nopes
16.08.06, 23:12
Jak wygladały walki Izraela z Hezbolla z relacji samych żolnierzy izraelskich.
W ostatnich dniach wojny komandosi Izraela musieli chodzić na nogach 15 km., żeby nie eksponować czołgów i pojazdów opancerzonych na ogień Hezbolla (a może juz nie mieli czołgów).
Jenostki izraelskie bez efektywnycego wsparcia czołgów i helikopterów były sparaliżowane przez ogień Hezbolla. Kilkuset żolnierzy Izraela było unieruchamianych przez kilkudziesieciu partyzantów i to w poblizu samej granicy..
Hezbolla miało nasłuch elektroniczny, wiec Żydzi musieli wyłączyc swoje urządzenia komunikacyjne.
www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1154525874444&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
During the last few hours of daylight on Sunday, the last day of fighting in Lebanon, a reserve paratroop battalion took up positions in Kantara.
According to the procedure designed not to expose the troops to anti-tank missile fire, they went in on foot, the medics carrying 40-kilo loads on a 15-km. night march to the advanced position in Kantara.
www.mosnews.com/news/2006/08/16/hizbullahchechens_.shtml
Military sources said numerous Israeli combat units, without effective air or armor support, spent most of their time in Lebanon paralyzed by Hezbollah fire. They said hundreds of soldiers were often overwhelmed by as few as a dozen Hezbollah mortar and anti-tank gunners within sight of the Israeli border.
In all, Israel sent 30,000 soldiers to Lebanon. At least 118 soldiers were killed in the 33-day fighting.
“From the point of view of the individual soldier, they are better than the Arab armies that surround us,” Col. Omri Bar-David, a reserve battalion commander, said.
In several cases, Israeli commanders, citing Hezbollah squads, dismissed orders to advance. The military reported the detention of five Engineering Corps soldiers, including a reserve company commander, for refusing to embark on a mission in Lebanon.
“There is a lot of confusion,” Anon, a soldier not involved in the courtmartial, said. “We go in, we come out. We go in, we come out.”
Military sources said Hezbollah also forced Israeli units to turn off their communications and tracking equipment. They said Hezbollah deployed systems designed to identify a range of signals, including those of cell phones.
“During the day, Hezbollah sees us perfectly and we can’t see them,” another officer said. “The only time we conducted operations were at night because we believed our night vision systems were better than theirs.”