An Assault on Urban Areas: The Revised Reference Scenario for the Home Front in Israel | INSS
Select any text and click on the icon to listen!
ByGSpeech
go to header go to content go to footer go to search
INSS logo The Institute for National Security Studies, Strategic, Innovative, Policy-Oriented Research, go to the home page
INSS
Tel Aviv University logo - beyond an external website, opens on a new page
  • Contact
  • עברית
  • Support Us
  • Research
    • Topics
      • Israel and the Global Powers
        • Israel-United States Relations
        • Glazer Israel-China Policy Center
        • Russia
        • Europe
      • Iran and the Shi'ite Axis
        • War with Iran
        • Iran
        • Lebanon and Hezbollah
        • Syria
        • Yemen and the Houthi Movement
        • Iraq and the Iraqi Shiite Militias
      • Conflict to Agreements
        • Israeli-Palestinian Relations
        • Hamas and the Gaza Strip
        • Peace Agreements and Normalization in the Middle East
        • Saudi Arabia and the Gulf States
        • Turkey
        • Egypt
        • Jordan
      • Israel’s National Security Policy
        • Military and Strategic Affairs
        • Societal Resilience and the Israeli Society
        • Jewish-Arab Relations in Israel
        • Climate, Infrastructure and Energy
        • Terrorism and Low Intensity Conflict
      • Cross-Arena Research
        • Data Analytics Center
        • Law and National Security
        • Advanced Technologies and National Security
        • Cognitive Warfare
        • Economics and National Security
    • Projects
      • Preventing the Slide into a One-State Reality
      • Contemporary Antisemitism in the United States
      • Perceptions about Jews and Israel in the Arab-Muslim World and Their Impact on the West
  • Publications
    • -
      • All Publications
      • INSS Insight
      • Policy Papers
      • Special Publication
      • Strategic Assessment
      • Technology Platform
      • Memoranda
      • Posts
      • Books
      • Archive
  • Database
    • Surveys
    • Spotlight
    • Maps
    • Real-Time Trackers
  • Events
  • Team
  • About
    • Vision and Mission
    • History
    • Research Disciplines
    • Board of Directors
    • Fellowship and Prizes
    • Internships
    • Newsletter
  • Media
    • Communications
    • Video gallery
    • Press Releases
  • Podcast
  • Newsletter
New
Search in site
  • Research
    • Topics
    • Israel and the Global Powers
    • Israel-United States Relations
    • Glazer Israel-China Policy Center
    • Russia
    • Europe
    • Iran and the Shi'ite Axis
    • War with Iran
    • Iran
    • Lebanon and Hezbollah
    • Syria
    • Yemen and the Houthi Movement
    • Iraq and the Iraqi Shiite Militias
    • Conflict to Agreements
    • Israeli-Palestinian Relations
    • Hamas and the Gaza Strip
    • Peace Agreements and Normalization in the Middle East
    • Saudi Arabia and the Gulf States
    • Turkey
    • Egypt
    • Jordan
    • Israel’s National Security Policy
    • Military and Strategic Affairs
    • Societal Resilience and the Israeli Society
    • Jewish-Arab Relations in Israel
    • Climate, Infrastructure and Energy
    • Terrorism and Low Intensity Conflict
    • Cross-Arena Research
    • Data Analytics Center
    • Law and National Security
    • Advanced Technologies and National Security
    • Cognitive Warfare
    • Economics and National Security
    • Projects
    • Preventing the Slide into a One-State Reality
    • Contemporary Antisemitism in the United States
    • Perceptions about Jews and Israel in the Arab-Muslim World and Their Impact on the West
  • Publications
    • All Publications
    • INSS Insight
    • Policy Papers
    • Special Publication
    • Strategic Assessment
    • Technology Platform
    • Memoranda
    • Posts
    • Books
    • Archive
  • Database
    • Surveys
    • Spotlight
    • Maps
    • Real-Time Trackers
  • Events
  • Team
  • About
    • Vision and Mission
    • History
    • Research Disciplines
    • Board of Directors
    • Fellowship and Prizes
    • Internships
  • Media
    • Communications
    • Video gallery
    • Press Releases
  • Podcast
  • Newsletter
  • Contact
  • עברית
  • Support Us
bool(false)

Strategic Assessment

Home Strategic Assessment An Assault on Urban Areas: The Revised Reference Scenario for the Home Front in Israel

An Assault on Urban Areas: The Revised Reference Scenario for the Home Front in Israel

Research Forum | July 2017
Carmit Padan
Meir Elran
Listen to this content
Plays:-Audio plays count
0:00
-:--
1x
Playback Speed
  • 0.5
  • 0.6
  • 0.7
  • 0.8
  • 0.9
  • 1
  • 1.1
  • 1.2
  • 1.3
  • 1.5
  • 2
Audio Language
  • English
  • French
  • German
  • Italian
  • Russian
  • Spanish
Open text
an assault on urban areas: the revised reference scenario for the home front in israel. the reference scenario for a future conflict against hezbollah and/or hamas approved by the israeli government in june 2016 is bound to affect the home front. the main change to the reference scenario, the first of its type presented and approved as a basis for future preparations, is the far graver threat than that of previous conflicts, manifested primarily by the introduction of more precise high trajectory weapons. these enable adversaries to switch from the previous strategy of “harassment,” based mostly on statistical weapons, to a revised strategy of “severe disruption.” the difference lies in the scope of launches, and above all, the greater damage resulting especially from what is referred to as the focused “assaults” on urban areas. these are likely to consist of dense barrages fired against urban targets during the first days of the conflict, which are liable to cause unprecedented harm to the population and damage to critical infrastructure. this article examines the existing possible responses to the new reference scenario, and argues that the gap between the developing threat and the civilian population’s current state of preparedness has widened. the article proposes concrete measures to narrow this gap.
Download audioDownloaded:0
Open context player
Close context player
an assault on urban areas: the revised reference scenario for the home front in israel. the reference scenario for a future conflict against hezbollah and/or hamas approved by the israeli government in june 2016 is bound to affect the home front. the main change to the reference scenario, the first of its type presented and approved as a basis for future preparations, is the far graver threat than that of previous conflicts, manifested primarily by the introduction of more precise high trajectory weapons. these enable adversaries to switch from the previous strategy of “harassment,” based mostly on statistical weapons, to a revised strategy of “severe disruption.” the difference lies in the scope of launches, and above all, the greater damage resulting especially from what is referred to as the focused “assaults” on urban areas. these are likely to consist of dense barrages fired against urban targets during the first days of the conflict, which are liable to cause unprecedented harm to the population and damage to critical infrastructure. this article examines the existing possible responses to the new reference scenario, and argues that the gap between the developing threat and the civilian population’s current state of preparedness has widened. the article proposes concrete measures to narrow this gap.

The reference scenario for a future conflict against Hezbollah and/or Hamas approved by the Israeli government in June 2016 is bound to affect the home front. The main change to the reference scenario, the first of its type presented and approved as a basis for future preparations, is the far graver threat than that of previous conflicts, manifested primarily by the introduction of more precise high trajectory weapons. These enable adversaries to switch from the previous strategy of “harassment,” based mostly on statistical weapons, to a revised strategy of “severe disruption.” The difference lies in the scope of launches, and above all, the greater damage resulting especially from what is referred to as the focused “assaults” on urban areas. These are likely to consist of dense barrages fired against urban targets during the first days of the conflict, which are liable to cause unprecedented harm to the population and damage to critical infrastructure. This article examines the existing possible responses to the new reference scenario, and argues that the gap between the developing threat and the civilian population’s current state of preparedness has widened. The article proposes concrete measures to narrow this gap.


The opinions expressed in INSS publications are the authors’ alone.
Publication Series Research Forum

Events

All events
The 18th Annual International Conference
25 February, 2025
08:15 - 16:00

Related Publications

All publications
Anadolu via Reuters Connect
What Can We Learn from Israel’s Attack on Iran
Israel’s swift strike on Iran was marked by precision and maximum surprise. While it has secured significant gains including degrading Iran’s ballistic missile capabilities, Israel must remain focused on its primary objective: delivering a decisive blow to Iran’s critical nuclear infrastructure. To achieve this, Israel should leverage its military campaign—alongside the credible threat of American involvement—to pursue a sustainable diplomatic outcome that denies Iran the capacity to have a nuclear weapon for many years to come.
19/06/25
Operation Rising Lion: Real Time Tracker
The Data Analytics Center at INSS provides accurate and up-to-date data on Operation Rising Lion
19/06/25
Majid Asgaripour/WANA via REUTERS
The Campaign against Iran: Situation Assessment, Dilemmas, and Implications
Iran is approaching a crossroads regarding the continuation of the fighting against Israel: What dilemmas is it facing—and what should Israel be preparing for?
17/06/25

Stay up to date

Registration was successful! Thanks.
  • Research

    • Topics
      • Israel and the Global Powers
      • Israel-United States Relations
      • Glazer Israel-China Policy Center
      • Russia
      • Europe
      • Iran and the Shi'ite Axis
      • War with Iran
      • Iran
      • Lebanon and Hezbollah
      • Syria
      • Yemen and the Houthi Movement
      • Iraq and the Iraqi Shiite Militias
      • Conflict to Agreements
      • Israeli-Palestinian Relations
      • Hamas and the Gaza Strip
      • Peace Agreements and Normalization in the Middle East
      • Saudi Arabia and the Gulf States
      • Turkey
      • Egypt
      • Jordan
      • Israel’s National Security Policy
      • Military and Strategic Affairs
      • Societal Resilience and the Israeli Society
      • Jewish-Arab Relations in Israel
      • Climate, Infrastructure and Energy
      • Terrorism and Low Intensity Conflict
      • Cross-Arena Research
      • Data Analytics Center
      • Law and National Security
      • Advanced Technologies and National Security
      • Cognitive Warfare
      • Economics and National Secutiry
    • Projects
      • Preventing the Slide into a One-State Reality
      • Contemporary Antisemitism in the United States
      • Perceptions about Jews and Israel in the Arab-Muslim World and Their Impact on the West
  • Publications

    • All Publications
    • INSS Insight
    • Policy Papers
    • Special Publication
    • Strategic Assessment
    • Technology Platform
    • Memoranda
    • Database
    • Posts
    • Books
    • Archive
  • About

    • Vision and Mission
    • History
    • Research Disciplines
    • Board of Directors
    • Fellowship and Prizes
    • Internships
    • Support
  • Media

    • Communications
    • Video Gallery
    • Press Release
    • Podcast
  • Home

  • Events

  • Database

  • Team

  • Contact

  • Newsletter

  • עברית

INSS logo The Institute for National Security Studies, Strategic, Innovative, Policy-Oriented Research, go to the home page
40 Haim Levanon St. Tel Aviv, 6997556 Israel | Tel: 03-640-0400 | Fax: 03-744-7590 | Email: info@inss.org.il
Developed by Daat A Realcommerce company.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Listen to this content
an assault on urban areas: the revised reference scenario for the home front in israel. the reference scenario for a future conflict against hezbollah and/or hamas approved by the israeli government in june 2016 is bound to affect the home front. the main change to the reference scenario, the first of its type presented and approved as a basis for future preparations, is the far graver threat than that of previous conflicts, manifested primarily by the introduction of more precise high trajectory weapons. these enable adversaries to switch from the previous strategy of “harassment,” based mostly on statistical weapons, to a revised strategy of “severe disruption.” the difference lies in the scope of launches, and above all, the greater damage resulting especially from what is referred to as the focused “assaults” on urban areas. these are likely to consist of dense barrages fired against urban targets during the first days of the conflict, which are liable to cause unprecedented harm to the population and damage to critical infrastructure. this article examines the existing possible responses to the new reference scenario, and argues that the gap between the developing threat and the civilian population’s current state of preparedness has widened. the article proposes concrete measures to narrow this gap.
Read content
audio content is empty.
an assault on urban areas: the revised reference scenario for the home front in israel. the reference scenario for a future conflict against hezbollah and/or hamas approved by the israeli government in june 2016 is bound to affect the home front. the main change to the reference scenario, the first of its type presented and approved as a basis for future preparations, is the far graver threat than that of previous conflicts, manifested primarily by the introduction of more precise high trajectory weapons. these enable adversaries to switch from the previous strategy of “harassment,” based mostly on statistical weapons, to a revised strategy of “severe disruption.” the difference lies in the scope of launches, and above all, the greater damage resulting especially from what is referred to as the focused “assaults” on urban areas. these are likely to consist of dense barrages fired against urban targets during the first days of the conflict, which are liable to cause unprecedented harm to the population and damage to critical infrastructure. this article examines the existing possible responses to the new reference scenario, and argues that the gap between the developing threat and the civilian population’s current state of preparedness has widened. the article proposes concrete measures to narrow this gap.
Close context player
Read content
Options
0:00
-:--
1x
Playback Speed
  • 0.5
  • 0.6
  • 0.7
  • 0.8
  • 0.9
  • 1
  • 1.1
  • 1.2
  • 1.3
  • 1.5
  • 2
Audio Language
  • English
  • French
  • German
  • Italian
  • Russian
  • Spanish
Open text
audio content is empty.
audio content is empty.
Select and listen