By Ruth Sherlock, Jawad Rizkallah, npr.com — NEAR AARAMTA, SOUTHERN LEBANON — Muscle-bound Hezbollah fighters karate chopped terracotta tiles to smithereens with their bare hands, as others leapt onto fast moving dirt-bikes while wielding rifles. Rockets smashed into a hillside the Lebanese militia had dotted with “enemy” Israeli flags. Snipers hit metal cut-outs of Israeli soldiers from hundreds of meters away. “Oh Zionists, we are coming for you, from places you know and places you don’t,” a Hezbollah member shouted into a microphone, as fighters sprayed their targets with live ammunition in the simulated attack. “We will come at you from the sea, from the air and from the land.”
The military exercise on Sunday at a Hezbollah base in southern Lebanon, close to the border with Israel, was the biggest public show of force by the militia in at least a decade. The group invited local and foreign journalists to attend, giving them rare access to a sensitive military position to report on the event. The display was ostensibly to mark the upcoming anniversary of the withdrawal of Israeli forces from southern Lebanon on May 25, 2000. But it also comes at a time of heightened tension between Israel, Hezbollah and allied groups.