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Iran Conflict 2026
27MAY

Lebanon outfires Iran against Israel

3 min read
15:33UTC

Ten days in, the war's heaviest daily fire on Israel comes not from Tehran but from across the Lebanese border — and Israeli leadership losses have not slowed it.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Lebanon is now the primary military front; a Tehran ceasefire cannot end the war.

Israel stated on Monday that Lebanon now launches more daily attacks on Israel than Iran — a reversal from the war's opening days, when Tehran's missile and drone volleys defined the conflict. CENTCOM reported three days ago that Iranian Ballistic missile fire had dropped 90% from Day 1 . Tehran's response was doctrinal: a shift to one-tonne warheads, fewer in number but heavier in destructive yield. The arithmetic consequence is that Iran fires less often while Hezbollah fills the volume with continuous rocket and anti-tank fire from southern Lebanon.

The question is who directs Hezbollah's campaign at this tempo. Dozens of IRGC Quds Force officers fled Beirut in recent days fearing Israeli targeting , and five Quds Force commanders — including the Lebanon Corps intelligence chief and its senior financial officer — were killed in Sunday's Ramada Hotel strike in central Beirut . The IDF killed Hezbollah intelligence chief Hussain Makled earlier in the week . Yet Hezbollah's daily fire rate has increased after those losses. That pattern is consistent with the movement's behaviour during the 2006 war, when its field commanders prosecuted a 34-day campaign with minimal real-time Iranian direction. Hezbollah's command structure has always been designed to function without its patron in the room.

The dual front stretches Israel's defence architecture across two different problems. Arrow-3 and David's Sling engage Iran's long-range ballistic threats; Iron Dome and short-range systems handle Hezbollah's rockets from positions along the border. Israeli ground forces are deployed in five south Lebanese towns — Kfar Kila, Houla, Kfar Shouba, Yaroun, and Khiam — but their presence has not suppressed the fire. Lebanon is now both a secondary front and the primary daily threat, a combination that sits awkwardly against any framing of the war as winding down "very soon."

Deep Analysis

In plain English

In the first week of this war, Iran was firing most of the missiles and drones. Now Lebanon — specifically Hezbollah — launches more attacks on Israel every single day than Iran does. This matters because it fundamentally changes what ending the war means. Even if Iran agrees to stop fighting, the Lebanese front keeps going under its own momentum. It also means Israel's air defence networks — built primarily to handle long-range Iranian ballistic missiles — must simultaneously absorb high volumes of shorter-range rockets from the north, a completely different interception challenge.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The crossing of the Lebanon-exceeds-Iran threshold forces a fundamental reframing of the war's diplomatic centre of gravity. Western and US efforts concentrated on a bilateral Iran deal cannot resolve the Lebanese front. Lebanon requires a separate diplomatic track — but President Aoun cannot deliver Hezbollah, and Hezbollah has no internationally recognised interlocutor willing to engage it directly. The front that is now primary is also the front with no accessible diplomatic off-ramp.

Root Causes

Hezbollah rebuilt its arsenal to 130,000–150,000 projectiles after 2006 specifically to sustain saturation fire beyond Israeli interceptor capacity for months, not days. This decade-long post-2006 investment was the explicit strategic response to the 2006 war's lesson: volume overwhelms even layered defences. The current volume is not improvised — it is the pre-planned operational posture Hezbollah has prepared since 2007.

Escalation

The reversal from Iran as primary source to Lebanon as primary source represents a qualitative shift in the war's character, not merely a quantitative one. High-volume rocket fire against northern Israeli population centres is less individually interceptable than Iranian ballistic missiles — which are fewer, slower to prepare, and tracked from launch. Aggregate civilian exposure in northern Israel is likely rising even as headline Iranian missile numbers fall. Escalation direction on the Lebanese front is independently upward.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Israel must allocate air defence assets and ground force readiness simultaneously across two primary fronts, constraining offensive operational tempo against Iran's remaining infrastructure.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Meaning

    Any ceasefire limited to the Iran-US bilateral track leaves the most active military front unaddressed, rendering any 'end of war' announcement operationally hollow.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Risk

    High-volume rocket fire against northern Israeli population centres carries higher aggregate civilian casualty potential than Iranian ballistic missiles, which are fewer and more interceptable individually.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    If the war ends with Hezbollah's arsenal largely intact and the Lebanese state further weakened, post-war Lebanon becomes even less capable of constraining Hezbollah's future military capacity.

    Long term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #31 · Iran moves to heavy warheads; China deploys

CNN· 10 Mar 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Lebanon outfires Iran against Israel
Lebanon replacing Iran as the primary source of daily attacks shifts the war's operational geography and forces Israel's layered air defences to engage two simultaneous, fundamentally different threat profiles: long-range ballistic warheads from Iran and short-range rockets from Hezbollah positions as close as ten kilometres from the border.
Different Perspectives
Iran human rights monitors (Amnesty International, Iran HRM, Hengaw)
Iran human rights monitors (Amnesty International, Iran HRM, Hengaw)
Monitors documented 30 women held on capital moharebeh charges in a basement prison ward, Benyamin Naqdi's death sentence with a forced-confession broadcast, and 39 political executions since February. Iran's security courts have processed protest cases at uninterrupted wartime tempo regardless of the diplomatic track.
Lloyd's of London (war-risk underwriters)
Lloyd's of London (war-risk underwriters)
Lloyd's held its Hormuz war-risk designation at $10-14 million per voyage while Brent fell 19%, maintaining a structural divergence from futures pricing. Underwriters require a UN Security Council resolution or government certification letter, not diplomatic optimism, before de-listing the strait.
Oman (Sultan Haitham's government)
Oman (Sultan Haitham's government)
Muscat issued a mine alert in its own territorial waters while denying any Hormuz toll plan after US Treasury threatened sanctions. A suspected mine in Omani waters on the same weekend as US financial pressure forces Muscat to demonstrate sovereignty without appearing to choose sides.
China (PRC)
China (PRC)
Beijing sent scholars rather than its defence minister to Shangri-La for the second year running and addressed Taiwan and multilateralism without mentioning Iran. China maintains its bilateral energy corridor protection with Tehran while refusing the diplomatic exposure of a public position at multilateral forums.
Iran Supreme National Security Council
Iran Supreme National Security Council
The SNSC framed the unsigned MOU as a 10-point Iranian victory with enrichment already recognised, and the foreign ministry rejected Trump's nuclear conditions within hours. Tehran treats each unsigned day as validation that Iran has retained its stockpile without surrendering it.
Trump administration (CENTCOM/White House)
Trump administration (CENTCOM/White House)
Trump posted three non-negotiable public conditions while CENTCOM disabled a commercial ship and Hegseth threatened resumed strikes from Singapore. The administration treats the unsigned MOU as leverage to extract maximum Iranian concessions before any ceasefire instrument is committed to paper.