Israel declared that 'no immunity' would be extended to 'any politician or military figure in Hezbollah, even supporters.' The statement accompanied overnight strikes on Beirut's Dahieh district that had already killed 31 and wounded 149 , and evacuation orders issued to dozens of villages in southern Lebanon. An Israeli military source described the operation as 'broad and comprehensive' and stated it 'may include a ground invasion.'
The reported killing of Mohammad Raad, head of Hezbollah's parliamentary bloc , shows the policy in action. Raad was a legislator in Lebanon's National Assembly, not a field commander. Israel's position — shared by the US, UK, and several EU member states that designate Hezbollah in its entirety — is that the group's political and military wings are inseparable. Hezbollah itself does not formally distinguish between them. But international humanitarian law requires individual combatant-status assessment, not categorical designation by organisational affiliation.
The word 'supporters' carries the broadest implication. Hezbollah drew roughly one million votes in Lebanon's most recent elections and operates hospitals, schools, and social services across the south. If 'supporter' encompasses voters or beneficiaries of that infrastructure, the category covers a large share of the Shia population. During the 2006 Lebanon war, the IDF treated civilians who remained after evacuation orders as presumed combatants — a practice Human Rights Watch documented and condemned, and which Israel defended on the grounds that Hezbollah deliberately embedded among civilians.
Israel characterised Hezbollah's rocket and drone attacks as an 'official declaration of war' . The 'no immunity' declaration translates that characterisation into targeting authority. If a ground invasion follows, the IDF would be fighting across three fronts simultaneously — Iranian missile barrages from the air, Gaza on the ground, Lebanon to the north. The last time the IDF fought a multi-front war was October 1973. It has never done so against an adversary with Hezbollah's estimated arsenal of 150,000 rockets and missiles.
