Israel struck a room in the Ramada hotel in central Beirut early Sunday, killing four and wounding ten. The IDF claimed it targeted "key commanders" of the IRGC's Quds Force Lebanon Corps advancing attacks against Israel. No names were provided. The hotel was simultaneously sheltering displaced civilians who had fled fighting in southern Lebanon and Beirut's southern suburbs — part of a displacement wave that reached 454,000 by Saturday, with 357 of 399 government shelters already full . Commercial hotels have absorbed the overflow.
This is the first Israeli strike inside Beirut's city centre since hostilities resumed on 2 March. Previous strikes concentrated on Dahiyeh — the southern suburbs housing Hezbollah's organisational infrastructure — and on southern Lebanon and the Bekaa Valley. The geographic expansion follows a known intelligence campaign: dozens of IRGC Quds Force officers fled Beirut in the preceding 48 hours fearing Israeli targeting , while a small contingent remained to maintain liaison with Hezbollah. Israel's intelligence penetration has been sufficient to locate commanders in specific hotel rooms. Every building those remaining officers enter becomes a potential target, and every displaced family sharing that building shares the exposure.
The Proportionality question under International humanitarian law is direct. Additional Protocol I requires that expected civilian harm not be excessive relative to the concrete military advantage anticipated. Four dead and ten wounded in a building known to house refugees, against unnamed commanders whose military role the IDF has not disclosed, makes independent evaluation impossible. Lebanon's cumulative toll since 2 March now stands at 394 killed, including 83 children, up from 294 reported Saturday . Nine rescue workers are among the dead — hit while responding to earlier strikes.
