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Lebanon: Attacks stoke fear of renewed escalation

October 23, 2025
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Lebanon: Attacks stoke fear of renewed escalation
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Eleven months after a was struck between  and the Iran-backed  militia in Lebanon, violent encounters are once again intensifying. On Thursday, Israel attacked an alleged Hezbollah training camp in Lebanon’s north-western Bakaa region.  A day earlier, an Israeli drone had killed Hezbollah commander Issa Ahmad Karbala in Lebanon’s south, according to a statement by the Israel Defense Forces, or IDF.

Karbala is the latest in a  since a US- and France-brokered on November 27, 2024 was signed between Israel and Hezbollah. It was meant to end almost a year of limited fighting and two months of full-scale war, during which Israel said it reduced Hezbollah’s weapon arsenal significantly and killed many of the militia’s leaders.  

Most recently, Lebanon’s health authorities stated that 274 people have died in Israeli attacks since the ceasefire took effect. In October, the UN further confirmed that 108 of those were civilians or noncombatants. 

A recent report by the multinational United Nations Interim Force In Lebanon (UNIFIL), also highlighted that some 950 projectiles were fired from Israel into Lebanon, in addition to 100 Israeli airstrikes between November of last year and mid-October 2025.

During the same period, UNIFIL reported 21 projectiles fired from Lebanon toward Israel.

Violating the deal

Both Israel and Hezbollah have accused the other side of not fulfilling . The deal stipulated that Israel would withdraw its troops from Lebanese territory, while Hezbollah disarmed across Lebanon and deployed its forces some 40 kilometers (25 miles) north of Lebanon’s Litani River. Lebanon’s military, meanwhile, would deploy troops alongside United Nations peacekeepers in southern Lebanon.

Israel accuses Hezbollah, whose military wing is designated as a terrorist group by several countries, including the US and the European Union, of trying to  instead of giving up their arms.

UN human rights experts have accused Israel of violating terms of the ceasefire by failing to withdraw from southern Lebanon, and has called for all parties to return to the agreement, which had been designed to ensure a “permanent cessation of hostilities,” as then-President of the United States Joe Biden stated at the time. 

Last week, Tom Barrack, Middle East diplomat and US special envoy for Syria, posted on X that “disarming Hezbollah is … not only Israel’s security imperative; it is  opportunity for renewal.”

Stalemate dilemma

Lebanon meanwhile continues to struggle after years of a as well as an ongoing that was exacerbated by the war from September to November 2024. According to the Lebanese Ministry of Public Health, Israel’s strikes killed around 4,000 people, destroyed parts of  and scores of villages in Lebanon’s south. The World Bank assesses that reconstruction will cost around $11 billion (€9.5bn).

However, much of the promised foreign aid by the and is tied to economic reforms, and Hezbollah’s disarmament.

Only, the plan to by the end of 2025 has reached a standstill, Kelly Petillo, Middle East researcher at the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR), told DW.

Hezbollah argues that they won’t surrender their arms as long as Israel continues  and construction factories that are key for reconstruction. Earlier in August, Hezbollah even warned of a . 

Meanwhile, Israel has been keeping its troops at five locations in Lebanon’s south, citing the need for self defense.

“This situation poses a significant threat for Lebanon’s stability, as the Lebanese government under President is unable to exert any significant leverage to shift the course of these actors,” ECFR’s Petillo told DW.

In her view, this very stalemate has led Israel to . “It could be a signal that Israel feels like it can go back to a full-scale conflict at any time if it judges that Hezbollah won’t disarm,” she said, warning that such a scenario — in which Israel could strike targets in other countries in a bid to deter threats — could easily become a blueprint for other conflicts in the region.  

Mona Yacoubian, director of the Middle East program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank, told the news agency AP in an interview earlier this week that she views the Lebanon scenario as a “lessfire” rather than a ceasefire. 

She warned that Lebanon “could well serve as the model for , essentially giving leeway to whenever they deem a threat without a full resumption of conflict.” 

Return to Resolution 1701

Ronnie Chatah, a Beirut-based political analyst highlights several differences between Lebanon and Gaza. While Israel had vowed to eliminate following the October 7, 2023, attack on Israel, this threat has not been extended to Hezbollah. 

Chatah also considers the from October 10, 2025, between to be different from the ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah: “What happened in late 2024 is enhancing the enforcement mechanism of ,” Chatah said. 

In 2006, a month-long — called the Second Lebanon War after the First Lebanon War between 1982 and 1985 — ended with the acceptance of the United Nations Resolution 1701.

The resolution mandated the deployment of Lebanese troops and UN peacekeepers to southern Lebanon, the withdrawal of Israeli forces as well as Hezbollah from that same area, and the disarmament of Hezbollah.

However, Hezbollah neither retreated north beyond Lebanon’s Litani River, nor did the militia give up its weapons. In the years since, with Iran’s support, Hezbollah’s military equipment and number of trained fighters have multiplied instead.

Following the Hamas-led attack in Israel on October 7, 2023, tensions escalated further when Hezbollah started targeting Israel in a bid to support Gaza. Around 60,000 Israelis had to evacuate the area, as well as some 110,000 Lebanese on the northern side of the border.

‘Hard to feel safe’

Given Iran’s disinterest in encouraging the full disarmament of what was once their most important asset outside of its borders, and the US backing of Israel’s military actions, Chatah believes that there are only limited chances that the Lebanese government could  the monopoly of weapons and the full control of its entire territory anytime soon.

Instead, he fears that targeted killings, missile strikes on Hezbollah infrastructure, more civilian deaths and the constant buzzing of drones might become Lebanon’s status-quo for some time.

“Honestly, it is or at ease with Israeli drones constantly flying low and causing a loud, unsettling noise,” 25-year-old Mariam Fneish told DW in Beirut. She said that she is anxious and worries that the situation escalates into war again.

Similarly, 23-year-old Raghid Awdeh is not optimistic that the ceasefire will hold. “Hezbollah doesn’t care about the population or human losses, and it obstructs any agreement that includes the transfer of weapons to the Lebanese state,” he told DW.

Edited by: M. Sass

The post Lebanon: Attacks stoke fear of renewed escalation appeared first on Deutsche Welle.

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