Thread by Mike:
A few thoughts on Operation Grim Beeper.
1) This is one of the most astonishing intelligence operations in history. It is a reworking of the story of the Trojan Horse for the digital age, and it deserves to become nearly as legendary as its iconic predecessor. If we are not utterly astounded, it is because we have seen too many James Bond and Black Mirror movies for our own good.
In real life, operations like this just don’t happen. It is at least four operations in one.
First, the Israelis thoroughly mapped Hezbollah’s supply chain.
Second, they invented a special explosive charge small enough to be inserted inside a handheld device, sophisticated enough to be remotely activated, big enough to do real harm, and yet not so prominent physically or electronically to call attention to itself.
Third, the Israelis turned themselves into a big enough link in Hezbollah’s procurement network to take physical control of the devices and rig them.
Fourth, they activated the charges simultaneously and across a very wide geographic area.
If any one of these sub-operations had been botched, the operation as a whole would have fizzled. Who else in the world could pull off such an imaginative, technically sophisticated and audacious plot?
2) It is the first mass targeted killing in history. Every one of the thousands of persons killed or maimed was selected individually, yet they were hit at the same moment. The great genius of the operation is that the Israelis relied on Hezbollah itself to select their targets for them. I can’t think of another case like this where the attackers just sat back and let the enemy perform a key part of their work for them. If we map the attacked men we map Hezbollah’s org chart, including the blinded Iranian ambassador to Lebanon who is an IRGC officer.
3) The large ratio of maimings to deaths is a sign of success. In military terms, a maiming is preferable to a death because it ties up more resources and stresses enemy systems to a much greater degree.
4) Israel’s mass targeted killing foiled Hezbollah’s human shield tactic. Whereas Israel places itself between its enemies and its public, Hezbollah, like Hamas, places the public between it and the IDF, secure in the knowledge that confused or corrupt Westerners will blame civilian deaths not on the terrorists but on Israel. To be sure, useful idiots like Josep Borrell, the Vice-President of the European Commission will never hesitate to reward Hezbollah for its human shield policy. They will reflexively bleat condemnation of Israel for indiscriminate killing of innocents. But the thinking observer can see clearly that these are clean kills, as clean as one can possibly imagine in war.
5) Operation Grim Beeper was not only conducted within the very narrow rules of war that are imposed on Israel but on no one else, but it is also morally laudable. Hezbollah is a terrorist organization. It is an arm of Iran whose rise across the Arab world has brought death and destruction everywhere it is gained a foothold. Hezbollah worked hand in glove with Russia, Iran and the Assad regime to flatten large parts of many of the major cities of Syria. Iran and Hezbollah cannot be appeased, they must be deterred.
Unfortunately, the Biden administration believes that diplomacy and military deterrence are separate activities and that diplomacy is the morally superior one. The administration reflexively admonished Israel for Operation Grim Beeper and repeated its pious mantra, “deescalation.”
Pressure on Israel to deescalate, however, advances Iran’s and Hezbollah’s agenda. It was they who escalated on October 8, when, unprovoked, Hezbollah opened fire on Israel. That escalation was not designed to help Gazans get a two-state solution but to weaken the American alliance system and to strengthen Iran’s corridor to the Mediterranean and safeguard its nuclear weapons program.
The only deescalation that the U.S. should support is the one that will return Israeli civilians to their homes and weaken Hezbollah’s death grip on southern Lebanon. Diplomacy designed to achieve that kind of deescalation requires military deterrence. Operation Grim Beeper is the beginning of the Israel effort to restore deterrence.
6) Operation Below the Belt — I mean Grim Beeper very likely sowed mistrust between Beirut and Tehran. It quite obviously did enormous psychological damage to Hezbollah by creating confusion in the ranks, disrupting basic communications systems, and leaving everyone from top to bottom in the organization feeling exposed and wondering what Israel will pull on them tomorrow.
But if those pagers came through Iran, as a number of press reports have claimed, it also planted doubt in the Lebanese mind about the reliability of Iranian systems. Many Israeli intelligence operations, including the recent Haniyeh killing, have demonstrated that Mossad has thoroughly penetrated Iran. That penetration has now obviously become a threat to Hezbollah, which has to wonder if it can trust anything manufactured or procured by Iran.
You dared to strike at a smart and courageous nation on October 7th—committing genocide, kidnapping their children, and violating their women. You thought they would fall, but they rose again, returning after 11 months to correct what had only momentarily slipped—their intelligence. Now, they will send you back 1,000 years, to a time without technology, where a ringtone feels like a death knell and a beep is a nightmare. You will be haunted by your own shadow, too afraid to use any technology, cut off from the advanced world. And they will defeat you—not with bullets or tanks, but through the unbreakable will of brave, intelligent people. Over a simple cup of coffee, with one decisive click, they will seal your fate, and the fate of anyone who dares harm their children. This is a nation the world respects. Lebanon—#Hezbollah’s pager attacks and today’s V82 strike are not merely military victories; they represent a triumph for the Middle East over radicalism—a victory not only for #Israel but for all who stand against terror.
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