
Kfar Shouba
Southern Lebanese village re-entered by Israeli forces, straddling the contested Shebaa Farms line.
Last refreshed: 30 March 2026
Will Israel hold Kfar Shouba as a permanent buffer, repeating its 18-year occupation?
Latest on Kfar Shouba
- What is Kfar Shouba?
- Kfar Shouba is a village in the Marjayoun District of southern Lebanon, near the Blue Line and the Shebaa Farms disputed territory. It was previously occupied by Israel from 1982 to 2000 and was re-entered by Israeli ground forces in March 2026 during the Iran-Israel-US conflict.Source: IDF / UNIFIL
- Has Israel occupied Kfar Shouba before?
- Yes. Israel held Kfar Shouba as part of its southern Lebanon security zone from 1982 until its withdrawal in May 2000, ordered under UN Security Council Resolution 1701. Israeli forces re-entered in 2026 as part of a broader ground advance into the same towns occupied during that period.Source: UNSCR 1701 / IDF
- Why did Israel enter Kfar Shouba in 2026?
- Israel described the advance into Kfar Shouba and neighbouring villages as a forward defence operation to create a buffer zone against Hezbollah rocket and anti-tank fire from southern Lebanon. Senior Israeli officials stated the aim was to seize all territory south of the Litani River.Source: IDF / Axios
- Where is Kfar Shouba relative to the Shebaa Farms?
- Kfar Shouba lies immediately adjacent to the Shebaa Farms, a 25 km strip of land at the foot of Mount Hermon claimed by Lebanon but controlled by Israel since 1967. This proximity makes the village a flashpoint in any Israeli-Lebanese border dispute.Source: UN mapping
Background
Kfar Shouba is a village in the Marjayoun District of southern Lebanon, situated near the Blue Line and the Shebaa Farms, a strip of territory claimed by Lebanon but occupied by Israel since 1967. The village sits at an elevation overlooking the Hasbani River valley, roughly 50 km south-east of Beirut. Israel occupied the area as part of its 2006 Lebanon War-era security zone and departed under UN Security Council Resolution 1701 in 2000.
Kfar Shouba became a front-line location in the Iran-Israel-US Conflict 2026 when Israel Defense Forces (IDF) ground units advanced more than one kilometre into southern Lebanon, entering the village alongside Kfar Kila, Houla, Yaroun, and Khiam . UNIFIL peacekeepers confirmed Israeli forces were present in Kfar Shouba, marking the villages re-entry into Israeli military control for the first time since 2000 .
The village’s occupation sits at the heart of a broader Israeli push to seize all territory south of the Litani River, a move Israeli officials compared explicitly to the Gaza campaign . Whether Israel withdraws after the conflict or entrenches a permanent buffer zone here, as it did from 1982 to 2000, is the defining open question for the Marjayoun border.