The Killing of Nasrallah--and the Virtue of Escalation
What Israel has managed to accomplish over the past two weeks will long be studied by military historians.
In a series of brilliant operationsbeginning with the simultaneous explosion of encrypted pagers belonging to Hezbollahs commanders, and culminating with the coup de grace on Friday that eliminated the organizations leader, Hassan Nasrallah, and the rest of his high commandIsrael managed to decapitate the entire leadership of the most fearsome terrorist army on the planet. In so doing, it ignored the advice of its allies in the West, and radically disrupted the balance of power in the Middle East.
Hezbollahs war is not just with Israel. It has American, Syrian and Lebanese blood on its hands as well.
Recall that in 1983, the group killed 241 servicemen with a massive bomb at the Marines barracks in Beirut. The organization was also responsible for the 1994 bombing of the AMIA Cultural Center bombings in Buenos Aires, in which 85 innocent people were murdered. In 2012, Hezbollah bombed a bus with young Israeli tourists at the port of Burgas, Bulgaria that left five dead and 32 injured.
https://www.thefp.com/p/the-killing-of-nasrallahand-the-virtue
What I think is notable about concerns of escalation is no one can define what that really means, who exactly is this going to trigger? Syria? Who TF cares. Iraq doesn't have the capacity to attack Israel, the GCC countries like what Israel is doing even though they won't admit it, Egypt and Jordan have nominal peace agreements with Israel, and benefit from trade, etc.
Iran is the only country of concern, and they appear unwilling to engage with Israel in any sustained way.