Arabic desk journalist Yossi Eliezer reports additional strikes underway in southern Lebanon this morning and questions when the Dahieh suburb of Beirut will be added to the target list, according to his the source. No specific locations, targets, or casualty figures have been reported.
Yossi Eliezer, a well-known Arabic desk journalist whose coverage is carried by the 301 Arab World the source, reported in a post at 10:09 Jerusalem that "more and more strikes are underway in the southern Lebanon sector." He added a pointed question: "When does Dahieh enter the equation?" — referring to the Hezbollah-dominated southern suburb of Beirut, which has been a key target in previous rounds of escalation. Eliezer's phrasing suggests ongoing or expanded Israeli operations in the south, though he provides no specific coordinates, target types, or casualty data.
This follows a prior update from Eliezer earlier this morning (03:56 Jerusalem), which The Zioneer published as a bulletin, reporting "severe incidents" overnight in southern Lebanon and stating that forces were prepared to strike Dahieh. The new post does not confirm whether a strike on Dahieh has occurred; it frames the question as open. The broader pattern — a sustained Israeli air and artillery campaign against Hezbollah infrastructure in southern Lebanon — has been tracked by the desk since June 8, with multiple reports of airstrikes, interceptions, and heavy artillery barrages.
As of this posting, the IDF has not commented on Eliezer's latest report, and no independent corroboration of new strikes has emerged. The claims rest on a single source and are framed as developing.
2 developments
- DevelopingBeirut's Dahieh district reportedly emptying as Israel signals broader strikes
- DevelopingIDF reportedly striking Hezbollah target in Dabah area of southern Lebanon
- StrongIDF says rocket fire was aimed at forces in southern Lebanon; analyst argues it justifies Dahieh strike
- DevelopingStrikes reported in southern Lebanon and deeper inside the country
Source and signal
A single-sourced dispatch is never rated Confirmed or Strong. Its Signal strengthens only when a second, independent source corroborates it.
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