PNN – One of the Zionist analysts admitted that this regime does not have a war strategy and that it is caught in a war of attrition on the northern and southern fronts.
According to the report of Pakistan News Network, Rai Alyum has reported in a report: Israeli security sources revealed that the occupying regime suffers from the lack of a war strategy on the northern and southern fronts.
Ravin Bergman, an analyst of intelligence and security affairs of the Zionist media Yediot Aharnot, quoted a high-ranking Zionist security source as saying: If Israel now moves towards an agreement, preferably in the south because agreement in the north is difficult, it will find itself facing a dangerous war of attrition. If Hezbollah fires two rockets and projectiles a day, then Israel will be forced to launch a massive ground attack on Lebanon, not only to create a buffer zone between Shiite villages in the south and Israeli settlements in the north, but also to destroy Hezbollah and create a safe zone. Does anyone in Israel want to enter a death trap or ambush? We have to look for an official who will find a solution to the disaster for Israel and this is the only point of hope.
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This analyst further reported on the confidential document prepared by General “Amit Sa’er”, the former head of military intelligence of this regime, which was presented on July 23, and it states: Over the years, Israeli intelligence has observed the increase in Hezbollah’s confidence in confronting Israel, and that the Secretary General of Hezbollah has come to a belief that he did not have the courage to do before.
This analyst stated: The ability to survive and confront Israel made Nasrallah an Arab leader with high popularity in the Middle East. In the Second Lebanon War (33-day war), Israel tried three times to assassinate Nasrallah, but failed, and this was due to the weakness of Israel’s intelligence and lack of information on Hezbollah. After the end of the war, Qassem Soleimani provided Hezbollah with all the means to revive this party and enter the arms race.
At the end, Bergman emphasized by quoting informed sources in Tel Aviv: Hezbollah has not used 10% of its strength and is looking for a reaction to the received blows. In the fragmented intelligence circle, officers were instructed to relentlessly seek whether Hezbollah could achieve something similar to October 7th. In any case, the euphoria and drunkenness (after the assassination of Seyed Hassan Nasrallah) among the decision-makers and part of the Israelis should be forgotten because the situation is still complicated.