海角大神

海角大神 / Text

Is Hezbollah tunneling into Israel? Army looks into village's old complaint.

With tensions high on the Lebanese border, the Israeli army has begun investigating a months-old complaint from villagers who reported hearing sounds of digging.

By Christa Case Bryant, Staff writer
Moshav Zarit, Israel

For months, residents of this northern border village complained that they were hearing drilling noises underground, but that seemed to elicit little response from the Israeli army. Until now.

With tensions rising along the Lebanese border over the past week and a half, the army began digging Wednesday for suspected Hezbollah tunnels 鈥 even before the Lebanese militant group killed two soldiers in a cross-border attack late that morning.

Kobi Cohen, deputy head of security for Zarit, says the community has been hearing unusual sounds for a few years.

鈥淚t started with small noises, like a hammer and anvil,鈥 Mr. Cohen told a group of visiting journalists last month. 鈥淭he noise [became] so intense that people鈥檚 furniture and objects in their homes actually moved.鈥

Cross-border tunnels proved to be one of the most frightening weapons in Israel鈥檚 summer war with Hamas, which adopted the technique from Hezbollah and launched several attacks into Israel via concrete-fortified channels under Gaza鈥檚 sandy soil.

Such tunnels, though much harder to build in the rocky hills along Israel鈥檚 northern border, could enable Hezbollah to launch a far more devastating attack than Wednesday鈥檚 hit on the patrol that killed two Israeli soldiers and wounded seven.

Like many of the small communal villages dotting Israel鈥檚 northern border, Zarit, home to about 70 families, lies a stone鈥檚 throw from the border security road the Israeli military regularly patrols. Some families live as close as 200 yards from the border, and can see Lebanese residents going about their day just over the fence.

2006 border incident聽

In 2006, Hezbollah fighters crossed the border fence between Zarit and Moshav Shtula, another communal village just a mile to the east, and killed three Israeli soldiers while kidnapping two more, setting off a month of fighting that left at least 160 Israelis and 1,190 Lebanese dead. A tunneling incident now could potentially spark a fresh conflict, though both sides seem wary of such an escalation.

The Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) has long known of the tunneling capabilities of Hezbollah, which prior to 2006 built an extensive system of underground bunkers and rocket-launch sites. Many of those facilities were taken out by Israeli strikes during the war; Hezbollah has said it is preparing for a far greater conflict.

Since the 2006 war, Lebanon鈥檚 southern border region has ostensibly been controlled by the United Nations authority, UNIFIL, whose white patrols could be seen rumbling along the ridge about a quarter of a mile from Zarit. But an Israeli security analyst says Hezbollah merely took down its flags from outposts along the border and is continuing to operate, albeit with a lower profile.

And it has proved in the past to be able to evade the eye of the UN.

Among the underground Hezbollah facilities found during the 2006 fighting was one with air conditioning, a cafeteria, dorms, medical facilities, and 3-foot-thick cement ceilings 鈥 all built聽secretly聽in view of a United Nations outpost along Israel鈥檚 border.

Nothing found so far

The IDF, which drew criticism last summer for not preemptively thwarting the Hamas tunnel threat in Gaza, has been doing its own due diligence on its side of the Lebanese border.

鈥淲e haven鈥檛 to date found any tunnels or are aware of any specific tunnels that are leading into Israeli territory,鈥 says Lt. Col. Peter Lerner, an Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesman. But given the heightened sensitivity along the border, they decided to start digging at Zarit as well to rule out the possibility. They were back again Thursday, continuing the work.

Residents say they鈥檝e been hearing sounds for at least a few years, and initially contacted a seismologist to make sure the vibrations weren鈥檛 due to tremors in the earth. They also had scientists visit from Israel鈥檚 Technion university, but the results were either inconclusive or purposely kept quiet, says Ruth Adoni.

A long-time resident whose son, Yossi, is the head of Zarit鈥檚 local council, Ms. Adoni says the scientists stayed with a neighbor of hers who lives very close to the border and had complained of 聽鈥渟ome very, very loud drilling noises and vibrations.鈥

鈥淪he claimed some pictures fell off the wall,鈥 Adoni says, adding that the noises in her neighbor鈥檚 house have since stopped. 鈥淪o maybe they finished the tunnel now.鈥