Hezbollah has fired Russian-made Metis-M anti-tank missiles and owns
[French]-made Milan missiles
 
Missiles Neutralizing Israeli Tanks
AP,   5 August 2006
 
 
JERUSALEM, - Hezbollah's sophisticated anti-tank missiles are perhaps the
guerrilla group's deadliest weapon in Lebanon fighting, with their ability
to pierce Israel's most advanced tanks.
 
Experts say this is further evidence that Israel is facing a well-equipped
army in this war, not a ragtag militia.
 
Hezbollah has fired Russian-made Metis-M anti-tank missiles and owns
[French]-made Milan missiles, the army confirmed on Friday.
 
In the last two days alone, these missiles have killed seven soldiers and
damaged three Israeli-made Merkava tanks - mountains of steel that are
vaunted as symbols of Israel's military might, the army said.  Israeli media
say most of the 44 soldiers killed in four weeks of fighting  were hit by
anti-tank missiles.
 
"They (Hezbollah guerrillas) have some of the most advanced anti-tank
missiles in the world,"
 
said Yossi Kuperwasser, a senior military intelligence officer who retired
earlier this summer.
 
"This is not a militia, it's an infantry brigade with all the support
units," Kuperwasser said.
 
Israel contends that Hezbollah gets almost all of its weaponry from Syria
and by extension Iran, including its anti-tank missiles.
 
That's why cutting off the supply chain is essential - and why fighting
Hezbollah after it has spent six years building up its arsenal is proving so
painful to Israel, officials say.
 
Israel's Merkava tanks boast massive amounts of armor and lumber and
resemble fortresses on tracks. They are built for crew survival, according
to Globalsecurity.org, a Washington-based military think tank.
 
Hezbollah celebrates when it destroys one.
 
"A Zionist armored force tried to advance toward the village of Chihine. The
holy warriors confronted it and destroyed two Merkava tanks,"
 
the group proclaimed on television Thursday.
 
The Israeli army confirmed two attacks on Merkava tanks that day - one that
killed three soldiers and the other killing one. The three soldiers who were
killed on Friday were also killed by anti-tank missiles, the army said.
 
It would not say whether the missiles disabled the tanks.
 
"To the best of my understanding, they (Hezbollah) are as well-equipped as
any standing unit in the Syrian or Iranian armies,"
 
said Eran Lerman, a retired army colonel and now director of the
Israel/Middle East office of the American Jewish Committee.  "This is not a
rat-pack guerrilla, this is an organized militia."
 
Besides the anti-tank missiles,  Hezbollah is also known to have a powerful
rocket-propelled grenade  known as the RPG29.  These weapons are also
smuggled through Syria,  an Israeli security official said, and were
previously used by Palestinian militants in Gaza  to damage tanks.
 
On Friday, Jane's Defense Weekly, a defense industry magazine, reported that
Hezbollah asked Iran for "a constant supply of weapons" to support its
operations against Israel.
 
The report cited Western diplomatic sources as saying that Iranian
authorities promised Hezbollah a steady supply of weapons "for the next
stage of the confrontation."
 
Top Israeli intelligence officials say  they have seen Iranian Revolutionary
Guard soldiers on the ground  with Hezbollah troops. They say that
permission to fire Hezbollah's longer-range missiles,  such as those could
reach Tel Aviv, would likely require Iranian go-ahead.
 


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