Israeli forces struck Dahiyeh, the southern Beirut suburb, on 7 May, killing Ahmed Ali Balout, commander of Hezbollah's Radwan Force elite commando unit 1. The strike was the first Israel Defense Forces (IDF) airstrike on the Lebanese capital since the Trump ceasefire of 16 April. Iran's Foreign Ministry warned within hours that continued Israeli strikes on Lebanon would constitute grounds for collapse of Iran's own Ceasefire with Israel.
The Radwan Force is the Hezbollah unit organisationally closest to Iran's IRGC Quds Force, which is what makes the target's position structural rather than tactical. Israeli strikes on southern Lebanon killed 41 in the day to 2 May , but the geographic line between southern Lebanon and Beirut has carried policy weight throughout the Ceasefire: Washington and Israel have treated southern Lebanon as inside the truce envelope and the capital as not. The Dahiyeh strike crosses that line. Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said Hezbollah and its Iranian patrons were applying pressure out of concern Israel would crush Hezbollah; IDF Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir told reporters the IDF was ready for a "powerful and broad" Iran operation 2.
Washington and Israel have publicly maintained that the Iran-US Ceasefire excludes Lebanon; Tehran rejects that scoping. Iran's Foreign Ministry threat places Lebanon inside the same file as the US paper that arrived in Tehran the same day, which itself does not mention Lebanon. The threat therefore acts as an unofficial precondition on whatever paper Tehran sends back through Islamabad. If Iran follows through on collapsing the truce, the MOU dies on arrival; if Iran does not, the threat becomes informational only and weakens Tehran's leverage on the next written exchange.
The operational test is whether the IDF strikes Lebanon again before the 14-15 May Beijing summit. A second Beirut strike before the Trump-Xi meeting would force Tehran to make the choice publicly under conditions where Beijing has already pre-positioned its own legal architecture and Washington's paper is being read in Tehran. An Israeli pause is the cleanest tell that the document Pakistan delivered has political traction in Washington, because it would imply The Administration has asked Israel to hold the geographic line during the negotiating window. Either move sends a written or kinetic answer to the question Iran's foreign ministry posed: what does the Iran-US Ceasefire actually cover.
