
sraeli strikes across Lebanon killed more than 20 people and wounded dozens on Wednesday, with raids stretching from central Beirut through southern and eastern Lebanon. The total death toll in Lebanon since Israel launched its offensive on March 2 has now surpassed 912, including 111 children, with more than one million people displaced. The UN has warned that some Israeli actions may constitute war crimes under international humanitarian law. European allies including Germany, France and Spain have expressed growing concern about both the scale of the strikes and the legality of Israel’s displacement orders.
The Strikes on Beirut
Wednesday’s attacks hit the Bashoura neighborhood in central Beirut, a location not traditionally targeted in previous conflicts. At least six people were killed in Beirut strikes, with dozens injured. A 15-storey building was completely demolished after its lower floors had been struck the previous week. Israel claimed Hezbollah stored cash in the structure. The director of political programmes at Hezbollah-affiliated Al-Manar TV, Mohammad Shari, was killed alongside his wife in a strike on the Zuqaq al-Blat area of central Beirut. His children and grandchildren were wounded.
Israel also targeted Al-Manar TV’s headquarters in Beirut and its communications infrastructure, including Al-Nour radio station. Israeli Defense Minister Katz announced that Netanyahu had personally authorized the military to target any senior official for whom actionable intelligence had been gathered, without requiring additional case-by-case approval. (Wikipedia, Al Jazeera)
Ground Operations and Displacement
Israel said its forces were conducting limited ground operations in southern Lebanon, issuing evacuation orders for residents of four towns near the Zahrani River and the Tyre area. The Lebanese army has pulled back its troops from at least seven forward operating positions along the border to ensure their safety amid escalating Israeli attacks.Israel said it would begin targeting bridges across the Litani River to prevent Hezbollah from moving reinforcements and equipment southward.
Israeli military spokesman Nadav Shoshani said operations against Hezbollah were expected to continue for at least three more weeks.More than one million people have registered as displaced since March 2, with more than 130,000 sheltering in over 600 collective sites. (Al Jazeera, Time)
Hezbollah secretary-general Naim Qassem laid down conditions for ending the Lebanon conflict: a full Israeli withdrawal, return of displaced people, release of detainees held over the past two years and a halt to all Israeli strikes. Israel has not responded publicly to those terms. France’s special envoy for Lebanon, Jean-Yves Le Drian, said it was unreasonable to expect Lebanon’s government to disarm Hezbollah while the country was being bombed. “Israel occupied Lebanon for a very long time and failed to eradicate Hezbollah’s military capacity,” he said. “They cannot now ask the Lebanese government to do that job in three days under bombardment.”
European Warnings
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, described as one of Israel’s most consistent supporters in Europe, called the ground offensive an “error” and warned it risked worsening an already dire humanitarian situation. Spain’s foreign ministry called the situation in Lebanon “extremely worrying” and demanded respect for international humanitarian law. France signaled it was ready to host direct ceasefire talks. The UN human rights office reiterated that deliberately targeting civilians or civilian objects, and sweeping displacement orders, may themselves violate international law. (Al Jazeera, Guardian)
Why This Matters to You
Lebanon is a separate country that did not choose this war. Its prime minister said as much in the opening days of the conflict. More than 912 people are now dead there, 111 of them children, and more than a million have been forced from their homes in under three weeks. That is a humanitarian crisis unfolding simultaneously with the active war in Iran, and it is receiving significantly less global attention.
For the international community, the combination of a UN war crimes warning, growing European criticism of a historically strong Israeli ally like Germany, and France calling for direct talks suggests the diplomatic consensus around Israel’s Lebanon campaign is beginning to fracture. It is worth thinking about: At what point does international condemnation translate into actual diplomatic or legal consequences for Israel’s conduct in Lebanon? With the UN warning that displacement orders may themselves violate international law, what legal recourse exists for the more than one million Lebanese people forced from their homes? And with Hezbollah still launching rockets into northern Israel despite three weeks of devastating Israeli strikes, has the military campaign achieved its stated goal of degrading Hezbollah’s capabilities?
-Elijah Iraheta, Editor in Chief, ASC News
