Key Takeaways:
– Hezbollah confirmed the loss of at least 30 members due to exploding pagers and walkie-talkies in Lebanon, with indications pointing towards Israeli involvement.
– The impromptu attacks may provoke further conflict between the adhesive enemies, Israel and Hezbollah.
– Israel maintains a cryptic record of orchestrating complex operations against its adversaries.
– Various high-profile attacks on Middle Eastern figures have been attributed to Israel over the past two decades.
The Spy Novel Strikes Reality
Last week’s attacks involving exploded pagers and walkie-talkies, targeting Hezbollah members in Lebanon, drew real-world parallels with espionage thrillers. Lebanese officials reported a staggering loss of at least 30 people with nearly 3,000 injured victims. Hezbollah’s chief made a statement acknowledging the damage incurred by the Iran-backed militant faction.
Hezbollah’s leader, Hassan Nasrallah, branded the attacks as an Israeli declaration of war. The magnitude of Hezbollah’s retaliation will likely determine whether these hostile incidents escalate into full-scale war.
Israel’s Involvement Unclaimed but Highly Suspected
While Israel has neither confirmed nor denied their participation, the intricacies of these attacks match Israel’s foreign intelligence agency, Mossad’s modus operandi. An examination of Mossad’s partially unclaimed history reveals a proclivity for covert operations, utilizing a variety of means ranging from car bombs to sophisticated malware.
Notably, the past two decades alone have seen several high-profile individuals in the Middle East fall victim to attacks attributed to Israel:
Distinguished Deaths Attributed to Israel
The recent attacks saw Hezbollah’s top military commander, Fuad Shukr, killed in Beirut, followed closely by the assassination of Hamas’ political chief, Ismail Haniyeh, in Tehran on July 31. Israel admitted to eliminating Shukr, but has not publicly acknowledged Haniyeh’s assassination, although US officials have cited Israel as responsible for both.
Last July, Israel confirmed striking down senior Hamas military commander Mohammed Deif, resulting in 90 casualties, including civilians.
In addition to these recent events, there have been several high-profile figures targeted in the last decade. Late 2020 witnessed the murder of Iran’s principal nuclear scientist, Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, using a remote-operated machine gun. Iran has since pointed fingers at Israel for the incident. Other victims include Ahmad Jabari, previous head of Hamas’s armed wing, killed in an airstrike on his car in 2012 and senior Hamas operative Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, allegedly suffocated to death by Mossad agents in a luxury hotel room in 2010.
Israel’s Espionage: Beyond Traditional Warfare
While some of Israel’s highest-profile operations have involved conventional weapons or explosives, others have demonstrated an evolution in tactics. In 2018, Mossad agents made headlines after infiltrating a secure warehouse to steal the plans for Iran’s clandestine nuclear program. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu subsequently revealed these plans to the world during a press conference, accusing Iran of duplicity in its nuclear ambitions.
Looking back to 2010, Israeli and American intelligence agencies demonstrated the potential of cyber warfare by unleashing the Stuxnet computer virus on Iran’s Natanz uranium enrichment facility. The virus resulted in considerable physical damage, creating a paradigm shift in perceptions of cyber warfare and its potential repercussions.