Israel putting dummy soldiers on Lebanon border, reports say | World news


Israel has positioned mannequins of soldiers in jeeps along the Lebanon border, according to Lebanese and Israeli correspondents, as the army braces itself for an expected attack from Hezbollah.

Ali Shueib, who works for Hezbollah’s al-Manar satellite TV station, tweeted photos of what appeared to be two military off-road vehicles. In the front sat yellowish dummies in army uniform.

علي شعيب 🇱🇧
(@ali_shoeib1)

خلصنا المزح بموضوع الجيب ✋
هذه الفضيحة كفيلة بإسقاط رؤوس كبيرة في جيشكم !! لأنها تدل عن “غباء وحمق”
لأنكم لم تتعلموا بعد انكم بمواجة رجال لديهم من الحكمة والحرفية والشجاعة والإيمان مايكفي لهزيمتكم !!#انضبوا
وضبوا تماثيلكم .. هالحركات حتى الأطفال بلعبة الغميضة ما بيعملوها ✋ pic.twitter.com/0FqVHC0hF9


August 29, 2019

Separately, Or Heller, an Israeli military correspondent for Channel 10 News, published a photo of a similar-looking mannequin in another vehicle.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said they would not comment on reports. It was not clear whether the dolls had been set up in an attempt to lure Hezbollah into firing on the targets or for other reasons. The Times of Israel said the IDF had placed mannequins in bunkers in the past to trick enemies “into thinking that these positions are full of soldiers and thus serve a deterrent effect”.

Or Heller אור הלר
(@OrHeller)

וכך ניראות הבובות בקו, בתמונה שחבר צפוני צילם. ברקע: ההבנה בצהל שנארסראללה סינדל את עצמו לתגובה על תקיפת הרחפנים בדאחייה. בדפוסי הפעולה האפשריים שלו: מטען, ירי צליפה, או ירי טילים נגד טנקים. pic.twitter.com/0jJ3QGc2iB


August 29, 2019

Hezbollah is a powerful Shia Islamist political and military organisation based in Lebanon that emerged as a force when Israel first invaded the country in the 1980s.

Israel is on high alert for a cross-border attack after Hezbollah’s deputy leader said his forces would launch a “surprise” retaliatory strike against its long-time foe, alleging that Israel attempted to attack it with two drones on Sunday.

While Israel has not claimed the Beirut strikes, two western diplomats said the rare operation may have been an assassination attempt or an effort to destroy equipment for fitting advanced guidance systems to rudimentary rockets.

The drones fell in the Lebanese capital’s southern suburbs, a stronghold of the militant group. On Thursday, the IDF said Hezbollah had in recent months been aided by Iran to manufacture precision-guided missiles within Lebanon, warning it would not tolerate the move.

Neither side has expressed an interest in a return to war, having fought a deadly month-long conflict in 2006 that killed about 1,200 people in Lebanon, mostly civilians, and roughly 160 in Israel.

However, tensions between Israel and Iran, Hezbollah’s founder and patron, have increased recently. The Israeli air force has bombed Iranian military assets in Syria, saying its arch-enemy is using the war-torn country as a base to attack it.

The latest strike took place at the weekend. The air force said it had thwarted an attempt by Iran to launch “killer drones” from a base near the Syrian capital, Damascus.

Israel has also been accused of bombing Hezbollah forces operating in Syria, where the militant group has allied with President Bashar al-Assad.

Until now, Israel appears to have avoided striking Hezbollah on home soil in Lebanon, fearing it may lead to reprisal attacks.

Both sides remain on edge. On Wednesday evening the Lebanese army said it had opened fire on two Israeli drones near its southern border. The IDF said no damage was reported.

According to the UK’s Imperial War Museum, mannequins and decoys were used during the first world war. Soldiers made papier-mâché dummy heads and cardboard cutout men to draw enemy sniper fire in order to reveal their positions.




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