Yedioth Ahronoth reported that a Northern Command officer told reservists the Lebanon ground operation could last "until Shavuot" — the Jewish holiday falling on 21–23 May 2026. If accurate, Israel is planning a three-month ground campaign beginning in mid-March. The timeline exceeds every operational horizon Israeli officials have publicly disclosed.
The contradictions are layered. IDF Brig. Gen. Effie Defrin told CNN last week that Israel had plans "through at least the Jewish holiday of Passover" in mid-April, with "deeper plans for even three weeks beyond that" . The Shavuot reference pushes past even Defrin's extended window by roughly a month. President Trump, meanwhile, called the broader conflict a "little excursion" and predicted it would end "very soon" . A three-month Israeli ground campaign in Lebanon cannot coexist with that framing.
The timeline matters because armies cannot deploy without logistical preparation — what an officer tells reservists about duration is a planning input, not rhetoric. Israel's emergency defence procurement of NIS 2.6 billion (~$826 million) approved last week is sized for a sustained campaign, not a limited incursion. The reservist briefing is more operationally reliable than ministerial statements calibrated for international audiences.
More than one million Lebanese are already displaced — one in five of the population. The 2006 war lasted 33 days and displaced roughly the same number. An operation running to late May would be nearly three times the duration of that ground campaign, fought over the same territory, against a Hezbollah force that has spent 20 years fortifying positions Israel once occupied. Reservists told to plan for Shavuot are receiving a different message from the one their government delivers to Washington and Brussels.
