10-year-old Fatima Jaafar Abdullah was killed in pager explosions in Lebanon.

Israel murders another kid again.

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      I believe the devil’s advocate argument would be that, based on Hezbollah’s internal communications, the Mossad intercepted a shipment of pagers which were being purchased to replace their (potentially compromised) mobile phones, knowing that these were - in theory - being distributed exclusively to Hezbollah operatives. That would make it the most precise military strike of all time.

      Everyone who launches a rocket is accepting the possibility of “collateral damage”, but this is surely the most surgical of surgical strikes in history. And yet, yes, they must have accepted the risk of bystander casualties, which just serves to highlight how awful that logic is. It’s definitely not worse than randomly firing into a crowd, though.

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        That would make it the most precise military strike of all time.

        Pretty sure that honor still goes to the R9X Slap Chop. The pager explosions, on the other hand, injured thousands.

        • HappycamperNZ@lemmy.world
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          Fat electrician had a great video on this.

          Soo accurate that if the target is in a car you need to know what seat.

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          I really don’t get it. Other than the “WAOW” factor, this certainly can’t have been a good use of resources for Israel.

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            They already believed their communications were being intercepted so switched to another method.

            That method then literally blew up in their pockets.

            The amount of fear and distrust of the supply chain can’t be overstated.

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              I dunno man. I just feel like if you’re at the point where you can clandestinely intercept huge amounts of your enemy’s personal communication devices, ‘turn them into bombs’ feels like a bit of a low-yield outcome.

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                Alternately this proves that they still are intercepting their communication AND can intervene in their supply chain.

                I assure you that basically every nation state in FVEY (and then Israel by proxy) has the ability to intercept your communication.

                This is something that ought to be considered as a basic entry level accepted threat.

                NOW they know they have to worry about shit blowing up randomly, brand new stuff.

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                Consider it backwards: Israel sees this attack happening so valuable, that they were willing to forego using the pagers for spying.

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                  Considering Israel’s history, I don’t know how much agreement there would be between my estimation of military value and the current administration’s.

              • CoCo_Goldstein@lemmy.world
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                They thought the pagers were secure communication devices. Now they know they are not. Hezbollah was maybe planning to escalate its attacks on Israel, without good, secure communications, they probably can’t. On the flip side, if Israel decides to invade Southern Lebanon to escalate things with Hezbollah, Hezbollah is going to have a much tougher time coordinating its defense since its supposed ‘secure’ communication system has just been blown up, the previous system (cell phones) what already suspected of being compromised, and now today, walkie-talkies used by the senior Hezbollah leadership have also exploded.

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              This is not normal for cyber ops. The only thing really that makes sense is if they needed to buy time so set off the pagers. Otherwise they just set their compromised communications devices on fire and told them they did it.

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            In which world getting thousands of Hezbolla operatives unwittingly keeping a bomb in their pocket would not be a good use of resources for Israel?

            • Rekorse@sh.itjust.works
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              Because it changes nothing in the long run. So what exactly was so imminent that this had to happen?

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                Hezbollah has been saying for a while it ‘might’ escalate its actions against Israel. Now… that does not seem as likely.

              • nonailsleft@lemm.ee
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                what exactly was so imminent that this had to happen?

                What was so imminent that Hezbollah had to fire that rocket barrage some days ago?

                You don’t seem to understand the nature of this conflict

                • Rekorse@sh.itjust.works
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                  I meant it more like, why blow up the pagers you spent all this effort to compromise. I would have thought that having access to those devices would be worth more covertly.

                  I suppose its possible the only thing they could manage to sneak into the devices was explosives though, since you have to take the board apart to find it. Its likely it looked like a board component too.

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                    These were one-way pagers that, given the scale, were probably used to disperse global messages to footsoldiers or the level right above. Like: “come if for a briefing to the usual spot”. That’s information that Israel can already intercept

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          I guess I should have qualified that to exclude individual assassinations, otherwise you’d have to include snipers and whatever. I almost don’t believe that “knife missile” is real (quotation marks because the only real knife missiles are Culture technology).

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        I feel like people are missing one of the more heinous aspects of this, which is that it injured thousands of people and only managed to kill ~10 of their targets. The outcome of this attack is going to be general terror and potentially hundreds of life altering injuries but very little military advantage.

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          The advantage is huge. 1000s of militants are now seriously injured and are no longer battle ready. Many will never be again. Massive success for Israel, and one of the most precision strikes ever used. Now there will be fear from any communication devise exploding, there will be 1000s of man hours wasted taking other stuff apart to check it, and morale will be down as well.

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            Now westerners will worry when lining up for concerts or flights and the increased security expenditure will impact their economy

            I guess you support ISIS terror attacks as a brilliant play too?

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            How did the compromised pagers not trigger warnings at airport X-rays? I guess lithium batteries and C4 look similar?

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          How did something that only killed 10 targets injure thousands, especially when you are considering explosives.

          I don’t think I could injure 1000s of civilians with only 10 targets killed with an explosive hidden on their person if I tried.

        • nonailsleft@lemm.ee
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          They injured thousands of their targets, killed a few, and only got very little collateral damage

          Nasrallah would shit down his prophet’s throat to get this kind of outcome

      • HappycamperNZ@lemmy.world
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        Correct.

        Killing civilians isn’t a war crime. Deliberately killing civilians, or not taking reasonable steps to minimize civilian casualties is a war crime.

        “Small” explosive that is embedded in something passed to and likely worn by the target is unlikely to be a war crime. If they somehow snuck a 1000lb bomb into one it absolutely would be however.

          • HappycamperNZ@lemmy.world
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            Close - you’re looking at letter, not action and intentions.

            Booby traps are banned for use in ways that are likely to be used by civilians and remove protections on the civilian population. Things like placing explosives on public transport, the side of the road, in marketplaces or protected places. Targeted strikes, like on a piece of civilian equipment that is likely to only be used by the target (cellphone, personal vehicle, laptop) are permitted as they are unlikely to be set off by a random civilian.

            What is a question, however, is if the targets were actually combatants.

      • xenomor@lemmy.world
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        It’s literally a war crime to attack people who are not actively participating in combat. That includes people who are members of your enemy’s military.

        • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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          That includes people who are members of your enemy’s military.

          No, members of an enemy’s military are combatants regardless of whether they’re holding a gun or in a firefight at the time. The only exception is personnel such as chaplains and medics.

          • T00l_shed@lemmy.world
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            Hmmm I guess with Israel having a conscript army then rocket barrages aren’t acts of terrorism. If a large portion of the country is considered “combatants” then any non-coms can be written off as “acceptable collateral damage”.

            • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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              Not unless you’re making a meaningful attempt to target combatants. “All civilians are combatants” is the kind of Nazi shite that Israel indulges in, so I’d thank you to not peddle such grotesque views.

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                  I don’t ascribe to it.

                  Then repeating things like this

                  Hmmm I guess with Israel having a conscript army then rocket barrages aren’t acts of terrorism.

                  in attempting to equate collateral damage with attacking civilians should probably be avoided.

          • xenomor@lemmy.world
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            On the prohibition of indiscriminate attacks:

            “© those which employ a method or means of combat the effects of which cannot be limited as required by this Protocol; and consequently, in each such case, are of a nature to strike military objectives and civilians or civilian objects without distinction.”

            https://www.justsecurity.org/81351/the-prohibition-on-indiscriminate-attacks-the-us-position-vs-the-dod-law-of-war-manual/

            It’s important to note that this is the consensus of much of the international community and the US (and I presume its surrogate Israel) have not signed on to the above provision despite speaking to support it. The weasely approach we (the US) have taken to these standards really demonstrates how hollow our sentiments are when we feign moral authority in international affairs.

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              “© those which employ a method or means of combat the effects of which cannot be limited as required by this Protocol; and consequently, in each such case, are of a nature to strike military objectives and civilians or civilian objects without distinction.”

              Would you like to explain how setting up bombs within the personal devices of enemy combatants is striking civilians or civilian objects without distinction? Or do you think all collateral damage is a war crime?

              Like, fuck’s sake, not every dogshit act by a criminal state like Israel is a war crime. Jesus H. Christ.

              It’s important to note that this is the consensus of much of the international community and the US (and I presume its surrogate Israel) have not signed on to the above provision despite speaking to support it. The weasely approach we (the US) have taken to these standards really demonstrates how hollow our sentiments are when we feign moral authority in international affairs.

              Was this really all just to say “US BAD” and “US PUPPET ISRAEL”? Holy shit.

              • xenomor@lemmy.world
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                First of all, there was no way for Israel to know whether the people they claim to be targeting were combatants when the attack occurred since Israel had no information about the status of these bombs when they chose to detonate them.

                Secondly, placing a bomb in a common device that you have every reason to believe will spend much of its time in the proximity of civilians, in homes, markets and other public spaces, and choosing to detonate it without knowledge of the location of the bomb, or it’s proximity to your supposed target, is actively avoiding distinguishing between ‘combatants’ and civilians. I can’t believe that western brain rot requires this to be spelled out for it.

                • CoCo_Goldstein@lemmy.world
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                  Israel learned that Hezbollah was ordering new pagers to be given to members of Hezbollah and no one else. Every member of Hezbollah is a sworn enemy of Israel. These pagers were to be used for secure communications between members of Hezbollah. It was highly likely that nearly every one of these pagers would be carried by members of Hezbollah at the time they went off (IIRC 3pm local time).

                • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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                  First of all, there was no way for Israel to know whether the people they claim to be targeting were combatants when the attack occurred since Israel had no information about the status of these bombs when they chose to detonate them.

                  So it’s your view that any explosive that isn’t tracked at all times with 100% accuracy is a war crime.

                  Uh. ‘Interesting’.

                  Secondly, placing a bomb in a common device that you have every reason to believe will spend much of its time in the proximity of civilians, in homes, markets and other public spaces, and choosing to detonate it without knowledge of the location of the bomb, or it’s proximity to your supposed target, is actively avoiding distinguishing between ‘combatants’ and civilians. I can’t believe that western brain rot requires this to be spelled out for it.

                  ‘Western brain rot’, apparently, is when someone else disproves your utterly and blatantly incorrect claim about the definition of a war crime and then you flail around desperately seeking another justification for your claim once disproven. Okay.

                  • Keeponstalin@lemmy.world
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                    This is terrorism and a violation of International humanitarian law. It’s not a war crime because Lebanon and Israel are not formally at war; yet Israel just attacked civilians in public, including health workers, and even officials in Parliament.

                    As an attack on Hezbollah militant fighters, sure, fair game. But this didn’t just attack them.

                    Photographs and videos filmed by victims and witnesses to the incident and reviewed by Human Rights Watch showed pagers exploding in various locales, such as grocery stores. Other videos that appear to be linked to the incident show adults and children in emergency rooms with severe penetrating traumatic injuries to their heads, torsos. and limbs, and other injuries consistent with the detonation of high explosives.

                    Hezbollah, in a statement, said that the pagers belonged “to employees of various Hezbollah units and institutions” and blamed the Israeli government. US and former Israeli officials speaking to the media said that Israel was responsible for the attack. The Israeli military has not commented.

                    “Customary international humanitarian law prohibits the use of booby traps – objects that civilians are likely to be attracted to or are associated with normal civilian daily use – precisely to avoid putting civilians at grave risk and produce the devastating scenes that continue to unfold across Lebanon today. The use of an explosive device whose exact location could not be reliably known would be unlawfully indiscriminate, using a means of attack that could not be directed at a specific military target and as a result would strike military targets and civilians without distinction. A prompt and impartial investigation into the attacks should be urgently conducted.”

                    • Lama Fakih, Middle East and North Africa Director at Human Rights Watch
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            18 U.S. Code § 2441 - War crimes

            Prohibited conduct: “(D) Murder.— The act of a person who intentionally kills, or conspires or attempts to kill, or kills whether intentionally or unintentionally in the course of committing any other offense under this subsection, one or more persons taking no active part in the hostilities, including those placed out of combat by sickness, wounds, detention, or any other cause”

            https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/2441

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              -According to Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions, combatants are:

              the armed forces of a party to a conflict, and also groups and units that are under a command responsible to that party for the conduct of its subordinates, even if that party is answerable to a government or an authority not recognized by an adverse party. Such armed forces shall be subject to an internal disciplinary system, which, inter alia, shall enforce compliance with the rules of international law applicable in armed conflict

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                According to this rule, when military medical and religious personnel are members of the armed forces, they are nevertheless considered non-combatants. According to the First Geneva Convention, temporary medical personnel have to be respected and protected as non-combatants only as long as the medical assignment lasts (see commentary to Rule 25).[14] As is the case for civilians (see Rule 6), respect for non-combatants is contingent on their abstaining from taking a direct part in hostilities.

                The military manuals of Germany and the United States point out that there can be other non-combatant members of the armed forces besides medical and religious personnel. Germany’s Military Manual explains that “combatants are persons who may take a direct part in hostilities, i.e., participate in the use of a weapon or a weapon-system in an indispensable function”, and specifies, therefore, that “persons who are members of the armed forces but do not have any combat mission, such as judges, government officials and blue-collar workers, are non-combatants”.[15] The US Naval Handbook states that “civil defense personnel and members of the armed forces who have acquired civil defense status” are non-combatants, in addition to medical and religious personnel.[16]

                Non-combatant members of the armed forces are not to be confused, however, with civilians accompanying armed forces who are not members of the armed forces by definition.[17]

          • Dasus@lemmy.world
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            Which explains why the IDF has had so many “accidents” recently.

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          That is absolutely not true. An easy example to disprove your argument would be the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7th, 1941. The American Navy was caught completely by surprise. At the end of the war, there were some Japanese tried for war crimes, but not for the sneak attack on Pearl Harbor.

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            I’m willing to argue that the unprovoked attack on Pearl Harbor was replete with war crimes by modern standards. I’ve cited some documentation above. Since doing that I’ve learned that there are also specific prohibitions against booby-trapping: https://ihl-databases.icrc.org/en/ihl-treaties/ccw-amended-protocol-ii-1996/article-7 Turns out that Israel has violated many international standards for war crimes and terrorism. It’s simple mystifying to me that any of this is controversial.

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              I’ll quibble with you on ‘booby trap’. Booby traps are like what Russian is doing in Ukraine when they retreat: putting primed grenades next to doors that will be opened when Ukrainian troops come through. Or maybe later if the Ukrainian troops don’t find the booby traps: civilians who come back to the ‘cleared’ areas. This is why booby trapping is prohibited. The enemy might miss it and later on a civilian might come across it.

              The Israelis modified devices meant for military purposes by a para-military organization. These pagers weren’t being sold in local markets to anyone who would buy them.

        • BussyCat@lemmy.world
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          That would make every crime a war crime going back thousands of years where they would lay siege on villages until the citizens starved

    • leisesprecher@feddit.org
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      Not that I think the Israel is the good guy in this conflict, but your argument is pretty weak.

      Pager are designed to be trackable. If you have such deep access to these devices, you know exactly who got called by whom and when.

      Yes, there will be collateral damage, but that’s almost a given in any armed conflict.

      • Threeme2189@lemm.ee
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        If these were one-way pagers,they are not easy to track, as they don’t transmit messages, but only receive and display them.

        • leisesprecher@feddit.org
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          …and you know which telephone numbers send data to the pager and at which time. That is sufficient to track or identify individuals.

          If this is a supply chain attack, the attacker already knows, which pagers are part of the organization they want to target.

          What this thread here shows really well, is that the general population vastly underestimates the abilities of intelligence agencies and technology in general.

          • Threeme2189@lemm.ee
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            You wrote a bunch of things that have nothing to do with my comment.

            The terrorist organization Hezbollah used dumb pagers exactly because they don’t transmit anything, and therefore are very hard to track.

            • leisesprecher@feddit.org
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              No, they are not.

              As I wrote, you can track which pager got paged when. And you can identify who uses that pager. The pager itself does not need to transmit anything for that.

              You obviously don’t know how tracking works.

              • Dasus@lemmy.world
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                You can’t track a pager.

                A mobile tower will send it a message, but since there’s no two-way communication, theres no way to track where the pager received the message. (Even if it was a two-way one, you need at least three good points of connection to be able to triangulate it.)

                So how exactly do you identify who’s using a pager you don’t even know the location of?

                You obviously don’t know how tracking works.

                Ditto

                • leisesprecher@feddit.org
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                  By tracking who sent what to whom?

                  If you know the phone number of a Hisbollah member and they send messages to a set of pagers, these are likely Hisbollah pagers. If you do that to several phone numbers, you get a pretty comprehensive list of members. You don’t need to know, where exactly they are. That’s simply not relevant.

                  And again: if it’s a supply chain attack, you don’t even need these contacts. Just a single entry point into the supply chain of the organization.

                  • Dasus@lemmy.world
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                    By tracking who sent what to whom?

                    And since tracking the devices is actually impossible, how would you know which pager is where and held by whom,

                    Say one of the pagers wasn’t delivered to the person who you “know” it to belong to. Say it got dropped in front of a school. Say another person who has one and even is a Hezbollah member, is visiting a children’s hospital, because they’re people too and usually have reasons to fight (even if their fighting style is immoral to some). Say another is eating dinner with his family. Etc. Etc. Etc.

                    There’s no way to verify any of that. It’s basically just as bad if not worse than carpet-bombing. Unless you implant a device like this on a person and then have surveillance on that person to know where they are and who with when you detonate the device, you’re probably doing a war crime.

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                You obviously don’t know how one-way pagers work.

                You can’t easily track a device that doesn’t communicate outwardly.

                Please track the location of my ceiling fan, it receives wireless transmissions from a remote and beeps in response. Kind of like a pager.

                • leisesprecher@feddit.org
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                  I don’t need your location.

                  Pager transmissions contain a sender and a receiver. That’s all the information you need. If a known Hisbollah sender sends to a receiver, that receiver obviously has some ties to Hisbollah.

                  • Threeme2189@lemm.ee
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                    Pager transmissions contain a sender and a receiver.

                    I agree. Although in this case the receiver does that and only that. No delivery confirmation or anything. Good luck tracking its location.

                    That’s all the information you need

                    How so? How do you track said dumb pager?

                    If a known Hisbollah sender sends to a receiver, that receiver obviously has some ties to Hisbollah.

                    This is a reasonable point. But that doesn’t mean you can pinpoint the recipients location.

                  • nonailsleft@lemm.ee
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                    3 months ago

                    These are literally one-way receivers. It’s like how I can’t track your fm radio receiver

      • febra@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        So which armed conflict in the middle of Beirut are you talking about now?

              • febra@lemmy.world
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                3 months ago

                Then I guess Hezbollah attacking IDF servicemen wherever they might be, including civilian areas in Tel Aviv, is completely okay. Even if it comes to some civilian casualties.

                • CoCo_Goldstein@lemmy.world
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                  3 months ago

                  I doubt if Hezbollah would attack the IDF directly. The IDF is armed and would shoot back immediatley.

                  • tocopherol@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                    3 months ago

                    They have attacked the IDF many times and secured numerous casualities, just recently they struck an IDF intelligence unit with drones killing dozens, resulting in the commander’s resignation.

                  • febra@lemmy.world
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                    3 months ago

                    Oh no, they’ll probably just plant detonation devices™️ in areas where IDF servicemen usually are and hope that no collateral civilian casualties™️ happen. After all it’s a very genuine war tactic and definitely not a terrorist attack

                • nonailsleft@lemm.ee
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                  3 months ago

                  Both of them are ‘wrong’ and ‘okay’ when they do this. But in some way Hezbollah is ‘more wrong’, because they (re)started it. The only result being a lot of useless casualties with no end in sight.

            • leisesprecher@feddit.org
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              3 months ago

              So, what exactly do you think would be a proper reaction here?

              Hisbollah is de facto a state actor in Lebanon. Lebanon is doing nothing against a group whose declared goal is the destruction of Israel, including shooting unguided rockets into civilian areas.

              Now, how would you address that? Unless you have any idea how else to solve this, you’re simply talking out of your ass.

              • Akagigahara@lemmy.world
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                3 months ago

                I hardly think it is necessary to be an expert in Near-East conflict or politics in order to condemn what basically amounts to a terrorist attack.

                Whether or not they should do something is a different issue all together. But dismissing criticism because they don’t provide an alternate solution to an intricate problem is hardly any more helpful. Israel has many more pathways to do this properly, one idea would be the ICJ.

                You’re also falling into an overgeneralization fallacy. While Hezbollah is in the lebanese government, this doesn’t make all citizens of lebanon complicit. Hezbollah doesn’t represent all of Lebanon, neither do Hamas all of Palestine or Netanjahu all of Israel.

              • nonailsleft@lemm.ee
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                3 months ago

                Obviously Israel should kindly ask that they turn themselves over a the border so they can have a fair trial

                • febra@lemmy.world
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                  3 months ago

                  Maybe they should stop their genocide in Palestine. Hesbollah has said on multiple occasions that they’ll stop any hostilities if a permanent ceasefire is implemented.

                  • nonailsleft@lemm.ee
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                    3 months ago

                    They attacked one day after Hamas ‘to keep the IDF busy’. Their long term goal is to destroy Israel and install an islamic state, not keep the peace.