Hezbollah tells Iran it would fight alone in any war with Israel
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[March 15, 2024]
By Samia Nakhoul, Parisa Hafezi and Laila Bassam
DUBAI (Reuters) -With ally Hamas under attack in Gaza, the head of
Iran's Quds Force visited Beirut in February to discuss the risk posed
if Israel next aims at Lebanon's Hezbollah, an offensive that could
severely hurt Tehran's main regional partner, seven sources said.
In Beirut, Quds chief Esmail Qaani met Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan
Nasrallah, the sources said, for at least the third time since Hamas'
deadly Oct. 7 attacks on southern Israel and Israel's devastating
retaliatory assault on Gaza.
The conversation turned to the possibility of a full Israeli offensive
to its north, in Lebanon, the sources said. As well as damaging the
Shi'ite Islamist group, such an escalation could pressure Iran to react
more forcefully than it has so far since Oct. 7, three of the sources,
Iranians within the inner circle of power, said.
Over the past five months, Hezbollah, a sworn enemy of Israel, has shown
support for Hamas in the form of limited volleys of rockets fired across
Israel's northern border.
At the previously unreported meeting, Nasrallah reassured Qaani he
didn't want Iran to get sucked into a war with Israel or the United
States and that Hezbollah would fight on its own, all the sources said.
"This is our fight," Nasrallah told Qaani, said one Iranian source with
knowledge of the discussions.
Calibrated to avoid a major escalation, the skirmishes in Lebanon have
nonetheless pushed tens of thousands of people from their homes either
side of the border. Israeli strikes have killed more than 200 Hezbollah
fighters and some 50 civilians in Lebanon, while attacks from Lebanon
into Israel have killed a dozen Israeli soldiers and six civilians.
In recent days, Israel's counter-strikes have increased in intensity and
reach, fuelling fears the violence could spin out of control even if
negotiators achieve a temporary truce in Gaza.

Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant indicated in February that Israel
planned to increase attacks to decisively remove Hezbollah fighters from
the border in the event of a Gaza ceasefire, although he left the door
open for diplomacy.
In 2006, Israel fought a short but intense air and ground war with
Hezbollah that was devastating for Lebanon.
Israeli security sources have said previously that Israel did not seek
any spread of hostilities but added that the country was prepared to
fight on new fronts if needed. An all-our war on its northern border
would stretch Israel’s military resources.
Iran and Hezbollah are mindful of the grave perils of a wider war in
Lebanon, two of the sources aligned with the views of the government in
Tehran said, including the danger it could spread and lead to strikes on
Iran's nuclear installations.
The U.S. lists Iran as a state sponsor of terrorism and has sought for
years to rein in Tehran's nuclear program. Israel has long considered
Iran an existential threat. Iran denies it is seeking a nuclear weapon.
For this story, Reuters spoke to four Iranian and two regional sources,
along with a Lebanese source who confirmed the thrust of the meeting.
Two U.S. sources and an Israeli source said Iran wanted to avoid
blowback from a Israel-Hezbollah war. All requested anonymity to discuss
sensitive matters.
The U.S. State Department, Israel's government, Tehran and Hezbollah did
not respond to requests for comment.
The Beirut meeting highlights strain on Iran's strategy of avoiding
major escalation in the region while projecting strength and support for
Gaza across the Middle East through allied armed groups in Iraq, Syria
and Yemen, analysts said.
Qaani and Nasrallah "want to further insulate Iran from the consequences
of supporting an array of proxy actors throughout the Middle East." said
Jon Alterman of Washington's Center for Strategic and International
Studies think tank, responding to a question about the meeting.
"Probably because they assess that the possibility of military action in
Lebanon is increasing and not decreasing."
Already, Tehran's carefully-nurtured influence in the region is being
curtailed, including by Israel's offensive against Hamas along with
potential U.S.-Saudi defence and Israel-Saudi normalisation agreements,
as well as U.S. warnings that Iran should not get involved in the
Hamas-Israel conflict.
IN ISRAEL'S SIGHTS
Qaani and Nasrallah between them hold sway over tens of thousands of
fighters and a vast arsenal of rockets and missiles. They are main
protagonists in Tehran's network of allies and proxy militias, with
Qaani's elite Quds Force acting as the foreign legion of Iran's
Revolutionary Guards.
While Hezbollah has publicly indicated it would halt attacks on Israel
when the Israeli offensive in Gaza stops, U.S. Special Envoy Amos
Hochstein said last week a Gaza truce would not automatically trigger
calm in southern Lebanon.
Arab and Western diplomats report that Israel has expressed strong
determination to no longer allow the presence of Hezbollah's main
fighters along the border, fearing an attack similar to Hamas' incursion
that killed 1,200 people and took 253 hostages.
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Lebanese army soldiers secure a site that was hit by a strike, after
Israeli jets hit Lebanon's Bekaa Valley for a second day on Tuesday,
according to security sources, in Saraain, Lebanon March 12, 2024.
REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir/File Photo

Israel's retaliatory assault in Gaza has killed more than 31,000
Palestinians and laid waste to the coastal enclave.
"If there is a ceasefire in (Gaza), there are two schools of thought
in Israel and my impression is that the one that would recommend
continuing the war on the border with Hezbollah is the stronger
one," said Sima Shine, a former Israeli intelligence official who is
currently head of the Iran program at the Institute for National
Security Studies:
A senior Israeli official agreed that Iran was not seeking a
full-blown war, noting Tehran's restrained response to Israel's
offensive on Hamas.
"It seems that they feel they face a credible military threat. But
that threat may need to become more credible," the official said.
Washington, via Hochstein, and France have been working on
diplomatic proposals that would move Hezbollah fighters from the
border area in line with U.N. resolution 1701 that helped end the
2006 war, but a deal remains elusive.
"FIRST LINE OF DEFENSE"
A war in Lebanon that seriously degrades Hezbollah would be a major
blow for Iran, which relies on the group founded with its support in
1982 as a bulwark against Israel and to buttress its interests in
the broader region, two regional sources said.
"Hezbollah is in fact the first line of defense for Iran," said
Abdulghani Al-Iryani, a senior researcher at the Sana'a Center for
Strategic Studies, a think tank in Yemen.
If Israel were to launch major military action on Hezbollah, the
Iranian sources within the inner circle of power said, Tehran may
find itself compelled to intensify its proxy war.
An Iranian security official acknowledged however that the costs of
such an escalation could be prohibitively high for Iran's allied
groups. Direct involvement by Iran, he added, could serve Israel's
interests and provide justification for the continued presence of
U.S. troops in the region.
Given Tehran's extensive, decades-long ties with Hezbollah, it would
be difficult, if not impossible, to put distance between them, one
U.S. official said.
Since the Hamas attack on Israel, Iran has given its blessing to
actions in support of its ally in Gaza: including attacks by Iraqi
groups on U.S. interests. It has also supplied intelligence and
weapons for Houthi operations against shipping in the Red Sea.
But it has stopped well short of an unfettered multi-front war on
Israel that, three Palestinian sources said, Hamas had expected Iran
to support after Oct. 7.
Before the Beirut encounter with Nasrallah, Qaani chaired a two-day
meeting in Iran in early February along with militia commanders of
operations in Yemen, Iraq and Syria, three Hezbollah representatives
and a Houthi delegation, one Iranian official said.
Revolutionary Guard's Commander-in-Chief Major General Hossein
Salami was also present, the official said. Hamas did not attend.
"At the end, all the participants agreed that Israel wanted to
expand the war and falling in that trap should be avoided as it will
justify the presence of more U.S. troops in the region,” the
official said.
Shortly after, Qaani engineered a pause in attacks by the Iraqi
groups. So far, Hezbollah has kept its tit-for-tat responses within
what observers have called unwritten rules of engagement with
Israel.

Despite decades of proxy conflict since Iran's 1979 revolution, the
Islamic Republic has never directly fought in a war with Israel, and
all four Iranian sources said there was no appetite for that to
change.
According to the Iranian insider, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei is not inclined to see a war unfold on Iran, where domestic
discontent with the ruling system last year spilled over into mass
protests.
"The Iranians are pragmatists and they are afraid of the expansion
of the war," said Iryani.
"If Israel were alone, they would fight, but they know that if the
war expands, the United States will be drawn in."
(Reporting by Samia Nakhoul and Parisa Hafezi in Dubai and Laila
Bassam in Beirut; Additional reporting by Ahmed Rasheed in Baghdad,
Arshad Mohammed and Matt Spetalnick in Washington, Dan Willimas and
James Mackeenzie in Jerusalem; Writing by Samia Nakhoul; Editing by
Frank Jack Daniel)
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