×
Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please consider supporting us by whitelisting our website.

 

​BY OUR MIDDLE EAST CORRESPONDENT

​ISRAEL’S military has been ordered to punch deeper into Lebanese territory to seize “strategic positions” in a major bid to stop border communities from being wiped off the map.

​In a defiant move that signals a hardening of Israel’s northern strategy, Defense Minister Israel Katz revealed he and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu have officially “authorized” the IDF to advance.

​The goal? A total lockdown of the frontier to ensure Hezbollah terrorists cannot launch cross-border raids or rain down fire on Israeli civilians.

​”Netanyahu and I authorized the IDF to advance and take control of additional strategic positions in Lebanon,” Minister Katz declared. He insisted the land grab is a vital necessity “in order to prevent attacks on border communities.”

​The announcement marks a significant escalation in the IDF’s mission to create a “security belt” on the Lebanese side of the wire.

For months, tens of thousands of Israelis have been forced to flee their homes in the north, turning once-vibrant towns into ghost cities.

​By seizing the high ground and key transit points, the IDF aims to physically block Hezbollah’s elite Radwan forces from reaching the fence.

Advertisement

​The conflict along the Blue Line—the UN-recognized border between Israel and Lebanon—has reached a fever pitch. Here is the context behind Katz’s latest order:

​The Displacement Crisis: Around 60,000 Israelis remain displaced from their homes in the north.

The Israeli government is under immense domestic pressure to make the area safe enough for families to return.

​Following the devastating strikes on Hezbollah’s leadership and communication networks earlier this year, Israel is seizing the opportunity to reshape the “rules of the game” on the ground.

​Rather than waiting at the border to intercept rockets, the IDF is now moving to control the launch sites and observation posts used by militants.

​Critics warn that “taking control” of additional territory could lead to a long-term occupation, mirroring the 18-year “Security Zone” Israel maintained in Southern Lebanon until 2000.

However, for Katz and Netanyahu, the price of “safety” is a boots-on-the-ground presence that keeps the enemy at arm’s length.

Share.
Leave A Reply

Exit mobile version
Be the first to get the news as soon as it breaks Yes!! I'm in Not Yet