Dozens of IRGC Quds Force officers fled Beirut in the past 48 hours, fearing Israeli targeting. An Israeli defence official told Axios the exodus is expected to continue over the coming days. A small contingent remained to maintain liaison with Hezbollah — but liaison from a skeleton crew is not the command architecture Iran maintained for four decades.
The physical departure matters more than the Lebanese government's order to arrest IRGC members on its territory . Beirut also banned Hezbollah's military activities and reinstated visa requirements for Iranian citizens — the most complete formal break with Tehran's security architecture since the 1989 Taif Agreement . But Lebanon's state has never possessed the enforcement capacity to act against the IRGC or Hezbollah on its own. The officers are leaving not because of Lebanese warrants but because Israel demonstrated, through the killing of Hussain Makled — described as Hezbollah's intelligence chief and the most senior Hezbollah figure killed since the campaign began — that it can identify and reach individuals inside Lebanon's Shia-majority areas.
Iran's security presence in Lebanon dates to 1982, when IRGC Revolutionary Guards deployed to the Bekaa Valley during Israel's first invasion and helped establish what became Hezbollah. For over 40 years, the Quds Force maintained command relationships, training pipelines, weapons transfers, and financial channels that made Hezbollah the most capable non-state armed force in the Middle East. That infrastructure is now being dismantled from three directions simultaneously: Israeli air strikes have killed 123 people across Lebanon this week, with IDF ground forces confirmed in five south Lebanese towns; Hezbollah's own operational capacity is degrading with each leadership loss; and the Lebanese state has formally renounced the arrangement that tolerated Iranian military presence on its soil.
The closest parallel is Syria after 2019, when Israel conducted hundreds of strikes on IRGC positions and Damascus gradually acquiesced to the degradation of Iranian military infrastructure on its territory. That erosion took years. In Lebanon, the same process is compressing into days. The difference is that Syria had a functioning military that could absorb the IRGC's withdrawal. Lebanon does not. More than 83,000 civilians were evacuated before Thursday's blanket Dahiyeh evacuation order; further displacement followed. What fills the vacuum left by a departing IRGC and a degraded Hezbollah — the Lebanese Armed Forces, an extended Israeli military presence, or factional fragmentation — is the question Lebanon's own history answers poorly.
