Hezbollah - What It Is And Why Israel Is Hitting It Alongside Iran
The gloves are off. And the battlelines are drawn. Israeli air strikes in southern Lebanon, targeting areas such as Iqlim al-Tuffah, are not isolated tactical actions. They are part of a broader strategic recalibration unfolding alongside coordinated U.S.-Israeli pressure on Iran. At the centre of this widening arc lies Hezbollah - Tehran's most formidable non-state ally.

AI-generated summary, reviewed by editors
For Israel, Hezbollah is not merely a Lebanese armed group. It is Iran's forward operating arm on Israel's northern frontier. Over decades, the group has accumulated an estimated arsenal of over 100,000 rockets and precision-guided munitions, many capable of striking deep inside Israeli territory. Now that the war has broken out with US and Israel targeting sites in Tehran on Saturday, Hezbollah by all means is expected to function as Tehran's primary retaliatory instrument.
That explains the timing. If Washington and Israel are escalating pressure on Iran's strategic assets, neutralising Hezbollah's launch infrastructure becomes a pre-emptive necessity. The objective is twofold: degrade its missile capabilities and deter it from opening a second front.
However, this carries enormous risk. The November 2024 ceasefire now appears structurally fragile. Repeated strikes, justified by Israel as targeting terror infrastructure, risk pushing Hezbollah toward calibrated retaliation - or worse, full engagement.
The larger concern is escalation geometry. A limited exchange across the Blue Line can rapidly morph into a northern war, drawing in regional actors and potentially threatening maritime routes and U.S. assets.
This is no longer a contained Israel-Hezbollah confrontation. It is the visible edge of a broader Iran-Israel conflict that has begun full scale, moving into overt phases. The coming days will determine how quickly the region slips into a multi-front war few can control.












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