economie

Israel faces a major issue in how deep it should go in Lebanon, security experts say

Israeli army tanks were deployed in the Upper Galilee region of northern Israel near the border with Lebanon on September 29, 2024.

Sabet of the Geneva Graduate Institute said an Israel offensive in Lebanon will be “distinct” from the one in Gaza in that the IDF would be operating on a “much larger” territory against a “bigger and more sophisticated” adversary.

While the Gaza Strip is about 140 square miles in size, Lebanon is about 4,036 square miles.

Hezbollah is also estimated to have stockpiles of up to 200,000 missiles.

Burcu Ozcelik, a senior research fellow for Middle East Security at the UK’s Royal United Services Institute, said that the IDF’s limited ground raids across the Lebanese border would expose its troops to combat with Hezbollah fighters on a terrain that is Hezbollah’s “home turf,” and where it commands control over military infrastructure and local communities.

“This is not an area that is peppered with densely populated urban centers in the way the Gaza Strip is,” she told BI.

Raleigh and Mehvar of ACLED, meanwhile, said the nature of the operation in Lebanon differs from those in Gaza. Israel isn’t fighting against Lebanon’s government — unlike the de facto government in Gaza, they said.

As such, they do not expect an “extensive carpet bombing” and “ferocity” like the one seen in Gaza.

“Israel’s objective is to ‘diminish’ Hezbollah’s military capabilities and push it away from the border,” they said.

How far it should go

Israel has spent months conducting airstrikes and raids into southern Lebanon to degrade Hezbollah’s capabilities.

Smoke billowed from the area as a result of the Israeli army’s attacks on the town of Hiyam in Nabatieh, Lebanon, on September 30, 2024.

However, it remains unclear how deep Israel’s ground incursions might go, according to Raleigh and Mehvar.

They said the IDF will likely not extend beyond southern Lebanon due to the risk of getting “increasingly” entangled in a new “prolonged” conflict in southern Lebanon.

They added that “Hezbollah still retains much of its capability, including the missile stockpiles it has built up since 2006, which could be used against Israeli military and civilian targets.”

Sabet, meanwhile, said that history is “strewn” with examples of countries whose militaries entered the territory of another country for limited military operations but ended up engaged in costly and damaging long-term wars.

He mentioned Israel’s own “costly” experiences of invasion in Lebanon, including the Second Israeli Invasion of Lebanon of 1982 and the Second Lebanon War in 2006.

Since the Hamas October 7 terror attacks on Israel last year, Israel’s economy has suffered, with its GDP contracting by 20.7% in the last quarter of 2023.

In the long run, the war in Gaza alone could cost Israel 10% of its annual GDP, Yannay Spitzer, an assistant professor specializing in economic history and applied microeconomics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, told The Media Line last month.

However, those sums, and Israel’s overall military calculations, could quickly change if Iran gets involved on the side of Hezbollah in Lebanon.

A senior US administration official told outlets on Tuesday, that Iran was preparing to launch a ballistic missile attack on Israel.

“We are actively supporting defensive preparations to defend Israel against this attack,” the official said.

During a speech last week at the UN, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gave a warning to the “tyrants of Tehran,” saying: “If you strike us, we will strike you.”

He added: “There is no place in Iran that the long arm of Israel cannot reach.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

https://www.businessinsider.com/israel-faces-dilemma-how-far-go-army-lebanon-hezbollah-experts-2024-10