Israel Finds Last Hezbollah Tunnel, Ending Mission on Lebanese Border

YERUSHALAYIM (AP) —
Activity to locate the terror tunnels. (IDF Spokesperson)

IDF troops discovered the sixth and final tunnel dug by Hezbollah terrorists for cross-border attacks, the military announced Sunday, saying it was wrapping up its operation along the Lebanese border.

IDF troops at the terror tunnel. (IDF Spokesperson)

The final tunnel was the largest one discovered so far, running hundreds of yards from under a Lebanese home and deep into Israeli territory, military spokesman Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus said.

Israel launched “Operation Northern Shield” early last month to detect and destroy what it called a vast network of Hezbollah tunnels aimed for militants to sneak across the border and carry out attacks.

Conricus said the latest tunnel originated from the Lebanese border town of Ramyeh.

A view inside the terror tunnel. (IDF Spokesperson)

It was 55 meters deep and ran 800 meters inside Lebanese territory and also “dozens” of meters into Israel, he said. It included stairs, a rail system and a wide passageway that allowed for the movement of equipment and a large number of forces.

The tunnel would be destroyed in the coming days, Conricus said, adding that while more tunnels still existed on the Lebanese side of the border, this effectively marked the end of the ambitious military operation.

“We have achieved the goal that we set out to achieve a month and a half ago,” he said. “According to our intelligence, there are no longer any cross-border attack tunnels into Israel.”

Israel and the United Nations say the tunnels violate a ceasefire resolution that ended a devastating war between Israel and Hezbollah in 2006. Conricus says the U.N. peacekeeping mission, known as UNIFIL, had been updated on the latest development.

The powerful Hezbollah terror group, which acts independently in Lebanon, has yet to comment on the Israeli discoveries.

Inside the terror tunnel. (IDF Spokesperson)

Israel has long called for a crackdown on the Iran-backed Hezbollah, a heavily armed mini-army that is believed to possess an arsenal of some 150,000 rockets that can reach nearly all of Israel. In recent years, Hezbollah has been bogged down with fighting in Syria on behalf of Syrian President Bashar Assad’s government. But with that civil war winding down, Israeli security officials fear Hezbollah is refocusing its attention on Israel.

In the wake of its discoveries, Israel has asked the international community to impose tough sanctions on Hezbollah and begin to act against its state-within-a-state operation in Lebanon.

The IDF said its forces would stay deployed along the border area to monitor  any other possible underground activity, and said it holds the Lebanese government responsible for everything happening in its territory.

News of the operation’s conclusion comes in the final week of IDF outgoing Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Gadi Eisenkot’s four-year tenure. The latest discovery, coupled with a weekend strike against suspected Iranian and Hezbollah sites near the Damascus International Airport that is attributed to Israel, was perceived in Israeli media as Eisenkot’s “parting shot” as he leaved office.

He gave a series on interviews over the weekend summarizing his term and focusing on shifting the Israeli military’s attention toward Iran directly instead of just engaging its lesser proxies, Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza. In a New York Times interview published on Friday Eisenkot said that Israel “has struck thousands of targets without claiming responsibility or asking for credit” as part of a shadow showdown with Qassim Suleimani, the commander of Iran’s elite Quds Force.

Eisenkot also revealed that the government approved his shift in strategy in January 2017, stepping up air strikes in Syria. In 2018 alone, he said Israel’s air force dropped 2,000 bombs in Syria.

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