Pagers belonging to Hezbollah operatives exploded in an attack that was allegedly planned by Israel. This is how experts are speculating they could have been detonated.
Pagers used by members of Hezbollah exploded in Beirut and southern Lebanon on Tuesday in what appears to be a highly sophisticated remote attack, killing 12 people, including two children, and injuring 2,800 including 300 people critically, according to Lebanon’s health minister Firas Abiad.
Both Lebanese caretaker information minister Ziad Makary and Hezbollah have alleged Israel is behind the pager explosions, with a US official also confirming to the Associated Press that the pagers exploded as part of an Israeli operation.
Hezbollah, which is backed by Iran and designated a terror organisation by the United States and the UK, emerged during the Lebanese civil war. Tensions with Israel date back to the 1980s with the militant group declaring Western powers and Israel as their enemies in a manifesto.
Hezbollah politician Ibrahim Al Moussawi called the attack a “criminal aggression,” with the Islamist militant group saying they would continue to defend Lebanon.
Experts told Euronews Next that while devices and laptops have been used as weapons before, this attack was highly sophisticated as the devices were well-concealed with the detonation coordinated.
Why is Hezbollah using pagers to communicate?
A pager is a small wireless communications device that is used to receive messages via radio signals. They were widely used before smartphones.
As a non-state actor with limited capabilities, Hezbollah has used pagers in the past to avoid Israeli interception, according to Elijah J Magnier, a veteran war correspondent and analyst who has been covering the region for 37 years.
“Hezbollah was very determined this time to prevent members from using the mobile phone because any phone that is connected to the Internet is easily accessed by the very advanced Israeli electronic capability,” he told Euronews Next.
How could the pagers have been tampered with?
SMEX, a Lebanese digital rights NGO, said in an analysis article after the attack that there were multiple possible scenarios for how the pagers could have been detonated.
They say the devices could have been tampered with during transit or shipping and set to detonate on a timer or via a radio signal.
SMEX also speculated that the devices could have been exploited to overheat the batteries, a scenario that some experts have since cast doubt on in media reports and social media posts.
Paul Amoroso, a counter improvised explosive device adviser at the Small Arms Survey and former ordnance technical officer with the Irish Defence Forces, said getting access to components and planting devices that initiate simultaneously is very sophisticated.
“There is a key characteristic you would need from the energetic material, the explosives, if it was an explosive, it’s called critical diametre and that’s how small you can make the explosives, and there are only very few types of explosives that have that characteristic,” he told Euronews Next.
Then there would need to be “an effective initiator” or detonator but putting one into an improvised explosive device the size of a pager is “very difficult,” so it would likely be a “bespoke state-engineered one,” Amoroso, who also formerly worked with the UN Mine Action Service, added.
You’re at the cutting edge of explosive ordnance technology here.
Paul Amoroso
Small Arms Survey adviser
“All it would have taken was two or three of these to malfunction and initiate before the intended time and internal security checks by Hezbollah would have alerted them that these were an issue so they had a robust IED that could be rough-handled,” he pointed out.
From an engineering perspective, “it’s at a level of sophistication only a few agencies in the world would have. You’re at the cutting edge of explosive ordnance technology here,” he said.
Magnier told Euronews Next that the pagers that exploded were not older ones but rather a new batch that arrived recently. This has also been reported by other news agencies citing Hezbollah officials.
“Hezbollah had the capability to inspect these pieces of equipment but it looks like these obviously have a superior technology and capability,” Magnier said, adding that the Israelis may have “managed to implant a very small amount of explosive, of highly explosive material” in the pager’s electronic circuit.
“This is why it is very difficult for a normal inspection to identify, in particular, when the pager was working,” he said.
A senior Lebanese security source confirmed to Reuters on Wednesday, meanwhile, that Israel’s spy agency put explosives inside thousands of pagers that were imported into Lebanon months ago.
Euronews Next has reached out to the Israeli defence ministry for comment.
“The one thing [Hezbollah needs] to operate as an organisation is they need a means to communications,” said Amoroso.
“This is real game-changer stuff, which Hezbollah commander now is willing to pick up a phone in the next while and not feel like his or her life is in threat – this is inside their personal safety space”.
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