Biden'sGiven Israel All They Wanted~ Biden Holding Bk.2000lb Bombs forGaza

The United States has given Netanyahu everything this man asked for and more. Was there one of the worst attacks against the Israeli population but now Biden is holding back. Tired of seeing so many kids without limbs and tired of Netanyahu's lies that they are doing surgical strikes. Biden Knows what Surgical strikes are, The U.S. I believe invented the phrase. But there is nothing surgical about hitting a hospital with a tonnage bombs. Netanyahu does not know what he is doing and we don't know who feeds him intelligence but he is doing what he wants thinking that the US is in his pocket like it has been in the past. Everything in life changes and there has to be a realignment of this re; relationship Netanyahu won't call for elections and wants the war to continue because he has to face the court and maybe jail.
This man has the scruples to make "hay" of the U.S. holding on sending them another 2000 lbs bomb. Where was he going to put it?? Some people have suggested to me where but I can't print that here.
 
Smoke rising over the Israeli side of the border with Lebanon during cross-border strikes between Hezbollah and Israeli forces on Tuesday.Credit...Avi Ohayon/Reuters
The New York Times

As the war has raged in Gaza, another battle has unfurled in parallel along Israel’s northern border with Lebanon — a risky game of tit-for-tat that has intensified in recent weeks, with a far stronger foe.

In a measure of the danger of a full-scale war erupting, President Biden dispatched one of his senior aides, Amos Hochstein, to Israel on Monday and to Lebanon on Tuesday to press for a diplomatic solution.

Unlike Hamas, the Palestinian militia fighting Israel in Gaza, Hezbollah has troops who are battle-hardened combatants, and the group possesses long-range, precision-guided missiles that can strike targets deep inside Israel.

Despite apparent efforts by both sides to keep the cycle of strikes and counterstrikes from spiraling into a full-blown war beyond the one raging in Gaza, civilians in Israel and Lebanon have been killed, and more than 150,000 people have been forced from their homes along the border.

But as the fighting in recent days has intensified, so too have fears that a miscalculation could draw the sides into deeper conflict. Hezbollah has said it will not negotiate a truce until Israel ends its military campaign in Gaza, which is likely to continue for weeks or months.

A stronger, better armed militia

Israeli military officials had long anticipated that well-trained gunmen might one day tear across their border, heading for towns and military bases, as Hamas did on Oct. 7. But they tended to look to the north, fearing Hezbollah’s elite fighters rather than the relatively weaker Palestinian armed group.

In the wake of the Hamas-led attack, the Israeli military began rushing forces by convoy and helicopter to cover its northern border, fearing that Hezbollah would take the opportunity to invade. The following day, Hezbollah began launching strikes on northern Israel in a show of solidarity, leading Israel to counterattack in Lebanon.

Analysts say Hezbollah is much stronger now than it was in 2006, the last time the group fought a major war with Israel. That war, which lasted about five weeks, killed more than 1,000 Lebanese and more than 160 Israelis, and displaced over one million people. But a war between the two sides today, they said, could devastate both Israel and Lebanon.

During the 2006 war, Hezbollah fired roughly 4,000 rockets, mostly toward northern Israel, over the course of five weeks, said Assaf Orion, a retired Israeli brigadier general. The group could now likely fire just as many, including heavy missiles that cause serious damage, all over Israel within only a day, he added.

Brig. Gen. Shlomo Brom, a former top Israeli military strategist, said the sheer number of munitions in Hezbollah’s arsenal — particularly its cache of drones — could overwhelm Israel’s formidable aerial defenses in the event of a full-scale war. Hezbollah’s troops are also experienced fighters; many of them fought in the Syrian civil war on the side of the Assad regime, which is also backed by Iran.

“In a no-holds-barred war, there will be greater destruction both on the civilian home front and deeper inside Israel,” General Brom said. “They have the ability to target more or less anywhere in Israel and will aim for civilian targets, just as we will target southern Beirut,” he added, referring to capital districts known to be Hezbollah strongholds.

For Hezbollah, a major escalation is similarly concerning. The Lebanese economy was slumping even before the current crisis, and many Lebanese have little desire for a reprise of the 2006 war. Moreover, analysts say Iran, Hezbollah’s patron, may not be interested in an escalation, preferring to deploy its proxy at a more opportune moment.

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Soldiers in camouflage carrying a coffin draped in a yellow shroud with green trim. A photo of a gray-haired man appears on the front of it.
Soldiers carrying the coffin of Taleb Abdallah, a senior Hezbollah commander, in Beirut last Wednesday, a day after he was killed in an Israeli strike in southern Lebanon.Credit...Wael Hamzeh/EPA, via Shutterstock

Last week, an Israeli strike killed a senior Hezbollah commander, Taleb Abdallah, prompting Hezbollah to step up its attacks on Israel in retaliation. Over the next few days, Hezbollah fired hundreds of rockets and drones at Israel in coordinated strikes, wounding several soldiers and civilians.

“Both sides are constantly challenging the other’s red lines. For now it seems neither side wants full-blown war,” General Orion said.

“But you can easily stumble into it, even if it’s not something they want in principle,” he added.

Despite the risks, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel has faced rising pressure at home to intensify the country’s military campaign against Hezbollah. In the wake of the Oct. 7 attack, Yoav Gallant, the Israeli defense minister, endorsed a pre-emptive war in Lebanon but was overruled. On Tuesday, the Israeli military announced that top commanders had approved operational plans for a potential offensive in Lebanon, without specifying when or if the plans would be used.

Tens of thousands of Israelis from northern border communities remain scattered across the country with no timeline for returning to their homes. And far-right members of Mr. Netanyahu’s coalition have called for more muscular action, including the establishment of an Israeli-run “security zone” inside Lebanese territory.

Shlomi Madar, 58, was greeted by a desolate city when he visited his border hometown, Kiryat Shmona, on Tuesday. He has lived in a Tel Aviv hotel for the past eight months, hoping to return home but unsure whether he would ever feel safe enough to do so.

“You can feel the tension in the air. It’s just insane,” said Mr. Madar, a bus driver. “We’re not going back anytime soon — who would want to return? Who would trust it?”

Since October, more than 80 Lebanese civilians and 11 civilians in Israel have been killed in the fighting, according to U.N. and Israeli government statistics. About 300 Hezbollah fighters have been killed, according to the group, as have at least 17 Israeli troops, according to the Israeli government.

An U.S. diplomatic push

Mr. Hochstein, a senior adviser to President Biden, met with senior Lebanese officials in Beirut to press for a diplomatic solution on Tuesday, a day after meeting with Mr. Netanyahu in Jerusalem.

Israel has demanded that the group withdraw its forces north of the Litani River in Lebanon, in accordance with the Security Council resolution that ended the 2006 war — a demand Hezbollah is unlikely to grant. The resolution stipulated that only United Nations forces and the Lebanese Army would be allowed in the area, but both sides have accused the other of violating it.

While in Beirut, Mr. Hochstein did not meet with the leaders of Hezbollah, which the United States and the European Union consider a terrorist organization. Instead, he met with members of Lebanon’s government — including the prime minister, Najib Mikati — whose influence on Hezbollah is limited.

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Two men sitting in a wood-paneled room with low wooden tables between them. A Lebanon flag is behind them.
Amos Hochstein, left, a senior adviser to President Biden, with Nabih Berri, speaker of Lebanon’s Parliament, in Beirut on Tuesday.Credit...Bilal Hussein/Associated Press

“The situation is serious,” Mr. Hochstein told reporters in Beirut. “We have seen an escalation over the last few weeks, and what President Biden wants to do is to avoid a further escalation to a greater war.”

For Lebanese civilians whose homes lie along the border, many of whom have been displaced by the violence, Mr. Hochstein’s visit offered only a sliver of hope that the fighting might end soon.

“Every time we heard about these visits, we’d pack to return back home,” said Taghrid Hassan, a teacher from the inland border community of Aitaroun, Lebanon, now living in the coastal city of Tyre. “Then our hope fades away from these empty promises.”

KEY DEVELOPMENTS

Netanyahu criticizes the U.S. for holding up some weapons deliveries, and other news.

  • Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu lashed out at the Biden administration on Tuesday for withholding some weapons from Israel. He said he had told the American secretary of state, Antony J. Blinken, last week that it was “inconceivable” that the Biden administration was holding up delivery of some heavy bombs and artillery shells to Israel, which he called “America’s closest ally, fighting for its life.” He said Mr. Blinken in turn had assured him the White House “is working day and night to remove these bottlenecks.” In Washington, Mr. Blinken declined to say at a news conference whether he had given that assurance. He said only “one shipment” of 2,000-pound bombs was still under review over concerns about their use in densely populated parts of Gaza, but other weapons shipments were still flowing. 

  • Amos Hochstein, a senior adviser to President Biden, met on Tuesday with senior Lebanese officials in Beirut, as he pressed for a diplomatic solution to the increasingly deadly aerial attacks between Israel and Hezbollah on the border with Lebanon, which have stoked fears of another full-blown war. Mr. Hochstein said the success of peace talks to end Israel’s war with Hamas in Gaza held the key to defusing the fighting between Israel and Hezbollah as well. “It will take everyone’s interest in ending this conflict now, and we believe there is a pathway, diplomatically, to do it,” Mr. Hochstein said at a news conference.

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