Hezbollah utilizes advanced video surveillance along border with Israel

Cameras placed on tree trunks & branches provide live video coverage 24/7  to a Hezbollah command center in one of its nearby Shiite villages.

Senior IDF officer: Israel to greatly reduce use of cluster bombs in any future war with Hezbollah.

By Daniel Siryoti, News Agencies and Israel Hayom Staff

 

 

Hezbollah’s intelligence unit has recently completed deploying an array of advanced surveillance cameras along the Israel-Lebanon border, the Lebanese daily Almustaqbal reported on Wednesday.

IDF soldiers at the Lebanese-Israeli border. – Photo: Reuters

The cameras, which were placed on tree trunks and branches, provide live video coverage 24 hours a day to an operations center in one of the nearby Shiite villages in southern Lebanon near the border with Israel.

According to the report Hezbollah has also recently finished rehabilitating its telephony communication system.

Meanwhile, according to a senior Israel Defense Force source earlier this week, Israel would use far fewer cluster munitions in any future war with Hezbollah than it did in their 2006 conflict, even though it would go into southern Lebanon earlier and harder.

The disclosure confirms that Israel already has detailed planning for an offensive aiming to avoid some controversial tactics used in the 34-day push against the Iranian-backed guerrillas.

Israel has not signed the Convention on Cluster Munitions, whose adoption in 2008 was spurred partly by Lebanese casualties of the bomblets, some of which lay scattered and unexploded until they were accidentally detonated by civilian passersby.

“Due to a whole range of considerations — legitimacy, our non-indifference to the treaty, effectiveness and other factors — cluster use is expected to be reduced in combat in the rural areas,” the officer told foreign journalists.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, he said “rural areas” meant “most of southern Lebanon.” The scattering of cluster bombs, whether by artillery or the air force, would be “much reduced, significantly reduced,” he said.

Israel sees the Shiite militia as the long arm of its enemy Iran. Israeli television has reported that 10,000 Lebanese sites are now listed as potential targets — far more than Israel had on its list in 2006.

Guarding northern border villages. – Photo: PP

Suggesting the depth of Israeli intelligence penetration, the officer said there was “more than one Hezbollah cell” in each of some 240 Shiite villages in southern Lebanon. Some have guerrilla bunkers, launch pads and arms caches.

Israel hopes Lebanon can rein in Hezbollah, which acts like a state within a state. If not, the officer predicted a future war would be settled more quickly by Israel, whose forces were fought to a standstill in 2006.

Israel had relied initially on aerial bombing, shifting to a ground offensive only after days of withering guerrilla rocket attacks on its northern towns. Next time, the tanks and troops would go in “very early on,” the officer said.

Israel must also brace for attacks on Israelis abroad, he said. Iran and its Lebanese ally have been accused of several plots. Many may have been foiled, but on July 18 a bomb in Bulgaria killed five Israeli tourists. Iran denied any role. Hezbollah has not responded to the charges of involvement.

Asked whether Israel would see a bomb attack killed many Israelis as justification for launching a new Lebanon war, the officer replied: “My personal opinion? Absolutely.”

 

View original Israel Hayom publication at: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=6267