Israel Resumes Attacks in Southern Lebanon Despite Ongoing Middle East Truce
Israel has stepped up military operations in southern Lebanon, issuing new evacuation orders and conducting strikes despite a broader ceasefire agreement in the Middle East that the United States and Iran brokered. This highlights the unstable and fragmented nature of peace efforts in the region.
Renewed Strikes Amid a Fragile Truce
On Wednesday, Israeli forces resumed airstrikes and military actions targeting positions in southern Lebanon, even as a two-week ceasefire agreement between Washington and Tehran began. The truce, meant to reduce tensions in the area, does not include Lebanon, creating a critical gap in ongoing diplomatic efforts.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made the government’s position clear, stating that operations against Hezbollah will continue regardless of the U.S.-Iran agreement. Official statements indicate that Israel sees its conflict with the Iran-backed militant group as a separate war.
“The ceasefire does not include Lebanon,” Netanyahu said, stressing that Israel’s operations in the north are active, even with wider regional pauses.
Evacuation Orders and Escalating Military Activity
As a sign of potential escalation, the Israeli military issued urgent evacuation warnings to residents of Tyre and nearby areas in southern Lebanon, advising civilians to move north ahead of planned strikes.
At the same time, reports show continued drone strikes and artillery fire across various areas in southern Lebanon, with Israeli forces keeping pressure on Hezbollah positions.
Lebanon’s military warned displaced citizens against returning to affected areas, citing ongoing bombardments and the danger from unexploded ordnance.
Hezbollah Signals Restraint, but Tensions Persist
While Israel continues its operations, Hezbollah seems to be showing some restraint. Sources close to the group indicate that it has temporarily paused attacks on northern Israel in line with the broader ceasefire agreement with Iran.
A political source in Lebanon mentioned that Hezbollah has been “committed to it since this morning,” referring to the ceasefire framework, even as Israeli operations carried on.
This situation has created uncertainty on the ground and raised concerns about the sustainability of the truce.
Mounting Humanitarian Toll
The renewed strikes are happening against a backdrop of severe humanitarian strain. Since the latest escalation began in early March, over 1,500 people have died in Lebanon, including civilians, with more than one million displaced from their homes.
Recent events have further heightened tensions. In one notable incident, an Israeli airstrike near Beirut killed a Lebanese political figure and his wife, provoking domestic outrage and intensifying criticism of both Israel’s military campaign and Hezbollah’s role in dragging Lebanon deeper into the conflict.
A Fragmented Ceasefire Landscape
The current situation reveals a major flaw in the U.S.-Iran truce: its failure to cover all active conflict zones related to the broader regional war. While the agreement has paused direct hostilities between Washington and Tehran, it has not halted Israeli operations against Hezbollah, an Iranian ally firmly established in Lebanon.
Analysts caution that such partial ceasefires may prolong instability instead of resolving it, as ongoing conflicts operate under different rules of engagement.
What Comes Next?
With Israel showing no signs of stopping its campaign in Lebanon and Hezbollah yet to officially outline its next moves, the region finds itself in a delicate situation. Diplomatic talks are likely to continue, but the ongoing strikes in southern Lebanon indicate that a comprehensive ceasefire is still out of reach.
For civilians caught in the middle, the overlapping conflicts provide little relief, only a continuation of displacement, uncertainty, and danger.
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