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from Stratfor.com
At this moment there appears to be a major shift taking place in the
war. Though the scope of the operation is unclear, it appears the
Israelis have shifted to a new phase of the war, focusing on broader and
more intense ground operations. It could be that this is the opening
phase of a broader raid-in-force against Hezbollah that might go beyond
southern Lebanon. We do not know this for certain, but it does warrant
alerting our readers to the possibility. Various bits of evidence point
in this direction.
For example, early Sunday Israeli time, an Israel Defense Forces (IDF)
spokesman was quoted as saying, “We have drawn our conclusions from
battles in other areas, we have learned our lesson and are about to
embark on another mission. There is no intention whatsoever to occupy
this region or any other – only to arrive, to act, and when we’re done,
to get out.”

There are reports of new areas involved in fighting and new Israeli
units being engaged. For example, Israeli forces are now fighting in the
area of Qana. This is a few miles southeast of Tyre and deep into
southern Lebanon. We have heard that the Qana action consists of
engineers, armor and infantry, indicating a more traditional combined
arms effort. The engineers would be clearing mines, bulldozing
fortifications and clearing roads damaged by Israeli airstrikes.
Infantry would be clearing the area of anti-tank teams and opening the
way for broader armored thrusts to destroy rear infrastructure and
isolate forward Hezbollah positions. There are additional reports of
engagements near and to the west of the Israeli panhandle in the
Dan-Dafna-Metulla region, along with heavy artillery fire in this
region. This would be the jump-off point for an attack both westward
along the Litani and northward into the Bekaa Valley. There were
extensive reports of a major armored buildup in this area over the past
48 hours. This would also explain the decision to disengage temporarily
at Bent Jbail in preparation for the new phase of operations.
Interestingly, the report about Qana that we have says the attacking
force is from the Nahal Division. According to Israeli media, the
Galilee Division, which normally has full responsibility for the entire
Lebanese border, has been given responsibility for the western half of
the border, while Nahal Division has been made responsible for the
eastern half. If all of this is true and the Qana fighting is being
carried out by Nahal, then the action at Qana represents a drive
westward from the northern panhandle rather than a northern drive from
Galilee division. This is of great importance because it indicates that
the armor massed in the panhandle is moving in a broad encirclement as
per traditional IDF doctrine. Nahal has been moving rapidly during
daylight hours. Ground operations involving the Golani Brigade were also
reported in Taibe last night. If Nahal moved west, it would have passed
through Taibe. If the division were planning on a move north to the
Bekaa Valley, it will need Taibe. The town is in a critical location.
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has canceled her visit to
Lebanon. She is, however, going to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud
Olmert on Sunday night and return to the United States on Monday. If
nothing important were happening, Rice would stick to her schedule. If
the United States objected to what is happening, Israel would postpone
until she left or she would be on the plane right now. Therefore, a
logical conclusion is that whatever is happening makes her trip to
Lebanon pointless or harmful but that she wants to signal that there is
no strain in relations with Israel. If there is a major attack coming,
Washington has signed off on it.
We are approaching nightfall in Israel. If this is indeed a major shift
operationally – and we simply cannot be certain at this point, in spite
of pieces seeming to fall into place – then we would expend rapid
movements of Israeli forces through the night, and we should get a sense
by morning, Israel time, of just how deep they expect to go. At this
point, having made the decision to shift to larger-scale, more
traditional operations, Israel will want to proceed as rapidly as
possible for operational and diplomatic reasons. If the Israelis are
going, they will be going rapidly.
It should also be noted that Israel attacked key roads and bridges along
the Syrian-Lebanese border. This indicates that Israel is not intending
to use those roads to attack Syria (otherwise they would have wanted
them intact) but does want to protect its flank from any Syrian
countermove. It is the least intrusive action Israel can take. They
neither want to attack nor be attacked by Syria.
At this point, if this should take place, we will get a better sense of
Hezbollah’s broader capabilities. Its forward troops seemed to be
extremely competent. Whether troops in other areas are equally capable
remains to be seen. Also remaining to be seen is the effect of the
Israeli air campaign on the militants’ numbers, morale and coordination.
If they are an effective fighting force, we would expect effective
attacks against armored columns using anti-tank weapons and mines, and a
slow evolution. If they are severely weakened, as some reports we are
receiving from Lebanon say they are, the attack will be broader.
Remember that in our view Hezbollah does not expect to defeat Israel’s
main force, but wants to draw it into Lebanon to impose an Iraqi/Afghan
style insurgency. Therefore, an apparent collapse of Hezbollah (as with
the Taliban and Saddam Hussein’s forces) does not necessarily mean
defeat but rather can mean a shift to insurgency rather than
conventional resistance. As the IDF statement makes clear, Israel does
not intend to occupy and expose itself to such actions. It should also
be remembered that both within and outside of Lebanon, Hezbollah has
historically used terror techniques to impose penalties on enemies and
shape the political environment. Hezbollah pioneered suicide bombing in
Lebanon during the 1980s.
In conclusion, we do not have definitive intelligence that Israel has
shifted to a radical new course. This could simply be another phase in a
piecemeal operation. However, given Israeli practice in the past and
political disputes within the Israeli government, we regard it as
reasonable to alert our readers to the possibility of the beginning
phases of a major, more traditional Israeli ground offensive designed to
destroy Hezbollah in detail. We will know more clearly over the next 12
hours.
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