Israel strikes Beirut and orders south Lebanon evacuation as conflict mounts
Israel issued a sweeping new displacement order for southern Lebanon, instructing residents up to 25 miles away from their border to head north, and striking the centre of Beirut in a sharp escalation of its fight with Hezbollah. A spokesperson for the Israeli military on Thursday ordered all residents to head north of the Zahrani River “for their safety”, before it began a bombing campaign against what it said were Hezbollah targets. The order covers major Lebanese cities, including Nabatieh, and dozens of villages. The IDF also issued an evacuation order for a neighbourhood in central Beirut near a row of restaurants, saying the Israeli military would strike a building there. The latest orders come just days after Israel issued instructions for people south of the Litani River and Beirut’s southern suburbs. Nearly a million people have already been internally displaced in 10 days of fighting.
“Where can I go?” asked Hamza Zbeeb, a 48-year-old member of the municipality of Nimiriya, one of the villages included in the evacuation order. “Many people have gone to Beirut and returned because there’s nowhere to stay. I don’t want to be on the streets.” A few hours later, Israel struck two buildings in central Beirut, levelling them after warning residents to move away. One of the buildings in Beirut’s Zouq Blat neighbourhood was next to a shelter hosting displaced people, causing large crowds of families seeking shelter in the main square of central Beirut. The other building was close to the prime minister’s office, UN agencies and foreign embassies. Israel’s military leadership is considering an escalated campaign in Lebanon against Hezbollah after the pro-Iran group launched its most intense attacks yet on Israel on Wednesday night. Hezbollah let off successive volleys of rockets and drone swarms on Israel, injuring two people, with most of the projectiles either being intercepted or falling into open areas. It continued firing into northern Israel on Thursday, with warning sirens sounding in Safed and surrounding towns.
Israel quickly responded by bombarding Beirut’s southern suburbs and southern Lebanon, which continued into Thursday afternoon, rocking the capital city with periodic airstrikes. The exchange was the most severe yet in the 10-day conflict between Israel and Hezbollah, in which Hezbollah and Iran coordinated their attacks for the first time. In a statement carried by the Fars and Tasnim news agencies, Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said the “joint and integrated operation” involved a missile attack by Iran carried out in conjunction with missile and drone fire from Hezbollah. Hezbollah launched more than 200 rockets towards Israeli territory, the statement added, including Israeli military bases in Haifa, Tel Aviv and Beersheba.
In Israeli border communities, many spoke of a “very difficult” night. “Last night was a bit crazy,” said Daniel Dorfman, 43, in Metula, a town a few hundred metres from Lebanon. “I don’t get anxious usually but all the walls were shaking. It’s a little bit frightening. Here we get zero warning of any attack. You hear the explosions of the interception before you hear the sirens.”
Hezbollah’s operation, called “Operation Chewed Wheat” – a reference to a Quranic verse about reducing one’s enemies to chewed wheat – was a sharp escalation by the group, believed to be battered by nearly two years of daily airstrikes by Israel. Israeli warplanes began bombing Lebanon nearly immediately after Hezbollah’s strikes. The skies of Beirut were lit red and windows shook as Israel unleashed its most powerful bombardment of the southern suburbs yet in this round of fighting. Videos showed collapsed buildings in southern Lebanon and streets choked with smoke illuminated by roaring flames. “It was a very difficult night; what can I say? Bombing all night,” said Ali Hariri, a lawyer and first responder with the Beit al-Talaba organisation in Nabatieh, as he stood amid the rubble-strewn streets of Nabatieh.
Israel also carried out a strike in the early hours of Thursday in the neighbourhood of Ramlet al-Baida, central Beirut, on the corniche where many displaced families have been sleeping. Videos showed at least two men lying dead on the seaside walkway. Lebanon’s health ministry said that at least 12 people had been killed and 28 injured in the strike. “It was terrifying,” said Riyadh al-Lattah, a 57-year-old woodworker from the southern suburbs of Beirut who was camped out with his wife and five children across the street from the impact site in Ramlet al-Baida. “We heard them hit once and then once again almost immediately. We didn’t think they would hit here. What’s here? It’s just the sea.”
Elsewhere, the health ministry said at least 17 people were injured in the strikes on Beirut’s southern suburbs, though more casualties were expected from other strikes throughout the country. In southern Lebanon, Israel’s military spokesperson said it was hitting Hezbollah’s missile launchers. They warned residents it would “soon act with overwhelming force” against Hezbollah and residents should distance themselves from affected areas immediately.
Human rights groups said the orders equated to forced displacement and could amount to war crimes. They also said the Israeli military should still try to prevent civilian harm, even if civilians did not evacuate. Israeli strikes have killed at least 634 people and injured 1,586 in less than 10 days of fighting. Israel’s security cabinet met on Wednesday night to discuss Lebanon, where officials sought to stop Hezbollah’s ability to launch rockets into Israeli territory. On Wednesday, the head of the Israeli military Lt Gen Eyal Zamir ordered reinforcements to its northern border, redeploying the Golani Brigade from Gaza to the north. The brigade is specialised in offensive ground operations, and analysts said the force’s redeployment could signal a larger ground invasion of Lebanon. Yaakov Selavan, the deputy mayor of the Golan regional council, said residents of northern Israel expected the government and military to “finish the job [with Hezbollah] once and for all” and that the military should advance as far north as the Litani River, 20 miles (30km) into Lebanon. “It is non-arguable. We are not looking to occupy land. We are just looking to survive,” Selavan said.
Hezbollah is reportedly preparing itself for a full-scale Israeli invasion of south Lebanon. Hezbollah fighters have been fighting with Israeli troops in south Lebanon, particularly around strategic points in the eastern parts of the country, such as hilltops around al-Khiam. Small units of Hezbollah’s elite Radwan force have been acting autonomously to ambush Israeli troops, which have been conducting in-and-out raids in southern Lebanon. Hezbollah has reportedly spent the year-and-a-half since its November 2024 ceasefire with Israel rebuilding its capabilities and reconsolidating its organisation. Israel had killed most of the senior leadership of the group and killed or incapacitated thousands of its fighters during the 13-month war, though exact numbers are not known.
Lebanon’s government has called on Hezbollah to stop firing into Israel, and has insisted the state should hold the monopoly of violence in the country. But its understaffed, under-equipped army has so far been unable to confront the armed group directly. The government also fears provoking civil strife in Lebanon, which has a long, painful history of sectarian division and violence. The government, with French assistance, has appealed to the international community for a ceasefire in Lebanon, calling for negotiations with Israel while vowing to curb Hezbollah’s activities. Israel and the US, however, are sceptical that the Lebanese government can disarm Hezbollah.