English LCCC Newsbulletin For
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For June 13/2024
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
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Bible
Quotations For today
For the Son of Man came to seek and save those who are lost
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Matthew 18/11-14:”What do you
think? If a shepherd has a hundred sheep, and one of them has gone astray,
does he not leave the ninety-nine on the mountains and go in search of the
one that went astray?And if he finds it, truly I tell you, he rejoices over
it more than over the ninety-nine that never went astray. So it is not the
will of your Father in heaven that one of these little ones should be lost.
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It's Decision Time for Israel in the North as Hezbollah Escalates
by Jonathan Spyer/The Jerusalem Post/June 7, 2024
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Escalation on Israel's northern front reached a hitherto unseen intensity this
week. Israel carried out a series of pinpoint strikes against Hezbollah and IRGC
(Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps) targets, both close to the Israel-Lebanon
border and far beyond it.
These included, according to several reports, an airstrike in the Aleppo area on
Monday in which several Iran-linked operatives were killed. Among the dead was
an Iranian IRGC official, Sayeed Aviar.
The opposition-linked Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) reported that
17 people associated with Iran and its militias were killed in this strike.
According to SOHR, the targets were a copper smelting plant and a weapons depot
maintained by the militias in the northern Aleppo countryside, between the towns
of Hayyan and Tamoura.
The dead that were listed
SOHR listed the dead as consisting of two Iranians, of whom only Aviar is
identified as a "military adviser;" three members of Lebanese Hezbollah; three
Iraqi citizens (probably members of IRGC-associated Shi'ite militias); and nine
Syrian citizens.
SOHR is pro-opposition, and the reliability of its reporting has in the past
been questioned, especially by voices sympathetic to the Assad regime and its
allies. While no source's claims should be accepted on trust, I can attest from
personal experience to the truth of its claim to maintain extensive sources on
the ground in Syria, and to the ability this has often given it to receive first
reports of events in the country that were later proven to be accurate.
The Iranians wanted to set the price for Israel's direct targeting of Iranian
IRGC personnel at a sufficiently high rate that Israel would think twice about
carrying out such activity again.
The Aleppo strike was only one of a series of targeted killings apparently
carried out by Israel in recent days. It is of particular significance, however,
because it is the first time since April 1 that Israel is known to have killed
an IRGC operative on Syrian soil. The killing of IRGC general Mohammed Reza
Zahedi in Damascus on April 1 triggered the large-scale direct Iranian attack on
Israel on the night of April 13.
The Iranian rationale for the April response appears to have been not to launch
all-out war with Israel (had they wanted that, they would have brought their
main source of firepower against Israel, Lebanese Hezbollah's missile array,
into operation).
Rather, the Iranians wanted to set the price for Israel's direct targeting of
Iranian IRGC personnel at a sufficiently high rate that Israel would think twice
about carrying out such activity again. This week, Israel appears to have
dismissed this Iranian effort. It remains to be seen if, and how, Tehran will
respond.
More broadly, Israel's strikes this week successfully targeted several notable
Hezbollah operatives. The movement has named three members killed in south
Lebanon in recent days – Ali Hussein Sabra, Muhammed Shakr, and Hussein Nasr
al-Din. Of these, Sabra appears to have been the most significant. An engineer
involved in Hezbollah's air defense structure, Sabra was killed when his car was
targeted while driving close to the city of Tyre on Monday morning.
The intensified Hezbollah response in the subsequent days is clearly related to
this continued successful targeting by Israel of Hezbollah fighters. The
organization launched rocket barrages at Katzrin, Kiryat Shmona, and Margaliot.
The firing resulted in the large brushfires in the Katzrin and Ramim Ridge
areas. Hezbollah also scored a significant achievement late last week with the
downing of an Israeli Hermes 900 drone.
The current situation in the North appears to be in a sort of unsustainable
equilibrium. On the one hand, Israel is scoring tactical successes daily. The
casualty figures – around 330 Hezbollah dead to 14 IDF soldiers and 10 Israeli
civilians – reflect this.
The intensified Hezbollah response in the subsequent days is clearly related to
this continued successful targeting by Israel of Hezbollah fighters.
On the other hand, Israel has proven unable until now to turn these tactical
achievements into a desirable outcome. That is, the current rate of attrition is
clearly not forcing Hezbollah to rethink its decision to continue rocket and
missile fire. As a result, Israel's North remains shut down, with over 60,000
Israelis currently internally displaced, and no solution in sight.
WHAT MAY happen next? The Arabic-language Al-Akhbar newspaper, which supports
Hezbollah, this week published a gleeful article titled "Hezbollah's rocket fire
is devouring the Galilee." The article listed areas struck by Hezbollah rocket
and drone attacks.
As has become usual in pro-Hezbollah media, it also included false claims of the
deaths of several IDF soldiers as a result of the attacks. Claims of this kind
have become common in pro-Hezbollah media, where the great discrepancy in deaths
and casualties is explained away to supporters by the assertion that Israel is
falsely concealing its true casualty figures.
In another article, titled "Message from London: The return of the threat of
war," on US envoy Amos Hochstein's current diplomatic efforts in Lebanon,
al-Akhbar describes what it refers to as "a message from the British side, which
defined a date for an Israeli strike in mid-June."
The article posits an imminent large-scale Israeli military operation, which
would be intended to break the current logjam and force Hezbollah to choose
between taking a step back and further escalation.
Unless Israeli policymakers want to tacitly concede that the current situation
is an acceptable one for Jerusalem, the logic leads toward intensified military
operations in the North.
Might such an operation be imminent? It would certainly make sense. The current
situation is one in which an Iranian proxy organization has been granted the
power to bring life in Israel's North to a standstill, in return for accepting
an unpleasant but bearable rate of attrition of its own operatives and
capacities.
The current lies regarding Israeli casualty figures by Hezbollah-associated
media are a sign of distress. But there is no reason to believe that this
discomfort is anywhere close to the level that would force the movement and its
patrons in Tehran to rethink their strategy since October 8 of a limited
multi-front war against Israel and its allies.
So unless Israeli policymakers want to tacitly concede that the current
situation is an acceptable one for Jerusalem, the logic leads toward intensified
military operations in the North, probably involving increased airstrikes and
possibly some ground component, too.
IT IS difficult to speculate the precise form that such action might take. But
Israel will need to take into account that it has no local allies in south
Lebanon, and any desire to push Hezbollah north of the Litani River through a
ground maneuver would need to consider that Hezbollah would likely return south
following such a move.
It is likely also that any escalation against Hezbollah would be counter to the
wishes of the US administration. In an interview this week, Hochstein expressed
continued hope for the possibility of reaching "understandings" between the
sides, leading to an eventual land border agreement between Israel and Lebanon.
Such sentiments are starkly at odds with a reality in which the IRGC's local
franchise is now by far the strongest political and military player in Lebanon.
The choice, a much grimmer one now because of the long period of drift, is
whether to destroy those forces or to allow them to continue their strategy of
Israel's slow strangulation.
Still, where strategic myopia is the issue, there is plenty of blame to go
around. The present situation in which Hezbollah is shutting down northern
Israel is possible because for nearly 20 years, Israel allowed the development,
growth, and strengthening of two Iran-supported Islamist armies on its borders.
While this was happening, the Israeli security system took great pride in its
tactical achievements against these forces, while failing in any serious way to
arrest their growth. These armies are now engaged against Israel, with all that
it implies.
The choice, a much grimmer one now because of the long period of drift, is
whether to destroy those forces or to allow them to continue their strategy of
Israel's slow strangulation. This is not a choice that can be postponed
indefinitely.
**Jonathan Spyer is director of research at the Middle East Forum and director
of the Middle East Center for Reporting and Analysis. He is author of Days of
the Fall: A Reporter's Journey in the Syria and Iraq Wars (2018).
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