(Reuters) - Israel
believes the militant group Hezbollah has probably dug tunnels across
the border from Lebanon in preparation for any future war although it
has no conclusive evidence, an Israeli army general said on Wednesday. Israel's vulnerability
to tunnels was laid bare during its war against Hamas in Gaza in July
and August. What began as shelling exchanges with Hamas escalated into a
ground offensive after Palestinian militants used dozens of secret
passages dug from Gaza into Israel to launch surprise attacks. Residents
of northern Israel, who were battered by Hezbollah rockets during a
month-long war in 2006, have at times reported underground noises
suggesting that guerrillas were burrowing across the frontier in a new
tactic. The Israeli military says searches it has carried out have
turned up nothing. "We
have no positive information meaning that there are tunnels. The
situation is not similar to what there was around the Gaza Strip,"
Major-General Yair Golan, commander of Israeli forces on the Lebanese
and Syrian fronts, told Army Radio. "That
said, this idea of going below ground is not foreign to Lebanon and is
not foreign to Hezbollah and so we have to suppose as a working
assumption that there are tunnels. These have to be looked for and
prepared for." Hezbollah
does not comment on its military capabilities. Spurred by the Gaza
experience, the Israelis say they hope to develop effective
tunnel-hunting technologies within two years. Golan said Hezbollah, which is fighting on the side of President Bashar al-Assad in the civil war in Syria, appeared unlikely to seek a renewed conflict with Israel. Were
that to happen, he said, Israel would hit Lebanese targets hard but
would also suffer from a Hezbollah rocket arsenal believed to be 10
times more potent than Hamas's. There
have been occasional attacks along the border in recent weeks, however,
including a roadside bomb planted by Hezbollah that wounded an Israeli
soldier. Israel responded by firing artillery shells into southern
Lebanon. "We will not be
able to provide the umbrella that was provided in the south by Iron
Dome," Golan said, referring to an aerial interceptor system which
Israeli and U.S. officials say scored a 90 percent shoot-down rate
against Gazan rockets. "We
and Hezbollah are conducting a kind of mutual-deterrence balance," he
said, while cautioning that isolated flare-ups on the border could still
boil over into war. "There
is no absolute deterrence. Each side has its pain threshold, its
restraint threshold, which when passed prompt it to take action."
Israel 'assumes' Hezbollah has tunneled across Lebanon border
Reuters
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