The Conflict in the Middle East Could Get Much Worse
“When I spoke to one veteran military observer of the northern front, he used the term 10X—by which he meant that to imagine an all-out war with Hezbollah, take the current war with Hamas and multiply it by ten.”
Matti Friedman suggests that Hezbollah could worsen the current conflict between Israel and Hamas.
He writes at the Free Press:
What If the Real War in Israel Hasn’t Even Started?
The undercurrents of Israeli life at this moment are darker than I’ve ever seen them: the daily photos of smiling young people, taken at some happy moment before their deaths in combat; glimpses of Israeli girls buried alive in Palestinian tunnels, a short drive from our border and utterly out of reach; a geriatric Israeli leadership uninspiring at best, deceitful at worst; devastation in Gaza; a wall of hate in the Middle East and in growing parts of the West.
But a central part of the dread in Israel is the possibility that the real war hasn’t even started.
Since October 7, most eyes have been on Israel’s south, but as the prophecy from the Book of Jeremiah reads, “the evil will come from the north.” The north means Lebanon, a beautiful, tragic shell of a country under the sway of Hezbollah, the “Party of God,” a fanatic Shia army funded and trained by Iran. This is the northern link of the Iranian encirclement of Israel, a strategy that often escapes Western news consumers accustomed to the fiction that the conflict here is “Israeli-Palestinian.”
When I spoke to one veteran military observer of the northern front, he used the term 10X—by which he meant that to imagine an all-out war with Hezbollah, take the current war with Hamas and multiply it by ten.
The Hezbollah strike force, known as Radwan, is bigger, better trained, and better equipped than the Hamas equivalent, the Nukhba, which was responsible for the carnage of October 7. If the Palestinians have fired 9,000 rockets since the beginning of the war, Hezbollah is thought to have an arsenal of 140,000—not including drones and mortars—with all of Israel in range. The army expects more than 4,000 launches a day, a scale Israeli civilians have never experienced. While this is going on, much of Lebanon will be laid waste by our air force and artillery. “If people truly understood what the war with Hezbollah will mean,” one officer told me this week, “everyone would be doing every possible thing in their power to find a diplomatic solution.”
Hezbollah has already lost more than 170 men in cross-border fighting since October 7, compared to 15 fatalities on the Israeli side. But what Hezbollah has already achieved, even without a full-scale war, becomes clear if you drive up to the border.
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Comments
BTW Jeremiah was referring to Babylonia (which actually was northwest of Judah.) In this case, the immediate threat is indeed from the north. The long run threat, though, is from the east in Iran.
Babylon was NW on a map, but the invasion came from the north. Invasions almost always came from the north (except when Egypt invaded). Nobody invaded from the east because that was desert, and the only potential invader to the south was Egypt.
Jerusalem, too, was always invaded from the north, because that was its only vulnerable side. “Jerusalem is surrounded by mountains”, except in the north. Until the advent of modern warfare in WW1, the city was protected by the Kidron valley on the east, and the Hinnom valley on the south and west, so usually only the north needed to be defended.
Possibly for this reason, the north is associated with chaos and danger. Ancient maps had east on the top, so south was on the right and north was on the left, the sinister side. And the Talmud says the reason the book of Genesis begins with the letter ב is because God made the world unfinished on the north side, and that is where evil can enter. This may be related to the fact that the northermost part of the globe is covered by the Arctic Sea, while the southernmost part is a continent.
See also Joel 2:20