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Exploding Hezbollah pagers: How did it happen?

Matthew Ward Agius with agencies
September 18, 2024

Lithium-ion batteries can catch fire or explode, but in the attack on pagers in Lebanon, the devices are more likely to have been hacked.

https://p.dw.com/p/4klU0
Libanon Beirut Explosionen von Pagern
Remains of exploded pagers on display in Lebanon on September 18.Image: AFP

Hezbollah, an Iran-backed Shiite political party and militant group in Lebanon, has alleged Israel coordinated an attack that resulted in a near simultaneous explosion of about 5,000 pagers — small one-way communication devices — on September 17, 2024. 

Independent analysts have said an attack of this scale would have to have been planned months in advance.

It's the use of pagers — a technological throwback to last century — that has caught the attention of many readers, and how these simple messaging units could be adapted to explode by remote detonation.

What is a pager?

While an entire generation has grown up surrounded by cellphones, specifically smartphones, there was a time where simple pagers were a commonplace device used by doctors and other professionals "on call" for emergencies. 

The small devices use specific radio frequencies, and, in most cases, only send one-way messages to specific recipients. The recipient then has to use another device to either message or call back.

And they haven't disappeared entirely. They are considered more reliable for communication in emergency situations, for instance, such as during blackouts or natural catastrophes.

Hezbollah officials reportedly switched to pagers from cellphone and satellite networks to evade tracking by Israel. Pagers allowed Hezbollah to send short messages.

Phone networks, on the other hand, can be monitored to geolocate devices.

The AR-924 pagers identified in the Lebanon attacks were reportedly manufactured under license by Hungarian company BAC Consulting KFT, according to the product's Taiwanese licensor Gold Apollo.

BAC's chief executive has since denied being responsible for the production of the items used in the attack.

According to the specifications listed by Gold Apollo on a since-removed product website, the AR-924 has up to nearly three months of battery life on a single charge.

Hezbollah had ditched smart phones over security concerns

Could it have been a lithium-ion battery explosion?

It is possible that the explosions resulted from thermal runaway of small lithium-ion batteries used to operate the pagers.

While generally safe to use, incorrect storage, charging or damage to lithium-ion batteries can result in overheating.

At full charge, this can lead to battery combustion — as has been shown in numerous internet videos and news footage of cellphones, or personal mobility vehicles, such e-scooters, lighting up.

A manipulated signal or malfunction of a device equipped with a lithium-ion battery could cause the battery to explode, but footage of the attacks makes this seem unlikely.

"I don’t think there’s much mileage in it being the lithium-ion battery as some people are suggesting," head of COTEC (the Cranfield Ordnance Test and Evaluation Center), Trevor Lawrence, told DW.

"From what I’ve seen, the effect is much more violent than that."

The impact of pager explosions in Lebanon

More likely: Hezbollah's pagers were sabotaged

While it is unclear what caused the explosions, at time of publication, the most probable explanation is sabotage at some point in the supply chain.

Lebanon's security services have told news agencies that about 5,000 of the AR-924 pagers were likely rigged with explosives before delivery. Lawrence, himself a former Ammunition Technical Officer in the British Army, agrees.

"I’m fairly confident that what we’re talking about is pagers that have been specifically modified and had explosives put in them," Lawrence said.

A forensic assessment of the explosion sites would allow authorities to determine the chemistry behind the explosives.

Reports suggest Hezbollah are investigating whether small quantities of PETN (pentaerythritol tetranitrate) or RDX were used as explosive.  

Bomb disposal experts have suggested that the simple build of a pager means it has most of the components needed for a makeshift bomb already — and that all that may have been needed was to have explosive material and a detonator added to them.

"There’s certainly been explosive inserted in them, and some sort of initiation device which has then been linked into the pager activation itself," Lawrence said.

"It would almost certainly be a military grade plastic explosive, so something like RDX or PETN," he said.

"If you can get very, very close to the target you only need a very small amount of explosive to cause life-threatening injuries. You can’t get closer than a pager."

Edited by: Zulfikar Abbany 

Update: This article was updated at 17:00 UTC on 18 September 2024. 

Explosions at home

DW Journalist Matthew Ward Agius
Matthew Ward Agius Journalist with a background reporting on history, science, health, climate and environment.