Pagers and drones: How Hezbollah aims to counter Israel's high-tech
surveillance
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[July 09, 2024]
By Maya Gebeily and Laila Bassam
BEIRUT (Reuters) - Coded messages. Landline phones. Pagers. Following
the killing of senior commanders in targeted Israeli airstrikes, the
Iran-backed Lebanese militant group, Hezbollah, has been using some
low-tech strategies to try to evade its foe's sophisticated surveillance
technology, informed sources told Reuters.
It has also been using its own tech – drones – to study and attack
Israel's intelligence gathering capabilities in what Hezbollah's leader,
Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, has described as a strategy of "blinding"
Israel.
The sides have been trading fire since Hezbollah's Palestinian ally in
the Gaza Strip, Hamas, went to war with Israel in October. While the
fighting on Lebanon's southern border has remained relatively contained,
stepped-up attacks in recent weeks have intensified concern it could
spiral into a full-scale war.
Tens of thousands of people have fled both sides of the border. Israeli
strikes have killed more than 330 Hezbollah fighters and around 90
civilians in Lebanon, according to Reuters tallies. Israel says attacks
from Lebanon have killed 21 soldiers and 10 civilians.
Many of Hezbollah's casualties were killed while participating in the
near-daily hostilities, including launching rockets and explosive drones
into northern Israel.
Hezbollah has also confirmed the deaths of more than 20 operatives -
including three top commanders, members of its elite Radwan special
forces unit and intelligence operatives - in targeted strikes away from
the frontlines.
Israel's military said it was responding to an unprovoked attack from
Hezbollah, which began firing at Israeli targets the day after Hamas
attacked Israel on Oct. 7. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said in a
statement to Reuters that they were striking military targets and taking
"feasible precautions in order to mitigate harm to civilians."
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"The success of these efforts hinges on the IDF's ability to gather
thorough and precise intelligence on Hezbollah's forces, its leaders,
the organization's terrorist infrastructure, their whereabouts and
operations," the statement said.
The IDF did not answer questions about its intelligence gathering and
Hezbollah's countermeasures, citing "reasons of intelligence security".
As domestic pressure builds in Israel over Hezbollah's barrages, the IDF
has highlighted its ability to hit the group's operatives across the
border.
On a tour of Israel’s Northern Command, Defence Minister Yoav Gallant
pointed to pictures of what he said were slain Hezbollah commanders and
said 320 “terrorists” had been killed as of May 29, including senior
operatives.
Electronic surveillance technology plays a vital role in these strikes.
The IDF has said it has security cameras and remote sensing systems
trained on areas where Hezbollah operates, and it regularly sends
surveillance drones over the border to spy on its adversary.
Israel's electronic eavesdropping - including hacking into cell phones
and computers - is also widely regarded as among the world's most
sophisticated.
Hezbollah has learned from its losses and adapted its tactics in
response, six sources familiar with the group’s operations told Reuters,
speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive security
matters.
Cell phones, which can be used to track a user's location, have been
banned from the battlefield in favor of more old-fashioned communication
means, including pagers and couriers who deliver verbal messages in
person, two of the sources said.
Hezbollah has also been using a private, fixed-line telecommunications
network dating back to the early 2000s, three sources said.
In case conversations are overheard, code words are used for weapons and
meeting sites, according to another source familiar with the group's
logistics. These are updated nearly daily and delivered to units via
couriers, the source said.
"We're facing a battle in which information and technology are essential
parts," said Qassem Kassir, a Lebanese analyst close to Hezbollah. "But
when you face certain technological advances, you need to go back to the
old methods - the phones, the in-person communications … whatever method
allows you to circumvent the technology."
Hezbollah's media office said it had no comment on the sources'
assertions.
LOW-TECH COUNTERMEASURES
Security experts say some low-tech countermeasures can be quite
effective against high-tech spying. One of the ways that al Qaeda's late
leader, Osama bin Laden, evaded capture for nearly a decade was by
disconnecting from the internet and phone services, and using couriers
instead.
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"The simple act of using a VPN (virtual private network), or better yet,
not using a cell phone at all, can make it much harder to find and fix a
target," said Emily Harding, a former CIA analyst now at the Center for
Strategic and International Studies think tank in Washington.
"But these countermeasures also make Hezbollah's leadership far less
effective at communicating rapidly with their troops."
Hezbollah and Lebanese security officials believe Israel has also been
tapping local informants as it zeroes in on targets. Lebanon's economic
crisis and rivalries between political factions have created
opportunities for Israeli recruiters, but not all informants realize who
they are speaking with, three sources said.
On Nov. 22, a woman from south Lebanon received a call on her cell phone
from a person claiming to be a local official, according to two sources
with direct knowledge of the incident. Speaking in flawless Arabic, the
caller asked whether the family was home, the sources said. No, the
woman replied, explaining they had travelled to eastern Lebanon.
Minutes later, a missile slammed into the woman's home in the village of
Beit Yahoun, killing five Hezbollah fighters including Abbas Raad, the
son of a senior Hezbollah lawmaker and a Radwan member, the sources
said.
Hezbollah believes Israel had tracked the fighters to the location and
placed the call to confirm whether there were civilians present before
launching the strike, they told Reuters without disclosing further
details.
Israel's military said at the time that it struck a number of Hezbollah
targets that day, including a "terrorist cell".
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Members of Hezbollah carry the coffin of Mohammed Nasser, a senior
Hezbollah commander who was killed by what security sources say was
an Israel strike on Wednesday, during his funeral in Beirut's
southern suburbs, Lebanon, July 4, 2024. REUTERS/Aziz Taher/File
Photo
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Within weeks, Hezbollah was publicly warning supporters via the
affiliated Al-Nour radio station not to trust cold callers claiming
to be local officials or aid workers, saying Israelis were
impersonating them to identify houses being used by Hezbollah.
It was the first of a series of strikes targetting key Hezbollah
operatives in Lebanon. Others killed include Wissam al-Tawil, Taleb
Abdallah and Mohammed Nasser, commanders who played leading roles
directing Hezbollah's operations in the south. Saleh al-Arouri,
deputy head of Hamas, was also killed while attending a meeting in
the capital, Beirut.
Hezbollah began suspecting that Israel was targeting its fighters by
tracking their cell phones and monitoring video feeds from security
cameras installed on buildings in border communities, two sources
familiar with the group's thinking and a Lebanese intelligence
official told Reuters.
On Dec. 28, Hezbollah urged southern residents in a statement
distributed via its Telegram channel to disconnect any security
cameras they own from the internet.
By early February, another directive had been issued to Hezbollah's
fighters: no mobile phones anywhere near the battlefield.
"Today, if anyone is found with their phone on the front, he is
kicked out of Hezbollah," said a senior Lebanese source familiar
with the group’s operations.
Three other sources confirmed the order. Fighters began leaving
their phones behind when they carried out operations, one told
Reuters. Another, the Lebanese intelligence official, said Hezbollah
would sometimes perform surprise checks on field units to see if
members had phones on them.
Even in Beirut, senior Hezbollah politicians avoid bringing phones
with them to meetings, two other sources said.
In a televised speech on Feb. 13, Nasrallah warned supporters that
their phones were more dangerous than Israeli spies, saying they
should break, bury or lock them in an iron box.
Hezbollah has also taken steps to secure its private telephone
network following a suspected breach by Israel, according to a
former Lebanese security official and two other sources familiar
with Hezbollah's operations.
The vast network, allegedly financed by Iran, was set up around two
decades ago with fibre optic cables extending from Hezbollah's
strongholds in Beirut's southern suburbs to towns in south Lebanon
and east into the Bekaa Valley, according to government officials at
the time.
The sources declined to say when or how it had been penetrated. But
they said Hezbollah telecommunications specialists were breaking it
into smaller networks to limit the damage if it is breached again.
"We often change our landline networks and switch them up, so that
we can outrun the hacking and infiltration," the senior source told
Reuters.
DRONE SURVEILLANCE
The group has also been touting its ability to collect its own
intelligence on enemy targets and attack Israel's surveillance
installations using its arsenal of small, homemade, unmanned aerial
vehicles (UAVs).
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On June 18, Hezbollah published a nine-minute excerpt of what it
said was video gathered by its surveillance aircraft over the
Israeli city of Haifa, including military installations and port
facilities. The Israeli Air Force said air defense systems had
detected the drone, but a decision was made not to intercept it
because it had no offensive capabilities, and doing so could
endanger residents.
Another video released by Hezbollah included aerial pictures it said
it had collected of a massive Israeli observation balloon known as
Sky Dew on the day before it was hit in a May 15 drone attack.
Reuters could not verify the authenticity of the images. But IDF
spokesperson Daniel Hagari said at the time that the airship, used
to detect incoming rockets, was hit while on the ground at a
military base in northern Israel. He said there were no casualties
and no impact on the military’s "aerial situational awareness
capability" in the area.
Hezbollah says it has also shot down or taken control of half a
dozen Israeli surveillance drones, including Hermes 450, Hermes 900
and SkyLark UAVs. Hezbollah operatives disassemble the drones to
study their components, according to two of the sources.
Israel has confirmed that five air force drones were downed by
surface-to-air missiles while operating over Lebanon.
However, the IDF said Hezbollah's declarations "should be noted with
reservation," saying the group aims to instil fear in Israelis.
Nicholas Blanford, a Beirut-based security consultant who has
written a history of Hezbollah, said the group's "awareness and
wariness" of security breaches was at an all-time high.
"Hezbollah has had to tighten up its security far more than it
needed to do in earlier conflicts," he told Reuters.
Israel retains a technological advantage, however, Blanford said.
On the afternoon of July 3, a car driving through a Lebanese coastal
village more than 20 km (12 miles) north of the Israeli border burst
into flames, witnesses said.
The Israeli military said it had eliminated Nasser, who it said
commanded a unit that is attacking Israel from southwestern Lebanon.
His death came less than a month after the strike that killed
Abdallah, who commanded operations in the central region of the
southern border strip.
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Hezbollah acknowledging both killings and in response launched some
of its biggest barrages to date into northern Israel.
(Writing by Maya Gebeily; Additional reporting by Maayan Lubell in
Jerusalem; Editing by Alexandra Zavis)
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