Saturday, 16 May 2026

New Security Doctrine in South Lebanon

https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/defense-news/article-896271

Inside Israel's new security policy in southern Lebanon

The destruction of El-Khiam reflects a profound shift in Israeli military thinking after October 7: deny the enemy not only the desire, but the capability, to strike.


EL-KHIAM, Lebanon – Those looking to understand Israel’s new security doctrine – one born out of the horrors of October 7 – need look no further than El-Khiam, a Shia town in southern Lebanon, just 6 kilometers from Israel’s border.

Once a town of nearly  30,000 people, it is now a pile of rubble – heaps of twisted metal, steel rods, and massive broken concrete slabs where homes and businesses once stood.

Why? Because this was not just a pastoral town surrounded by vineyards and olive trees, but a Hezbollah stronghold, with arms caches stored in people’s homes and Hezbollah command and control centers buried in tunnels beneath the floors of civilian structures, such as an innocent-looking clothing store with a teddy bear hanging on its wall.

El-Khiam was also deeply symbolic.

Once the site of a notorious prison used by the South Lebanon Army, it was overtaken by Hezbollah after Israel withdrew from Lebanon in 2000 and turned into a symbol of Hezbollah’s “liberation” of Lebanon.

    Tunnel shaft down to Hezbollah hideout

But it was much more than just a symbol.

The town sits astride key routes linking southern Lebanon to Hezbollah’s heartland in the Bekaa Valley, making it a central corridor for moving fighters and equipment across the country.

Over the years, Hezbollah transformed it into a major logistical and operational hub, fortifying the area with tunnels carved deep into the rock – a far more difficult and expensive undertaking than digging through the sands of Gaza – and building command posts used to direct anti-tank missile attacks, rocket fire, and potential cross-border infiltration missions by Radwan forces.

Over the years, El-Khiam, with its commanding view of border communities in Israel just to the south, was the site from which Hezbollah had a direct line of fire for anti-tank missiles into Metula and Kfar Yuval – from which it could terrorize those communities at will.

No more.

In place of Hezbollah terrorists peering through gun sights into Metula, what remains of the town is now in the hands of Givati’s Sabar Battalion, and to hear its deputy commander, identified only by the initial of his first name, A., talk about it, they are there for the long haul.

“Our most important goal is that the residents of Metula and Kfar Yuval will no longer endure the anti-tank missiles and direct fire they’ve suffered until now,” he told a group of journalists the IDF brought to the site on Wednesday.

“We are here with a very strong forward defense posture, here to stay for as long as necessary.”

And therein lies the crux of Israel’s new defense posture – one visible not only in southern Lebanon but also along eastern Gaza and in southwestern Syria.

Never again allow forces dedicated to your destruction to sit directly on your border. Not within anti-tank missile range, and not close enough to overrun border communities within minutes, as Hamas did on October 7.

Push them back, and level the towns from which they operated so they will be unable to hide there again.

Is it aesthetic? No. Are the visuals of a once vibrant town now leveled to the ground going to win friends and supporters overseas? Absolutely not.

Israel's post-October 7 security mindset

But the post-October 7 Israeli security mindset – one which, by the way, the world should realize will not change even if Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is ousted in the coming election – is that the country cannot just allow terrorists to sit on its porch and hope they will be deterred from breaking into or shooting into the house. Instead, the porch must be demolished.

Which is the El-Khiam story.

Asked whether he thought it likely that civilians will ever be allowed to return to live in the town, A. – an officer, not a politician making those decisions or a diplomat trying to explain them – said simply: “I do not see a situation where we leave this area and civilians return here. I think we know from experience that this does not work. Every time people return to a point like this, it simply creates vulnerability and renews the threat to the residents of the North.”

A. said that “we do not have the right or the privilege to abandon this territory,” until a real solution removes the threat and provides security. He didn’t say so, but that would mean the dismantling and disarming of Hezbollah – something few foresee in the foreseeable future.

So in the meantime, the IDF will remain, and the town – formerly a staging ground for attacks against Israel – will not be allowed to be rebuilt.

“We are creating a protective barrier between Hezbollah and the residents,” the officer said, echoing what Amir Shoshani, commander of the local security squad in Metula, said a few hours earlier in an Army Radio interview, heard on the drive to the northern border.

“The state understands that you defend civilians from outside the community, not from within it,” Shoshani said. “Right now, we have residents in Metula, terrorists inside Lebanon, and between the terrorists and the residents stands the IDF – and that’s how it should be.”

The quicker route or the safer route?

IT’S ABOUT a 15-minute ride from Kiryat Shmona to the border fence with Lebanon and a gate that opens into the country, and then another 25-minute ride in an armored tactical vehicle to El-Khiam. The road is jarringly bumpy, the kind that rattles your internal organs, with the vehicle at times hitting bumps so hard that those sitting in the back are jolted off their seats.

There is a quicker route from the fence to the destroyed town, but this one is safer because it is less exposed.

Little is visible from the back of the vehicle through narrow windows, though one can see vineyards punctuated by the sight of destroyed buildings along the way.

During the fighting with Hezbollah in 2024, it took the IDF weeks to reach the outskirts of El-Khiam. This time, after Hezbollah fired rockets into Israel following the February 28 attack on Iran, the IDF moved on the city at lightning speed, doing in a matter of hours what in 2024 took weeks to do.

Commanders on the ground said Hezbollah was caught off guard by both the speed and depth of the Israeli maneuver in early March, not expecting Israeli troops to penetrate this quickly into the town. Intense battles then took place before the IDF took control.

What Israeli troops discovered was a town that was nothing less than a fortified Hezbollah launching pad for attacks on Israel.

Nearly every 30 meters, officers said, there was another tunnel shaft, another underground passage, another piece of military infrastructure woven into the civilian landscape.

The homes themselves were large and well built, evidence, the officers noted, that this was not a place driven by desperate poverty. “The hatred toward Israel and the desire to kill Israelis or Jews exists everywhere,” one officer said.

Underground Hezbollah command center beneath the floorboards

THE GROUP of journalists was met in what was once the center of the town by Col. Y., the head of Battalion 779.

After giving a brief overview of the area, pointing out the town of Marjayoun on a distant hill and gesturing toward the Litani River, Y. led the group into the remains of a small clothing store, with some articles of clothing still hanging on the racks. Beneath the floorboards was a 25-meter shaft leading to an underground Hezbollah command center, where communications equipment, weapons, and uniforms were found.

Y. described an elaborate network linking homes, alleyways, tunnels, and fortified positions. This gave the terrorists the ability to move through large sections of the neighborhood without ever exposing themselves in the street.

For A., the operation also carried personal resonance. The commander noted that in 2014, a Givati deputy battalion commander was killed by anti-tank fire launched from this very area. “For us, this is closing a circle,” he said.

Just as the brigade commander began his explanation of the area, equipped with detailed maps, an aide suddenly interrupted with the words “Air hammer” – code for a drone identified overhead – and the journalists were hurriedly shuffled into the hulk of a destroyed building for shelter.

In the meantime, Givati soldiers scanned the skies and pointed their rifles in the direction of the drone. Gunfire echoed in the distance, and the delegation was later told the drone had been shot down by a soldier using his personal rifle.

The drones, the officers at the scene stressed repeatedly, are viewed by the IDF as a tactical challenge, not a strategic threat – a message echoed so consistently by the commanders on the ground that it was clear the army was trying to reassure a jittery public increasingly focused on the issue.

“The drones do not affect our operational work,” A. said. “We have made adjustments. We operate somewhat differently now, with adaptations that I won’t elaborate on, but the threat is manageable.”

Those adjustments include low-tech solutions such as nets and protective coverings, along with soldiers tasked with constantly scanning the skies for incoming drones.

One officer said the experience had reinforced an old military lesson: “Simple, old-school fieldcraft is often the most effective solution – not relying solely on technology.”

Another company commander argued that Hezbollah’s growing reliance on drones reflected weakness more than strength.

“It shows how desperate and afraid they are, and how much they don’t want to engage the IDF in direct combat,” he said.

What El-Khiam illustrates is that Israel is no longer relying solely on deterrence to prevent terrorist attacks, but is instead taking operative steps to deny its enemies the capability to carry them out in the first place. The goal is not only to weaken the enemy’s desire to attack, but to rob it of the ability to do so from right on the country’s doorstep.

What is taking shape in El-Khiam is not merely a military operation against one Hezbollah stronghold, but the real-time implementation of a new Israeli security doctrine – one that says hostile forces will no longer be allowed to entrench themselves directly along Israel’s borders and threaten civilian communities from just over the fence.

The destruction in this town may draw condemnation abroad, but among the officers operating here, there is little doubt that the country has crossed a psychological Rubicon. The era of relying on deterrence alone ended on October 7.

Or, as Shimoni said in that Army Radio interview: “Right now, we have residents in Metula, terrorists inside Lebanon, and between the terrorists and the residents stands the IDF – and that’s how it should be.

https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/defense-news/article-896271



Friday, 15 May 2026

US Army signs contract with Smart Shooter for AI anti-drone fire control system

https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/article-895971

Israeli defense-tech company secures $10.7 million contract with US to supply AI-powered system

Smart Shooter's SMASH systems are expected to be delivered in the third quarter of 2026, according to a company statement.


Israeli defense tech developer Smart Shooter has secured a $10.7 million contract with the US Army to supply its AI-powered SMASH fire control systems, the company announced this week. The deal will provide American soldiers with advanced "one-shot, one-hit" technology designed as a counter-drone weapons system. 

The contract comes amid increased efforts to defend frontline troops against the rising threat of small, low-cost drones. By integrating artificial intelligence and computer vision into soldier-mounted sights, the SMASH system allows even non-specialist infantry to lock onto and neutralize fast-moving aerial targets, according to the company's statements. 

Smart Shooter CEO, Michal Mor, stated in the company’s announcement of the agreement that, “as drone threats evolve in scale, accessibility, and complexity, armed forces increasingly require proven, field-ready systems that can be rapidly deployed and effectively operated at the tactical edge.” 

This latest contract builds on a $13.4 million contract signed in May 2025 between Smart Shooters and the US Army with the US Department of Defense's premier army-led task force, JIATF-40. SMASH systems are expected to be delivered in the third quarter of 2026, according to a statement from Smart Shooter.


“We remain committed to supporting US military requirements with reliable solutions that enhance precision, survivability, and mission effectiveness,” she added in the company's announcement.

Expanding Israeli defense-tech sector

The contract between Smart Shooter and the US Department of Defense marks the latest win for the Israeli defense tech sector.

The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) published its global arms imports and exports of countries earlier this year, in which Israel surpassed the UK to become the 7th largest exporter of arms and defense tech in the world, according to data collected from 2021 to 2025.

Israeli defense exports have grown consistently over the last decade. In 2024, Israeli defense exports totaled $14.7 billion in revenue, a 72% increase from $8.55 billion in 2020, according to the Israeli Defense Ministry.

https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/article-895971


Thursday, 14 May 2026

Israel Accuses NY Times of Blood Libel

https://www.dailymail.com/news/article-15813643/Israel-accuses-NY-Times-blood-libel-paper-alleges-widespread-rape-Palestinian-prisoners.html

Israel accuses NY Times of 'blood libel' as paper alleges widespread rape of Palestinian prisoners



Israel has accused The New York Times of publishing a 'blood libel' after an article on Monday alleged widespread rape of Palestinian prisoners.

In an opinion piece for the paper titled 'The Silence That Meets the Rape of Palestinians', columnist Nicholas Kristof interviewed 14 alleged victims of sexual abuse.

In the testimonies, several sources alleged being raped countless times with batons by Israeli prison guards, while others, Kristof wrote, had their genitals beaten or yanked. One reportedly had to have them amputated because of severe injuries.

In another instance of alleged abuse, he quoted an anonymous Gazan journalist who said he had been raped by a dog as soldiers laughed and took photos.

Kristof argued that while Israeli leaders may not explicitly order rape, the country's security apparatus has fostered an environment where sexual violence is a key component of Palestinian mistreatment. 

He added that Netanyahu labelled reports of sexual violence as 'baseless,' similar to how Hamas dismissed claims of rape during the October 7 attacks.

In response to the column, Israel's ministry of foreign affairs took to social media to strongly condemn the article, claiming the NY Times 'chose to publish one of the worst blood libels ever to appear in the modern press.'

The post continued: 'In an unfathomable inversion of reality, and through an endless stream of baseless lies, propagandist Nicholas Kristof turns the victim into the accused.

In response to the column, Israel's ministry of foreign affairs took to social media to strongly condemn the article

In response to the column, Israel's ministry of foreign affairs took to social media to strongly condemn the article

 'Israel – whose citizens were the victims of the most horrific sexual crimes committed by Hamas on Oct 7, and whose hostages were later subjected to further sexual abuse – is portrayed as the guilty party.'

'This publication is no coincidence. It is part of a false and well-orchestrated anti-Israel campaign aimed at placing Israel on the UN Secretary-General's blacklist.

'Israel will fight these lies with the truth - and the truth will prevail.'

'Blood libel' is a harmful antisemitic trope, originating in the Middle Ages, that falsely accuses Jews of murdering Christians for religious rituals. 

The term has evolved to encompass any modern, malicious conspiracy theory or false accusation targeting Jewish people and Israel

In the article, the columnist cited a speech where Netanyahu demanded global condemnation of Hamas's October 7 sexual violence, asking, 'Where the hell are you?'

'Think of it this way: The horrific abuse inflicted on Israeli women on Oct 7 now happens to Palestinians day after day,' Kristof wrote.

'It persists because of silence, indifference and the failure of American and Israeli officials alike to answer Netanyahu's query: Where the hell are you?'

Kristof went on to claim that the US is 'complicit' in the alleged sexual violence, as US tax dollars subsidize the Israeli security establishment.

Honest Reporting, a pro-Israel media watchdog, alleged inconsistencies in a key  complainant's account, claiming they previously expressed pro-Hamas views.

Several prominent figures have spoken out against the column, with journalist David Collier accusing the publication of 'acting like a Hamas mouthpiece to deliberately spread misinformation.'

Journalist and commentator Emily Schrader added that spreading 'absurd claims' that Israel uses dogs to rape Palestinians make a 'mockery' of victims of sexual violence.

These new allegations mirror accounts from Sde Teiman military prison, where in July 2024 CCTV footage appeared to show several Israeli guards sexually abusing a Palestinian detainee.

A prisoner later required treatment in hospital for internal injuries, including tears to his rectum and a punctured lung.

The soldiers were charged with aggravated abuse and causing serious bodily harm, but the charges were dropped in March 2026 - a decision praised by Netanyahu.

Kristof published his piece just before the release of the most comprehensive report to date on October 7 sexual violence, authored by the independent Israeli women's rights NGO, The Civil Commission. 

The Daily Mail was the first British newspaper granted advance access to the report, fittingly titled 'Silenced No More'.

It highlights over 430 testimonies from witnesses, survivors, and medical staff detailing horrors from the Nova music festival and Kibbutzim attacks. 

Returning hostages and experts provided evidence of systematic sexual violence and abuse by Hamas terrorists.

It shows it was not just women who were degraded as a 'deliberate tool of terror, humiliation, and control'. Men were also sexually abused and in at least one case gang raped.

Victims were mutilated, with body parts cut off and used to create depraved scenes gleefully concocted to traumatise those who discovered them. 

Those taken hostage were assaulted in front of loved ones and young relatives forced to commit sex acts on each other, an intentional, premeditated strategy of kinocide to destroy family units even after release from captivity.

The report runs to over 180 pages of utterly harrowing evidence, which collates and corroborates previous testimonies - as well as revealing disturbing new accounts.

The Civil Commission, funded by philanthropic organisations and its archive supported by the German Embassy in Israel, examined over 10,000 photographs and videos of the attack totalling more than 1,800 hours of visual analysis.

Testimonies, geolocation imagery, text messages, media reports and open source intelligence were  painstakingly scrutinised. The report found that the abuse was not isolated.

There was a recurring pattern of rape and gang rape; sexual torture; mutilation; targeted shooting to the face, head and genital area; forced nudity; binding and restraint; genital burning; objects inserted into intimate areas; post-mortem sexual humiliation; and execution during or after sexual assault.

When Hamas led other terror groups into Israel they carried Arabic-to-Hebrew phrase lists commanding victims to 'take off your pants', 'lie down', and 'spread your legs'.

For Israeli first responders arriving at Nova hours later, it was clear extreme violence, sexual humiliation and mutilation was an intentional, widespread tactic deployed that day.

https://www.dailymail.com/news/article-15813643/Israel-accuses-NY-Times-blood-libel-paper-alleges-widespread-rape-Palestinian-prisoners.html


Wednesday, 13 May 2026

2 Israeli Universities Ranked in World Top 10

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/426967

Two Israeli universities rank in world top 10 for startup founders

Tel Aviv University and the Technion produced startups that raised more than $50bn over the past decade


     Technion

Two Israeli universities have been ranked among the world’s leading institutions for producing founders of venture capital-backed startups, according to new analysis based on PitchBook data published by Silicon Valley investment firm Andreessen Horowitz (a16z).

The report found that Tel Aviv University ranked seventh globally for undergraduate alumni who went on to establish venture-backed companies, while the Technion - Israel Institute of Technology - placed tenth. Israel is the only country outside the United States with two universities in the global top 10 in this category.

The study examined more than 170,000 founders worldwide who raised institutional venture capital between 2014 and 2025, mapping the universities that produced the highest number of startup entrepreneurs. Tel Aviv University alumni were found to have founded around 865 companies, which collectively raised approximately $30 billion. Technion graduates founded roughly 783 venture-backed startups, raising about $23 billion.

According to the Israel Innovation Authority, the findings underscore that “ecosystem strength isn’t about population size, but infrastructure, culture and the ability to turn research into globally competitive companies."

In contrast, no British university appeared in the global top 10 for undergraduate founders.

Israeli institutions stand out in artificial intelligence, cybersecurity and computer vision.

Israeli universities outperform many elite US institutions in “founder efficiency," measuring startup output per 1,000 students.

Analysts attribute Israel’s strong performance to close ties between academia, military intelligence units, venture capital and industry. They also noted that Israeli founders often launch companies earlier in their careers.

The report comes amid growing global competition in AI and deep-tech sectors, with investors describing 2026 as an increasingly strong environment for early-stage entrepreneurship driven by new AI tools and lower barriers to company creation.

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/426967

Tuesday, 12 May 2026

Swiss Banks: A Repository for Terrorist Funds

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/426801

Helvetian Hypocrisy re Iran- A glimpse behind the “chocolate-box" image

For decades, Swiss banks have served as a repository for funds linked to "rogue regimes", dictators, and corrupt officials


While the press coverage has been focused largely on the kinetic-and lately (since the closure of the Straits of Hormuz) on the sub-kinetic coercive-dimensions of the ongoing conflict in Iran, there is an additional aspect that usually avoids the full glare of media attention.

A repository for funds of "rogue regimes."

This is the financial dimension-in particular, the banking sector, which often undergiths the ability of protagonists in a conflict to sustain their military operations-including payment of salaries to the military, acquisition of armaments, replenishment of ordinance, and so on. In this regard, Switzerland and its banking system hold a place of prominence. The Swiss banking sector is one of the most important in the world and is a central lynchpin of the Alpine nation’s economy.

Specifically for the purposes of this article, Switzerland holds roughly 25% of all global cross-border assets.

While all this speaks to the significance of the banking sector of the Swiss economy, there is a darker side to the picture. Indeed, historically, Swiss banks have served as a repository for funds linked to "rogue regimes", dictators, and corrupt officials, something which, allegedly, continues in various forms, despite significant tightening of financial regulations in recent decades.

Clearly, today, with the conflict in Iran and its indisputably “rogue" regime, this steers attention to the relationship between Switzerland and the theocratic tyranny in Iran.:

Helvetian guardians of the riches of the tyrants

But picturesque Switzerland's murky history with unsavory regimes is not a recent phenomenon. Indeed, it can be traced back as far as the mid-1700s. However, its international attraction began to emerge at the turn of the 20th century, when Swiss financiers became a magnet for foreign investors wishing to stash their increasingly mobile wealth in what was perceived as a politically neutral state.

By 1934, politicians enshrined banking secrecy - the “duty of absolute silence" - into law, making it a crime to share clients’ banking information, particularly with foreign authorities.

This, combined with Switzerland’s political neutrality, made the country a haven for Nazi officials. Swiss bankers collaborated heavily with Adolf Hitler and his regime, offering financial credit and assistance to fleeing Nazis to hide their ill-gotten riches.

In a blistering indictment of past Swiss international conduct, a veteran political journalist made the following assessment regarding Swiss machinations to conclude a deal for the purchase of gas from Iran, which many perceived as undermining the sanctions regime against Tehran, imposed because of its continued nuclear program. Caustically, she wrote: “Switzerland could no more have sold its principles than it could have sold its soul to the devil. For all its syrupy sanctimony, it has no principles - much less a soul. Switzerland is no rookie at playing footsie for profit with genocidal tyrants."

Greed-gratification & banking “hanky-panky".

To back up her acerbic portrayal, she catalogues how, during the Holocaust, Switzerland not only blocked the entry try of Jews fleeing persecution, but actually handed would-be refugees directly back over to their persecutors.

Pointing an accusatory finger, she laments: “…this means nothing less than collaboration in mass-murder [sic]. The Swiss turned away tens of thousands of Jews, sending them to certain, cruel death. Their blood indelibly stains Switzerland's reputation."

She resolutely exposes the blatant Swiss malice and hypocrisy, charging: “Without even touching on the business of banking hanky-panky and greed-gratifying benefits reaped by Switzerland from the incomparable Jewish tragedy, Switzerland did well for itself via exports of war materials to Hitler's Germany, extending it credit, all manner of financial underpinning and loot-laundering services". With scathing sarcasm, she laments “All this time, Switzerland gloried in resplendent neutrality,"

Indeed, it seems Switzerland has some difficulty in relinquishing its penchant for commercial contacts with brutal despots. Although Switzerland diluted its absolute bank secrecy significantly, high-profile leaks such as "Suisse Secrets" (2022) show that tainted funds-including those from sanctioned parties, war criminals, and human traffickers-have prevailed in the Swiss financial system.

According to one seasoned commentator, such accusations are not new for Swiss banks, particularly when it comes to allegations relating to energy transactions or to attempts by Swiss banks to clean up their reputations for involvement with funds “redirected" from low-income countries, such as Haiti, the Philippines, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and so on.

Falling afoul of US Treasury

Indeed, more recently, the Swiss banking system ran afoul of the US Treasury when its investigators found that one bank, MBaer Merchant Bank, had allegedly played a part in money-laundering activity related to Venezuela in 2020.

Moreover, according to investigators at the U.S. Treasury’s financial crime unit FinCEN, the bank allegedly then went on to enable financing of the Russian war machine and channeling Iranian oil funds back to the oppressive authoritarian regime-including to the Revolutionary Guard Corps.

This chronicle of dismaying Helvetian misfeasance is sadly not confined to the financial machinations of Swiss institutions. The same spineless display of hypocrisy and double standards extends to the conduct of the International Red Cross (ICRC), the flagship entity supposedly symbolizing Switzerland’s neutrality and humanitarianism, and whose statutes stipulate that its top echelons must be comprised exclusively of Swiss citizens.

These were on stark display during the recent (2023-5) Gaza conflict, when the organization displayed deep concern for the population of Gaza (many of whom openly celebrated the abduction/abuse of unsuspecting Israeli civilians), but was totally useless in doing anything to ascertain the fate or the location of the Israeli hostages, never mind visiting them to determine their well-being under the “harsh" ( to greatly understate the case) conditions under which they were held.

Feigned “neutrality" behind picturesque chocolate-box image

Indeed, it is difficult to detect any effective ICRC measures to exert pressure on Hamas, certainly not-heaven forfend-raise the possibility of suspending aid to a largely complicit Gazan population until access to the Israeli hostages was granted-presenting this equivalence for victims of aggression and those complicit (even if passively) in that aggression as its “neutrality

So, beneath the idyllic chocolate box images of a picturesque Alpine haven, there lurks a far more nefarious and avaricious reality, of which both Israel and the rest of the world should not obscure-or allow to be obscured.

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/426801

Monday, 11 May 2026

Example of AI working with drones to neutralize Hezbollah terrorist

https://www.jpost.com/defense-and-tech/article-895697

Inside Israel’s AI targeting system: How data from a phone becomes a death sentence

Ahmad Turmus got in his car, started it up, and drove off. Less than 30 seconds later came the shriek of the two missiles that lanced through his car.


The buzz of the Israeli drone was constant that day, and every time Ahmad Turmus looked up, it seemed to be circling over him, like an all-too-patient bird of prey.

So when the phone rang as he was visiting family one Monday afternoon in February, Turmus wasn’t too surprised that the person speaking accented Arabic was an Israeli military officer.

What surprised him was the question.

“Ahmad, do you want to die with those around you or alone?”

According to family members interviewed, Turmus answered with one word before hanging up: “Alone.”

The targeting of Turmus, which Israel acknowledged, demonstrates how, time and again, its military has mastered an intelligence war for which Hezbollah appears to have no answer.

Ever since the spectacular pager attacks of September 2024, when Israel remotely detonated explosives hidden in pagers carried by Hezbollah members, foot soldiers, support personnel, field commanders, chiefs of staff, and even a revered secretary general have been felled by a targeting system powered by artificial intelligence.

IDF AI system permits near-omniscient Hezbollah tracking

The system, which fuses data from smartphones, security and traffic cameras, Wi-Fi signals, drones, government databases, and social media, has granted Israel what seems an almost omniscient ability to track Hezbollah cadres’ every movement.

Turmus, 62, was serving as a liaison between Hezbollah and residents of Talloussah, a small village less than three miles from the Israeli border, which had turned into a battlefield during Israel’s campaign against Hezbollah in 2024.

Throughout the 15-month ceasefire that followed, he spent his time coordinating with repair personnel and civil defense crews to get the village running, even as Israeli strikes persisted across south Lebanon.

His family described him as a former fighter for the militant Islamist group, but who, in his older age, had taken an administrative role. Israel said it was working on “military and financial matters... to rehabilitate Hezbollah terrorist infrastructure.”

Whatever his role, he too was now ensnared in Israel’s kill chain – the culmination of an intelligence-gathering process that began years ago.

There are multiple ways Turmus could have landed in the military’s cross-hairs – none of them a smoking gun on its own, but all potential grist for the algorithm that eventually picked him to be killed that February day.

For one, he lived in Talloussah, a Shiite-dominated village supportive of Hezbollah. This meant that the movements of Turmus and other residents were constantly under the surveillance of Israeli drones.

According to an AI specialist who worked with defense firms until he raised concerns about the use of such systems in Gaza, the drones’ cameras probably filmed and recorded his face, along with the make and license plate of his car and his home.

The drones could have used cell-site simulators, known as “stingrays,” to masquerade as cellphone towers and trick his smartphone into connecting, granting them access not only to Turmus’s data but his movements in real time.

Even if Turmus had switched SIM cards, he would still have been tracked, said the AI specialist, who was granted anonymity to discuss his work.

“It’s a massive data pipeline: phone metadata, location pings, SIM card swaps, app usage, social media behavior, sometimes even banking or facial recognition inputs. A lot is ‘scraped’ from commercial platforms, mobile networks, partner intelligence agencies, or spies on the ground,” the AI specialist said.

Once collected, platforms such as Palantir’s Maven standardize, tag, and score all data, linking it to identities across devices and accounts. Palantir has spoken openly about its work with the Israeli military.

Then AI can build a timeline of a subject’s activity and map their network of relationships.

Turmus could have been flagged there, too: One of his sons was a Hezbollah fighter killed in early 2024, and another was injured in the pager attacks.

Tracking Turmus would have been made easier by Israel’s deep and cumulative intelligence infiltration of Lebanon, said retired Gen. Mounir Shehadeh, who served as the Lebanese government’s coordinator to the United Nations peacekeeping mission in Lebanon.

Much of the country’s data infrastructure, including databases with information on mobile phone subscribers or vehicle registrations, has been accessible to the Israelis for two decades. They also hacked into Hezbollah’s terrestrial network and its signal corps, he said.

Hezbollah’s involvement in the civil war in Syria from 2011 to 2024 further compromised the group’s security.

“These factors allowed Israel to construct a precise target bank encompassing both field commanders and high-ranking leadership figures,” Shehadeh said.

The AI comes in at this stage. Rapidly processing terabytes of data, it detects patterns and compares them to the movements of a known threat or someone who has shown up near flagged zones. It also analyzes deviations from a subject’s routine. All this is used to create a so-called threat profile.

The result, according to an Israeli colonel interviewed in a February 2023 Israeli military article on AI in combat, is a system capable of quickly finding targets.

“The system does this process in seconds, while in the past it would have taken hundreds of investigators several weeks to do,” said the head of the Israeli military’s Artificial Intelligence Center, identified only as Col. Yoav.

But one concern, the AI specialist said, is that these systems rely on data rather than logic to determine whether someone is dangerous. If that information is flawed, then it will keep repeating the same mistakes, but “faster and with more confidence.”

“It creates this illusion of certainty, and that’s dangerous because it turns correlation into action without always having context,” the specialist said.

“It’s not like a lab,” he added. “So how does the system know who’s who? And when it flags someone, is it a human decision or just an algorithm flipping a switch?”

Another problem is that such systems rely on tracking mundane, routine activities, such as who is talking to whom, or where and when they’re traveling, to calculate the probability that someone is a combatant, potentially leading to false positives, said Vasji Badalic, a professor at the Institute of Criminology in Slovenia, who wrote a 2023 research paper on the rise of metadata and big-data driven targeting processes.

“Relatives, or people engaging in propaganda or finances – they’re not combatants, but the machine recognizes them as such because they have similar communication patterns,” Badalic said.

“Where do they put the threshold that divides combatants and civilians?”

The effort to deploy machine learning to suss out targets or anticipate events in a war zone is not new. During the Iraq war under former US president George W. Bush, the US military hoovered phone metadata and processed it to look for what it deemed suspicious activity.

The National Security Agency also developed a behavioral profiling program, SKYNET, to identify al-Qaeda couriers in Afghanistan.

By 2019, companies like Amazon and Microsoft had developed sufficient “compute” – computing power – to run the math on more complex scenarios that would improve forecasting.

The US military in Afghanistan used those advances to develop Raven Sentry, an AI trained on reports of insurgent attacks stretching back to the ‘80s, along with ancillary information such as the amount of street lighting in various areas.

By the time the US pulled out of Afghanistan in 2021, the model’s predictions on locations of upcoming attacks achieved a 70% success rate, putting it roughly on par with human analysts, according to Col. Thomas W. Spahr, who wrote about Raven Sentry at the US Army’s War College.

Despite Israel’s success in Lebanon, there are signs that Hezbollah is adapting to being in Israel’s AI-fueled sights.

During the current conflagration, which began after the group struck Israel in response to its killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and repeated violations of the 2024 ceasefire, Hezbollah returned to its guerrilla warfare roots, adopting smaller unit sizes with a decentralized structure. It also relied on more secure, albeit less convenient, forms of communication, according to Shehadeh, the retired general.

What action triggered the algorithm to move Turmus from surveillance to the kill list is unclear. In his role as a liaison, he was a noncombatant member of Hezbollah, and family members said he didn’t even bother changing phones.

On February 15, a day before he was killed, he turned off his smartphone and left it at home while he went to a municipal meeting in a nearby village the next day. The phone call from the Israelis came soon after he went home to Talloussah and turned on his smartphone.

When he hung up, his face changed, family members told The Times. He told them the Israelis were after him and that they should leave the house and let him die alone. They pleaded with him to try to escape and to give him some disguise so he could leave.

But Turmus refused. He went to the door.

“They know my face. There’s nothing we can do against this,” he said.

His wife was walking in as he left, but he didn’t acknowledge her, family members said, so she wouldn’t try to stop him.

He got in his car, started it up, and drove off. Less than 30 seconds later came the shriek of the two missiles that lanced through Turmus’s car.

https://www.jpost.com/defense-and-tech/article-895697