s threats – is either side ready for war?
Hezbollah says it can and will fight until a ceasefire
in Gaza is agreed, here’s a look at the scenarios.
Published On 29 Jun 2024
Beirut, Lebanon – Hezbollah is preparing for different scenarios as the
low-level conflict between it and Israel threatens to spin out into something
larger.
Feeding the idea of Israel shifting military focus
from Gaza to Lebanon have been statements from officials including Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who said on Sunday that Israel is winding down
operations in Rafah and will redirect to Lebanon.
Serious Israeli military action on Lebanon would drag in regional and possibly international actors.
Israel’s attacks to date have displaced nearly 100,000
people from their homes in south Lebanon and killed at least 435 people, some
349 of them named by Hezbollah as its members.
Hezbollah appears to be sticking to its guns,
matching Israeli rhetoric with its own, and intensifying its cross-border attacks – which have so far killed 15 Israeli soldiers
and 10 civilians, according to Israel.
The two have been trading attacks across the border
since the day after Israel launched a war on Gaza on October 7, the day a
Hamas-led operation in Israel killed 1,139 people, according to the AFP news
agency.
Ceasefire or bust
Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah has repeated in
speeches since October that his group will stop its cross-border attacks on
Israel only when the latter agrees to a ceasefire in Gaza.
Even if Israel turns the bulk of its military
attention to Lebanon, analysts believe Hezbollah will stick to its position.
“I don’t think Hezbollah will accept [negotiations] in
absence of a ceasefire [in Gaza],” said Amal Saad, the author of two books on
Hezbollah. “The war will be ongoing.
“Nasrallah has said they will keep fighting until
Hamas is victorious and if Hamas is weakened and undermined then Hezbollah
won’t sit on [its] hands,” she said.
“There’s a strategic objective here … Hezbollah will
not leave Hamas on its own.”
The idea of a ceasefire seemed to have hit a snag as
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s hardline coalition partners demanded a
“complete defeat of Hamas” before an end to the war.
However, some Israeli officials have expressed doubts
about the idea of a complete defeat of Hamas, underlining that Hamas is an idea
and ideas cannot be eradicated.
Military spokesperson Daniel Hagari expressed such
doubts on June 19, while National Security Council head Tzachi Hanegbi said the
same on Tuesday, less than a week later.
Whether in tacit acceptance of that idea or for other
considerations, Israel is now talking about a lower-intensity phase, in which,
it claims, its military would continue to target Hamas in Gaza while looking
for a political alternative to the group in the enclave.
A lower-intensity war in Gaza would, in theory, allow
for a focus on Lebanon – though that would require the Israeli military to
execute the challenging prospect of engaging on two fronts.
Projecting strength
For his part, Nasrallah has been displaying his
group’s might and standing firm.
On June 19, he said his group has more than 100,000
fighters and that many heads of regional armed groups had offered more fighters
to join the fight against Israel, offers he rejected as Hezbollah is
“overwhelmed” with cadres already.
A day before his speech, Hezbollah released drone
footage taken over the Israeli city of Haifa, an implicit threat that the city
could be targeted.
Another recent video by Hezbollah showed what appears
to be a series of targets inside Israel and the Mediterranean Sea.
“Hezbollah is displaying and simulating to Israel its
options [to widen the] war … [this will make Israel] understand that the
repercussions are seriously costly,” Imad Salamey, a political scientist at the
Lebanese American University, said.
Nasrallah also threatened Cyprus, an island nation that is in the European Union but
not NATO, should it support Israel in war.
Cyprus responded that it does not cooperate militarily
with Israel in any conflicts.
“Since October 8th, Cyprus has been a key location
where Israeli reservists fly into and then go on to Israel,” Seth Krummrich, a
former special forces officer who is now at Global Guardian risk management
firm, told Al Jazeera.
Israel has used Cypriot territory for training drills
in the past.
The threat was Nasrallah’s way of signalling “to the
European Union to refrain from supporting Israel in any way, which may
implicate [its] member states,” Salamey said.
Contingency plans
While both sides escalate and lay cards on the table,
Hezbollah will have a couple of contingency plans.
“Hezbollah most probably have a strategy ready in case
of a limited, protracted war in south Lebanon and they have probably prepared a
strategy in case there is a wider full-scale war,” Karim Emile Bitar,
professor of international relations at University Saint Joseph in Beirut,
said.
A limited war would be what Salamey called a
“low-intensity asymmetric warfare of attrition” that bleeds “the enemy through
low-cost, efficient, and effective skirmishes” – basically a continuation of
the current conflict.
A full-scale war may intensify attacks across Lebanon,
including on infrastructure like Beirut’s airport, as Israel did in 2006.
Some analysts believe a limited ground invasion of
south Lebanon is possible, though it would lead to heavy casualties on both
sides.
For Bitar, Hezbollah likely does not want that option.
“Hezbollah, as well as the Iranian regime, realises [an escalation] would be
extremely risky and devastating for Lebanon,” he said.
The intensified threats and military actions are
running parallel to diplomatic negotiations.
US Special Envoy Amos Hochstein was recently in Tel
Aviv and Beirut, where he allegedly passed Hezbollah messages through Lebanese
parliament speaker, and Hezbollah ally, Nabih Berri.
According to unnamed Western diplomats who spoke to
Axios, Hochstein told Hezbollah it would be mistaken to assume that the US
could prevent Israel from starting a wider war.
At the same time, Hezbollah and Israel are passing
messages through French diplomats, Bitar said, seeking “a face-saving exit or
strategy”.
If these negotiations could result in “assurances to
Israel that Hezbollah’s allies would not be present in a 6-10km [4-6 mile]
radius [from the border] and that they have no intention of using the
[Hezbollah’s elite] Radwan forces to attack Israel” Hochstein’s efforts may
bear fruit, Bitar said.
The parallel tracks of diplomacy and military action
are interlinked.
Still, there is an oft-repeated fear that a
miscalculation could force an escalation with neither side wanting to give
their opponents an opportunity to declare a moral victory.
A war might still be prevented, save for said
miscalculation or a political decision by Israel to push ahead, based on
domestic considerations.
For their part, Hezbollah has stuck to their position
of demanding a ceasefire as their sole precondition to stop the fighting.
“We’re in a situation where, on both sides, domestic
political considerations take prevalence,” Bitar said.
“Hezbollah is conscious that most Lebanese, including
a significant part of their own supporters, do not want a new war,” he added.
“Both parties are taking these factors into
consideration however we are in a situation that is extremely volatile and any
miscalculation by either side could lead to a new full-fledged [escalated
conflict] in the region.”
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