HA supporters, neutral analysts, and those with a passing interest - answer me this please

I understand fully that the ground forces very much are still in operation, I understand they still have a lot of firepower, training, experience. This is not just a bunch of rent-a-cops.

They're the real deal.

But my previous understanding of Hezbollah to me could be seen as 4 part mechanism.

1- Literally Same7t el Sayyed Nasrallah 2- Their claim that they can fire 1000s of rockets, missiles, and drones (this would overwhelm the Iron Dome) 3. Their popular support 4- Their ability to handle significant losses and continue

But, this isn't 2006 in my mind.

The losses they have suffered aren't significant. They appear in my mind near-fatal. We're not talking about just the the very top of the organization but even down to field team leaders if the reporting/analysis is accurate.

So, Point 1 is gone. Point 2 the IDF claims they can no longer do, HA seems to suggest they still can

Point 3 is a matter of debate bas kas shi3e sarle kazza osbo3 deep in this whole get people out to safety thing, I am not seeing my loved ones in a good state of existence. So it does raise the question about the popular support.

And given all the above points, it seems point 4 to me is true. I think they no longer can. The losses are too much. If the Washington Post article is to be believed, and what we already know from local reporting and sources, the Israelis had Hezbollah internally compromised from anywhere from a few months to potentially 9 years. Even a few months is a long time!

This is why, in addition to moles and spying and what not, they were able to take everything out so quickly, and why in the past year it seems a lot of officers and field team leaders and commanders kept being taken off the battlefield.

And this isn't 2006. This is full Gaza treatment of South Lebanon and Dahye. This is a lot of damage. And el Sayyed is gone, and i literally dont think any of us have truly processed that or really let it sink in. Like the second guy in line never even made a public appearance before he was also taken off the battlefield.

And we have the Lebanese government under threat cooperating with Israel with the airport and the land border with Syria precisely to prevent logistics and supply chains. An under reported claim, masalan, is that had been doing things like conducting special forces raids on Iranian weapons factories for Hezbollah in Syria and destroying them and things like it.

So how exactly are their ground forces fully in tact??

And if that's not your claim, but that they can still resist like 2006 and beat the iDF??

Especially the last point, can you help me understand? I feel like my biases and the assumptions i've mad have just locked me into an assessment that the land invasion will be way more shockingly easy than people expected. Yes the IDF will suffer losses, Hezbollah is still a fierce fighting force.

But with so much institutional memory and experience gone, with moral so low, with the very spiritual warrior leader gone, with their own families dead, injured, or displaced often in terrible conditions, with supply lines choking, with the Lebanese government making its own moves (and certain leaders being given ultimatums), how is Hezbollah not already defeated?

La2no my biggest worry is they may be defeated as a military, but as a militia they can still stream roll this country.

So what I would like addressed in summary is

Is Hezbollah truly already defeated and it is a matter of time if the IDF continues its war here??

If Hezbollah decides to turn its weapons also on Lebanon to keep its military potential alive, aren't we all then just totally fucked?

Whatever the comments are, I am sure we all learn but please be respectful, civil, and even though this is not the norm I know, I am just admitting my biases and asking for you to show me a different perspective because I care more about the truth than my own beliefs being true.

Thanks.