Defense Minister Yoav Gallant on Monday night revealed that the IDF has in recent days destroyed tens of thousands of Hezbollah rockets, a potential strategic game-changer for the Lebanese terror group.
Gallant's estimate was a major jump over earlier estimates which had been under 10,000 rockets destroyed.
Despite the success, pre-war Hezbollah had over 150,000 rockets.
The tens of thousands of Hezbollah rockets destroyed occurred in southern Lebanon and deep in the Bekaa Valley.
The show of force is double the largest number of attacks the IDF has carried out against Hezbollah in a single day, even during the major new strikes since Thursday of last week, and is around 10-20 times what large attacks by the IDF on Hezbollah looked like prior to last month.
These strikes follow warnings from IDF Spokesman Daniel Hagari on Monday afternoon for Lebanese civilians to evacuate Bekaa Valley; social media posts showed several explosions across the valley.
Hezbollah has much longer-range strategic weapons in the Bekaa Valley because it is farther from the border with Israel, making collecting intelligence about the weapons and attacking them more difficult.
While the impact of Hagari's warning may be to cause a mass evacuation from the area, the IDF did not say that the whole area must be evacuated, rather focusing on residences where weapons are hidden.
However, given that the IDF has accused Hezbollah of hiding weapons in every three to five houses in parts of Lebanon, the impact of Hagari's threat could be a mass evacuation.
Further, Hagari pushed back on global criticism of rising Lebanese casualties and the IDF decision to target civilian areas, saying that the videos of large explosions circulating on social media prove that Hezbollah hid powerful weapons in civilian areas which caused secondary explosions.
Strikes in the Bekaa Valley
The IDF spokesman specifically showed a video of an attack of a structure at Jabal al-Butum with what appeared to be tremendous secondary explosions not consistent with if the IDF had bombed a house which did not contain weapons.
Moreover, he said this third wave of attacks was to stop what the military viewed as an imminent decision by Hezbollah to fire on Israel using some of its strategic weapons in the Bekaa Valley area.
Hagari did not change the status of home front restrictions which currently only apply to the Haifa Bay Area and northward.