Hours after the US-Iran ceasefire was announced on Tuesday, Israel unleashed the most intensive bombardment campaign Lebanon has seen since fighting with Hezbollah escalated last month. The strikes killed at least 254 people and wounded over 1,160 others according to Lebanon's Civil Defence — casualties concentrated in Beirut's southern suburbs, the Bekaa Valley, and southern Lebanon. The Israeli military claims it struck 100 targets within a 10-minute window, demonstrating both the scale of the operation and its deliberate timing.
The death toll makes Wednesday the single deadliest day of the Lebanon front of this conflict. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu explicitly stated that Lebanon is not covered by the US-Iran truce — a position the US has since confirmed despite Pakistan's announcement that the ceasefire applied "everywhere, including Lebanon." This contradiction is not a misunderstanding but a calculated move: Israel used the ceasefire announcement as cover to strike Hezbollah targets it had been preparing to hit, knowing the immediate diplomatic chaos would make meaningful international response impossible.
Hezbollah responded overnight with rocket fire into northern Israel, citing "ceasefire violations." Israel continued strikes into Thursday morning, hitting targets in southern Lebanon. The pattern suggests Israel is attempting to establish facts on the ground — degrading Hezbollah infrastructure while diplomatic attention focuses on the US-Iran track.