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Ground clashes erupt in Khiam

3 min read
16:30UTC

Hezbollah fighters engaged Israeli forces with RPGs and small arms in Khiam — the town whose detention facility became synonymous with Israel's 18-year occupation of southern Lebanon.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Ground combat at Khiam tests whether Hezbollah's 18-year prepared defence can force the IDF into a costly infantry war.

Hezbollah reported direct ground clashes with Israeli forces in Khiam on Saturday night — light and medium weapons and RPGs, beginning at 19:20 GMT 1. This is the deepest reported ground engagement since Israel announced plans to seize all territory south of the Litani River .

Khiam's detention facility, run by the Israeli-backed South Lebanon Army from 1985 to 2000, became synonymous with the occupation itself. Former detainees — among them Soha Bechara, whose 1988 assassination attempt on SLA commander Antoine Lahad and subsequent ten-year imprisonment made her a national figure — documented systematic abuse including electric shocks and prolonged isolation. When Israel withdrew in May 2000, residents stormed the prison. Hezbollah later converted it into a museum. Israeli forces re-entered the town within the past week , part of the broader advance into the same towns last occupied during that period.

The style of engagement matters as much as the location. RPGs and small arms at close quarters are Hezbollah's doctrinal strength — the lesson of the 2006 war, when Israeli armoured columns took heavy casualties at Wadi Saluki and Bint Jbeil against fighters using exactly these weapons from prepared positions. Israel lost 121 soldiers in 33 days. The current campaign was designed for air operations: 1,100 strikes in Lebanon since 28 February . Infantry combat is a different war. Hezbollah Secretary-General Naim Qassem declared on 14 March that 30,000 fighters, including members of the elite Radwan unit, are deployed in southern Lebanon .

Israel's announced seizure of everything south of the Litani requires holding ground, not just striking from the air. Holding ground against prepared infantry in the hills and wadis of southern Lebanon — terrain that favours defenders with local knowledge and pre-positioned weapons — demands sustained ground forces at a scale Israel has not yet deployed.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Khiam is a town in southern Lebanon with profound symbolic history for both sides. From 1985 to 2000, Israel ran a detention centre there — operated with Lebanese proxy forces — that became notorious for the treatment of prisoners. When Israel withdrew in 2000, Hezbollah freed the remaining detainees and converted the facility into a resistance museum. That liberation became one of Hezbollah's founding stories of success against Israel. Now Israeli forces and Hezbollah fighters are clashing there again with rifles, rocket-propelled grenades, and light weapons at close range. Israel's current campaign was designed around air power, not grinding infantry battles in difficult terrain. Khiam is precisely where Hezbollah has spent two decades building tunnels, weapons caches, and defensive positions — the scenario Israeli planners most wanted to avoid.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

Khiam is the first terrain test of whether Hezbollah's prepared defensive infrastructure — built specifically to neutralise Israeli air superiority through close-quarters fighting — can convert an IDF campaign designed for air operations into a costly infantry stalemate. If Hezbollah holds even one symbolically charged position at significant IDF cost, it generates a victory narrative deployable across the region irrespective of the broader military picture. The Khiam engagement is therefore simultaneously a military line-of-contact and a strategic communications battle.

Root Causes

Hezbollah's post-2006 military doctrine mandates holding ground in southern Lebanon because strategic withdrawal would destroy the organisation's domestic legitimacy within Lebanese Shia communities. Unlike a conventional army, Hezbollah cannot trade Khiam for tactical advantage — the symbolic loss would be existential for its political standing and electoral base. This compulsion to hold symbolically significant terrain is a structural feature of Hezbollah's dual identity as both armed militia and functioning political party within Lebanon's sectarian system.

Escalation

Hezbollah choosing to contest Khiam with light and medium weapons rather than withdrawing indicates the organisation is executing its prepared-defence doctrine — trading Israeli casualties for terrain. If the IDF attempts to clear Khiam block by block, casualty rates will rise sharply. High-casualty urban fighting in Lebanon could generate domestic Israeli political pressure to constrain the ground component, leaving Hezbollah's 30,000-fighter deployment intact as a persistent future threat.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Ground combat in Khiam draws IDF forces into prepared defensive terrain where Hezbollah holds topographic and logistical advantages, materially increasing expected casualty rates.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Consequence

    If fighting spreads across the Litani zone, the IDF will require additional ground forces not currently allocated to Lebanon, straining simultaneous Iran air campaign commitments.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    Hezbollah contesting Khiam — given its occupation-era symbolism — transforms a military line-of-contact into a narrative battle with regional mobilisation implications across Shia communities.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Risk

    High IDF casualties at Khiam could generate domestic Israeli political pressure to constrain the Lebanon ground component, leaving Hezbollah's force posture intact for future use.

    Short term · Suggested
First Reported In

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

Times of Israel· 16 Mar 2026
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