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Many Israelis are resigned to war with Hezbollah. Are they prepared?

For Israelis who have been fixated for more than eight months on the war with Hamas, the prospect of an additional conflict, with Lebanon’s powerful Hezbollah militia, elicits a blend of fatigue and resignation. 

Residents of northern Israel, many of whom have been forced from their homes by the escalating violence, cannot live with the threat posed by Hezbollah, the argument goes, even if the timing of another war is bad.

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Many factors fuel resilience in time of war: hope, confidence, unity, trust in government. As Israelis endure their longest-ever war, against Hamas in Gaza, the threat of a far more arduous conflict looms with Lebanon’s powerful Hezbollah.

“We don’t want a war, but we don’t have a choice,” is how Tel Aviv hairdresser Pini Yonatan puts it.

Many Israelis, though increasingly distrustful of the government, express faith in the military to protect them. But experts warn there is a lack of appreciation for what a war with Iran-backed Hezbollah would mean for residents of the densely populated center of the country.

“I don’t think the public fully understands how difficult this is going to be,” says Chuck Freilich, a senior fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv and a former national security adviser.

“It is a totally different order of magnitude,” he says. “The level of destruction on Israel’s homefront may be something like we have never, ever experienced.”

With hostilities between Israel and the Lebanese militia Hezbollah escalating daily, U.S. and European diplomats are striving to prevent the violence from erupting into a full-scale war that could threaten the region.

The need for a diplomatic resolution to the crisis, which has already driven tens of thousands of people from their homes, was a key message conveyed Tuesday by U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin to visiting Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant in Washington.

“Another war between Israel and Hezbollah could easily become a regional war with terrible consequences for the Middle East,” Secretary Austin said. “We are urgently seeking a diplomatic agreement that restores lasting calm to Israel’s northern border and enables civilians to return safely to their homes on both sides of the Israel-Lebanon border.”

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Many factors fuel resilience in time of war: hope, confidence, unity, trust in government. As Israelis endure their longest-ever war, against Hamas in Gaza, the threat of a far more arduous conflict looms with Lebanon’s powerful Hezbollah.

Yet for many Israelis – fixated for more than eight months on the war with Hamas in Gaza and a traumatic hostage crisis – the prospect of war on an additional front elicits a blend of fatigue and resignation that conflict is perhaps inevitable. 

Residents of northern Israel cannot live with the threat of Hezbollah rockets or an invasion like the one Hamas carried out Oct. 7, the argument goes, even if the timing is bad.

An all-out war with Hezbollah would be a “disaster,” says Pini Yonatan, a hairdresser at a salon in northern Tel Aviv, as he takes a break.

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