World

Netanyahu Orders Israeli Military to Attack Beirut Suburbs

Local residents flee the suburbs south of Beirut, Lebanon, after Israel warned the area would be targeted with attacks on Monday morning, June 1, 2026. For many, urgently leaving the area, known as the Dahiyeh, has become a well-worn routine. (Daniel Berehulak /The New York Times)
Local residents flee the suburbs south of Beirut, Lebanon, after Israel warned the area would be targeted with attacks on Monday morning, June 1, 2026. For many, urgently leaving the area, known as the Dahiyeh, has become a well-worn routine. (Daniel Berehulak /The New York Times) NYT

BEIRUT -- Beirut, Lebanon’s capital, was bracing for an Israeli bombardment Monday after Israel announced it would strike the city’s southern suburbs. The warning stoked fears that the shaky ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah was on the brink of collapse.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a statement that he had ordered the Israeli military to attack the southern outskirts of Beirut, known as Dahiyeh, as part of the widening Israeli campaign against Hezbollah, the powerful Iran-backed militia. Israel has mostly refrained from attacking the city since the U.S.-Iran ceasefire took effect in early April, but it has continued to bombard southern and eastern Lebanon. Hezbollah has fired on Israeli soldiers in Lebanon and targets in northern Israel.

The announcement by Netanyahu prompted thousands of residents to flee their homes, clogging the roads out of the area late Monday morning. For many residents, the sudden exodus has become a miserable routine over nearly three years of conflicts between Hezbollah and Israel.

“I lost count of how many times I’ve evacuated,” said Zahra Khomasi, 43, as she sat in her car in Tayouneh on the outskirts of Dahiyeh.

Khomasi fled her home during the last escalation between Hezbollah and Israel in 2024 and then again when the latest war began in March. She returned in April after a shaky ceasefire went into effect, only to hurriedly pack up again Monday and leave with her 14-year-old son and 9-year-old daughter.

“We’ve somehow become used to this,” Khomasi said.

Many in Dahiyeh have evacuated several times since 2023, when Hezbollah fired at Israeli positions in support of its ally, Hamas, the Palestinian militant group, setting off a major war with Israel. Although a ceasefire was declared in Lebanon in November 2024, fighting continued in large parts of the country.

The war reignited in March, after Hezbollah began firing at Israel in solidarity with Iran, days after the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran began in late February. Though a U.S.-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah was announced in April, both sides have continued to launch attacks -- fighting that has sharply escalated over the past week.

Lebanon’s government, which is distinct from Hezbollah, vowed to continue negotiating with Israel despite the latest Israeli threats against Beirut and its suburbs on Monday.

“Some regrettably consider negotiation to be surrender,” President Joseph Aoun of Lebanon said in a statement. “It is not that, nor is it a concession. It is a solution to stop wars with the least possible harm.”

The Trump administration has brokered rare talks between Israel and Lebanon in Washington on disarming Hezbollah, whose power and influence have long overshadowed the Lebanese government.

The relentless cycle of fighting has taken a toll on Lebanese people, even among Hezbollah’s support base in Dahiyeh, where the group holds sway.

“I’m really exhausted by this. It’s been nearly three years we’ve been suffering from this tension and stress,” said Batoul Hassan Srour, 47. “It’s enough. We’ve had enough.”

Srour left her home in Dahiyeh early Monday morning for a school that has become a shelter in Aramoun, north of Beirut. Later that day, she was still glued to her phone, anxiously refreshing news updates to see whether -- and where -- the Israeli military would strike. She said she hoped the bombardment of Dahiyeh would come quickly and that Israel would declare the operation over so that she could return home Monday night.

But as the hours passed, that possibility seemed increasingly unlikely -- and the already tenuous ceasefire increasingly fragile.

“I don’t believe in this ceasefire; we heard this many times but we need action not just talk,” Srour said.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Local residents flee the suburbs south of Beirut, Lebanon, after Israel warned the area would be targeted with attacks on Monday morning, June 1, 2026. For many, urgently leaving the area, known as the Dahiyeh, has become a well-worn routine. (Daniel Berehulak /The New York Times)
Local residents flee the suburbs south of Beirut, Lebanon, after Israel warned the area would be targeted with attacks on Monday morning, June 1, 2026. For many, urgently leaving the area, known as the Dahiyeh, has become a well-worn routine. (Daniel Berehulak /The New York Times) DANIEL BEREHULAK NYT
FILE -- A view of the Beaufort Castle fortification atop a cliff above the Litani River in southern Lebanon, on Sept. 20, 2025. The seizure of Beaufort in southern Lebanon called up bitter memories in both countries amid a widening Israeli conflict with Hezbollah that seems far from over. (David Guttenfelder/The New York Times)
FILE -- A view of the Beaufort Castle fortification atop a cliff above the Litani River in southern Lebanon, on Sept. 20, 2025. The seizure of Beaufort in southern Lebanon called up bitter memories in both countries amid a widening Israeli conflict with Hezbollah that seems far from over. (David Guttenfelder/The New York Times) DAVID GUTTENFELDER NYT

Copyright 2026 The New York Times Company

This story was originally published June 1, 2026 at 11:05 AM.

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