No Israeli airstrikes have been carried out in southern Lebanon since the announcement of an agreement, according to Abu Ali Express. Occasional artillery fire — warning shots — has been reported, but the aerial campaign has halted.
Since the announcement of the agreement between Israel and Lebanon, no Israeli airstrikes have been observed in southern Lebanon, according to Abu Ali Express, an Arabic-language desk. The only military activity reported is occasional artillery fire described as warning shots. This marks a sharp departure from the preceding days, when Israeli airstrikes were a regular occurrence across southern Lebanon.
As The Zioneer reported on Monday (08:38 Jerusalem), Israeli forces were still striking terror targets in southern Lebanon despite reports of a pending agreement. That bulletin itself followed an overnight calm bulletin (Monday 08:21 Jerusalem) that noted controlled demolitions but no active ground advancement and no withdrawal. The current lull in airstrikes reinforces the pattern of a rapidly de-escalating front following the diplomatic announcement. By Monday 09:18 Jerusalem, The Zioneer reported celebrations in southern Lebanon after the ceasefire declaration.
The reported cessation of airstrikes is consistent with the agreement framework, though no official Israeli confirmation of a full halt to aerial operations has been issued. The source notes that ground forces remain in their positions and artillery warning shots continue, indicating that the military posture has shifted but has not entirely stood down. The situation remains developing.
4 developments
- StrongApparent decline in IDF strike tempo across southern Lebanon, sources note
- DevelopingUNIFIL: IDF halts village destruction in South Lebanon, sources say
- DevelopingLebanon denies reports of IDF strike; Israeli sources say event under review
- StrongIDF maintains strikes on Hezbollah infrastructure in southern Lebanon
Source and signal
- Internal intake
