Israel, Iran, and Hezbollah manoeuvre in military and political minefields
Credit: Globely News
By James M.
Dorsey
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Hezbollah and
Iran are playing political and military defence in Lebanon.
This week, Hezbollah
successfully fired medium-range missile barrages at Tel Aviv and the Israeli port city of Haifa. Hezbollah fighters have also stood
their ground in fighting back Israeli incursions into southern Lebanon.
It was
unclear whether Hezbollah was refraining from deploying its long-range
precision-guided missiles to avoid further escalation or whether Israel had
successfully targeted its arsenal.
Meanwhile,
Iran braced for a likely Israeli strike in retaliation for the Islamic
Republic’s recent missile attack on military and intelligence targets near Tel
Aviv that could determine whether hostilities escalate into an all-out Middle
East war.
Credit: Washington Institute for Near East Policy
At the same
time, Iran appeared determined to maintain its network of non-state actors as
its primary frontline in confronting Israel.
In practice,
this mainly meant beyond Hezbollah Yemen’s Houthi rebels, who have disrupted
Red Sea shipping and lobbed missiles and drones at Israel, forcing it to effectively close its southern port of Eilat.
In a
potential indication of the setbacks, Hezbollah suffered because of Israeli
attacks on the group’s communications and weapon depots and targeting of its political
and military leadership, Houthi and Iraqi drone and missile
experts headed to Lebanon
to support Hezbollah, according to Elijah J. Magnier, a pro-Hezbollah military
analyst.
Even so, Syria, a key member of the Iranian-backed
network, and Iraq, home to a host of Iran-friendly militias, scrambled to
remain on the sidelines of the escalating conflict.
More
fundamentally, the network, dubbed the Axis of
Resistance, has little to show for itself a year into the Gaza war beyond
adding to the economic cost of Israel’s war in Gaza.
Attacks by
Hezbollah, the Houthis, and Iraqi groups failed to deter Israeli military
operations in Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon or Syria or limit its battlefield
objectives despite forcing the 60,000 Israelis to evacuate their homes along
Israel’s northern border and shutting down Eilat.
On the
contrary, the attacks offered Israel an opportunity to settle scores with
Hezbollah at significant cost to the movement and Lebanon.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi (left) meets
Lebanese Acting Prime Minister Najib Mikati (right). Credit: Al-Manar
None of this
justifies Israel’s war conduct nor does it suggest that Israel has been able to
achieve anything more than short-term battlefield and intelligence successes at
a horrendous human and political cost.
Nevertheless,
with the cost/benefit analysis of the Axis’ year of confronting Israel in
support of Hamas calling its strategy into question, Iranian Foreign Minister
Abbas Araghchi rushed to Beirut last week to defeat Lebanese attempts to delink
the Gaza and Lebanon wars.
Insisting
that a truce in Lebanon could not be achieved without a ceasefire in Gaza, Mr.
Araghchi was responding to Acting Lebanese
Prime Minister Najib Mikati's endorsement of a US-led call for an immediate
21-day halt to the fighting in Lebanon.
Mr. Araghchi
sought to capitalise on the fact that by killing Mr. Nasrallah, Israel may have
squashed hopes for a Lebanon ceasefire independent of developments in Gaza.
In the days
before his death, Mr. Nasrallah signalled his willingness to give a Gaza
ceasefire a chance by tentatively agreeing to a temporary halt of hostilities on
Israel’s northern border.
However, contrary
to Lebanese government assertions, Mr. Nasrallah insisted that his
acceptance of a ceasefire did not decouple the Gaza and Lebanon wars. On the
contrary, maintaining a truce would depend on halting the war in Gaza.
Mr. Nasrallah
unilaterally launched Hezbollah’s war of attrition against Israel a day after
last year’s Hamas October 7 attack on the Jewish state. He consistently insisted
Hezbollah would halt hostilities only when Israel agrees to a ceasefire in
Gaza.
Mr.
Nasrallah’s killing may have undermined his more conciliatory approach.
Lebanese
American scholar Assad AbuKhalil quoted Imad Mughniyeh, Hezbollah’s notorious
military commander who was assassinated in 2008, as saying about concern at the
time that Mr. Nasrallah may be killed, “They would have taken out the most reasonable among us.”
Analyst Mouin
Rabbani suggested the fallout of Mr. Nasrallah’s removal was already visible.
Mr. Rabbani described Hezbollah’s latest missile barrage targeting Haifa as a
“deliberately indiscriminate attack” that “reflects the absence of Hassan
Nasrallah, who considered insulating his constituents from the conflict with
Israel a priority… His successors are likely to
prioritise retribution,”
Mr. Rabbani said.
Mr.
Nasrallah’s presumed successor, Hashem Safieddine, who Israel may have killed in last
week’s bombing of
Beirut’s southern suburbs, is/was a hardline proponent of violence with close
ties to Iran.
In that vein,
Hezbollah deputy leader Naim Qassem, exuding confidence, insisted on Tuesday in
a defiant broadcast that Hezbollah remained a force to be reckoned with despite
the Israeli body blows.
“Our capabilities are intact. The leadership, command and control, and administration of the party function… We have no vacuum… We have increased our missile attacks and expanded the battlefield… Israel has achieved nothing in the seven days” since it launched its ground offensive. Mr. Qassem said.
To drive the
point home, Hezbollah launched shortly after Mr. Qassem’s
speech a second barrage of 100 missiles towards Haifa, the largest to target the city since
hostilities erupted a year ago.
Mr. Qassem
said Israel’s offensive, rather than allowing the 60,000 Israelis to return to
their settlements along the border with Lebanon, would force more Israelis to
evacuate their homes.
Mr. Qassem
supported Parliament speaker Nabih Berri, a veteran Shiite Muslim politician, in
his quest to find a political solution to the Lebanese conflict, suggesting
that Hezbollah would not backtrack on Mr. Nasrallah’s acquiescence.
Mr. Berri is
the United States and France's contact point for indirect talks with Hezbollah
aimed at achieving a temporary ceasefire and implementing United Nations
Security Council resolution 1701.
Adopted in
2006 after the last Lebanese war, the resolution calls for the withdrawal of
Hezbollah to the Litani River, 30 kilometres north of the Lebanon-Israeli
border, the deployment of the Lebanese army in the border region, and the
pullback of Israeli troops from disputed Lebanese territory.
“We support
Berri’s political moves to reach a ceasefire. Everything can be discussed, but
only once there is a ceasefire. We are not begging for a ceasefire… We are
willing to sacrifice,” Mr. Qassem said. However, Mr. Qassem insisted that
Hezbollah would not disarm.
Mr. Araghchi,
the Iranian foreign minister, may not have to worry about Mr. Mikati’s
endorsement of the US-French ceasefire proposal while Mr. Berri may not have
anything to negotiate.
French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot. Source:
Instagram
Mr. Mikati
complained this week that the United States, France, and other supporters of
the ceasefire plan were no longer actively promoting it.
French
Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot barely mentioned the plan on a recent visit to the Middle East,
focusing instead on the need to strengthen Lebanese institutions, including the
Lebanese army.
Accusing
Hezbollah of unilaterally dragging Lebanon into an unwarranted confrontation
with Israel, Lebanese opposition forces backed Mr. Mikati’s decoupling of
Lebanon and Gaza and Mr. Barrot’s approach.
In a statement, the opposition insisted that the
Lebanese army take control of the country’s borders.
The
opposition further called for the speedy election by parliament of a new
president after Hezbollah appeared willing to drop its
demand that the next
president should be a Christian ally of the group.
Hezbollah’s
move could break the deadlock that has stalled the election for the past two
years.
“It is time
to transform our national tragedy into a ‘historic opportunity’ to finally
break out of the cycle of repeating the past and its mistakes, to return to a
common word to build together a homeland of freedom, partnership and human
dignity, a state of sovereignty, justice and law,” the opposition said.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an Adjunct
Senior Fellow at Nanyang Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of
International Studies, and the author of the syndicated column and podcast, The Turbulent World with James M. Dorsey.
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