Israel

IDF on manoeuvres as Nasrallah hints at war

November 26, 2010 10:42
Chief of Staff Gabi Ashkenazi (centre) visiting an IDF combat unit in the Golan Heights earlier this month

By

Anshel Pfeffer,

Anshel Pfeffer

1 min read

The IDF's Nahal infantry brigade is carrying out its annual manoeuvres on the Golan Heights.

Traditionally, this is considered tank country, a potential battlefield between Israeli and Syrian armoured formations, but the column of soldiers moving under cover of darkness into dawn attack positions are training for war against another adversary.

"We learnt in the Second Lebanon War that any future battle with Hizbollah will necessitate long night marches," says one of the brigade's commanders. A colonel nods approvingly. "We are reaching a maximum readiness status," he says of the series of gruelling manoeuvres that Nahal, "but it's not connected to any recent developments in the news or whatever Nasrallah is saying. Lebanon and Hizbollah remain a central theatre of operations, whatever happens."

The field officers may claim to be unconcerned about developments in the news but that is not the mood in the higher echelons. Last week, the IDF Chief of Staff's office released some unorthodox comments made by Lieutenant General Gabi Ashkenazi in a meeting with his Canadian counterpart.

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