In a sweeping military operation, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) pounded multiple Hezbollah and Hamas positions throughout Lebanon, from southern villages to the bustling city of Sidon. Sources on both sides of the border verified the intensity of the attacks, which persisted from late Monday into Tuesday morning.
Footage exploding across social platforms showed thick black smoke billowing over Sidon’s coastal skyline post-strike, signaling the scale of the bombardment. A commercial structure in the city’s industrial heart was reduced to rubble, according to Lebanon’s official news outlet, with reports of injuries but no confirmed deaths at press time.
The IDF’s statement painted a clear picture: overnight raids obliterated above-ground and subterranean arms depots, alongside Hezbollah’s military infrastructure used for launching assaults on Israeli forces and regenerating capabilities. Southern Lebanon bore the brunt, with Hamas production facilities in four villages and border-adjacent sites flattened.
Local reports lamented the collateral devastation—homes leveled, cars wrecked, businesses gutted, and infrastructure crippled. Yet Israel maintains these preemptive measures are vital to dismantle terror networks threatening national security. As debris settles, questions loom over Lebanon’s fragile stability and the ripple effects on regional peace efforts.