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European Tech Sovereignty
13APR

Israel raids Lebanon, loses a captain

2 min read
17:09UTC

Israel struck Nabatieh, Deir Siryan and Taybeh on 27 and 28 June after a Hezbollah gunman killed Golani captain David Hazutt, 21, calibrating its answer to targeted raids rather than wider war.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Israel met its captain's death with targeted raids, not the wider war earlier losses had triggered.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) struck Nabatieh in south Lebanon on 27 June and hit Deir Siryan and Taybeh on 28 June. Israel kept the response to targeted raids, not the strategic escalation that earlier IDF commander losses in Lebanon had triggered. 1

Captain David Hazutt, 21, of the Golani Brigade's 12th Battalion, was killed in a clash with a Hezbollah gunman on 28 June. 2 The strikes answered Hezbollah's killing of an IDF 52nd Battalion commander and three crew at Kfar Tebnit on 26 June .

Israel calibrated its Lebanon response to keep oil flowing and the day-old Lebanon framework technically alive for the Washington counterparts who had signed it. The United States took the opposite path the same week, meeting a bloodless drone strike on a container ship with airstrikes on Iranian territory.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Israel's army struck three places in south Lebanon on 27 and 28 June after Hezbollah fighters killed an Israeli officer. Captain David Hazutt, a 21-year-old in Israel's Golani Brigade, died in a confrontation with a Hezbollah gunman on 28 June. This followed Hezbollah killing a more senior officer, a battalion commander, just two days earlier. Despite losing two officers in two days, Israel chose small, targeted strikes rather than a large military campaign. This was deliberate: a large campaign could have collapsed the diplomatic agreement that the US, Israel and Lebanon's government had signed the day before. Israel wanted to retaliate but not to the point of destroying the negotiations.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    Israel's containment of its retaliation to three village strikes, despite losing two officers in 48 hours, reveals that the Lebanon framework signed on 27 June functions as a practical constraint on Israeli military options even while Hezbollah has rejected it.

  • Risk

    If Hezbollah kills a brigadier-general or equivalent, the political cost of a calibrated response rises above the diplomatic cost of a larger strike, and Israel's three-village restraint pattern breaks.

First Reported In

Update #140 · US bombs Iran, and the oil market shrugs

Al Jazeera· 28 Jun 2026
Read original
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