UN peacekeepers confirmed IDF ground forces present in five south Lebanese villages: Kfar Kila, Houla, Kfar Shouba, Yaroun, and Khiam. The confirmation came from UNIFIL — the UN Interim Force in Lebanon, which has maintained positions along the Blue Line since its establishment in 1978. UNIFIL personnel observed the Israeli presence directly; this is not single-source reporting.
The five locations form a band along the Israeli-Lebanese border. Khiam — the largest — held a notorious Israeli-run detention facility during the 18-year occupation of south Lebanon from 1982 to 2000, a facility whose exposure after Israel's withdrawal became a symbol of the occupation's human cost. Kfar Shouba sits at the base of the disputed Shebaa Farms, which Lebanon claims Israel still occupies. The geography follows a military logic focused on the border buffer zone that UN Security Council Resolution 1701 — which ended the 2006 war — was meant to establish. That resolution required Hezbollah forces to withdraw north of the Litani River and prohibited foreign forces from deploying without Lebanese government consent. Neither provision was fully enforced in the 20 years since.
Israel last conducted ground operations in Lebanon in 2006, when a 34-day campaign ended with both sides claiming success and Resolution 1701 as the framework for withdrawal. Before that, the IDF maintained a self-declared "security zone" in south Lebanon from 1985 to 2000. Hezbollah's guerrilla campaign eventually made that occupation untenable — the withdrawal in May 2000, after years of steady Israeli casualties, is the foundational event of the organisation's domestic legitimacy in Lebanon. Any renewed Israeli ground presence in these same villages carries that history with it, for both sides.
Combined with the blanket evacuation orders covering Dahiyeh and 50 southern and eastern villages , and the 83,000 people already displaced, the geography of the conflict in Lebanon now extends from Beirut's southern suburbs to the Israeli border. That is the same footprint as the 2006 war, reached in one week rather than five. The civilians of these villages — those who have not already fled — are caught between an advancing military force, an armed organisation that has embedded itself among them for decades, and a UN peacekeeping mission whose mandate does not include the authority to prevent either from operating.
