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16JUL

Israel takes Beaufort Castle above the Litani

3 min read
09:39UTC

Israeli forces seized the fortress above the Litani on 1 to 2 June, their first hold since the 2000 withdrawal, advancing on ground the Beirut ceasefire never covered.

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Key takeaway

Israel seized Beaufort Castle above the Litani, its first hold since 2000, outside the Beirut-only truce.

Israeli forces captured Beaufort Castle, the Crusader fortress above the Litani river, on 1 to 2 June, holding it for the first time since the 2000 withdrawal 1. The capture came despite the partial ceasefire Donald Trump brokered by phone on Monday 1 June, which stood down planned strikes on Beirut and nothing south of it . The ground operations sit outside that truce entirely.

The day split clean down the middle. Trump's call halted the Beirut strikes; Benjamin Netanyahu's troops kept advancing on the ridge the call never mentioned. Netanyahu's Lebanon campaign was always the clause he fought hardest to keep out of any deal, the one he told Trump on 24 May would end the campaign if accepted . What the phone call settled in the capital, the infantry unsettled on the river.

Beaufort sits on high ground that commands the Litani crossings, the same approaches the 2006 war was fought over. Taking it while a ceasefire nominally holds is the clearest signal yet that the truce is paused by map reference, not by intent. Israel has said the Beirut halt is tactical, a breathing space rather than a wind-down, and the fortress on the ridge proves the point in stone.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Beaufort Castle is a medieval fortress perched on a hilltop above the Litani river in southern Lebanon. Israel captured it in 1982 and held it until withdrawing from Lebanon in 2000. Its strategic value is simple: whoever holds it can see most of southern Lebanon and track movement across a wide area. Israel's forces took the castle again on 1 to 2 June despite a ceasefire that Trump brokered covering Beirut. That ceasefire explicitly did not cover the south of Lebanon, so the advance continued uninterrupted. Israel taking this position signals it intends to hold ground rather than withdraw once fighting stops.

Deep Analysis
Escalation

Capturing Beaufort Castle during a nominal Beirut ceasefire establishes the geographic partition of the truce explicitly: Beirut and the north are covered, the south is not. This signals Israel's intent to control the ground south of the Litani before any permanent ceasefire is signed, giving the IDF a strong territorial position to bring to the Washington talks (see event 06).

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Beaufort Castle's capture gives Israel a permanent observation anchor north of the Litani before any ceasefire agreement is finalised, making withdrawal from that position a future Israeli concession rather than a baseline requirement.

  • Risk

    Hezbollah's use of an FPV drone to kill Tzarfati at Yohmor (see event 05) the same day the castle was taken demonstrates that even a dominant terrain position does not prevent close-range drone attacks on the forces holding it.

First Reported In

Update #116 · Washington signs a sanction, not a strike

NCRI· 3 Jun 2026
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