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Christophe Bordet, edited by Ugo Pascolo with AFP
After the explosions of Hezbollah’s pagers, it was the walkie-talkies of the men of the Shiite terrorist group that went up in smoke. And now, it is the path of these devices, as well as the way in which, probably, they were sabotaged, that is emerging.
An attack that blew up the beepers of Hezbollah members, then the next day another targeting the Shiite group’s walkie-talkies. In two days, Tuesday and Wednesday, the terrorist organization close to Iran and a supporter of Hamas suffered two severe setbacks that killed 32 people and injured more than 3,000. Weakened and disorganized, Hezbollah seems totally overwhelmed by these cyberattacks. And now, the path of the booby-trapped beepers and walkie-talkies is beginning to take shape.
Hungarian shell company and Japanese walkie-talkies no longer manufactured by the brand
According to investigators and investigations conducted by several Israeli journalists, the explosives appear to have been introduced into the devices at the very moment they were manufactured. This therefore implies that these two operations were the result of heavy logistics. As for the beepers, the Hungarian company that sold the devices of a Taiwanese brand to Hezbollah appears to be a front company set up for the sole purpose of selling the booby-trapped objects to the terrorists.
As for the walkie-talkies, Icom, the Japanese company that has not manufactured them for a decade, said it was investigating whether its own transmitting devices were involved in the wave of explosions that hit Hezbollah members on Wednesday. Icom said it would publish “updated information, as soon as it becomes available, on [son] website”. Apparently, these contained an even greater quantity of explosive than that found in the pagers.
A deadly sabotage operation aimed in any case at demonstrating the vulnerability of the military communications network of Lebanese Shiite terrorists allied with Iran.
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