Daily Briefing June 5 – Why only Lebanon can drive Hezbollah out. But it won’t

From Israel’s northern border, Lt. Col. (res) Sarit Zehavi assesses Israel’s options — and warns away from outsourcing the country’s security to a weak army

With:

Welcome to The Times of Israel’s Daily Briefing, your 20-minute audio update on what’s happening in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world.

Lt. Col. (res) Sarit Zehavi joins host Amanda Borschel-Dan for today’s episode.

WATCH the full episode here:

This week, Hezbollah resumed striking Israel soon after an announcement out of DC that the Jewish state and Lebanon had agreed on Wednesday to renew their fragile ceasefire and create a number of “pilot” security zones inside Lebanon from which the terrorist group would be banned.

From her vantage point, only 10 km from the northern border, Zehavi, the head of the Alma Research and Education Center, explains how this plan was unrealistic from the start: Hezbollah is not going to willingly vacate its territory and the Lebanese army — many of whose members openly support Hezbollah — is not the force to uproot the terrorist group from southern Lebanon.

Zehavi gives us an overview of the options on the table — none of them good — and hypothesizes that the only way Hezbollah will be driven out of Lebanon is if the government takes a principled stance and risks civil war.

And finally, Zehavi, a member of Forum Devora, speaks about how the organization is promoting the equal representation of women in key decision-making positions in the fields of national security and foreign policy.

Check out The Times of Israel’s ongoing liveblog for more updates.

For further reading:

Rockets, drones trigger warnings in north after Hezbollah rejects Lebanon ceasefire proposal

Subscribe to The Times of Israel Daily Briefing on Apple PodcastsSpotify, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. This episode was produced by Ari Schlacht.

Check out yesterday’s episode here:

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