Chapter 1265: Israel Lacking Courage
As soon as the fighting in Tel Aviv started, Netanyahu was also alarmed for the first time.
At the same time, the Israeli high command also received a lot of information on the battlefield.
The Iraqi-Syrian Federation still dispatched its navy. Just as the Israeli high-level officials had expected, in the industrial zone of Syria, the Iraqi-Syrian Federation did prepare warships.
But the prepared warships are not one or two, but a very powerful amphibious battle group.
At the same time, the Israeli high-level officials never imagined that the Iraqi-Syrian Federation was so determined to win the Tel Aviv operation. Not only did it dispatch more than a dozen cutting-edge warships, it also dispatched airborne troops on a large scale.
As a result, the Israeli army was completely at a disadvantage from the beginning of the battle.
"At present, we have completely lost contact with the troops in Tel Aviv. All connections have been cut off, and satellite communications cannot be sent or received." Lieberman said anxiously.
Netanyahu also said anxiously: "Immediately let all the nearby troops rush to help Tel Aviv quickly. We must ensure that the city is still firmly under our control."
The importance of Tel Aviv, for today's Israel, exceeds that of any city in Israel.
Even if Netanyahu is willing to lose Jerusalem, he is not willing to lose Tel Aviv.
Tel Aviv is the most important port. Once it leaves this city, most of Israel's foreign materials will be completely cut off.
And all land directions of Israel are blocked by the coalition forces in the Middle East. The key combat materials needed by the army, including food and fuel, all need to be obtained from the port.
Prior to this, Netanyahu also felt that the Iraqi-Syrian Federation had taken a fancy to Tel Aviv, and was also actively preparing for Tel Aviv's defense.
But he didn't expect that the battle would come so quickly, and there would be no time for him to prepare.
Netanyahu grew up in Tel Aviv and has spent most of his political career there.
When it got Jerusalem, Tel Aviv played the role of the capital of Israel.
For Israelis, the significance of the city of Tel Aviv is not just a domestic lifeline.
Haifa can be lost, the Red Sea city of Etra can be lost, and even any port in Israel can be lost, but Tel Aviv cannot have any mistakes.
Otherwise, this will not only bring about extremely disastrous consequences, but also deal a huge blow to the morale of the Israeli army and the people.
At this moment, when Israel is cheering up and down, if Tel Aviv is lost, it will be too heavy a blow to the confidence of the people and the army.
What's more, in Tel Aviv and many nearby urban areas and connected cities, nearly half of Israel's population is concentrated in this area. Once this place is controlled by the Iraqi-Syrian Federation, Israel will directly lose half of its population.
Moreover, a large number of family members of soldiers are in that place, and the morale of the army will be even more unstable.
You must know that in the current Israeli army, a large number of soldiers have all recently left their families to go to the battlefield, and their mentality has not yet fully entered the role of soldiers. This is also human nature.
Originally, Netanyahu felt that with a large number of troops guarding the periphery, coupled with the deployment of civil defense projects, the Iraqi-Syrian Federation would not be able to directly attack rear cities like Tel Aviv.
After all, the Iraqi-Syrian Federation does not have any warships appearing in the Mediterranean Sea. Some ideas are more just speculations. There is no evidence, and they cannot be used as reasons for formulating military actions.
Lieberman felt Netanyahu's anxiety. As the Minister of Defense, he was equally anxious, but at the moment, he was more helpless: "As soon as the battle started, I ordered all the troops around Tel Aviv to immediately It is a pity that our troops were attacked by the air as soon as they took action. The troops have not traveled ten kilometers, and most of them have lost more than half. They can only return to the previous location, otherwise they have not reached Tel Aviv
All these troops are finished. "
"What about the civil air defense project?" Netanyahu seemed to think of something and asked.
"Mr. President, the civil air defense project in Tel Aviv only has air-raid shelters, and there is no civil air defense passage connecting other cities." Lieberman shook his head and said.
"Damn it, how did this happen? The Iraqi-Syrian Federation once again gave us a fatal attack when we were unprepared." Netanyahu roared very unwillingly.
"Ninety-nine percent of military tactics can be learned from military textbooks, and it is not difficult for soldiers to fight against water and earth. The most fearful thing is that one percent that no one knows." Lieberman regretted Said.
In fact, Lieberman clearly felt that Israel has always lacked courage, lacking the same courage as its opponents.
If at first it was guessed that there might be a hidden fleet of the Iraqi-Syrian Federation in the Syrian industrial zone, it would have been able to decisively mobilize heavy troops from all around to Tel Aviv, and even transfer part of the strategic reserve force on the front line to Tel Aviv, then Tel Aviv would be impossible It is what it is now.
However, this kind of change to the formulated and arranged military deployment is completely impossible based on a single guess. Lieberman is also very clear that if he does not change the formulated military deployment, he is also worried that this is completely a suspected soldier of the Iraqi-Syrian Federation. The plan is to disrupt the current defense deployment.
An unfounded guess that anyone as a commander couldn't make such a super risky decision.
This is what Lieberman is thinking at the moment. He lacks a decisive courage. On the other hand, his opponent not only has a very complete strategic strategy, but also has a bold courage to act.
Just from this point, Lieberman felt that this war was really going to become difficult.
Although it seems that the opponent's attacks on the frontlines are not bright, in the past, Lieberman may not understand why the opponent engaged in such a war of attrition.
But at this moment, he has fully understood that consumption is the opponent's tactic, to consume as much as possible of his own combat potential, and then cut off all foreign aid.
With the loss of electricity and industrial capabilities, and only relying on handicraft workshops, it is already very difficult to maintain normal operations, let alone all-people warfare.
Moreover, if the war continues, one's own combat potential will be further depleted. On the other hand, the opponent's powerful supplementary capabilities for war demonstrated by the Future Technology Group can fully afford it. (To be continued.)