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As Israel officially began its invasion of south Lebanon this week, a sense of dĂ©jĂ vu immediately struck people who have been or observing Israelâs year-long war on Gaza.
Whether tactics known as âfire beltsâ; blocks; Ìęentire villages; dehumanising civilians as âhuman shieldsâ; and journalists; or even calling for building settlements, Israel is now openly copying its brutal tactics from Gaza in Lebanon, after the world allowed it to get away with flagrant war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Since Israelâs exploding pagers operation that killed 42 and wounded over 3,500, the Israeli military has exploited the ensuing chaos to escalate its bombing of Lebanon. In a single day, Israeli warplanes struck 1,600 targets and killed over 500 people, including 35 children.
In the daily airstrikes on Lebanon since, one tactic in particular stands out as reminiscent of its strategy in Gaza: âfire beltsâ or ârings of fireâ. This concept of bombs simultaneously on and around a targeted area, maximising devastation and destruction, and amounting to indiscriminate bombing.
The concept of fire belts was developed by the 2019-2023 Israeli army Chief of Staff Aviv Kohavi in his multi-year plan, which replaced his predecessor Gadi Eisenkotâs ââ, premised on quick, decisive war. âTnufaâ is and relies on the use of high and intense levels of firepower by air, land, and sea.
Israel first deployed this âfire beltâ tactic in Gaza in its 2021 war, âGuardians of the Wallâ. The Israeli armyÌę a residential bloc in central Gaza with some of its heaviest missiles, killing 44 civilians, and claimed to have aimed for a tunnel they presumed existed underneath without any precise intelligence about its location, size or significance.
The line of thought was that if there was a tunnel in that area, and they dropped a bomb every few meters, they would inevitably hit the tunnel.
Since 7 October, however, Israel began deploying fire belt tactics more widely and more aggressively, not aiming for tunnels, but rather to flatten entire residential neighbourhoods, decimate whole villages, maximise causalities, and force them to flee.
Such a modus operandi compelled even Israelâs staunchest supporter, Joe Biden, to Israelâs âindiscriminate bombingâ of Gaza.
Now, in southern Lebanon, Israel has similarly been ' consistently in after the pager explosions, with the same aim of terrorising the population to their homes and flee north of the Litani river.
Israel also deployed 'fire belts' in the assassination of Hassan Nasrallah, where instead of a targeted airstrike on Hezbollahâs leader, the Israeli army dropped over eighty 2,000-pound âbunker-busterâ bombs on six high-rise buildings, killing at least 300 residents.
This was perhaps to dramatise the assassination and strike fear into the hearts of spectators, who were shocked at the vast destruction.
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As soon as the Israeli invasion formally started on Monday, Israel ordered all inhabitants of to âevacuate immediatelyâ northwards of the Litani River. Israel then started carrying out and âfire beltsâ on some of those villages on the same day to cause panic and prompt civilians to abandon their homes en masse.
This tactic was almost identical to what Israel applied in Gaza in the early phase of the war. In October 2023, it cut the Gaza Strip in two halves, declaring the northern half a military zone, and ordering over 1.4 million people to âmove southâ.
Then Israel began heavily bombing the north indiscriminately and targeting vital infrastructure such as bakeries, solar panel installations, and water treatment and storage facilities. Whenever the Israeli military was challenged over the high civilian death toll in the north, it would âbut we told them, move southâ.
The Israeli military officially in the north as a âpartner to a terrorist organisationâ, including the elderly, disabled, and pregnant women who couldnât flee. Israel repeated the north Gaza mass forcible expulsion tactic in southern Gaza in Khan Younis, Rafah, Al-Bureij, al-Maghazi, and other areas until it of the population and squeezed people in the south into the tiny and constantly bombed al-Mawasi tent city.
The Israeli military also designated as âexterminationâ or âkillâ zones any area its ground troops invaded, subsequently shooting at anything that moved.
Israelâs most watched TV station, Channel 12, these mass displacement tactics were not about moving civilians out of harmâs way, but rather were designed as tools of collective punishment and psychological warfare to create pressure on the population and thereby Hamas.
For instance, when Hamas fired a rocket from Khan Younis in July, the Israeli army promptly displaced the entire city and forced 250,000 civilians to flee despite having no intention of carrying out any military operations there.
The ground invasion of Lebanon now portends a repetition of these ethnic cleansing and psychological tactics deployed in Gaza, disguised as âhumanitarian evacuation ordersâ.
In Gaza,ÌęIsrael doesnât in practice use between âcombatantâ and âcivilianâ, but ratherÌę. Hamas in Gaza is the local government, a political party, a militant organisation, and also runs a number of charities. In Israelâs eyes, any Hamas non-combatant member, including civil servants, is âinvolvedâ and therefore a legitimate target.
The implication of this is given Hamasâ integration in society and that Gaza is one of the most densely populated and built-up areas on earth, with over 90% of the population now displaced into tinier, overcrowded, and heavily bombed âsafe zonesâ, there is a potential âtargetâ for Israel in virtually every building, and on every street. The civilians present, despite having nowhere to flee, are, according to Israel, merely âhuman shieldsâ.
Similarly, Israel made clear in the exploding pagers attack that it considers anyone affiliated with Hezbollah to be fair game. The pagers were not in the possession of combatants alone, but also in the pockets of political members, advisers, administrative staff, Hezbollahâs medics, and even Iranâs ambassador to communicate securely with the party.
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Israelâs most repeated justification whenever its military kills scores of Gazan civilians has always been the refrain of âhuman shieldsâ. This is despite ,Ìę, theÌę, and Ìęnever finding evidence of shielding in the wars where Israel has used that claim incessantly.
Israel is now repeating the âhuman shieldsâ libel in Lebanon in exactly the same way it did in Gaza; whether concerning the 300 victims killed in the strike on Nasrallah or people who refused to be displaced from their villages. The Israeli military even released an embarrassing claiming Lebanese civilians store ballistic missiles in their living rooms. The same CGI stunt was used to falsely claim thatÌęal-Shifa hospital in Gaza was standing atop a giant underground tunnel city.
Under international law, using civilians as human shields alongside you. It doesnât mean operating in an area that happens to have civilians around. According to international law scholar Asli BĂąli, the âdeliberate placement of civilians in proximity to military objectives during a conflictâ defines human shielding, ânot the presence of civilians in densely populated areas from which armed groups also operateâ.
Virtually fights from within the civilian population to overcome the asymmetry of power. This was the case in the American Revolution, Italy's Risorgimento, Malaysia, India, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Algeria, Angola, and even for pre-Israel Zionist militias.
Guerrilla warfare and âpeopleâs warsâ don't make civilians a legitimate target, even if combatants are nearby. The Additional Protocol to the Fourth Geneva Convention explicitly states that the presence of fighters in an area âshall not release the Parties to the conflict from their legal obligations with respect to the civilian populationâ.
Ironically, the only actual well-documented human shielding committed since 7 October has been , including dressing Gazan detainees in Israeli uniforms and forcing them against their will to inspect potential boobytraps and tunnels.
Muhammad Shehada is a Palestinian writer and analyst from Gaza and the EU Affairs Manager at Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor.
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