Overnight Israeli strikes pushed Lebanon's confirmed dead to 52 with 154 wounded — up from 31 killed and 149 wounded in the initial Dahieh strikes . Two-thirds of the dead are in southern Lebanon, confirming the campaign has expanded from Beirut's southern suburbs into the border region. Highways heading north are choked with families. Schools have been converted to shelters.
The displacement trajectory follows the 2006 template. During the 34-day war between Israel and Hezbollah that July and August, approximately one million Lebanese — roughly a quarter of the population — fled their homes, with southern Lebanon emptying almost entirely. That war killed over 1,100 Lebanese, the vast majority civilians, and 160 Israelis over five weeks. The current conflict is 72 hours old. If the overnight casualty rate holds, Lebanon's toll will pass the 2006 total within weeks.
Prime Minister Salam's government has placed itself in an unprecedented position. His ban on all Hezbollah military activities and the justice minister's directive to arrest those who fired at Israel are the most direct challenge to Hezbollah's armed status since the Taif Agreement ended the civil war in 1989. The Lebanese Armed Forces field roughly 80,000 personnel; Hezbollah's fighting force is estimated at 30,000 to 50,000, with combat experience from Syria's civil war that the regular army lacks. Whether these orders will be enforced while Israeli bombs are falling — asking soldiers to disarm a domestic force during a foreign bombardment — remains unanswered.
Washington has left Beirut no room to manoeuvre. The US informed Lebanon that the November 2024 Ceasefire is over and that it will not restrain Israel unless Beirut designates Hezbollah a terrorist organisation . For Lebanon's civilian population — under Israeli air strikes, caught between a government ordering Hezbollah's arrest and an armed movement that controls much of the south — there is no actor working to stop the bombing. The corridors north are filling faster than they can carry people out.
