By Aluf Benn <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> , Haaretz Correspondent

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/778485.html





The Israel Air Force destroyed 59 intermediate and long-range missile
launchers in the Hezbollah arsenal during the second day of the war in
Lebanon, during a raid that lasted 34 minutes, according to research
recently published by David Makovsky and Jeffrey White of the Washington
Institute of Near East Policy.

The success of the raid was the greatest Israel Defense Forces achievement
during the war, and according to Israeli assessments, it prevented Hezbollah
leader, Hassan Nasrallah, from being able to carry out his threats and
strike central Israel with missiles.

The air attack of 13 July struck the Zelzal and Fajr missiles in the
Hezbollah arsenal, both made in Iran. The range of the Zelzal can endanger
the Tel Aviv area from Lebanon.





Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and senior IDF officers prided themselves for the
success of this air raid.

Olmert described it as "an impressive, perhaps unprecedented, achievement,"
and his aides went as far as to compare it to the destruction of Arab air
forces during the first day of fighting in the Six-Day War, in 1967.

However, to date, details of the operation remain unclear, and official
sources in Israel avoid specifying the precise nature of the target and the
results of the strike.

Israeli officers had said during the war that the "34 minute operation" was
based on accurate information from Military Intelligence that enabled the
pinpointing of the missile launchers. The AIF had trained for several years
for such an operation, and the operational plans were presented on several
occasions to former Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz.

 

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