By Daniel Greenfield @ Sultan Knish Blog
Some
were shocked to learn that Israel’s successful ‘Pagergeddon’ operation
had been the work of a female intelligence operative under thirty. But
they shouldn’t have been.
Israel’s digital intelligence
capabilities rely on the work of young women operating in arenas like
Unit 8200 which monitors enemy communications, plants surveillance
devices and puts together intel data to form a bigger picture, and Unit
414, the unarmed observers on the front line, many of whose members were
killed and a number captured during the Hamas invasion on Oct 7.
Women
from 8200 and 414 had sounded early warning alerts about Hamas training
drills and movements that went unheard before Oct 7. And Unit 414 had
lost 27 of its own on Oct 7.
Unit 8200, which is 55% female, had
taken some of the blame for the failures on Oct 7. The assault on
Hezbollah provided a unique opportunity for Israel’s women to strike
back.
‘Pagergeddon’ went viral on social media but it was only a
piece of a bigger puzzle. The Israelis had deconstructed the lessons of
Oct 7 and turned them against the Islamic terrorists. Hamas and its
Iranian masterminds had wrecked Israeli battlefield communications in
the initial attack. Israeli military units were slow to respond, aerial
units were unable to strike and hours passed before the military
leadership understood the scope of the terrorist assault on the
homeland.
The first thing Israel came after were Hezbollah’s
communications. ‘Pagergeddon’ was a crucial last step that began with
Israel infiltrating Hezbollah’s landlines and then its other
communications. When Hezbollah leaders fell back on the pagers and
handheld radios, also favored by Hamas, that had been rigged to explode,
communications were fatally scrambled.
Hezbollah leaders were
forced to begin meeting in person and retreating to bunkers which made
it all too easy to take them out. With a broken leadership and
communications structure, Hezbollah lacked the ability to decisively
move its forces and quickly respond. Within a week, its protectors at
the UN and the White House were frantically urging a ‘ceasefire’.
Destroying
communications and the chain of command is standard military doctrine,
and Israel’s successful implementation of it within such a short time
and against one of the world’s largest Islamic terrorist groups will be
studied in military academies for generations, but there was also
something feminine about breaking apart Hezbollah’s social bonds before a
bombing campaign.
While misleading photos and videos of female
IDF soldiers carrying rifles circulate on social media, the burden of
front line combat is largely handled by men. The killing and capture of
unarmed Israeli female observers from Unit 414 remains a deep moral
failure. The true role of Israeli women is to act as the invisible heart
and soul of the country’s national defense.
When Iron Dome and
other interceptor systems take down incoming attacks, the odds are very
good that the country’s female air defense controllers are alert and
responding. And the extent to which Hezbollah’s communications were
penetrated and turned against the terror group owes much to nameless
female ‘keyboard warriors’ who exposed the enemy’s weaknesses.
Hezbollah
was uniquely vulnerable to these tactics because it was in the awkward
stage between terror group and terror state, too big to hide in tunnels,
too small to have an effective air defense system, and too dumb to
realize that tens of thousands of rockets were still no match for what a
first rate air force could do to all its infrastructure and weaponry.
The
Iranian-backed Jihadists who had taken over much of Lebanon’s power
structure still thought like terrorists even as Hezbollah had grown much
too big to function like one.
Terrorist groups start out as
individual cells carrying out lone attacks, recruit more members, build
militias, seize control of entire areas, transition to guerrillas and
then become states. Islamic terrorists naturally adopted the same model
employed by Marxist guerrillas across Asia because it was already innate
to nomadic raiding culture and foundational to the rise of Islam.
Western militaries perform badly against terrorists and guerrillas, but very well against states.
Islamic
armies never achieved much success against Israel, but their terrorists
proved quite effective. Peace accords that turned over territory to the
PLO and Hamas created safe zones for terrorists inside Israel in which
the terrorists were surrounded by civilians who shared their cause of
establishing Arab Islamic supremacy over Israel and the entire world.
Hezbollah’s
position in Lebanon was much more precarious. Unlike Gaza, Lebanon is
genuinely diverse. Apart from its large Christian population, Lebanon
contains Arab Sunnis and groups that hate Hezbollah and resent the
country turning into an Iranian and Syrian colony.
Mao had
advocated that guerrillas should move like fish in the water among the
local population. Hamas does this, Hezbollah, like its Shiite
counterparts in Iraq, however built an intimidating sectarian power base
by controlling entire neighborhoods and areas. Dahieh, the center of
Israel’s bombing campaign, is Hezbollahs’s version of Sadr City. Rubbing
shoulders with Christians and Sunni Muslims, every move Hezbollah makes
is highly visible and reported to the Israelis by both allies and
enemies who are eager to see the Shiite terrorist group fall.
Dahieh
was not Rafah, it was the Green Zone in Iraq, and Hezbollah was not
moving among the people like fish in the water, but like a widely
resented occupying army making a lot of noise.
All of that
allowed Israel to infiltrate its communications, track its personnel and
strike decisive blows against its leaders. Hezbollah had alienated the
local population, built up its forces and assumed that the sheer threat
of its rocket arsenal would be enough to deter Israel, allowing it to
shell Israel’s north with thousands of rockets in order to depopulate
the region in preparation for its own version of the Oct 7 attack. But a
rocket arsenal is a very crude tool. Like suicide bombs and other
terror weapons, it’s useful for attacks carried out from hiding. But the
response to a large visible terrorist group isolated in its areas
launching rockets is all too obvious.
The inability of the
Biden-Harris administration to stop the similar Houthi attacks by its
sister Iranian-backed terror group out of Yemen had given Hezbollah a
false sense of confidence.
Not only did Israel take out the
Hezbollah leadership planning an invasion of the Galilee, providing a
redeeming narrative for Unit 8200 after the horrors of Oct 7, but
Hezbollah had made the fatal mistake of planning to invade Israel from a
territory it did not actually control.
Everything that Hezbollah
had thought was a strength, its arsenal, its power and its numbers,
were actually weaknesses. Outside Iran and Dearborn, Michigan, Hezbollah
has no friends.
Hezbollah is not only widely hated in Lebanon,
but in the Arab world. Even the Sunni Arab Muslims clamoring to save
Hamas had little more to offer than disdainful shrugs for Hezbollah. The
wounds of the Syrian Civil War run deep and many Sunnis hate Hezbollah
more than israel.
Israel isolated Hezbollah’s leaders and cut them out, just as it isolated the terror group.
Iran
and Qatar had set out to divide Israel. Hamas took hostages, living or
dead, while its Qatari backers pushed for rallies that demanded Israel
surrender to Hamas to free them. The terrorists had hoped to fracture
Israeli society into factions in order to tear it down the way they had
torn apart Lebanon. But Israel turned to Lebanon to divide the
terrorists and unify Israel.
By attacking Hezbollah, Prime
Minister Netanyahu exploited the divisions among the terrorists and
reunified Israel around the mission of defeating them. Syrian Sunni
Arabs celebrate the downfall of Hezbollah while Shiites lash out at
them. Iran is trying to pressure Syria’s dictator to bail out Hezbollah
and Iraq’s Sunnis are taking issue with the Shiites dragging them into a
war.
Behind the scenes, Israeli women had played a vital unsung
role in dividing the terrorists and uniting the country just as they had
done in keeping the nation and families together during the war.
Countless wives and mothers had watched their husbands go off on
deployment after deployment and had kept households going, sometimes
from bomb shelters, and then still found time to volunteer and to pray
after putting the children to bed.
Thousands of mothers of
families displaced by Hezbollah’s rocket attacks have had to do all this
without a home to come back to. As the fires burn in Hezbollah
compounds, hope rises that all Israelis will be able to return home,
that backyards will no longer have to give way to bomb shelters and that
Israel’s families may once again know some measure of peace.
In
the Bible, the Prophetess Devorah had predicted that “into the hand of a
woman the Lord will deliver Sisera”. And in her song she described
Sisera’s mother being comforted with promises that the Canaanite general
and his armies were seizing women and loot. “Are they not finding and
dividing the spoils? A girl or two for every man?” she imagines them
saying and concludes with “So may perish all Your enemies, O Lord.” Once
again history repeats itself.
And many a woman has repeated the same words and sentiments tonight in Israel.
Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. This article previously appeared at the Center's Front Page Magazine. Click here to subscribe to my articles. And click here to support my work with a donation. Thank you for reading.
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