Visual data reveals extent of systematic Israeli white phosphorus attacks on south Lebanon: Report
Lebanon's Ministry of Environment has formally accused
the Israeli military of committing 'an act of ecocide,' resulting in an
estimated $25 billion in damages
JUN 7, 2026
A report by The New York Times (NYT) published on 6 June gathers thorough documentation
that the Israeli military has repeatedly deployed white phosphorus over
populated areas in southern Lebanon during its ongoing war and invasion of the
country.
Visual evidence collected by NYT, including verified
social media footage and news coverage, shows distinctive smoke trails and
airbursts over cities like Nabatieh and Tyre, as well as smaller towns like
Qlayaa, Khiam, and Yohmor, with incidents documented as recently as May
2026.
While the Israeli military maintains that its use of
these munitions is intended for smoke screens and complies with international
law, human rights experts assert that deploying such an indiscriminate
incendiary substance in civilian-heavy areas violates the laws of war.
The body of evidence gathered by numerous
international observers and human rights groups is extensive and corroborates
these findings.
Amnesty International’s Crisis Evidence Lab and Human Rights Watch (HRW) have verified dozens of videos and photos showing
the airbursting of US-made M825A1 artillery shells.
These shells are designed to release 116 burning felt
wedges that can be detonated high in the air and drift over a radius of up to
250 meters, causing widespread fires on the ground.
In Yohmor, HRW geolocated eight images from March 2026
showing these munitions exploding over residential neighborhoods, directly
resulting in fires in homes and vehicles.
Similar evidence from Dhayra in October 2023 includes
testimony from residents and doctors who treated nine civilians for suffocation
and respiratory damage caused by the "garlic-like" smoke.
Independent researchers have now documented over 200
uses of the substance in Lebanon since October 2023, which the Lebanese
government reports have caused more than 600 fires.
This pattern of use extends far beyond recent events
in Lebanon; Israel has a long history of deploying white phosphorus in the
region, including during the 1982 and 2006 wars in Lebanon, extensively in Gaza
in 2009, and throughout its ongoing genocidal campaign since 2023.
Amnesty International documented the use of white
phosphorus artillery shells in densely populated civilian areas in Gaza shortly
after the launch of the war on 7 October, 2023; this deployment directly
violated a 2013 pledge by the Israeli military to phase out the use of the
incendiary substance in populated areas.
The humanitarian risks of these munitions are
devastating because white phosphorus causes horrific, deep-tissue burns that
can reach the bone and may reignite if exposed to oxygen after treatment.
Beyond the immediate physical trauma, the substance
poses long-term environmental hazards by contaminating soil and water,
necessitating specialized cleanup operations before farmers can safely return
to their land.
Due to the indiscriminate nature of these illegal
weapons, rights groups continue to call for an immediate halt to their use in
residential areas.
Lebanon's Ministry of Environment formally accused the Israeli military of committing “an act of
ecocide,” back in April 2026, citing a National Council for Scientific Research
report that details $25 billion in damages, including the destruction of
thousands of hectares of forest and orchards alongside extreme phosphorus soil
contamination in strikes conducted between 2023 and 2024.