The IDF ordered all civilians south of the Zahrani River to evacuate on Thursday — a line north of the Litani River, beyond the boundary established by UNSC Resolution 1701, and beyond every previous evacuation zone in this conflict. The new boundary extends to within nine miles of Sidon, Lebanon's third-largest city. Defence Minister Katz stated: "If the Lebanese government does not know how to control the territory and prevent Hezbollah from threatening the northern communities — we will take the territory and do it ourselves."
Resolution 1701 ended the 2006 war by establishing the Litani as the operational ceiling: south of it, only UNIFIL and the Lebanese Armed Forces were authorised to maintain an armed presence. By ordering evacuations north of that line, Israel has moved past the international framework it previously accepted as sufficient. The last time Israel held territory this far north was during the 1982 invasion, when the IDF reached Beirut before withdrawing to a southern security zone it would occupy for 18 years.
Katz's language — we will take the territory — recalls that occupation, which ran from 1985 to 2000 and ended when Hezbollah's guerrilla campaign made the cost unsustainable. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun had already called for direct talks with Israel , framing Hezbollah's attacks as an attempt to drag Lebanon's state into a confrontation it did not choose. Katz's response makes the terms explicit: Israel conditions its withdrawal on a degree of Lebanese state control over Hezbollah that no Lebanese government has achieved since the group's founding in 1982. Each new evacuation order also compresses the geography available to Lebanon's 800,000 displaced — a population already concentrated in Beirut and the Bekaa Valley with diminishing options.
The gap between Israel's stated condition and Lebanese reality is the problem. Lebanon's army has roughly 80,000 active personnel and a budget smaller than Hezbollah's estimated annual income from Iranian transfers. The Taif Agreement that ended Lebanon's civil war in 1989 never resolved Hezbollah's parallel military structure; three decades of international pressure, including Resolution 1701 itself, failed to disarm the group. Katz is conditioning Israeli withdrawal on an outcome that the Lebanese state, the United Nations, and multiple international coalitions have been unable to produce for 40 years.
