Lebanon, the New Gaza
Israel’s northward expansion is the new test of
American patience.
Jun 21, 2026
https://www.theamericanconservative.com/lebanon-the-new-gaza/
On April 17, President Donald Trump, using what Reuters termed “an unusually harsh tone,” told Israel
and its Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that they would be prohibited from
attacking Lebanon. “Enough is enough!!!” Trump wrote on Truth Social.
Within two days of Trump’s declared prohibition, the
Israelis issued fresh forced displacement orders in southern
Lebanon, accompanied by home demolitions and airstrikes that killed civilians.
It was not the first time the Israelis had ignored
ostensible directives from Washington. Vice President J.D. Vance had said in
October that the Trump administration would not allow Israel to annex the West
Bank. Yet Israel is continuing its inroads into the West Bank anyway.
But unlike the situation in the West Bank, which the
U.S. and Arab governments have effectively ceded to Israeli settlers, Israel’s
ambitions in Lebanon face a serious geopolitical obstacle. Iran has, since
March, made a ceasefire in Lebanon one of its stated conditions for reopening
the Strait of Hormuz and ending the broader war—a conflict, now in its fourth
month, which has substantially depleted American munitions stockpiles and hit
Americans at the gas pump.
“For us, a ceasefire in Lebanon is just as important
as a ceasefire in Iran,” Iran’s Speaker of Parliament Mohammad Ghalibaf said in April. Trita Parsi, executive vice president
of the Quincy Institute, reports that Iranian security officials are now openly
discussing a “UAE for Lebanon” strategy involving costly retaliation on Emirati
territory for every Israeli strike on Lebanon.
Parsi identifies several reasons why Iran has made a
ceasefire in Lebanon a strict term of any deal, with “perhaps the most
consequential issue” being “what Lebanon reveals about Washington itself.” For
Iran, Parsi says, binding Israel to the ceasefire is “a test of America’s
willingness—and ability—to restrain its closest regional ally.”
Indeed, Lebanon, more than anything else, could be a
lasting obstacle to resolving the Iran War. When reports circulated in late May
that the U.S. had moved closer to a deal with Iran that included a ceasefire in
Lebanon as a term of the agreement, Netanyahu quickly phoned Trump to secure his personal assurances that
Israel would retain “freedom of action” in Lebanon regardless of any agreement
the American president signs.
But Israel’s military campaign in Lebanon is more than
a spoiler for the ongoing Iran War. It is rapidly becoming a sequel to the
brutality in Gaza before it, and is likewise one in which all Americans,
whether they like it or not, have a stake through their tax dollars.
Courtney Bonneau, an American-Dutch journalist who has
reported from southern Lebanon throughout Israel’s ongoing assault, told The
American Conservative that the destruction she has documented is
neither incidental nor impacted by ceasefire agreements.
“The destruction has been systematic,” she said.
“They've destroyed between 37 and 40 towns and villages so far, and they
started that destruction during the last ceasefire period.”
Bonneau says she has personally documented extensive
structural damage across roughly 140 towns. From where she lives near the
border, she can see and hear Israeli forces carrying out demolitions across the
frontier on a daily basis.
Israel’s Defense Minister Israel Katz gave orders on March 22, 2026 to “accelerate the
destruction of Lebanese homes” following the “model in Gaza,” and footage
posted by journalists like Courtney Bonneau demonstrates that is exactly what
Israeli soldiers and civilian volunteers have done.
Bonneau says the most “arduous” demolitions she has
witnessed involved Israeli forces rigging Lebanese homes in the ancient town of
Yaroun during the supposed ceasefire that followed the 2024 war: “We watched
them for weeks rigging homes with C4, going house to house. It takes all day
because they go on foot, rigging them all together with wire hooks. And at the
end of the day, they would detonate them.”
Israeli officials have been explicit about how broadly
they define their target in Lebanon. During his September 2024 address to the
UN General Assembly, Netanyahu said Hezbollah had “a missile in every kitchen,
a rocket in every garage” in Lebanon.
Lebanon’s Ministry of Public Health reports that
Israeli attacks since March 2 have killed around 3,500 people. Journalists from
Lebanon say that total does not include Hezbollah militants. The Beirut-based
photojournalist Mohamad Kleit told TAC that the death toll from the Lebanese
Health Ministry “excludes active Hezbollah fighters since the civil defense
can’t reach the areas where clashes occur like the border towns,” so the count
is composed exclusively of civilians.
The bombs killing them, in many cases, bear American
markings. “A lot of the military waste that I personally photographed after the
last war in 2024 said ‘made in the USA’ right on the boxes,” Bonneau told TAC.
Among the weapons Bonneau has documented Israel using
against Lebanese civilians is white phosphorus, an incendiary chemical that
ignites on contact with air and inflicts severe burns on humans. The deployment
of white phosphorus against civilian targets has long been banned under the
laws of war. “They’ve been using that at least since 2024,” Bonneau said,
describing Israeli deployment of white phosphorus in the olive groves of border
villages and, most recently, in Nabatieh. The Washington Post confirmed in December 2023, through analysis of munition
fragments collected in southern Lebanon, that the white phosphorus Israel was
firing into the country was U.S.-supplied. Lebanese media reported a further white phosphorus attack on the
southeastern town of Shebaa on May 26, 2026.
The international relations scholar John Mearsheimer
argues that the broader Israeli project in Lebanon, which at one point may have
been Jewish settlement of the land, is now the destabilization of the country
itself. “Israel is number one interested in creating a Greater Israel,
expanding and creating an almost purely Jewish state,” Mearsheimer told TAC.
“What I think Netanyahu wants to do is to foment civil
war in Lebanon, a war with the government on one side and Hezbollah on the
other, as a way of weakening them both,” Mearsheimer said. “The Israelis can’t
disarm Hezbollah, so they want the Lebanese government to do it.”
Israeli officials are openly calling for the
conditions that would produce such a collapse. On April 12, Israel’s Energy and
Infrastructure Minister Eli Cohen called for Israel to bomb Lebanon's civilian
infrastructure. Israel’s National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir has called
for Israel “to cut off the electricity in Lebanon.”
Israel has demonstrated a clear will to ethnically
cleanse southern Lebanon; Iran, by conditioning the reopening of the Strait of
Hormuz on an end to those hostilities, is seemingly their main obstacle. What
happens next depends entirely on Trump’s willingness to restrain the foreign
government he sponsors.