Hezbollah's Silent Fury: Will Lebanon's Militant Group Break its Silence on Israel?
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict has been simmering for years, but since a ceasefire with Israel was announced in November 2024, the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah has remained eerily silent. Despite over 11,000 Israeli violations of Lebanese airspace, Hezbollah has only launched one attack – a lone strike in December that was met with devastating retaliation.
The situation on the ground remains dire, with Israel continuing to occupy five points in southern Lebanon and target construction equipment, preventing much-needed reconstruction efforts. The group's leader, Hassan Nasrallah, died during the 2024 war, weakening Hezbollah's military leadership and limiting its ability to respond to Israeli aggression.
"We are determined to defend ourselves," said Naim Qassem, Hezbollah's second-in-command. "We will choose in due course how to act." However, analysts warn that any potential response from Hezbollah would be met with a fierce Israeli backlash, potentially reigniting the cycle of violence that displaced over 1.2 million people and killed thousands.
The group's secretiveness has intensified since the war, with reports suggesting a divide within Hezbollah on its position vis-a-vis Iran and disarmament. Some members may view Iran's survival as existential and push for an attack on Israel. However, most analysts believe that only a "dramatic external shock" like a regional war involving Iran would draw in the group.
Hezbollah currently lacks the strategic confidence, logistical depth, and political cover needed to launch a full-scale response. Any action would likely be limited, calibrated, and asymmetric, aimed at signalling relevance rather than triggering all-out war. With Israel's military capabilities having changed the rules of engagement through deep intelligence penetration, cyber-enabled targeting, AI-assisted surveillance, and precision strikes that degrade command and logistics, Hezbollah's ability to mount an effective response is severely limited.
As tensions continue to escalate, one question remains: will Hezbollah break its silence on Israel, or will it remain committed to the ceasefire that has brought relative calm to the region?
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict has been simmering for years, but since a ceasefire with Israel was announced in November 2024, the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah has remained eerily silent. Despite over 11,000 Israeli violations of Lebanese airspace, Hezbollah has only launched one attack – a lone strike in December that was met with devastating retaliation.
The situation on the ground remains dire, with Israel continuing to occupy five points in southern Lebanon and target construction equipment, preventing much-needed reconstruction efforts. The group's leader, Hassan Nasrallah, died during the 2024 war, weakening Hezbollah's military leadership and limiting its ability to respond to Israeli aggression.
"We are determined to defend ourselves," said Naim Qassem, Hezbollah's second-in-command. "We will choose in due course how to act." However, analysts warn that any potential response from Hezbollah would be met with a fierce Israeli backlash, potentially reigniting the cycle of violence that displaced over 1.2 million people and killed thousands.
The group's secretiveness has intensified since the war, with reports suggesting a divide within Hezbollah on its position vis-a-vis Iran and disarmament. Some members may view Iran's survival as existential and push for an attack on Israel. However, most analysts believe that only a "dramatic external shock" like a regional war involving Iran would draw in the group.
Hezbollah currently lacks the strategic confidence, logistical depth, and political cover needed to launch a full-scale response. Any action would likely be limited, calibrated, and asymmetric, aimed at signalling relevance rather than triggering all-out war. With Israel's military capabilities having changed the rules of engagement through deep intelligence penetration, cyber-enabled targeting, AI-assisted surveillance, and precision strikes that degrade command and logistics, Hezbollah's ability to mount an effective response is severely limited.
As tensions continue to escalate, one question remains: will Hezbollah break its silence on Israel, or will it remain committed to the ceasefire that has brought relative calm to the region?