news-22092024-065941

Lebanon is reeling after facing deadly back-to-back attacks targeting Hezbollah members – with pagers simultaneously exploding across the country on Tuesday, then walkie-talkies detonating in a similar fashion on Wednesday.

Panic, fear, and grief have now gripped the country, with questions swirling about how the attacks could have been carried out, where the devices came from, and whether this latest development could plunge the Middle East into a wider regional conflict.

At least 37 people, including children, have been killed in the attacks, which Lebanese officials have blamed on Israel. Thousands more are injured – many maimed and in critical condition after communications devices exploded in their pockets or in their face.

After warning Wednesday that a “new era” of war was beginning, Israel on Thursday began to strike targets in Lebanon and says its top commander has approved plans “for the northern arena.”

### What happened, when and where?

The first attack came on Tuesday afternoon when pagers exploded at the same time across several parts of Lebanon – including the capital Beirut, and in several towns in the central Beqaa valley, strongholds for the Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah.

Videos showed the bloody aftermath on streets and public spaces. In one CCTV video, a man was picking out fruit in a supermarket when an explosion detonated – leaving him groaning in pain on the ground, clutching his lower abdomen as panic breaks out around him.

Lebanese hospitals were quickly overwhelmed, with limited staff attending to hundreds of bandaged and bleeding patients – some of whom had to lie on the floor as more of the injured arrived.

Almost exactly 24 hours later, Lebanon was rocked by a second attack Wednesday, when walkie-talkies detonated in the suburbs of Beirut and in the south of the country.

One witness, who cannot be named for security reasons, described seeing a man’s hands blown off by an exploding walkie-talkie while attending a Hezbollah funeral. Fires broke out in dozens of homes, stores, and vehicles, with videos showing smoke billowing on chaotic streets.

In a speech on Thursday, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah conceded the group had suffered an “unprecedented” blow. He said the twin attacks had “crossed all red lines” and pledged there would be a “reckoning.”

While Nasrallah was speaking, CNN reporters in the country heard a sonic boom as an Israeli military jet flew over Beirut and dropped what appeared to be flares over the city.

Minutes later, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) confirmed it was striking targets to “degrade Hezbollah’s terrorist capabilities and infrastructure.”

### Hezbollah, Israel, and the World’s Response

Nasrallah said Israel will face a “reckoning” for its twin “massacres.” The head of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), Hossein Salami, told Nasrallah that Israel will face a “crushing response,” Iran state media IRNA reported.

The Lebanese government also condemned the attack as “criminal Israeli aggression” and a violation of their national sovereignty.

Lebanon’s Foreign Minister Abdallah Bou Habib told CNN on Wednesday he fears the consecutive attacks in Lebanon signal a move to an “introduction to war,” calling on the United Nations Security Council and the United States to help re-establish peace along the Lebanon-Israel border.

It’s less clear what capacity Hezbollah might have to launch a counterattack if many of its members are wounded and key communication methods are no longer reliable.

Meanwhile, Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant appeared to reference the attacks on Wednesday during a visit to an air force base – praising the “excellent achievements” of the military and intelligence agency.

“We are at the beginning of a new era in this war and we need to adapt ourselves,” Gallant said.

After the IDF strikes began on Thursday, Gallant said: “Our goal is to ensure the safe return of Israel’s northern communities to their homes. As time goes by, Hezbollah will pay an increasing price.”

It appears US officials were largely in the dark until reports emerged of the explosions, according to three sources familiar with the matter. Israeli officials notified the US that it was going to carry out an operation in Lebanon on Tuesday but did not give any details about what they were planning, the sources said.

### The Mysterious Origins of the Explosives

There are still many questions on how Israel might have carried out its attacks this week – and where the devices that detonated came from.

Hezbollah is highly secretive, and its leader has previously urged families to dump their cell phones to avoid infiltration from Israeli and US spyware. That’s why so many Hezbollah members and their families rely instead on low-tech wireless communication devices like pagers.

The pagers that exploded were new and had been purchased by Hezbollah in recent months, a Lebanese security source told CNN. The New York Times reported that Israel planted explosives next to the battery in each pager, as well as a switch for remote detonation, citing US and other officials.

When CNN tried to trace the pagers’ origin, it found a mysterious supply chain that stretched from Asia to Europe.

Damaged pagers in Lebanon bore the name of a Taiwanese manufacturer – but the company said the devices were instead made and sold by a Hungarian company in Budapest.

Hungarian authorities denied this, however, saying the Budapest firm was a “trading intermediary” with no manufacturing sites in the country.

Making things even stranger, the address for the company’s office is in a residential area – where other people in the building said they hardly saw people coming to work, and that the Budapest company had never physically been to the building.

Late Thursday, The New York Times reported that the Hungarian company, BAC Consulting, was in fact part of an Israeli front, citing three intelligence officers briefed on the matter. The firm was one of at least three shell companies created to mask the fact that Israeli intelligence personnel were manufacturing the pagers, the officers told the Times.

Meanwhile, Lebanon said the walkie-talkies that exploded were a discontinued model made by Japanese firm ICOM.

The devices were not supplied by a recognized agent, were not officially licensed and had not been vetted by the security services, Lebanese authorities said. ICOM said the model was discontinued a decade ago, and it could not determine whether the ones used in Lebanon were counterfeit or shipped from its company.

In conclusion, the recent explosive attacks in Lebanon have escalated tensions between Israel and Hezbollah, with both sides signaling readiness for potential war. The mysterious origins of the explosives used in the attacks raise questions about international involvement and the potential for further conflict in the region. The world waits anxiously to see how this situation unfolds and what actions will be taken to de-escalate the situation and prevent further bloodshed.