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Why Israel Refuses To Ignore Hezbollah - Even If It Delays Peace With Iran

News Image By PNW Staff June 15, 2028
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As efforts continue to secure a broader peace agreement with Iran, critics increasingly point the finger at Israel. The argument is simple: if Israel would stop its military operations against Hezbollah in Lebanon, Tehran might be more willing to make concessions and move toward a larger regional settlement.

On the surface, that argument sounds reasonable.

But it ignores a critical reality that many outside the region fail to understand: for Israel, the Hezbollah threat is not theoretical. It is existential.

From Israel's perspective, the question is not whether peace with Iran would be desirable. Of course it would. The question is whether any peace agreement is worth accepting if it leaves intact the very military force Iran has spent decades building on Israel's northern border.

Recent discoveries in southern Lebanon help explain why Israeli leaders remain unwilling to simply stand down.

This weekend, the Israel Defense Forces released footage from an extraordinary underground complex discovered beneath the Beaufort ridgeline in southern Lebanon. What they found was not merely another weapons cache or isolated bunker.

According to the IDF, it was effectively an underground military city.


The tunnel network reportedly stretched through a mountain less than six kilometers from the Israeli border town of Metulla. Inside were living quarters capable of housing hundreds of fighters, along with kitchens, showers, water systems, electrical infrastructure, restrooms, medical facilities, anti-tank missile storage areas, launch positions, and air-defense installations.

This was not a defensive structure built to protect a village.

It was built to support a major offensive operation.

For years, many Israeli analysts have warned that Hezbollah was preparing its own version of October 7.

While Hamas launched its surprise assault from Gaza in 2023, Hezbollah possesses a far larger arsenal, more fighters, more sophisticated weapons, and significantly greater backing from Iran.

Had Hezbollah launched a coordinated invasion across Israel's northern border while simultaneously unleashing thousands of rockets, the consequences could have been catastrophic.

Israeli communities near the Lebanese border have long feared exactly such a scenario.

The tunnel complex discovered near Metulla appears to validate many of those concerns.

Israeli officers say the facility was designed to support an assault intended to overwhelm border communities in the opening stages of a future war. In other words, this was not merely a deterrent. It was infrastructure for invasion.


That reality fundamentally changes the conversation surrounding peace negotiations.

Many observers view Hezbollah as a separate issue from Iran. Israel does not.

Israel sees Hezbollah as one of Iran's most important strategic assets.

For decades, Tehran has invested billions of dollars into Hezbollah's military capabilities. Iran has supplied funding, weapons, training, intelligence, and strategic guidance. Hezbollah may operate from Lebanon, but Israel views it as an extension of Iranian power.

The tunnel complex itself reportedly reflects that relationship. According to Israeli officials, the project was financed and directed by Iran as part of Tehran's broader regional network that stretches from Lebanon to Syria, Iraq, Gaza, and Yemen.

From Israel's perspective, signing a peace agreement with Iran while leaving Hezbollah's offensive capabilities intact would be like signing a peace agreement with an adversary while allowing them to keep an armed division positioned just outside your front door.

No Israeli government--left, right, or center--is likely to accept that arrangement.

There is another troubling aspect to the discovery.


The tunnel complex was reportedly embedded beneath civilian areas in southern Lebanon.

This has long been one of Hezbollah's most controversial military strategies. Weapons, command centers, missile launchers, and military infrastructure are routinely placed within or near civilian populations.

Critics argue this effectively turns ordinary Lebanese families into human shields, ensuring that any Israeli military response risks civilian casualties and international condemnation.

For Israel, every newly discovered tunnel reinforces the belief that time is not neutral.

Every month of quiet allows more weapons to be stockpiled, more tunnels to be dug, and more invasion plans to be refined.

This is why many Israelis reject calls to simply freeze operations in Lebanon for the sake of diplomacy.

Peace agreements are valuable. Few nations understand the value of peace more than Israel, a country that has spent decades fighting for its survival.

But peace built on wishful thinking is not peace at all.

The discoveries emerging from southern Lebanon reveal why Israeli leaders remain convinced that Hezbollah cannot simply be ignored or contained. They believe the next war is being planned long before the first shot is fired.

And if the evidence found beneath the mountains of southern Lebanon is any indication, they may have a point.

That is why many Israelis view the current campaign not as an obstacle to peace--but as a prerequisite for any lasting peace that might eventually come.




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