Wall Street Journal: Hezbollah's huge arsenal awaits Israel. You'll drown it in another swamp


https://www.saba.ye/en/news3376510.htm

Yemen News Agency SABA
Wall Street Journal: Hezbollah's huge arsenal awaits Israel. You'll drown it in another swamp
[25/ September/2024]
Washington - Saba: The American newspaper "Wall Street Journal" commented on the negative repercussions that the Zionist enemy entity will face in the event of a ground aggression on southern Lebanon, after escalating its attacks against it, from committing the electronic massacre through the bombing of "pagers" and wireless communication, the aggression on the southern suburbs of Beirut, and then the widespread and intensive aggression on the south and the Bekaa.

Although Israel has launched violent attacks on Lebanon, which have shown "superiority in intelligence gathering and technology, while showing Hezbollah in a defensive position," the picture is likely to turn in the event of a ground war in Lebanon, according to the newspaper, as Israel will then fight on Hezbollah soil, and its advantages in technology and intelligence will not be the decisive factor.

The newspaper reported that Hezbollah, which continued to strike targets belonging to the Zionist entity for about a year in support of the resistance in the Gaza Strip, has maintained "a huge arsenal of missiles, anti-tank missiles and drones," which it can deploy in the face of Zionist advances, should a ground war occur.

Among Hezbollah's "new and most dangerous" weapons is the diamond anti-tank guided missile, according to the Wall Street Journal, which gives Hezbollah "a much higher degree of accuracy in its strikes than in 2006," when the last war between Hezbollah and Israel took place, and when Zionist estimates indicated that "Hezbollah possessed about 12,000 rockets and missiles."

Military analysts believe that the diamond is "a reverse version of the Zionist Spike missile, which Hezbollah likely acquired and sent to Iran in 2006," which was confirmed by a commander in the cross-squares resistance in February.

At the time, the leader of the resistance revealed that "diamonds" developed from the Zionist "Gail Spike" missiles, and talked about the resisters seizing a fist of "Gail Spike" in 2006, after the occupation soldiers left it and fled, to transfer the fists later to Iran.

Going back to what the Wall Street Journal reported, Almas can be compared to other advanced anti-tank missiles, such as the American Javelin in that "diamonds allow Hezbollah to hit targets with greater precision than in past years when it relied mainly on unguided missiles."

In the face of all this, the newspaper believed that Israel would face what it faced in 2006, when it "ended in a dead end," and that if the ground war occurs, it will turn, "just like in Gaza, into a quagmire for Israel."