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Iran Conflict 2026
2JUN

Israel cuts south Lebanon's last roads

4 min read
09:04UTC

The destruction of at least two bridges over the Litani River seals off the south from the rest of Lebanon, turning the area below the river into a closed military zone where more than a million people once lived.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Destroying Lebanon's last Litani crossings seals a humanitarian trap for over a million displaced civilians without road access.

Israeli warplanes destroyed at least two bridges over the Litani River on 18 March, cutting southern Lebanon's last major road links to the north 1. Defence Minister Katz stated the bridges were used for weapons smuggling and Hezbollah movement. The strikes follow the destruction of the Zrarieh Bridge days earlier — the first acknowledged Israeli strike on Lebanese civilian infrastructure in this conflict — and complete the severing of overland routes between the south and Beirut.

The military logic is clear. With two armoured divisions now committed south of the Litani — the 91st Galilee Division that entered on 13 March and the 36th Armoured Division that deployed alongside it , including the 7th Armoured Brigade — Israel is conducting the largest ground operation in Lebanon since 2006. Cutting the bridges denies Hezbollah resupply and reinforcement from the north while sealing the operational zone. A Northern Command officer told Yedioth Ahronoth the ground campaign could last 'until Shavuot' in late May . The IDF has stated its intent to seize all territory south of the Litani , an area of roughly 1,100 square kilometres.

The humanitarian consequence is immediate. Displacement from Lebanon already exceeds 1,049,000 — 19% of the country's population, with more than 300,000 children among the displaced . Destroying the Litani crossings eliminates the primary evacuation corridor for anyone still south of the river. Lebanon's cumulative death toll reached approximately 968, with more than 20 killed on 18 March alone, including six in a central Beirut apartment building 2. Since 2 March, ACLED has counted 565 Hezbollah attack waves against Israel 3 — a rate that bridge destruction alone is unlikely to halt, since rocket and missile fire does not depend on road infrastructure.

Israel occupied this same territory from 1982 to 2000. The towns its forces now patrol — Khiam, Kfar Kila, Houla — are the same ones it held during the 18-year occupation that produced Hezbollah in the first place. Khiam's detention facility remains a potent symbol in Lebanese collective memory. The Washington Post reported that Shiite communities forming Hezbollah's core base are 'increasingly furious' with the group for pulling Lebanon into the war 4, while Foreign Policy described the country as 'inching toward civil war with Hezbollah' 5. Whether Israeli military pressure accelerates that fracture or — as in 2006 — rallies Lebanese behind resistance is the question the bridge strikes leave unanswered.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The Litani River runs roughly east-west across Lebanon, dividing the heavily contested south from the centre and north. The bridges over it were the only road connection between the fighting zone and the rest of the country. Israel says destroying them cuts Hezbollah's weapons supply lines. The problem is that roads do not distinguish between weapons trucks and ambulances, food deliveries, and families trying to flee. With over a million people displaced — including 300,000 children — destroying the last road links cuts off aid delivery, medical evacuation, and civilian escape simultaneously. Southern Lebanon is now effectively an isolated zone. The military logic and the humanitarian consequence are, in this geography, inseparable.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The bridge destruction creates conditions meeting academic definitions of siege warfare: a population's access to external supply is severed by military action. With 1 million+ displaced and ground routes cut, the legal question — whether bridges serving overwhelmingly civilian movement qualify as legitimate military targets under IHL Article 52(2) — will be contested internationally regardless of military outcome. The Shiite community backlash against Hezbollah noted in the narrative may intensify faster under conditions of supply isolation, cutting in unpredictable directions for Hezbollah's political position.

Root Causes

The Litani River has functioned as a strategic boundary in Israeli military doctrine since Operation Litani in 1978: the goal across four operations has been to make Hezbollah's zone of operation logistically untenable by severing its connection to national supply networks. Bridge destruction is the doctrinal instrument for that severance, consistently applied regardless of political administration or stated operational objective.

Escalation

The destruction of the Litani crossings eliminates the UN and ICRC's primary ground logistics corridor. Any sustained humanitarian operation now requires air or sea access, both of which are either contested or require Israeli coordination — effectively giving Israel veto power over international humanitarian access to southern Lebanon.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Humanitarian aid to over one million displaced persons in southern Lebanon now requires air or sea delivery; both corridors are contested or subject to Israeli access control.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    Civilian mortality from supply shortages in the sealed southern zone may exceed direct conflict casualties within weeks if road access is not restored.

    Short term · Suggested
  • Risk

    Supply isolation in the south could accelerate the Lebanese internal fracture between Shiite communities and Hezbollah, with unpredictable consequences for both Hezbollah's cohesion and Lebanon's political stability.

    Short term · Suggested
  • Precedent

    Bridge destruction as a geographic seal tactic will be cited in future IHL debates about the targeting threshold for dual-use civilian infrastructure during counterinsurgency operations.

    Long term · Assessed
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