Skip to content
Iran Conflict 2026
13MAR

Lebanon: 850 dead, 831,000 displaced

4 min read
17:56UTC

163 more killed in five days, the total past 850 with more than 100 children among the dead, and 831,000 displaced — matching the entire 2006 war's displacement in half the time.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Lebanon's death toll is outpacing the 2006 war's daily rate and will surpass its total within days.

Lebanon's Health Ministry reported on Sunday: 850 killed — more than 100 children among them — 2,105 wounded, and 831,000 displaced since Israeli operations intensified on 2 March 1. Five days earlier the toll stood at 687 . 163 people died in approximately 120 hours.

The daily rate has held at roughly 33 deaths per day since 2 March with no sign of deceleration. The trajectory is legible in the successive counts: 486 on 8 March , 634 on 10 March , 687 on 12 March , 826 on 13 March , 850 now. Child fatalities — 86 on 10 March, 98 on 12 March, 106 on 13 March, past 100 in the latest report — have exceeded the rate UNICEF documented during the 33-day 2006 war since the conflict's first week . That war killed approximately 1,100 Lebanese in 33 days. The current campaign has killed 850 in 15.

Displacement at 831,000 matches the total displacement of the 2006 war, reached in less than half the time. Israel's evacuation orders now cover 1,470 square kilometres — 14% of Lebanese territory . Nearly 100,000 people have crossed into Syria, 37% of them Lebanese nationals — civilians fleeing into a country whose own infrastructure remains hollowed by a decade of war. The border traffic runs against the historical pattern: for most of the past 15 years, the flow moved in the opposite direction, with Syrians seeking refuge in Lebanon. The reversal measures the scale of what southern Lebanon has become.

No political off-ramp is visible. Israel announced plans to seize all territory south of the Litani , destroyed the Zrarieh Bridge — the first acknowledged strike on Lebanese civilian infrastructure — and Netanyahu rejected President Aoun's offer of direct talks as "too little too late" . Hezbollah's Naim Qassem declared 30,000 fighters committed and "surrender is not an option" . France offered Paris for negotiations; Israel has not responded. A Hamas official was killed by an Israeli strike in Lebanon one day after Hamas publicly urged Iran to stop targeting Gulf neighbours — removing a voice that had, however cautiously, broken from the axis. The killing rate is stable. The distance to a Ceasefire is growing.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Since early March, Lebanon has seen roughly 850 people killed — more than 100 of them children — with over 800,000 forced from their homes. To contextualise the pace: Israel's last major Lebanon conflict in 2006 killed around 1,200 Lebanese over 34 days. The current campaign is approaching that total in half the time. What makes this especially severe is that Lebanon was already in economic collapse before a single strike landed. Its hospitals were barely functioning, most of its population was below the poverty line, and there was no functioning central government to organise an emergency response. Displacement and injury therefore cause cascading harm far beyond what the headline casualty numbers convey.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The 831,000 displaced figure — approximately 13% of Lebanon's entire population — already exceeds the peak displacement of the 2006 war in roughly half the time. UNHCR and ICRC field capacity in Lebanon was already constrained by Lebanon's pre-existing refugee population of approximately 1.5 million Syrian and Palestinian refugees. A secondary humanitarian system failure — where relief infrastructure collapses independently of military developments — is a plausible near-term outcome that international response planning has not publicly addressed and that standard UN co-ordination mechanisms, designed for functional-state scenarios, are structurally ill-equipped to manage.

Root Causes

Lebanon's pre-war structural collapse is a force-multiplier for casualties that was not present in 2006. Following the 2020 Beirut port explosion and subsequent financial system collapse, Lebanon's public hospitals were operating with severe medicine shortages and critically reduced capacity before the campaign began. Displacement therefore produces secondary mortality — from untreated wounds, failed chronic disease management, and exposure — at lower violence thresholds than in any prior Israeli-Lebanese conflict. The absence of a functioning state means there is no government actor capable of negotiating civilian protection corridors, removing a standard de-escalation mechanism.

Escalation

The 163-deaths-in-120-hours interval is faster than the preceding period, indicating operations are intensifying rather than stabilising. If ground fighting at Khiam spreads north across the Litani zone, civilian casualties will accelerate further as the conflict moves into more densely populated terrain between Israeli advance positions and Hezbollah's main defensive lines, where the population has less capacity to evacuate.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Displacement of 13% of Lebanon's population in 15 days is outrunning UNHCR field capacity; secondary mortality from displacement conditions may approach direct conflict death totals within weeks.

    Short term · Suggested
  • Risk

    Lebanon's collapsed state removes the civilian protection corridor negotiation pathway that functioned as a de-escalation tool in 2006 and 1982 — there is no counterpart to negotiate with.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Precedent

    High-intensity military operations against a collapsed state produce humanitarian outcomes that standard UN response mechanisms — designed for functional-state scenarios — cannot adequately address.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Meaning

    The casualty rate relative to 2006 will trigger accelerating international legal and Security Council pressure regardless of military outcome, compressing the political window for Israeli operations.

    Short term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #37 · Six more weeks of strikes; Hormuz deal dead

Times of Israel· 16 Mar 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Lebanon: 850 dead, 831,000 displaced
The killing rate in Lebanon has held at roughly 33 deaths per day since 2 March with no deceleration, child casualties have exceeded the rate UNICEF documented during the 2006 war, and displacement has matched the 2006 war's total in under half the time — all while the ground campaign deepens and no political off-ramp exists.
Different Perspectives
South Korean financial markets
South Korean financial markets
South Korea, which imports virtually all its crude oil, is absorbing the war's economic transmission most acutely among non-belligerents. The second KOSPI circuit breaker in four sessions — with Samsung down over 10% and SK Hynix down 12.3% — reflects an industrial economy unable to reprice energy costs that have risen 72% in ten days. The market response indicates Korean industry cannot sustain oil above $100 per barrel without margin compression across manufacturing, semiconductors, and shipping.
Migrant worker communities in the Gulf
Migrant worker communities in the Gulf
The first confirmed civilian deaths in Saudi Arabia — one Indian and one Bangladeshi killed, twelve Bangladeshis wounded — fell on communities with no voice in the military decisions that placed them in harm's way. Migrant workers live near military installations because that housing is affordable, not by choice. Bangladesh and India face the dilemma of needing to protect nationals who cannot easily leave a war zone while depending on Gulf remittances that fund a substantial share of their domestic economies.
Azerbaijan — President Ilham Aliyev
Azerbaijan — President Ilham Aliyev
Aliyev treats the Nakhchivan strikes as a direct act of war against Azerbaijani sovereignty, placing armed forces on full combat readiness and demanding an Iranian explanation. The response is calibrated to maximise international sympathy while stopping short of military retaliation — Baku cannot fight Iran alone and needs either Turkish or NATO backing to credibly deter further strikes.
Oil-importing nations (Japan, South Korea, India)
Oil-importing nations (Japan, South Korea, India)
The Hormuz closure is an existential threat. Japan, South Korea, and India receive the majority of their crude through the strait — they will bear the heaviest economic cost of a war they had no part in.
Global South governments (Indonesia, Brazil, South Africa)
Global South governments (Indonesia, Brazil, South Africa)
Neutrality was possible when the targets were military. 148 dead schoolgirls made it impossible — no government can explain that away to its own citizens.
Turkey
Turkey
Has absorbed three Iranian ballistic missile interceptions since 4 March without invoking NATO Article 5 consultation. Each incident narrows Ankara's political room to continue absorbing without Alliance-level response.