What's new

Lebanon pager explosions: Who is behind the attack?

Who is behind the attack?


  • Total voters
    8

FearlessRoar

T20I Star
Joined
Sep 11, 2023
Runs
30,521
The pager explosions in Lebanon, claiming 12 lives and injuring 2,800, have sent shockwaves throughout the region. As I examine the situation, I seek to understand the underlying factors and consequences. Hezbollah has accused Israel of responsibility, citing historical tensions and covert activities. Israel's silence fuels speculation.

Was this a deliberate attack by Israel, exploiting Hezbollah's communication methods? Or could a third-party actor have orchestrated the attack, seeking to escalate tensions?
 
This new warfare just exposes the modern tech giants. Also highlights the pressing need for countries to be independent in their tech development in future. Ofcourse Israel is behind this attack.
 

Death toll from Hezbollah pager explosions in Lebanon rises to 12​


Lebanon’s health minister says the number of people killed when pagers used by members of the armed group Hezbollah exploded on Tuesday has risen to 12, including two children and four healthcare workers.

Firas Abiad told a news conference that almost two-thirds of the 2,800 wounded people needed some form of surgery to their face, eyes or hands, and that many had suffered amputations.

Hezbollah, which is backed by Iran, blamed Israel for the attack and warned that it would face a “severe reckoning”.

While Israel declined to comment, media reports cited US and Lebanese sources as saying Israeli operatives had hidden small amounts of explosives inside recently imported pagers.

The UN, US and UK have appealed for calm and restraint, amid fears of an all-out war.

Israel’s leaders have said they are ready to step up military action to return tens of thousands of displaced people from the north of the country to their homes after 11 months of cross-border fighting between Israel and Hezbollah, sparked by the war in Gaza.

Hezbollah says it is acting in support of Hamas - which is also backed by Iran and proscribed as a terrorist organisation by Israel and many Western countries - and will only stop its attacks once the fighting in Gaza ends.

Hospitals across Lebanon were overwhelmed by casualties on Tuesday afternoon, after thousands of pagers used by Hezbollah blew up almost simultaneously in shops, homes, and cars, and on streets.

Tracy Chamoun, a Lebanese writer, politician and former ambassador to Jordan, told the BBC the aftermath of Tuesday’s explosions was “horrifying”.

She had been travelling in a car along a flyover in Beirut’s southern suburbs - a stronghold of Hezbollah - when she suddenly saw people lying on a road below.

“All hell broke loose as they started to scramble to take these people to hospital. The cars were just pushed aside as motorbikes and cars came through with people covered in blood,” she said. “One of the injured men who I saw had his eye blown out. Another one had half of his face ripped off.”

Hezbollah has provided no details about what happened, but it is known that the group has long relied on pagers for communications due to concerns among its leaders about mobile phones being hacked or tracked by Israeli security forces.

Ms Chamoun said the pagers had “emitted a sound before being detonated to encourage people to take them out of their pockets or from their desks and lift them to their heads”.

US and Lebanese sources told the New York Times and Reuters news agency that Israel planted small amounts of explosives inside at least 3,000 pagers ordered by Hezbollah this year from a Taiwan-based electronics manufacturer, Gold Apollo.

"The Mossad injected a board inside of the device that has explosive material that receives a code. It's very hard to detect it through any means," one Lebanese security source told Reuters.

Gold Apollo’s founder denied it had anything to do with the blasts and said it had signed an agreement with another company based in Budapest, BAC Consulting, to manufacturer the devices and use its name. The BBC has attempted to reach BAC.

Axios meanwhile cited US officials as saying that Israel had decided to blow up the pagers “out of concern its secret operation might have been discovered”. "It was a use it or lose it moment," one official was quoted as describing the timing.

Lebanon’s health minister said an eight-year-old girl and an 11-year-old boy were among the dead, as well as several healthcare workers from Dahiyeh, in southern Beirut, who had been using pagers.

Of the 2,800 people who were wounded, about 750 were in the south of Lebanon, 150 in the Bekaa Valley, and about 1,850 in the capital and its suburbs, he added.

Mr Abiad said a large number of patients were in intensive care, some due to injuries affecting their ability to breathe. Others had injuries related to bleeding, including brain haemorrhages.

Iran's ambassador to Lebanon, Mojtaba Amani, was injured by one of the blasts, but his family and Iranian officials said he was in a "good and stable condition".

In an interview with the BBC, an ophthalmologist at Mount Lebanon University Hospital in Beirut said the past 24 hours there had been “a nightmare”.

“Unfortunately, we were not able to save a lot of eyes," Dr Elias Warrak said, adding that more than 60 to 70% of the patients ended up with at least one eye removed.

“Some of the patients, we had to remove both eyes. It kills me. In my past 25 years in practice, I’ve never removed as many eyes as I did yesterday.”

Hezbollah has announced the deaths of 12 fighters since Tuesday afternoon, including the son of the Hezbollah MP Ali Ammar. However, it has not given details on the locations and circumstances, saying only that they were “martyred on the road to Jerusalem" - a phrase it has been using to refer to fighters killed by Israel.

The only death the group directly attributed to a pager explosion was an employee of the al-Rassoul Al-Aazam Hospital in southern Beirut.

Hezbollah said in a statement on Wednesday that it would continue operations "in support of Gaza" and "defend Lebanon".

“This path is ongoing and separate from the severe reckoning that the criminal enemy must face for the massacre it committed on Tuesday against our people, our families, and our fighters in Lebanon,” it added.

The UN Special Co-ordinator for Lebanon, Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert, warned of “an extremely concerning escalation in what is an already unacceptably volatile context”.

She urged all parties to “refrain from any further action, or bellicose rhetoric, which could trigger a wider conflagration that nobody can afford”.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken denied that his country - Israel’s closest ally - had known about or been involved in the explosions.

Negotiating a Gaza ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas would be the best way to reduce regional tensions, he said at a news conference with his Egyptian counterpart in Cairo.

“We remain very clear about the importance of all parties avoiding any steps that could further escalate the conflict that we're trying to resolve in Gaza to see it spread to other fronts,” he added.

Israel has yet to respond to any claims. However, the Israeli military quoted the head of its Northern Command, MG Ori Gordin, as saying forces were "determined to change the security reality as soon as possible" along the border with Lebanon.

 

Iran president says Lebanon pager blasts should shame Israel allies​


Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said Wednesday that Western backers of Israel should feel “shame” after paging devices belonging to Lebanon’s Hezbollah exploded, in a deadly attack the Tehran-aligned group blamed on Israel.

“Western countries and the Americans... fully support the crimes, killings and indiscriminate assassinations of the Zionist regime,” Pezeshkian said in a statement, referring to Israel, adding that the explosions should bring them “shame.”

Earlier, Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani said in a statement he “condemned the terrorist act of the Zionist regime... as an example of mass murder.”

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, posting on X, condemned what he called “Israeli terrorism,” following a phone call with his Lebanese counterpart Abdallah Bou Habib.

Among those wounded in Tuesday’s pager blasts was Iran’s ambassador to Lebanon Mojtaba Amani, with Iranian media reporting he suffered injuries “to the hand and the face.”

State television said Amani was only slightly injured. The Iranian embassy in Beirut took to social media site X to deny “rumors about the physical condition and vision problems” of the ambassador.

His treatment was progressing well, it said.

The Iranian Red Crescent said on Wednesday it had dispatched “rescue teams and eye surgeons” to Lebanon to treat the wounded.

There was no immediate comment from Israel on the wave of explosions that killed nine people, including the 10-year-old daughter of a Hezbollah member, and wounded between 2,750 and 2,800 others.

The blasts came hours after Israel said it was broadening the aims of the war sparked by Hamas’ October 7 attacks to include its fight against the group’s ally Hezbollah along the country’s border with Lebanon.

 
They still use pagers in Lebanon?
I thought those things were to be found only in museums now. They used to be popular in India ... in the 1990s.

I have a few Lebanese friends here who think no end of themselves and their country. Will use this information to poke fun at them :)
 
They still use pagers in Lebanon?
I thought those things were to be found only in museums now. They used to be popular in India ... in the 1990s.

I have a few Lebanese friends here who think no end of themselves and their country. Will use this information to poke fun at them :)

I presume they used them because they were built on old technology and less prone to hacking. Hence the elaborate plot to weaponise them at production level instead.
 

Hezbollah hand-held radios detonate across Lebanon, sources say​


By Laila Bassam and Maya Gebeily

BEIRUT (Reuters) -Hand-held radios used by Hezbollah detonated on Wednesday across Lebanon's south and in Beirut's southern suburbs, a security source and a witness said, further stoking tensions with Israel a day after similar explosions launched via the group's pagers.

Three people were killed in Lebanon's Bekaa region, the state news agency reported, and dozens of people were wounded in the latest device blast.


At least one of the blasts took place near a funeral organized by Iran-backed Hezbollah for those killed the previous day when thousands of pagers used by the group exploded across the country and wounded many of the group's fighters.

The group, which was thrown briefly into disarray by the pager attacks, said on Wednesday it had attacked Israeli artillery positions with rockets, the first strike at its arch-foe since blasts wounded thousands of its members in Lebanon and raised the prospect of a wider Middle East war.

The hand-held radios were purchased by Hezbollah five months ago, around the same time that the pagers were bought, said a security source.

Israel's spy agency Mossad, which has a long history of sophisticated operations on foreign soil, planted explosives inside pagers imported by Hezbollah months before Tuesday's detonations, a senior Lebanese security source and another source told Reuters.


The death toll from Tuesday's blasts rose to 12, including two children, Lebanese Health Minister Firass Abiad said on Wednesday. Tuesday's attack wounded nearly 3,000 people, including many of the militant group's fighters and Iran's envoy to Beirut.

The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk called for an independent investigation into the events surrounding exploding pagers.

A Taiwanese pager maker denied that it had produced the pager devices which exploded in an audacious attack that raised the prospect of a full-scale war between the Iran-backed Hezbollah and Israel.

Gold Apollo said the devices were made by under licence by a company called BAC, based in Hungary's capital Budapest.


RETALIATION

There was no immediate word on when Hezbollah had launched its latest rocket attack but normally the group announces such strikes shortly after carrying them out, suggesting it fired at the Israeli artillery positions on Wednesday.

 
This new warfare just exposes the modern tech giants. Also highlights the pressing need for countries to be independent in their tech development in future. Ofcourse Israel is behind this attack.
That’s not how hardware works at all, not a singe product is made by a company that owns end to end supply chain.
The issue here is security , any country with minimal IQ would had known how susceptible these electronics were, and they gave it to their intelligence/fighters.
 
That’s not how hardware works at all, not a singe product is made by a company that owns end to end supply chain.
The issue here is security , any country with minimal IQ would had known how susceptible these electronics were, and they gave it to their intelligence/fighters.
Bro really?

You would expect these devices to have prepared explosives inside then before you have bought them? People are walking around with bombs beside innocents and women and children.

Nobody expected this or would expect it at this scale.
 
To be honest this was below the belt by Israel.

No pun intended. 2000+ men will never be able to have children now. Their line just ended with the fall of the family jewels. If anyone finds it funny, i pity his sadist mind. Today, was a dark day for patriarchy.
 
Bro really?

You would expect these devices to have prepared explosives inside then before you have bought them? People are walking around with bombs beside innocents and women and children.

Nobody expected this or would expect it at this scale.
If you are in a war with a technological superior enemy, shunned advanced devices and procuring devices specifically for your top agents who are on enemy hit list. Yes, a smart organization would keep track of the bombs being deployed in the supply chain.
 
Bro really?

You would expect these devices to have prepared explosives inside then before you have bought them? People are walking around with bombs beside innocents and women and children.

Nobody expected this or would expect it at this scale.
It depends upon the usage, since these were specifically being bought by certain segment of Army/Resistance/whatever, they needed to be thorough as it was not to be used by civilians but defence..

These are not cellphones that has mass market ..
 
The entire supply chain of electronic products delivered to Hezbollah has been compromised from walki talkies to Pagers, most ppl think news is about same attack but the second attack was done today.
 
If you are in a war with a technological superior enemy, shunned advanced devices and procuring devices specifically for your top agents who are on enemy hit list. Yes, a smart organization would keep track of the bombs being deployed in the supply chain.

It depends upon the usage, since these were specifically being bought by certain segment of Army/Resistance/whatever, they needed to be thorough as it was not to be used by civilians but defence..

These are not cellphones that has mass market ..
You guys are overestimating the capabilities of Hezbollah. They are a volunteer resistance force, not a full-scale army of a country, that has the capability or resources to undertake intelligence operations. They probably bought it from ebay equivalent.

Anyway Israeli attack didn't do much physical damage. Psychological damage but for the resource they had at their disposal lets be honest the attack flopped and Hezbollah will upgrade its security now.
 

Israel notified US ahead of Tuesday’s Lebanon operation but gave no details of what was planned, sources say


Israeli officials notified the US it was going to carry out an operation in Lebanon on Tuesday but did not give any details on what they were planning, according to three sources familiar with the matter, including in a call between Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant early Tuesday morning.

The fact that no details about what the operation would entail meantUS officials were left in the dark until reports of hundreds of exploding pagers emerged a short time later, the sources said.

CNN has learned that Israel was behind the audacious attack, which has heightened tensions in a region already on edge, and it was a joint operation between Israel’s intelligence service, the Mossad, and the Israeli military. The Lebanese government condemned the attack as “criminal Israeli aggression.”

A shock to senior US officials: Tuesday’s explosions came as Secretary of State Antony Blinken was traveling from Washington to Cairo, stunning US diplomats who watched the breaking news in real time on their airplane TVs. On Wednesday, Blinken said during a news conference in Egypt that the United States “did not know about nor was it involved in these incidents.”

Mitigating the aftermath: The US conveyed to Iran via a backchannel that it was not involved in the attack and that Iran should not escalate, a separate US official told CNN. Iran’s ambassador to Lebanon was injured by the exploding pagers, according to Iranian state media. Throughout the course of the nearly year-long war in Gaza, the US has consistently sent indirect messages to Tehran about not escalating.

Source: CNN
 

UN Secretary-General alarmed by 2 consecutive days of device explosions in Lebanon

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres expressed alarm at the two consecutive days of communications device explosions in Lebanon.

“The secretary-general urges all concerned actors to exercise maximum restraint to avert any further escalation,” his spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said Wednesday.

Earlier in the day, Guterres commented on Tuesday’s explosions, warning of the risk of escalation in the region.

“Everything must be done to avoid that escalation,” he told reporters during a briefing on Wednesday. The UN chief said the “logic” of making all the devices explode was that of a“pre-emptive strike before a major military operation.”

Source: CNN
 
You guys are overestimating the capabilities of Hezbollah. They are a volunteer resistance force, not a full-scale army of a country, that has the capability or resources to undertake intelligence operations. They probably bought it from ebay equivalent.

Anyway Israeli attack didn't do much physical damage. Psychological damage but for the resource they had at their disposal lets be honest the attack flopped and Hezbollah will upgrade its security now.
How many contradictions can you put in one post and how many false narratives are you going to post depending on the day
1. Hezbollah is far more equipped than Hamas. It is well recognized and I have seen several posts claiming the might of Hezbollah when Israel couldn't wipe out Hamas for nearly an year now.
2. A dozen dead, 200+ critically injured, with 3000 injured and several more injured with walkie talkie blasts today. from purely miltary war calculus its a huge win for Israel. Will Hezbollah go back to sending messages through human couriers like Al Qaeda?
 
From 2011:


WASHINGTON - The CIA's operations in Lebanon have been badly damaged after Hezbollah identified and captured a number of U.S. spies recently, current and former U.S. officials told The Associated Press. The intelligence debacle is particularly troubling because the CIA saw it coming.

————

US has shown it plays the long game, now Hezbollah is being called stupid and volunteers, they were actually very smart for 30 years, this situation of theirs happened in last 10 years.
 
How many contradictions can you put in one post and how many false narratives are you going to post depending on the day
1. Hezbollah is far more equipped than Hamas. It is well recognized and I have seen several posts claiming the might of Hezbollah when Israel couldn't wipe out Hamas for nearly an year now.
2. A dozen dead, 200+ critically injured, with 3000 injured and several more injured with walkie talkie blasts today. from purely miltary war calculus its a huge win for Israel. Will Hezbollah go back to sending messages through human couriers like Al Qaeda?
Where is the false narrative? You make these claims about people constantly presenting false narratives but then run away when asked to highlight them.

I mean just because it is better equipped than Hamas doesn't mean it is well equipped, does it? It is funded by local donations and goodwill from the Iranians who themselves are under sanctions. It is equipped in terms of its human resources and missiles donated from the Iranians, and some drone technology.

When you can wipe out whole members of an organisation but you end up killing a few people and some children, it is not as huge a win as it could be. Reports are the Israelis panicked and triggered their explosives early because they feared they had been rumbled.
 
How many contradictions can you put in one post and how many false narratives are you going to post depending on the day
1. Hezbollah is far more equipped than Hamas. It is well recognized and I have seen several posts claiming the might of Hezbollah when Israel couldn't wipe out Hamas for nearly an year now.
2. A dozen dead, 200+ critically injured, with 3000 injured and several more injured with walkie talkie blasts today. from purely miltary war calculus its a huge win for Israel. Will Hezbollah go back to sending messages through human couriers like Al Qaeda?
One has to wonder why would any military want their enemy to avoid using devices that they can spy on.
 
Where is the false narrative? You make these claims about people constantly presenting false narratives but then run away when asked to highlight them.

I mean just because it is better equipped than Hamas doesn't mean it is well equipped, does it? It is funded by local donations and goodwill from the Iranians who themselves are under sanctions. It is equipped in terms of its human resources and missiles donated from the Iranians, and some drone technology.

When you can wipe out whole members of an organisation but you end up killing a few people and some children, it is not as huge a win as it could be. Reports are the Israelis panicked and triggered their explosives early because they feared they had been rumbled.
So yea not a significant victory but good for short term optics.

Meant to tag Aang
 
Since most devices today are manufactured in China/Taiwan, talks a lot about their Quality Control process.
 
One has to wonder why would any military want their enemy to avoid using devices that they can spy on.
Radio messages have been intercepted for decades but still militaries try to destroy enemy communication networks.
Anyone with battle IQ knows you cant intercept every message, its best to disrupt coordination of the enemy at the start itself.
 
Radio messages have been intercepted for decades but still militaries try to destroy enemy communication networks.
Anyone with battle IQ knows you cant intercept every message, it’s best to disrupt coordination of the enemy at the start itself.
I do not believe Israel will put boots in Lebanon.
 
To be honest this was below the belt by Israel.

No pun intended. 2000+ men will never be able to have children now. Their line just ended with the fall of the family jewels. If anyone finds it funny, i pity his sadist mind. Today, was a dark day for patriarchy.

I think doctors and nurses use pagers as well in these countries. When israel is weaponising them at the production level, how would they know where they end up? I heard reports of them detonating in hospitals.
 
Poor Hezbollah. It must be nerve wracking for anyone to be apprehensive of all electronic devices.
 
Gotta love Israel.. they know how to take care of their enemies. We Indians love and admire Israel for precisely this reason. Need to learn from them and they have always helped us in Technology.
 
No electronic equipment considered safe after Lebanon chaos

Just as crowds had gathered to mourn some of those killed in Tuesday’s wave of pager-bomb attacks, an explosion sparked chaos in Dahiyeh, Hezbollah’s stronghold in southern Beirut.

A video captured the blast, showing a man lying on the ground and panicked people, some screaming, running away.

All this, moments before funerals were due to start for an 11-year-old boy and three Hezbollah members killed the previous day.

In the surrounding area there was bedlam as the sound of the explosion echoed through the streets. The chants stopped. Those gathered looked at each other, some incredulous.

As reports spread that this was part of a second wave of explosions now targeting walkie-talkies, no electronic equipment was considered safe.

Hezbollah supporters stopped our team several times, demanding we did not use our phones or our camera.

Lebanese officials said at least 20 people were killed and 450 others wounded across the country, with fires said to have broken out in dozens of homes, shops, and vehicles.

Already, the latest attacks are being seen as another humiliation for the Iranian-backed group, and a possible indication that its entire communication network may have been infiltrated by Israel.

Many people here are inevitably wondering what will come next.

This is a country still shocked and angered by what happened on Tuesday, when thousands of pagers exploded in that synchronised attack, after users received a message they believed had come from Hezbollah.

The devices detonated as people were in shops, or with their families at home, killing 12, including an eight-year-old girl and an 11-year-old boy, and injuring around 2,800.

Dr Elias Warrak told the BBC it was “the worst day of [his] life as a physician”. At least 60% of the people he had seen had lost at least one eye, he said, with many also losing a finger or a whole hand.

“I believe the number of casualties and the type of damage that has been done is humongous,” he said. “Unfortunately, we were not able to save a lot of eyes, and unfortunately the damage is not limited to the eyes – some of them have damage in the brain in addition to any facial damage.”

Reports suggest a shipment of pagers may have been rigged with explosives, before being detonated remotely.

Hezbollah had distributed the pagers amid concerns that smartphones were being used by the Israeli military and intelligence agencies to track down and kill its members. It was still not clear how Wednesday’s attacks might have been carried out.

But Hezbollah has vowed to respond, blaming Israel for the attacks. As usual, Israel has not commented.

Fears are, again, rising that the current violence between the two rivals, which has led to the displacement of tens of thousands of residents on both sides of the border, could escalate into an all-out war.

Hezbollah says its attacks on Israel, which started almost a year ago, are in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza, and that they will only stop with a ceasefire, an elusive possibility for now.

Mourners who spoke to the BBC at the Dahiyeh funeral also struck a defiant tone.

One young man said: “The pain is huge, physical and in the heart. But this is something we are used to, and we will continue with our resistance."

A 45-year-old woman told the BBC: "This will make us stronger, whoever has lost an eye will fight with the other eye and we are all standing together.”

Hours after the latest explosions, the Israeli defence minister, Yoav Gallant, said his country was “at the start of a new phase in the war”, as the 98th division of the Israeli army relocated from Gaza to the north of Israel.

Up until now, Hezbollah has indicated that it is not interested in another major war with Israel, as Lebanon struggles to recover from a years-long economic crisis. Many here say a conflict is not in the country’s interests.

But some will certainly demand a strong response. An indication of what Hezbollah might be planning to do could come on Thursday, in the first public reaction by its powerful leader, Hassan Nasrallah.

BBC
 

Bulgaria to probe company links to pagers that exploded in Lebanon​


Bulgaria will investigate a company linked to the sale of pagers to Lebanon's militant group Hezbollah that exploded this week in a coordinated attack, the state security agency said on Thursday.

Bulgaria's state security agency, DANS, said in a statement that it is working with the interior ministry to probe the role of a company registered in Bulgaria, without naming it.

Bulgarian media reports allege that a Sofia-based company called Norta Global Ltd had facilitated the sale of the pagers, which exploded across Lebanon on Tuesday, killing 11 people and wounding 4,000.

Reuters was not immediately able to confirm the link to Norta. Company officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment. A lawyer that registered the company at an apartment block in Sofia did not respond to Reuters questions.

Images of destroyed pagers analysed by Reuters showed a format consistent with pagers made by Taiwan Gold Apollo. Gold Apollo said on Wednesday that the pagers were made by Budapest-based BAC Consulting.

But Hungarian news site Telex reported that the sale was actually facilitated by Norta, citing sources. The Bulgarian state security agency said that it did not detect any shipments of the suspected pagers on Bulgarian territory.

 
Gotta love Israel.. they know how to take care of their enemies. We Indians love and admire Israel for precisely this reason. Need to learn from them and they have always helped us in Technology.

It is mainly the hindutvas (including some sikhs) who love israel, as they see Muslims as the enemy. Israel and hindutvas share the same goals, although hatred is all they have in common, israelis would not want Indians moving to their country in large numbers as they consider them inferior.
 
It is mainly the hindutvas (including some sikhs) who love israel, as they see Muslims as the enemy. Israel and hindutvas share the same goals, although hatred is all they have in common, israelis would not want Indians moving to their country in large numbers as they consider them inferior.
When the Muslims are out to force convert us and behead us in the name of there religion, off course to protect us we need to share the same goal. You can write Hindutvas 1000 times in every post, does not make an inch of a difference to anyone.
The truth is we are fed up of the cult followers trying to force there beliefs on us.
Why would I want to move to Israel? I am happy in India.. Can't speak for others as everyone has different goals in life. People go outside India, plenty of people move back after sometime. Thanks to Modi Ji, the economy is prospering.
 
This attack has only reinforced that the nature of war is changing. Infantry grunts, tanks and ground warfare are much less relevant now. Even traditional airforce and navy. All this will become mainly useful for mopping up.

It's the revenge of the nerds in asymmetrical warfare that's much more relevant - nerds piloting drones safe from the suburban offices, nerds mounting technology attacks, nerds launching precision missiles from way behind the lines.

Governments and non-governmental groups that adapt will be the powers of this new era. If Israel can do so much, I have to wonder what the States is hiding in terms of asymmetrical warfare capabilities? Can they for example turn everyone's bank balances to random numbers in an enemy country when they openly go to war thus destroying confidence in the banking system? After all, the two main Mobile operating systems - Apple and Android are of American origin. Do they have inbuilt backdoors to turn everyone in the country's mobiles into bricks?

It's a crazy new world.
 
After all, the two main Mobile operating systems - Apple and Android are of American origin. Do they have inbuilt backdoors to turn everyone in the country's mobiles into bricks?

Not only do they have that built in .. I have long suspected the monthly updates of my android OS online is actually siphoning of all my monthly data stored in the phone .. sms, whatsapp, calls etc .. and store it in a giant database in NSA headquarters at Maryland.

Or am I being paranoid ? :unsure:
 
Not only do they have that built in .. I have long suspected the monthly updates of my android OS online is actually siphoning of all my monthly data stored in the phone .. sms, whatsapp, calls etc .. and store it in a giant database in NSA headquarters at Maryland.

Or am I being paranoid ? :unsure:

You are being a bit paranoid. On the other hand, Britain stripped out Huawei from all their apparatus, and Google refused to allow their search engines once it was decided we weren't friends with China. Everyone is paranoid, at state level definitely.
 
This attack has only reinforced that the nature of war is changing. Infantry grunts, tanks and ground warfare are much less relevant now. Even traditional airforce and navy. All this will become mainly useful for mopping up.

It's the revenge of the nerds in asymmetrical warfare that's much more relevant - nerds piloting drones safe from the suburban offices, nerds mounting technology attacks, nerds launching precision missiles from way behind the lines.

Governments and non-governmental groups that adapt will be the powers of this new era. If Israel can do so much, I have to wonder what the States is hiding in terms of asymmetrical warfare capabilities? Can they for example turn everyone's bank balances to random numbers in an enemy country when they openly go to war thus destroying confidence in the banking system? After all, the two main Mobile operating systems - Apple and Android are of American origin. Do they have inbuilt backdoors to turn everyone in the country's mobiles into bricks?

It's a crazy new world.
I would like to also include cloud computing, very clearly again - American companies.
And now AI Nvidea/Amd ..
 
Not only do they have that built in .. I have long suspected the monthly updates of my android OS online is actually siphoning of all my monthly data stored in the phone .. sms, whatsapp, calls etc .. and store it in a giant database in NSA headquarters at Maryland.

Or am I being paranoid ? :unsure:
Who knows who's actually paranoid and who's being sensibly cautious in this crazy new world? If you'd told me a month ago that Israel had the ability to blow up thousands of pagers and walkie-talkies and was holding it in reserve, I'd have asked you to check your tinfoil hat.
 
An important aspect of this event, which many seem to overlook, is that every single device had to be physically equipped with explosives.

Every phone, device, or app has already been hacked or could easily be compromised, yet this hasn't significantly altered the dynamics of conflict. The event in question will not either, as, ultimately, boots on the ground are required to win any war or conflict.

It served its purpose for optics and had a short-term psychological impact.
 
An important aspect of this event, which many seem to overlook, is that every single device had to be physically equipped with explosives.

Every phone, device, or app has already been hacked or could easily be compromised, yet this hasn't significantly altered the dynamics of conflict. The event in question will not either, as, ultimately, boots on the ground are required to win any war or conflict.

It served its purpose for optics and had a short-term psychological impact.
You're very much viewing this in isolation.

Imagine the amount of background work it would've taken to intercept the information that Hezbollah was planning to switch to pagers, to then intercept or redirect the order, electronically modify all the devices and then co-ordinate this attack.

If we do see a ground invasion in the next few days, I think we'll see the impact of this asymmetrical assault. A lot of the Hezbollah operatives who were important enough to receive a pager or a walkie-talkie will be in hospital having lost an eye or a hand - basically the entire decision making infrastructure. Response to the invasion will be uncoordinated and directionless since there is no time to put in alternate infrastructure for communication.

As I said, the ground invasion and infantry will basically be mopping up.
 
Lebanon bans pagers and walkie-talkies being taken on flights from Beirut

Lebanese authorities on Thursday banned walkie-talkies and pagers from being taken on flights from Beirut airport, Reuters reports.

Citing the Lebanese national news agency, it notes the Lebanese civilian aviation directorate asked airlines operating from Beirut to tell passengers that walkie-talkies and pagers were banned until further notice. Such devices were also banned from being shipped by air, the Lebanese state news agency reported.

At least 37 people were killed and more than 3,000 wounded when pagers and walkie-talkies were detonated in two waves of attacks widely attributed to Israel. Those killed or wounded included Hezbollah fighters, medics and administrative staff. At least two of Tuesday’s dead were children.

The impact of the attack on civilian life will add further to criticism that the attack bore the hallmarks of “wanton disregard” for civilian life, as Irish Tánaiste Micheál Martin said earlier in the week.

Reuters spoke to a Beirut resident, Mustafa Sibai, who said “Of course we’re scared, my children, my siblings’ children, all of us. Who can feel safe in this situation? When I heard about what happened … I left my phone on my motorcycle and walked away.”

Mustafa Jemaa, who owns an electrical shop in Sidon, told the news agency he had removed some stock. “We had some devices here that we believed were 100% safe, but out of caution, we removed them ... because we got worried,” he said.

Earlier today the Lebanese army said it was carrying out controlled demolition of suspicious electronic devices. Lebanon’s information minister Ziad Makari said panic was to be expected, noting that the attack was “a new type of crime to the Lebanese” and that it had struck people at home, at work and during their daily lives.

The Guardian
 
Hezbollah leader calls detonations a 'massacre'

He blames Israel for the pager and walkie-talkie attacks, which he said paid no heed to innocent life and the lives of children. About 4,000 pagers were targeted, he adds.

Some of those killed have not yet been included in official figures, he says.

Nasrallah accuses Israel of trying to kill 4,000 people at the same time, and says Wednesday's attack was also intended to kill around a thousand more.

"This is sheer terrorism. We'll call them Tuesday's massacre and Wednesday's massacre. These are war crimes or at least declaration of war," he says.

"God is merciful and prevented more deaths and injuries. A number of pagers were out of service or switched off. Some were not allocated and still in storage."

BBC
 
Device attack was unprecedented, Nasrallah says

He says over the last two days, Israel tried to kill 5,000 in two minutes, and that the blasts were unprecedented in the history of both Lebanon and the world.

There is no doubt "we've been breached", he says.

Israel has not yet directly commented on the attacks.

BBC
 
An important aspect of this event, which many seem to overlook, is that every single device had to be physically equipped with explosives.

Every phone, device, or app has already been hacked or could easily be compromised, yet this hasn't significantly altered the dynamics of conflict. The event in question will not either, as, ultimately, boots on the ground are required to win any war or conflict.

It served its purpose for optics and had a short-term psychological impact.
They did that and now they have attacked..



Israel said it hit at least 30 Hezbollah targets in southern Lebanon, including a weapons storage facility, adding it will continue to "operate against the threat of the Hezbollah."

"The IDF is currently striking Hezbollah targets in Lebanon to degrade Hezbollah’s terrorist capabilities and infrastructure," the Israeli army said Thursday afternoon.
 
They did that and now they have attacked..



Israel said it hit at least 30 Hezbollah targets in southern Lebanon, including a weapons storage facility, adding it will continue to "operate against the threat of the Hezbollah."

"The IDF is currently striking Hezbollah targets in Lebanon to degrade Hezbollah’s terrorist capabilities and infrastructure," the Israeli army said Thursday afternoon.
Unless Israel puts boots on the ground or levels Lebanon, it will lead nowhere, it will just be another episode in a long conflict. In the long run, if the Hizbullah decides to completely abandon technology for communication, which they might for short period, it will leave Israel with limited spying options.

Israel has to enter Lebanon and fight face to face, Nethanyahu wants to, but the west isn't ready for it.
 
They did that and now they have attacked..



Israel said it hit at least 30 Hezbollah targets in southern Lebanon, including a weapons storage facility, adding it will continue to "operate against the threat of the Hezbollah."

"The IDF is currently striking Hezbollah targets in Lebanon to degrade Hezbollah’s terrorist capabilities and infrastructure," the Israeli army said Thursday afternoon.
Honestly, it would have been far more effective to employ a 'pager attack' during the active conflict while attempting to push the Hizbullah from southern Lebanon. It appears their operation was on the verge of being compromised, leaving them no choice but to activate it sooner rather than later.
 
Unless Israel puts boots on the ground or levels Lebanon, it will lead nowhere, it will just be another episode in a long conflict. In the long run, if the Hizbullah decides to completely abandon technology for communication, which they might for short period, it will leave Israel with limited spying options.

Israel has to enter Lebanon and fight face to face, Nethanyahu wants to, but the west isn't ready for it.
Israel has developed infrastructurally and economically(from the time wars started), Lebanon gone down.

In modernware one just needs to ruin the opposition and in that way I think Israel has done what a campaign does.

Do you see Lebanon ever raising their education or economy or infrastructure in next 25 years?

Even historically many wars were fought for years before a victor happened.. but from 2011 this has been fall of Hezbollah.
 
Who knows who's actually paranoid and who's being sensibly cautious in this crazy new world? If you'd told me a month ago that Israel had the ability to blow up thousands of pagers and walkie-talkies and was holding it in reserve, I'd have asked you to check your tinfoil hat.
Well, there is precedence to this. Mossad had taken out a couple of the Munich Olympic massacre perps by implanting bombs in their phones. Also if I am not mistaken some Hamas or Iranian bombmaker ironically by implanting a bomb on his cell phone. But the scale of this one is unprecedented.

Tbh, this is a massive intelligence failure for Hezbollah.
 
Israel has to enter Lebanon and fight face to face, Nethanyahu wants to, but the west isn't ready for it.
Israel's f35s will flatten lebanon into stone age if Netanyahu was given the all clear..... US wants this conflict to never end.
 
Taiwan says it did not make Hezbollah pager parts

The Taiwanese government has said components in thousands of pagers used by the armed group Hezbollah that exploded in Lebanon earlier this week were not made on the island.

The comments come after Taiwanese company Gold Apollo said it did not make the devices used in the attack.

The Lebanese government says 12 people, including two children, were killed and nearly 3,000 injured in the explosions on Tuesday.

The incident, along with another attack involving exploding walkie-talkies, was blamed on Israel and marked a major escalation in the conflict between the two sides.

"The components for Hezbollah's pagers were not produced by us," Taiwan's economy minister Kuo Jyh-huei told reporters on Friday.

He added that a judicial investigation is already under way.

"I want to unearth the truth, because Taiwan has never exported this particular pager model," Taiwan foreign minister, Lin Chia-lung said.

Earlier this week, Gold Apollo boss Hsu Ching-Kuang denied his business had anything to do with the attacks.

He said he licensed his trade mark to a company in Hungary called BAC Consulting to use the Gold Apollo name on their own pagers.

The BBC's attempts to contact BAC have so far been unsuccessful. Its CEO Cristiana Bársony-Arcidiacono told the US news outlet NBC that she knew nothing and denied her company made the pagers.

The Hungarian government has said BAC had "no manufacturing or operational site" in the country.

But a New York Times report said that BAC was a shell company that acted as a front for Israel, citing Israeli intelligence officers.

In another round of blasts on Wednesday, exploding walkie-talkies killed 20 people and injured at least 450, Lebanon's health ministry said.

Japanese handheld radio manufacturer Icom has distanced itself from the walkie-talkies that bear its logo, saying it discontinued production of the devices a decade ago.

Iran-backed Hezbollah has blamed Israel for what it called “this criminal aggression” and vowed that it would get “just retribution”.

The Israeli military has declined to comment.

The two sides have been engaged in cross-border warfare since the Gaza conflict erupted last October.

The difficulty in identifying the makers of the devices has highlighted how complicated the global electronics supply chain has become.

BBC
 
Israel's f35s will flatten lebanon into stone age if Netanyahu was given the all clear..... US wants this conflict to never end.

A poignant reminder to all on here of the mentality of those who hate the Muslims. For them it is a frustration that nations don't get flattened to the stone age to win a war. It would be similar to fumigating a house. Although in this case it would be fumigating a who country.
 
A poignant reminder to all on here of the mentality of those who hate the Muslims. For them it is a frustration that nations don't get flattened to the stone age to win a war. It would be similar to fumigating a house. Although in this case it would be fumigating a who country.
You are right Cap.

Israel should just sit still and keep getting bombed by the extremists.

My apologies..

I hope Iran/hezbollah flattens Israel to Stone age.
 
You are right Cap.

Israel should just sit still and keep getting bombed by the extremists.

My apologies..

I hope Iran/hezbollah flattens Israel to Stone age.

Flattening countries to the stone age is a term used by non-Muslims, coined by a US general before the nuking of Japan, and delighted in by others who share similar disbeliever ideologies.
 

Hezbollah handed out pagers hours before blasts - even after checks​


Lebanon’s Hezbollah was still handing its members new Gold Apollo branded pagers hours before thousands of the devices blew up this week, two security sources said, indicating the group was confident they were safe despite an ongoing sweep of electronic kit to identify threats.

One member of the Iranian-backed militia received a new pager on Monday that exploded the next day while it was still in its box, said one of the sources.

A pager given to a senior member just days earlier injured a subordinate when it detonated, the second source said.

In an apparently coordinated attack, the Gold Apollo branded devices detonated on Tuesday across Hezbollah’s strongholds of south Lebanon, Beirut’s suburbs and the eastern Bekaa valley.

On Wednesday, hundreds of Hezbollah walkie-talkies exploded. The consecutive attacks killed 37 people, including at least two children, and injured more than 3,000 people.

Lebanon and Hezbollah say Israel was behind the attacks. Israel’s secretive military intelligence Unit 8200 was involved in the planning, a Western security source told Reuters this week. Israel, which has since stepped up airstrikes on Lebanon, has neither denied or confirmed involvement. The batteries of the walkie-talkies were laced with a highly explosive compound known as PETN, another Lebanese source familiar with the device’s components told Reuters on Friday. Up to three grams of explosives hidden in the pagers had gone undetected for months by Hezbollah, Reuters reported earlier this week.

One of the security sources said it was very hard to detect the explosives “with any device or scanner.” The source did not specify what type of scanners Hezbollah had run the pagers through.

Hezbollah examined the pagers after they were delivered to Lebanon, starting in 2022, including by travelling through airports with them to ensure they would not trigger alarms, two additional sources told Reuters. In total, Reuters spoke to six sources familiar with the details of the exploding devices for this story.

The sources did not specify the name of the airports where they conducted the tests.

Rather than a specific suspicion of the pagers, the checks had been part of a routine “sweep” of its equipment, including communications devices, to find any indications that they were laced with explosives or surveillance mechanisms, one of the security sources said. The attacks, and the distribution of the devices despite the routine sweep and checks for breaches, have struck at Hezbollah’s reputation as the most formidable of Iran’s allied “Axis of Resistance” umbrella of anti-Israel irregular forces across the Middle East.

In a televised speech on Thursday, Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah said the attacks were “unprecedented in the history” of the group.

Hezbollah’s media office and Israel’s armed forces did not immediately respond to requests for comment for this story. Taiwan-based Gold Apollo has said it did not manufacture the devices used in the attack, saying they were made by a company in Europe licensed to use the firm’s brand. Reuters has not been able to establish where they were made or at what point they were tampered with. A batch of 5,000 of the pagers were brought into Lebanon earlier this year. Reuters previously reported that Hezbollah turned to pagers in an attempt to evade Israeli surveillance of its mobile phones, following the killing of senior commanders in targeted airstrikes over the past year. Hezbollah’s conflict with Israel dates back decades but has flared up in the past year in parallel with the Gaza war, heightening worries of a full-blown regional war.

After the pagers detonated on Tuesday, Hezbollah suspected more of its devices may have been compromised, two of the security sources, as well as an intelligence source, told Reuters.

In response, it intensified the sweep of its communications systems, carrying out careful examinations of all devices. It also began investigating the supply chains through which the pagers were brought in, the two security sources said.

But the review had not been concluded by Wednesday afternoon, when the hand-held radios exploded.

Hezbollah believes that Israel opted to detonate the group’s hand-held radios because it feared Hezbollah would soon find that the walkie-talkies were also rigged with explosives, one of the sources told Reuters.

The walkie-talkie explosions left 25 people dead and at least 650 injured, according to Lebanon’s health ministry - a much higher fatality rate than the previous day’s pager blasts, which killed 12 and wounded nearly 3,000.

That is because they carried a higher payload of explosives than the beepers, one of the security sources and the intelligence source said.

The group’s probe into precisely where, when and how the devices were laced with explosives is ongoing, three of the sources said. Nasrallah later said the same in the speech on Thursday.

One of the security sources said Hezbollah had foiled previous Israeli operations targeting devices imported from abroad by the group - from its private landline telephones to ventilation units in the group’s offices.

That includes suspected breaches in the past year.

“There are several electronic issues that we were able to discover - but not the pagers,” the source said. “They tricked us, hats off to the enemy.”

 
On the trail of the mystery woman whose company licensed exploding pagers

She speaks seven languages, has a PhD in particle physics, an apartment in Budapest plastered with her own pastel drawings of nudes, and a career that took her around Africa and Europe doing humanitarian work.

What Cristiana Barsony-Arcidiacono, 49, the Italian-Hungarian CEO and owner of Hungary-based BAC Consulting, says she hasn't done is make the exploding pagers that killed 12 people and wounded more than 2,000 in Lebanon this week.

After her company was revealed to have licensed the design for the pagers from their original Taiwanese manufacturer Gold Apollo, Barsony-Arcidiacono told NBC News that she didn't make them.

"I am just the intermediate. I think you got it wrong," she said.

Since then, she has not appeared in public. Neighbours say they haven't seen her. She did not respond to messages seeking comment. Her flat in a stately old Budapest building, where a door to a vestibule had been open earlier in the week, has been shuttered.



 
On the trail of the mystery woman whose company licensed exploding pagers

She speaks seven languages, has a PhD in particle physics, an apartment in Budapest plastered with her own pastel drawings of nudes, and a career that took her around Africa and Europe doing humanitarian work.

What Cristiana Barsony-Arcidiacono, 49, the Italian-Hungarian CEO and owner of Hungary-based BAC Consulting, says she hasn't done is make the exploding pagers that killed 12 people and wounded more than 2,000 in Lebanon this week.

After her company was revealed to have licensed the design for the pagers from their original Taiwanese manufacturer Gold Apollo, Barsony-Arcidiacono told NBC News that she didn't make them.

"I am just the intermediate. I think you got it wrong," she said.

Since then, she has not appeared in public. Neighbours say they haven't seen her. She did not respond to messages seeking comment. Her flat in a stately old Budapest building, where a door to a vestibule had been open earlier in the week, has been shuttered.




Interesting.

Hezbollah members will spend the the rest of their lives tracking down this lady and making an example of her.
 

Bulgaria to probe company links to pagers that exploded in Lebanon​


Bulgaria will investigate a company linked to the sale of pagers to Lebanon's militant group Hezbollah that exploded this week in a coordinated attack, the state security agency said on Thursday.

Bulgaria's state security agency, DANS, said in a statement that it is working with the interior ministry to probe the role of a company registered in Bulgaria, without naming it.

Bulgarian media reports allege that a Sofia-based company called Norta Global Ltd had facilitated the sale of the pagers, which exploded across Lebanon on Tuesday, killing 11 people and wounding 4,000.

Reuters was not immediately able to confirm the link to Norta. Company officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment. A lawyer that registered the company at an apartment block in Sofia did not respond to Reuters questions.

Images of destroyed pagers analysed by Reuters showed a format consistent with pagers made by Taiwan Gold Apollo. Gold Apollo said on Wednesday that the pagers were made by Budapest-based BAC Consulting.

But Hungarian news site Telex reported that the sale was actually facilitated by Norta, citing sources. The Bulgarian state security agency said that it did not detect any shipments of the suspected pagers on Bulgarian territory.


In my opinion, this operation was an inside job that collaborated with external agencies.

The Bulgarian company mentioned reportedly has ties to Indian ownership, which adds an interesting layer to the scenario. However, it raises an important question: why would they choose to source such equipment through intermediaries in Bulgaria, is it because of the potential for sanctions since Hezbollah is recognized as a terrorist organization, and they cannot source directly from manufacturers? It's perplexing.

I believe that whoever facilitated the sourcing of this equipment was likely part of a broader scheme, and it wouldn’t be surprising if there were undercover operatives or paid informants embedded within the Hezbollah framework.
 
Pager and walkie-talkie explosions violated international law, says UN Human Rights chief

The UN's High Commissioner for Human Rights has called for an investigation into the pager and walkie-talkie explosions in Lebanon this week.

At least 37 people were killed and around 3,000 wounded after the hand-held devices, used by Hezbollah, exploded on Tuesday and Wednesday.

"International humanitarian law prohibits the use of booby-trap devices in the form of apparently harmless portable objects," Volker Turk told an emergency session of the Security Council last night.

"It is a war crime to commit violence intended to spread terror among civilians," he adds, calling for an "independent, rigorous and transparent" investigation.

BBC
 
It is mainly the hindutvas (including some sikhs) who love israel, as they see Muslims as the enemy. Israel and hindutvas share the same goals, although hatred is all they have in common, israelis would not want Indians moving to their country in large numbers as they consider them inferior.
It's nowhere close to how the arabs treat the muslim subcontinent labor force... they treat a richer hindu or Christian way better - no comparison really. You should be fighting for and advocating for proper treatment for them. Infact the richer hindus or Christians treat their fellow subcontinent muslims irrespective of country way better. You guys need to get out of your super narrow religious focus and spectrum
 
I think what we’re seeing here with the pagers in Lebanon is a clear example of how warfare is evolving. Cyber warfare is now blurring the lines between traditional and digital conflict, and the attack on Hezbollah shows just how vulnerable even outdated tech can be when it’s weaponized. It’s wild that something as simple as pagers, which were once just used for communication, can now be turned into deadly tools with a bit of hacking and supply chain manipulation.

This wasn’t just some random incident either—Israel clearly used advanced cyber tactics through Mossad to exploit the vulnerabilities in Hezbollah’s communication network. It's scary to think that even old-school tech like walkie-talkies and pagers, which should have been long out of the game, can still be weaponized in such sophisticated ways. It’s a reminder that no system is really safe, and supply chain security is more important than ever in this kind of modern warfare.

This also sends a message to countries like Pakistan and others—cybersecurity can’t be taken lightly anymore. If something like this can happen in Lebanon, we’ve got to step up our game in securing critical infrastructure and communication systems.
 
Norwegian police seek missing man over pagers in Hezbollah blasts

Police in Norway have put out an international search warrant for a Norwegian Indian man in connection with the sale of pagers to the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah that exploded last week, killing dozens of people.

Rinson Jose, 39, the founder of a Bulgarian company that is alleged to be part of the pager supply chain, went missing during a work trip to the US last week.

On Thursday, Oslo police said: “Yesterday, the Oslo police district received a missing person report in connection with the pager case. A missing persons case has been opened and we have sent out an international warrant for the person.”

Jose declined to comment on the pagers when he was contacted by Reuters on 18 September and hung up after being asked about the Bulgarian business. He then failed to respond to multiple calls and messages.

His employer, DN Media Group, said Jose, who works in the Norwegian media company’s sales department, departed for a conference in Boston on 17 September and since the following day the company had been unable to contact him.

According to Bulgaria’s corporate registry, Jose founded Norta Global Ltd, based in the capital, Sofia, in 2022.

Bulgarian authorities have investigated the company’s role in supplying the pagers but did not find evidence that they were made in or exported from Bulgaria.

Jose is a Norwegian citizen and was born in another country, the broadcaster NRK reported.


 
Israel concealed explosives inside batteries of pagers sold to Hezbollah, Lebanese officials say

Israel carried out part of its device attack targeting Hezbollah by concealing explosives inside the batteries of pagers brought into Lebanon, according to two high-ranking Lebanese security officials, who said the technology was so advanced that it was virtually undetectable.

Lebanese security officials watched a series of controlled explosions of some of the weaponized pagers, as investigations into who manufactured the wireless communication devices and how they made their way into Hezbollah’s pockets continued.

The pagers used in the controlled explosions were switched off at the time of the attack on September 17, which meant they did not receive the message that caused the compromised devices to detonate. The officials had a front-row seat to see just how catastrophic the blasts would have been to those carrying the devices and others around them.


 

Hezbollah pager blasts: International warrant for Kerala-born businessman​


Rinson Jose, a Kerala-born Norwegian businessman, whose name had cropped up in the Hezbollah exploding-pagers case has gone missing. Norway has issued an international warrant for Jose, whose Bulgaria-based firm was probed for being part of the supply chain that provided pagers to Lebanon-based terrorist group Hezbollah. Those pagers were detonated by Israel, resulting in over 30 deaths and injuries to thousands across Lebanon.

A Bulgarian company, Norta Global Ltd, was behind the pager's deal, reported Telex, a Hungarian media outlet, earlier in September. The Bulgaria-based firm was founded by 39-year-old Rinson Jose in 2022, reported The Cradle. Jose, it said, was a Norwegian citizen.

Jose and his company were cleared of any association with the exploding pagers by Bulgaria.

Norway, now, is looking for Jose, who disappeared while on a work trip to the US last week, reports Reuters.

Norwegian police have issued an international search request for Rinson Jose, a Norwegian-Indian man linked to the sale of pagers, the news agency says.

"On September 25, the Oslo police district received a missing person report in connection with the pager case. A missing persons case has been opened, and we have sent out an international warrant for the person," Norwegian police told Reuters.

On September 20, India Today Digital reported that a Kerala-born Norwegian businessman's name had cropped up in the Hezbollah pagers case.

Jose was born in Wayanad and moved to Norway after completing his MBA.

Kerala-based channels met his family and relatives, who confirmed that Jose had moved to Norway after his MBA degree.

"Rinson graduated from Mary Matha College, Mananthavady, completed his MBA, and went to Norway as a caretaker and later shifted to some business firms," his uncle, Thankachan, told Manorama Online. "We don't know about his job or his business," he added.

 
How Israel’s bulky pager fooled Hezbollah

The batteries inside the weaponised pagers that arrived in Lebanon at the start of the year, part of an Israeli plot to decimate Hezbollah, had powerfully deceptive features and an Achilles' heel.

The agents who built the pagers designed a battery that concealed a small but potent charge of plastic explosive and a novel detonator that was invisible to X-ray, according to a Lebanese source with first-hand knowledge of the pagers, and teardown photos of the battery pack seen by Reuters.

To overcome the weakness - the absence of a plausible backstory for the bulky new product - they created fake online stores, pages and posts that could deceive Hezbollah due diligence, a Reuters review of web archives shows.

The stealthy design of the pager bomb and the battery’s carefully constructed cover story, both described here for the first time, shed light on the execution of a years-long operation which has struck unprecedented blows against Israel's Iran-backed Lebanese foe and pushed the Middle East closer to a regional war.



 
Ex-Israeli agents reveal how pager attacks were carried out

Two former Israeli intelligence agents have revealed how members of the Lebanese Shia militant group Hezbollah used Israeli made walkie-talkies booby-trapped with explosives for 10 years before they were detonated in a surprise attack in September this year.

The two ex-Mossad agents told CBS News how Hezbollah was duped into buying thousands of rigged walkie-talkies and pagers without realising they were made in Israel.

Dozens of people were killed and thousands injured in the attacks. Israel said it was tailored to target only Hezbollah members, but civilians were among the victims, Lebanese officials said.

The UN human rights chief called the attack a war crime.


 

FO condemns Israeli airstrikes in Lebanon, urges int’l community to hold Tel Aviv accountable​


The Foreign Office on Friday “unequivocally” condemned the Israeli airstrikes on Beirut and southern parts of Lebanon, urging the international community to hold Tel Aviv accountable and take immediate action against the offensive.

According to Al Jazeera, the attack on Thursday targeting Hezbollah marks the fourth time Israel has bombed Beirut after a ceasefire was signed in November 2024. The Lebanese President Joseph Aoun, in a statement after the strikes, voiced “firm condemnation of the Israeli aggression,” calling the attack — carried out on the eve of Eidul Azha — a “flagrant violation of an international accord.”

Israel and Hezbollah started trading fire on Oct 8, a day after Hamas attacked communities in southern Israel and sparked the Gaza offensive. Hezbollah, a Hamas ally, says its attacks aim to support Palestinians who are under Israeli bombardment in Gaza.

The Foreign Office, in a statement, extending solidarity to Lebanese people during “this difficult time” and highlighted that “the reckless use of force threatens civilian lives, fuels regional instability, and undermines efforts for lasting peace.”

The FO noted that the attack constituted a violation of the sovereignty of Lebanon as well as the ceasefire signed between Israel and Hezbollah.

“We urge the international community, particularly the United Nations and ceasefire mediators, to take immediate action to hold Israeli occupying forces accountable and prevent further escalation,” the statement read.

Source: Dawn

“Pakistan remains firmly committed to peace, justice, and the principles of international law.”

On Thursday, the prime minister of Lebanon, Nawaf Salam, announced that the Lebanese army had dismantled “more than 500 military positions and arms depots” belonging to Hezbollah in the south of the country.

“There can be no security or stability while Israel’s daily violations persist, parts of our land remain occupied, and our prisoners are not freed,” Salam added.
 
Back
Top