IDF gets ready for Hezbollah along the Israeli-Lebanese border
The IDF has reorganized the way it responds to alerts and deploys troops along the border with Lebanon amid growing concern of a possible confrontation with Hezbollah, senior officers told The Jerusalem Post.The IDF changes — led by the 91st Galilee Division – were done in recent months, in which the unit carried out significant measures to step up its preparedness.The purview of the 91st Division, which consists of the 300th Brigade in the West and the 769th Brigade in the East, spans the entire Israeli-Lebanese border.As part of its preparation, the division rearranged the way it deploys its troops. It formed new tactical units of infantry, tanks, missile batteries, engineering corps, and others in order to increase its firepower capabilities, and to “exact a higher price” when it responds to an enemy attack.
In order to more rapidly respond to incidents, the division recently created a new mechanism to tighten cooperation between different units, including the Navy and the Air Force units that operate in the area.This new deployment was practiced in the recent “Lightning Storm” division drill completed two weeks ago. A major part of the drill was joint work on the “Circle of Fire” – the ability to have multiple units focus on a target and attack it at the earliest possible time.if(window.location.pathname.indexOf(“656089”) != -1){console.log(“hedva connatix”);document.getElementsByClassName(“divConnatix”)[0].style.display =”none”;}The IDF Intelligence Directorate maintains that the Lebanese front is the most sensitive among all of Israel’s frontiers. It said in its recent annual assessment that Hezbollah is still seeking to avenge the death of an operative who was killed in an attack attributed to the Israel Air Force.Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah said in a speech in late August that “Israel needs to understand… If they kill one of ours, we’ll kill one of yours.” That came a month after the organization accused Israel of killing one of its members, Ali Kamel Mohsen Jawad, near Damascus.Hezbollah sees the situation as an “open tab,” and according to Nasrallah’s remarks, it is believed that it will try to kill an Israeli soldier in order to maintain the “equation.”As part of the 300th Brigade’s rearrangement efforts and the steps that were taken to make it more efficient, the IDF decided to reinforce the observation units along the border. That step, along with the reinforcement of its firepower capabilities, was made to avoid sending troops to the fence when the mission could be completed by other means.The idea is to avoid creating targets for the enemy and to use technological tools more efficiently.Among these tools are observation devices, operated by the Combat Intelligence Collection Corps’s 869th Battalion.This co-ed battalion, in charge of collecting intelligence along the Lebanese border, uses a wide range of reconnaissance devices including drones. The unit specializes in operating these tools without being exposed to the enemy, and without their knowing that the soldiers are even there.
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