Exploding Pagers in Lebanon and Syria

Peloni:  A brilliantly exercised assault on the enemy at the brink of war – simple yet highly disruptive to any attempt at coordinating either further assaults or even any defense of the many Hezbollah units scattered across Southern Lebanon. Hence, Hezbollah must now find a new means of communicating, obtaining the new devices and distributing them to all their various members amid the onset of war. Well, it is not likely that Israel will allow them the time to do any of this – as Gen. Avivi noted, war is immanent.  It would be ironic if Nassrallah came to his senses and used his next post-Friday prayer announcement to call all his minions North of the Litani so that they could collect their new cellular devices which they could use til Israel chose to blow those up as well…ironic indeed.  And let us not overlook the psychological warfare aspect of this victory as well.

Hezbollah’s Strategic Communications Shut Dow

Stephen Bryen | Weapons & Stategy | Sept 17, 2024

Encrypted pagers used by Hezbollah and their sponsors in Lebanon and Syria simultaneously started exploding earlier today, September 17.

This was the backbone of Hezbollah and Iranian communications in Lebanon and Syria.  It has now been destroyed along with wounding at least 1,000 Hezbollah and Iranians connected with them, including Iran’s ambassador to Lebanon.  We will probably learn more about how many pagers exploded in the coming days.

There is now video of some of the pagers exploding and video of hospitals crowded with wounded.

Lacking communications except on public cellular phones, it will be difficult for Hezbollah to launch coordinated missile attacks on Israel, as they have done as recently as the last few days.  That does not mean they won’t try, of course, but the shutdown of their communications system is a definite setback.

If the attack was launched by Israel, which has not been confirmed, it would indicate that Israel is (1) retaliating for Hezbollah attacks and (2) seeking to hobble Hezbollah’s military operations if Israel launches an attack on Lebanon, as many project will soon happen.

Details of exactly how this feat was accomplished are still under wraps.  News reports say that the pagers exploded by overheating their lithium batteries.  This means that while the pagers sent and received encrypted messages, their operating systems were not secure.

Encrypted pagers can be text only or can be text and voice.  Many of them, even US brands, are made in Asia.  China offers a number of models.

It is likely the pagers used by Hezbollah were dual voice-text devices, meaning they were bigger than small text pagers and look similar to a walkie-talkie.  Such devices would have a larger lithium battery to support voice communications and allow longer range operations.

One assumes, therefore, that it was possible to infect the pagers with malware that could override temperature controls inside the pagers and “cook” the batteries.

Lithium-ion batteries are explosion prone. Devices have gone off unexpectedly even on airlines. Temperature is one of the ways to detonate a battery, although there are other methods.

But more is involved.  It is obvious that while the pagers were encrypted, their signals could still be tracked, meaning that it was possible to identify the Hezbollah operatives and those cooperating with them, especially Iranians, who were part of the network.  It is likely only pagers belonging to Hezbollah-linked terrorists and their leaders were targeted.  There are no reports, as yet, of civilians such as first responders, experiencing exploding pagers.

The last time this level of cyber attack was mounted, that we know of, was the US and Israeli attack on Iran’s uranium enrichment centrifuges in 2010.  That was the Stuxnet computer worm.  Stuxnet caused the controllers of the centrifuges to speed them up too fast until they broke down and their spinning carbon-carbon rotors disintegrated.  So far as is known, there were no casualties in the Stuxnet attack.

By its very nature, a pager is safer to use than a cellular phone because it is essentially a radio and is not connected to the internet or to social media.  However, pagers require repeater stations, providing a way for an adversary to electronically collect signals intelligence and, in the latest case, allegedly to introduce software changes to working pagers.  The fact that the Hezbollah network covered Lebanon and Syria suggests it was a very large network.  It would be interesting to know what telecommunications suppliers helped Hezbollah build out the system, and who provided the pagers.

September 18, 2024 | 9 Comments »

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9 Comments / 9 Comments

  1. Syrians are celebrating the pager bombings.

    Why? Because they know better than anyone the true nature of Hezbollah. They suffered a decade of oppression, death and misery.

    Waiting for hysterical Westerners to condemn them also.

    Nioh Berg

  2. Reports say that Hezbollah purchased all the communication devices from a European shell company owned by Israel ??

    That is, they also paid Israel for all the devices that exploded

    Dr. Eli David

  3. The fact that the Hezbollah commenders ordered their agents to use the walkie-talkie’s that they had acquired from the same provider that had given them to pagers, and at the same time, wasn’t all that bright. So they brought on themselves a second round of explosions and more casualties. It is a good thing that some of Israel’s enemies are not geniuses, like the Hamas tunnel-builders. Apparently the Hezbollah people are not up tothe genius level as their Hamas allies.

  4. Iranian State Media is reported that Iran’s Ambassador to Lebanon, Mojtaba Amani suffered “Extremely Serious Injuries” to his Eyes leaving him almost Completely Blind, as a result of today’s Pager Attack by Israel.

    OSINTdefender

  5. Lebanon’s health ministry updates the death toll in the pager explosions to 11.

    Another 4,000 are wounded, including 400 in critical condition, according to ministry numbers cited by Arab media

    Emanuel (Mannie) Fabian

  6. The Guardian is reporting that the Pager attack is in response to an assassination attempt on a former top Israeli defense official.

  7. Paging Mr. Hezbollah, Paging Mr. Hezbollah…BOOM!!! I have been literally laughing about this since I first heard about it.