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Iran Conflict 2026
2MAY

Israel pushes 91st Division into Lebanon

3 min read
13:27UTC

Defence Minister Katz ordered the 91st Division to seize new territory as UNHCR reports 30,000 displaced from southern Lebanon since Monday.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Ordering a standing border division to 'advance and seize controlling areas' — not a raid formation — signals a sustained territorial commitment with no defined endpoint, making withdrawal politically costly once ground is held.

Defence Minister Israel Katz ordered the 91st Division to "advance and seize additional controlling areas" in southern Lebanon, with the stated objective of preventing Hezbollah fire on northern border settlements. UNHCR reports 30,000 people newly displaced since Monday. The Lebanese Armed Forces withdrew from key border positions rather than contest the advance — lacking both the military capacity and the political mandate to confront the IDF directly.

The phrasing matters. "Advance and seize" is the language of territorial control, not of a limited raid or security sweep. Israel mobilised reservists and launched what it called an "offensive campaign" on Saturday , following Netanyahu's statement to his cabinet that Trump had given approval for operations against Hezbollah. Four days later, the operation has progressed from mobilisation to active ground seizure, with the 91st Division — a reserve formation typically tasked with holding ground — ordered forward into new positions.

Every Israeli ground operation in Lebanon has followed this trajectory. Operation Litani in 1978 was a limited security sweep; it produced the South Lebanon Army and a semi-permanent occupation zone. Operation Peace for Galilee in 1982 aimed to push the PLO 40 kilometres from the border; it became an 18-year occupation that cost over 1,000 Israeli soldiers' lives and ended in a unilateral withdrawal in 2000. The 2006 ground invasion in the war's final days achieved little beyond additional casualties on both sides.

Israel is now running air operations across 24 Iranian provinces while pushing ground forces into Lebanon — operations that require different force structures, different intelligence pipelines, and different command attention. The 1982 Lebanon invasion consumed Israel's strategic bandwidth for a generation. Lebanon's government, actively reviewing a formal ban on Hezbollah's military activity, may provide political cover for what Israeli planners describe as a limited operation. But "limited" is what every Lebanon incursion was called at the start.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The 91st Division is Israel's permanent standing army on the northern border — not reservists called up for an emergency, but the professional force stationed there permanently. Ordering it to advance and hold territory is qualitatively different from a strike-and-withdraw operation: it means Israel intends to physically occupy and control ground, not just pass through. The stated rationale is creating distance between Hezbollah and Israeli border towns so rockets cannot reach them. Once an army holds territory, giving it back becomes a political decision, not just a military one.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The use of a standing division in a 'seize and hold' posture rather than the reserve call-up formations used in Gaza marks a deliberate institutional signal: this operation is being resourced for sustained commitment, not rapid resolution. The absence of a stated northern limit to the advance mirrors the structural ambiguity that preceded both the 1982 and 2006 expansions — a pattern the body notes but whose force-composition dimension is new.

Root Causes

Approximately 60,000–80,000 residents of northern Israeli communities have been evacuated since October 2023 — over 16 consecutive months. Restoring these communities is a binding domestic political commitment for the Israeli government, creating pressure for a territorial buffer that extends the operation's logic beyond purely military objectives. The 'advance and seize' order is as much a response to internal political pressure from evacuated communities as to battlefield necessity.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    Deploying a standing division in advance-and-hold mode rather than reserve raid formations signals operational planning for weeks of sustained ground presence, not a temporary incursion.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    Once territory is seized and held, domestic political pressure to maintain it — enabling return of northern evacuees displaced for 16 months — could prevent withdrawal even if the immediate military rationale diminishes.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    A ground advance without a defined northern geographic limit establishes an expandable operational mandate whose scope is determined by field conditions rather than pre-stated political objectives.

    Long term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #15 · Iran rejects ceasefire; embassies close

The National· 3 Mar 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Israel pushes 91st Division into Lebanon
The order to 'advance and seize additional controlling areas' while simultaneously running air operations across 24 Iranian provinces creates a dual commitment that historical precedent — the 1982 Lebanon invasion, the 2003 Iraq war — shows is prone to scope expansion and overextension.
Different Perspectives
International human rights monitors (NetBlocks, IHR, Hengaw)
International human rights monitors (NetBlocks, IHR, Hengaw)
NetBlocks recorded 1,704 cumulative hours of near-total internet blackout for roughly 90 million Iranians on Day 74, while IHR documented ongoing executions under emergency provisions. These organisations are the only active monitoring windows into a civilian population cut off from the global internet for 71 consecutive days.
UK / France coalition
UK / France coalition
The Royal Navy confirmed HMS Dragon's Hormuz deployment on its own website on 11 May, converting a press-reported presence into declared force posture; UK and French defence ministers hosted a coalition meeting the same day. Britain and France are now the only named contributors to a Hormuz escort mission all five allies Trump originally asked had declined.
Saudi Aramco / Gulf producers
Saudi Aramco / Gulf producers
Saudi Aramco CEO Amin Nasser warned on 11 May that a Hormuz closure could remove 100 million barrels of weekly supply from global markets (roughly 15 million barrels per day for a week), a figure that dwarfs any OPEC+ swing capacity. The warning functions as both a price-floor signal and a public pressure on Washington to protect transit.
Beijing / Chinese Government
Beijing / Chinese Government
China has not publicly acknowledged the four Hong Kong-registered entities designated on 11 May or extended MOFCOM's Blocking Rules cover to HK-domiciled firms. Xi Jinping hosts Trump on 14–15 May having already de-risked state-bank balance sheets via NFRA's quiet loan halt, entering the summit partially compliant before any negotiation.
Tehran / Iranian Government
Tehran / Iranian Government
Foreign Minister Araghchi described Iran's 10-point counter-proposal as 'reasonable and responsible' via spokesman Baqaei on 11 May, and widened the mediator pool by meeting Turkish, Egyptian, and Dutch counterparts in a single day. Tehran is buying procedural runway while Trump's verbal rejection went unmatched by any written US counter.
Trump White House
Trump White House
Trump called the ceasefire 'on massive life support' and dismissed Iran's 10-point counter-proposal as 'a piece of garbage' on 11 May, while departing for Beijing two days later with no signed Iran instrument to show Congress. The verbal maximum and the paper void coexist: the administration is running a legal pressure campaign through Treasury while the president free-lances the rhetoric.