Israel’s march into Lebanon felt inevitable – but they will want to avoid full-scale invasion

World

Despite mounting calls from allies to cease fire, Israel’s march across its border into Lebanon felt like the inevitable next step after days of punishing air strikes. 

The military has described its operation against Hezbollah as “limited, localised and targeted”.

Israeli forces will surely want to avoid a full-scale invasion given their last ground war in Lebanon in 2006 was costly, difficult and ended in retreat.

Follow latest: Israeli ground forces attacking Hezbollah targets in Lebanon

This time, though, the momentum is with Israel following a two-week onslaught against the Iranian-backed paramilitary force that began with a covert mission to destroy their communication devices and culminated in the death of its leader in an airstrike on Beirut.

It means Hezbollah’s ability to command any effective counterattack against Israel will have been severely undermined.

An Israeli tank manoeuvres near the Israel-Lebanon border Pic: AP
Image:
An Israeli tank manoeuvres near the Israel-Lebanon border Pic: AP

Israel will be wanting to exploit the chaos to fight as hard as it can to achieve its stated goal of pushing Hezbollah forces back from the border in southern Lebanon and take out all militant positions to prevent the group from any longer being able to fire rockets into northern Israel.

More on Hezbollah

Hezbollah stepped up rocket and drone attacks against Israeli targets in the north the day after the 7 October Hamas atrocities against Israel in the south.

The escalating threat prompted Israel to evacuate around 60,000 of its civilians from towns, villages and small farming communities that dot the northern border.

Smoke rises from an Israeli airstrike that hit the southern suburb of Beirut.
Pic: Reuters
Image:
Smoke rises from an Israeli airstrike that hit the southern suburb of Beirut. Pic: Reuters

Read more:
Thousands flee Lebanon for Syria
Is wider war in the Middle East now inevitable?

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has now vowed to create conditions for them to be able to return.

But Hassan Nasrallah, the long-standing Hezbollah leader who was killed in an airstrike last Friday, had days before his death vowed to prevent Israel from achieving its goal.

It means if Hezbollah is able to reorganise its ranks, Israeli forces will face significant resistance on the ground while the rest of Israel could come under a much more intense barrage of missile strikes.

Yet Israel is looking and sounding supremely confident after its ramping up of attacks against Hezbollah and other Iran-aligned groups has yet to trigger an overwhelming return of fire.


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Tehran in particular has so far been muted as it considers how to react to a series of escalations by Israel that could well spiral into all-out regional war depending upon the Iranian response. But the Iranian regime will be all too aware that such an eruption – while devastating for everyone – could put under threat its very survival.

If Israel believes it can achieve its war goals with a limited ground invasion into Lebanon alone, it will surely not seek to overstretch its hand given the potential for new fronts erupting elsewhere at this hugely volatile time.

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