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FILE PHOTO: Interceptions of rockets launched from Lebanon to Israel over the border, amid ongoing cross-border hostilities between Hezbollah and Israeli forces, close the Israeli border with Lebanon, on its Israel side June 27, 2024. REUTERS/Ayal Margolin/File Photo FILE PHOTO: Members of Hezbollah carry the coffin of Mohammed Nasser, a senior Hezbollah commander who was killed by what security sources say was an Israel strike on Wednesday, during his funeral in Beirut's southern suburbs, Lebanon, July 4, 2024. REUTERS/Aziz Taher/File Photo FILE PHOTO: Lebanon's Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah speaks during a televised address at a memorial service for Taleb Abdallah, a senior field commander in the group who was killed on June 11 alongside three other Hezbollah fighters in an Israeli strike on the south Lebanon village of Jouaiyya, in Beirut's southern suburbs, Lebanon, June 19, 2024.

REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir/File Photo BEIRUT - Coded messages. Landline phones. Pagers.



Following the killing of senior commanders in targeted Israeli airstrikes, the Iran-backed Lebanese militant group, Hezbollah, has been using some low-tech strategies to try to evade its foe's sophisticated surveillance technology, informed sources told Reuters. It has also been using its own tech – drones – to study and attack Israel's intelligence gathering capabilities in what Hezbollah's leader, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, has described as a strategy of "blinding" Israel. The sides have been tradi.

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