31°46′40.7″N 35°14′07.7″E
Top Stories
The Wire
← The Wire
The Front · Dispatch · SecurityStrong

Multiple strikes reported in southern Lebanon overnight, air strike in Nabatieh

The Zioneer Intelligence Desk
Multiple strikes reported in southern Lebanon overnight, air strike in Nabatieh

Primary source Internal intake · 2 reviewed intake signals · Desk window 09:25

TL;DR

Despite the ceasefire, multiple artillery strikes and at least one airstrike were reported in southern Lebanon overnight and this morning, according to a single regional security source. The strikes were reported in the Nabatieh area. No details on targets, the attacking force, or casualties have been provided.

01 · THE DISPATCH

A regional security correspondent reports that despite the existing ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah, multiple artillery strikes and an airstrike were recorded in southern Lebanon overnight and this morning. The airstrike was reported in Nabatieh, a city in southern Lebanon that has been a frequent site of strikes in recent weeks. The report is single-sourced and does not specify the attacking force, the targets, or any casualties. The Zioneer has previously reported on Israeli and Lebanese military activity in the Nabatieh area, including artillery bombardments near the local hospital (June 11) and IDF strikes on the city and surrounding villages (June 12). An IDF strike in the Nabatieh area was also reported earlier this week (Monday). The source of this morning's fire remains unclear; the Lebanese army has conducted its own artillery operations in the area in the past.

02 · How it developed

4 developments

  1. Latest

    Strikes reportedly followed Hezbollah fire at Israeli troops

  2. Israeli journalist Yaron Schneider reports a renewal of strikes in the area.

  3. Additional reports of artillery strikes alongside the airstrike in Nabatieh

Related dispatches
03 · Source and signal

Source and signal

  • Internal intake
Desk accountability

This dispatch is published under The Zioneer Intelligence Desk. Raw intake channels remain internal provenance; an external outlet or channel is named only when it materially helps readers evaluate a specific claim.