Sunday, November 8, 2009

Nation & World

Hell From the Heavens

Longer-range Iranian arms are Israel's newest menace

By David E. Kaplan
Posted 7/23/06

At dawn on January 31 this year, Lebanese Army troops stopped a suspicious convoy of 12 trucks trying to cross the border from Syria. Inside, they found tons of unauthorized ammunition, rockets, and other weapons. The convoy's final destination: the arms caches of Hezbollah, the radical Islamic political movement whose militia controls wide swaths of southern and eastern Lebanon. A series of phone calls followed, reportedly reaching the Lebanese prime minister's office, until, finally, the convoy was allowed on its way.

An Israeli man in Nahariya with the remains of one of hundreds of small rockets that have terrorized the country
GALI TIBBON--AFP/GETTY IMAGES

The incident was but a glimpse of a vast supply train running from Iranian arms factories and Syrian warehouses to Hezbollah, whose burgeoning arsenal has prompted Israel's offensive into Lebanon this month. For a quarter century, Hezbollah's backers in Tehran have poured arms, money, and men into the group, helping transform it from a ragtag guerrilla force into one of the world's most formidable militias. Interviews with military and intelligence experts suggest that Hezbollah stands almost alone among groups on the U.S. terrorism list. "This is not merely a terrorist group," says Brig. Gen. Michael Herzog, who served as chief of strategic planning for the Israel Defense Forces. "This is a military."

Indeed, Hezbollah's armed force--with a hard core of several thousand men--is equipped with rocket launchers, artillery, and armored personnel carriers. Its soldiers have access to night vision goggles, aerial drones, and motorized gliders. "I have a lot of respect for Hezbollah's capabilities," says former CIA officer Robert Baer, who has followed the group since 1983. Baer spent a couple of weeks with Hezbollah last year, touring its facilities. "You've got some the most experienced operatives in the world there."

Born out of the chaos of Lebanon's civil war in 1982, Hezbollah--in English, the Party of God--is a direct spinoff from Ayatollah Khomeini's Iranian revolution and its vision of Islamic Shiite fundamentalism. Over its first 15 years, the group earned a long and bloody record for terrorist acts: suicide bombings of the U.S. Embassy and Marine barracks in Beirut, the hijacking of TWA Flight 847, and bombings of the Israeli Embassy in Argentina and U.S. military housing at Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia. But Hezbollah's top mission was always fighting the Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon. Iran's ruling mullahs poured as much as $100 million a year into their Lebanese allies, say U.S. officials, and sent large shipments of arms and dozens of trainers from their elite Revolutionary Guards. The investment paid off: Hezbollah's military prowess was a key factor in Israel's 2000 withdrawal from Lebanon, ending an 18-year occupation. At the same time, Hezbollah grew into a potent political force, with elected officials in the Lebanese National Assembly and a wide network of social services, media, and businesses.

After leaving Lebanon, the Israelis watched with growing alarm as Hezbollah dug in along their northern border and amassed a growing arsenal. With Lebanon essentially controlled by Syrian troops until last year, arms shipments rolled in unencumbered from Iran and Syria. The bulk of weapons have come from Iran, say U.S. and Israeli officials. Iranian cargo jets typically fly the arms to Damascus, where they are unloaded and trucked to Hezbollah strongholds in the Bekáa Valley and farther south. Among the shipments: rocket-propelled grenade launchers, automatic weapons, mines, mortars, and, most troubling to the Israelis, huge stores of rockets. It is the unrestrained supply of those rockets--both their number and capability--that has changed the strategic equation and pushed the Israelis over the edge.

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