The Daily - A War Within the War: Israel’s Bombardment of Lebanon
Episode Date: March 16, 2026With the world’s attention on the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran, a second front in the conflict has opened in Lebanon. Israel has pummeled an area in the southern outskirts of Beirut where Hezbollah ho...lds sway, as well as southern Lebanon, with airstrikes, displacing almost one million people. Israel has also expanded its assault into other parts of Beirut, the capital. Christina Goldbaum, The New York Times’s bureau chief in Beirut, explains how the crisis in Lebanon connects to the broader war, what Israel hopes to achieve and what people in Lebanon fear might come next. Guest: Christina Goldbaum, The New York Times’s bureau chief in Beirut. Background reading: Strikes are haunting displaced families in Lebanon. Displaced people in the country are facing cold streets and an uncertain future. Photo: David Guttenfelder/The New York Times For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From the New York Times, I'm Rachel Abrams, and this is the Daily.
Breaking news, Israel saying it is now expanding operations in Lebanon.
With the world's attention on the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran over the last two weeks,
a second front has opened in Lebanon.
The target of those strikes, a Hezbollah stronghold.
The IDF says it's hitting sites linked to the group, which is backed and funded by Iran.
Israel has pummeled southern Lebanon and southern Beirut with airstrikes,
displacing almost a million people,
and it's expanded its assault into other parts of the capital.
I carried the children quickly, and we left towards the airport road.
People were like ants.
Like Judgment Day. It was like Judgment Day.
One man, his wife and four young children have fled a few miles north to safer ground.
Like many families, they'll spend the night on the streets,
watching the strikes at a distance.
Today, Beirut Bureau Chief Christina Goldbaum explains how the crisis in Lebanon connects to the broader war,
what Israel hopes to achieve, and what the Lebanese people fear may come next.
It's Monday, March 16th.
Christina, since the war with Iran began, I think it's been clear that there has been sort of this second front emerging in Lebanon.
It started when Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed militia group that's based in Lebanon,
lobbed missiles at Israel. Israel lobbed missiles back. The two sides have traded fire for days now.
And that is not in and of itself an unfamiliar scenario, right? But things have really escalated.
And you are based in Beirut. You are the Beirut-Bur-Chief for the New York Times. And so I'd like for you to paint a picture for our audience of what the last few days have looked like on the ground.
So what we've seen over the last two weeks is what feels like the beginnings of another major war in the country.
Nowadays, when you're walking through Beirut, there is this acrid smell in the air from all of the airstrikes in and around the city.
And you have the sound of Israeli drones overhead, this loud buzzing that's been a near constant over the last two weeks.
In certain parts of the city, life feels very normal, kind of untouched by the war, buildings intact,
but in other parts of the city, walking around, you can see this mass displacement that has happened.
You see people putting up kind of makeshift tents out of tarps and out of gray blankets that people have set up in parking lots on the seaside Corniche, on sidewalks and in parks,
and living there because there isn't room in the schools that the government has turned into shelters.
In the Dachia, in these southern suburbs for Hezbollah holds a lot of.
lot of sway, a lot of buildings there have been just completely cratered in this bombardment by
Israel. And in the last couple of days, it felt like it escalated even more when Israel started
targeting buildings and cars within Central Beirut itself and also issuing evacuation orders
for buildings in Central Beirut. You have guys who are shooting weapons up in the air to warn people
to get out and massive crowds of people trying to get out of those buildings, get out of the street,
get out of the way before these strikes hit. So there's very much now a sense, even in Beirut,
that this conflict is escalating, that fewer and fewer places in the city that once felt safe
are still safe. And also just the scale of this is already huge. I mean, over a million people
have been displaced so far. That's in a country of 5.8 million people total. And you have more
than 800 people who've been killed in Israeli strikes so far. So now there is just this kind of
tenseness here where people are really coming to terms with the fact that the country is yet again
in less than two years being dragged into another major war. Christina, can you give us a sense of
why this feels different than previous campaigns that Israel has waged in Lebanon, even as recently
as 2024? I think what makes this different is the fears now that there is going to be a major
Israeli ground invasion, which is something that the country has not seen since the 19th.
There has been this massive buildup of troops on the Israeli side of the border, and the rhetoric that we're hearing from Israeli officials is increasingly suggesting that they also view this war as something different.
The Israeli defense minister compared the southern suburbs of Beirut to Han Yunus, saying that that's what it will soon look like.
That's the city in Gaza that was completely destroyed.
And he also said recently that if the Lebanese government cannot prevent Hezbollah from,
firing on Israel, then Israel will take it upon itself to do so in Lebanese territory. And so that's
obviously an escalation of rhetoric that has people here very on edge and feeling like this is going to be
something bigger than what we saw the last time around. I believe the defense minister, I think I
saw comments from him saying that he wanted to basically flatten large swathes of southern
Beirut. He was naming individual cities. Yes, he said that about Dachia, this cluster of neighborhoods
in the southern edge of the city. The other thing we've seen that makes this
feel like it's going to be much bigger, is that for the first time, we didn't see this in
2024, but for the first time, Israel has issued sweeping evacuation orders for all of the
southern suburbs of Beirut, as well as a huge swath of territory in southern Lebanon that extends
as far as 25 miles from the border. That's something that we did not see in the war in 2024.
Obviously, there's a war going on with Iran right now. What is the relationship between this
war in Lebanon and that wider conflict. So after the war in Iran began, Hezbollah then fired on Israel
in retaliation, it said, for the killing of Ayatollah Ali Hemeni there. Israel then struck back and
started firing on Lebanon in the south, in the east, and in the southern parts of Beirut.
And what everyone understood was that Israel was kind of taking this attack by Hezbollah as an
opportunity to do what they have wanted to do for so long, which is for once and for
all take out Hezbollah. And so what we're seeing right now is essentially kind of a war within a war,
the second front that is actually a much bigger war for Lebanon and feels much more consequential
for this country. So just to be clear, Hezbollah started this conflict in solidarity with Iran,
and it has spiraled from there. That's right. And it's important to note that this kind of took a lot
of people here by surprise. Very few people thought that Hezbo would get involved in this conflict.
Obviously, Israel has been at odds and in conflict with Lebanon and Hezbollah for many, many years.
Can you just give us a brief history of that back and forth?
Sure. So this dates back to the 1980s and to set the scene a little bit.
You know, at that time, Lebanon is in the midst of the civil war.
You have Palestinian groups in southern Lebanon that are launching attacks on Israel.
And then in 1982, Israel launches this large-scale invasion.
Asian of southern Lebanon, getting as far as the capital, Beirut, and then occupying the
South for, I mean, nearly 20 years. And it was within that context in the 1980s that Hezbollah
came to be. It emerged as this Shiite militant and political movement that was dedicated to
what it described as resisting Israeli presence in Lebanon. And it had the backing of the
vanguard of Shia Islam in the region, Iran. And so,
So throughout that period of Israeli occupation in the South, Hezbole militants were fighting with Israeli forces.
And eventually, when Israel withdrew from southern Lebanon in 2000, it was seen as this major victory for Hezbollah.
And with that, it started to expand its political influence while also keeping its armed wing.
So for years after that, you know, tension was still very high along the border between the two.
There were periodic clashes.
But then in 2023, we saw this much larger escalation between the two.
So in October 2023, Hezbo launched rockets at Israeli positions in solidarity with Hamas, another Iran-backed group.
Which had just attacked Israel in the October 7th attacks, of course.
That's right.
And that escalated into a major conflict.
Israel bombarded much of the south and eastern Lebanon, as well as Beirut.
It exploded thousands of pagers carried by,
Hezboa members, and it killed Hassan Nasrallah, the longtime leader of Hezbollah, in what was a major
blow to the group.
I think for the last year, a lot of people have had the impression that because of all of those
events, the killing of Nisrella, the pager incident, the attacks by Israel, that Hezbollah had
been severely weakened, right?
So if Hezbollah has been severely weakened, why would Israel need to go after them so hard
right now if, presumably, they pose less of a threat?
I think what we're seeing right now is Israel really seizing on this moment where a lot of eyes are on the war in Iran.
The country's feeling emboldened by its partnership with the United States, feeling its own military strength.
And it senses this kind of weakness and it's two, you know, fiercest adversaries because Hezboe was always the strongest among Iran's proxies.
We also know from, you know, reporting out of our Jerusalem Bureau that this is rarely offensive in, you know,
Lebanon has been months in the making, and Israel was essentially just waiting for the opportunity
for Hezbollah to fire on Israel to attack in order to carry out these long-laid plans.
And I think it's important to note that while the kind of going narrative over the last year
was that Hezbollah has been battered, what we're seeing now is proof that they're still able to mount a fight
even if they are severely weakened. We're seeing that they've been able to manufacture and locally
assemble arms within Lebanon to replenish its weapons stockpile. And even after, you know, their senior
military ranks were wiped out during the war, what we've also seen now is how members of Iran's
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, the IRGC, appeared to come into the country to replenish those
ranks and take even greater control of Hezbo's military arms. And we've seen proof of that
over the past two weeks. Already at least two Israeli soldiers have been killed and more
than a dozen injured. So there is this sense now that even though over the last year, Hezbollah
has not appeared to be very militarily strong, while it hasn't responded to the near daily
airstrikes by Israel that have happened despite the ceasefire, that in fact it was using the past
year to in part rebuild and prepare for this major conflict, that it too expected would happen
with Israel. Given all of that, if Israel's goal is to finally take out Hezbollah's ability to operate,
just maybe completely wipe them out once and for all. Is that actually possible in this moment?
So this has been a long-time project of Israel for decades now. And so far, Israel has not been able
to disarm or eliminate the group. But I think what we're seeing is Israeli officials seeing a
moment to seize on when they could finally take out this group that has for decades posed a threat to
Israel. But all of the challenges that have existed over the last several decades when it comes to
Israel's aim of disarming Hezbollah are still there. So this is still a very complicated endeavor.
We'll be right back. So Christina, you explained that Israel would face all of these challenges in its
quest to take out Hezbollah. But this time, the circumstances are different enough that at least
Israeli officials seem to think that they might have more of a chance. Can you just explain why they
think that? So I think first off you have to keep in mind that yes, Hezbollah is an Iran-backed militant
group, but it's also a very strong political and social movement that is embedded in Lebanese society
here, especially among the Shia community, which is about a third of the country. And for decades,
it has essentially had the Lebanese government in a chokehold where no political decisions
could be made without its support. So it is the most powerful political party,
in the country. It holds seats in Lebanon's parliament. And it also runs this vast network of social
services that its supporters benefit from, like schools and hospitals. And it employs tens of thousands
of people within that network. So it does hold this immense sway in Lebanese society.
A lot of people have described it as being like a state within a state.
I visited Beirut a few years ago. And one thing that really stood out to me was all of the
Hezbollah flags, Hezbollah shirts, Hasbola merchandise that you could purchase, particularly in the
south of Lebanon, where Hezbollah obviously has a huge presence. And it really hit home this idea
that Hezbollah in a way that perhaps Americans or people outside of the country can't fully
appreciate, it is this political party. It is fully embedded in the population. I had a friend
say to me that if his mother's car broke down, he hoped it would be in a Hezbollah neighborhood
because those are the folks that are more likely to help.
That's right, but now we're also beginning to see that loyal base of support tested like it hasn't been before and more tired than it's been before.
A lot of people who have been displaced, the vast majority are people who are in areas that are more sympathetic to Hezbollah.
So it means that a lot of Hezbollah supporters are the ones that have been shouldering the burdens of these wars over the last two years.
The one thing that they keep telling me
is how exhausted they are.
How after the last war in 2023,
2024, and then this one,
they're tired of evacuating from their homes,
they're tired of living in shelters,
they're tired of their towns and villages,
especially in the South,
being flattened by airstrikes.
They're tired of rebuilding homes,
only to now worry that they're going to get demolished again.
So I think we're starting to see
this very new feeling right now.
For ages, there's been this kind of fervent, ideological zeal within Hezbollah's support
base to resist Israel at any cost.
And Hezbollah still does command a lot of support and can turn out massive crowds,
especially in Beirut.
But right now we're starting to see that commitment give way to this kind of wariness
of war.
And also just some people that are questioning why Hezbollah chose to become involved in this
war.
why they chose to fire on Israel only after the killing of a foreign leader, Ayatollah Khomeini,
and not over the last year when Lebanese have been killed in Israeli airstrikes.
It sounds like what people are telling you is that increasingly,
they are maybe for the first time questioning Hezbollah, questioning their support for Hezbollah,
and that feels quite new.
Yes, that's right.
In one of the shelters that we went to...
Can you tell us her name and age?
I actually ran into a nurse who I had met during the last war in 2024 in a hospital in the southern city of Nebatia.
And at that time, she was dealing with this influx of people who were injured in Israeli strikes.
And now with this war, she's been displaced from Nehatiah to Beirut.
And my colleagues and I sat with her and her family, and we were talking about this very question.
What are the costs of these wars? Are these wars worth it?
And they were debating among themselves whether Hezbollah remains their main defender.
Because keep in mind, you know, as Israeli forces have moved into the south,
the Lebanese army is pretty much nowhere to be found.
On the other hand, they're also wondering if actually, because Hezbollah has now dragged the country
into war twice in two years, whether that is still the case,
whether they are still able to defend the Shia community, and whether the cost
community is bearing is worth it.
If the Lebanese government is so dysfunctional,
what is their capacity to help their own people
and what is their relationship to Hezbollah?
What do they want from Hezbollah in this moment?
So this has been the main topic of political conversation in Lebanon
over the last year.
Because in that time, the country has kind of reached
this political tipping point.
after the ceasefire in 2024, there was this kind of sea change here where the Lebanese government agreed for the first time ever to begin a process of disarming Hezbollah.
Now, of course, over the past year, we've seen the many, many challenges that come with trying to do so.
The Lebanese military is weak. You know, its soldiers are underpaid. It is not terribly well equipped. So in many ways, it is outmatched by Hezbollah.
And at the same time, there is this fear that if the government moves too quickly and too decisively, it could lead to a clash between Lebanese soldiers and Hezbollah fighters.
And that here is a recipe for civil war.
I wonder what the point of all of this is then with Israel saying that it's going to take out Hezbollah.
Like, is that kind of the equivalent, this is a super imperfect comparison, but the equivalent of the U.S. saying it's going to take out the Taliban just in terms of one country saying it's going to take out this heavily armed, embedded group in another country.
that doesn't, for many reasons, seem realistic.
Like, I just sort of wonder if this is Israel kind of doing what it's always done with Hezbollah,
which is basically periodically crippling them, but not actually totally destroying them.
I mean, that's the rhetoric we've heard, right?
Is this idea that Israel wants to completely eliminate the threat from Hezbollah.
But I think what a lot of people here see is this major buildup of Israeli military forces along the border,
on the Israeli side of the border.
And that has made people here in Lebanon extremely concerned about the possibility of a massive Israeli ground invasion of southern Lebanon and possible occupation of a large swath of southern Lebanon, essentially creating a new, much larger buffer zone with Israel.
Now, that, of course, has brought up a lot of concerns within Lebanon of mass displacement, because we've already seen more than a million people displaced from their homes from this conflict.
And also this possibility that Israel would reoccupy southern Lebanon just feels like this repeat of history here.
And it's coming at a time when these memories of the Civil War of the last occupation are still seared into people's minds here.
And I can imagine for Israel, though, the creation of that buffer zone in southern Lebanon, buffer zone maybe a AKA occupied territory, would be a win politically for Netanyahu, right?
Like even if he doesn't oust Hezbollah completely, he may still.
end up with a swath of land in southern Lebanon that achieves at least some of his political goals.
Yeah, you could imagine that as part of this calculation.
How should we think about the United States' role here?
Obviously, they're heavily involved in the conflict with Iran, but what is their stance on Israel's
action in Lebanon?
So typically the U.S. has tried to temper Israel's efforts to take out Hezbollah because of
these fears of it spiraling into a lot of.
larger war and destabilizing the region. It's the same reason why we haven't seen Israel involved
in a war with Iran like this before, but we're seeing that that's beginning to change now.
The U.S. has essentially allowed Israel to carry out this bombardment of Lebanon. And it's also
been putting an immense amount of pressure on the Lebanese government to act more decisively to
disarm Hezbollah, to declare the group, a terrorist group, and take a much tougher stance against Hezbollah
despite the concerns from Lebanese officials,
that doing so could be very destabilizing for the country.
So basically, whereas the United States has been a check
on Israel's actions in Lebanon in the past, at least to some degree,
that check seems to have disappeared or dissipated.
Yeah, at least so far, that's what we've seen.
I think we're still waiting to see as this war escalates
whether the U.S. decides to step in and try to rein Israel back in.
So, Christina, just stepping back,
should we think about this war in Lebanon as part of the larger war with Iran? How are you thinking about
how they're connected? So sure. I mean, on the one hand, the two are clearly connected, right? Hasbla
is an Iran-backed militant group. It fired on Israel in response to the killing of an Iranian leader.
And in a lot of ways, what we're seeing now is the kind of epitome of Iran's access of resistance, right?
Hasbla firing on Israel, coordinating their rocket attacks on Israel with Iran, trying to create a second front in this war.
And more and more, some of these missiles and rockets are beginning to get through and hit Israeli territory.
Christina, what do you see as the possible outcomes in this conflict in Lebanon, both in the short term and also in the long term?
So Hezbollah is trying to inflict as much pain and as many casualties as they can on Israeli forces in order to change the political cost for Israel to continue to engage in this war.
We've already seen that Hezbollah has killed two Israeli soldiers.
and injured more than a dozen others.
But at the same time, there is this growing sense here
that this war will last much longer than the Iranian war.
People are afraid that when the war in Iran ends,
Israel is going to turn its attention to Lebanon
and focus its military capabilities here.
And also, even just in the last couple of days,
there are these new fears as people see similarities
in the messaging from Israeli officials in Gaza and in Lebanon.
The Israeli military has issued the sweeping evacuation orders for much of southern Lebanon,
which is similar to what we saw in Gaza.
The other day, Israeli warplanes were dropping leaflets over central Beirut,
calling on people to disarm Hezbollah and talking about a, quote, new reality in Lebanon.
And Israeli officials have said they believe Hezbollah is using ambulances and civilian trucks to move weaponry
and started to hint that those two would no longer be off limits.
So these eerie similarities are starting to create a new fear in Lebanon,
that Israel's aims in this war are much more permanent than in previous ones.
It sounds like the Lebanese, not without some reasons,
are concerned about another protracted deadly conflict.
Yeah, so this is creating the prospect of more clashes with Hezbollah,
more displaced people, and more civilian casualties for years and years to come.
Christina Goldbaum, thank you so much.
Thanks for having me.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
Iran's foreign minister, Abbas Arakchi, said that the country was not ready to hold talks with the United States.
We never asked for a ceasefire, and we have never asked even for negotiation.
Arakchi's comments directly contradict an interview President Trump gave just one day earlier, during which he said that Iran, quote, wants to make a deal.
And the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad has urged Americans to leave Iraq immediately after it was attacked for the second time since the war with Iran started.
The warning said militias aligned with Iran had carried out numerous attacks on targets associated with the United States,
including diplomatic facilities, American companies, and hotels frequented by foreigners.
The alert comes after Americans all over the region have complained that the Trump administration was not providing enough assistance to citizens.
in stranded in evacuation zones.
Today's episode was produced by Jessica Chung,
Mary Wilson, Rochelle Bonja, and Olivia Nat.
It was edited by MJ Davis-Linn with help from Paige Cowett
and contains music by Dan Powell,
Alicia Be Aetube, and Rowan de Mistow.
Our theme music is by Wonderly.
This episode was engineered by Alyssa Moxley.
That's it for the Daily.
I'm Rachel Abrams.
See you tomorrow.
