War tactics are creating inadvertent connections between young citizens of the two enemy states
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On a popular Facebook page, a young Israeli, recently released from military reserve duty, pens a message about a host of surprising matches on a dating app.
They are, bafflingly, in Lebanon, a country with which Israel is on the brink of war, as its army and Lebanese militant group Hezbollah escalate strikes in each other’s territory.
The young reservist had never seen profiles from Lebanon before. Then, suddenly in October, just after Israel launched their incursion into Gaza, Lebanese accounts started appearing.
Israeli social media thinks it has identified the reason for the sudden appearance of the profiles. GPS jamming. The tactic is used by the country’s forces to disrupt attacks originating from Lebanon. It essentially dupes phones into putting their owner’s location elsewhere.
“I’ve been in the reserves for quite some time,” the Israeli user jokes about the absurd situation. “But if the army decides to get that maniac in the north [Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah], I request that my country calls me to arms once more,” he says, hoping
to get a chance to meet the new matches.
Across the border to the north, Beirut residents Leila and Maher, who met online, are discussing the same phenomenon.
“Since the war started, I mostly see Israelis on the app – I barely use it any more,” says Maher.
The consequences for the pair are more serious. Lebanon and Israel are still technically at war and Lebanese citizens are banned from any type of contact with Israelis.
Lebanese social media is perplexed. According to the newspaper L’Orient-Le Jour, in Beirut, Israeli profiles accounted for 60 to 62 per cent of the total profiles in February on Tinder in Lebanon.
The issue is also sparking significant interest in Israel.
“I think Israelis and Lebanese alike have grown accustomed to total separation to the point where encountering the ‘enemy’ is basically unthinkable,” says Ari, who lives in Tel Aviv and has a similar experience on a recent trip to the north.
“Now, with a little bit of GPS jamming, these two enemies are casually swiping past each other,” he adds.
“Israelis are revelling in it.”
Yonatan in Haifa writes on a Facebook page that dating apps are suddenly full of “Amalek”, a biblical reference Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu used to describe his country’s enemies shortly after the October 7 attack on southern Israel.
A female poster complains: “Tinder, I’m so sick of seeing Lebanon and everyone who’s in it.”
Before the war, Israeli profiles would occasionally pop up, although “there are definitely more profiles,” says Omar, another Lebanese dating app user.