Israeli forces have now crossed into southern Lebanon to conduct what the IDF describe as "limited and targeted" ground operations against Hezbollah. This is the necessary response to years of unrelenting aggression from a terrorist organization embedded in Lebanese territory, one that has turned southern Lebanon into a forward base for Iranian ambitions against Israel.
The IDF makes the purpose of the incursion clear: these actions target Hezbollah's key strongholds in order to expand and fortify Israel's forward defensive area. As the IDF statement puts it: "This activity is part of broader defensive efforts to establish and strengthen a forward defensive posture, which includes the dismantling of terrorist infrastructure and the elimination of terrorists operating in the area, to create an additional layer of security for residents of northern Israel."
One might almost call it common sense, if common sense had not become such a rare commodity in discussions of Israel's security. For nearly two decades, the residents of northern Israel have lived under the shadow of Hezbollah's rockets, its tunnels, and its constant menace.
The time for passive endurance has passed.
Defence Minister Israel Katz stated plainly on Monday that the maneuver will "protect the residents of the Galilee and the North." He went further, addressing the grim demographic reality on the ground: "The hundreds of thousands of Shi'ite residents of southern Lebanon who have evacuated and are evacuating their homes from southern Lebanon and Beirut will not return to their homes south of the Litani region until the safety of the northern residents is guaranteed."
Defence Minister Israel Katz stated plainly on Monday that the maneuver will "protect the residents of the Galilee and the North." He went further, addressing the grim demographic reality on the ground: "The hundreds of thousands of Shi'ite residents of southern Lebanon who have evacuated and are evacuating their homes from southern Lebanon and Beirut will not return to their homes south of the Litani region until the safety of the northern residents is guaranteed."
The message could scarcely be clearer. Hezbollah has chosen to make southern Lebanon its battlefield; it has chosen to place its arsenals among civilian populations; it has chosen to fire on Israeli civilians with impunity. The consequences are now unfolding and for Hezbollah, stuff is hitting the proverbial fan.
Katz and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu have directed the IDF "to act and destroy the terror infrastructure" in villages near the Lebanese border, "to prevent threats and the return of Hezbollah to the area, exactly as was done against Hamas in Gaza in the Rafah and Beit Hanoun areas."
The parallel is deliberate and apt. In Gaza, Israel confronted a similar enemy: a terror group that embedded itself among civilians, used human shields as doctrine, and promised Israel's destruction. The operation there was thorough, costly, and effective in degrading the threat. Hezbollah now faces the same reckoning.
Katz's final words carry the weight of inevitability: "Hezbollah will pay heavy prices for its aggression and its activity within the Iranian axis to destroy Israel. Those who sought to destroy have been destroyed and will be destroyed."
There is a moral clarity here that much of the world prefers to obscure. Israel does not seek empire or conquest in Lebanon; it seeks security for its people. It does not fire rockets indiscriminately into civilian areas; its enemies do. And when those enemies pay the price they have invited, the chorus of condemnation is predictable—yet it changes nothing about the facts on the ground.
The residents of northern Israel have waited long enough. Hezbollah's aggression has a cost, and that cost is now being exacted.
Katz and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu have directed the IDF "to act and destroy the terror infrastructure" in villages near the Lebanese border, "to prevent threats and the return of Hezbollah to the area, exactly as was done against Hamas in Gaza in the Rafah and Beit Hanoun areas."
The parallel is deliberate and apt. In Gaza, Israel confronted a similar enemy: a terror group that embedded itself among civilians, used human shields as doctrine, and promised Israel's destruction. The operation there was thorough, costly, and effective in degrading the threat. Hezbollah now faces the same reckoning.
Katz's final words carry the weight of inevitability: "Hezbollah will pay heavy prices for its aggression and its activity within the Iranian axis to destroy Israel. Those who sought to destroy have been destroyed and will be destroyed."
There is a moral clarity here that much of the world prefers to obscure. Israel does not seek empire or conquest in Lebanon; it seeks security for its people. It does not fire rockets indiscriminately into civilian areas; its enemies do. And when those enemies pay the price they have invited, the chorus of condemnation is predictable—yet it changes nothing about the facts on the ground.
The residents of northern Israel have waited long enough. Hezbollah's aggression has a cost, and that cost is now being exacted.
Am Yisrael Chai.
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