Hezbollah may launch October 7-style attack on Israel any minute after air strikes as Israelis prepare for all-out-war

TERROR group Hezbollah could unleash an October 7 style massacre on Israel at any moment as the country prepares for an all-out war across the Middle East.
Tensions are at boiling point in the war-torn region after Hezbollah launched hundreds of missiles at Israel this morning as the IDF targeted its strongholds in southern Lebanon.
Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) had unleashed a pre-emptive strike against Hezbollah bases across the border at around 4.30am on Sunday morning.
Intelligence had detected plans by the terror group to fire thousands of rockets, with some even earmarked to go as far south as Tel Aviv.
Hezbollah later followed through with its planned revenge attack - for the Israeli assassination of a senior commander last month - but was only able to fire a few hundred rockets with little damage caused.
It marks the latest humiliation for Iran and its chief terror proxy, and threatens to push boiling tensions across the border into a new phase of all-out war.
Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah warned that the rocket barrage was only “phase one” of its master plan to avenge the death of Fuad Shukr in Beirut last month.
Middle East expert and former editor of The Jerusalem Post Yaakov Katz told The Sun how Hezbollah could now be looking to launch an October 7 style massacre across Israel's northern border.
He said Hezbollah has a huge system of underground tunnels, not unlike Hamas, which they could use to unleash hell.
Hamas terrorists used Israel's western border to launch a surprise ambush on October 7 last year which killed over 1,200 people and saw some 250 more kidnapped.
Militant group Hezbollah is thought to have 30,000 to 50,000 fighters and between 120,000 and 200,000 missiles, rockets, attack and reconnaissance drones.
It is believed to be the world's biggest and most powerful non-state military force.
If it did unleash a massacre comparable to the horrors of October 7, Yaakov said it could force Israel into putting boots on the ground in Lebanon to try and wipe out the terror group once and for all.
Yaakov said: "An October 7 style Hezbollah attack is always a possibility.
"And it would be irresponsible to assume that they cannot do it.
"I think one of the lessons of October 7 for Israel is always assume the worst and don't think that you have your enemy contained and under control.
"We have to assume that such an option does exist and can happen."
An October 7 style Hezbollah attack is always a possibility
Yaakov Katz
Yaakov said since October 7 some 60,000 Israelis have fled their homes along the border in the north because of tit-for-tat strikes between Israel and Hezbollah.
"Not because of the rockets," he explains "but because of the fear that Hezbollah does have tunnels, does have a way to storm the border".
It "can carry out an attack much larger than what Hamas did on the border with Gaza", he explained.
"Most of those people along the border have left their homes and have not yet been able to go back because of exactly that fear of an October 7 style attack."
"The real possibility does exist."
Yaakov said Israel prevented Hezbollah from firing "thousands of rockets and missiles" over the border just "minutes before those missiles were supposed to be launched" today.
But he warned: "Hezbollah has over 150,000 rockets and missiles that cover the entire state of Israel with their range and their different sizes."
And Hezbollah could pursue "a desire and urge that it needs to get something launched into the center of Israel, into the Tel Aviv area".
"If they strike in Tel Aviv," he warns, "it would provoke Israel to also retaliate in a big way in Beirut", and "then we're on a path towards a wider escalation."
If Hezbollah starts to send its forces across the border, Israel will have no choice but to also send its troops into Lebanon to push back those forces
Yaakov Katz
The Middle East pro said "anything is possible" when it comes to Hezbollah and Iran, and that the group has the capability and the desire to launch an even bigger attack than what we saw this morning.
Speaking of the possibility of a ground invasion into Lebanon, he said: "If Hezbollah starts to send its forces across the border, Israel will have no choice but to also send its troops into Lebanon to push back those forces so they cannot cross into Israel.
"If you really want to degrade your enemy's capabilities, you need to send boots on the ground, and you need to go between their different targets and their different command centres.
If this war does expand and all these rockets are unleashed on Israel, I don't think it will have much of a choice but to do and launch such a ground offensive
Yaakov Katz
"You need to go into those bunkers and into those tunnels to go and weed out those different terrorists and infrastructure.
"They have massive underground bunker complexes, which they can launch rockets from, they can move trucks inside.
"If this war does expand and all these rockets are unleashed on Israel, I don't think it will have much of a choice but to do and launch such a ground offensive."
By Ellie Doughty, Foreign News Reporter
ISRAELI jets obliterated thousands of Hezbollah rocket launchers in “pre-emptive” strikes on the morning of Sunday August 25.
Hezbollah aimed to fire thousands of rockets towards the north and central Tel Aviv, according to Israeli intelligence, but was only able to launch some 320 missiles after IDF strikes thwarted its plans.
IDF spokesperson Daniel Hagari said 100 fighter jets struck over 40 launch areas in southern Lebanon in an "act of self-defence".
Hezbollah said it fired some 320 rockets and attack drones at northern Israel later on Sunday, as the IDF put the number closer to 250.
Very little damage was caused by the strikes fired from southern Lebanon.
The attacks were the biggest escalation against Israel by Hezbollah since last year’s October 7 ambush from Gaza and sent tensions soaring.
It threatens to trigger an all-out war which could draw in the United States, Iran and militant groups across the region.
Hezbollah's leader Hassan Nasrallah said the operation was only “phase one” of its master plan to avenge the assassination of its commander Fuad Shukr in Beirut last month.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed that Israel's pre-emptive strikes are "not the end".
He said: "Three weeks ago we eliminated his chief of staff, and today we foiled his attack plan.
"Nasrallah in Beirut [Hezbollah leader] and Khamenei in Tehran [supreme leader of Iran] should know that this is another step on the path to changing the situation in the north, and returning our residents safely to their homes.
"And I repeat - this is not the end of the verse."
Former British Army commander Colonel Richard Kemp, speaking to The Sun from Tel Aviv, said this latest escalation marks a shift in the conflict.
"What we're seeing now illustrates a problem that has to be dealt with.
"In northern Israel, something like 80,000 civilians have had to be withdrawn from the northern part of Israel, and are now distributed around hotels in different parts of Israel.
"They can't go home while this threat remains of massive missile capability, plus a significant ground army that could launch an attack such as the 7th of October in the north.
"And that has to be dealt with, and Israel has to find a way of dealing with it."
Richard said the streets of Tel Aviv are "very quiet" and the beaches are almost deserted as people stay at home amid the ongoing warnings from officials.
He said most are only leaving if they have to and are otherwise staying at home close to their air raid shelters.
The former Army boss believes that a solution for Israel will likely have to be "a large scale military assault on southern Lebanon".
"And of course, Israel has to confront Iran head on as well at some point," he added.
"While the current regime in Iran feels that it has the ability to continually generate and carry out attacks against Israel through its proxies, then that threat will continue.
"And Israel simply cannot allow it to go on. I think there has to be a further escalation in this conflict. I think it's a necessity.
"The alternative is for Israel to live in perpetuity under this threat. It has to be seen to deal with the threat, not only to prevent further rocket attacks and further attacks from the different proxies of Hezbollah, but also to deter other potential enemies against attacking it.
"Israel lives in a very tough region and has to be as strong as it can be and as robust as it can be in dealing with the enemies who mean to bring harm to Israeli civilians and the Israeli military."