Walkie-talkies in Lebanon may have held more explosives than pagers: Analysis
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The Sept 18 blasts on the devices set off more large fires, suggesting that they might have contained more explosives.
PHOTO: AFP
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NEW YORK - The two-way radios that exploded in Lebanon on Sept 18 were larger and heavier than the pagers that blew up across the country on Sept 17, and in some cases set off larger fires, according to a New York Times analysis of the available visual evidence.
The devices, seen in photos and a video of the aftermath of the Sept 18 attacks, were nearly three times heavier than the pagers, and while the blasts on Sept 18 were not as widespread as the earlier ones, they set off more large fires, suggesting that they might have contained more explosives.
The Lebanese health ministry said that at least 20 people had been killed
That added to the toll from Sept 17, when the blasts from pagers killed 12 people
Fires broke out in at least 71 homes and stores, and at least 18 cars and motorcycles were set ablaze, according to Lebanese Civil Defence, the country’s emergency service.
The Times reviewed three photos and one video to identify the communication devices involved in Sept 18’s attacks as the IC-V82, a two-way radio bearing the brand of the Japanese company Icom.
It is unclear where Hezbollah purchased the radios.
In some cases, the back of the device was blown off, indicating the force of the explosions, while in other instances, the front of the device was visibly damaged.
Hezbollah militants have been previously linked to the IC-V82.
In 2022, United Against Nuclear Iran, a privately funded group advocating stronger sanctions on Iran, had warned that Hezbollah was using Icom’s devices.
And a Hezbollah fighter was photographed in 2022 wearing an Icom two-way radio. NYTIMES

