Top Israeli General Says IDF Gearing Up for War in 2018

A senior IDF general on Monday warned that the chances of war were higher than ever for 2018 in light of the battlefield victories in the Syrian civil war by the country’s dictator, Bashar al-Assad, and his allies Iran and Hezbollah, The Times of Israel reports.

“The year 2018 has the potential for escalation [of military conflict], not necessarily because either side wants to initiate it, but because of a gradual deterioration. This has led us to raise the level of preparedness,” Major General Nitzan Alon, head of IDF Operations, told Army Radio in a rare interview.

Assad is close to snuffing out the last pockets of rebel resistance in Idlib and, eventually, in the country’s southwest, along the Israeli and Jordanian borders, which Alon said will provide the Syrian regime’s allies an opportunity to turn their attention to Israel.

“In the northern arena, there is a change coming due to the strategic developments in the Syrian internal fighting. The Iranians and Hezbollah, who are backing [Assad], are getting freed up to start building their power. We are not allowing these things to happen without our involvement. We are acting and will continue to act,” he said, apparently referring to reported Israeli airstrikes in Syria against Hezbollah and Iranian targets.

Though it has long opposed Iranian entrenchment in the country, Israel has taken an increasingly bellicose tone over the Islamic Republic’s actions there and across the Middle East in recent weeks, especially following a round of aerial clashes earlier this month.

Alon warned that if war were to break out, Iran would likely encourage its proxies to fight Israel from Lebanon, Syria and, potentially, the Gaza Strip.

“War with Hezbollah could bring in other actors, whom we’d need to fight,” he said.

According to Israel, Iran now provides funding to the two largest terrorist groups in the Gaza Strip: Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad. The Israeli military estimates that each Gaza-based group possesses thousands of fighters, significant stockpiles of rockets and mortar shells, and attack tunnels, some of which enter Israeli territory and others that are designed for warfare inside the coastal enclave. Alon said that the Palestinian groups may also be called upon by Tehran to take part in the fighting of a future war.

“Iran won’t hold itself back in Gaza. It wants to pay for its interests on the northern border in Palestinian blood,” he said.

He said that in the case of war, the IDF would look to fight back with “maximum force in the minimum amount of time.

“We have to use the advantages the IDF has over its enemies as forcefully as possible and as quickly as possible,” Alon said.

Military officials and defense analysts have assessed that a future conflict with Hezbollah — whether it is treated as a third Lebanon war or a first Israeli-Iranian war — would be devastating for both Israel and Lebanon. Hezbollah has a stockpile of some 150,000 missiles, which it could rain down on Israel at a rate of over 1,000 missiles a day, and has been preparing fighters to infiltrate into Israeli territory and attack a community near the Lebanese border, slaughtering the residents or taking them hostage.

Israel, for its part, has prepared a massive list of Hezbollah targets that it can strike with aircraft and artillery, and IDF ground forces have trained for fighting in Lebanese terrain.

“If the next war indeed breaks out, it will be rough. But, first and foremost, it will be rough for the other side,” Alon warned. “I don’t think any Israeli citizen would want to switch places with a Lebanese citizen during the next war.”