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[Order David Horowitz’s new book, America Betrayed, HERE.]
After the Israelis learned that Hezbollah was intending to strike their country with a massive rocket attack — some 6,000 rockets — at 5 a.m. on August 25, the IDF “rose up first” and launched its own preemptive attack, sending more than 100 planes into Lebanon to destroy thousands of rockets in their launches. Hezbollah managed, in the end, to send not 6,000, but 320 missiles into Israel. They were aimed at the Mossad headquarters in Glilot, the Defense Headquarters known as Kirya, and several military bases. Not one of those military targets was hit. Only one Israeli died — a sailor — in the raid, hit by shrapnel from a missile that had been intercepted by Iron Dome. And after Hezbollah published photos of a chicken coop it had damaged in northern Israel, the terror group was subject to endless ridicule on social media by people from all over the Arab world.
The editorial board of the Jerusalem Post praise for the smashing success of the IDF’s preemptive strike, and call for more such actions in the future, can be found here: “Israel’s decisive preemptive strike thwarted a major Hezbollah attack. It’s about time – editorial,” Jerusalem Post, August 26, 2024:
The IAF, in a pre-dawn preemptive raid in southern Lebanon on Sunday, struck at thousands of rocket launchers that were poised and timed to fire at Israel at 5:00 a.m., preventing a major Hezbollah attack and its “revenge” for last month’s killing of its chief of staff, Fuad Shukr.
It’s about time.
Nearly 11 months after Hezbollah – completely unprovoked – started firing on Israel, forcing dozens of communities in the North to evacuate, and upending life for hundreds of thousands of people, this was the first significant Israeli offensive against Hezbollah inside Lebanon.
No, this wasn’t Israel’s preemptive attack against Egypt’s air force on the first day of the Six-Day War in 1967 that determined the fate of that war and altered history, but it was definitely more than Israel has done against Hezbollah since this war began.
Granted, Israel has taken out several senior Hezbollah terrorists, and it has engaged in an effective tit-for-tat response with the Iranian-backed Shia terrorist organization, extracting a heavy toll in men and material since they started firing on Israel on October 8. But this is the most significant military act that Israel initiated to change the rules of the game in play since the war started and to signal to Hezbollah that what was, and what has become a crazy new normal, will not last.
It cannot last. It is unsustainable….
With this massive attack inside Lebanon, Israel has signaled that it will no longer be content with tit-for-tat responses to Hezbollah’s firing of rockets into northern Israel, but will let loose with all barrels. On August 25, it destroyed 5,680 Hezbollah rockets and rocket launchers. And it successfully intercepted almost all of the 320 rockets that Hezbollah did manage to launch toward Israel. Not a single one of Hezbollah’s rockets hit either the Mossad headquarters at Glilot or any of the military bases that were the terror group’s main targets.
Sixty thousand Israelis have had to abandon their houses in northern Israel since the Gaza war began because of Hezbollah rocket attacks. Until now, Israel has not struck with sufficient force to persuade Hezbollah to halt those attacks so that those internally displaced Israelis can return home. Israel’s preemptive strike shows that the IDF in the future is going to be far more aggressive in attacking Hezbollah fighters and weapons, and will do so at any moment of its choosing, without waiting for a Hezbollah attack to respond to.
The preemptive attack is a warning to Hezbollah, and even more, to Hezbollah’s puppet-master Iran, about what the IDF is capable of. And it provides its own citizens, who after ten months of war, that still have not brought the hostages home, a much needed boost in morale.
The Jerusalem Post editors are advocating for more such preemptive strikes like the one unleashed by the IDF on August 25. It should hit Hezbollah much harder, with many more targets hit simultaneously, and more often — without waiting for Hezbollah to strike first. Only thus, they argue, can Hezbollah be forced to stop its attacks on northern Israel so that 60,000 Israelis can return home.
The IDF has already dismantled 20 of Hamas’ prewar 24 battalions. It has killed 17,000 Hamas operatives, or about half of the estimated 35,000 combatants Hamas had on October 7. Among those who were not killed, many thousands must surely have been wounded and are now unsuitable for combat. That means that while the IDF is conducting mopping-up operations in Gaza, many of its troops can turn their full attention to the Hezbollah threat on the Lebanese border. The IDF need not wait for a Hezbollah attack, but can be ready, the Jerusalem Post editors say, “to keep its foot just above the gas pedal in Lebanon, ready to press down and strike Hezbollah with overwhelming force at a minute’s notice.” The Talmud supplies the only justification that is needed for such attacks: “When someone comes to kill you, rise up and kill him first.” That’s what the IDF did so spectacularly on August 25, and it’s what it should be doing from now on.
john blackman says
the idf need to carpet bomb a significant corridor in southern lebanon , for as long as possible and as deep as the bombs allow . even if they only succeed in blocking the tunnels . then they need to continue doing it until all the projectiles cease . as they bomb it the holes will get deeper and eventually they will get the prize . unfortunately the left are israels worst enemy and will complain regardless . thats what happens when you are under the illusion that you can do deals with terrorists . giving them breathing room will only encourage them just as it has done in gaza . they love death , oblige them . shock and awe the way to go , time to get on with it .
Richard Kronenfeld says
Just like the old football fan chant: “Hit ’em again, harder, harder.”
BLSinSC says
Makes you wonder if Israel has a few of those MOAB’s in RESERVE for a SPECIAL OCCASION! It would be awesome for them to just DEMONSTRATE their ABILITIES with just ONE MOAB dropped in Southern Lebanon! That would surely clear some tunnels and give the terrorists something to ponder!
Robert L Wasson says
Israel needs to be careful in its approach to Iran, a nation of 9 million people faced of against a nation of 90 million people.
Rick says
Why would you claim that the Iranian people, who repeatedly try to rise up against the Mad Mullah tyrants who subjugate them, would want total war against Israel if Israel were to shoot the Mad Mullah’s right in the face with cruise missiles?
Or another round of blowing up murderous hajjis in Iran while they’re in their beds?
If anything, Iranians would cheer Israel for freeing them from hajji tyranny.
Billy L. says
Bravo IDF – will await news of preemptive encores at any time.
It’s very unfortunate Hezbollah holds Lebanon hostage in a similar way Hamas does with Gaza.
Personally I think Israel should give the Palestinians their walking papers from Gaza. To where? Surely there is some inland dessert land miles & miles from Israeli populations that would love to be developed. The wilderness southwest of Shitim would be my pick.
Reclaim Gaza in totality from their ungrateful and unworthy occupants who hate you and live for your destruction – including the “innocent civilians”, those giving full support to their terrorist overlords. Perhaps in time some who demonstrate a desire to live peacefully within Israel’s heartland might be allowed to apply for acceptance and relocate closer to civilization. Good behavior mandatory!
In the meanwhile, please enjoy “New Gaza” (in the vein of NewYork, NewMexico, NewEngland, etc) … your desert paradise annexation, far, far away from easy striking distance. Dig your tunnels to your heart’s content in your new sandbox! 😁
Sebatien Zorn says
I looked at a map and the good news is
that Shitim has a population of 4.
The bad news is that I when I googled the question: How far is Shitim from the Negev Nuclear Research Center which I saw on that map when I scrolled up, I got:
“1 hr 32 min (132.8 km)
via Route 90.”
But I agree that the Arabs have to go. They should remain next to Egypt and the Muslim countries need
to be pressured
to allow them to move there without exhorbitant bribes. Many of
them already want to leave, but are being nlocked
from doing so. Chechnya has taken some.