Photo Credit: IDF Spokesperson's Office
Hezbollah in Lebanon

Hezbollah terrorists in central Syria are practicing banging their heads against concrete walls. Seriously.

That’s according to the Arabic-language daily Ad Diyar, which reported Tuesday that the Lebanon-based guerrilla fighters “completed maneuvers” using special equipment to “penetrate” concrete block walls, in an effort to learn how to infiltrate the new border wall Israel is building in the north.

Advertisement




Of course, they’re assuming that their training walls are similar to the security barrier.

“A Western diplomat told his Arab counterpart that intelligence information acquired by his embassy indicates that Hizbullah carried out maneuvers in the central region of Syria last week using special equipment for the penetration of concrete walls similar to those constructed by Israel on the border with southern Lebanon,” the sources said.

“Maneuvers have focused on ways to breach electronic sensors, surveillance cameras and the harmonization between ground advancement and the use of unmanned drones in addition to other exercises to violate Israeli measures along the border,” the report continued, adding that Hezbollah’s actions are “a concern for the decision-making circles.”

The Iranian-backed Lebanese group declined to comment on the report, according to Ad Diyar, which quoted sources within Hezbollah as saying, “The Israelis realize that what they are doing is only to delay the fieldwork of the Resistance and not to prevent it.”

Advertisement

SHARE
Previous articleWashington Post Claims Israel Used Iranian Drone As ‘Pretext’ For Attack
Next articleIsraeli Scientists Find Medical Cannabis Significantly Safer for Elderly With Chronic Pain Than Opioids
Hana Levi Julian is a Middle East news analyst with a degree in Mass Communication and Journalism from Southern Connecticut State University. A past columnist with The Jewish Press and senior editor at Arutz 7, Ms. Julian has written for Babble.com, Chabad.org and other media outlets, in addition to her years working in broadcast journalism.