
Shafaq News
Israel’s ongoing military campaign in Lebanon, the
most dangerous escalation since the 1982 invasion, is reshaping the country’s
southern geography and threatening to trigger long-term demographic and
political consequences. Field estimates and statements from Israeli officials
indicate that, if the conflict were to stop at its current stage, nearly 10% of
Lebanese territory could remain under direct or indirect Israeli control.
The war has already displaced more than 1.2 million
Lebanese, according to the Ministry of Social Affairs, particularly following
the escalation linked to the US-Israeli confrontation with Iran that began on
February 28. The figure represents nearly one-fifth of Lebanon’s population.
The Health Ministry data also indicate that approximately 13,000 people have
been killed or wounded since the conflict intensified on March 2.
While Lebanon has experienced repeated waves of
displacement during previous Israeli invasions and wars in 1978, 1982, 1996,
2006, and 2024, the current campaign differs in both scale and method. Entire
villages and towns in southern Lebanon have been systematically destroyed,
raising concerns that Israel is applying in Lebanon a model similar to the one
used in Gaza.
According to field data and publicly available
military assessments, Israeli forces currently exercise direct occupation or
effective fire control over around 60 villages and towns across southern
Lebanon. The areas, estimated at more than 400 square kilometers, include
locations where residents can no longer safely return due to continuous
airstrikes and artillery fire.
Israeli officials, including Defense Minister
Israel Katz, have openly discussed plans for a buffer zone extending between
seven and 15 kilometers inside Lebanese territory. Finance Minister Bezalel
Smotrich recently argued that the Litani River should become the effective
dividing line of the conflict zone, while National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir
went further by publicly speaking about potential Israeli settlement plans
inside Lebanese territory.
The destruction on the ground extends beyond
military targets. Entire villages, including Mhaibib, Aita Al-Shaab, Kfarkela,
Yaroun, Maroun Al-Ras, and Odaisseh, have reportedly been leveled. Other towns
such as Khiam, Mais Al-Jabal, Blida, Houla, and Dhayra suffered near-total
devastation. Human Rights Watch (HRW) and the UN human rights officer have
increasingly classified such operations as potential war crimes, citing forced
displacement and widespread destruction of civilian infrastructure.
Contrary to common perceptions, southern Lebanon is
not exclusively Shiite. Although Shiites form the majority population in many
southern districts, the region also includes Sunni Muslims, Druze communities,
and Christian villages representing multiple denominations. The scale of
displacement and destruction risks undermining Lebanon’s delicate sectarian and
communal balance.
The Israeli military has consistently framed its
operations in Lebanon as targeting Hezbollah infrastructure and personnel.
However, UN humanitarian officials and field documentation indicate the impact
has extended well beyond Hezbollah-affiliated areas and communities.
The senior UN humanitarian coordinator for Lebanon,
Imran Riza, confirmed after a field visit to Beirut’s southern suburbs that airstrikes
and demolitions were causing casualties among women, men, and children, as well
as displaced families, including Syrian and Palestinian refugees and
Bangladeshi migrants.
An Israeli airstrike, for example, killed at least
23 people in the village of Aalmat, north of Beirut, and far from the areas in
southern and eastern Lebanon where Hezbollah maintains a major presence.
UN experts noted that many strikes hit densely
populated residential neighborhoods and commercial areas in central Beirut, in
violation of the principles of distinction and proportionality under
international humanitarian law.
Suha, a 30-year-old resident of Hasbaya, a
predominantly Druze town in southern Lebanon, described the psychological
strain of living near the conflict zone.
“Every night I spend in Hasbaya, I hear explosions
and airstrikes hitting nearby villages,” she told Shafaq News, requesting
partial anonymity. “Sometimes I can see the flashes from the strikes with my
own eyes. On one hand, you feel relatively safe, but on the other hand, your
people are being killed and losing their livelihoods.”
Although Hasbaya avoided the level of destruction
seen elsewhere in the south, nearby roads, valleys, and commercial areas have
repeatedly come under attack, forcing residents to alter travel routes and
daily routines.
The WHO representative in Lebanon, Dr. Abdinasir
Abubakar, also confirmed that health facilities had been directly attacked,
with five hospitals forced to evacuate within a single month, and that attacks
on medical workers, ambulances, and civil defense centers had accelerated the
erosion of Lebanon’s healthcare sector.
Amnesty International noted the Israeli military
alleged —without providing evidence— that ambulances and healthcare sites were
being used for military activities.
Between March 2 and May 21, Israeli attacks have
killed 116 healthcare workers and injured 263 others across Lebanon, the Health
Ministry reported. The strikes have affected 147 healthcare facilities during
the same period, including 16 hospitals and 31 healthcare centers. The
ministry’s overall toll since March 2 stands at 3,111 killed and 9,432 wounded.
HRW documented that the Israeli strikes on at least
nine bridges along the Litani River between March 12 and April 8 significantly
limited the ability of state institutions, humanitarian organizations,
hospitals, and healthcare facilities to deliver aid and provide medical care.
Ahmad Haidar, a Lebanese civil defense activist,
told Shafaq News that casualties and destruction have affected nearly all
Lebanese communities.
“Israel has killed people from every sect and
targeted areas across the country,” he said, adding that the destruction did
not only hit Shiite villages, but also Sunni villages such as Marwahin, Yarine,
and Dhayra were devastated, while Beirut and its suburbs faced hundreds of
airstrikes that killed Sunnis, Shiites, and Christians alike.
Field reports further indicate that several
Christian-majority villages in southern Lebanon, including Rmeish, Ain Ebel,
Debel, Alma al-Shaab, and Qawzah, were exposed to incursions or bombardment.
Syrian and Palestinian refugees, as well as Lebanese citizens holding European
and American nationalities, have also been among the casualties.
The April 8 campaign, Operation Eternal Darkness,
insisted that every target hit belonged to Hezbollah. The operational reality
that day told a different story. In the span of ten minutes, some 50 Israeli
fighter jets delivered around 160 munitions across at least five neighborhoods
in Beirut’s central and coastal areas, hitting busy commercial and residential
districts during rush hour and sending the city into widespread panic. By the
time the smoke cleared, at least 360 people were dead and more than 1,000
wounded, the vast majority of them in areas where ordinary Lebanese had been
going about their daily lives.
The conflict’s implications extend beyond Lebanon
itself. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has repeatedly linked
military operations in Lebanon and southern Syria under a broader security doctrine
aimed at preventing hostile armed groups from operating near Israel’s northern
borders.
Netanyahu previously announced plans for what he
described as a “security zone” stretching from Ras Naqoura on Lebanon’s
Mediterranean coast to areas reaching the Yarmouk Basin and Mount Hermon in
Syrian territory. He also stressed that Israel would not allow Syria’s border
region to become “another southern Lebanon,” signaling support for expanded
demilitarized zones inside Syria.
Military estimates suggest Israel currently
controls roughly 1,200 square kilometers in southern Syria, including the
occupied Golan Heights, which Israel seized in 1967 and formally annexed in
1981. Since the collapse of Bashar al-Assad’s government, Israeli forces have
reportedly expanded daily incursions across Quneitra, rural Damascus, and Daraa
provinces, establishing fixed military positions and advancing to within
approximately 25 kilometers of Damascus near Qatana.
Israeli strategic planning increasingly seeks to
connect its operational belt in southern Lebanon with its expanding military
presence in southern Syria. Officials in Israel argue the policy is “necessary
to shield northern Israeli settlements and the occupied Golan Heights from
future attacks.” Critics, however, warn that the strategy risks creating a
permanent occupation reality across multiple fronts.
Legally, the developments raise questions over
Israel’s compliance with the 1949 Armistice Agreement with Lebanon, the 1974
Disengagement Agreement with Syria, and the UN-demarcated Blue Line. Diplomats
and regional observers believe the evolving military map could impose a new
negotiating framework on both Beirut and Damascus while broader regional
tensions with Iran remain unresolved.
As fighting continues without a clear political
settlement, concerns are growing that temporary military arrangements could
harden into lasting territorial changes, fundamentally altering the strategic
landscape of the Levant.
Read more: Beirut’s southern suburb emptiesovernight: Stories of displacement under fire
Written and edited by Shafaq News staff.





