Derec
Contributor
No, because then they would have malfunctioned and not exploded. They worked as intended.I heard that they bought the pagers from Boeing.
I don't think so. This image shows the ten dead Hezbollah members the terror group claimed as result of Tuesday's wave.That said, the death toll and the number injured seems awfully maldistributed. Is Hezbollah not indicating deaths among their ranks and only civilian related collateral damage? Because otherwise, 12 or so including civilians killed seems awfully low.
From an Iranian site. Good riddance to some bad rubbish!
The low death count is more a function of small explosive charges. Pagers are tiny anyway, and so you can only hide a miniscule amount of explosives. The deaths are probably bad luck - a piece of shrapnel piercing the femoral/external iliac or carotid arteries for example.
Note that the second wave, where larger devices like walkie talkies and laptops exploded had slightly more deaths but far fewer injuries suggesting bigger explosive charges but fewer devices involved.
Hezbollah devices explode again in Lebanon, raising fears of wider Israel conflictReuters said:Lebanon's health ministry said 20 people were killed and more than 450 injured on Wednesday in Beirut's suburbs and the Bekaa Valley, while the death toll from Tuesday's explosions rose to 12, including two children, with nearly 3,000 injured.
From what I heard, the change had to do with Hezbollah being bothered by many targeted killings of their leaders in recent months, and (the quite reasonable) suspicion that they were tracked using their cell phones.The other question is who fed them the line about the cell phones being a problem. I'm wondering if Israel successfully trolled Hezbollah into swapping phones for pagers... and then did this, or whether they got word of the shift in plans by Hezbollah and a light bulb went off.
How Hezbollah used pagers and couriers to counter Israel's high tech surveillanceReuters said:Coded messages. Landline phones. Pagers. Following the killing of senior commanders in targeted Israeli airstrikes, the Iran-backed Lebanese militant group, Hezbollah, has been using some low-tech strategies to try to evade its foe's sophisticated surveillance technology, informed sources told Reuters.
[...]
"We're facing a battle in which information and technology are essential parts," said Qassem Kassir, a Lebanese analyst close to Hezbollah. "But when you face certain technological advances, you need to go back to the old methods - the phones, the in-person communications … whatever method allows you to circumvent the technology."
It was a great intelligence coup for sure.The great thing here is that Hezbollah has to quadruple think buying any electronic communication device now. It sounds like Israel achieved more in this maneuver than they have in 11 months in Gaza against Hamas. And with a substantially muted amount of collateral damage.
They may try, but it is by no means an easy feat to insert explosives into devices. You have to insert yourself into the supply chain without anyone noticing.I hope that this isn't something Iran can easily try themselves, regarding miniaturized explosives, not pagers. No one uses those.
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